U The Michigan Daily I michigandaily.com J October 3,2011 MICHIGAN 58 MINNESOTA 0 Finishing mentality helps 'M' offense showcases Michigan blank Gophers new scheme in blowout1 By TIM ROHAN had been all the players heard. Daily Sports Editor During winter conditioning, it was finishing their workouts. The Michigan defense was When practice started, it was dangerously close to losing its finishing a play. Then it was fin- shutout. ishing the games. They've said Facing the 19th-ranked Wol- they want the fourth quarter to verines' second-team defense, be their quarter. Minnesota had the ball at the It's all about finishing. Michigan 20-yard line with So with Minnesota knocking about five minutes left in the on the door, Michigan penetrat- game. ed the backfield and disrupted Up 51-0, all the defense had the handoff. The ball popped left to accomplish was to finish loose and sophomore corner- the game and the shutout. That back Courtney Avery knew what to do with it. "I just saw the ball and I saw the open field and I said, 'No way I'm falling on this one,' " Avery said. He had to finish. "We're not allowed not to swarm to the ball - ever," said junior defensive end Craig Roh. "It's just natural in the games that ... if one guy misses a tackle, there'll be five more guys there." "It's second nature now," Avery added. See DEFENSE, Page 3B By KEVIN RAFTERY Daily Sports Editor It's playoff baseball season, and Michigan junior running back Vincent Smith hit for the cycle - a football cycle, that is. In No. 19 Michigan's 58-0 rout of Minnesota on Saturday, Smith caught, threw and ran for a touchdown. "I was just put in the right place at the right time," Smith said. "The coaches know what I'm capable of. I just did what- ever I had to do for the team to help them out. It was real fun."., Smith's touchdown pass at the beginning of the second quarter was one of several trick plays showcased by Michigan. offensive coordinator Al Borges on the day. On 2nd-and-4 from the Min- nesota 17-yard line, junior quarterback Denard Robinson pitched theball to Smith. Nearly everyone in Michigan Stadium thought he'd run - including the Golden Gopher defense. "Coach was just stressing every time I'm in a trick play, I have to definitely set up the run," Smith said. "That's the first thing defenders are look- ing at." Smith faked it to perfection, and found sophomore wide receiver Drew Dileo wide open in the back of.e end zone 4r the score, giving Michigan a 21-0 advantage. "(Smith) does everything you want him to do," Michigan coach See BLOWOUT, Page 3B * Blue unimpressive, lacks scoring in exhibition loss to Onario By EVERETT COOK Daily Sports Writer No, this wasn't Notre Dame. It wasn't Ohio State in the Frozen Diamond Faceoff. It was an exhi- bition game against an obscure team the Michigan UOIT 3 hockey MICHIGAN 2 team had never played before. The oppo- nent really didn't matter. Luck- ily for the Wolverines, the game didn't really matter either. On Saturday, Michigan dropped its first exhibition game of the year to the Ontario Institute of Technology, 3-2, in a sloppy effort highlighted by the Wol- verines' inability to finish near the net. Michigan had twice as many shots on goal as the Ridge- backs, 56-28, but couldn't convert 54 of those shots into goals. On top of that, Ontario played more than a third of the game on the penalty kill, amassing 22 penalty minutes. The Wolverines led in every major statistical category - except for goals. "That team turned out to be a good team," said Michigan coach Red Berenson. "We don't know much about our opponent, but it turned out to be a good team." Michigan looked to be in the driver's seat early on, when senior defenseman Greg Pateryn rifled in a shot from the blue line for the early lead. The Wolverines domi- nated the rest of the first period, outshooting Ontario 20-6. The tide started to turn in the second period. The Ridgebacks tied it up when sophomore forward Bren- dan Wise scored an unassisted, shorthanded goal. Michigan still outshot Ontario 20-17 in the peri- od, but failed to find the net. "We carriedtheplayinthe first half of the game," Berenson said. "We kept them in the game. And then sure enough, they started to carry the play. They took advan- tage of our turnovers in the sec- ond period. They got back in the game, and it was anyone's game in the third." The teams swapped goals in the final period, with Michi- gan freshman forward Phil Di Giuseppe scoring 10 minutes See EXHIBITION, Page 3B iED MOCH/Daily Michigan coach Red Berensorn' icers maanaged just two galen56 shots. BIG TEN BULLIES, Nkem Ezurike scored all three of Michi- gan's goals on the weekend, as the Wol- verines won a pair of Big Ten road games. Page 2B MEET BIG RED Missing Alex Hunt, the rest of the Wol- verines were introduced to the Big Ten's newest volleyball power: the Nebraska Cornhuskers. Page 2B