The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com September 26, 2011 - 3B ThAihgn al qihiadiyomSpebr26 01-3 GAME STATISTICS Michigan handed first loss of season by Purdue Tam Stats First Dwn Rush/Yds Pssing.Yar OffesiePlays TtlIOffense KickreGt1r/ Yds Pun0t rer/ Yds Comp/Att/Int Punts/Avg Fuble/Lost Penaltie/Yar Timo OPos MICH 45/320 93 62 413 0/0 2/21 8/17/2 4/49 3/2 4/25 30:13 SDSU 50 29/123 253 77 376 4/75 2/22 23/48/0 6/38;2 4/3 6/5 29:47 ASNG M I C H I G A N Player C-A Yds TD Int Robinson, D. 8-17 93 0 2 Totals' 8-17 93 0 2 RUSHING Player Att Yds Avg Lg TO Smith 9 47 5.2 32 1 Hopkins 1 8 8 8 7 O~Tea 1 92 92 92 0 Pos 4s 3OA A.1 3 47 RECEMVNG Player No. Yds Avg Lg TO Rondtree 2 5 Dileo 1 17 17 17 0 Hemmngwa 4 0 A Gllon 1 3 Totals 8 93 1106 32 0 PUNTING Player No. Yds Av - Totals 4 196 49 51 PCOP R ETCRNo. Yds Avg Lg TD Totals 0 0 0 0 0 Plye REUNNo. Yds Avg Lg TD Gallon 1 21 21 21 0 Tota 1 21 21 21 0 TACKLES Player Solo Asst Tot Gordon, T 6 1 7 Ryan 4 1 5 Woolfolk 3 2 5 Hawthorne 2 Floyd 2 1 3 Johnson, C. 1 2 3 Rah 2 0 2 Furm 1 1 2 Morgan 1 1 2 Martin 1 1 2 Heininger 0 1 1 Totals 44 24 68 S A N D I E G O S T A T E PASSING Player C-A Yds TO Int ByMATT SPELICH Daily Sports Writer WEST LAFAYETTE - The final nail in the Michigan volley- ball team's coffin Saturday night was a service ace, courtesy of Purdue defensive specialist Blaire Bashen. That MICHIGAN 3 final kill INDIANA 0 whipped the Boil- MICHIGAN 0 ermakers' PURDUE 3 student section into a frenzy. The crazed fans - basking in the score- board's bright red glow of Purdue 3, Michigan 0 - looked as though they were about to tear the stands apart board by board. With blank expressions the Wolverines stuck to routine - they shook hands, collected bags and jogged into the locker room. For all the plays and scenarios that Michigan coach Mark Rosen ran his team through, he never taught it how to lose. After a spec- tacular undefeated preseason and conference opener, perhaps he believed it never would. The 18th-ranked Wolverines lost to No. 13 Purdue in three sets, dropping each of the first two sets by the same 26-24. Both teams handily won their confer- ence openers the night before, with Michigan sweeping Indi- ana in three sets and the Boiler- makers dismantling Michigan State in similar fashion. Both the Wolverines and Purdue also had undefeated records entering the weekend and shared the label of having strong offenses. But the Boilermakers managed to find that slight edge to put it away. "You don't learn stuff from succeeding all the time," Rosen said. "You learn a hell of a lot more from losing. It's all about the process. It's alongseason, and we are looking to be the best team we can be by the end of the year. Tonight we failed at some things, but we have to learn from those failures and go from there." Prior to the game, Purdue's Associate Athletics Communica- FILE PHOTO/Daily Senior outside hitter Alex Hunt was held in check by Purdue in Michigan's 3-0 loss on Saturday. ROBINSON From Page lB season. If it weren't for a wide-open dump-screen pass to Smith, which went for 32yards, Robin- son would've finished the game with 61 passingyards. His 93 total yards through the air were the lowest com- plete-game total in his career. He broke his record from a week ago, when he threw for 95 yards. "(Former TCU quarterback) Andy Dalton had plenty of problems with (that defense) a year ago - and it's not an easy defense to try and figure things out," Hoke said. "But he did a good job there in the run game." Every week, Borges and Hoke key in on Robinson's foot- work: feet set, clean pocket, choose wisely. That was the case several times Saturday, but Robinson still couldn't deliver. "They go out there and they fly around everywhere," Robin- son said. "So you can say it was (the defensive scheme), but we worked on it all week and I've just got to execute. "Just some throws, I shouldn't have forced them. Just take my time and do what coach taught me." In the fourth quarter, Lind- ley looked like the