0 U The Michigan Daily Imichigandaily.com jApril 16, 2012 C Rawls powers into spotlight with two TDs Backup running Saturday afternoon at Michi- and burst into the secondary. shirt junior left tackle Taylor ning back spot locked up, Rawls numbers have no place to go but gan Stadium. Seeing significant That's where freshman safety Lewan. could prove to be an important up. back displays grit, time as the backup to redshirt Jarrod Wilson, an early-enroll- "I think he's like a bowling asset in the backfield. "I'm not surprised at all at Y junior tailback Fitzgerald Tous- ee, learned that Rawls isn't eas- ball, man," said fifth-year senior "When Thomas hits you, what he did today," Lewan said. hard-nosed style in saint, Rawls scored the only two ily stopped. safety Jordan Kovacs. "He's a you're going to feel it," Borges "The sky's the limit for him, and touchdowns of the game. Wilson met Rawls head on, grinder on offense." said. "He makes no concessions he's going to be an awesome But it was the wasn't the but bounced off the 5-foot-10, "He's a different kind of run- to the defense. He's got a little back to have in this group." stats that made Rawls the high- 219-pound tailback in a massive ner - he's a battering-ram-type bit of stop-and-go ability, but Senior defensive"end Craig By STEPHEN J. NESBITT light of the annual intrasquad collision and fell to the ground guy," said offensive coordinator I wouldn't say that's his game. Roh echoed Kovacs' assessment DailySportsEditor scrimmage - it was the path of as Rawls scampered past and Al Borges. His game is running through of Rawls being a bowling ball, destruction he left in his wake. into the end zone. Animal, bowling ball or bat- people and making himself very and he even went further. It's not easy to slow down Early in the event, Rawls took He might look like a pip- tering ram, Rawls made an difficult to tackle and falling "Rawls is my new favorite Thomas Rawls. It's even harder a handoff from redshirt fresh- squeak in the backfield, but impact during spring camp, forward." player on our team - he's just to stop him. man quarterback Russell Bel- there's something different earning rave reviews from Rawls played in 10 games as a a guy that will bulldoze people The sophomore running back lomy and found a seam in the about Rawls. Just ask his team- Borges and Michigan coach freshman last season, collecting over," Roh said. "It's fun to put on a clinic in the Michigan offensive line. He'broke an arm mates. Brady Hoke. Though Toussaint 79 yards on 13 carries. From his watch. He'll just throw guys." football team's Spring Game on tackle at the line of scrimmage "He is an animal," said red- certainly has the starting run- teammates' point of view, those See RAWLS, Page 3B r I Defense working to Backup QBs flash youth, improve the middle potential in Spring Game By LUKE PASCH It didn't seem like a matter DailySportsEditor of high-expectation coach- speak, either. Hoke elaborated At a glance, the Michigan on a number of areas where football team's defense appears the defense failed. Regardless to have successfully stymied of what the scoreboard said on the offense throughout Satur- Saturday afternoon, the defen- day's Spring Game. The offense sive unit has a long way to go to scored just a pair of touch- be ready for the season opener downs, both on scampers by against defending national sophomore tailback Thomas champion Alabama. Rawls. "I didn't feel like we were But when asked if the tackling like we need to, and defense was simply set up for that's concerning," Hoke said. success because the star of "The point of attack defensive- Michigan's offensive attack ly, especially up the middle, is - senior quarterback Denard not where it has to be before we Robinson - played only one get to September 1. That's both- set of downs, Michigan coach ersome." Brady Hoke was blunt in his It's somewhat understand- response. able that the middle of the front "I didn't see the defense have seven would need improve- a better day (than the offense)," ment at this point in spring. Hoke said. The Wolverines' returning playmakers are mostly in the secondary and the outside. Names that come to mind are fifth-year senior safety Jordan Kovacs, sophomore cornerback Blake Countess, senior defen- sive end Craig Roh and redshirt sophomore outside linebacker Jake Ryan. The middle two on the defensive line, conversely, have a daunting task ahead in replacing key components of last season's defense. Senior nose tackle Will Campbell and junior defensive tackle Jibreel Black - who is making the move inside this offseason - are replacing last season's standout seniors Mike Martin and Will Heininger. Defensive coordinator Greg Mattison has liked what he's See DEFENSE, Page 3B By BEN ESTES Daily Sports Editor Denard Robinson played one series and then rode the bench of the rest of the afternoon. That's how you knew it was the Spring Game. Robinson, Michigan's senior startingquarterback, led the team out of the tunnel, went through warmups and then took the field for the first series of Saturday's scrimmage at Michigan Stadium, completing a couple short passes but doing little else of note. Just like that, Robinson's afternoon came to a conclusion. He didn't take another snap. But that's the way Michigan coach Brady Hoke and offensive coor- dinator Al Borges planned it - they wanted to get a look at the two scholarship backups, junior Devin Gardner and redshirt Junior Devin Gardner struggled at quarterback in the Spring Game. freshman Russell Bellomy. fresh, it will be important for Since Robinson will undoubt- Gardner or Bellomy to be able to edly need to be periodically step in and keep the offense mov- spelled next season in order to ing. Inexperience was a problem keep his body intact and his legs See QUARTERBACKS, Page 35 In his hands, Roundtree develops a positive into his negative By ZACH HELFAND Daily Sports Editor There is a photograph on the wall of Roy Roundtree's bed- room. A reminder, he calls it, of the greatest moment of his career. The photograph shows an airborne Roundtree, then a red- shirt junior, catching the game- winning pass with just four seconds left on the clock against Notre Dame last September. The photo is a reminder of something else, too, a reminder of why his hands are sore every day, of why he spends as much time at practice catching tennis balls as he does footballs. There are other iconic photos of Michigan receivers. Desmond Howard remains suspended in midair, also against Notre Dame, ready to cradle the most famous reception of his career in his outstretched hands. Braylon Edwards is out-leaping a Michi- gan State defender to catch the game-winning pass in 2004 to cap a 17-point fourth-quarter comeback. Again, in Edwards' snapshot, he's plucking the ball out of the air using his hands. That's where Roundtree's differs. In Roundtree's, the ball is trapped rather awkwardly between his wrists and his chest, a no-no for receivers. And that, Michigan coach Brady Hoke said after Satur- day's Spring Game, is where Roundtree has made the biggest strides this offseason. "(Roy) has really improved a lot," Hoke said. "He's catching the ball away from his body bet- ter just throughout the spring." Hoke also mentioned route running as an area of improve- ment, as Roundtree develops into the Wolverines' most dan- gerous and reliable receiv- ing option. The route running comes from maturity and expe- rience in offensive coordinator Al Borges' offense. The hands, well, that takes more work. As Howard said after Sat- urday's game, "Someone here asked a question. 'Is that just something that comes with get- ting a year older?' Nah, it doesn't happen that way. You can be a year older next year, you try catching it away from your body if you're not comfortable with it now." Catching away from the body is important not only to limit drops, but to lead to more yards after the catch. Howard said catching with the hands allows receivers to maintain their speed after a reception. To emphasize catching passes See ROUNDTREE, Page 3B CLOSING CHAPTER Chronicling the senior seasons of * Michigan student-athletes Alex Hunt and Stuart Douglass. Page 4B TEAM ONE BEATEN The Michigan men's lacrosse team lost its first-ever match to Ohio State, a 12-9 decision at Michigan Stadium. Page 3B