4 8A - Thursday, October 13, 2011 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com _ Kirk Cousins might not be speaking with some of his friends back home in Holland, Mich. after beating their Michigan Wolverines three straight years. But Cousins sure has done enough to eas- ily find. some new ones. Michigan State's senior quarterback has thrown for more than 5,000 yards, nearly 40 touch- downs the past two sea- sons and he's helped "Little Brother" grow up in a big way. At Big Ten Media Day in August, Cousins sat down with the Daily to talk about the upcoming season: The Michigan Daily: Kirk Cousins, do you hate Michigan? Kirk Cousins: I don't hate anybody. I think hate's a strong word. But the rivalry is personal. I grew up in Michigan. I grew up in Holland. And when you have friends that say they'll root for you every day but one, they don't understand: you're either with me or against me. It's sort of like if Isaid, I like you, but I don't like your kids or your wife.' You're either with me or against me. And to say you'll root for me every day but one, you might as well just not root for me at all. We need to beat Michigan. We need to beat Mich- igan, I've said that every year. They will be ready. Michigan will be ready when they come play us in Spartan Stadium. They will come loaded. And we will need to play a tremendous game to beat them. TMD: How well do you know Denard Robinson? Cousins: I don't know Denard at all. I've never spoken to him. I know him pretty well because he's on TV a lot. So I guess I see his highlights a lot. I know his great plays. He's a tremendous player, tremendous athlete. He deserves all the hype, or all the attention he's gotten because he's just a tremendous player. And he's for leadership. What Jesus did above all other leaders was ser- vice. He served people. So agoalof mine as a leader is to be a servant. So now if you go and talk to the other players, they'll tell you dif- ferently - that I'm not a servant. But I try to be. And when I do that, that's my bestway of leading. TMD: Your leader and coach, Mark Dantonio, seems to have the backing of your whole team. How much does that help? Cousins: We're actually believers in Coach Dantonio. And I think the proof is in the pud- ding. Four years now, he's won a Big Ten Championship and brought this program to new heights. He's given us every rea- son to get behind him and believe in him. TMD: Does it feel good to be a part of the Spartans' resurgence? Cousins: Yeah, yeah it does. It's very fulfilling to be a part of it. But my career's not done. We'll see when the last chapter is writ- ten come December or January. But there's no doubt to have a Big Ten championship already on our resumes is a special thing. And no one can take that away from us going forward. TMD: Is there any added pres- sure on you, with the type of supporting cast Michigan State returns? It's your job to perform, right? Cousins: If anything, it makes my job easier to throw to three senior receivers and hand off to three experienced runningbacks who could all be top running backs in the Big Ten. My job is to just be a distributor, to make great decisions and get them the football. No one's going to put more pressure on me than I put on myself. And it's been that way since I was a redshirt. I came in as a freshman and had a lot to learn. I had higher expectations of myself, than any coach or any media member or any fan. And as a result, I think I don't let the pressure or the expectations get to me. Spartan senior quarterback Kirk Cousins led Michigan State to a share of the Big Ten title and a Capital One Bowl berth a season ago. going to have another greatyear. TMD: What kind of leader are you, Kirk? Cousins: I'll put it this way: what kind of leader I try to be. The greatest leader of all time was Jesus Christ. So I go to the Bible and read the Gospels to get insight Secondary improving, still a work in progress for Blue 0 By MICHAEL FLOREK Daily Sports Editor The Michigan football team's secondary needed to make big changes after ranking 112th in pass defense last season. But sec- ondary coach Curt Mallory start- ed small. A two-year letter winner for the Wolverines from 1989-90, Mallory came back to Ann Arbor after spending last year as the defensive coordinator and cor- nerbacks coach at Akron. He took over the secondary when Hoke was hired and went about adjust- ing the players' technique. In spring ball, he realized sophomore cornerback Court- ney Avery took a false step - a small step forward before back- peddling. He fixed*it in about five practices. "One false step or one bad step here, he's going to talk to you about it even if you do make the play," Avery said. "I thought it was a small thing. I was like, 'come on coach,' but it is important, and I see that now." That emphasis on technique has the Wolverines' secondary telling a different story, even if Michigan coach Brady Hoke isn't pleased yet. No. 11 Michigan is now ranked 32nd nationally in pass defense. After giving up 23 passing plays of 30-plus yards last season, it's surrendered just three this season, and none more than 40 yards. While the improvement seems vast, Hoke says the unithas only improved "some" since the beginning of the year. "We are a long way from being a good secondary," Hoke said. According to Hoke, the big- gest problem hasn't been the long passes that plagued the unit last year - it's been the short ones. The backs aren'tgettingoffblocks well enough or supporting the runs or bubble screens. Northwestern ran the bubble screen nine times last Saturday, completing every pass and aver- aging about seven yards a recep- tion. As the Wolverines made adjustments in the second half, the yards per screen decreased but the completions remained. The task of stopping the short passes usually falls to the cor- nerbacks, which have consisted of redshirt junior J.T. Floyd and a rotation of fifth-year senior Troy Woolfolk, Avery and fresh- man Blake Countess. And with Hoke, helping them defend is simple. "You show it to them," he said. "You talk about their technique and their hips and if they're keeping their feet under their hips, not opening up. There's a lot of technique, and you can't defend all of those." While Floyd has generally remained in the game on one side, the rotation among the I MAsiA MccLAIN/Daily Redshirt junior cornerbackJ1T. Floyd has three pass break-ups in sir tames. other three has increased in recent weeks, as Woolfolk has been banged up and Countess has received more playing time. In certain situations, Avery has left the rotation to play nickel back, a position he also played as a fresh- man. "You don't want to get caught up in how much playing time you're getting," Avery said. "At times (it's tough getting into a rhythm), but I feel like we rotate pretty well." Avery will feel comfortable wherever he plays next Saturday. He played nickel back significant- ly against the Spartans last season and knows the challenge Michi- gan State's receivers pose. The Spartans' corps possesses the most depth the secondary has seen this season, with B.J. Cun- ningham, Keshawn Martin and Keith Nichol lining up on the out- side. This week, defensive coor- dinator Greg Mattison said he believes Cunningham is an NFL- caliber player. And as the second- ary triesto stop the short routes, it knows what the stakes are if it lets a reciever get open deep. "You can say anything you want about the secondary," Mat- tison said last week. "But you're one big pass away from not look- ing like you should look, and they understand that." 4 4 4 .,,,~llIIIIIIIlIII It' QualifyIn Ev'erything esDo 4 I