I 8A - Tuesday, November 1, 2011 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Hoke pleased with play of linebackers At long last, Toussaint ByT.fimROHAnamed Blue's top back Daily Sports Editor You get the feeling talking to Michigan football coach Brady Hoke that Desmond Morgan and Jake Ryan are two of his favorite players. Ryan, the longhaired 6-foot-3, 230-pound redshirt freshman, plays like a ball of energy and NOTEBOOK like a tough kid who doesn't know any better. And after Hoke said his line- backerswere too hesitant against Michigan State, he inserted the true freshman Morgan in the starting lineup. "I think what I like best about themisthatthey're football play- ers," Hoke said. "I mean, they understand and - my boy Jake can be - what's the right word? "He makes plays unorthodox sometimes." Howso, coach? "I've got an example, when he knifed through and (got a) tackle for a loss," Hoke contin- ued. "That's a guy being a foot- ball player. That's a guy saying I'm not going to (go to) the edge because I'm going to get knocked out. But if I take the guys knees and go up through, I've got a chance. "He just makes plays." Instead of playing his assign- ment by the book, Ryan made the play. That's why he's second on the team with five tackles for loss. "He just seems to find the football all the time," said fifth- year senior defensive end Ryan Van Bergen. "If you're going to make a mistake, make it going 1,000 miles per hour. That's what Jake does and that's why you see so many plays with him disrupt- ing something. He might not be in the right spot, but he's going fast so it looks good." Against Purdue, Hoke said Michigan's linebackers played more downhill, running to the ball - movingvertically, not hor- izontally. Their reaction time and play recognition were too slow when the Spartans ran all over the Wolverines. Simply put, this time they made an "impact." In his second-career start, Morgan made a team-high nine tackles, and afterwards, Hoke praised his physicality and instincts as a linebacker. "I think he's going to play a lot of football here at Michigan," Hoke declared. Morgan would've played more earlier in the season had he not tweaked his hamstring in the TERRA MOLENGRAFF/Daily Redshirt freshman linebackerJake Ryan (right) ranks second on the team with five tackles for loss this season. last week of training camp. His production has grown as he has grown more comfortable. He has 18 tackles in the past three games. "Desmond does a great job of self-critiquing and self-criticiz- ing and making sure he doesn't (continue to make mistakes)," Van Bergen said. "He really understands, for a freshman, (he) has a maturity to know how Michigan defense is supposed to be played. He has the best effort - as good an effort as anybody else on the field." With two freshmen starting at linebacker - the position Hoke played himself - it took two spe- cial players to usurp the gang of veterans who are still vying for playing time at the position. Hoke said he'd never had to rely on so many starting freshmen - Ryan, Morgan and true fresh- man cornerback Blake Countess - on a team that could still wina conference championship. "The best players have to play," Hoke said. "If we don't play the best players, not matter who they are, where they're from, what age they are, then we're cheating the program. And we're not going to cheat the program." HAGGLING OVER HAGERUP: When sophomore punter Will Hagerup returned from his four-game suspension against Minnesota, there wasn't much discussion about whether he'd lost his job. Hagerup was coming off a fantastic freshman season - he averaged 44 yards per punt and had 11 punts inside the 20-yard line. He lessened the pain of losing all-time great Michigan punter Zoltan Mesko to gradua- tion. But four games after his 2011 season debut, Hagerup has underwhelmed and now may have to fight off freshman Matt Wile, who handled the punting duties while Hagerup sat out. Though he's punted the ball just 12 times in four games, Hag- erup has averaged just 35 yards per punt, compared to the fresh- man Wile's 41-yard average. "I think he had the one - the first punt was a good punt," Hoke said of Haegrup's first 49-yard punt. "The second punt (which went 32 yards), the inconsistency there. ... We've got good compe- tition because Matt (Wile) there is competing at both (punter and kicker). So we'll compete there like we do any other position." Could the time off have left Hagerup rusty? "No," Hoke said flatly. "He's punted. He might be pressing a little bit, which I think he does." In fairness to Hagerup, Hoke praised him for placing four punts inside the 20-yard line after a windy game in East Lan- sing. PINK'S OUT: Iowa's Kinnick Stadium is famous for its pink visitors' locker room - the walls, the floors - even the toilet - are pink. When Van Bergen was asked about it, his answer dripped with sarcasm. "I love the pink locker room," Van Bergen said. "I've never had an issue with the pink locker room. I think it gives it a nice decor. The Feng Shui feels real good before a game. "As you get in there and you see the pink, it warms you up. It's very welcoming. I think more teams should go with pink. I have no problem with it. I think it's a great touch and better than the oft-white jail cell look. So, I say paint them up." "You really know what feng shui is?" one reporter asked. "It's a word," Van Bergen said, cracking a smile. KOVACS, BARNUM AND LEWAN UPDATES: Redshirt junior safety Jordan Kovacs (knee) and redshirt junior left guard Ricky Barnum (ankle) are day-to-day, Hoke said. Barnum has missed three games already this season with an ankle injury, and he hurt his other ankle midway through last Saturday's game aganst Purdue. Hoke wasn't concerned about redshirt sophomore left tackle