The Michigan Daily'- michigandaily.cam November 21, 2011- 3B The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom November 21, 2011 - 3B GAME STATISTICS Robinson puts together complete game Team Stats First Downs Rush/Yds Passng Yards Offensive Plays TotalOffense Kickreturnss/ Yds Puntreturs/ Yds Comp/Att/Int Punts/Avg Fumbies/Lst Pealties/Yards Time of Poss MICH 24 61/238 80 418 3/70 5/33 11/19/1 4/36.8 0/0 5/45 41:13 NEB 11 31/138 122 54 260 7/159 1/11 9/23/0 6/46 4/3 8/73 18:39 M I C H I G A N PASSING Player C-A Yds TD Int Robinson, D. 11-18 180 2 1 Gardner, D. 0-1 0 0 0 Totals 1119 180 2 1 RUSHING Player Att Yds Avg Lg TD Toussaint 29 138 4.8 31 2 RAbinson 23 83 3.6 16 2 Hopkins 2 15 7.5 12 0 Dleo 1 4 4 4 0 Odoms 1 1 1 1 0 Shw 2 0 A 2 0 RECEMVNG Payer No. Yds Avg Ug TD Odoms 2 47 23.5 38 1 Hemingway 2 34 17 26 0 04142471t 2 4 2 7 0 Roundtre 1 46 46 4 0 DAeo 1 1s 1s 15 0 Totals 11 180 16.4 46 2 PUNTING Player No. Yds Avg 1 5 Hagerup 4 147 36.8 50 Totals 4 1 363 s0 KICKOFF RETURNS Player No. Yds Avg Lg TD COdoms1 2 7 0 233 2 0 152ta18s 2 7 0 233 2 0 PUNT RETURNS Gallon 4 0767 1 Furman 1 6 6 0 0 Totals s 33 6.4 17 0 TACKLES Player Solo Asst Tot Kovacs 7 0 7 Morgan 1 4 s5 Simmons 3 0 3 Hawthorne 2 0 2 Floyd 2 0 2 Van Bergen 2 0 2 Countess 1 1 2 Henne * 2 Avery 1 0 1 Robinson,T 1 0 1 Cavanaugh 1 0 1 Gordon 0 1 1 Woolfolk 0 1 1 Totals 3s s8 5 N E B R A S K A By MICHAEL FLOREK Daily SportsEditor For some fleeting moments, Denard Robinson looked like the same inconsistent quarter- back who has been at the helm of the Michigan football team's offense all season. For all the other moments, he just looked NOTEBOOK fleeting. In Michigan's 45-17 win over Nebraska, Robinson passed and ran for a combined 263 yards and four touchdowns and threw just one interception. The typical "Denard, No!" moments were there. His screen pass in coverage that was batted into the air and intercepted led to a Cornhusker field goal that knot- ted the game at 10 points. But for every one of one of those, there were two plays similar to his 14-yard touchdown run: finding the hole, cutting back and outrun- ning defenders into the endzone. Robinson's 83 rushing yards were his highest total since he eclipsed the century mark-against Northwestern. The biggest differ- ence, though, came in the passing game. He completed 61 percent of his passes, his highest completion percentage in three weeks. One of Robinson's touchdown passes was a bullet into redshirt sophomore Jeremy Gallon's hands with a defender on Gallon's back. The deep balls that were over- thrown against Iowa and Illinois connected on Saturday. Robinson had four completions of over 20 yards, including the touchdown pass that put the game away. Already up 31-17, Michigan had a third-and-six on Nebraska's 38-yard line early in the fourth quarter. Robinson lofted a throw to senior wide receiver Marta- vious Odoms, who had beaten his cornerback and snuck behind the safety. The throw led Odoms into the back of the endzone, away from defenders, but it gave him enough room to get his feet in bounds for the touchdown. "That was as good a throw as I've seen him make, especially on a long ball," said Michigan coach Brady Hoke. "It was a great catch by Martavious, but that was where he had to put the ball." RACE OF THE CENTURY: Odoms probably wouldn't call it a comeback, but the receiver's resurgence in recent weeks cer- tainly looks like it. As a freshman, Odoms led the team in receiving. Battling injuries, his numbers steadily declined in his sophomore and junior years. After breaking his left arm in fall camp this season and practicing with a cast, Odoms didn't make a catch in Michigan's first eight games. But in the past two weeks, Odoms has increased his role, catching four passes for two touchdowns, including Saturday's catch. Finally healthy, Odoms is back to full speed. "Me and Martavious had a race (two years ago)," Robinson said. "So, I've seen that he can run. And he ran right past the defenders and I put it in the air." As for who won the race? "You go ahead and tell them," Robinson told Odojms at the post- Junior quarterback Denard Robinson tied Tom Brady for seventh on Michigan's all-time career passing touchdownsNlist. game press conference. "I ain't going to tell them," Odoms responded. "You tell 'em." "He beat me," Robinson said. "He got the win there." CLOCK CRAZIES: Early in the game with Michigan inside the Cornhuskers' 10-yard line, Rob- inson was called for a delay-of- game penalty. It wasn't that he lost track of the 25-second clock, it was that he didn't have one. Shortly before the game, Michigan Stadium's power went out. Auxiliary generators pow- ered the north scoreboard, but there wasn't enough electricity to power the