0 0 shouldn't line up - no disrespect to Mar- cus Knight andKevin Bryant and all those guys - you and Tai Streets should be out there," Marcus said. "All you have to do is learn the plays, keep your mouth shut and be a freshman. Just don't play like a freshman." "Marcus, I'm from Richmond, Virgin- ia," Dave said flatly. "I don't know what it is to be scared of anything. "I want to do what y'all did last year." Win the national championship. Whenever Dave would ask Marcus a question, he'd contort his face the same way every time - he'd raise his eyebrows and twitch his lips at the same time, and smile while he did it. Marcus saw that face a lot that summer, and when training camp started, he made sure to get a glimpse of it every time they sat down to eat. Dave's look had a frustrated twistto it lately - he was dealing with going fromthe No.1 receiving recruit in the country to No. 4 on Michigan's depth chart, and the rea- son was simple: he didn't know the plays. Marcus told him: Meet up with Tai Streets, Marcus Knight, some of the older receivers, and Tom Brady, and learn the offense, learn the plays. Once you under- stand what you're doing, you'll play. You'll be great. "I don't think he understood how to compete and go from a second-team or third-team guy," Marcus says. "As a fresh- man, I don't think he understood what that meant as far as climbing up the ladder. There were other guys that waited their turn as well." During his freshman year, Marcus didn't know the plays - the other safeties hadn't had much interest in him taking their playing time and his position coach Hoke needs to prove he-s more than a good talker WMU's Carder will be first real test for defense Dub-Nik served asa training ground for four freshman, including Dave Terrell, before their first football season in 1998. knew he wasn't going to play, so there was no sense in bothering. "At Michigan, they don't throw you into the fire unless they have to, so they don't have to deal with (you) - they don't want to fight the monster they helped create," Marcus says. "That's why a lot of talented freshmen won't play, so they won't become a star." So Dave did as he. was told. He needed to learn the plays, so he approached the older wide receivers. But Dave wasn't just any old guy, holding a number, waiting his turn. He was holding THE number. 'I don't know if the guys he (sought) help from really wanted to give him help, because he was a better wide receiver," Marcus says now. "And it's kinda like, they didn't want him to take their job. I don't think he truly got the guidance from the receiving corps, the older receivers. "That's why he was a little frustrated or he didn't know who to trust. He didn't know who to go to, who to look up to. "I think he probably got it more from Brady because he knew Dave was going to be one of those targets that makes a quar- terback look pretty good. And that's where I think he and Tom Brady really developed. a close bond, when Dave finally went to him and said, 'Teach me the plays. Where do I need to be?"' Two years later, Marcus had graduated, but he still called Dave on a monthly basis, just to check in. This time, he wanted to crawl inside Dave's head before the biggest game of his life: the 2000 Orange Bowl, Brady's senior year. This was it. "These are the types of games that you showcase yourself in," Marcus said, as if he were sitting across from Dave in Dub-Nik. "And do whatever you have to do to make sure your team wins. If you want to get to this level, they rise, they perform well on these types of stages. "Catch every pass if you can. Go to work. This is the type of the game that would put you, in your junior year, at the top of the list." Dave didn't disappoint - he caught 10 passes for 150 yards and scored Michigan's first three touchdowns of the game. Each drive, Dave found a new way to get open. "Terrell's got another one!" the TV See Dave Terrell that's the best~ wide receiver in the country. announcer exclaimed, as Dave moved Michigan down to the 20-yard line late in the third quarter. He had already caught two touchdowns by that point. Brady went back to him on the very next play, on a curl route, and Dave muscled his way through the cornerback and ran for daylight. Touchdown, Michigan. Brady set a Michigan bowl record that day with his 369 yards passing, as he led his team to a thrilling 35-34 win. But Dave was the Orange Bowl MVP. Marcus watched from California. He was playing for the Raiders at the time, and he told anyone who'd listen: See Dave Ter- rell, right there, that's the best wide receiver in the country. Brady Hoke used six words to shift the feelingof Michigan football. It was in response to a question about Michigan still being an elite job. After being nationally embar- rassed on a consistent basis, those words were just what Michigan fans wanted to hear. "This is Michigan, for God's sake." Hoke then proceeded to wrap every MICHAEL Wolverine fan FLOREK in a verbal hug the past seven months with sound bites including "physicality" and "fundamentals," bringingback Michigan football and the ever popular: "This is Michi- gan." The alumni believed. They told us to believe. We did. It wasn't a hard sell. A fanbase so battered from staring at 52-14, 37-7 and 48-28 in a three-game span needed some glimmer of hope. Fans needed a leader to rally around, someone to blindly follow back to the prosperity they signed up for. So why not Hoke? He understands the traditions. Clocks are around Schembechler Hall counting down the Ohio State and Michigan State games. He's extremely passionate about Michigan. Just listen to him talk. He's a genuinely good dude. He responds to people by name and has self-deprecating humor. Asked to describe Hoke in one word, freshman linebacker Frank Clark told MGoBlue.com, "Epic." "Sometimes coaches are standoff- ish or kind of hard to approach, but Coach Hoke's not like that at all," fifth-year senior center David Molk said on Monday. "He's just a great guy that you put your arm around and say, 'Hey, how ya doin?"' Fans decided that somehow these traits were going to help him win football games. Without a single vic- tory to his name, he's nice-guyed