8A -- Wednesday, January 12, 2011 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com We really don't know anything gnorance is bliss. It's one of the most cliche sayings in the English lan- guage, so my apologies. I'm only using it because it's applicable to the mysterious odyssey that was Athletic Director Dave Brandon's S search for Michigan's next JOE head coach. STAPLETON There was speculation about the locations, at various times, of certain wing-helmeted planes and Domino's jets. Jim Har- baugh was as good as signed, then he wasn't, then he was again after he didn't sign anywhere for a day or two, and then he was the coach of the 49ers. Les Miles was a done deal as late as two nights ago (I'm looking at you, Joe Schad). When the Big Lead "broke" the story that Harbaugh-to-Michigan had fallen apart, the incessant bragging about the scoop was annoying but understandable: It was the one time throughoutthe whole thingthat someone got something undeniably right about the whole mad tragicomedy. Through all the unnamed sourc- es and flight trackers, through the baseless speculation by reporters and yahoos alike, we all learned one thing: We don't know anything. And you know what? I'm OK with it. And I hope, for your sake, that you are too. A common takeaway from the search: "Michigan isn't the job we think it is." I was one of the loud- est supporters of this theory. And maybe it's true. But afterthinking about it, that's not something you can infer from this search. - Sure, it appeared that Harbaugh spurned Michigan. He was the obvious first choice, right? But how much do we know about the talks between Brandon and Harbaugh? Not much. In fact, nothing. We don't know freaking anything about them. And Les Miles? We're still unsure about who spurned whom in that situation, but it's really impossible to say. ESPN's Joe Schad reported Miles turned down an offer. Brandon claims he didn't offer Harbaugh or Miles. And on and on. What if Brady Hoke was Bran- don's guy the whole time? What if Brandon was simply humoring the fan base bytalking to Harbaugh and Miles? It's certainly a pos- sibility. In fact, that was one of the early reports at the beginning of the search (from FOX2, but still). if that's true, doesn't it mean that Michigan was the picky one in this situation? But once again, we have no idea. So now it's Hoke. And guess what? We don't know anything about him, either. We know he turned around a Ball State program that was in shambles - and it took him five years (four, if you count 7-6 - but our head coach was just fired for that record, so...). He went 9-4 his second year at San Diego State and 4-8 his first year. He coached under former Michigan coach Lloyd Carr, who went 1-5 against Ohio State coach Jim Tressel. So what can we reasonably expect? Again, who knows. Here's my humble plea to Wol- verine nation: You don't know any- thing, so just accept that and throw your supportbehind this guy. Try to forget about how botched you believe this search was, how close Michigan was to landing Harbaugh - who suddenly became the greatest coach in football over the past two weeks - and how underwhelmed you are with Brady Hoke's name. Michigan fans focused on all the negatives once already and look what that yielded. Embrace the unknown instead of fearing it. After all, you know whatthey say. Ignorance is bliss. Stapleton can be reached at jstaple@umich.edu 0 0 0 Brady Hoke is the 19th Michigan football coach in the program's history. CHRIS RYBA/Daily Junior guard Zak Novak, Michigan's leading rebounder this season, will look to help Michigan continue its solid play defensively against No. 2 Ohio State. Michigan gets.i opportunity for revenge againstOS Merrill displays durability, talent in first season By MARK BURNS weeks, whereas we only played Daily Sports Editor two games," Berenson said. "I wasn't surprised because he played Jon Merrill had the opportunity a high level of hockey, and then he to catch his breath, but only after got right back here and stepped another solid all-around perfor- back into his regular game." mance. While he's played just 21 games After playing for the U.S. as a Division I athlete, it's clear National Junior team in the 2011 that Merrill plays with a relative IIHF World Junior Champion- smoothness and style that isn't ships over the holidays break, the characteristic of an 18-year-old. freshman defenseman could have In the Wolverines' 4-0 win over had the luxury of taking this past Michigan State on Saturday, Mer- weekend off, according to Michi- rill had three Spartans scratching gan hockey coach Red Berenson. their heads and wondering why But the Ann Arbor native they couldn't steal the puck from declined, saying it wouldn'tbe "too him. tough" to lace up the skates against With a loose puck lying in front Michigan State. of the Michigan bench in the mid- "I get to play hockey. I love to do die of the first period, Merrill cor- it," Merrill saidbefore