2B - October 19, 2011 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.cam 2B -Octber1, 211 Te Mchign Dily mihigadaiyco SPORTS WEDNESDAY COWMN Dirty game or not, Michigan has to take care of its own Merrill's future with Wolverines in doubt EAST LANSING - W illiam Gholstonl landed a right hook and the Wolverines hit the mat. Wobbly and woozy, Michigan has 10 days untily its next game to figure out what went wrong-17 days until its TIM next Big Ten ROHAN road game. Some- where on its way down, Michigan lost itself. In between Gholston jumping on Denard Robinson's head andr viciously twisting his facemask and Gholston socking Taylor Lewan after a play or one of sev- eral Michigan State defensive lineman hurling Robinson's help- less body to the turf long after the ball left his hand - somewhere in that mess - the Wolverines forgot Michigan State defensive end WilliamI about the fundamentals. Brady Hoke decreed this would think twice the second time never happen. No matter how around. But that's-not how Michi- talented the opponent, how tal- gan State plays football. ent deprived the Wolverines, his Spartan defensive tackle Jerel team would always play with Worthy said the defense's game fundamentals andtechnique. plan was to hit Robinson as many Michigan's identity was forged, times as possible, knock him and all else - the toughness, the around and put fear in his eyes. opportunistic defense, the pro- You may call Michigan State style offense - would be birthed dirty. They call it "Dominance." from thatsingular belief. They wanted to inflict their The indelible image of Rob- dominance over their opponent, inson's body lying on the field Worthy explained it as if it were in East Lansing - the first time common knowledge. Edwin he appeared seriously injured Baker, Le'Veon Bell and their all season as he exited the game offensive line play the same way, with a bruised back - proved that running down opponents' throats Michigan State hadn't forgotten until they've had their fill. its identity. Gholston throwing a righthook "Unnecessary roughness every or body slamming Denard Rob- play - that's what we try to do," inson seems all part of the plan, Michigan State defensive coor- considering the Spartans' identity. dinator Pat Narduzzi announced "I don't think I prepared them after the game. well enough to go into a physical "Sixty minutes of unnecessaryw, football gameoir ioke said Monday. roughness iaobjust-happy it didn't "You get punched in the mouth get called every snap." and you come back and you punch Six personal foul calls later, back - not literally. But you come that is Michigan State football. back and keep fighting. You don't Narduzzi distinguished lose the composure of my funda- between stupid penalties like mentals and techniques." Gholston's wrestling-match With how Michigan State moves and aggressive penal- tossed Robinson around like a rag ties, which he encourages. If he doll, senior captain Kevin Koger were to yell at a defensive player admitted he had to restrain him- for being flagged for a penalty self from retaliating. of aggression, said player would "(But) you don't want to get MARIdSA MCCLAI/Daily iGholston drew notional attention tsr his two tlagarant plays against Michigan. a penalty and hurt your team," Koger reasoned. "If that happens, you shouldn't be in the game for Michigan." No, Michigan should've coun- tered Michigan State's antics and physical play with a left jab, another blow. Instead, Michigan suffered from a high amount of "game spasms," which Koger said Hoke defined as mistakes a player makes in a game they wouldn't make in practice, likea missed assignment or mental breakdown. That's the most concerning part about how the Spartans whipped the Wolverines: how everything we thought we knew about this Michigan team went out the window when the going got tough. Tackling and blocking - two staples of a fundamentally sound football team - were Hoke's two ibiggest issteswiththe game. : They forgot to block a blitzing cornerback on a crucial 4th-and-1. And they couldn't take down a charging5-foot-11, 189-pound receiver - twice. "I was interested to see how we would react as a team in that environment going in," Hoke said Monday. "Because you don't know until you go through it and see how we learn from it. And I know one thing: you can't let one team beat you twice." The next time, if the Wolver- ines keep their cool, Robinson won't get KO'ed if Michigan picks up the blitz. The defense won't have to chase Baker all over. The Wolverines will be throwing the punches - figuratively. It doesn't matter what Michi- gan State does - or any opponent - if Michigan takes care of its own. Defensive coordinator Greg Mattison turned a 100-some- thing-ranked defense into a top- 10 scoring defense with the same personnel. Al Borges is working with Robinson on becoming a true dual-threat, and he had a