The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com September 12, 2011-- 3B GAME STATISTICS TeamSlats ND MICH First Downs 28 16 Rush/Yds 33/198 26/114 Passing Yards 315 338 Offensive Plays 72 50 TtalOffese 513 452 Kik retuns/Yds 6/89 5/98 Punt returns/ Yds 3/10 1/21 Comp/Aft/Int 27/39/2 11/24/3 Punts/Avg 4/33.5 5/386 Fumles/Lost 4/3 1/0 Penalties/Yards 9/75 9/82 Time of Poss 37:01 22:59 M I C H I G A N PASSING obiAson,D. 124 48 Totals 112 338 4 PyIN Att Yds Avg Lg Robinson, D. 16 108 6.8 39 Hopkins,S. 5 10 2 3 Smith 1 3 3 3 TEAwM 2 -4 - 0 Totals 26 114 4.4 39 RECEIVING Player No. Yds Avg Lg Hemingway,. 3 165 55 77 GETallo T 2 U839 6 631 Umt 2 6 13 2 Grady 1 27 27 27 Roundtree 1 16 16 16 Totas 33 30.7 7 NINGPlye No. Yds Avg Wile 5 193 38.6 Totals 5 193 38.6 KICKOFF RETURNS Player No. Yds Avg L Smith 5 98 19.6 2 Totals 5 98 19.6 2 PUNT RETURN$S Player No. Yds Avg La TACKLES Player Solo Asst Kovacs s 3 Robinson, M. 5 2 Hwhorne, B. 4 Ryan 2 2 Black 3 0 Van Bergen 2 0 Avery 0 2 Gallon 1 0 Fitzgerald 1 0 Sih 1 McColgan 1 0 Morgan 0 1 Totals 49 24 .g TD 3 0 0 0 0 0 9 1 .g ,7 4 ?t 6 5 ll TD 1 0 0 3 Lg 47 47 ROBINSON From Page 1B touchdowns, it became clear early that he had to make some- thing happen. No Michigan run- ning back rushed for more than 10 yards. But from the beginning, Robin- son struggled. He completed just two passes in the first half and overthrew a screen pass for an interception. The throw was sim- ilar to the one he hit Smith with for the go-ahead touchdown. When the team went to the lock- er room, Michigan had a rattled Robinson and was in jeopardy. "I went and talked to him at halftime and really just needed to calm him down because some- times he speeds everything up and then kind of loses track of where he is," fifth-year senior center David Molk said. "He just needed to calm down and once we got back out there in the second half, he was ready to go." It didn't translate immediately to the field. Robinson completed just two more passes in the third and threw another interception. As the quarter wound down, the game appeared over yet again. Notre Dame quarterback Tommy Rees' second touchdown pass of the game put Notre Dame up 24-7. TURNOVERS From Page 1B Dame driving yet again and threatening to blow the game open, redshirt junior safety Jor- dan Kovacs slipped in front of receiver Michael Floyd on the sideline to intercept Rees's third- down pass. "I think we did a good job of disguising the defense," Kovacs said of the play. "I think the quar- terback thought we were blitzing. He checked out of it and he didn't see us drop into coverage." Added Michigan coach Brady Hoke: "It was a tremendous play because it started on the line of scrimmage being a good play. We gave them a good look and every- body then bailed out, and I think At the break, Rees had one fewer touchdown pass than Robinson had completions. On the Wolverines' first play after the touchdown, Fighting Irish defensive end Kapron Lew- is-Moore grabbed Robinson by the ankles. Before going down, Robinson fired a pass to fifth- year senior wide receiver Junior Hemingway, coming across the field behind his defender. Hemingway went 77 yards to the six-yard line. Robinson entered the fourth with 136 yards passing. Over half of them came on one throw. The defense kept Michigan (2-0) in the game. While Rees had 315 yards and three touchdowns, he also threw two interceptions and Notre Dame fumbled three times. And it was a Wolverines turnover that turned Robinson around. With Michigan on the one-yard line, sophomore Ste- phen Hopkins fumbled. The ball bounced back and right in front of Robinson, who picked it up and ran into the endzone untouched. "Once I handed it off, I looked, I was like 'what?' "Robinson said. "And I just grabbed the ball and ran." The next time Robinson touched the ball, he both threw and ran effectively, bringing it confused them a little bit." It was just the second time all game the Michigan defense stopped Notre Dame from scor- ing, giving the Wolverines