The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Wednesday, January 4, 2012 - 5A MICHIGAN From Page 1A the half winding down, Rob- inson had Kyle Fuller, Virginia Tech's best cornerback, reach- ing for his ankles. But the junior quarterback reloaded and fired off his back foot as two more Hokies crashed into him. The ball floated. Virginia Tech safety Eddie Whitley whiffed on the pick, while his teammate, Antone Exum, was two steps out of place. The ball landed neatly in Hemingway's hands. The fifth- year senior raced for a 45-yard touchdown. For Robinson, it was anoth- er head-scratching decision that turned out OK. Borges has resigned himself to the fact that his quarterback doesn't always listen to the advice he gave him before the season: "Make plays * and let God do the miracles." "Sometimes he elbows God outta the way and decides he wants to do it anyway," Borges said. On that play, Michigan inex- plicably took its first lead, 7-6. Virginia Tech quarterback Logan Thomas had put on an aerial show, lasering passes in and around a Michigan second- ary that lived almost exclusively by the motto "bend, but don't break." His favorite target was receiver Danny Coale, who was a nuisance for the Michigan sec- ondary all game. And Thomas's running back, ACC Player of the Year David Wilson, found room on the edges, where so many teams exploited Michigan this season. On defense, the Hokies' front seven blitzed Robinson, contain- ing him to modest gains. Tous- saint's quickness wasn't always * enough, either. Virginia Tech had more yards in the first half than Michigan did the entire game (185), but the Hokies were held to just six points due to an opportunistic Michigan defense and timely mistakes. "This defense made this game happen," said redshirt sopho- more tackle Taylor Lewan. "Because God knows our offense didn't." On Virginia Tech's first drive of the game, facing alfiaat'owa l and'goal with the ball, on their own 4-yard line, Wilsonbounced outside. But he quickly aborted the original plan, as his offensive line lie obliterated on the ground. Thomas Gordon, Craig Roh, Jor- dan Kovacs, Jibreel Black and Jake Ryan stared him down like a pack of foaming dogs. Relent- less, they chased Wilson as he retreated. Briefly, Wilson entertained the thought of running around them. But Ryan accelerated, wrapping Wilson and hurling him down 22 yards from where the play started. Virginia Tech settled for a field goal. Then, with a chance to demor- alize Michigan and build on a 6-0 lead, facing a fourth-and-1 again on the Wolverines' 4-yard line, Thomas tried to sneak the ball himself. Fifth-year senior defensive tackle Ryan Van Ber- gen stuffed him. Virginia Tech came away with no points. After Hemingway's touch- down catch - and right on cue - senior special teamer J.B. Fitzgerald forced a fumble on the kickoff and Michigan tacked on a field goal. Early in the second half, the defense complemented "Big Play" Hemingway again. Fresh- man defensive end Frank Clark snatched a screen pass out of the air, and four plays later Heming- way was celebrating. Robinson threw the ball high and far, where only Hemingway could reach it. He tiptoed the sidelines and came down with the catch. The play was reminis- cent of his missed opportunity at Iowa, when Hemingway couldn't come down in bounds with a high pass. In his head, he thought: "Please, Denard, throw this up. Please, I want you to so bad." The 17-6 lead allowed Michi- gan breathing room, as Thomas led the Hokies back with two consecutive scoring drives - a field goal and a touchdown. A beautiful pass to the back of the end zone converted the two- point conversion, tying the game. But Michigan no longer need- ed "BiggPlay" Hemingway's ser- vices. Coale, who kicked in high school, was called upon to punt earlier in the game for the Hok- ies. He was no slouch kicking the ball, but with the game tied 17-17 midway through the fourth quarter, Virginia Tech coach Frank Beamer elected to call the fake. The Wolverines had trouble covering the Hokie receivers and slowigg)eThomas's qnasterbalc1 runs, butthey snuffed Coale's run out. Then Gibbons nailed a 39-yarder, which was enough to get Michigan to overtime. His teammates knew Heming- way had carried them there. "Real big impact," Toussaint said. "I'm kind of speechless about that. He was outstanding tonight." FLOREK From Page 1A place, it was the perfect capper. The Wolverines probably didn't "deserve" to have the season they did. They probably didn't "deserve" to be in the Sugar Bowl. They probably didn't "deserve" to be in this game after the first quarter. They willed themselves to this victory just like