south, which was the end of the field the Michigan offense was facing. The back referee started a countdown with 10 seconds remaining when the play went off, but Robinson was confused on which official was actually sig- naling. By the time he figured it out, he didn't need to. The student section began screaming a count- down. "Yeah you could hear it, 'Five, four, three,' " fifth-year senior offensive lineman Mark Huyge said. "I'm like, 'Snap the ball. Snap the ball."' Though there was one moment where the crowd crescendoed at "two," Michigan didn't have another delay of game. "I appreciate the fans helping us out because we really needed it," Robinson said. "Shout out to the fans and I hope they'll be ready next week." NOTES: Former Michigan coach Lloyd Carr was honored before the game for his induc- tion into the College Football Hall of Fame. SPECIAL TEAMS From Page 1B extra-point snap against Iowa; his emphasis on technique led to picture-perfect tackles on the returns. "It's probably as well as we've played with all three phases," Hoke said after the game. Spe- cial teams included. Pelini was beside himself. "Not locking the ball, not put- ting the ball away when you're carrying the football, dropping the punt," Pelini said. "The punter dropped the punt. You can't do those things. I don't know why they happened. I don't know why we dropped the ball. "I don't know." Leading up to the game, Hoke praised Nebraska's return game - Ameer Abdullah was the nation's fifth-best kick returner (31 yards per return) and 34th- ranked punt returner (nine yards per return). Hoke warned against neglecting the "hidden yardage" won and lost on special teams. It was still a 17-10 game when Michigan kicked off to start the second half. It was just like any other kickoff. Freshman kicker Matt Wile drove the ball to the goal line and backup wide receiver Ter- rence Robinson manned his lane. Nebraska returner Kenny Bell found some open space and cut back toward Robinson, who had squared his shoulders waiting for Lane to come to him. Robinson exploded toward Bell, who never saw the 5-foot-9, 179-pound Robinson until he got blindsided by him. "And he fumbled the ball!" the press box announcer shout- ed, sounding surprised. "Michi- gan's got it at the 33." "I'll take it any day of the week," said fifth-year senior right tackle Mark Huyge. "Great field position for an offense." Eight plays later, junior quar- terback Denard Robinson ran into the endzone. 24-10. It was still a two-touchdown game when Nebraska lined up to punt on its next posses- sion. The ball was at midfield. There was plenty of time left for a comeback, and a good punt from Nebraska's Brett Maher could bury the Wolverines deep. Maher dropped the snap. Josh Furman, a safety who only sees the field on special teams, burst through the line and blocked Maher's late punt attempt. "It's huge," Pelini said. "You're just talking about giv- ing away possessions and giving them short fields and field posi- tion changes. It hurt us." On the ensuing drive, Michi- gan stalled inside the five-yard line. Hoke sent his field-goal team onto the field. With a make, Nebraska would only have to overcome three additional points. But Hoke called a fake. Dileo caught the snap, hopped up and had plenty of room to pick up the first down. "It was the one that Penn State used against us in '95," Hoke said of the fake. "Drew Dileo, having him as a holder, he's such a smart football player and did a tremendous job with it. If (you've) got it, you might as well use it." Pelini agonized. "We had it covered," he said. "We actually practiced that fake. ... Somebody didn't do their job." The next play, redshirt sopho- more running back Fitz Tous- sasint scored a touchdown. 31-10. It was again a 14-point game, 31-17, early in the fourth quarter when Nebraska stopped Michi- gan again on third down. But after Will Hagerup punted it, a flag came flying in. Nebraska special teamer Wil Richards was one of eight rush- ers Pelini sent to try and create some magic of his own. Rich- ards couldn't block the kick, and he landed underneath Hagerup as his foot came down, causing the punter to fall. The game's momentum hung in the balance - a "running into the kicker" call only gave Michigan five yards, but a "roughing the kick- er" call would give them a first down. It was the latter. "After that happened it pretty much just shut everything off with us," Pelini said. do Eight plays later Michigan scored again. 