NFL-caliber quarterback Hoke spoke of all week - feet set and follow through. Michigan couldn't have played better coverage on several throws Lindley com- pleted. But the Wolverines had a plan early on - hit Lindley and make him scared of getting hit again. "We knew that if we got in his face, got pressure to him, pressed the pocket on him, he'd get happy feet and make missed throws," said senior defensive tackle Mike Martin. "He's a good quarterback and he can sling that thing around. If you don't get in his face, he can throw it as well as anyone." Even with a clean pocket, and no pressure, Lindley's throws were off target at times. When the pressure did come, he got rid of the ball so early the receivers were still running their routes. Michigan's mind games had no bigger impact than on third downs, where Lindley and San Diego State converted just 8-of-18 attempts. Lindley didn't have much help from sophomore running back Ronnie Hillman, who was the nation's second-leading rusher entering the game. He fumbled twice. Still,withLindley's11-for-25, 114-yard three-quarter perfor- mance, the Aztecs were within two touchdowns of upsetting Hoke's new school after Lind- ley threw a strike to his wide receiver, who had a Michigan defender draped all over him. Then Lindley threw for 139 yards in the fourth quarter, making NFL throw after NFL throw - the kind of throws Borges wished Robinson would make. Lindley made his case. But the Aztecs had to stop Robinson with eight minutes left and the ball near midfield. Robinson did what he does best, sprinting for a nail-in- the-coffin, catch-me-if-you- can 30-yard run. New examples arise each week as to why Hoke shouldn't try and pound a square peg into a round hole. But he still struggles with the question: how can he play to Robin- son's strengths and still have a respectable West Coast pass- ing game and a traditional running back-led ground attack? It's an even tougher question if Robinson's running ability or the threat to run is winning games. "We. know we just have to sustain drives, get the ball flowing and get in a rhythm," Smith said after the game. That's up to Robinson, spe- cifically his arm. "I want to see what plays he got us into," Hoke said, defending his quarterback. "That's something that the quarterback never gets credit for. "We won the game." Hoke's quarterback is now the fourth-leading rusher in the country with 552 yards, but he's also tied for fourth- most in interceptions thrown, and tied for 84th in passing yards. But would Hoke choose Ryan Lindley over Denard Robinson? Probably not. tions Director Wendy Mayer laid out what she believed to be the Boilermakers' plan of attack. "We are looking to shut down (senior outside hitter) Alex Hunt," Mayer said. "We want to make her invisible. She's burned us too many times in the past." The Boilermakers did exactly that - Hunt had a season low of two killsin the first set that ended up contributing to a total of seven kills over the course of the match. Although sophomore middle blocker Jennifer Cross picked up the slack, leading the pack with nine kills overall, it wasn'tenough to put Michigan over the top. The match was relatively even with the exception of two key aspects - attack errors and block- ing. The Wolverines earned twice as many attack errors as Purdue, and the Boilermakers doubled Michigan's blocks. The inverse correlation was no accident. Purdue had one of the biggest front lines Michigan has seen all season. It wasn't particularly tall, but it was quick in the air. If a team can be up in the air quickly, it can block more attempts, put the opponent on its heels, and cause its players to augment their shots and force errors. The Wolverines knew this for- mula well, because they are usu- ally the ones imposing their will on other teams. The shoe didn't fit so well on the other foot this weekend. In sharing his feelings on the game, Rosen harkened back to a quote by Hunt, which she uttered two weeks ago over dinner after the Pepperdine win: "Boy, what a difference two points can make," Hunt said. Those words haunted Rosen in the locker room after that third and final set. Two points in the other direction in either the first or second set could have yielded an entirely different result. "(If we had won) Purdue would have been in the locker room before set three asking them- selves some tough questions," Rosen said. "Then we could have jumped on them in game three, and gutted out the win. "What you're seeing is the frailty of athletics. We're all just walking on a balance beam. The wind is blowing, and it could go either way. We just have to find a way to win." RUSHING Player A Hillman Lockett Kazee McFadden Lindley 7 Totals RECEIVING Player P Oenso ; Lockett 7 Escobar Hillman 2 Russell t Kazee Totals Att 21 2 3 2 1 29 No. 7 7 5 2 1 1 23 Yds 109 13 10 5 -14 123 Yds 77 71 64 15 15 11 253 Avg 3.3 25 42 Avg 11 1s5 Ls 20 s 4 10 -14 30 LS 21 16 0 13 15 11 30 TD 0 TD 0 1 PUNTING Stahovich Totals KICKOFF RETURNS Lockett Totals TACKLES Player Parker Lemon Andrews, R. McFadden Thomas Fely Siluano Harris Andrews, M. Meredith Tenhaeff Stves No> H, Avg g 6 229 38 2 w No. Yds Avg ' !g 4 75 18.8 29 4 75 18.8 29 Solo Asst 7 3 4 2 3 .3 3 1 2 2 3 2 1 1 0 2 3 0 24 Tot 10 6 6 4 4 4 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 1 1 1 1 1 1 60 DEFENSE From Page 1B fumbles of his careeer - his other was on his first career carry for Hoke last season. Fifth-year senior defensive tackle Ryan Van Bergen caught Hillman from behind inside the 10-yard line and knocked the ball loose for the second fumble. Try reading it this way: a 288- pound defensive tackle caught the nation's second-leading rusher from behind in the open field - 30 yards away from the line of scrimmage. Van Bergen got a block from fifth-year senior defensive tackle Mike Martin, but most of his help came from practice. "But when it comes down to it, we have the most explosive player in the country in our backfield," Van Bergen said. "We get to play against (junior quar- terback) Denard (Robinson), so we've learned how to take angles at guys who have speed. "I took off on my horse just thinking, 'I've almost caught AZTECS From Page 1B the goal line or short-yardage defense. There were other uses for the pictures as well. "It was our way of telling them how much we missed them," Long said. "But the real reason we used them was because they know our signals. So we were try- ing to figure out a way to signal the defense to our defense with- out them knowing exactly what we were in." The plan didn't work out as well as Long would have liked. He said the signs might have been part of the reason the Aztecs struggled on defense in the first half - San Diego State gave up 208 yards on the ground, with no answer for Michigan junior quar- terback Denard Robinson, who rushed for 140 yards and three touchdowns. Denard before, maybe I can catch this guy."' The lion caught the gazelle, for once. But the whole family feasted on Lindley. Michigan learned early that Lindley couldn't handle the blitz - throwing erratically with a collapsing pocket. So Mattison dialed up the pressure. "We knew that if we got in his face, got pressure to him, pressed the pocket on him he'd get happy feet and would miss throw," Martin said. The final line on the quar- terback read 23-for-48 passing for 253 yards and a touchdown. Not gaudy. Not glorious. Not the same quarterback his old coach remembered Ryan Lindley being. The lone score came late in the third quarter, when Lindley spun a tight throw to wide receiver Colin Lockett crossing over the middle for a 16-yard touchdown. It ended a nearly six-quarter scoreless stand by the Wolver- ines, stretching back to a field goal by Eastern Michigan to open the second quarter last Saturday. "We actually thought in the process it would help us," Long said. "I don't think it did. It prob- ably would have been better if we hadn't done it. But it was really a tribute to them, because we're all friends and we know they're gonna do a great job