'101 2B - November 14, 2011 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 2B - November14, 2011 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Hoke's secret is leading with his seniors One week before the big- gest game of his life, Rick Kelly broke his leg. The senior defensive end's Yorktown Tiger football career was cut short before he had the chance to finally beat crosstown rival Delta, , . who had' dominated the series in recent years. TIM The year ROHAN was 1983 and Brady Hoke was just starting his coaching career at the small Indiana high school as the Tigers' linebackers' coach. Thatyear,in what could be con- sidered a minor miracle, the farm boys from Yorktown beat the city slickers from Delta, 13-12. After the game, Hoke was charged with handing out the game ball, which could've gone to the star running back or Hoke's star pupil line- backer - and both deservedly so. "I know we're happy," Hoke began as he stood in front of the whole team. "But we've got one person in the hospital who didn't get to enjoy this. He's going to enjoy it. "This is his!" Hoke shouted, holding the game ball high. The Tigers erupted. They thought Kelly would eventu- ally get the ball, but once they all boarded the team bus Hoke directed it immediately toward the hospital, the players still sporting their jerseys and pads. Hoke and a few players marched up the hospital stairs and handed the ball to Kelly. Nearly 30 years later, Michigan coach Brady Hoke still coaches for his seniors. His unwavering message: "We're always going to play and coach for our seniors." You heard it after Michigan lost against Michigan State. And after the Wolverines disappointed and tripped against Iowa. And after each game, as the season culmi- nates. Each time the message is strong because it plays on the heartstrings - time is precious. It's all about the seniors. And it makes sense. Hoke's belief is a program is only as strong as the seniors who lead it. Your best players should be the upperclassmen who are older, stronger and more mature. They know how to handle themselves and prepare off the field. They know the traditions. Then, when the time comes, they can share their knowledge of work ethic and tradition with the freshmen. The cycle continues. A winning tradition breeds more winning. But what do you do when you inherit a senior class that has known nothing but late-season disappointment since it stepped on campus? With this Michigan team, Hoke had to win them over first, which wasn't too hard. With their clock ticking, the seniors MARISSA MCCLAIN/Daily Seniors Ryan Van Bergen (left) and Mike Martin are two of the leaders who have taken charge this season. didn't waste time buying into a State loss, their talks have focused after a 6-0 start - to make sure coach who wanted to help them on staying strong as leaders. their senior year was special change their legacy. "It's just about not being a flash - the leaders of each position So he let them take charge. in the pan," Van Bergen said. "As group took charge to do that little Some are leaders in the tradi- far as, the seniors have given so "extra" Van Bergen was talk- tional sense. Ryan Van Bergen much of themselves, everyone ing about. All season long. That gets vocal during practice. David included, through January all the means extra film, extra lifts, extra Molk rallied the offense before way to now. And it's draining, it workouts - extra everything. the fourth quarter Saturday. really is. It's hard to do because (Don't worry. It's not breaking Then there's the quiet type, you have to go outside your compliance rules. It's all player- who'd rather show you how to expectations and do extra things. led.) act. Like Martavious Odoms, So you kind of hit a wall during Mike Martin and Van Ber- whose once-promising career the season a little bit. gen had the defensive linemen became littered with injuries, and "I think (Hoke) sensed that. come in three extra days a week who rebounded from a broken He kind of said, 'You guys could to work on their hands. Junior arm this year to catch the game- be the best senior class to play quarterback and offensive leader icing touchdown pass against the at Michigan. Not because you Denard Robinson called in the FightingIllini. guys inherited a great bunch of wide receivers. Defensive backs Hoke meets with his seniors guys, but because you made them worked on seven-on-seven drills. twice a week to gauge the pulse great.' " Through the sweat, a bond was of the team. Since the Michigan To avoid the second-half slide built. "I like how they like each other," Hoke said two weeks ago, after his team beat Purdue. "Maybe that's corny or whatever, but from where I sit, I've liked that