38-17. Of course, Nebraska fumbled the ensuing kickoff. "Another special teams blun- der, as the Huskers are cough- ing it up and giving Michigan the game," the TV announcer roared. Hoke said he didn't emphasize anything new in practice. There was no new strategy. He simply challenged his special teams to out-compete the guys the lined up against - as he always does. "They were what they're sup- posed to be: special," Hoke said. PASSING Player C-A Yds Martinez 9-23 122 Totals 19-23 122 RUSHING Player Att Yds Avg Marlowe 1 23 23 Abdullah 2 19 9.5 David 1 6 65 Totals 31 138 4.s5 Int 0 0 L9 23 16 65 23 Lg 12 15 8 54 TD 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 TD 0 0 1 0 0 RECEIVING Player No. Marlowe 3 Enunwa 3 Reed 1 Bell 1 Totals 9 Yds 24 21 15 8 122 Avg 8 54 15 8 18.4 HUSKERS time of possession, churning up (the offense) on the field." dium. Big Ten Legends division title, over 41 minutes off the game The crowd of 113,718 at Mich- "We've won two in a row, but the Wolverines don't mind From Page 1B clock, compared to Nebraska's igan Stadium began a "Beat right?" Hoke said. "There's taking the conceding that prize 18:47. Ohio" chant with six minutes another one to go win." for now. Hoke credited the Wolverine "You play really good defense remaining in the fourth quar- Michigan's victory, coupled Because in the Cornhuskers' offense for keeping the defense when you get to watch your ter and the Wolverines leading with a 55-3 Michigan State win first visit to the Big House as a prepared and rested. Michigan offense," Hoke joked. "One of 45-17. Michigan plays Ohio State over hapless Indiana in East member of the Big Ten, Michi- thumped the Cornhuskers is our best defensive calls is having next Saturday at Michigan Sta- Lansing, gave the Spartans the gan left Nebraska in the dark. PUNTING Playr Maher2 Totals22 KCOFFtETRN Player Marlowe1,4 No. Yds Avg Lg 6 276 46 69 6 276 46 69 THE GAME From Page 1B No. 4 1 2 7 Solo 14 5 5 5 5 4 2 3 2 2 2 2 2 0 1 1 1 1 1 68 Yds 88 33 38 159 Asst 3 4 2 1 1 0 2 0 1 1 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 18 Aug 33 Lgs 28 33 30 Tot 17 9 7 6 6 4 4 3 3 3 3 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 76 lowing in a seven-game losing streak - the Wolverines' longest ever against Ohio State. Adding insult, the Buckeyes have won the past four Games by a score of 114-27. Saying there's been an empha- sis placed on beating Ohio State would be an understatement. Hoke refuses to wear red - a tradition that's lasted his whole coaching career, which included stops at Ball State and San Diego State, and both of those teams wear red. He won't call his the Buckeyes by their full name, "Ohio State." Instead he says, "Ohio." The players have picked up Hoke's term. So did the fans who chanted after the Nebraska game. "That's what he calls them, so that's what we call them," Kovacs said. When the players walk into Schembechler Hall - which has voluntarily become their home away from home - countdown clocks are posted as a reminder. They've been up ever since Hoke took over. "Every day," said redshirt sophomore running back Fitzgerald Toussaint. "We walk in that building and it's right there," added Huyge. "Right in your face," Tous- saint interrupted. "Can't miss it. In red." The reeling Buckeyes lost against Penn State on Saturday, dropping their record to 6-5. Michigan is 9-2, with a potential at-large BCS bowl bid on the line. The previous 11 games this sea- son say change is afoot. The last time Michigan had a better record entering The Game was 2004. The last time the Wol- verines had a winning streak lon- ger than two games entering The Game was 2006. "Well it does give us a lot of confidence," Huyge said of the team's two-game winning streak. "In the past - I don't want to bring up past seasons - but we haven't been playing well in November." That's one difference. Another is the emphasis the coaches have placed on improving each week, Huyge said. After every game, win or lose, the coaches have focused on getting better. And Saturday's 28-point win over a ranked Nebraska team could be considered the Wolverines' best game in years. "We knew if we got better in November, we'd be playing better wll" C.. FOLLOW US ON TWITTER @michdailysports @michdailyfball @michdailyhockey @michdailybball FILE PHOTO/Daily Former Michigan running back Chris Perry Celebrates after Michigan last beat Ohio State in 2003. football," Huyge said. five years. "And really, playing this great All the while, Hoke holds an "Everyone knows how big this game of football in the month of appreciation for how the Ohio game (is)," Martin said. "That's November, is just, it can't get bet- State game always caps that all- what makes it such a great game, ter than that. This week has to be important month. A win Satur- because of how much time is put one of our best weeks of prepara- day would give Michigan its first into it - how much it means to tion, period. That's what it needs winning record for November in each program. to be."