here." As for the Michigan players: "We were laughing," Robinson said. "Everybody was in that hud- die laughing. They got pictures of our coaches up there - it's crazy." A YOUNG DONOVAN WAR- REN?: In the second quarter, fifth-year senior cornerback Troy Woolfolk was off the field, injured. Again. Woolfolk has suffered vari- ous injuries this year, including a tweaked left ankle in the season opener against Western Michi- gan. And it was that same ankle that he "tweaked" again on Sat- urday. "I'm sure that's day-to-day," Hoke said of the injury. "If I The offense scored 52 points in that time. "Whenever we can watch our offense (from the sidelines), we always play better defense," Martin said. But the Michigan offense wasn't so kind as to oblige against the Aztecs. Robinson threw two interceptions and running backs fumbled the ball away twice, put- ting the defense back on the field. "Don't let (turnovers) trans- late into points, because that's how you get beat," Van Bergen said. For this new Michigan defense, there's one way to respond. "Get 11 hats on the ball," Van Bergen said. The forced turnovers came - three fumbles. So did the stops. Michigan made three fourth- down stops and ten third-down stops. "I thought our defense kept us in the game, because we tried to give it away," Hoke said. Hoke may not have recog- nized his former offense across know Troy, he'll come out tomor- row and do everything that we'll do." Freshman cornerback Blake Countess replaced Woolfolk, and he made the most of his time on the field. He recorded seven tackles - tied for a team-high - and broke up a pass. "(Countess) is a talented young guy," Hoke said. "He's done a good job. He has great pride in performance, so he gets himself ready to play." Fifth-year senior Ryan Van Bergen compared Countess to former Michigan cornerback Donovan Warren, a 2009 All-Big Ten selection and current mem- ber of the Detroit Lions practice squad. "He has a swagger about him," Van Bergen said. "He's very con- fident in his abilities, and I think the more reps he gets, the more time he'll see because I think he'll prove that he can play. I think the coaches are slowly get- Redshirt sophomore safety Thomas Gordon wraps up an Aztec running back. the field, but the defense was as coached at Michigan in the mid- familiar as an old friend. He saw 1990s, and he took it with him. this style of defense when he Now it just might be back. 1 1 1 30 FOLLOW US ON * TWITTER @michdailysports @michdailyf ball @michigandaily ting more comfortable with him and rotating him in." WILL IT EVER GET BETTER?: Entering Saturday's game, red- shirt sophomore kicker Brendan Gibbons had only attempted one field goal this season - a 21-yard chip shot that he converted against Eastern Michigan last week. That didn't exactly convince Michigan fans that he's the answer for the Wolverines' kick- ing woes. Gibbons and redshirt sopho- more Seth Broekhuizen went a combined 4-for-13 on field goals last year, good for last in the nation. And on Saturday, Gibbons didn't exactly help the cause. With 3:30 left in the third quarter and Michigan leading 21-0, Gibbons lined up on the right hash for a 40-yard field goal as the Big House collective- ly held its breath. He had the distance, but he pushed it left. No good. "I think it was just one bad kick," Hoke said. "I can tell you from how he planted, not that I'm (former NFL Pro Bowl kicker) Garo Yepremian at all or know much about the kicking aspect, but he just didn't plant well and kind of pushed it." ONE BIG, POWERFUL FAM- ILY: When asked after the game if there was anything about his team that surprised him, Hoke paused. He made a few faces and thought about it for a good five seconds. And then his face lit up. "I like how they like each other," he said. "I've been around teams that don't like each other. And if they like each other enough and respect each other enough, they're gonna play for each other. "When they play for each other and they play for Michi- gan, that's a powerful thing."