The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com September 13, 2010 - 3B GAME STATISTICS TaN StatN First Downs Rush/Yds Offensive Pays Total Offense Kick returns/ Yds Punt returns/Yds Comp/Att/Int PuntT/Avg Fubles/Lost Penalties/Yards Time of Poss PASSING Player Robinson, D. Totals RUSHING Player A * A Shaw Hopkins Totals 4 RECEING Player Nc Roundtee I Odousp Stenum I Shaw Grady Tota 2 PUNTING Player N Hagerup * A Totals X PUNT RETURNS Player Tota TACKLES Player A , Kovacs Floyd Ezeh Furrha Banks " Van Bergen Sion-m De-es wJams Leach PASSING Player Crist Montana RUSHING Montana 4 CGist 4 Riddok 2 Tota 3 RECEIVING Player N Rudolph 8 R ddick 2 Eifert Tota 2 PUNTING Turk Totals KICKOFF RETURNS Player N Riddick Wod C TACKLES Calabrese Smith, H. Wa"ls Flerning 10 Gray, G. *lanon Johnson Garcia Nwanko Neal McDonald Martin Tota z MICH 41/288 81 532 4/101 0/0 24/40/0 10/37.5 A/TA 8/99 34:09 ND 23 32/154 535 3/63 1/9 21/44/3 8/38.8 /A 4/29 25:51 Gibbons, Hagerup struggle despite vote of confidence M I C H I G A N C-A Yds TD 24-40 244 1 24-40 244 1 Att 5 1 41 Yds 258 12 1 288 Avg 2.4 1.0 7.0 Avg 8.3 9.3 102 Lg 87 5 1 87 Lg 16 12 7 TD 2 0 0 1 3 TD 1 0 0 1 0 0 No. Yds 8 82 7 91 4 33 3 28 1 7 1 3 24 244 o. Yds Avg 9 345 38.3 1 3 300 Lg 53 30 No Yds A Lg TD 4 101 125.3 30 0 No. Yds Avg Lg TD 0 0 0.0 0 0 Solo Asst 6 4 4 3 Tto 10 3 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 2 0 2 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 31 32 & N o t r e D a m e 5 4 2 i 5 By NICOLE AUERBACH Daily Sports Writer SOUTH BEND, Ind. - As the Michigan football team marched down the field in Sat- urday's final minute trailing 24-21, there was one ques- NOTEBOOK tion rever- berating through Notre Dame Stadium. Would the Wolverines have to make a field goal to tie the game? After all, redshirt freshman kicker Brendan Gibbons had just missed two consecutive field goals (a 39-yarder in the middle of the third quarter and a 40-yarder early in the fourth). Would Michigan coach Rich Rodriguez send Gibbons out there with the game on the line? Or would he go to Gibbons' backup, Seth Broekhuizen? Fortunately for Rodriguez, those questions never needed answers. His sophomore sensa- tion quarterback Denard Rob- inson methodically moved the Wolverines down the field, com- pleting a huge third-down pass to Roy Roundtree that set up a short rushing touchdown. "I can tell you this: I'm glad we didn't have to try a field goal at the end," Rodriguez said after the game. "Not that I didn't have confidence we (could) make it. But after you miss two in a row, psychologi- cally you may not be ready to go out there at the end. So we tried to call a play to get a first down and move forward." After Michigan scored the go-ahead touchdown with 27 seconds left in the game, Rodriguez sent redshirt fresh- man Broekhuizen, listed as second on the depth chart, to kick the extra point - which was good. ROBINSON From Page 1B Tate Forcier's comeback vic- tory against Notre Dame last season, Robinson marched the Wolverines down the field on a 12-play, 72-yard drive - adding to his record-shattering 502- yard performance - capping it with a two-yard touchdown run that left just 27 seconds remain- ing on the clock. His touchdown gave Michigan the 28-24 lead it needed to finish off the Irish for the second year in a row and give coach Rich Rodriguez a marquee road win. "(Robinson) played outside his body," senior linebacker Jonas Mouton said on the field after the game. "I don't know, it's his heart. He's not the big- gest guy, but he has a big heart." After showing his electrify- ing potential in the Wolverines' week-one win over Connecticut, Robinson obliterated his own records in week two against Notre Dame. With 244 yards through the air and 258 on the ground, Robinson became the ninth quarterback in Football Bowl Subdivision history to run and pass for more than 200 yards in a game. The last to eclipse the mark also happened to be a member of a Rodriguez offense - Pat White, to whom Robinson is often compared. In his time at West Virginia, White ran for the most yards of any quarterback in FBS history. More staggering than his numbers, though, was