The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Tuesday, February 7, 2012 - 5 The cards will dictate the future ometimes when I finish crocheting on icy Wednes- day evenings, I build houses of cards. This pastime helps me reflect on the day gone by and allows me to contemplate other issues - such as the prospects of the Michigan men's basket-e ball team the NEAL remainder of ROTHSCHILD the season. The Wol- verines have a certain formula they use to win games. They rely on penetration from their guards to create open shots for their shooters. But when they can't find penetration or hit their shots, they wind up look- ing much like my cards in my amateur years of building. Allow me to let you in on a few tricks of the card-building trade. Glue works. I success- fully build houses every time I add a dose of Elmer's to my con- struction. That's not the only way I can build one, but it sure does help matters. In the same way, this team finds success under specific cir- cumstances. The most promi- nent of those conveniently involves a house, but one not made of spades and diamonds. Rather, it's the House that Cazzie Built. The Wolverines are unbeaten at'home and have looked like a different team than the travel- ing version of the squad. They have been PT Cruisin' at the Crisler Center this season, where they've put up a 14-0 mark. But in visiting arenas, they are a rather underwhelm- ing 1-6. The Indiana team that Mich- igan fell to in Bloomington the first week of the year was the same one it beat at Crisler by 12 points last week. And the same Michigan State team that lost to the Wolverines three weeks ago had no problem with Michigan at the Breslin Center on Sunday, as the Spartans swag-stepped to a 10-point victory. No explanation can help me understand how a team can play the same exact sport under the same exact rules, so much more poorly in a differ- Merrill provides calm ing presence Michigan freshman guard Trey Burke is the ace in the Michigan basketball team's deck. But he alone won't be enough. ent venue. Yet, I'll agree that there's something real about home-court advantage. Luckily for Michigan, the meaningful games it plays this season won't be in opposing arenas. But unluckily for Michi- gan, those games also won't be at home. So, just like glue isn't allowed at my quarterly card-building competitions, the Big Ten Tour- nament and NCAA Tournament are held at neutral sites. For these games, the dark magic of home-court advan- tage isn't around to haunt my dreams. It's at these times that Michigan will have to win games on its own merit. When the time comes, Michi- gan will have to face the conse- quences of its lack of depth in the post.Redshirt sophomore center Jordan Morgan is the only person able to defend elite big men in the post. And when he tried to do that a week ago, Ohio State knocked him around. After picking up four fouls, Morgan had to spend much of the second half on the bench. With sophomore center Jon Horford nursing a.foot injury that looks to keep him side- lined for the rest of the season, Michigan's only alternatives to guard the Meyers Leonards, and Jared Sullingers remaining on the regular-season sched-' ule are slight sophomore Evan Smotrycz and perimeter-dwell- ing junior Blake McLimans. And when the games that matter come around, Michigan must deal with the reality that its most prolific shooter may also be its worst. Sophomore forward Tim Hardaway Jr. has taken 46 more 3-pointers than senior guard Zack Novak and he's made two fewer. . Hardaway continues to play like his father (circa 2035) and it's hurting Michigan. His questionable shot selection and turbulent emotions (and resem- blance to Chris Rock) have put the Wolverines in a funny posi- tion. Michigan coach John Beilein has reiterated his faith in the sophomore, but that faith has scarcely been rewarded in Big Ten play. If Hardaway keeps on gunning, he might just shoot the Wolverines out of Big Ten title contention or postseason tournament play. How freshman point guard Trey Burke performs down the stretch will also have important implications. Early in my card- building days, I would fatigue when I neared completion of one of my mansions. My hands would tremble, and I found it difficult to place my cards like I was used to. Burke may be at risk of some- thing similar. He has had more difficulty getting into the lane in recent games, and though his numbers haven't been affected because he's been draining threes, he does not look as explosive off the dribble. The Wolverines may not look to be in such bad shape now, sit- ting comfortably at third place in the conference with a rela- tively cushy schedule ahead. Still, their hopes for even greater glory in March rest on a few cards - on threes (by Hardaway), a five (position- wise) in Morgan and an ace in Burke. And if, somehow, the house hasn't fallen, King Beilein winds up on top. - Rothschild can be reached at nealroth 5umich.edu. ByZACH HELFAND Daily Sports Editor You probably haven't noticed the Michigan hockey player wearing the No. 24 sweater, so here's an introduction: his name is Jon Merrill, he's a sophomore defender, and he's pretty decent. Jokes, jokes. Of course you've noticed Merrill, Michigan's best all-around talent and brightest professional prospect by a lofty margin. His return from a three- month-long suspension has coin- cided with Michigan's current 6-1-1 tear through the CCHA that has put the Wolverines just three points behind first-place Ferris State. You know Merrill. Just don't tell him - for his own sake. "I just try to keep it simple and try to - try not to get noticed, really," Merrill said. "As a defen- seman, you want to go out there, (and) you don't want anyone to notice you've been out there." Mission not quite accom- plished. Or is it? Merrill's return made a big splash because he's one of Michi- gan's best players, and it's contin- ued to generate buzz because of the team's success with him in the lineup. Yet players such as sopho- more forward Luke Moffatt said the 6-foot-3 Merrill makes a big impact because he's inconspicu- ous on the ice. Moffatt had a hard time articulating what Merrill does for Michigan. At one point, he described Merrill as "a presence." Other times, he said the opposite. "He's a little more, I wouldn't say steady, but snore..." Moffatt said, his voice trailing off. "Pas- sive? I