The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, April 19, 2011 - 5A *Ryan's energetic play fits well with new scheme By TIM ROHAN Daily Sports Editor His helmet was so beaten it looked like he had fought off a ram. Redshirt freshman linebacker Jake Ryan first noticed pieces of his winged crown coming off during the first week of spring practice. His helmet was the only one that had to be repaired this spring as an off-yellow paint covered most of the front left side, serving as a medal of the hits he's levied this spring. Then that paint started taking blue scuff marks from even more hits. "When Jake's on the field, he adds a little something out there and you can just feel it," Michi- gan coach Brady Hoke said. "There's an intensity." "He's a tough sucker," Hoke added on the Inside Michigan Football television show. "He's fun to be around ... He is truly a guy who loves to play the game, and that's the fun part about it." During Michigan's spring game last Saturday, Ryan stood out as a member of the second- team defense - behind first- teamers Cam Gordon and Marell Evans - and showed a diversi- fied skill set: in Michigan defen- sive coordinator Greg Mattison's complex defense, he showed quickness during blitzes and the ability to shift his hips and drop . into coverage. And in a game with little scor- ing, the linebacker dropped back during a cover-4 zone call. Back- up quarterback Devin Gardner looked right and stared down his receiver heading toward the middle of the field. Ryan stepped in fron it in st 22-yar "My Ryan impro' defens hard, 1 you kn ward.' Rya under Ryan i tion - Mattis "a be th S The ing pai up for Michig Mark that hi is that, is wro the fie Add a lot o1 time h doing we've j Jake, h gy and I think ly need Mat compli ing th at of the pass, intercepted quarterbacks Denard Robin- :ride and returned it for a son and Devin Gardner on their d touchdown. heels. And if he's not starting by spring has been good," the fall, Ryan could at least see said. "I feel like I've time as a potential weapon to ved a lot, just getting the throw at opponents. e down. The defense is After the game, Hoke talked but once you get it down, about how he was pleased with now it and you work for- the pressure his defense was able to get, saying it was good to see n redshirted last year some "active guys." Ryan could Rich Rodriguez and now certainly apply to that group. s playing a different posi- Ryan's approach, which com- outside linebacker - in pliments Mattison's aggressive 'on's 4-3 defense. attitude, may be exactly whatthe coaches want out of a linebacker. "I think we've worked more as ' a unit," Ryan said. "We're strip- ping the ball more, everyone is aplayer getting to the ball faster, there's a on no loafing. is defense at "They're making us swarm to the ball. You have to tag the ball ome point." once it's down. When they're still running, you have to tag it because they're just going to keep on running, and we're re have been some grow- going just swarm to the ball and ins for Ryan, but he makes get to it." it with his intangibles. Before he gets to the ball, gan linebackers coach Ryan will have to work his way Smith told MGoBlue.com through and around huge Big s favorite part about Ryan Ten linemen. That will come eas- even when the young guy ier once Ryan adds some bulk to ng in what he's doing on his 6-foot-3, 224-pound frame. Id, he goes hard. "I've been saying since last ed Mattison: "He's made year that Jake's going to be a f mistakes, and then every player on this defense at some e comes back the next day point," fifth-year senior defen- it right. The one thing sive end Ryan Van Bergen said. really been pleased with "He just has to develop more ie shows tremendous ener- physically. He's not very big. He's speed off the edge, which not very heavy. He has to hitthe is something we definite- weight room hard this summer I in our package." and he could probably be a big- tison dialed up all sorts of time contributor." cated blitz packages dur- Ryan could follow junior e spring game that kept defensive end Craig Roh's lead in Redshirt freshman linebackerjake Ryan has drawn praise for how he has picked up Greg Mattison's defense this spring. the weight room. Roh didn't have the luxury of an entire summer to get bigger when he was thrust into a starting role during his true freshman year. Now, Roh has climbed to 251 pounds and said he plans to add 10 more pounds of muscle this summer himself to deal with those big linemen. "My freshmen year I was play- ing at 235 (pounds)," Roh said. "In the Big Ten, that's tough to do. Soyou just put on some weight and it helps. "And you just get mashed around a little bit. It's nice to do the mashing sometimes." Van Bergen: "We've still been wearing the same helmets" . By TIM ROHAN of alumni and former Michi- Daily Sports Editor gan football players flocked to Ann Arbor for multiple events Fifth-year senior defensive end highlighted by Saturday's spring Ryan lranjBergen has hila>hrde i game. Ottriday, Michigan cohach: head coaches since he's been Brady Hoke met with more than at Michi- 250 former players during a team gan. But he First seen on meeting in which Hoke discussed doesn't think -the game how important the alumni were he's any to teaching the current players less of a Wolverine than Michi- about the tradition of Michigan gan players who have fists full of football, among other topics. bowl-game rings. On Friday at his charity basket- Over the weekend, hundreds ball game at Pioneer High School, former Michigan star receiver Braylon Edwards said that Hoke's regime already has a different feel than Rich Rodriguez's. i[It's just different," Edwards- said. "You feel welcome. That right there is enough. You can feel that warmth. That sense of, 'I played here, I deserve to be able to come back and walk around.' That wasn't there. He's bringing that back." After the spring game, Van Ber- gen was asked what it was like to see some former Michigan greats back in the Big House. "It's just kind of unsettling," Van