The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com GAME STATISTICS ,, _ .., .. _ . . * ... .. au October 19, 2011 - 3B J fl/ Team Stats Fist Downs Rush/Yds Passing Yards Otfensive Plays Total Ottense Kick returns/Yds Punt returns/Yds Comp/At/Int Punts/Avg Fumbles/Lost Penalties/Yards lime oftPoss MICH 20 36/82 168 67 2500 2/32 2/2 12/31/1 7/32 2/0 5/40 29:27 MS 16 39/213 120 63 333 3/47 1/13 13/24/0 5/41 2/2 13/124 30:33 Int 1 0 1 PASSING Player C-A Yds TD RobinsonD. 9-24 123 1 Gardner, D. 3-7 45 0 Toas 12-31 168 1 - MARISSA MCCLAIN/Daily Michigan coach Brady Hoke had his perfect record tarnished in the Wolverines' 28-14 loss to Michigan State on Saturday in East Lansing. Hoke looks to rebound from first loss fRUSHING O Player Att Yds Avg Lg TO Robinson, D. 18 42 2.3 15 1 Gallon 1 0 t.0 0 0 emig 3 3 14.3 20 0 Totals 36 82 2.3 26 1 RECEIVING Player No. Yds Avg Lg TD Roundtree 4 66 16.5 34 1 "emn"ay 3 3 143 2 Galalo 7 22143 032 42 Koger 2 16 8.0 12 0 Totals 12 168 140 34 10 PUNTING Player No. Yds Avg Lg Hagerup 7 223 31.9 42 Totals 7 223 0 42 KICKOFF RETURNS Player No. Yds Avg Lg TDO Odoms 2 32 16.0 17 0 Totals 2 32 16.0 17 0 PUNT RETURNS Player No. Yds Avg Lg TD Galln 2 2 1 1 28 coamla 2 22 10 1 TACKLES Plr Solo Asst To Kovacs 6 0 6 Roh 4 2 6 Martin 2 3 5 Floyd 3 1 4 cMoranul 1 3 1 Van Bergen 1 2 3 Hawthorne 1 2 3 Woo folk 2 Campbell 0 2 2 Simmeons 1 0 1 Black 0 1 1 Cavaag 0 1 1 M I C H I G A N S T A T E PASSING SPlayer C-A Yds Cousins 13-24 120 *otals 1324 120 RUSHING Player Att Yds Avg Baker 26 167 6.4 Martin 3 20 6.7 el 7 20 3. Fowler 1 6 6.0 "oal 39 213 5. RECEIVING Player No. Yds Avg Cunningharm 4 39 9.8 Unthicun 2 22 11.0 Nkchol 2 20 10.0 Totals 13 120 9.2 TD Int 2 0 2 0 L.g 25 11 8 6 Lg 13 15 11 16 TD 1 0 0 0 0 1 TD 0 2 0 0 0 0 2 BySTEPHENJ. NESBITT Daily Sports Editor Michigan coach Brady Hoke's first loss was bound to come sooner or later. But that loss com- ing to Michigan State certainly didn't make it any easier to stom- ach. The 18th-ranked Wolverines fell to the Spartans,28-14, in East Lansing on Saturday, catapulting Michigan State ahead of Michi- NOTEBOOK gan in the Big Ten Legends Division. The Wolverines (2-1 Big Ten, 6-1 overall) now have a bye week to refocus after the defeat. But it'll be the head coach who needs the most time to recover. "I have to shift myself first probably," Hoke said on Monday. "But the seniors now will get together tomorrow and have a very good conversation. They're a prideful group. Kids are more resilient than we are, period, and so we'll move forward." The senior captains - center David Molk, defensive tackle Mike Martin and tight end Kevin Koger - all emphasized the importance of players supporting each othet through a bye iseek instead of sitting on the previous game. Last season, Michigan lost two-straight games entering the bye week, then emerged with a poor showing in a 41-31 road loss to a 4-3 Penn State team. "That's really what's going to STATE From Page 1B set. When junior quarterback Denard Robinson turned away from the handoff, Adams - the "Pony" - broke loose knocked him back halfway to Tuesday. "We've gotten many first downs with that play, same play, where the guy jumps and you send one guy in motion," Michi- gan coach Brady Hoke said. "I saw the 25-second clock rolling to zero. I think we got away with one, to be honest with you." In hindsight, a delay of game penalty would have been a gift. After a Michigan State punt, Robinson had a chance at redemption. He took the first snap, had a linebacker in his face, and threw a dart right on the numbers to cornerback Isaiah Lewis, who returned the only Michigan turn- over of the day for a touchdown ROBINSON From Page 1B "You can put a fear in the quarterback's eyes, cause him to make mistakes," said Michigan State defensive tackle Jerel Wor- thy. "He's a guy, you know he's a competitor. But at the same time, he's not that big.You don't want to keep getting crunched by a 300- pound defensive lineman all the time." Narduzzi told the ESPN announcers that his plan was to have nine defenders up close to the line of scrimmage at all times, playing his cornerbacks tight to the line, clearly zeroing in on Robinson's ability to run. In 2010, Narduzzi's plan forced three Rob- inson interceptions and held him