The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, November 8, 2011- 5 Hoke rehashes close call, clock management at Iowa 'NASCAR' offense ignites Wolverines down the stretch By TIM ROHAN Daily SportsEditor Brady Hoke's mouth was half agape as he talked to special teams ace Floyd Simmons on the sidelines. Hoke had just called his first timeout of the second half with 5:22 remaining in the fourth quarter. But the 'oops' look said he knew he made a mistake. It was a questionable decision considering the circumstances: Facing a 4th-and-6 near mid- field, Iowa was ready to punt. "Why call a timeout if you're Michigan?" ESPN anchor Dave Pasch asked rhetorically. "Don't you need to save your timeouts?" Hoke said he had counted 12 men on the field for Michigan. To Hoke's credit, had the five- yard penalty been called, Iowa would've had a 4th-and-1 situa- tion. The Hawkeyes were initially going to go for it, facing a 4th- and-1, but they were called for a false start and were forced to punt. Worried about the penalty, Hoke called timeout. But, as Hoke realized after- ward, there were only 11 Wolver- ines on the field. "I didn't count very well," Hoke said. "And as soon as I called it and counted, I said, 'I hope we don't need that one late.'" Twenty minutes later, Hoke's hands were tied because of it, especially after Junior Heming- way's would-be touchdown catch was called incomplete with seven seconds left. On Monday, Hoke rehashed many 'what-ifs' that weighed heavily on Michigan's 24-16 loss at Iowa, mostly concerning Hemingway, but also the time- out blunder. Hoke had used his second timeout to stop the clock as Michigan got the ball back on its final drive. And he called his third and final timeout, instead of spiking the ball, when the Wolverines got a first down .at the three-yard line with 16 sec- onds left. Without any timeouts, Michi- gan was forced to throw the ball four times. The luxury of the pass-run option was not afforded the Wol- verines and the dynamic quar- terback Denard Robinson, who could have been forced to watch the clock tick away had a run not been successful. A team that ranked among the nation's best at running the ball had to throw it. "No (regrets)," Hoke said of his timeout usage down the stretch. "We talked about that (Sunday). Going into the two- minute at the end, knowing where we were timeout-wise, I thought (offensive coordina- tor) Al (Borges) really managed it well. We had four shots at the endzone. Two of them we had in our hands." ERINKIRKLAND/Daily Michigan coach Brady Hoke made a mistake calling his first second-half timeout. By STEPHEN J. NESBITT Daily Sports Editor With terms like NASCAR, three-wide and pace flying around Michigan coach Brady Hoke's press conference, NOTEBOOK you might think the topic of conversation was Tony Stewart's upset vic- tory at Texas Motor Speedway on Sunday. Instead, Hoke was discuss- ing the "NASCAR" formation that almost saved the No. 22 Michigan football team from its 24-16 upset defeat in Iowa City on Saturday. After redshirt sophomore running back Fitzgerald Tous- saint - the Wolverines' lead- ing rusher against Iowa - left the game with an injury, junior quarterback Denard Robinson and the Michigan offense shift- ed into the one-back, three- receiver shotgun set and turned up the pace. Was it essentially a two-min- ute drill? "It's just a little different on the play selection - the calls," Hoke said on Monday. Is it as fast as the two-minute offense? "It might be even a little more tempo," Hoke said. Robinson appeared signifi- cantly more comfortable in the "NASCAR," a formation that is more similar to what Michigan ran the past three seasons. In the final quarter, Robin- son led the offense on one late scoring drive and fell just three yards and a two-point conver- sion short of completing the comeback against the Hawk- eyes. "I think when you go what we call 'NASCAR' ... you limit the defense a little bit," Hoke said. "Iowa's not a huge substitution defensive football team - never have been. But you limit there a little bit to what they can do because you've got a little more Woolfolk was the starting safety engaged tempo. alongside Kovacs. Gordon didn't "Now we've done that same play a snap. thing three other times this Hoke attributed the change year. In one game we were three to Woolfolk besting Gordon, the and out, so we used no posses- team's third-leading tackler, in sion time. We weren't in any practice during the week. kind of situation not to try and "We just thought Troy was score quickly." going to start the football game Having Toussaint on the once Jordan came back," Hoke sideline didn't hurt the come- said. back, according to Hoke, since "We were going to go with he would rather use junior those two guys. And they'll running back Vincent Smith's compete like hell this week (to see) who'll be the guy. It's not like Thomas had made some mistakes. "W hen you go "You have to feel pretty good (NASCAR\ about the guy that's on the field, (NASCAR) ... too. It all comes down to com- petition and where guys are. you limnit the Thomas is a competitor." defense." Woolfolk didn't play badly, but he had never started a game at safety alongside Kovacs and didn't necessarily impress with his routes to the ball. pass-blocking abilities in the "I think we should have taken late-game offense. an opportunity to get (Gordon) "We got into the two-minute in a little bit and just didn't for and got into the 'NASCAR', one reason or another," Hoke and that's kind of Vince's deal," said. Hoke said. "If you watched the INJURIES: Redshirt freshman game and watched him pick linebacker Jake Ryan was one of up the linebacker blitz the one four freshmen who saw signifi- time, you know why he's in cant time on Michigan's defense there." against the Hawkeyes. Ryan SAFETY SWAP: Through started but suffered a stinger on seven games this season, the opening play of the game. He redshirt sophomore safety returned in the fourth quarter. Thomas Gordon was the most "(Ryan will) be alright," Hoke opportunistic player on Michi- said. "He came back in the game, gan's defense. made a great play on third down Gordon was a turnover at the end of the game to get the machine, collecting an intercep- ball back for our offense." tion, forcing