don't know what the right word is there." In measurable terms, Merrill's contributions are much clearer. He's big, physical and talented. He can move the puck to forwards quickly or fire shots through the defense. Merrill and junior defenseman Lee Moffie have complemented each other well. Moffie prefers to fire shots on cage and attack the goal on rushes. Merrill is content to stay back. And both special-teams units have made giant leaps in pro- duction after Merrill's return. Against Miami this past week- end, the penalty kill thwarted all 12 of the RedHawks' power plays, while Michigan scored twice. Merrill assisted on both goals. "He's a top defenseman, and we knew that coming in when he got to play again," said Michigan coach Red Berenson. Michigan's goals-against aver- age is more than 1.3 goals better with Merrill than without. That can't all be because of one player, can it? The short answer: no. As Berenson noted, the Wol- verines caught fire during the Great Lakes Invitational, and Merrill's return the following series just added fuel to said fire. Few players, especially defen- semen, are worth 1.3 goals per game. Yet Merrill's name in the lineup is worth more than its weight in goals because of the depth he adds. Plus there's that on-ice pres- ence. Moffatt fumbled through words like "passive" and "steady." Maybe it's just Merrill's confi- dence, which shines through in his statements: "We don't look it at as some- thing that's bad, we kind of get excited when we have to kill a penalty. We get momentum out of it." Or: "It's unbelievable when you string a couple wins together, beat some good teams. The locker room, the morale is up, everyone's excited. And going into games, instead of in November when we thought we were going to lose every game, it's now we know we're going to win every game." Berenson said Merrill and his teammates enjoy a symbiotic rela- tionship, just like any player on a well-functioning team. Merrill makes the team better, and the team also makes Merrill better. But his impact was visible to anyone who witnessed the con- trast in the Wolverines' play this weekendto when they met Miami in November. November's Michigan team lacked a calming presence in a fast and physical series in a hos- tile environment. It got one back in Merrill. Wolverines gear up for first season of Division-I lacrosse By EVAN QUINN tunity for the student-athletes to For the Daily pioneer a new chapter in Michi- gan history. One hundred ninety-five Michigan coach John Paul years, 138 Olympic medals, -an does not take this opportunity alumni chapter on the moon lightly. Pointing to head football and a President of the United coach Brady Hoke's invocation of States later, making University "Team 132," he views this forma- of Michigan history can seem tive era for the lacrosse program like a daunting task. This Sun- as essential to building future day, the Michigan men's lacrosse success. team will find themselves doing "We've embraced the whole just that. Team One attitude here," Paul The 2012 lacrosse season will said. "We're calling ourselves mark the first in school history in Team One. I talk to the team which the Wolverines will com- about being Team One all the pete at the Division-I level. The time. I thank coach Hoke for announcement that the team setting that precedent, and as would make the jump to the var- important as it was for him to sity level from club status came instill an understanding of tradi- last May, providing a rare oppor- tion in his program, we need to understand the opportunity we have as Team One. There's going to be a Team 132 in lacrosse one day, and they're going to look back and remember the number of teams that have been through this." As a varsity team, the Wolver- ines will face much stiffer com- petition. In light of this, Paul is taking a long-term approach to coaching his team. "We've made it our mis- sion this year to build an elite Division-I culture," Paul said. "And that doesn't necessarily mean that we're winning every Division-I game, it means we're building this culture that's going to lay the foundation for what this program is going to become." Junior Sean Sutton expressed a similar sentiment about the turbulent transitional phase. "We expect the competition to be a higher level, obviously," he said. "But we're going to do what we can control, and that's getting better each and every day. We have no expectations of wins and losses right now. "We're just trying to work to get that culture established, and trying to set the culture that will bring us to a great program some day." Paul will need serious com- mitment from his players mov- ing forward if the Wolverines hope to have success. The switch to Division I places new demands on his players. Most of the players of the Michigan lacrosse team didn't sign on to compete at a varsity level, coming to Michigan with the expectation of playing club lacrosse. Suddenly, thrust into Division I, their upcoming sea- son includes many more respon- sibilities than they're used to handling. It remains to be seen whether these new responsibilities will be fulfilled moving forward. So far, Paul seems pleased with the team's development. Last Satur- day, Michigan participated in an exhibition match against Divi- sion-III Denison and came out with a 12-8 victory. "We had a lot of young guys stepping up," Paul said. "We had guys playing out of position that had to step up. From the perspective of guys stepping up in their roles today, I thought it went really well." Regardless of the team's final record this year, the season will be a remarkable one due to its historic nature. For the players, this represents a dream come true. "(Being a Division-I athlete) is surreal," said fifth-year senior Trevor Yealy. "I would have never guessed it. When I started here, I would have never thought that I'd have the opportunity and the privilege to do this. It's a privilege, it's an honor, it's excit- ing." WANT TO JOIN THE DAILY SPORTS STAFF? Come on in to the sports meeting, every Sunday at 1 p.m. at 420 Maynard Street. VISIT AT MICHIGAN DAILY.COM AND FOLLOW US ON TWITTER: @MICHDAILYSPORTS @MICHDAILYFBALL @MICHDAILYBBALL @MICHDAILYHOCKEY Do you have a background in Math, Engineering, or Computer Science? You Could Have a Future in Financial Engineering at Illinois! APPLICATION Apply now for FaIl 2012 E msfe.illinois.edu A