technically sound line to rely on. Being physical is fine. Fundamen- tals are better. "It's a focus," said senior defen- sive tackle Martin said. "I think guys get caught up in what the otherteamisldoingand not (them- -: selves). It's something that we can fix and that's a good thing." Dirty or not, Michigan State was sure of itself. Michigan wasn't. All it took was one good punch to the face to wake up the Wol- verines. -ohan can be reached at trohan@umich.edu or @ TimRohan on Twitter. ByZACH HELFAND Daily Sports Editor Maybe he was just taking in a hockey game. Maybe he was siz- ing up his future team. Whatever the reason, sopho- more defenseman Jon Merrill did not attend N the No.1Mich- NOTEBOOK igan hockey team's practice on Friday, but he did attend a Plymouth Whal- ers game, according to several unconfirmed reports. Plymouth owns Merrill's OHL rights, and Michigan coach Red Berenson acknowledged that Merrill leav- ing Michigan is a possibility. The Whalers could not be reached for comment. Merrill is currently serving a 12-game suspension leveled prior to the season for violating team rules. Under the policy, he was eligible to return to practice after two weeks. Friday marked the end of those two weeks, but he did not attend the practice then or on subsequent dates. "Right now it's still in a gray area," Berenson said. "I can't tell you that there is or there isn't (a return date), but I think at some point we'll have to either figure that out or announce it:" The choice to restore Mer- rill's practice eligibility isn't Berenson's alone. He said that Michigan Athletic Director Dave Brandon will also offer input. "It's not going to be all my call," Berenson said. "That's why I can't give you an answer." Merrill recorded 25 points last season, which made him the Wolverines' highest returning point scorer entering this year's campaign. He also earned sec- ond team all-CCHA honors as a freshman. The New Jersey Dev- ils drafted Merrill with the 38th pick in the 2010 NHL draft. If Merrill opts to play professionlly, he will be unable to return to Michigan as a player. SsheyWoldgriset ihatm gone 4.0 iihis absengegeod enough for the No. 1 ranking the nation. Senior forward Luke Glenden- ing, Michigan's captain, said that with Merrill's situation still unclear, the team must play with the assumption that he won't return. "This is our team, as of right now," Glendening said. "We don't know what's going to happen with that whole situation yet, so as far as we're concerned, we'll embrace him and whatever, but this is our team." SCOOTING ON HOME: Michi- gan has had the proper amount of players at practice this week, despite Merrill's absence. That's because practices this week have had the new addition of an old player, former forward Scooter Vaughan. Vaughan took reps in the teams' regular drills while rehabbing a broken arm, presum- ably in an attempt to continue playing professional hockey. He played on the same line as fresh- man defenseman Brennan Ser- ville and sophomore defenseman Kevin Clare. Vaughan played in 137 games as a Wolverine and tallied 39 points, 24 of which came as a senior last year. He was picked up by the San Jose Sharks in the preseason but was released in September. ICE, ICE BABY: If you live in Marquette, Mich., you probably like ice. Maybe that's why North- ern Michigan decided to add 15 additional feet of it to the width of its rink. The Berry Events Center is one of just eight Olympic rinks in Division-I hockey, and Michigan will have to adjust to more open play when it makes the trip to the Upper Peninsula for the weekend series. The Wolverines will play just four total games on Olympic- sized ice this season - against Northern Michigan this week- end and against Alaska in December - butthey did go 3-1-1 in the big rinks last year. That included two wins to end the regular season against Northern Michigan to clinch first place in the CCHA. "I think it plays to our advan- tage," Glendeningsaid. "We have a really fast team." Berenson said the rink will change play slightly, with both teams having more time and space in the offensive zone. Still, he recognizes that Northern Michigan is allowing just 2.25 goals per game through four con- tests this season. "It's stillhard to get to the net," Berenson said. "Their defense is big and they're physical, and you still have to pay a price when you want to get to the net. "The bottom line is, it's going to be hard to score goals." 