to 4.1yards per carry, injuring the quarterback in the process. From that point on last season, make this team different than all the teams in the past that I've played on and started," Molk said. "It's time for me, along with my senior group and fellow cap- tains, to step up and take con- trol of the emotional level of this team and stride on. "We can't let one loss set us back for the entire season and really make us feel like it's over just because we have one loss. That's not goingto happen." The bye week is also crucial to allow Michigan's injured players some much-needed rest from the grind of the season. Hoke pointed out fifth-year senior cornerback Troy Woolfolk and junior quarterback Denard Robinson as two players who will surely benefitfrom the bye week. "Football is a physical game, and guys are going to get bumped up, get sore," Martin said. "I know we have some guys that are feeling that a bit, so having the bye week is key. I think it comes at the perfect time." Michigan's seniors have already set their sights on the next game - an Oct. 29 home- coming matchup with Purdue. But the loss to Michigan State isn't out of their minds just yet. They're letting it hurt just a while longer. "This game is going to sting for a bit - I think it has to," Martin said. "This team has to remem- ber the taste in our mouths. It's not good, but we have to move on. "We're at the halfway point of the season, and we have five more guaranteed opportunities as a football team. For us to be able to prepare longer for Purdue is also going to help. I think it's going to show up on Saturday." FOURTH AND NONE: It was unquestionably the final turning point of the game. With one play call gone wrong, the Paul Bunyan Trophy settled right back into the Spartans' hands. On fourth-and-one from the Michigan State nine-yard line in the fourth quarter, Michigan offensive coordinator Al Borges called for a play-action fake out of an I-back set. No one ever learned what the end of the play was supposed to look like. By the time Robinson took the snap and faked to sophomore running back Fitzgerald Tous- saint, Spartan cornerback John- ny Adams was in Robinson's face, untouched off a corner blitz for a game-saving sack. On Monday, Hoke explained that the call was supposed to leave Koger open for the score. "If we execute the play, Koger's in the endzone," Hoke said on Monday. "We don't make a block that we need tomake.- "That's part of their defense, bringing their corners especially when you get into two tight ends. A lot of people will do that to the weak side of it. Again, he was accounted for if we executed." Instead of a chance to tie up the game, 21-21, the ball was handed back to the Spartans. Koger doesn'thave any regrets about the play call, saying the team runs it every week in prac- tice. He also didn't even know if he was open on the play. "It's hard to say," Koger said. "When I whipped my head around, Denard was being tack- led. So it's hard to say if I was open or not. We just have to exe- cute. We have to block better on that play, no matter what the call is. If we had executed, the play it would have worked." WOE IS WILLIAM: Michigan State is conducting an internal review into possible "sportslike conduct violation" by defensive end William Gholston in the Spartans' win over Michigan. Michigan State athletic direc- tor Mark Hollis released a state- ment Tuesday sayingthe Big Ten had been notified of Gholston's potential violations. "We are thoroughly review- ing the entire game and utiliz- ing all of the available resources: coaches' video from midfield and end zone cameras, TV copy as well as still photographs," Hol- lis's statement read. "Once the internal reviewisamopleoi eln will forward a writen report on to the Big Ten." If Big Ten commissioner Jim Delany disagrees with the Spar- tans' assessment, he has up to three business days to make a decision. FOURTH DOWN From Page 1B tioned immediately. But fifth- year senior David Molk is one of the best centers in the Big Ten and Robinson hadn't had a prob- lem gaining only a single yard in the past. He converted on a 4th- and-1 earlier in the drive. Com- ing into the game Michigan had converted on 3-of-4 fourth down attempts on the season. Each came through running the