they willed themselves to this season. It was a year ago tomorrow that Dave Brandon started his coaching search. He found a man in Brady Hoke who willed himself to live his dream and become Michigan's head coach. He took largely the same play- ers that went 15-22 over the past three seasons and willed them to believe in this one. They showed how far they came in front of the nation Tuesday night. Fifth-year senior center David Molk was ruled out of the game in warm-ups after a foot injury. He missed three plays. Fifth- year senior Ryan Van Bergen had his foot bent parallel to his shin. Then had it bent the other way. He couldn't make it around after the game without the help of crutches. He didn't miss a snap. "That's the why we've won 11 games," Hoke said of the team's resolve. That's what good teams do. Teams that go to Rose Bowls and win national titles and beat their rivals out-will evenly matched opponents. The memories of the Michigan of yesteryear aren't about great play-calling. What's remem- bered are the moments where battles are won. Tuesday night was a battle. And in the end, the entire team stormed the Sugar Bowl stage. They wore flat-brimmed hats and giant T-shirts, there were no Roses in their mouths. Adding in the specially made Sugar Bowl jerseys made it obvious that this wasn't the wardrobe of the teams of the past. Slowly, the chant started. "It's great...to be...a Michigan Wolverine" But they sure looked and sounded like them. CHARLIE RItEL/AP Republican presidential candidate, former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum, joined by wife Karen, pauses as he addresses supporters at his lowa caucus victory party last night in Johnston, Iowa. Student voters come out In low nu-mbers for Iowa caucus U.S. forces start new special ops training program Youth show general lack of support in Hawkeye State By RAYZA GOLDSMITH and ADAM RUBENFIRE t;, Daily News Editors DES MOINES, Iowa - Despite being held on Drake University's campus, most cau- cus-goers in attendance atpre- cincts 45 and 46 in Polk county were not students. About 215 people came out to caucus at Olmsted Hall on Drake's campus here yesterday evening. While many students helped staff the event, few came to vote, leaving a majority of the caucus populated by elderly and middle-aged adults. In Polk county, where Drake is located, former Massachu- setts Gov. Mitt Romney won with 28.4 percent of the vote, followed by Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas) with 22.6 percent of the vote. Former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum, who fin- ished second state-wide after a late surge in the campaign, fin- ished third in Polk County with 21.6 percent of the vote. Aside low student turnout at Drake, there also was a general lack of college student support at many campaign events in state-wide preceding the cau- cus. Very few students attended a campaign event for Romney in Clive, Iowa Monday night and Rock the Caucus - an event held in West Des Moines to garner youth support yesterday morn- ing - was restricted solely to high school students. Even a downtown Des Moines whistle-stop for Paul, the libertarian-leaning candi- date who particularly boasts his campaign's youth support, lacked in student attendance. In an interview before the caucus, Drake sophomore Sam Pritchard, caucus chair for the two precincts at Drake, said he expected about 200 people in total at the event, but was skep- tical regarding student turnout. Pritchard said student turn- out was because many students are still on Winter Break. J "That}was rpally damaging to the kind of influence that we were able to give students at Drake," Pritchard said. John Michael Hall, a 2009 graduate of Drake who caucused at Olmstead, said he under- stands why college students may not vote in droves, noting he feels differently about politi- cal issues as a graduate than he did while still in school. "When you're in college ... you don't seem as affected by a lot of the policy and ... legislation that's being passed," Hall said. "... I think more than anything it's just maturing and getting to stage in your life where these things are more important." Hall attributed his increased interest in policy to beginning to experience political issues firsthand in the real world. "I think they were just as important then, I just wasn't as aware," he said. Pritchard said Drake Uni- versity hosted its first straw poll this election season, and according to the University's research, it was the largest college straw poll in the coun- try during the current elec- tion cycle, with over 1,200 students participating. According to poll