Taylor Lewan. "Taylor's fine," Hoke said. "An ankle a little bit. Knee a little bit. But he's fine. He did everything (Sunday), too." Kovacs missed the first game in his Michigan career Saturday. Up until the final minutes before kickoff, his teammates thought he might suit up. "Thursday we found out (he might be out)," Van Bergen said. "It was still - the doctor said he wasn't going to play. If you asked Jordan, he was going to play. I think there was probably a fight right before we went out on the field and they were like, 'No, you probably shouldn't.' ... You could tell he was hungry to be out there. He probably could've played but it wasn't in his best interest. "Jordan's a competitor. I know he'll be back this week. He was running around yesterday, look- ing pretty good." By STEPHEN J. NESBITT Daily Sports Editor For the first time since he arrived in Ann Arbor in January, Michigan coach Brady Hoke has named a definitive starting run- ning back: Fitzgerald Toussaint. Toussaint, a redshirt sopho- more, ran all over Purdue on Sat- urday, tallying 170 yards and two touchdowns in the No. 13 Michi- gan football team's 36-14 victory over the Boilermakers. Entering the season, Hoke and his staff refused to name a starter, proclaiming it an open competi- tion in the backfield behind junior quarterback Denard Robinson. The pack quickly whittled down to a three-man race between Toussaint, junior Vincent Smith and senior Michael Shaw. Smith seemed to have the job wrapped up after a 118-yard per- formance against Eastern Michi- gan on Sept. 17. "Vince probably right now has earned that right (to start)," Hoke said two days later. But the decision was far from final. Hoke admitted the backfield would still be more likely to fea- ture arunningback-by-committee look rather than Smithexclusively. Against San Diego State the following week, Toussaint was in the starting lineup and carried the ball four more times than Smith. Hoke isn't flip-flopping any- more. During his weekly Monday press conference at the Junge Family Champions Center, he con- firmed that Toussaint had taken over the starting job. "I think it's Fitz right now, I don't think there's any doubt," Hoke said. "He's earned that opportunity." Toussaint's 170 rushing yards against Purdue were the most by a Michigan running back in a Big Ten game since Mike Hart's 195 W ,e a yards against Minnesota on Oct. 30, 2006. His 20-carry workload was heavier than that of any Wolver- ine running back in a single game since Carlos Brown rushed 25 times against Illinois on Oct. 31, 2009. Toussaint's breakout per- formance could also be attrib- uted to the bye week. Against Michigan State two weeks ago, he received just two carries. He looked refreshed and ready from the outset against the Boil- ermakers, matching Robinson's 170-yard passing performance. The most impressive touch was Toussaint's 59-yard touchdown rumble late in the third quarter. He took a pitch to the left, cut inside a pair of blocks, split the safeties and outran everyone to the end zone. "(On) the 59-yarder, he sepa- rates the safeties and has a tre- mendous burst as he does it," Hoke said. "And the other credit goes to our wide receivers block- ing down field like nobody's busi- ness." The burst, which was missing all season, was a welcomed sight. With his 503 yards on 82 car- ries (a 6.1 yards per-carry aver- age), Toussaint is Michigan's second-leading rusher, behind only Robinson. After eight games, Hoke has seen enough to name Toussaint the definitive starter, but the oth- ers will certainly see the field. "I don't know what (Toussaint being the starter) does, besides the continuity of it," Hoke said. "But I think they're so interchang- able to some degree. Vince (Smith) was a little beat up so he didn't get as many opportunities. Mike (Shaw) comes in and gives you a different gear to some degree. "But right now, Fitz definitely will be the guy." So, for now, the case is closed. TODD NEEDLE/Daily Redshirt sophomoreFtzgeraldToussadnt ran for 170 yards and two touch- downs in Saturdays 36-14 win over Purdae. ICE HOCKEY WOMEN'S SOCCER Michigan sets new mark at Yost Injuries, youth doom Wolverines Wolverines riding program-record 20-game home winning streak By MATT SLOVIN Daily Sports Writer If Yost Ice Arena could talk, it would save its stories of unparal- leled drama and celebration for the weekend. It would tell sto- ries of Hobey Baker winners and National Championships and future NHL stars. But it's never seen a winning streak like this before. The Wol- verines have won 19 straight at Yost and 20 straight at home, counting the win over Michigan State in The Big Chill at the Big House. The home winning streak is the program's longest ever. But during the week, Yost is a completely different place. Coaches' voices echo to each unoccupied corner of the his- toric venue as the Wolverines practice. Nine National Cham- pionship banners hang from the rafters, serving as the lone reminders that these walls are home to a special program. In the old brick building, the dark concourses and worn metal bleachers are cold, lonely places during the week. When the weekend rolls around, Yost comes alive. And all of its intricacies tantalize the A 4 fans, from the wide-eyed young- ster taking in his first game, to the old alumnus filled with sto- ries from decades past. Even the smell of Yost - a dis- tinct aroma that every regular can identify - seems more pro- nounced when it's hockey night in Ann Arbor. In the midst of the program's longest home winning streak of all time, the small things that make Yost a special place are appreciated by Michigan's play- ers and coaches, as much as by its fans. But Yost wasn't always the place to be on Friday and Satur- day nights in the winter. "When I first came here, you