6 mmr- - -7 mw w- - - mr w w W- Perimeter defense key to stopping Boilermakers Everyone in Lemont remembers exactly when Dave Molk, now the starting center on the Michigan football team, exploded onto the football scene. It wasn't a snap, a pancake block or a pregame speech. It was an offseason - during the winter and spring, when the field outside Lemont High School was iced over and nothing but the weight room was open. Dave entered high school at 5-foot-6 and 180 pounds - "a pudgy little freshman kid," according to Lemont strength coach John Coneset. After noticing him on the freshman team, Coneset took Dave under his wing and brought him into Coneset's world - the weight room. Dave was hooked. The following season, Dave started on the Lemont Indi- ans varsity team's offensive line as a sophomore. From Lemont to Michigan, his size was questioned every step of the way. He was too small. That's why Dave loved the weight room. It's a direct comparison that never lies: you versus me. Dave never lost the battle. Within two years, he added 100 pounds and was out- lifting Coneset. Dave also grew seven inches, which helped. "Saying Dave liked the weight room would be anunder- statement," Coneset said, glancing around at the rows of equipment. "He loved this place. He was always the last one out of here." Dave was always the last one out of the weight room, but that didn't mean he had reached the end of his workout. Coneset and the other members of the Lemont coaching staff alternated staying past 5 P.M. to lock up the weight room after Dave finished his workout. They would go home for dinner. Dave wouldn't. "I'd work out at the high school gym for two-and-a-half hours," Dave said. "When Coneset would finally say, 'Dave, I'm getting outta here, you've got to leave,' I got in my car and went to Powerhouse Gym for another hour and a half." Thinking back, Dave's old teammates laugh - he never had any company at Powerhouse. 4 "No, absolutely not," former Lemont tight end Sean Brickey said. "Dave was a madman." Even his best friends didn't understand it. Why would the undersized lineman spend all his time in the weight room, where no one even noticed? The answer isn't so difficult for Dave. It's in his blood. He comes from a family of the big- gest, strongest men you can find. His father is 6-foot-5. Steve is 6-foot-4. The other half of the equation came from his mother. "She's the toughest person I've ever met," Dave said. "She might be a rea- son I have never let an injury get to me, because she never showed her pain. She dealt with unimaginable pain, so nothing I could have would compare." Dave didn't use the game of football to cope with his mother's death, but rather to remember her life. "She showed me just how precious life is," Dave said. "I realized that I wanted to do everything I could do to= get the most out of mine. "I wanted to make the most of whatx I have because I knew, saw and experi- enced how short it can be." Today, a photo of Dave sits propped against the window facing outof Cone- set's office, overlooking the weight room. The overlayingtext on the photo reads, "Offensive Player of the Game: David Molk - Eastern Michigan." Coneset asked Dave for a copy of the r photo after Michigan's win over the, Eagles in 2009. Dave had it delivered to the weight room. Michigan's All- Fifth-year senior c America candidate will send another photo when he reaches the NFL. That Lemont High School weight room is where Dave Molk was born asa football player. "Fastest and strongest - that's why I love the weight room," Dave said. "That's where I make my money. That's where my football career lives: strength and speed. I knew that my size wouldn't matter if I got to the defender before he got to me." Dave Molk has always had a mean streak. He and his brother will stand up to anybody and stare them down. It's seen both on the football field and at home. Tom gave his sons boxing gloves at the ages of six and seven. But Tom readily admits that losing their mother like- ly played a part in the boys' aggression. "Steve expelled his anger in a place that was considered unauthorized," Tom said. "Dave had another place to expel his anger, and that was on the football field." Seated on a workout bench in the Lemont weight room, Tom pauses, shifts his gaze and laughs. "When he put the helmet on, it flips a switch for him and he becomes somebody that nobody can like," he continued. That switch was first flipped in elementary school, when Dave started playing football. He was too delicate. He was getting picked on by the team bully. "Dave, you have to stop being nice," Tom told him at the time. "When you put that helmet on, you're a gladiator. Play like