The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, March 31, 2011 - 7A Mattison expects line Cam Gordon settles into his to be a strength of 'D' new position, SAM linebacker By TIM ROHAN like, 'Okay coach, I'll see you Daily Sports Editor tomorrow, and (I'll) get ready to go.' They're all that way," Mattison Every time Greg Mattison takes said. a look at the big, golden Michigan As Mattison mentioned ear- Rose Bowl Championship ring on lier this spring, Roh will play the his finger, he thinks of the defen- "Terrell Suggs position" on the sive linemen who earned it for him. Michigan defense, to compare this "I think of Buster Stanley; I situation to Mattison's last stop in think of Chris Hutchinson," Matti- Baltimore. Roh entered his sopho- son said. "I think of those defensive more campaign in 2010 with high linemen that played with incred- expectations to be the team's edge- ible technique: Jason Horn. pass rusher. But he endured a mid- "It's been 15 years since I've season position change, playing seen some of those guys. I can just eight games at outside linebacker picture them out there in the Rose and five games at his natural posi- Bowl, playing with the technique tion of defensive end - and he that we wanted. And that was a finished with just half-a-sack in 13 great night." games. All these years later, Mattison is "Roh has had some signs of, back at Michigan looking for more 'Okay, he's kind getting to what we rings, and nothing has changed want him to do,' where his hand's - the defensive line will be a key on the ground," Mattison said. ingredient to the Wolverines' suc- "And to play the position that we cess on defense. want him to play, he's got to be a "You can't have a great defense, very physical football player - so unless you have a really good he's worked onthat." defensive line. I've never seen one," Mattison would like to develop a Mattison said. "And in order to play rotation of quality players at every really, really good defense, your position on the defensive line, and defensive line has to be one of the the entire defense for that matter. strongest points - that's a must." Backing up Roh is Black, who The names have changed - Mattison expects to bring an Mike Martin, Ryan Van Bergen, explosion off the edge. Craig Roh are expected to anchor "Jibreel Black, some days, looks the unit - and so has the scheme, as good as (Roh), or better," Mat- with four downlinemen now on the tison said. field at once instead of the three- Opposite Roh on the line, Ryan man front Michigan employed Van Bergen is penciled in at defen- last year under Rich Rodriguez. sive end. And Mattison expected The Wolverines are expected to be Will Heininger, who tore his ACL more physical at the point of attack. this time last year and missed most Leading the charge is Martin, of the 2010 season, to rotate with the gem of the group at defensive Van Bergen at that end spot. tackle. When Mattison was nam- But the most intriguing position ing the players who had impressed up front is the defensive tackle posi- him through six spring practices, tion next to Martin - Will Camp- the first name he mentioned was bell and Quinton Washington have Martin, followed by Roh and fellow been battling for the spot in spring defensive end Jibreel Black. practice. The two famously flip- Mattison noted Martin's enthu- flopped in the middle of the season siasm to learn - as if he were an a year ago, when Rodriguez moved unseasoned freshman - and spoke Campbell to offense and Washing- of how willing he was to change ton to defense - essentially taking his technique. That eager-to-learn each other's spots. And Washing- attitude has permeated the entire ton did see playing time onthe goal defense. Roh sat through an entire line defensive unit as an extra big film session "without (Mattison) body. Now, the two are locked in a saying a positive thing on his tech- position battle. nique." "When you see Quinton Wash- "And when he got done, it was ington and Will Campbell bat- tling for a position, that says great, because now we can roll them," Mattison said. "I believe in that, and always have. "(Washington has) been neck- and-neck with (Campbell). If one guy doesn't do quite what we're supposed to do, the other guy goes in there." Washington nearly matches Campbell pound-for-pound, as he is listed at 6-foot-4, 315 pounds and Campbell is 6-foot-5, 333-pounds. During the first 20 minutes of practice on Tuesday, which was open to the media, it appeared Washington was running with the first-team defense. Despite a disap- pointing beginning to the five-star recruit's Michigancareerhe seems to be makingstrides this spring. ."Will Campbell is showing signs at times of being the guy that comes off the football like we want him to, and then there's other times when he doesn't," Mattison said. "Now, he's like everybody else and we've got to be more consistent doing it, play after play," he added. "I've been real excited with those