two fumbles and Redshirt junior offensive recovering three fumbles. lineman Ricky Barnum did not So when fifth-year senior make the trip to Iowa City. Troy Woolfolk shifted from He is recovering from an cornerback to safety last week, ankle injury, and Hoke was it was expected that Woolfolk hopeful Barnum would practice would be the backup safety more this week. and would only start if redshirt Toussaint 'left in the third junior safety Jordan Kovacs quarter and didn't return, remained out of the lineup with but Hoke and Toussaint said a knee injury. the ' unning back could have But on Saturday against Iowa, returned late in the game. Fifth-year senior Junior Hemingway was still the center of attention Monday. Hoke was still convinced Monday that Hemingway caught it. "I thought Junior made a catch," Hoke said. In bounds? "Oh yeah." Did he finish the process of catching the ball? "You see, that's where every- thing gets diluted," Hoke responded. "What is that rule?" How do you perceive it? "I thought he caught the ball." And he finished the catch and everything? "Hm-hm," he affirmed. Redshirt sophomore running back Fitzgerald Toussaint said every player thought Heming- way had caught it when they reviewed the game film on Sun- day. When the play happened live, the officials immediately ruled it incomplete, but then it was reviewed in the booth. After the review, the official was ambigu- ous: "The ruling on the field stands as called. The pass is incomplete. Third down." That was it. On the telecast, Pasch explained that the explanation meant they did not have enough video evidence to overturn the ruling on the field.' Hoke was never given an explanation during the game or at any point afterwards. He added that they didn't have time during the game to explain why or how they ruled Hemingway's catch incomplete. Like he does every week with a handful of plays, Hoke will ask the Big Ten office about the rul- ing on Hemingway's would-be catch. "I think it's just the way it goes," Hoke said. "Just part of the game. We're always trying to get, 'Is that the right call? Why did they call it?' More than any- thing." Senior leaders Ryan Van Bergen and Dave Molk both expressed some level of disdain for the call, but both were stoic in their approach to move for- ward - atrait that Hoke has val- ued win or lose. "I think the honest approach we take every Sunday with our kids - good or bad - (will help)," Hoke said. "We'll move through that and past it pretty quick. They know. "(Monday), there will be a bunch of them over in the office watching film on Illinois. They'll turn the page pretty quickly. Kids are a heck of a lot more resilient than we are. We've got to take that next step and so do they." Junior running back Vincent Smith is a key part of the 'NASCAR" offensive scheme Michigan runs to speed op tempo. Faceoffs more than just about the draw for Berenson, Michigan Michigan won just 43 percent of its faceoffs against Western Michigan By MATT SLOVIN Daily Sports Writer In football, the Oklahoma drill is a staple at practices from high school to the pros. Created by famed Sooners coach Bud Wilkinson, the drill pits two players against each other in a hard-hitting, teeth- gritting tackling situation. Michigan hockey coach Red Berenson may soon need to integrate a similar tool into his practices. But instead of having his players try knocking their opponent to the turf - or in this case, the ice - he'd make them beat the other to the puck off the draw. The Wolverines are plenty physical - a powerful check from senior defenseman Greg Pateryn may land an inattentive opponent in Ypsilanti. Rather, a fundamental weakness exposed itself against Western Michigan this weekend. "I think up until this weekend, we've been strong on faceoffs," Berenson said. He added that faceoffs are about the team, not just the man in the middle. Despite winning a majority of this season's faceoffs thus far, there's still cause for concern inside the circles. And it's not simply that Michi- gan hasn't been taking control of the puck - it won just 43 percent of the time against the Broncos - it's when the Wolverines lose it. "A big part of it is preparation and focus by the centermen," Berenson said. "But it could also be the winger next to him. It's something we work on all the time." Berenson was known as a you can't win a faceoff and some nights when you can't lose (one)," Berenson said. Unfortunately for him, his team didn't win them in big spots on Friday night. Several times in the Western Michigan series, especially Fri- day, Berenson called on his men to win the scuffle at crucial stag- es of the games - on the power play, killing penalties and with time winding down. And at each critical juncture, it seemed the puck wound up resting comfortably on the tape of a Bronco stick. Take, for example, the faceoff that lost the Wolverines the game on Friday, a 3-2 deci- sion. As freshman center Zach Hyman demonstrated, winning the draw is just half the battle. With the game tied at two and under a minute to play, Hyman skated into the circle. The puck was in the Michigan zone, and a mistake on a faceoff so late in the game could doom the Wol- verines. Hyman won the puck - but that wasn't enough. The Michigan defense was slow to react and Western Mich- igan swarmed the loose puck. Before the team had recovered from the draw, the puck was in the net - a "bang, bang" play according to Berenson. The home winning streak was over at 20 games. Berenson cited Hyman, Tra- vis Lynch and Alex Guptill - all freshmen - as impressive so far in faceoffs. But that's hardly to say experience is irrelevant. Size, Berenson says, is less important. Luckily, 5-foot-8 junior center A.J. Treais "plays big," according to Berenson. Treais is fast, intelligent and intense - qualities that Beren- son believes wins draws. "Sometimes it's just a bad bounce, sometimes it's just a bad drop," Treais said. "But those are the battles we have to start winning." ADAMGLANZMAN/Daily Junior forward A. Treais maybe short in staore at 5-foot-8, but Berenson said he 'plays big' for his position, which helps him win faceoffs. strong faceoff center in his NHL one that sometimes the puck just days. slides away. So he knows as well as any- "There's some nights when I.