practice last ralled it and dangled it through Thursday, two hours after arriving and around the defenders from at Detroit Metro Airport. "I know I practically a standstill, before head wanted to play, so there's no doubt manning the puck to a fellow Wol- in my mind that I was going to verine. play." "He's one of those exceptional Berenson added: "He couldn't players ... He knows what to do at wait to get back here. He was only this level," Berenson said of Mer- gone a few weeks, but he was excit- rill, who is tied for fourth in CCHA ed just to come back to Michigan." defensive scoring. "He came in as Merrill then proceeded to tally a high, blue-chip recruit, and he's two assists, block six shots and log lived up to it. That's the hardest his usual significant minutes in the thingto do." Wolverines' weekend split with But despite his maturity on the Michigan State, picking up right ice and his ability to keep oppos- where he left off in The Big Chill - ing teams guessing with how he he notched two goals in the team's outmaneuvers them, there are still 5-0 rout of the Spartans at the Big areas to improve on such as putting House. on some weight and getting quick- Only after the split Merrill final- er, according to Berenson - even ly decided, along with Berenson's for a player who has drawn com- wishes, to take a break from prac- parisons by teammates to eventual tice on Monday and let his body Hall of Famer Nick Lidstrom. recover from the past three weeks. And being such a highly touted During that stretch, Merrill and recruit and property of the New sophomore forward Chris Brown Jersey Devils, which drafted Mer- represented their country in Buf- rill with the 38th pick in the 2010 falo, N.Y., playing nine games NHL Entry Draft, there's always (including exhibitions) in 18 days the slight possibility he could sign against some of the world's best an entry-level contract at anytime competition. during his collegiate career. Merrill - who didn't seem to Just look at ex-Wolverine defen- miss a beat against the Spartans seman Jack Johnson who left after after missing the Great Lakes Invi- his sophomore campaign, signing tational - hasn't missed a game with the Los Angeles Kings, as an all season. Ironically, his defen- example. sive partner, senior Chad Langlais, But for now, Berenson can never missed a game during his breathe a sigh of relief and know first year in Ann Arbor as well, and that he'll have the highly-touted is a model of consistency in the recruit in Ann Arbor for the time lineup. being. "He had the advantage of play- "Right now, Jonny's really in a ing nine games in the last three good place," Berenson said. By ZAK PYZIK t thoughts. Really that's the only Daily Sports Editor thing that I thought about. Now that you brought it up, I think Michigan men's basketball about it." sophomore guard Darius Morris The last time that the Buckeyes seems to have totally forgotten came to Ann Arbor, Michigan about the Wolverines' buzzer- pulled off a 73-64 upset, though beater loss to Ohio State in the Big Ohio State captain and last sea- Ten tournament last season. son's National Player of the Year When asked if last year's 69-68 Evan Turner was out of the game season-ending because of injury. defeat to the The Buckeyes are led by a dif- then fifth-ranked OhiO State ferent national star this year in Buckeyes moti- at Michigan freshman forward Jared Sull- vated any sort inger. The 280-pound rookie has of revenge for Manu: claimed eight o h ieBgTn Ohio Stat ftenn i e Wednesday's 16-0; Michi- Freshman of the Week awards this rematch against gan 11-5 season - the one being claimed by Ohio State at When: teammate Deshaun Thomas. Crisler Arena, Wednesday Leading the conference in Morris was non- 6:30 P.M. defensive rebounds and second in chalant. Where- offensive rebounding, Sullinger "Oh, honestly Criser Arena tallies a team-high 18 points per the thing that I game. Michigan dealt with Kan- thought about TV/Radio: sas's Markieff and Marcus Morris when you said BTN in the post on Sunday by showing (that was when) different looks on defense and we had Ohio State at home," Mor- sometimes double-teaming them ris said on Tuesday afternoon. in the paint. That type of team "I just really went back to when mentality will be necessary to we had Ohio State here at home stop Sullinger as well. and had a victory, just positive "We've played some good post players already," redshirt fresh- man forward Jordan Morgan said. "We need to approach it the same way, as a team. Not just one- on-one matchups. We just have to shift our whole defense towards some of their better players." The Wolverines intend to alter- nate between 1-3-1 zone and a man-to-man defensive schemes throughout the game. By dealing out different looks on defense, Michigan coach John Beilein plans to limit what the Buckeyes can do with their size advantage. "Whatever (defense) is getting stops, works," junior guard Zack Novak said. "I think