it." Dave did just that. The next time the bully spit in his face- mask, Dave took him down, faster than any pancake block he's ever thrown. Everyone learned a lesson that day. The bully never came back to Dave. Tom realized his son's raw power. Dave learned that he loved to hit. The ern an( the un tough-r Just around uppercl on the from th Kenny and th Jake I Brandir thorne. away f dan Ko Take to the and w Michig "I w said M "That's Nort option fleet-fo Persa a tans us to push eter, wI By TIM ROHAN ning room, racking up 167 rushing Daily Sports Editor yards. Both used quick-hitting screen passes, matchingup defend- secret's out. Northwest- ers one-on-one. d Michigan State exposed "I don't think we tackled worth derbelly of Greg Mattison's a darn," Hoke said Oct.17, the Mon- minded defense. day after the Michigan State loss. run "I don't think we played the the four purdue at perimeter of our defense worth a lassmen darn." line, away Miigan Mattison told CBSSports.com 1e physical Matchup: that he wants his defense to have Demens Purdue 4-3; "eight or less" missed tackles per e athletic Michigan 6-1 game. According to the report, Ryan and When: Satur- Michigan has averaged six missed n Haw- day 12 P.M. tackles per game and has reached Just run Where: Michi- Mattison's goal in all but two from Jor- gan Stadium games this season - Notre Dame vacs. (11) and Michigan State (18). the ball ESPN2Radio: You could blame the defensive perimeter line for being on the ground, watch- vatch the ing Baker run by after it couldn't an defense fall apart. chop block the offensive line. Or ould attack our perimeter," you could blame the poor tackling ichigan coach Brady Hoke. of the cornerbacks - senior defen- where I would start." sive tackle Mike Martin said the hwestern used the speed Spartans were "aware that they to get outside with two (were) capable of missing tackles." oted quarterbacks in Dan What about the linebackers' hesi- nd Kain Colter. The Spar- tancy? Or the unnaggressive play ed a stretch running play of the entire defense? But particu- Edwin Baker to the perim- larly, as Hoke said, the linebackers here he found plenty of run- need to read the play quicker and react faster. Mattison and Hoke used the bye week to fix these problems, because Hoke expects Michigan's perimeter to be attacked again this week against Purdue. The same stretch play that Michigan State ran with Baker and similar bubble and quick-hitting screen passes that both teams ran could come back to haunt the Wol- verines, Hoke said, because Purdue runs the same plays. "I think their backs are fast," Mattison said, referring to junior running backs Ralph Bolden and Akeem Shavers. "They seem very, very quick. They have a lot of ways that they try to get to the perimeter with the ball." Added Martin: "They do a good. job of getting the ball in a lot of guys hands. ... They have a lot of weapons. We've just got to make sure we execute on defense and we run to the ball and get guys down." The problems that have plagued the whole defense - a lack of aggressiveness getting off blocks, everyone running to the ball, missed tackles - are worrisome because they are all fundamental basics of Mattison's defense and trademarks of the unit during the Wolverines' first five games. In practice this week, the defen- sive players worked on wrapping up, running through offensive players and finishing tackles. If they did it wrong, the coaches ripped them and forced them to stay after practice to hit the sleds. Running to the ball is a combi- nation of aggressiveness to get off the initial block and awareness to contain, meaning that Michigan instructs every player to funnel the ball back to the middle of the field to another defender. "We've seen what's happened on film," said fifth-year senior defen- sive tackle Will Heininger. "We just have to turn the ball in. Every coordinator I've ever had in high school, it was, 'Turn the ball inside to your guys, and then have every- one pursue. "And we're not good enough - we don't have all 11 NFL players where everyone can make the play - we've got to get everybody to the ball and everyone do their assign- ment. (Then) it doesn't matter if they run inside or outside." Purdue junior quarterback Caleb TerBush has been the facili- tator of the equal-opportunity Boilermaker offense, which fea- tures two 300-yard rushers and three 200-yard receivers. During the bye week, many Michigan play- ers watched TerBush play one of his best games of the season, as he completed 64 percent of his passes and spread the ball to eight dif- ferent receivers. Purdue upset No. 23 Illinois, thanks in large part to TerBush. But Michigan practiced all week with the mindset of