his way into Michigan fans' hearts. Now on the eve of Brady Hoke's first game, he doesn't feel much like a new coach, unproven at a big-time college football program. He's the son who never left, the one *who reminds fans of the days when Michigan coach Brady Hoke has sky-high expectations in his first season at the helm., Michigan won Big Ten Champion- ships and were guaranteed a good bowl game. But as you watch this season wearing your "This is Michigan" student t-shirt, realize that those old days are gone - at least temporarily. Michigan lacks depth, has a few weak spots and is undergoing a change of system both on offense and defense. And no matter how many recruits Hoke pulls from Ohio or how technically sound Kyle Kalis is at run blocking, it's not going to have an effect this fall. Despite talking all camp about findinga featured running back, Michigan still doesn't have one. Hoke can talk about the good com- petition between senior Mike Shaw and redshirt sophomore Fitzgerald Toussaint, but if they were both game-breakers wouldn't he say they were both too good to keep off the field? The Wolverines are starting a former walk-on in Will Heininger at strong-side defensive end. Brady Hoke cited experience as the biggest reason he's starting. Heininger's , backup, redshirt sophomore Nathan Brink, is a walk-on that's 32 pounds lighter than Heininger is. The kicking game that was so atrocious last year returns redshirt sophomore Brendan Gibbons as the starter in all his 1-for-5 glory. The punting situation isn't any rosier with sophomore Will Hagerup suspended for the first four games. While freshman Matt Wile and redshirt sophomore Seth Broekhuizen having taken over the duties, the shankopotamus has crashed Michigan practice on more than one occasion. And just how much cana defense that was 110th last year improve? Michigan will win some games because of experience, far superior talent and Denard Robinson. Hoke could even motivate a few wins out of the Wolverines in games they maybe shouldn't have won. But we have no idea how much of an effect Hoke and his coaching staff will have. A 9-3 record is a pos- sibility. So is 4-8. Hoke's press conference quotes don't win games. Don't carry over what you felt into the season. You're only setting yourself up for disap- pointment when Michigan doesn't reach the Big Ten title game. Be pre- pared for anything. This is the new Michigan. -Florek can be reach at florekmi@umich.edu. Follow him on Twitter, @michaelflorek. By TIM ROHAN Daily Sports Editor c: ea If you asked Brady Hoke or Greg ti Mattison, Alex Carder is eight-feet ft tall and can throw a football more a: than 400 yards, in the air, against sh the wind..n To be fair, the h, Western Michi- W n gan quarterback Michigan threw for more ar than 3,300 yards Matchup: s last season attd 30 Michigan 0-0; 0 touchdowns. So Michigan 0-0 is he'll be the Michi- When: Satr- W gan defense's first day 3:30 P.M. s true test of the ft season. With him Where: Michi- h: at quarterback, gan Stadism re the Broncos won't TV/Radio: bt go down easily. ABC or "I'd like to see de who's a better quarterback in the o Midwest," Hoke said. "I think Alex, he throws the ball well. He manages the offense well. He's got great timing. He's got a quick release. He's tough and he's a dura- ble guy. Because when you see him on tape last year, getting hit some- times and he gets right back up and goes to work." Mattison, the man charged with confusing Carder, echoed Hoke's comments. "I think he's a great quarter- back," Mattison said. "I think this fir guy's special. I think you're going ju to see this guy playing on Sunday's some day. He's got an arm that he bt can throw it from hash to the side- th line ... He's got mobility. He can m run when he has to. This guy's the w real deal." hr Michigan's defense is supposed to be revamped and refocused, H after allowing 450 yards and 35 of points per game last season. Mat- w tison has his unit, which has li nine returning starters from that It porous defense, playing his NFL- (C like schemes the way he likes. The players say they have got it down. ht And Mattison is quick to brag ex about their willingness to get it R right. But none of that offseason buzz in matters if Michigan can't stop ut Carder, his 63-percent comple- be tion rate, and his top wide receiver - senior Jordan White caught 94 H passes for more than 1,300 yards dt and 10 touchdowns last season. g The secondary that was often riticized a year ago will have an arly shot at changing its reputa- on. Fifth-year senior Troy Wool- blk and redshirt junior J.T. Floyd re back from injuries and red- hirt junior safety Jordan Kovacs ow has the self-proclaimed ball- awking Thomas Gordon playing ext to him. Sophomores Courtney Avery nd Carvin Johnson surely will ee some playing time as well. All f the inexperience and depth sues were cured by last season's voes. It'll be up to Mattison's blitz chemes and the Michigan front ur to make sure Carder doesn't ave enough time to find open ceivers. As last season snow alled, lost in the blame on the sec- ndary was how Greg Robinson's efense rarely got pressure on pposing quarterbacks. Michigan "I'd like to see who's a better quarterback in the Midwest." nished the 13-game season with st 18 sacks. Carder led the nation's 16th- est passing attack and was under re guide of coach Bill Cubit, a an entering his seventh season ith the Broncos, and a man Hoke as tremendous respect for. "Bill Cubit is a smart man," oke said. "He's always had good fenses. He uses his personnel ell. I think when you've got a guy ke Carder as your quarterback, think it's an advantage for what ubit) has in his tool chest." Yet, Western Michigan still as to deal with Michigan's own' plosive offense and Denard obinson's unique skill set. A reporter asked Hoke, tongue cheek, "You'd rank (Robinson) p there with Carder, among the st in the Midwest?" "Oh, well, you know what," oke said, "I think he's a pretty aggone good quarterback. I'm ad he's at Michigan." Dave Terrell holds the bail high after a touchdown catch against Wisconsin his Junior year. 10 1 FootballSaturday - September 3, 2011 TheMichiganDaily - www.michigandaily.com j 3