ball, including two by Rob- inson. The only failed conver- sion came when Robinson threw an interception against Eastern Michigan. So why run a play action? "We've gotten many first downs with that play, same play, where the guy jumps and you send one guy in motion," Hoke said. "A bunch of touchdowns too. ... We've been very success- ful, really in the las two years on the same play." Although the play ended Michigan's best opportunity, it wasn't the Wolverines' last opportunity. The Michigan defense got a three-and-out after forcing an incompletion on a 3rd- and-4. After struggling the entire "We've gotten many first downs with that play." game, Robinson had a chance to redeem himself. He had 65 yards in front of him and 4:40 left in the game. On the first play of the drive, Robinson took the snap in the shotgun. Michigan State brought another blitz, this time up the middle. Robinson hurried in his throw to junior running back Vincent Smith, who was in the slot. The ball sailed past Smith before he could turn his head around, and went right into the hands of Spartan safety Isaiah >Lewimse u 10 snmt Lewis stormd ""down the sideline and into the endzone to give Michigan State their final 14-point lead. With two offensive plays the comeback remained unfinished, but Michigan was. State attack proved too power- ful for Michigan's offensive line. Robinson and sophomore quar- terback Devin Gardner were sacked a season-high seven times. Following the Roundtree touchdown, the Michigan defense forced a fumble and got the ball right back within strik- ing distance of the endzone. Then came Adams's fourth- down sack of Robinson. Then came the interception. Then the final horn and raising of the Paul Bunyan Trophy. In the end, the jerseys didn't play a role in the outcome. And the Michigan offense did its best to be a non-factor. Ultimately, the Spartans won the one-upmanship battle by claiming the Paul Bunyan Tro- phy for yet another season. And that feeling will last long after the season ends. "For the rest of our lives, well walk the streets of this state," Spartan quarterback Kirk Cous- ins said. "For the rest of our life. It's satisfying." cerned with how his offensive line blocked than the play of his quarterback. The unit whiffed on picking up a key cornerback blitz on a 4th-and-i in the red zone late in the fourth quarter that would have extended the potential game-tying drive. And Robinson and Gardner were sacked a com- bined seven times. What you saw against Michi- gan State - Robinson at the helm, with Gardner running a few key plays - seems to be the plan going forward. If the Big Ten follows the Spartans' scheme, Robinson may be forced to evolve or Gard- ner could see more time. Borges said last week that he wasn't one to pull a quarterback after a few bad throws. How poorly would Robinson have to play to force Hoke's hand? "I wouldn't even speculate, because that's a point that's way out there," he said. PUNTING Player No. Yds Avg Lg Sadler 5 205 41.0 45 Totals 5 20s 41.0 4s5 KICKOFF RETURNS Player No. Yds Avg Lg Celek 1 7 70 7 Totals 3 47 15.7 21 Planer No, Yds. Avg Lg Martin 1 13 130 13 Totals 1 13 13.0 13 TACKLS Player Solo Asst Tot Norman 6 4 10 Bullough 2 6 0 Allan 3 4 7 Robinson 5 1 6 Lewis 1 5 6 Adams 4 0 4 Pickelman 2 2 4 Drummond 3 0 3 Rush 2 1 3 Gholston 1 2 3 Worthy 1 1 2 Dennard 0 2 2 Gainer 1 0 1 Elsworth 1 0 1 Gardiner 0 1 1 (Totals 32 30 62 WANT TO JOIN DAILY SPORTS? Come to our weekly sports staff meetings at 1 p.m. every Sunday S at 420 Maynard Street and a commanding 28-14 lead. Robinson had blitzing line- backers in his face all day, and the numbers showed his struggle in the face of a rush. He finished the game with just 165 total yards. "He made some things hap- pen," said Michigan coach Brady Hoke of Robinson. "And there were a couple times..." Hoke trailed off. It's hard to describe a 9-for-24 passing out- ing. "He always plays excited, with a lot of energy," Hoke continued. "The interception, I don't know what he saw, but I thought he held in there." Robinson held in there until he was knocked out of the game after a roughing-the-passer call on the Spartans. Robinson's day didn't end so comfortably, but in the day of the duelinguniforms, the Wolverines tallied first. on the opening drive of the game, Robinson shook a defender in the backfield and scrambled for 15 yards into the endzone to finish an 80-yard drive. But the highlight of the drive came two plays earlier when sophomore wide receiver Drew Dileo, the kick-team holder, ran a bootleg around the ride side on a fake field-goal attempt and stretched just inches beyond the first-down marker. It wasn't quite "Little Giants" - the name of Michigan State's fake field goal call that toppled Notre Dame in overtime last sea- son - but Hoke had cast the first stone. 