6 0 MEN'S SOCCER Alashe's chip-shot goal downs No. 4 Akron Zips By CHAZ ROTENBERG For the Daily On a chilly and drizzly Tues- day night in Ann Arbor, junior midfielder Latif Alashe gave the Michigan men's soccer team a 1-0 overtime victory in a thrill- ing game against Akron, the defending national AKRON 0 champions. MICHIGAN 1 Alashe's chip shot dropped over the hands of Akron goalkeeper David Mewes from 12 yards out last night at the U-M Soccer Com- plex. It was Latif's second goal of the season and second-career overtime goal. "I knew the goalie was out and I knew their guys weren't on the line," Alashe said. "I was trying to get it over all of them and it turned outperfectly." Heading into the match up against No. 4 Akron, the Wolver- ines (1-3 Big Ten, 4-10-1 overall) were coming off a 4-1 loss to Big Ten rival Indiana. The Zips (3-0 MAC, 10-1-2 overall) were hold- ing onto a three-game winning streak. Michigan came out firing. In the sixth minute, freshman strik- er Matthew Rickard received a pass from freshman Tyler Arnone and struck the ball off the fingertips of Mewes. The ball then hit the post and bounced out to Alashe, who blasted it way over the bar. The last time these two teams faced off, Michigan suffered a devastating 2-1 loss in the 2010 College Cup semifinals. Was this a rematch of last year's loss? "I wish that was the storyline, but I really don't think it was," said Michigan coach Steve Burns. "They've got a different team and we've got a different team. I think that we had a tougher time (adjusting) just because of the losses of the four kids that went pro." But there were other players who stepped up for the Wolver- ines. "There were a couple of guys that were unsung heroes for us," Burns said. "(Redshirt fresh- men midfielder) Nick Lewin and (fifth-year senior midfielder) Adam Shaw in the middle of mid- field did a great job today." Along with Lewin and Shaw, Michigan had two stellar perfor- mances from freshmen midfield- er Luca Schioppa and sophomore forwardEzekiel Harris,who each recorded a team save in near- scoring opportunities for Akron. "The focus is on putting together complete games and playing to our potential," Burns said. "We saw it tonight and cer- tainly a tough opponent helps you." Heading into the weekend, the Wolverines have tough games against San Diego State and Big Ten rivals Michigan State and Northwestern. In each of those games, Michigan will be the clear underdog. "We've been having a rough season," Alashe said. "That being said, all the games we have lost - eight of them have been by one goal. We know we can play with just about anyone." CHRIS DZOMBAK/Daily Michigan coach Red Berenson has his 4-0 Wolverines atop the early season rankings with Michigan's CCHA play set to start this weekend at Northern Michigan. Still untested, Icers take top spot in new rankings By MATT SLOVIN Daily Sports Writer Monday was picture day for the Michigan hockey team. There was no shortage of adjectives - young, scrappy, hungry, to name a few - already being floated around to describe the smiling group posi- tioned in front of the home bench at Yost Ice Arena. But earlier that day, pollsters added one more: top-ranked. And while the decision wasn't unanimous - the Wolverines are ranked second in the USA Today poll behind Boston College - one has to wonder how the nation's top spot in the USCHO.com poll will affect a team that consistently plays all eight of its true freshmen. The only certainty, however, is that just more than two weeks into the season, the ranking has no merit in the mind of Michigan coach Red Berenson. "I think everyone goes off the team's records (nowadays)," Berenson said. "Right now, every- one's lost some games, so nobody's really running away with any- thing." Everyone, that is, except for a handful of teams including Michi- gan. But it's far too early to deter- mine the best team in the con- ference, let alone the nation. In the CCHA preseason poll, Notre Dame was deemed the favorite, though Berenson's nod went to Miami (Ohio). Both programs fin- ished above the third-ranked Wol- verines, who collected just one of the 11 first-place votes. Much of Michigan's starkest competition comes from inside its own state. Ferris State and Lake Superior State have matched the Wolverines' 4-0 start. But Beren- son's squad has climbed steadily to the top of the rankings by making quick work of teams that it should beat. Powers like Miami and Notre Dame, however, have been tripped up early while getting reaccus- tomed to the rigors of regular season play. The RedHawks split their first two series to Bemidji State and Colgate. Meanwhile, the Fighting Irish split with defending national champion Minnesota-Duluth and Ohio State. Michigan has eased its way into the schedule, allowing its young- est skaters to build confidence that Berenson says is good for morale, "We haven't had that kind of test yet," Berenson said. "So we'll take (the ranking) with a grain of salt. We've got a long way to go." And that long journey begins this weekend with the start of CCHA play against Northern Michigan - yet another in-state power. The series against the Wildgats represents the Wolverines' first opportunity to prove themselves as a serious contender for the con- ference title and deserving of the nation's top ranking. 0