fixing its defensive problems. "This game is about Michigan," Martin said. "Coach has really been talking about that. Because it doesn't really matter what Purdue does.... It boils down to what we do and how we execute." Hoke said his team practiced faster and more downhill this week, as the defense returned to its fundamentals. "If you're hesitant at all, that half a step that you're behind can cost you as a defense," Hoke said. "I think we played a little bit ten- tative, and you can't play tentative. If you're going to make mistakes, make them aggressive. I can han- dle that." enter Dave Molk picked Michigan over Wisconsin and lowa. That passion is what has kept him in the game of football from the youth leagues to Michigan and beyond. His Lem- ont teammates joke that, if it weren't for the sideways smile he cracks after every big hit, sometimes no one can tell if Dave enjoys the game of football. "Dave was never aggressive off the football field," said former Lemont cornerback Ryan Buttney. "But he's on a mission on the field." Dave is always searching for a chance to showcase his strength. He loves nothing more than hearing that he's fac- ing a nose guard on Saturday touted as one of the best in the nation. "He loves that, because he just wants to smatter him," Tom said. "He wanted to knock him on his ass, 'Welcome to college football."' Before every game at Michigan, Dave welcomes one of his teammates to college football by head-butting another offensive lineman - hard. He claims he gave redshirt junior lineman Ricky Barnum a concussion last season. True freshman lineman Jack Miller has been the victim this season. "I like Jack," Dave said. "He doesn't like it. He always says it's OK if he knows it's coming. Usually, when I come back from the coin toss, I'll just kind of run up to him and grab him, and slam my head into him." That tenacity, before games and at the line of scrimmage, is why Dave was already on his third helmet of the season by the Big Ten opener. "Dave told me he compresses his facemask so much that it pulls out of the sides and cracks the back of his helmet," former Lemont offensive lineman Nick Palermo said. "I just looked at him. 'You just told me you crack helmets.''' Tom Molk flung the door open, entered the Lemont STAFF PICKS The Daily football writers pick against the spread to predictS J scores in the 2011 football season. Michael NeStephen I Florek Nesbitt No.17Michigan -5) vs. Purdue No. 3 Oklahoma State-8) vs. Baylor No. 4 Stanfordl(-8.5) atNo.20 USC No.6Clemson(-4.5)atGeorgia Tech No.7 Oregon (-32.5)vs. WashingtonState No. 8 Arkansas -2.5) at Vanderbilt No.9MSU at No.13Nebraska(-5.5) No.10 KSU.vs. No.110klahoma (-13.5) No.12 Wisconsin (-8.5) at Ohio State No.14South Carolna (-6.5)atTennessee No.15Virginia Tech (-14) at Duke No.16 Texas A&M(-11)vs. Missouri No.18 Houston (-26.5)vs. Rice No.19 TexasTech-7.5) vs. Iowa State No.21 PennState (-6) atIltlinois No. 22 Georgia (-3)vs. Florida No. 23 Arizona State (-30.5) vs. Colorado No. 25 West Virginia (-7) at Rutgers Northwestern (-9.5)at Indiana lowa-t7.5)at Minnesota LastWeek- Overall Michigan Oklahoma State Stanford Georgia Tech Oregon Arkansas Nebraska Oklahoma Wisconsin Tennessee Virginia Tech Texas A&M Houston Texas Tech Illinois Georgia Arizona State West Virginia Northwestern Iowa 8-11 106-83-3 Michigan Baylor Stanford Clemson Oregon A rkasas Michigan State Oklahoma Wisonsin South Carolina Virginia Tech Texas A&M Houston Texas Tech Penn State Georgia Arizona State West Virginia Northwestern Iowa 9-14. 113-76-3 Kevin Raftery Purdue Oklahoma State Stanford Clemson Washington State 'A rkansas Nebraska Kansas State Ohio State South Carolina Virginia Tech Texas A&M Houston Texas Tech Illinois Florida Arizona State Rutgers Northwestern Minnesota 10-9 106-83-3 T.m Rohan Michigan Baylor Stanford Clemson Oregon Arkansas Nebraska Oklahoma Wisconsin South Carolina Virginia Tech Texas A&M Houston Texas Tech Illinois Georgia Arizona State West Virginia Northwestern Iowa 8-11 116-73-3 Sam Sedlecky, Maize Rage j President b Michigan Oklahoma State Stanford Clemson Oregon Arkansas Nebraska Kansas State Wisconsin South Carolina Virginia Tech Texas A&M Houston Iowa State Penn State Georgia Arizona State West Virginia Northwestern Iowa 11-8 77-47-1 Dave Molk handed his mother, Gail Molk, the football after the first and only touchdown of his career. 6 1 FootballSaturday - October 29, 2011 .,........ j .__ - - .. 1_ To apply to be a guest picker, e-mail trohan@umich.edu. If you're chosen and can beat at least two of us, you'll stay on for another week. The longest-tenured guest picker will get a prize at the end of the season. TheMichiganDaily - www.michigandaily.com .3