The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, November 29, 2011 - 7 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Tuesday, November 29, 2011 - 7 Meyer hire changes the game STEPHEN J. NESBITT Daily Sports Editor It took him 23 years, but Urban Meyer finally found his way back to Columbus. This time, Meyer isn't the Ohio State football team's wide receiv- ers coach and graduate student, he's the head man. Meyer signed a six-year contract to replace Luke Fickell as the Buckeyes' head coach on Monday. Meyer returns to Columbus as a bona fide commodity, hav- ing captured two BCS national championships in six seasons at Florida, his last coaching stop. He boasts an overall 104-23 record And has gone 7-1 in bowl games. Meyer's only bowl loss came to Michigan in the 2008 Capital One Bowl, the only time he faced the Wolverines. Michigan coach Brady Hoke, coming off a 40-34 victory over Ohio State, sees Meyer's arrival as a welcomed challenge. "He's not going to play a down and neither am I," Hoke said. "Me, knowing Urban, he's a good football coach, good guy, going to welcome him in. "But this is still Michigan and Ohio, and it's still going to be that rivalry and neither one of us is going to play a game." Hoke and Meyer have never faced each other or coached in the same conference before, but both are Ohio natives that began their head coaching careers in the Mid- American Conference - Meyer at Bowling Green in 2001 and Hoke at Ball State in 2003. But as a native Ohioan, Meyer understands the magnitude of The Game. "That's the game of games, and the one I grew up watching," Meyer said. "It's also true that the next game is 362 days away, so I understand the significance of it. "The one thing I know about that game (is that) as much as there is dislike and hatred across college football rivalries, there's a share of that, but there's also a lot of respect in that rivalry. I'm really looking forward to coach- ing in it." It was a short reign for Fickell. After taking over as head coach when former coach Jim Tressel was dismissed on May 30, Fick- ell was tasked with monitoring a program already hindered by 'M' travels east in first true road test DANIEL WASSERMAN Daily Sports Writer In the past week, the Michi- gan men's basketball team has become familiar with leaving the friendly confines of Crisler Arena. But in its first true away game, a matchup with Virginia in Charlottesville, the Wolverines won't have the benefit of a split crowd - or mid-80s and sunshine - like Maui had to offer. And if Michigan (5-1) shows early signs of any remaining jet lag, watch for the Cavaliers and their unconventional pack-line defense to pounce. "It's just so good," said Michi- gan coach John Beilein of the defense. "It's not like pressure defense, where you can get back- doors or something. It's just real- ly difficult to score against them." The pack-line defense, used almost exclusively by Virginia coach Tony Bennett, empha- sizes on-ball pressure, while the other four defenders sag inside the 3-point line to form a mock perimeter. The objective is to take away any penetration or backdoor cuts - both of which flourished for Michigan at the Maui Invita- tional last week. Penetration was key in freshman point guard Trey Burke's success, as he was able to drive into the lane with ease and create scoring opportunities. The Wolverines had an unusual week- end after returning to the main- land. After flying back on a Friday red-eye flight and having Satur- day off, the team's preparation time for Virginia and its defense has been limited. Like Michigan, the Cavaliers (5-1) have a young roster, featur- ing just three seniors. But one of those seniors, All-ACC forward Mike Scott, is the main reason Virginia was the preseason pick to finish fourth in a strong ACC field this year. After an ankle injury sidelined Scott last sea- son, the big man is going to be the toughest post matchup the Wol- verines have faced so far. Scott, who was recruited by Beilein at West Virginia, is aver- aging 15 points and 10 rebounds per game. Virginia's second offensive option, guard Joe Har- ris, poses a major threat from beyond the arc. Though the soph- omore is shooting just 32 percent from 3-point range this year, his presence must be respected after he shot 42 percent last year. "I'd seen them way back, and they've gone through a transi- tion, now (in their) third year with Coach Bennett," Beilein said. "They're very much play- ing like the Wisconsins and the Wisconsin-Green Bays. Just a difficult, difficult team to play against, both offensively and defensively." Heading into Maui, the offense and particularly the play of Burke were major question marks. But in just one week, Michigan's situ- ation looks