guys, the size inthere, the strength in there and them coming off the ball. It just has to be more consis- tent." Teaching guys like Campbell has been rewarding so far, Mat- tison said explaining that when he corrects a player, he usually doesn't see the same mistake the next day. But, the unit still has work to do to get to where Mattison wants it to be. "The entire defense has tons of work to do on basic techniques," Mattison said. "But I would've said that about any team that I've had because unless they're perfect with their technique, I'm not satisfied. This group has to work very, very hard on just basic, steps, punch, blow delivery, those kind of things - the very integral parts of being that kind of a player." Then, the ringswill come. "I assume that any Michigan player has rings," said Mattison, who made his son dig up Mat- tison's Rose Bowl ring when he took the defensive coordinator job at Michigan. "Our goal is to get more of those." By TIM ROHAN Daily Sports Editor Physically, Cam Gordon didn't look much different during prac- tice on Tuesday afternoon. He was the same athletic, 6-foot-3, 207-pound specimen that received a load of hype this time last year during spring prac- tice. And he looked just as he did when he put an exclamation point on the beginning of the 2010 sea- son by blocking a field goal in the first quarter against Connecticut. Yet, there stood Gordon as an outside linebacker in Greg Mat- tison's 4-3 scheme, playing with what appeared to be the first- team defense - his fourth dif- ferent position since coming to Michigan, having already played at wide receiver, safety and Rich Rodriguez's hybrid linebacker position last season. Mattison said Wednesday that Gordon had made the most progress of anyone during the first six spring prac- tices. "I really, really have high hopes for him," Mattison said. "This is a guy that played safety obvi- ously, that now is playing a SAM linebacker up on the line, play- ing against tight ends. This guy, I think has a chance to be a pretty good football player and has a tremendous attitude, wants to do everything right. He runs to the football. He's very physical ... I think he's a kid you're going to see a lot of." When Gordon was moved from safety to the hybrid linebacker position before Michigan's game against Penn State, it was viewed as advantageous having him clos- er to the line of scrimmage. Rodri- guez could get creative in how he used his athletic abilities. Gordon finished the 2010 season with 77 tackles, 3.5 tackles-for-loss, three interceptions, four pass break- ups and two fumble recoveries, including one for a touchdown against Purdue. "Believe me, Cam's areallylong way away," Mattison said. "But as a coach, you see things ina young man, you say, 'This guy really could be one of those really good players some day.' "You're talking about a safety that has never lined up on a guy this close away and now he's in there every day battling with guys a lot bigger than him. His aggres- siveness and his toughness really stand out and he's always been able to run." Mattison would like to see Gor- don get bigger, but with one stipu- lation. "I'd like to see as big as he can get - as big as he can get and still run," Mattison said. When guys come up to Matti- son and ask where he wants them to be, he tells them all the same thing. " 'I want you as strong as you can get' - we don't believe in sup- plements, we don't believe in any of that kind of thing - 'So work out the way (Director of Strength and Conditioning) Aaron (Well- man) wants you to work out and you'll be where we want youto be,' " Mattison tells them. The same advice could apply for Gordon's counterpart, fellow linebacker Mike Jones, who lined up at weakside linebacker spot during Tuesday's practice with the first teamers. He, too, is a bit undersized for the position, listed at 6-foot-2, 207pounds. He's a guy that Mattisonnotedhad alsomade big strides since the start ofspring practice.Joneswassparinglyused as a special teams player his fresh- man year in 2009, and he redshirt- ed last year after he broke his leg against Notre Dame. The unit as a whole still has its work cut out for itself, though. "There's not a lot of minutes that have been played by those guys in that scheme," Mattison said of their inexperience. "You know, where they have to react, they have to adjust, they have to do some things instead of just blitz a lot -- I think that's what a lot of them had done. So now, we have to train them to read run-pass, take . the perfect steps. And when it is pass, drop back. "All of the backers have improved, they just have to improve faster than everybody else. Again, the linebacker posi- tion in our defense might be the most difficult - because you have to do all of it. So that's where a lot of the improvement will have to happen." SUMMER SESSIONS &i UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH SCHOOL OF ARTS AND SCIENCES COLLEGE OF GENERAL STUDIES. 41 I