The Michigan Daily -- michigandaily.com November 22, 2010 - 3B The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom November 22, 2010 - 3B GAME STATISTICS TeamStats First Downs Rush/Yds Passing Yards Offensive Plays Total Offense Kick returns/ Yds Punt returns/ Yds Comp/Att/lnt Punts/Avg Fumbles/Lost Penalties/Yards Time of Poss MICH 36/168 274 442 9/236 0/0 19/30/1 3/39.7 3/1 1/10 23:01 M I C H I G A N C-A Yds 16-25 239 3. 3 wis 20 50/357 201 73 558 3/53 0/0 14/10/1 1/41 1/1 2/25 36.59 Missed tackles plague M' in loss to Badgers, Robinson sets recor PASSING Player Hopkins RobinsonD ott RECEHING HSonsomn Grady Playe lsith Tta's REUEIING Player Hogerp Togn ta nreng en Soum Gason Ttals PUNTREN RNG Playo Ttals KCKEG Player Rlyers R.h Plakr Totals Player Aer Bial Toon Whoges *att Fiygral Banks Matins PUNe NG Blayr Totals Payer Totals Playr Totals Player enry,. ToNew Whibe Smith lean Ewing Pedes"n Dippel Southward O'Neill Total TD 2 b 11 2 4 3 2 1 1 Yds 132 50 3 0 185 Yds 114 99 23 24 9 3 2 274 45 15 2475 7.67 3.0 2.0 14.2 Lg 29 7 3 0 29 Lg 28 34 12 13 9 3 2 34 int 1 0 1 TD 2 0 0 0 2 TD 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 Rob lead in Had James helmet could 1 the Bu mascot his hea Whit sophon ning ba tee Bal 150 yar victory urday. Wiscon that m and th injured Wisc with a r ished w in the s a hands side, an hole ano a 61-yar aged no and Bal ",I t a rhytf they're runnin right, t then yo they're that," Moffitt Moff gers' zc runs to against gan (3 didn'tI inson becomes different looks as the Badgers were expecting either. With the [ing rushing QB 3-3-5 defense, Wisconsin (6-1, 10-1) handled the Wolverines' a single season defensive front and got offensive lineman out to lead block for its By TIM ROHAN running backs. DailySportsEditor "There's going to be free peo- ple," White said. "And that's your Wisconsin running back job as a running back is to break White played without his tackles. So that's what we went , the Michigan defense out there and did. And just made have had a good look at one person miss and just got to cky Badger - Wisconsin's the endzone." - shaved into the back of To work on breaking tackles, d. White and Ball worked on their te and knee drive using rope drills in nore run- NOTEBOOK practice leading up to the game. ock Mon- When the running backs got I both ran for more than through the first line of defense, rds in the Badgers' 48-28 Michigan missed several tackles over Michigan on Sat- at the second and third levels It was the first time two that let both backs run free. sin running backs gained "We're not the spread, so we're any yards since 1974 - not sexy," Wisconsin coach Bret ese were the backups to Bielema said. "It's not on the * starter John Clay. front of everybody's wish list, but onsin started the game I'll tell you this, 48 points is fun." heavy dose of Ball, who fin- ALONE AT THE TOP: Lost vith four touchdowns. And amid the Badgers' success on the econd quarter, White took ground was a lofty achievement off off the tackle to the left on the part of Michigan sopho- ad sprinted through a big more quarterback Denard Rob- d easily into the endzone for inson. d touchdown run. He aver- He set the single-season record early eight yards per carry for rushing yards by a quarter- lmanaged sixyards per clip. back. The previous record holder hink a defense gets into was former Air Force quarter- hm, like they think, 'Oh back Beau Morgan. running left, they're And Robinson also became the g inside, they're running first player in NCAA history to hey're running inside' - throw for more than 1,500 yards ou hit it for outside and and run for more than 1,500 not ready to respond to yards in a single season. Wisconsin guard John Robinson ran for 121 yards and said after the game. two touchdowns on 22 carries, fitt added that the Bad- bringing his season total to a FBS one run scheme and their leading 1538 yards. He has 14 the outside were "open" rushing touchdowns on the year. the Wolverines. Michi- INJURY BUG: Injuries are a -4 Big Ten, 7-4 overall) part of the game. But Michigan give Wisconsin as many is feeling the injury bug's impact No. Yds Avg Lg 3 119 39.7 44 3 119 39.7 44 FG Pc. L XP Pts 0-1 0.0 0 4 4 ARIEL BOND/Da Sophomore quarterback Denard Robinson passed Beau Morgan of Air Force for the most rush yards in a season by a QB. No. 2 1t 2 63 15 236 257 31.5 15.0 262 L9 33 36 15 34 36 TD 0 0 No Yds Avg g TD Solo Asst To 5 8 13 4 8 12 2 3 5 3 1 4 3 1 3 1 4 2 2 4 1 2 3 1 1 2 1 1 2 1 0 1 1 *0 0 1 1 44 46 90 W I S C O N S I N C-A Yds TD int 1415 21 more than most teams heading into the Wolverines' final regular season game. Sophomore defensive end Craig Roh suffered concussion- like symptoms during the loss. Neither junior running back Mike Shaw nor redshirt fresh- man left tackle Taylor Lewan played due to concussion-like symptoms. And junior wide receiver Darryl Stonum, who had four catches for 99 yards, was carted off the field in the fourth quarter with a right ankle injury. Junior defensive tackle Mike Martin was also slowed by ankle injuries. It's hard to find a healthy defensive player who was listed on