brighter. "I do see some things that are very promising," Beilein said. "I liked how we played with great passion and energy and confi- dence against some really good teams. Biggest question was Trey Burke, how is he going to do now that he's out there. I think he per- formed fairly well." However, the Wolverines' post play continued its inconsistency in the Maui Invitational. While sophomore forward Jon Horford showed glimpses of the potential Beilein has raved about, sopho- more forward Evan Smotrycz and redshirt sophomore forward Jordan Morgan struggled. Morgan found himself in early foul trouble in two of the three games in Maui. Meanwhile, Smotrycz was held scoreless in each of the tourna- ment's games and has been criti- cized for forcing shots. "When he lets the game come to him a little bit more, he's a far more efficient player," Beilein said. "He knows it. And he's just got to continue to work at it. When you're out there, it's a dif- ferent thing. So he's adjusted a lot in the past, he'll adjust again." Aside from continuing its momentum after a third-place finish in Maui, Michigan will again look to pick up a win in the Big Ten-ACC Challenge. Last year, the Wolverines went on the road and knocked off Clemson, a key factor in gaining confidence. TERYGILIMAP ND MM A SMCCLAIaly (Top) Urban Meyer, who boasts an all-time 104-23 record as head coach, will replace Luke Fickell (left) as Ohio State football coach. Fickell dropped The Game to Michigan coach Brady Hoke (right) and the Wolverines on Saturday. pending NCAA sanctions and allegations. A week later, starting quar- terback Terrelle Pryor withdrew from the university and began training for the NFL's Supple- mental Draft. Fickell was left with a tattered program head- lined by a promising young fresh- man quarterback, Braxton Miller. The resulting season wasn't pretty. After losing to the Wolver- ines for this first time since 2003 on Saturday, Ohio State crawled to the finish line at 6-6 for a fourth-place finish in the Big Ten Leaders division. The end was ominous for Fick- ell - Hoke sensed that. When he came to midfield after Saturday's victory, Hoke gave the first-year coach a few words of support. "I just thought he did a heck of a job all year," Hoke said. "Tough situation." Fickell will coach the Buckeyes in their bowl game, after which he will remain on staff at Ohio State. His job description has not been determined. The three head coaching changes between Michigan and Ohio State in less than a calendar year qualify as the most in the rivalry's history. Meyer's last game was a 37-24 win over Penn State in the Out- back Bowl on Jan. 1, 2011. He stepped away from Florida citing family and health concerns and spent the past season as a college football commentator for ESPN. At one point this spring, Meyer toured the country visiting major college football programs for ESPN. He took in a Michigan practice on March 30on the side- lines at Schembechler Hall. Does Hoke regretletting Meyer inside the walls? "No," Hoke said. "Nope." A month later, rumors swirled about Meyer as a replacement for Tressel. His daughter, Nicki, quickly quelled those rumors. "HE IS NOT repeat NOT, GOING TO OHIO STATE," she tweeted on April26. Seven months later, her father stood at the podium in Columbus as Ohio State's new head coach. As for the effect the hiring has on Michigan, Hoke says his sin- gular focus is on recruiting. That focus won't waver. "Recruiting is the lifeblood of the program," Hoke said. The ability to close Ohio's bor- ders to outside recruiting was a point of emphasis for Ohio State Athletic Director Gene Smith in his coaching search. "We wanted a football coach who ... will create an environment here with an aspiration for every single football player in the state of Ohio is to be a Buckeye and come to the Ohio State Univer- sity and have no other thoughts," Smith said. Michigan's 2012 recruiting class of 23 commits includes nine players poached from the state of Ohio. Michigan icers'problems aren't an easy ix The last time the Michi- gan hockey team won a game, the Wolverines were the third-ranked team in the nation, the football team was headed towards a late season slide after losing to Iowa and I was not passing Spanish. Now, more than three weeks later, Michigan has tumbled all the way down to 19th in the rankings, the football team EVERETT beat Ohio COOK State and my Spanish grade es bueno, gracias. Michigan will travel an ungod- ly amount of miles this weekend to play Alaska-Fairbanks and try to snap its six-game winless streak. The Nanooks are com- ing off two shutout victories in a row, but they were against lowly Bowling Green. The hardest part about playing Fairbanks (3-7-2 CCHA, 6-8-2 overall) is not the