that they came in essentially a one-man show, as the sophomore sig- Rodriguez said he was disap- pointed in the kicking game's performance on Saturday, but seemed optimistic about its future no matter who plays next week. "Those guys can kick," Rodri- guez said. "Brendan's a lot bet- ter than he showed today. And Seth Broekhuizen, I think he'll compete. And I don't know who will be the starter next week." While the kicking game gar- nered the most negative atten- tion after Saturday's game, special teams on the whole was a concern. True freshman Will Hagerup punted five times in the game, averaging 40.6 yards, but didn't pin the Notre Dame offense inside its own 20-yard line at any point. One of his punts missed so badly that it sailed into the stands. Again, Rodriguez didn't appear too concerned. "Will Hagerup is the first one back there in that room, prob- ably disappointed in some of his punts, but he's a true fresh- man," Rodriguez said. "He's got a great future. I'm not worried about him at all. He's going to be fantastic." BACKFIELD WOES: While Michigan fans spent the week- end salivating over Robinson's 502 total yards of offense, one group of players might be con- cerned about this number: 30. That's the total number of rushing yards from Wolverines who tie their shoes. In other words, the running backs and anyone not named Robinson. Sophomore Vincent Smith and junior Mike Shaw both averaged exactly 2.4 yards per carry, and together, they had 12 rushing attempts. Freshman Stephen Hopkins had a 1-yard touchdown run in the first quarter on his first col- nal-caller accounted for more than 94 percent of Michigan's offense, including the longest play from scrimmage in Notre Dame Stadium's 80-year his- tory - an 87-yard sprint to give the Wolverines the lead in the second quarter. Last week against Connecticut, Robin- son accounted for 80 percent of the offense. But offensive coordinator Calvin Magee said after the game that Robinson's performance, despite the high percentage of total offense, was possible because of the play of his teammates. "There's 10 other guys block- ing and catching and doing all of this stuff," Magee said. "He's not throwing it to himself and catching it himself. He's not making blocks and turning around and running it. There's some other guys (who are) a part of that. So don't worry about it." Rodriguez said after last week's game that, in hindsight, Robinson's 29 carries against the Huskies was much higher than he would've wanted. But in South Bend, Robinson was just one carry short of his 29 from last week. That shoulder- ing of the load brought a sig- nificant number of questions about Robinson's durability following his record-shattering performance. "Of course you don't want to run him that much," Magee said. "But at this point, this -team has been working awfully hard to try and play as a team and win some games. We're try- ing to do whatever it takes right now." And Robinson's poised sec- ond-half performance may have legiate carry. All in all, their performance was less than impressive - especially for a running-back- by-committee system that's expected to take some of the load off Robinson's back. The running backs know they need to contribute more. "I think we're going to have to," Shaw said. "It's great that (Robinson) can do this, but sooner or later we're going to step up and make big plays. We're working to get better and the coaches are looking forward to what we can do. But right now it's Denard's show." RECORD-SETTING DAY: Not only did Robinson dazzle fans on Saturday, but he also broke some records with his perfor- mance. He set Michigan's single-game individual record for total offense with his 502 yards (breaking his own record of 383 from last week against Connecticut). He set the Big Ten quar- terback single-game rushing record with 258 yards. He also became the ninth quarterback in NCAA history to rush and pass for 200 yards or more in a game. The last player to accomplish the feat? Rodri- guez's own Pat White at West Virginia, who did it against Pittsburgh in 2006. For all this, Robinson became the first player ever to earn the Walter Camp National