k " .Yt V l;- IC r, , r ,, r 9 L n e The Michigan Daily michigandaily.com September 20,2011 MICHIGAN 28, SAN DIEGO STATE 7 Robinson helps Hoke beat former team, former QB By TIM ROHAN Daily Sports Editor Would Brady Hoke trade Denard Rob- inson for Ryan Lindley? Would he choose his newer, sleeker, faster quarterback or his former tall, prototype, NFL-made model? The junior quarterback Robinson made several good arguments on Satur- day, running for 200 yards for the third time in his career, and three touchdowns, tying a career high. Plus, his team won - Robinson and the 22nd-ranked Wolver- ines beat Lindley and the rest of Hoke's former players at San Diego State 28-7, improving to 4-0 on the season. So what's the debate? Well, Robinson did most of his talking with his legs, not his arm. Tradition says quarterbacks aren't supposed to pass for less than 100 yards in consecutive weeks, as Robinson has, and be consid- ered stars. Denard Robinson isn't traditional. Hoke and offensive coordinator Al Borges are realizing that, because the offense that Robinson ran on Saturday was hardlyrecognizable from the one Aztecs' quarterback Lindley played in the past two years under Borges and Hoke. "If the best player on the field - and I'm talking about both teams now - the best player is a spread quarterback, it's not unusual that they're in the spread about 80 percent of the time," said San Diego State coach Rocky Long, Hoke's former defensive coordinator. "Every once in awhile they line up the same way and they hand the power play, and they ranI thinka couple sprint outs. And they ran a bootleg or two, but that's the only thing that looks like last year's (San Diego State) offense. The rest of it is spread, which is smart." In the first quarter, it seemed like the debate would beover rather quickly. Robinson'sthird snap of the game was a nifty 19-yard run. Three plays later, he scored an easy follow-the-leader five- yard touchdown. Three plays later, Robinson and junior running back Vincent Smith ran a rare option play. Seeing no one between him and the endzone, Robinson knifed through the line for a 53-yard touch- down run. Long's sophisticated 3-3-5 defense blitzed Robinson too often in the first half. So Robinson, Smith and redshirt sophomore running back Fitz Toussaint, who started at running back, ran past the pressure and into the open space behind it. When Long adjusted, dropping his players back in coverage in the second half, Robinson had an even tougher time throwing the ball. Receivers were underthrown. His feet weren't always set. Sometimes Robinson had all day to throw. And he just missed his receiver or, on a couple of occasions, made poor decisions. The instance came on a third down, when Robinson stepped up and had room to run for the first. But perhaps con- scious of what Borges had taught him about staying true to his progression, he tried to force the ball into a well-covered receiver and it was tipped and picked. It was Robinson's third-straight poor- ly thrown ball, his second interception of the game and his sixth of the young See ROBINSON, Page 3B Aztecs give 'tribute' to former coaches, Countess shines as sub Lindley, Hillman hounded by Blue By KEVIN RAFTERY Daily Sports Editor During the Michigan football team's 28-7 victory over San Diego State on Saturday, several Michigan coaches - including head coach Brady Hoke - spent the entire game on the Aztecs' NOTEBOOK sideline. But don't panic - the coaches were on the Michigan sidelines, too. The only difference was they were in their full human form on the Wolverines' sideline. For the Aztecs, they were sim- ply signs indicating formations. Throughoutthe game, the San Diego State coaches held up pictures of all the coaches and administrators who departed the team last year for Michi- gan. Each picture represented a differ- ent type of play for the Aztecs. "We chose the pictures based on, we know those guys and we respect those guys," San Diego State coach Rocky Long said. "They related to certain cov- erages by their personalities." For example, Hoke, who is known for his defensive mind, represented See AZTECS, Page 3B By STEPHEN J. NESBITT Daily SportsEditor It was only after the San Diego State players removed their helmets and approached him after the game that Michigan coach Brady Hoke recog- nized his offense from last season. NFL-caliber quarterback Ryan Lind- ley was harassed in the pocket. And Heisman Trophy candidate Ronnie Hillman was contained by the Michi- gan defense in the Wolverines' 28-7 victory. It was the most lopsided Aztec defeat since Hoke led them to a 38-7 loss to then-No. 18 Utah on Nov. 21, 2009 - also the last time a defense held San Diego State to a single-digit score. Hoke's Aztec teams the past two sea- sons averaged 35 points per game. Now his Michigan defense nearly shut them out. Prior to the game, defensive coor- dinator Greg Mattison gathered the Michigan defense at the hotel - and later in the locker room - to stress the importance of playing sound defense from the first snap. In their three previous games, the Wolverines suffered through open- ing drives of 74, 57 and 55 yards, twice allowing touchdowns. Against the Aztecs, Michigan took control of the line of scrimmage early, snothering Hillman behind the line on third-and- one to force a punt on the first set of downs. Three and out, just the way Mattison wanted it. "(Michigan's defense) had alot to do with us playing poorly," said San Diego State coach Rocky Long. "We played poorly in the first half, so obviously I did a bad job coaching." On San Diego State's next possession, Hillman fumbled the ball away. Later, he did it again -both times inside Michigan territory. It was only the second and this See DEFgNSE, Page 3B I .. TEeA MULOAENGAiF AND MARiSSA MCLLAIN/Daily (Left) Junior defensive end Criag Roh had a sack and a forced fumble before being spelled by sophomore defensive end Jibreel Black (center). Junior quarterback Denard Robinson (top) ran for 200 yards and passed for another 93 yards against San Diego State, who Michigan coach Brady Hoke's (bottom) coached for the past two seasons. TWITTERED OUT U Twitter is changing the dynamic between athletes and fans. Denard Rob- inson made the mistake of giving an open invitation to his birthday party. Page 2B BIG TEN BLUES * The Michigan volleyball team has struggled the past five years in its second Big Ten game. Saturday, the trend contin- ued as 'M' lost to Purdue. Page 3B