The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com September 19, 2011 - 3B The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom September 19, 2011 - 38 GAME STATISTICS Team Stats Rsh/Yds Passing Yards Offensive Plays Total Offense Kickreturns/Yds Puntreturns/Yds Comp/Att/nt Punts/Avg Fumbles/Lost Penalties/Yards Time ofPoss PASSING M Player C-A Robinson, D. 7-18 Totals 7-18 RUSHING Player Att RAbi, . 28 1 Toussaint 11 Gardner 1 Totals 50 3 MICH 24 50/376 95 68 471 6/350 3/17 7/18/1 3/35 1/0 2/17 32:15 EMU 46/207 29 52 236 2/133 2/16 3/6/1 5/43.6 1/1 5/45 27:45 DEFENSE From Page 1B position," Kovacs said. "We were right on the goal line. What more could you ask for?" Added Eastern Michigan coach Ron English: "I think you've got to score from the one- inch line. If you can't score from the half-yard line then you're going to have a hard time win- ning." Opening the second quarter with another fourth down, this time from the three-yard line, English had learned his lesson. He kicked the field goal, giving the Eagles their first and only lead of the day. The saving grace for Michigan actually ended up being the East- ern Michigan trailing away from their jet sweep package. On a first down in Wolver- ines territory early in the second quarter, English checked in Tyler Benz, his backup quarterback to an unfamiliar formation. "They gave us a little funky formation," Gordon said. "We knew something tricky was up." Gillett took the snap and threw left to Benz, who had stepped back from the line. He took a look downfield and angled a pass toward the near pylon. Gordon, though, had "sniffed it out." He lunged for the over- throw with his right hand, hold- ing the receiver off with his left. "It just came down in my glove," Gordon said. The explanation was simple enough, but the catch was spec- tacular. Then junior quarterback Denard Robinson and the offense woke up, tacking on two touch- downs before the halftime break. Another pair of touchdowns in the third quarter all but sealed the game up. Gillett finished the first half with 29 passing yards. He ended the game with 29 passing yards. Zero second-half passing yards, throwing just once while facing a double-digit deficit - that's rare, even for a run-heavy team. Hoke pointed to the pressure provided by his defensive line as a key factor, saying he "felt them a little more this week." The front four were led by junior defensive end Craig Roh, who finally made his mark on the stat sheet - and on the field - with five tackles and a sack. It seemed Mattison and the defense had figured the Eagles out - after their wide-receiver pass and flea-flicker (two of just five passes on the day) stumped them in the first quarter. "They came out and threw the kitchen sink at us in the first half - some formations we've never seen - and we stayed calm and knew eventually they'd have to play some football," Kovacs said. But English had a different explanation. "To me, the biggest thing that happened was, we weren't doing that," English said, thrusting his fist forward to simulate his running backs running straight downfield. "We were doing this," he con- tinued, movinghis fistin azig-zag pattern. "And I thought Michigan improved obviously, but I know we can run it. And you have to be willing to take those tough yards as a back. That was disappointing to me." The Eagles finished with 207 rushing yards, compared to the Wolverines' 376. Michigan's defense switched AI C H I G A N k Yds 1 8 95 1 s5 TD 2 2 Senior linebacker J.B. Fitzgerald and the rest of ther Michigan defense held Eastern Michigan to 51 yards of total offense in the second half. RECEIVING Play' Gallon Koger Dileo Jackson Totals No. 3 2 t 1 7 Yds 46 7 382 Yds 43 21 19 12 95 Avg 4.2 7 7.5 Avg 14.3 14.5 19 12 13.6 L9 52 12 52 24 TD 1 0 1 0 0 0 2 TD 0 1 1 0 2 from making the special plays occasionally in the first half to making the correct plays down the stretch. Eastern Michi- gan's three points were the least allowed by Michigan since a 38-0 shutout of Notre Dame on Sept. 15, 2007. But from the looks of the open- ing drive, Mattison has plenty to work on with this group. Play N No. Yds Avg Lg Wile 3 10s 3s 41 Totals 3 10s 3s 41 KICKOFF RETURNS Player No. Yds Avg Lg TO Smith 2 31 15.5 17 A Totals 2 31 15s5 17 0 PUNT RETURNS Player No. Yds Avg Lg TO "allon 2 17 3 Dileo 1 2 3 Totals 3 17 s6 1 0 1 TACKLES Player Solo Asst Tot Hawthorne 7 3 10 Kovacs 4 4 8 Gordon, T 2 4 6 Demens 0 1 1 Blac 3 1 4 Van Bergen 0 4 4 Fitzgerald, J 2 1 3 Floyd 1 2 3 Johnson 1 0 1 Bey' 1 0 1 Washington 1 0 1 Fur"an 1 0 1 Avery 0 1 1 Tas 38 30 68 RAFTERY From Page 1B were no bright lights, no para- chutists, no College GameDay, no Desmond Howard, no special band performances and certainly no intriguing matchups - Robin- son made it worth watching. Sure, he had his struggles. He was just 7-of-18 passing for 95 yards, two touchdowns and an interception. At times, he looked more like a shot-put thrower than a Division-I quarterback. After Robinson underthrew fifth-year senior receiver Junior Heming- way and Eastern Michigan's Latarrius Thomas picked it off on the Wolverines' first drive of the game, I'm pretty sure I heard a few strands of hair being pulled out Michigan fans' heads. A few plays later, with the Wolverines on their own two- yard line, Robinson rolled right looking to pass, couldn't find anybody, danced around in the end zone, juked a couple defend- ers, lowered his shoulder, ran to his right and was tackled at the line of scrimmage. I'm tired just from describing the play. It was a no-gain and the drive resulted in a punt and more groans from the stands. But in