Offen- sive Player of the Week honor for two consecutive weeks. For Robinson, who Rodri- guez has said is very humble, these records and statistics don't mean much. At the post- game press conference on Sat- urday, he wasn't even aware of his numbers. "I'm a team player, and I don't worry about the stats," Robin- son said. been the only answer to Michi- gan's woes after halftime. Leading 21-7 at the half, the game's momentum strongly leaned in Michigan's favor, as Notre Dame junior quarter- back Dayne Crist missed much of the first half with an injury to his right eye. But the Irish held in the game long enough for Crist .to return, and with their starter back, the Irish charged down the field on two separate touchdown drives to take the lead. With little help from the Wol- verines' special teams play after redshirt freshman kicker Bren- dan Gibbons missed two make- able field goals in the second half, the heightened drama of a possible game-winning drive seemed to do little to affect Rob- inson, despite the fact that his only previous game-on-the-line experience ended in an inter- ception at Iowa last season. Quarterbacks coach Rod Smith said after the game that that poise is something the players and coaches knew about Robinson all offseason. But Smith told the sophomore quar- terback after the game that even he was shocked and impressed by his growth on that final drive. "(I said,) 'Son, you don't know how much you have matured, just that one drive, just moved you forward light years (from) where you need to be,' " Smith told reporters after the game. "It takes experiences like that in order for quarterbacks to grow - especially young ones." Added Rodriguez: "I've got my shoes untied in honor of Denard." DEFENSE From Page 1B But it was too high. And the Fighting Irish's last chance land- ed just to the right of the Michi- gan marching band. "I was a little concerned, but we practice that play over and over," redshirt sophomore safety Jordan Kovacs said after the game. "It was kind of scary that they made it that far, but they threw it out of the end zone." The Wolverines' defense responded when it most desper- ately needed a stop in Saturday's 28-24 win over Notre Dame. Michigan did allow the fourth most yards in school history - the second highest total in a win-but it didn't allow the yards when it mattered most. It had also answered the call when the first half was coming to an end. Nate Montana, who was playing while Crist sat out with an injury, led a drive down to the three-yard line with only three seconds remaining. Instead of kicking the easy field goal, Notre Dame coach Brian Kelly called for Montana to throw the ball. His pass also ended up closer to the fans than a receiver. Michigan had a 21-7 lead at haftime after the stop. And the Wolverines built that lead because of the defense's ability to slow down Notre Dame's offense after its opening touchdown drive. After that series, Crist left the game with an eye injury, and freshman quarterback Tommy Rees replaced the junior signal caller. On the second snap of his colle- giate career, Rees handed the ball off to senior running back Arman- do Allen, who flipped it back to Rees. The flea flicker didn't work. Rees threw the ball, and senior linebacker Jonas Mouton stepped in front of the intended receiver for the interception. Later in the half, the Wolver- ines once again showed they were opportunistic. Redshirt sopho- more cornerback J.T. Floyd picked off Montana on a pass intended for Michael Floyd - whom, last week, redshirt junior defensive end Ryan Van Bergen called the best receiver Michigan faced in 2009. Montana, a junior and former walk-on, and Rees were limited to just five first downs on the first seven drives after Crist left the game. "There's so many guys on this team who are going all-out," soph- omore linebacker Craig Roh said. "Mistakes are made up through hustle and effort. Whereas, last year, I don't think we were as vicious going to the ball. We weren't as bound together. This year, these guys are just so hun- gry: hungry for tackles, hungry for sacks, hungry for intercep- tions - hungry to be great." Although Michael Floyd