the preseason roster. "CraigRoh, Mike Martin, Dar- ryl Stonum - the list goes on," Michigan coach Rich Rodriguez said. "It's just one of those crazy years. I've never had a year with this many guys (injured) in key positions in certain spots, but that's where you're at. The next guy in has to come in. For us, we're just not at the point where we can take an experienced play- er out and put an experienced player in. There's a lot of inexpe- rience out there." LYTLE PASSES AWAY: Former Michigan All-American running back Rob Lytle passed away due to a heart attack on Saturday night in Fremont, Ohio. He was 56. "Rob was a teammate and a terrific individual," Michigan Athletic Director Dave Brandon said through a press release. "It's a sad day because we've lost someone who was a great example of a Michigan man. Our sympathies go out to his family during this difficult time." Lytle finished third in the Heisman Trophy voting during the 1976 season and when he left Michigan, his 3,317 career rush- ing yards was the single-season record for a Wolverine at the time. Mike Hart is the current all-time rushing leader. Att 23 29 4 2 No. 3 2 2 1 17 Yds 189 173 14 0 376 Yds 74 57 19 10 21 13 7 201 Avg 7.9 6.0 1s5 19.0 9.5 5.0 70 11.82 L9 61 27 30 1 Lg 34 TD 2 4 0 0 6 TD 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 STONUM From Page 1B On the offense's first play, Rob- inson tossed a 34-yard pass to Sto- num, who shielded the defender from the underthrown ball and caught it over his shoulder. In less than two minutes, Sto- num had given the Wolverine offense exactly what it needed - a spark. BADGERS From Page 1B victory was Wisconsin's first in the Big House since 1994 and the Badgers' second consecutive win over Michigan for the first time since then, too. "We certainly didn't play well," Rodriguez said. "We didn't tackle well. We didn't catch the ball well. We didn't execute on either side of the ball at times. You do that against a good team, you're going to get beat." The first half was a forget- table one for both Michigan's offense and defense, as the Wol- verines (7-4, 2-4) registered just 124 yards to Wisconsin's 379. Sophomore quarterback Denard Robinson was completely sty- "It helped to see him make plays," offensive coordinator Cal- vin Magee said after the game. "We were trying to get the ball to Junior (Hemingway) also, but Stonum got the coverage that was favorable. Denard did a good job finding him." Teammates said they appreci- ated what Stonum added to the offense - big plays from a player who loves to make them. "He definitely brings the big- mied by Wisconsin's brute front seven, going for 22 yards on 4-of- 10 passing Meanwhile, the Badger offense seemed to be toying with Michigan's defense, even with- out junior ballcarrier John Clay, who missed the game with an MCL sprain. Clay's backups, sophomore Montee Ball and freshman James White, were still too much for Michigan's defensive front to handle, as they combined for 187 yards in the first half alone. It was Wisconsin coach Bret Bielema's plan all along - run, run and run some more - and it was working to perfection. "There wasn't anything they could do to slow that down," Bielema said. But in the second half, Robin- play ability for our offense," junior tight end Kevin Koger said. "He's a big threat at any time in the game." Stonum's playmaking oppor- tunities increased as he played a larger role on special teams on Saturday. He returned four kick- offs for 103 yards. After Michi- gan's recent struggles in the return game, Stonum's sure hands were a welcome sight for Wolver- ine fans. "He does it all," Koger said, son showed flashes of his early- season self and a little bit of the Wolverines' 2008 magic shined through. With 11:03 remaining in the third quarter, Robinson lobbed a beautiful ball toward the south endzone where junior wideout Darryl Stonum took advantage of man-to-man coverage and pulled down the Wolverines' first touchdown of the day. Then, after Badger wide- out Isaac Anderson coughed up a fumble and the Wolver- ines recovered, Robinson threw another deep pass to Stonum to set up his own 4-yard touchdown scamper. Suddenly, down just 10 points now, another comeback was in reach. But Bielema stuck to the game- plan: expose Michigan's biggest smiling. "He's versatile and he can do a lot of things on the field to help our team." On his final kick return, though, he got hit hard while trying to twist away from a Wis- consin defender. His right ankle received the brunt of the hit, and he crumpled over in pain, clutch- ing his right leg. The injury, if serious, would be a big blow to the Wolverine pass- ing game. It would also be just weakness on defense - funda- mental tackling. "We were emphasizing that in practice: that we were going to have to make players miss because of the kind of defense they run," Ball said. "There are a lot of open bodies. ... We knew that they miss a lot of tackles." Bielema didn't call a pass play for the rest of the game after that, instead opting for 33 straight run plays. After focusing on running through loose tackles all week in practice, his