The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, January 12, 2012 - 7A Did Robinson learn anyhin at all Michigan's season ended with the sight of Denard Robinson rac- ing across the field, mouth com- pletely agape, screaming at the top of his lungs. At that point - even having led his team to a 11-2 season and Sugar Bowl win - Michigan fans may have wanted to yell at Robinson as much as they wanted to scream with him. Though his two touch- down tosses to Junior TIM Hemingway ROHAN were crucial, his few mis- takes were costly. Had Virginia Tech not struggled itself, Robin- son could've been the scapegoat. What other player could evoke such dichotic confusion? Two reasonable people could have a conversation about Robin- son's Sugar Bowl performance - one could argue Michigan won the game because of him, the other that Michigan won despite him - and neither would be wrong. The same conversation could've been had after a miracle comeback win over Notre Dame in Septem- ber, or after a close - but not so close - road win at Northwestern in October, or after November games against mediocre Big Ten teams: a nail-biting loss at Iowa and a sluggish win at Illinois. After each game, the Michigan brass pounded the table in defense of Robinson. He was improving, they said. Yet after Robinson ran across the field at the Superdome, once what happened had been digested, one couldn't help but wonder if he had learned anything at all. Every Tuesday duringthe season, offensive coordinator Al Borges met with the media. And every Tuesday, he defended Rob- inson, offering assurances that there was growth. First, Robinson dragged Michi- gan down against Notre Dame, throwingthree interceptions. Then, he willed 28 fourth-quarter points - his receivers simply started catching the risky jump halls he kept launching- and, ultimately, a win. That Tuesday, Borges diagnosed a problem that would become reoccurring. "Generally, when he throws the ball bad, it is because of his foot- work or rushing throws," Borges said. "When he got his feet set, he made some really good throws. He threw just a gorgeous corner route to Kelvin Grady - right on time, perfect trajectory. "He's very capable, but he's still learning all the nuances of the offense, and in a pressure-packed game like that, there's a lot of stuff going on. It's easyto forget about some little things." A month later, Robinson threw three more interceptions against Northwestern's 71st-ranked pass defense, and Michigan fell into a huge first-half hole. Again, Robin- son jump-balled his way out. Robinson said he got too excited early on. That Tuesday, Borges said his accuracy was off because he wasn't following through with his hips. Still, the identified problems persisted: inaccuracy, hurried throws, poor decision making. Robinson's mad- ness boiled over at Iowa, where he marched Michigan to Iowa's three-yard line late in the game - all the Wolverines needed was a MAR ISSA MCCL AIN/ Junior quarterback Denard Robinson must improve in Borges' second year. touchdown to tie. In theory, he did his job. But he went 4-for-13 on the final drive. This time, he couldn't convert, and he wasn't the hero. The next week, Borges refused to throw into the wind at Illinois. Robinson ran for two scores, threw a pick and left the game with an injury, all while playing second fiddle to an emergent Fitz Toussaint. That Tuesday, Borges defied the statistics and nearly every outsider's opinion, declaring: "Denard's growing in our offense. Nobody wants to hear that." Borges' vague claims that Rob- inson was gaining a better overall feel for the offense were justi- fied in season-saving wins over Nebraska and Ohio State. Robin- son finally looked comfortable, finding a balance between run- ning and passing, and his precise passingscreamed improvement. Without linebackers breath- ing down his neck, it was easy to stand at a podium and say he was improving. He said he knew when to run, when to throw, and who to throw to. The other side of a tran- sition year seemed in sight. But that would've been too neat an ending for the kind of year Rob- inson had. Instead, he regressed to mid- season form in the Sugar Bowl - not quite as bad as his worst (Michigan State) but nowhere near his best. He reopened the conversation: is Michigan's suc- cess because of him, or despite him? The Hokies' athletic defense and early lead neutralized Robin- son's legs, so the game rode on his arm. When Virginia Tech blitzed and Robinson felt pressure, which was often, his progress was most .questionable. Flushed out of the pocket, where it seems lie forgets his throwing mechanics, Robinson lofted a jump ball - off his back foot - towards Hemingway. The ball should've been intercepted. Instead it was a 45-yard touch- down. Earlier, as an unblocked blitzer approached, he lofted aball towards a well-covered Heming- way (while Roy Roundtree had a step on his man further down- field) which resulted in an inter- ception. It reassured logic - not every miracle jumpball would go his way. Later, staying true to the madness, Robinson - with a clean