was held relatively in check, finish- ing with five catches for 66 yards, Michigan struggled to contain the Fighting Irish's other great receiving threat, junior tight end Kyle Rudolph. Crist connected with Rudolph on a 95-yard touchdown pass that gave Notre Dame the lead with less than four minutes to play. When Crist first returned in the second half, he started with a bang and hit freshman wide receiver T.J. Jones for a 53-yard touchdown pass. "They seemed to rally around Dayne Crist," Kovacs said. "He played very well. When he was in there they seemed to get a lot of momentum. He's a good quarter- back." With Michigan clinging to a four-point lead in the third quar- ter, and the momentum squarely on Crist's right arm, Mouton tipped one of his passes which was then intercepted by Kovacs. But the Wolverine offense didn't capitalize on the turnovers that the defense forced. The Michigan defense still held Crist and the Fighting Irish offense to 51 yards over the next three drives - all ending in punts. "I think we made some fresh- men mistakes, but at the same time, we held them for most of the game," Kovacs said. "We con- tained them pretty well. We gave up a few big plays, but those are things we're going to correct." In the second half when Rob- inson and the offense was stall- ing, Michigan made sure Notre Dame's did too. The opportunistic attitude and key defensive stops showed signs of an improved defense. Michigan defensive coordina- tor Greg Robinson wasn't worried about the amount of yardage that his unit allowed. He pointed to Rudolph's long catch and the 47 yards during Notre Dame's final drive as outliers. The last time the Wolverines allowed so many yards in a win was in 2002 against Illinois. Michigan allowed 543 yards of offense, but won 45-28. The other two times the Wolverines allowed more than Saturday's 535 yards, they lost. Because of how obscene Notre Dame's offensive stats seem, the defense's contribution to Satur- day's win could easily be glossed over. "What won't be overlooked is that we won," Robinson said. C-A 13-25 8-17 Yds 277 104 0 0 z 4 4 2 32 Vo. 8 2 1 Yds 89 23 19 10 10 3 154 Yds 164 66 73 39 17 13 9 381 5.8 4.8 15 48 Avg 20.5 19,5 17.0 181 L9 29 10 19 10 2 3 29 Lg 95 17 53 37 17 13 9 95 TD 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 TD 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 No. Yds Avg Lg 8 310 38.8 47 8 310 38.8 47 No. Yds Avg Lg TD 1 19 19.0 19 0 2 44 220 2 Solo Asst 6 7 3 7 6 3 7 1 3 3 3 3 2 4 5 0 2 2 2 2 1 2 2 0 1 1 1 1 0 2 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 46 40 Tot 13 10 9 8 6 6 6 5 4 4 3 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 86 Wolverines blank three opponents in home tourney By ZAK PYZIK afternoon by defeating Chicago Daily Sports Writer State 3-0, and holding their sec- ond straight opponent to a nega- As Big Ten play looms right tive hitting percentage. around the corner for the No. 22 Michigan's 2-0 record pitted Michigan volleyball team, the them in a final contest against Wolverines found themselves fac- Miami (Ohio). Like the rest of ing three teams with a combined the weekend's competition, the 2-18 record entering the Michi- RedHawks were no match for the gan/Adidas Invitational this past Wolverines. weekend in Ann Arbor. Miami kept all three sets close, Some may have seen it as a but the Wolverines still smashed vacation. But the Wolverines took their way to a 3-0 win. With the no time off. victory, Michigan remained unri- Michigan (8-1) kicked off the valed throughout the entire invi- weekend by blanking Youngstown tational. Though, the whole team State 3-0 on Friday night in front had contributed to the victory, it of a Maize and Blue faithful that was senior setter Lexi Zimmer- helped rowdyup CliffKeen Arena. man who pushed the team the The Wolverines then repeated extra distance and won the tour- their performance on Saturday nament's MVP award. T t1 OR 1 0 1 N A L 512 E. William (734) 663-3379 Welcome Back! Students, Faculty, & Staff CUSTOMER APPRECIATION Lunch Buffet M-F ll-2pm s% $6.95 F$2 OFF our Lunch Buffet With Beverage Included Just Present Your U of M I.D. Oiler Expires: 11/5/2010 i