a 8 - Friday, November 4, 2011 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Hawkees wllbe'most F TBA LL Tlawkeyes will be The telling noise ofIowa nhvsieal' tes for Bl1P a _a. .- Trvi .im-L vK-FVI/J n v.L A_/ w- By STEPHEN J. NESBITT Daily Sports Editor Three weeks ago, the Michigan football team traveled to East Lan- sing to face Michigan State - the toughest team on the schedule, according to Michigan coach Michigan Brady Hoke. On Saturday, at Iowa the 13th-ranked Matchup: Wolverines (2-1 Michigan 7-1; Big Ten, 7-1 Iowa 5-3 overall) travel When: Satur- to Kinnick Sta- day 12 P.M. dium to again Where: Kin- face the tough- nick Stadium est team on their TV/Radio: schedule. But ESPN this time it's Iowa. The Hawkeyes (2-2, 5-3) sit one game behind Michigan, Michigan State and Nebraska in the Big Ten Legends division, but are unbeat- en in Iowa City this season. "They play awfully well and they're a very well-coached foot- ball team and have been for many, many years," Hoke said. "It will be the most physical game to this point for us as ateam." The Wolverines' only loss of the season came on the road against the Spartans, a game that was plagued with personal fouls and, well, toughness of all sorts. Still, for Hoke, that game wasn't the toughest. This one will be. "Oh, yeah," Hoke said. "(The Hawkeyes) always have been (the toughest), in my opinion. I always thought they were well-coached and physical. It's a fun week. As a defensive line coach, this is fun. I love this." Added fifth-year senior captain David Molk: "They're old-school football. It's hit-'em, smash-mouth football. That's what they play. Always have." Michigan has dropped its past two decisions with Iowa and hasn't won in Iowa City since MAROSA MCCLA/Daily Michigan coach Brady Hoke is 1-1 on She road is his first season in Ann Arhor. 2005. Seeming to ignore the Hawk- eyes' defensive rankings - they are in the bottom half of the Big Ten in both rushing and passing yards allowed - Hoke has empha- sized Iowa's tenacious, exemplar defense to his players. "Iowa is one of those teams that's not going to change anything they do in preparation for you, especially offensively," said fifth- year senior defensive end Ryan Van Bergen. "They're going to do the same thing they've been doing for, I don't know how many years." Saturday's matchup with Iowa also marks the beginning of Mich- igan's November slate of games. The Wolverines' final month con- sists of consecutive games against the Hawkeyes, Illinois, No. 9 Nebraska and Ohio State. Those four teams currently have a com- bined record of 23-10. This is exactly the competition that Hoke wants in November. "It's going to be a great chal- lenge for us," Hoke said. "When you get in November, you play for championships in the Big Ten con- ference, and that's kind of how it's been for many years." Michigan is certainly within striking distance of the confer- ence championship, sitting in a three-way tie atop the division but the Wolverines' roster has slowly begun to deteriorate. Sophomore safety Carvin Johnson left the team this week, becoming the sixth player to depart this fall. Perhaps more importantly, sev- eral everyday starters are ques- tionable entering the weekend. Redshirt junior safety Jordan Kovacs missed last Saturday's game with a knee injury, while redshirt sophomore offensive tackle Taylor Lewan and redshirt junior offensive guard Ricky Bar- num have both been slowed by nagging ankle injuries. Hoke gave no final indication as to whether any of the three would play, but he also didn't rule any player out. Even with the depleted roster, junior quarterback Denard Robinson is healthy, and thatgives Michigan a chance in any game. "I don't know if our blueprint is ever going to be different (in November)," Hoke said. "We want to run the football. We want to be able to possess the football. We want to take care of the football. "I can't tell you that's going to be any different, but it's how you have to improve on a daily basis so you can play your best football through the month." At 7-1 to begin November, Michigan fans won't be demand- ing anything different. egend has it, the field at Kinnick Stadium talks to unwanted guests. They say you can hear the fan in the first row while you're in the huddle. They say Iowa's stadium is so tight, you can feel the noise breath- ing down the - back of your neck. "They could prob- TIM ably touch ROHAN you," said junior quar- terback Denard Robinson. After driving through miles of