they respect each other and they want to play for each other, in my opinion. It shows." The system is set up for suc- cess - the underclassmen want to prove themselves; the upper- classmen want to leave a mark. Accountability matters. These seniors decided to go the extra mile to change the sta- tus quo of recent years, and they were rewarded Saturday with their eighth win this season - the most for a Michigan team since 2007. Maybe they'll finish with eight wins. Maybe nine. Maybe 10. Maybe they'll get a chance at 11, if they're lucky. But what should make Hoke smile is how Martin and Van Bergen took over the Illi- nois game on defense. His seniors led and everyone else followed. "It shows that what you've been doing, this is how it pays off," Van Bergen said. "This is how things will happen for you if this is how hard you work. "I think that's a great message to the younger guys too. I'm gone next year but the legacy - if you do this in the offseason and you work this hard, this will be how successful you are." -ohan can be reached at trohan@umich.edu oron Twitter @TimRohan. 19-0 run fuels'M'in season opener Michigan looks By NEAL ROTHSCHILD Daily Sports Editor TI hfor answers after cyp ULo~i av gnve the Michigan basketball team's season opener against Ferris State. The Wol- FERRIS STATE 33 verines MICHIGAN 59 were hot and cold throughout the contest on Friday evening. But luckily for Michigan, it ended on a 19-0 run to relax away the pain of a shaky first 30 minutes of play in a 59-33 victory. "It started on defense, first of all," said redshirt sophomore center Jordan Morgan about the spurt. "We got a lot of steals and got some easy shots and when we started getting those easy lay- ups, whether it be in the full court or the half court, we got a rhythm and then shots started to fall for us - the same shots we couldn't get to fall in the first half." The 18th-ranked Wolverines (1-0) were led by the two players who went scoreless in last week's exhibition game against Wayne State. Sophomore forward Evan Smotrycz and senior guard Stu Douglass both scored 14 points and were on the mark from 3-point range to help seal the win. In addition to shooting 3-for-4 on 3-pointers, Smotrycz also demon- strated his strength by finishing two lay-ups while getting fouled. A day after Michigan coach John Beilein announced that freshman Trey Burke would start over Douglass, Burke was benched at the start of the game because he was late to the team's walkthrough on Friday. The move to start Douglass had oppo- site effects on the two guards. two-game sweep S r - n s ts -hl-sots30-4 o 4e t a Sophomore forward Evan Smotrycz scored 14 points while shooting 3-of-4 from beyond the arc. Douglass was quick in transi- tion and shot the ball with con- fidence, finishing 5-for-10 from the floor with a team-high four assists. Meanwhile, Burke strug- gled to get into the flow of the game, making just one of seven shots and failing to record an assist in 18 minutes. "One of the things that I really want Stu to do is think like a two- guard instead of always running the team," Beilein said. "You can see we need to score points, and I have not been comfortable with Stu not scoring points. So we're trying to create opportunities for them and if that means he's in with Trey or that he comes off the bench, it gives him more opportu- nities to score some points." Beilein said that while he believes Burke's tardiness was a one-time incident, he has yet to decide who will start Monday's game against Towson. Much like last week's exhibi- tion, Michigan struggled to find offense throughout much of the game. The Wolverines relied on 3-point shooting to keep them out of the Bulldogs' reach, but failed to score from in close. While Michigan was effective in getting into the lane in the early going, it converted on just three shots in the paint in the first half - the big men were largely uninvolved. The result of penetration was mainly a kick-out for a 3-point attempt. "I think we went 1-for-12 after we went 3-for-3," Beilein said. "That's when you've got to take it to the basket, you've got to throw the ball inside. You can't be afraid to back-cut, and you've got to get to the foul line." Sophomore center Jon Horford started but didn't even attempt a shot and pulled down three rebounds in 18 minutes. Morgan, who replaced him, was also a non-factor in Michigan's attack until the spurt late in the game when he scored back-to-back field goals. "They're just having trouble right now finishing in crowds, and we've got to get that part of our offense really going," Beilein said. "Both of them are playing a little tentative, and that's some- thing that we have to work on as coaches." With 8:50 