a way, that's part of what makes watching Robinson so fun: You never know what he's goingto do. Most quarterbacks would've just thrown the ball away. Not Denard. He'd rather dance around all day looking for day- light to run. He'll run 20 yards backwards, 30 yards sideways and then 21 forward just to gain a yard. With the Wolverines down 3-0 early in the second quarter, a radio announcer behind me pro- claimed, "This one is starting to have the smell of an upset." I'm not sure what he was smelling, but there was no way the Eagles would keep Robinson bottled up forever. Two drives later, Robinson found the light. With the Wol- verines on their own three yard line, he found a seam and burst "We can't be getting behind at the beginning of the game," Kovacs said. "If we want to be a great defense, we've got to stop them in their tracks at the begin- ning of the game. "We came out a little flat, got off to a rough start again. There's definitely some things that we need to do. We need to come out with that intensity every game." In Michigan's first drive of the second half, Robinson racked up 29 rushing yards and zero pass- ing, capping the drive off with a one-yard run up the middle for the score to give the Wolverines a 21-3 edge. He cut left, cut right, sprinted forward, ran backward, juked sideways, turned it all around - everything short of completing the Hokey Pokey - for 198 total rushing yards and one touch- down. On a day when his game was clearly off, he out-rushed all of the Michigan running backs by himself. He nearlyout-gained the whole Eastern Michigan team. And asked after the game what he felt was wrong with his passing game, Robinson paused for a second. "I always got room for improvement," he said. "That's the biggest room." Even confined to a press room, he found the open space. I'd say he's worth the price of admission. -Raftery can be reached at kraftery@umich.edu. CHRIS DZOM8AK/Daily Junior quarterback Denard Robinson was bottled up for a while before he broke a 52-yard run in the second quarter, on his way to a 198-yard rushing day. through the Eagles' defense for 52 yards, breezing by defenders who could only crank their necks and watch. The play eventually led to Michigan's first score of the game. For the rest of the game, Rob- inson continued to excel on the ground and struggle through the air. Eastern Michigan I PASSING Player Gllett RUSHING Gillett White Bufield Totals RECEIVING Player Shlb C-A 3-5 Yds 29 29 11 7 5 1 46 No. 3 Yds 80 61 34 18 14 2 220 Yds 18 6 5 29 5.5 4.9 24 2 45 Avg 18 9.7 TD 0 0 0 Lg 14 19 10 18 12 2 19 ig 18 6 5 18 Int 0 TD 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 TD 0 0 0 0 ROBINSON From Page 1B the first quarter 0-0. "As much as you say to a play- er, 'He's going to make plays,' I think it can be demoralizing," English said. It was never the design to run Robinson as much as they did. Earlier in the week, offensive coordinator Al Borges said he wanted Robinson to carry the ball about 15 to 17 times. "We don't want to get him beat up," Michigan coach Brady Hoke said. "We're going to play in a pret- ty physical league, so we have to make sure we get other ways.... It takes a toll on your body, and he's not the biggest guy in the world." But, while Michigan got 118 yards from junior running back Vincent Smith, the Wolverines needed Robinson to continue running the football because of his struggles in the passing game from the outset. On Michigan's first drive, Robinson threw behind his receiver for an interception while attempting to convert on fourth down. Early in the second quarter, fifth-year senior wide receiver Junior Hemingway had beaten his cornerback on third down. Robinson overthrew the long touch pass. Robinson finished the game 7-for-18 for just 95 yards and one interception. He did have two touchdown passes - his second going to sophomore wide receiv- er Drew Dileo - but it was the second straight game Robinson had completed just two passes in the first half. "I think we just got to be bet- ter with our feet, setting our feet on some throws," Hoke said. "That's usually is where it starts with a quarterback." By the end of the game, Rob- inson got benched - in a good way. With 39 seconds left in the game, sophomore quarterback Devin Gardner trotted out to take the last three snaps. Two were handoffs, the final was a designed quarterback run for seven yards. When a quarterback passes for less than 100 yards and still controls the game enough so that the backup quarterback comes in for mop-up duty, some- times all you can do is laugh. PUTING Player Karutz Totals gKICKOFF RETURNS Player Paopao TACKLES Player Cudworth Slater Poole wRos WOsrman No. Yds Avg lg 5 218 43.6 53 5 218 43.6 53 No. 4 1 1 6 Solo 5 6 5 4 2 4 2 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 40 Yds 92 17 13 122 Asst a 2 3 3 5 0 2 2 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 28 Avg "3 Lg "2 WANT MORE SPORTS? Check out coverage from this weekend's Michigan field hockey, men's and women's cross country, and rowing events. ALL ONLINE AT MICHIGANDAILY.COM Tot 9 8 8 7 7 4 4 4 4 3 3 1 1 7 t 3 t 1 68 7 Up to $7,500 award 7 Pre-candidate doctoral students 7 International component required 7 Proposals must integrate Mha M. Weinberg leA. '50) all three areas JOIN DAILY SPORTS. COME TO OUR SUNDAY MEETINGS ON 420 MAYNARD STREET. 1 P.M. Upcoming Campus Events -Info Session: Monday, Sept.19th 6:30 pm, International Center, Rm 9 -Application Workshop: Tuesday, Sept. 20th 6:30 pm, International Center, Rm 9 Apply online by Oct. Vtfor open programs departing in2012! facebook.com/UMPeaceCorps -"peacecorps.gov