con- fidence that they were clearly lacking early in the game. On the ensuing offensive possession, Michigan scored on a 43-yard touchdown grab by fifth-year senior Junior Hemingway, tight- ening the score to 14-7 when it clearly could have - and should have - been much worse. On the next Notre Dame drive, with the Fighting Irish on the Michigan 18-yard line and in the midst of another impressive scor- ing drive, Rees rolled right, look- ing for Floyd in the end zone. But he waited just a second too long, giving redshirt junior cornerback J.T. Floyd enough time to drop LZ TD 24 0 24 0 -9 TD 21 0 21 0 Tot 12 9 8 7 6 6 4 Junior quarterback Denard Robinson accounted for about 99 percent of his team's offense on Saturday. Michigan within three with a beautiful throw on Gallon's fade route. But Robinson couldn't shake his demons, throwing another interception - this time it was at the goal line with four minutes left. After the defense bailed him out again, Robinson took over with 2:16 left - just enough time for a two-minute drill. "The last drive we had offen- sively, number 16's ability to back and jump in front of Floyd to make the interception. Just like that, instead of trail- ing21-7 - or worse, 28-0 if Kovacs didn't force his interception - the Wolverines had the ball back, down by just seven with about five minutes left in the half. Both interceptions came on passes intended for Floyd, Notre Dame's all-time receptions leader who finished the game with 13 recep- tions for 159 yards. "You can never eliminate a guy like that or take him out of the game, but that's something we tried to do," Kovacs said. "He's a great player and he's gonna get his catches and we knew that, but we couldn't let the rest of the team beat us." The two first-half interceptions were key in keeping Michigan in elude and evade and step up and throw the ball, that's something that we always have going for us," Michigan coach Brady Hoke said. "We've done two-minute drills since we got here in Janu- ary. We've probably done 1,000 two-minute drills with different scenarios, different timeouts, different ones-on-ones, twos-on- twos because those are the high pressure - most pressure - situ- ations that you have in a football the game, but in the second half, a fumble recovery set the Wolver- ines up to have a shot at finishing off a miraculous comeback. With Notre Dame up 24-21 and just over six minutes left in the game, the Irish were just seven yards away from seemingly put- ting the game out of reach for Michigan. Rees dropped back to pass, cocked his arm back to throw, and somehow, inexpli- cably, the ball slipped out of his hands without being touched. There was a scramble for the ball, and fifth-year senior defensive tackle Ryan Van Bergen came out of the scrum with it. It was the fourth forced turnover for the Wolverines. "We did step up and make some big plays," Martin said. "Throughout the game we had game so I was confident that we knew how to handle that." Michigan scored but so did Notre Dame. Three touchdowns were scored in the final 1:12. Rob- inson had to lead another come back not in a two-minute drill, but a 30-second version. That's when Robinson, on his + most imperfect day, threw the imperfect pass that led to the Roundtree touchdown. It was the perfect victory. some adversity, but it made us better throughout the game, and I think we did a really good job of stepping up and making plays when we needed to." The defense clearly had its struggles throughout the game (it gave up 513 total yards and allowed what appeared then to be the game-winning drive by Notre Dame with just 30 seconds left), but the players did what they had to do in order to keep Michigan in the game. "That's the unique thing about this defense," Kovacs said. "We're gonna fight. At times we played well but at other times it was tough. We just put it in the past and kept fighting. We knew good things would happen." In other words, they didn't stop believin'. 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