remaining in the game, the Wolverines held a 38-32 lead and Ferris State had the momentum with a 9-3 run. But Smotrycz's 3-pointer, followed by a second-chance basket by junior Matt Vogrich put the Wolverines on a streak which culminated in Douglass's 3-pointer to give Michigan a 25-point advantage with three minutes to play. "We didn't want to win by 10," Smotrycz said. "We wanted to get everyone in the game. We felt like we should be winning by a lot more and shots weren't dropping,. but we stuck with it." By EVERETT COOK Daily Sports Writer OXFORD - In reality, the shootout didn't really matter. The weekend was going to be a disappointment even if Miami (Ohio)'s Byron MICHIGAN 1 Paulazzo MIAMI (OH) 3 didn't turn his sud- MICHIGAN 3 den death MIAMI (OH) 3 shootout attempt into a spinning whirl- wind of a shot that sealed the loss for the Michigan hockey team. Getting the two-point shoot- out win wouldn't have changed much because even that extra point couldn't have saved the weekend for the Wolverines. No. 5 Michigan (3-3-2 CCHA, 7-3-2 overall) traveled to Oxford and played its worst series of the year, dropping both games to a Miami team that hadn't won a CCHA game until last week. The most concerning thing for the Wolverines wasn't the loss- es, but rather not knowing what caused them. "I don't know (what we are missing)," said junior forward A.J. Treais. "We just needto find it. We are struggling right now." That search for "it" wasn't much of a question on Friday night because the Wolverines continued their season-long, Friday-nightstruggles. The RedHawks (3-4-1, 5-6- 1) scored less than two minutes into the first period, putting Michigan in a hole it could not climb out of. The Wolverines were dominated physically from the moment the puck dropped. "I don't know if it was a lack of focus todayor what,but we didn't come out like we needed to," said senior forwardLuke Glendening. "We struggled because of it." All weekend the Wolverines had serious troubles hanging onto the puck in Miami's zone, which led to a lot of turnovers and missed opportunities. They were able to erase a two-goal deficit in the final period when Glendening dug a puck out of the corner and finished on a great feed fromjuniordefenseman Lee Moffie to give his team a fighting chance with 13 minutes left. But Michigan couldn't get a second goal. The team finally showed signs of life late, but that slow start was too much to over- come. The answers after Saturday were a lot harder to come by. This time it wasn't a slow start, as junior forward Chris Brown gave Michigan an early 1-0 lead. It also wasn't a lack of hustle. The first tally was set up by a great effort play from Treais, who disrupted the setup of a RedHawk play deep in their zone to give Brown a great look at the net. It also wasn't for a lack of bounces. Michigan tied the game with four minutes left on a spectacular goal from freshman forward Zach Hyman. Hyman took a pass behind Miami's net and sent off an odd lookingshot/ pass to the crease. The puck then bounced off the skate of Miami goaltender Cody Reichard and just barely made it in the net. The RedHawks also had two goals called back on Saturday, and a shot in the first overtime period missed ending the game by a couple inches. "We just need * to find it. We are struggling right now." 0 I f 4apoe-:artnvaoft epsrmict e Occs gey is +currantly offaring a resarch stucdy or Psoriasis - if ycou ara at least -18 --Ancl ar~e in good gene4ral health, youa rnty bEo aligiblIa to participate in a rasaar4-- prog ramn for psoriasis- ffic visits and study agarnt are providedA frae of charge tca a/gib/e participants. YOu will also receiva cormpansatiaon for your participation- Vcor more inforrnation, picasc3 call: (734) 764-1 EFRIMI or log can to http ://www. umcliriicaistucd ins..c)rg/ -I L) utOOO493OO "TheseteamsintheCCHAare really good teams," said Michi- gan coach Red Berenson. "We are no better than anyone we play. We have proven that." But opinions as to Michigan's struggles differ throughout the locker room. Senior goaltender Shawn Hunwick cited the team's lack of experience and also ques- tionedthe Wolverines' mentality. "Maybe you go through the week, you might think, 'Hey we're Michigan, we're just going to come out and play, and it's going to be easy', but it's not,' " Hunwicksaid. "It's alessonwe're learning real soon. You can say whatever you want, guys can talk in the locker room, but unless you go out and do it, it's all talk." Whatever the true issue is, after a disappointing week- end, Michigan returns home with many more questions than answers. "One point out of six on the road is not acceptable," Berenson said. "No way, no matter how you twist it." 0l