results, Pritchard said the university's student body is "mirrored" in terms of party affiliation, with 40 percent identifying as "some type of Democrat," 41 percent identifying as "some type of Republican," and 16 percent identifying "in the middle." "It surprised me how perfectly balanced it is," Pritchard said. Pritchard argued that stu- dents stand to benefit more from caucuses than ballot-style pri- mary elections. "(In) a primary you're act- ing as an individual, in a caucus you're acting as something big- ger than that," Pritchard said. } Drake sophomore Lucas Osh- man, a non-voting observer at the caucus, said he thinks the caucus structure is particularly conducive to college students. "If you're looking at the way a university works, a caucus would be more in line with what a Uuniversity would want to do rather than a private pri- mary because it allows people to speak their minds, which is what a lot of people do at a uni- versity," Oshman said. Drake senior Zach Seeman said he finds the caucus atmo- sphere refreshingly social, allowing caucus-goers to min- gle and discuss their political beliefs. "The nice thing about cau- cuses is that you get to function as more of a group, and its nice because you get to meet fellow supporters," Seeman said, add- ing that he spent much of the night debating with a fellow Drake student who came to the caucus in support of Santorum. Seeman donned a bright red Ron Paul shirt throughout the caucus, and even helped staffers pass out pencils. He said he was happy that Paul supporters at Drake coordinated over e-mail to garner support for the cau- cus, especially since Paul won in student-heavy precinct 45. Though student turnout at Drake was not incredibly high, he said young people are important to the Paul campaign throughout Iowa. "Elsewhere in the state, defi- nitely the youth vote for Ron Paul has an effect in the cau- cus," Seeman said. Military learning CIA intelligence * tactics FORT BRAGG, N.C. (AP) - A scene of stomach-clenching gore confronted the special operations troops: The shredded remains of a suicide bomber, scattered around the checkpoint. But the blood and body are fake, like the Hollywood-style explosion that began a classroom exercise designed to teach these students to look past the grisly mess for the evidence that could lead to those who built the bomb. Ft. Bragg's Special Warfare Center shows how the U.S. has turned hunting terror networks into half-science, half-art-form since the al-Qaida attacks of Sept. 11th. Forging lessons painfully learned in the decade since into a formal curriculum, the training is intended to help elite military units track militants across inter- national boundaries and work alongside sometimes competing U.S. agencies. The coursework is similar to the CIA's legendary spycraft training center called The Farm, and is at the brainchild of Green Beret Maj. Gen. Bennet Sacolick, a veteran of elite special operations units, and a long stint on loan to the CIA. Among the students at the CIA-approved Ft. Bragg course are U.S. Army Green Berets, Navy SEALs and Marine Corps special operators. As in the Navy SEAL raid that killed Osama bin Laden, everything from computers to fin- gerprints can be retrieved from a raid site and quickly analyzed. In some cases the analysis is so fast it can lead to several newtargets in a single night. The school is also an illustra- tion of how special operations and intelligence forces have reached an easier coexistence, after early clashes where CIA officers accused the military operators of ineptly trying to run their own spy rings overseas without State Department or CIAknowledge. "As my guys go to Afghanistan, and interface with CIA base and station chiefs, they can do it with more credibility than in the past," Sacolick told The Associated Press in a rare interview. While many in the public may not be aware that the military is allowed to gather information, and even run its own spy net- works, special operations forces have been authorized to do just that since the disastrous Desert One raid meant to rescue the U.S. hostages held in Iran in 1979. The raid went awry because of a heli- copter crash, not an intelligence foul-up. But before the raid, mili- tary planners had been frustrat- ed that CIA employees working inside the country were unable to provide them the tactical intel- ligence needed to insert a covert force - even basic information like which way the streets ran out- side the embassy. 800-2Review 1800-273-84391 PrinceoonRoview com n -H i ',z.in~czaingmzatihGvm9t~~4.~ v~xf:s u~ti :~x ci~~z!tl ttiAYiihsucik9a Alivz FOLLOW THE DAILY ON TWITTER @MICH IGANDAILY 4