corn stalks, opponents dress for battle in pink locker rooms. Ahead of them is an opponent who doesn'ttry to trick or dis- guise anyone or anything. Soon enough, you'll be facing a physi- cal, unrelenting defense. Brady Hoke will play the role of the leader of the unwanted guests. Unimaginable prior to the season, Hoke has Michigan at 7-1, ranked 13th in the country. The seniors can still talk about how they have something to play for, how the Big Ten Champion- ship is within reach. Their voices grow more confident each week. All this because Hoke has them playing the right way. But there's one thing he has yet to do: Prove he can win consistently on the road in the Big Ten. This is where the Kinnick Stadium voices come in. The Spartans were too loud - too boisterous for Michigan's liking. The Wolverines had problems with their snap count. All the preparation didn't matter when the Michigan State blitzers could easily pounce on Denard Rob- inson once they timed that snap count perfectly. Even in the quiet, high-class, less-than-raucous academia set- ting of Evanston, Michigan wasn't prepared in the first half to take. on Northwestern in their house. And this field in Iowa can talk, remember. Silence it - silence the crowd and the questions about his team - and Hoke will have proven this team worthy of being in the hunt this late in the season. He may just be able to add another check to the list of his impressive start. The noise is deafening though. The top eight teams in the Big Ten, regardless of division, are 39-3 at home this season. The last time Robinson threw a pass in Kinnick Stadium, he was merely a freshman and in the spotlight for the first time, charged with leading Michigan on a game-winning drive against undefeated Hawkeyes. The sound reached a crescen- do as Robinson tossed an inter- ception with 46 seconds left. "I actually missed the sig- nal," Robinson said Wednesday, recalling what many consider the defining moment of his freshman season. "It kind of bothered me because I think I could've done better - beinga little calmer about the situation.... I was just trying to do so much." How will he respond this' time? Could he rise above his past mistakes - including a three interception half at Evanston and a poor showing in East Lan- sing - and play with poise? Can he silence the noise - the racing thoughts - within himself? The last time Michigan took the field, Robinson was calm and the offense looked a lot like Michigan. Less Robinson, more Toussaint. Questions turned from whether Robinson could ever figure out his mechanical issues in the passing game to whether Fitzgerald Toussaint could keep this up. Offensive coordinator Al Borges said that's what the offense is supposed to look like: pound the ball 20 times with Toussaint, with Robinson safe behind "BREAK ONLY IF NEC- ESSARY" glass. Sounds like Michigan circa Lloyd Carr and Bo Schembechler, right? But Ricky Barnum and Taylor Lewan - the whole left side of the offensive line - are banged up; and Michael Schofield can only spot one of them. But Toussaint had been absent in so many games this season, carrying the ball 16 times for 32 yards in Michigan's two road games. Against the Spartans, he had two carries for seven yards. But Hoke should know better, that the noise is louder on the road. That staying true to your identity is all you can do when it gets loud. Players revert to muscle memory and what feels comfortable when it gets loud. Toussaint and the offensive line will have their chance to prove that not only was last week's Purdue game how Michi- gan runs the ball, but also how Michigan will run the ball. Iowa plans to run the ball too. "And they're going to dare you to try and stop it," said fifth-year senior defensive end Ryan Van Bergen. There will be no tricks. No fancy gimmicks. Just tough on tough. For a coach that has fed his players three square meals of toughness since he arrived in January - he recently called out their manhood, saying football players don't wear long sleeves when it gets cold outside, they embrace it - this is the ultimate test: Is his team truly tough enough? The winning team won't make the most noise. It'll be whoever silences the other long enough to either bask in the glory of its own screaming crowd or to hear a collective audible moan once the Wolverines answer all these questions. Regardless, by Saturday's end, Kinnick Stadium will have said something about Brady Hoke's team. -Rohan can be reached at trohan@umich.edu 6 0 0 0 ,I