backs ran through and around Michigan's defense, as White finished with 181 yards to Ball's 173, and the two com- bined for six touchdowns on the ground. The Badgers' 170 yards rush- ing in the second half overshad- another injury on what is turning into quite a long list of wounded players on Michigan's roster. "He's not banged up too bad I don't think," running backs coach Fred Jackson said. "He'll be ready to go this week to try to give us a chance next Saturday." Stonum tweeted a few hours after the game: "Hopefully I'm ok (I think I am) but its gonna take a whole lot to keep me out of this next game."this next game." owed Robinson's record-setting effort - he passed Air Force's Beau Morgan for the most rush yards by an NCAA quarterback in a single season (1,538 yards in 1996). A different Michigan record, though - a more somber one - was more telling of the losing effort and the season as a whole. After allowing 558 total yards and 48 points to Wisconsin's offense, this year's Michigan defense has officially allowed the most yards and points in a season in program history - with one game still remaining. "They just pounded us," red- shirt sophomore safety Jordan Kovacs said. "We're disappointed with the way that we played, but we're moving on, and we have a big game next week." No. Yds Avg Lg 2-2 100.0 40 6 12 No Yds Avg Lg TO 1 7 7 0 o 0 3 53 1767 24 0 No. Yds Avg Lg TD 0 0 0 0 0 Soto 8 3 4 4 4 2 2 2 3 2 2 2 0 i i i i 0 44 Asst 2 6 2 1 0 2 2 2 0 1 1 1 3 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 26 Tot 10 9 6 5 4 4 4 4 3 3 3 3 3 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 70 SWEET 16 From Page 1B Doyle. Meram, who extended his goal streak to six games, attrib- uted his recent success to his partners in crime. He and the Saad brothers refer to them- selves as the "three amigos." "At first, I was trying to score on my own," Meram said. "Now, I've changed my outlook on everything. With Soony and Hamoody on the attack ... no team can defend all three of us." Following the equalizer, the game's momentum swung away from Michigan - much in part to several seemingly impossible saves by Doyle. The back-and-forth, up- tempo nature of the game con- tinued to the end of regulation when the score remained dead- locked. "We really needed to get balls into our forwards' feet," Burns said. "We just felt we'd get a rhythm and get a lot more chances." After a Central Florida foul, such an opportunity presented itself.Hamoody launched the free kick from 35 yards out toward the goal, and just as the over-capacity crowd thought Doyle would make another one of his signature saves, sopho- more midfielder Latif Alashe tipped it in for the game-win- ner. "We just got lucky on that one and got it to actually go in," Alashe said. "(Doyle) made a few great saves earlier. The luck just went our way, and it went in the net." The Michigan Ultras - the Wolverines' dedicated student section - exploded as Michi- gan made the field of 16. A huge following was present at the game and the enthusiasm of the group hardly went unno- ticed by the Wolverines or the opposition. "It's great for college soc- cer," Knights head coach Bryan Cunningham said. Michigan's next opponent, South Carolina, also squeaked by on Sunday. The seventh- seeeded Gamecocks broke a scoreless tie in overtime to defeat Duke. This upcoming Sunday, in Columbia, S.C., the Wolverines will have their hands full. But, unless South Carolina can do somethingthat few others have done and shut down the "three amigos," Michigan may very well pull a minor upset of its own and continue its tourna- ment run. MERAM From Page 1B come to him. "At first, I was trying to score on my own per se, and now I've changed my outlook on every- thing," Meram said. "With Soony and Hamoody and us three in the attack ... just the combination of us doing what we do best, no team can defend all three of us." The goal was Meram's eighth in his past six games, including one game-tying and one go-ahead goal. Excluding the game against Wisconsin in which he didn't play, Meram has scored at least one goal in every game since his two- goal performance against Bowl- ing Green on Oct. 27. Meram sent the game into overtime largely because the the Wolverines maintained their composure, even while facing the possibility of elimination. "It didn't have the feel of one of those games," Burns said. "Some- times there's a feeling when a team is just throwing bodies in front of the ball, the keepers on fire. ... From a fan's perspective, I think you could get pretty tight and say, 'Oh, this might not be Michigan's day.' But it never felt like that on the bench, and on the field, these guys certainly didn't play like that." Had Meram failed to convert his open try, though, it would have been hard to avoid such feelings. But Meram, a senior, knew exactly what was at stake. When asked if he knew what he had to do to keep his collegiate career alive, Meram didn't hesi- tate. His response? "Score." . FOLLOW THE DAILY ON TWITTER @MICH DAILYSPORTS PHOBIC? Afraid of Snakes or Spiders? 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