could sit anywhere you wanted," said Michigan coach Red Beren- son, who started coaching in 1984. "Finally, we got that turned around and generated more inter- est. Then the students got into it and the fans got into it and it just took off." Today, scalpers seem reluc- tant to let their prized tickets go to anyone not wearing maize and blue. Berenson recalls some embarrassing series against rivals in which Michigan fans were in the minority. "We filled the building for Michigan State, but more than half the people were from Michi- gan State," Berenson said. "It was insulting, really, to the Michigan people." Berenson describes the pro- cess that forever changed Yost as an education. After becoming aware of the impact fan bases can have on a game's outcome, the students pulled together to restore honor to one of the sport's most storied programs. During their time as Wolver- ines, skaters forge relationships with the venue. It becomes a home - a safe haven that treats its kind well. And its intruders are met with immediate hostility. "When you're a team or a play- er, when you have confidence in a certain building ... part of it is because of the environment," Berenson said. "Whether it's the student section or the band or the overall rink or all of the above, it's been a positive thing for this hockey program for a long time." The nurturing atmosphere that Yost has provided isn't tangible. From the outside, the building on State Street doesn't look like a hockey arena. Inside, though, it's hallowed ice. As Berenson puts it, if you want to play in most state-of-the- art arena, you should look else- where. When he brings recruits inside the arena, he's helping them find a potential home for four years - a supportive environment that will cheer you at your worst and make your opponents wish they'd stayed home. These recruits may also be finding their family. By STEVEN BRAID Daily Sports Writer There was so much promise. The Michigan women's soccer team had shown up to its pre- season workouts in mid-August equipped to improve on its strong showing the year before. It was poised to bounce back from a heartbreaking 2-1 loss to Oklaho- ma State in the first round of the 2010 NCAA Tournament. Yes, the Wolverines entered the season as a young squad with 18 underclassmen, but they didn't care. Almost the entire start- ing lineup returned. Forward Nkem Ezurike, the team's top goal scorer as a freshman, spoke excitedly of a sophomore encore and redshirt junior goalie Haley Kopmeyer was ready to reprise her role as one of the Big Ten's best keepers. "I think, hands down, every- one (believes) that we will get back to the tournament," said redshirt junior Clare Stachel before the season. "We are not goingto go backwards onthat." And early on, Michigan ful- filled that potential. The Wolver- ines put aside their shutout loss to Akron to start the season and won eight of their next 12 games, starting the season with a record of 8-3-2. During that period they jumped to second place in the Big Ten with a 3-1-1 record after five conference games. Michigan also scored 21 goals during that timespan and worked hard to shed its "offensively chal- lenged" label, one that had clung to past years' teams. The team was aggressive on the attack and was on pace to tally the most goals in a season during Michi- gan coach Greg Ryan's four-year tenure. As the offense became a weapon for the Wolverines, Kopmeyer anchored a stifling defensive unit. She limited the opposition to just 11 goals in the first 13 games and posted six shut- outs during that period. But even in its wins, Michigan suffered losses. Midway though the sea- son, the team lost starting sopho- more midfielder Meghan Toohey to a season-ending leg injury just three games after starting junior midfielder Holly Hein played her last game of the season due to treatment of thyroid cancer. With the loss of key contribu- tors disrupting the dynamic on the field and taking an emotional toll on the team, Michigan strug- gled mightily towards the end of the season. Players shuffled positions to try to fill the void left by Toohey and Hein, but their absence was too much to over- come. The team lost all but one of their last six games and was shut out in four of those contests, including crippling home losses to Northwestern and Ohio State. Staring junior midfielder Emily Jaffe was also sorely missed over the final three games, as she underwent an appendec- tomy. The offense became ane- mic and one-dimensional. Until senior. defender Kim Siebert's goal against Illinois with about five minutes left in the season, Nkem Ezurike was the lone Wol- verine to score since a Sept. 23 loss to Minnesota at home - a span of roughly nine games, dur- ing which Ezurike scored seven goals. The only other player who scored more than two goals on the team was Stachel, who tallied five. "We're not the same team without Meghan on the field and we're not the same team without Holly," Ryan said Michigan's late-season slide can also be attributed to its youth. With multiple injured players and very little upperclassmen, Ryan played a consistent lineup of seven underclassmen in the final games. Defensive lapses and crucial blunders - turning the ball over deep in their own zone - made by the young back line also gave opponents ample scoring oppor- tunities near the end of the sea- son. During its late-season swoon Michigan gave up critical goals late in games, typical of a young team. The Wolverines will enter the offseason with just three graduating seniors and will once again return almost their entire starting lineup next season. Though it will be slightly more experienced, the team will enter next season just like it started this one: A talented and exuber- antbunchintentontakingthe Big Ten by storm. S4