Bergen said. "It's great that thIeV're back. iautnlirekinda like, 'Where have they been the past two or three years?' Because we've still been wearing the same helmets we have been since they were here. You know what I mean? "It's good to have them back, but at the same time, it's new all of a sudden. Which is a good thing, it's good to have alumni back to support us." Players like Mike Hart and Steve Breaston said they felt no animdsity frotm 4odriguez or his ?staff and they were always wel- comed back, but both said maybe other players had their own rea- sons for not coming back. Michigan missed a bowl game 'for its firsttwo years under Rodri- guez - which, in 2008, marked the first time in more than 30 years that the Wolverines had not played in a bowl. Rodriguez was replaced by Hoke in January after Rodriguez finished his career with a 15-22 record. "Ihave no ill >feelings toward # (Rodriguez)," Breaston said. "(But) when it comes to Satur- days it's all about winning games. And everybody keeps makingthis whole, 'Oh, he wasn't accepted.' Butwhenyouwingames onSatur- days you get accepted. It changes a lot ... When you win ballgames, you're goingto be here." Your standard, sappy and heartfelt senior farewell There are a lot of things I didn't learn in college. I still set off the smoke alarm when making grilled cheese sandwiches, I can't tell you much about dino- saurs (despite having taken the class "Dinosaurs. and Other Failures") and I wouldn't CHANTEL know where JENNINGS to begin with algorithms or anthropology.. But in four years, I've gone from being a premed student to an English major, I've been an activist, a GDI, a sorority girl, back to a GDI, an almost-IM sports champion, a volunteer in prisons, a basketball coach, a Spaniard, a Daily writer, a Daily photographer, a student and a Michigan fan. But when asked to define myself, I always end up using the word "writer." I used to think that was solely because of my experience at The Michigan Daily, but to be honest, I'm not sure how much the Daily taught me to write so much as it allotted me the space to do so. It's been a pleasure covering sports teams for three years. But more than anything, I realized the Daily has taught me how to be an adult. It taught me to be grateful, to apologize when you should and to give everything i you can because someday, some- how, it will come back to you (Quid pro quo, John Rubadeau). So, I think I'll use this last byline to do all of that. Thank you to everyone I've worked with. The good and the bad have made me the writer I am today. Thank you to whoever sub- sidizes the cost of the vending machine at the Daily. It's been nice spending just 50 cents on a can of Coca-Cola to help me fin- ish my articles. Thank you to my friends. Mostly, to my four roommates who, for the better part of this year, had no idea which state I was in or when I'd be coming home. You are all wonderful, and the regret of my Daily career will be never writing the ex-athletes feature. I'm sure it would've been Pulitzer worthy. My bad. Patrick, for the past two years you've been offering me quotes for stories. Considering I never covered the football team, they've been worthless. But for today, here you go. "The early bird gets the worm," Patrick Collins said Mon- day. "The second mouse gets the cheese." On a less serious note (thanks for the transition Nez, but you still can't date my little sister), I would like to apologize to my professors. I don't think I was ever anyone's favorite student. I've skipped far more classes than I should've and I've been half asleep for the others. I've often gotten comments on my papers that read: You write b you do always you wr School I hate: And readin who've didn't1 classes the onf cation. manyc read? Daily a YO. t] ft You never g calculu have a apprec out the of thee I've 420 M money earned better on deadline than on the baseline at the Duke/ for my class. And there's Michigan basketball game this the inevitable groan, "Oh, year, I wanted to tell Coach ite for the Daily." (Read: Beilein that I think he's a great is your No. 2 priority and coach. More importantly, I you.) wanted to tell him I think he's since you're probably a good man. g this, sorry to my parents Had I not spent the past just realized how much I three years seeing these ath- prioritize my schoolwork/ letes as people and seeing the /exams considering you're emotion behind the moments es who paid for this edu- that make them such, I'm not But let's be serious, how sure if I'd see him as anything of my final papers have you more than a basketball coach. None. How many of my Writing has made me more irticles? Almost all. human and helped me to see others in the same light. I think in 10 or 20 years, I'll i write better really start to understand how much the Daily gave me. And in )n deadline these four years when I was in classrooms learninghow much han you do I didn't/wouldn't ever/couldn't ever know, I was learning who I Dr my class. was and what I could do on the second floor of 420 Maynard. It was the most frustrating and rewarding thing I've ever can't be that upset. I was done. I hope it continues tobe going to study medicine or that way as long as I can write, as. There are people who because if I can find a place like passion for that, and I the Daily and fellow writers that iate that those people are work as hard as they do (for as re because I am not one little as they do), I'll be in a very a. special place. put in countless hours at So thank you to those who aynard St. I've spent more deserve it, sorry to those who on coffee than Iever desire it and goodbye to those l here and I'd like to think who have read this. that I've helped keep a few of the restaurants on State Street afloat during this recession. I've done my best to separate myself from being a fan at the events I covered. But as I sat -Jennings will be graduating in a week and a half and leaving Michigan sometime thereafter. Until then, she can be found at Dominick's and can be reached at chanjen@umich.edu. )01 _d