'Anything you can do," the fourth-down call seemed to say. Michigan's opening drive took over six minutes off the clock. Just like the legacy uniforms, it was old-school Michigan football - at first, anyway. The Spartans struck back with a touchdown drive that took half as long as Michigan's drive. But nerves, weather and defensive pressure put the offen- sive outburst to rest. The swirling wind turned Spartan Stadium into a relative maelstrom. Michigan's offense went cold. After the opening-drive touch- down, seven consecutive drives ended in punts. Worse yet, though the field position was ter- rific, the last six punts came from inside Michigan State territory, just outside of field-goal range. "We had a lot of opportunities to come back in the game and just keep the game within reach, and we just didn't execute," Robinson said. Not until early in the fourth quarter, nearly 45 minutes after Robinson's openingscore, did the Wolverines finish a drive with a score. With 9:56 remaining in the game, trailing 21-7, Robinson found junior wide receiver Roy Roundtree on a slant. After a broken tackle, Roundtree went into the endzone to cap a seven- second drive and pull within a single score. With plenty of time left, the Wolverines were barely one- upped - just seven points away. But the vaunted Michigan Robinson looked like a different quarterback than the one that dominated non-conference play. A few games later, former Michi- gan coach Rich Rodriguez started rotating Tate Forcier in at quar- terback because he liked Forcier better running certain passing plays. Once Michigan fell behind in games, the Wolverines needed Forcier and his passing-oriented playbook to come back. The Spartansmayhave started a chain reaction of events again. In the 2011 version, Robinson set a career-low for completion percentage and exited the game with a bruised back as questions arose for the first time whether he should be replaced by Gard- ner - the taller, supposedly more polished passer. Gardner saw action in the past two games in a package featur- ing both Robinson and himself on the field at the same time. But against Northwestern and Mich- igan State, Gardner took a hand- ful of snaps without Robinson on the field. About a month ago, it seemed implausible that Gardner would see playingtime with Rob- inson still struggling as a passer. "All these questions about Denard Robinson are all fair questions," Borges said on Sept. 20. "Denard Robinson is not going to develop any of these skills with Devin Gardner in the game. That's bad and good, because God knows I'd like to get Devin in the game. It's just hard to do unless you're going to commit to a two-quarterback system, which we're not going to do. We're going to wait and find instances we can get him on the field." Hoke explained that they had three plays they liked for Devin to run, but Gardner's role has expanded in each Big Ten game. Most critics of the two-quar- terback system point to a lack of consistency and rhythm that hurt the starter. Hoke denied that sub- bing Robinson out for those three snaps, and the handful with Rob- inson lined up out wide, added to his inability to get going. "That would be similar to tak- ing a defensive end out and rotat- ing him," Hoke said of putting Gardner in for a few plays. "When you think about it, because they both have fundamentals and techniques and things that they. have to do, when you look at it schematically from a defen- sive standpoint. So I don't know what the difference is, besides he touches the ball every time." Clearly, Robinson had neither consistency nor comfort Saturday as he completed just 9-of-24 pass- es, but the Spartans' plan can take most of the credit for that. Hoke seemed more con-