mixing it up is good because it doesn't let teams get into rhythm. I know that when teams mix it up against us, I guess it just messes with you a little bit. You can't really get into (a) flow mentally." But slowing down Ohio State's post game isn't the Wolverines' only concern. The Buckeyes boast some of the best perimeter play in the conference. Senior guards Jon Diebler and David Lighty are shooting a combined 49 percent from 3-point range. "Lighty has improved every year because he is an athlete," Beilein said. "He is a football play- er, a two sport athlete. He is phys- ical, he gets to the basket. They'll isolate him a lot on our guys and just try to get him to the foul line. And when you coach against a kid for four years, you just see that 3-pointer climb ... He had a huge one against Minnesota (on Sun- day). He can do so many different things." Though there are new players on the rise for the Buckeyes, they are a similar team to the one the Wolverines contested three times last year. Michigan's experience in previous games with Ohio State will serve as a blueprint for what needs to be done on Wednesday. "If you look at them last year we played them in six halves," Beilein said. "I think we won four of the six halves but we lost two of the three games. So we need to make sure that we put two halves together ... We have to keep it con- sistent so that we have a chance to win. We can't continue to get these double digit deficits and come back to win, it's really hard." 6 Freshman phenom Sullinger will be a handful for Blue By CHANTEL JENNINGS DailySportsEditor Don't let his number fool you. He may wear No. 0, but fresh- man Jared Sullinger is anything but nil for the undefeated Ohio State men's basketball team. The 6-foot-9 forward has quickly made a name for himself, not only on the Buckeye roster, but nationally. Last week, Sull- inger was named to the John R. Wooden Award Midseason Top- 30 list - just one of two freshmen mentioned. But recently, his efforts have been focused on the Big Ten, where he has led the Buckeyes to a 3-0 start in conference play. Coaches and players around the conference knew about Sull- inger's dominance before the sea- son began - he has been named the Big Ten Player of the week, or Freshman of the week, in eight of the nine weeks so far this season. "He's above his age level as far as strength," Wisconsin coach Bo Ryan said in a teleconference on Monday. "Sullinger, physically, was ready. He obviously listens, he obviously does what's best for the team. You can see that he posi- tions well. You can see he's not just a talented player, but he's a skilled, talented player. He's a dif- ference maker." Entering the Buckeyes' match- up with the Wolverines, he remains the dominant force for Ohio State. He leads the team in points (17.9) and rebounds (10.3) per game. All the while shooting nearly 59 percent from the floor, second on the team only to senior forward Dallas Lauderdale. But in three Big Ten games for the Buckeyes, Sullinger's numbers have improved to 19 points and 11 rebounds per game. He has eight double-doubles on the season and is a brute force on the glass. His shear size makes him a force to be reckoned with, but he has surpris- ingly light hands for a post player. His impressive numbers as a first-year player under Ohio State coach Thad Matta shouldn't sur- prise anyone. As a senior at Northland High School in Columbus, Sullinger averaged 24.5 points and 12.3 rebounds a game. But even more impressively, he shot 78 percent from the floor. That same year he was named a McDonald's All-American, a high school Naismith Award winner and Parade Magazine's Player of the Year. "He had signs in preseason workouts where he was very dom- inant," Matta said. "I remember watching him in the quarterfinals of the National AAU Tournament in Orlando and he had 28 (points) and 19 (rebounds). And I'm like, 'No, he can't play any better in the semifinals.' Then he got 32 (points) and 20 (rebounds) and I'm like, 'He can't play any bet- ter.' And then he went into the Championship game and had like 36 (points) and 22 (rebounds) or something." In a video posted by the Ohio State Athletic Department on Tuesday, Sullinger expressed his excitement to play in his first rivalry game as a Buckeye. Having grown up in Columbus he said he experienced it, but he's looking forward to doing so as a player. "It's always going to be a rival- ry," Sullinger said. "It's always going to be bad blood between Ohio State and Michigan and you've just gotta enjoy it ... Some sports, like us, you get (to play Michigan) six or seven or eight times in your four years here. So you've just got to enjoy playing against Michigan." It remains unseen whether or not Sullinger will see more rivalry games outside of this season. Ohio State is notorious for sending freshmen to the NBA - with five in the past four years. But for this season, Michigan has about 280 pounds of No. 0 on its hands. 0