team, but the travel. But it doesn't matter who Michigan (3-5-2, 7-7-2) is playing anymore. The issue isn't the other team. Senior forward Greg Pateryn has said that if this team is run- ning on all cylinders, it's unbeat- able. He might be exaggerating, but to a certain extent, he's right. Michiganhas one ofthebestgoal- tenders in the nation in Shawn Htunwick, one of the most excit- ing young players in all of college hockey in Phil Di Giuseppe and one of the most respected coach- es at any level in Red Berenson. This is a team that should have no problem making the NCAA Tournament for the 22nd con- secutive season. It's not the most talented team Berenson has ever coached, but it's good enough to make some noise in the tourna- ment. But the thing that the Wol- verines are missing right now is something that Berenson can't coach. He can coach the pen- alty kill, the faceoffs and the line changes, but he can't teach pas- sion. Michigan's issues aren't talent- based. They are based off the one lesson, the most important les- son, that every kid hears on day one. It's the lesson of hustle, hard work and grittiness. It's the les- son of not getting outworked by anyone, anywhere, because the minute you stop working is the minute you let the other team into the game. The Wolverines haven't won a game since Nov. 5 because they haven't played like a team that wants to win. They aren't doing the little things - dig- ging the puck out of the corner, hustling out of line changes and flying to loose pucks - that all teams, even talented ones, have to do to sustain success. In some respects, it would be easier for Berenson if he could point to the defense, the special teams or the goaltending and definitively say, "This is what we need to work on." If it were that easy, junior forward Chris Brown wouldn't walk into a press conference with his head in his hands, mimicking the pose that senior captain Luke Glendening struck a week earlier. If Michigan's problems were an easy fix, there wouldn't be much of a concern. Berenson has had teams in the past that have looked like locks to break the NCAA Tour- nament streak. Two years ago, the Wolverines finished seventh in the CCHA and were relying on the walk-on Hunwick to win the CCHA Tournament and keep the streak alive. That team had no business making the tournament, but they did. That team had what my high school football coach called "want-to." They wanted to win more than anything else, and did whatever it took to become team No. 20. This team doesn't have that - yet. Berenson and the older players know it, but you can only teach so much. You can't teach want-to, that has to come from within. "We have to work harder," Brown said. "I know that's cli- che an the pa how it thing our go nothin l a: to win don't h On I game d we've been saying it for freshman defenseman Brennan st three weeks, but that's Seville tried to clear the puck by has to be. We can't do any- taking his man one-on-one. The different. It's not systems, puck was stolen from him, but alie, or coaching. ... It's not then he stopped skating, turned g. It's just the will to want around and watched Dutchman forward Kevin Sullivan skate uncontested towards the net. t Hunwick never had a chance. Those type of plays aren't skill to grow up or talent. Those type of plays are pure hustle, something any play- nd play like er is capable of doing. Those are the types of plays a m an." that decide games. "It's time to grow up and play like a man," Brown said. "It's time to start playing hockey. a game. And right now we Michigan hockey, and this is not ave it." Michigan hockey." Union's second goal of the You can .never count a team in Sunday's 6-3 blowout, out. Not in November and not at Michigan. But the Wolverines are dan- gerously close to being the first team in 21 years to miss the NCAA Tournament. Yes they are young, and yes it's early, but this team has no drive right now. The schedule is only going to get tougher. Michigan is missing some- thing that can't be coached. If the players don't find it soon, they'll be on the outside looking in, despite riding high with the No. 1 ranking just over a month ago. In the last month, something was lost in translation - just like my Spanish skills. - Cook can be reached at evcook@umich.edu or on Twitter @everettcook Do you know a GSI whose teaching and mentoring are outstanding? If so, tell your department about it! Provide your department chair or administrator with the names of GSIs who deserve to be recognized. The nomination deadline is January 23, 2012, 12PM EST. More information: Pat McCune at phmccune@umich.edu http://www.rackham.umich.edu/umogsia12 RACKHAM GRADUATE SCHOOL - UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN ENE }'p