.%f.: : r Toussaint collects 170 yards and two touchdowns as lead running back By TIM ROHAN Daily Sports Editor Hooting and hollering, the Michigan foot- ball team sprinted up the tunnel exiting the Big House. The uphill slope burned, but the players were too excited not to run. Their screams echoed off the walls. Somewhere in the crowd was redshirt sophomore running back Fitz Toussaint, the running back who may have - at long last - claimed his seat as Michigan's lead back. Left tackle Taylor Lewan walked with a slight limp with his arm around Denard Rob- inson's shoulder. Lewan tweaked his knee in pregame warmups then badly limped off the field in the third quarter but didn't miss a snap. Michigan coach Brady Hoke was pick- ing left guard Ricky Barnum's brain as they brought up the rear. Barnum re-injured his ankle midway through the game and couldn't return. At guard, Michael Schofield and Pat- rick Omameh stepped in, and stepped up. Lewan, Schofield, Omameh, center Dave Molk and right tackle Mark Huyge paved the way for arguably the best running back per- formance since 2009, as Toussaint ran for 170 yards and two touchdowns on 20 carries. As a team, the Wolverines played "Michi- gan football" and bullied Purdue, 36-14, simi- lar to how they were bullied two weeks ago against Michigan State. "I think nationally, people think about Michigan football and playing defense, then running the football," Hoke said. "Being able to run the football and knock people off the line of scrimmage. And soI think, that's what, in my mind, Michigan football is." Michigan's defense was considered stout this year - until Northwestern and Michigan State showed the world the Wolverines were weak on the perimeter. Purdue followed Michigan State's lead. On the Boilermakers' first drive, wide receiver Gary Bush took a bubble screen 48 yards for a touchdown - it was the first 40-plus yard play the Michigan defense had allowed all season. But Michigan's emphasis on technique paid off, and Purdue punted on five of its next seven possessions. The sixth ended in a Mike Martin safety - which was Michigan's first See RUNNING GAME, Page 3B TODD NEEDLE/Daly Redshirt sophomore Fitzgerald Toussaint rushed the hall 20 times and rocked sp a career-high 170 yards o Saturday. Martin leads resurging defense against Purdue MARISSA MCCLAIN/Daily Fifth-year senior Troy Woolfolk (29) has moved from cornerback to safety to replace redshirt junior Jordan Kovacs, but Woofolk is expected to remain at safety permanently. Countess, Woolfolk emerge ofill in for injured Kovacs Fifth-year senior posts career-high two sacks in win By STEPHEN J. NESBITT Daily Sports Editor It's hard to overstate the differ- ence defensive coordinator Greg Mattison has made on the Michi- gan football team through eight games. In the past 10 months, the Wol- verines evolved from one of the worst defenses into a depend- able, sometimes dominant corps. In Saturday's 36-14 victory over Purdue, the defense caused a red-zone turnover, a safety and a turnover on downs. After the defense allowed a swift opening-drive touchdown, capped by a 48-yard touchdown reception - the longest play allowed by Michigan all season - fifth-year senior defensive tackle Mike Martin took control of the game. Lined up at his own five-yard line, Purdue quarterback Caleb TerBush took a snap from under center. Before TerBush dropped back three steps, Martin had brushed past Boilermaker guard Peters Drey ready for the kill shot. It's a sight no quarterback MARISSA MCCLAIN/M Senior Mike Martin made seven tackles and two sacks against Purdue, includ ing a safety that gave the Wolverines their first lead of the game at 9-7. By KEVIN RAFTERY Daily Sports Editor There's too many easy Hal- loween puns for this one to even make an attempt. NOTEBOOK in the F; Michigan football team's 36-14 win over Purdue on Saturday, Michigan redshirt junior safety Jordan Kovacs watched from the sidelines, nursing a knee injury he suffered in practice earlier in the week. It was an unexpected sight. Kovacs's injury hadn't been released to the media until an hour before kickoff. During the team's practice Tuesday, which was open to the media, it appeared that Kovacs, No. 32, was participating. No. 32 was indeed playing. But Kovacs was not. According to sources, Michi- gan coach Brady Hoke had redshirt junior safety Matt Cavanaugh, normally No. 28, dress as No. 32. This wasn't an early Halloween costume. This was practice. It's unsure wheth- er Cavanaugh's number switch was to hide the Kovacs injury or to impersonate Purdue starting safety Albert Evans, who wears No. 32,on the scout team. Either way, when asked about injuries throughout the week, Hoke remained tight-lipped on the situation, continually saying his team was healthy. He didn't want people to know about Kovacs - and for good reason. See NOTEBOOK, Page 3B wants to see. Martin powered through Drey's last attempt to block him and dropped TerBush two yards deep in the end zone for a safety, giving Michigan a 9-7 lead early in the second quarter. "(The safety) was a great momentum (boost)," said Michi- gan coach Brady Hoke. "When you score defensively it always brings great momentum and morale for your team." Nine minutes later, Martin added another sack, giving him a career-high two sacks for the afternoon - matching his season- long totals for his freshman and sophomore seasons. "That guy is a physical beast," said junior defensive end Craig Roh of Martin. "He's a physically dominating player." Martin and the defensive line needed the bounce-back perfor- mance after No. 17 Michigan's last test, a 28-14 loss to then-No. See MARTIN, Page 3B BYE BYE, BULLDOGS Michigan swept Ferris State at Yost, pounding the nation's No.1 defense for nine goals. Page 2B BIG TEN CHAMPS With a win on Friday, the Michigan field hockey team captured its eighth Big Ten regular-season title. Page 2B At- 0