pocket and time to survey the field - dialed up a perfect pass to Hemingway in the back of the endzone, where only he could grab it. Michigan took a 17-6 lead, but it could've been more. On back-to-back plays early in the game, Robinson missed adding another touchdown. The first was a pass - intended for a wide-open Hemingway - batted at the line of scrimmage, and the next was an off-balanced, underthrown screen pass to Vincent Smith, who had a host of blockers set up and no tacklers in sight. Borges often referred to Rob- inson as a 3-point shooter, who needed to make a few shotsbefore he caught fire. Then, Borges said, the basket would look like a hula- hoop, and Robinson could keep firing. Rarely this season did Rob- inson string together.consecutive drives fueled by his passing. For that, and the up-and-down Sugar Bowl, Borges is as much to blame as Robinson. The play calling didn't give Robinson easy warm-up passes, and Robinson didn't get hotter as the game went on - "luckier" may have applied; though. Robinson's mechanics proved as reliable as his passing statistics: a mixed bag. To quell the criticism at his Tuesday press conferences, Borg- es pointed to how quarterbacks typically performed better in their second season in his system. His famous example is UCLA's Cade McNown, who he said rose from last in passer efficiency in the con- ference in year one, to first in the country in year two. Borges hopes to see the same jump in Robinson. Considering thatbowl games are viewed as starting points for next year's team, and how Rob- inson played Jan. 3, that maybe a stretch. What Robinson did after four weeks of preparation - 9-of- 21 passing for 117 yards - is alarm- ing, and should open some eyes, no matter how respected the Hokies defense is. What's scarier is that Robinson opens his second season under Borges versus defending national champion Alabama. Albeit, their defense will be without Courtney Upshaw, the championship game's defensive MVP, and likely without future pros Dont'a Hightower and Dre Kirkpatrick, among others. Though if Robinson doesn't find a consistentbalance and comfort inside and out of the pocket, and in Borges' playbook, it wouldn't matter if the season opener was Alabama or Northwestern. Soon after Robinson's yell, Borges was asked what went through his head as Robinson con- tinued to blindly throw up jump balls to Hemingway. The man who had coached Robinson for the past year, who taught him the intricacies of the offense and built a toolbox of mechanics, let his guard down: "Probably prayers," he admitted. After 13 games, even he didn't know what to expect. -Rohan can be reached at trohan@umich.edu. HAVE A HANKERING TO JOIN THE DAILY? You've come across this message at just the right time. MASS MEETINGS ARE AT 7:30 P.M. AT 420 MAYNARD STREET ON THESE DAYS: THURSDAY, JAN. 12 " TUESDAY, JAN.17 WEDNESDAY, JAN.18 PAUL SHERMAN/Daily Junior forward Chris Brown missed his shootout attempt against Lake Superior State on Saturday. He admitted that he didn't have his approach planned out. 'M'over-thinking shootout approach By ZACH HELFAND DailySportsEditor After some thinking, junior forward Chris Brown declared that over-thinking has plagued the Michigan hockey team dur- ing shootouts this year. The Wolverines' ineffective- ness in that category has hurt them in the standings this year especially, but it's a decade-old struggle. "It's not like it's a lack of tal- ent," Brown said. "I think we're just screwing ourselves over in our heads." Shootouts, or, penalty shots in general, have a habit of making players over-think. Forty-one years add 17 days ago, the St. Louis Blues found themselves in a battle against the Minnesota North Stars in an important game. The contest came down to a late-game pen- alty shot. The shooter: a St. Louis for- ward named Red Berenson. The goalie: Cesare Maniago, Beren- son's former teammate with the New York Rangers. "(Maniago) knew that I liked to come in and fake the shot and go to my backhand and roof it," Berenson said. "And of course, I knew that he knew that, so I'm thinking about this when I got the penalty shot. "So I'm thinking, 'Well, Cesare knows that I'm gonna do that, so he knows I won't do it. So if he knows I won't do it, then I'm gonna do it.' And so I went through this whole thing in my mind, so when I did it, I beat him. He guessed that I wouldn't do it. He was on the other side of the net, it was an easy goal." Got all that? Berenson knows he took at least one penalty shot in a 17-year NHL career, plus three years playing for Michigan. He thinks he took a second one at some point. When he played, there were no shootouts. Still, the level of detail he pro- vides about a brief moment that happened over four decades ago shows he has a strong apprecia- tion for what ashootout requires. Not that that makes any differ- ence. "You can't coach it," Berenson said. The Wolverines simulate a shootout in practice every week, yet they dropped to 1-3 in shoot- outs on Saturday after regulation and an overtime period couldn't decide a game against Lake Supe- rior State. Sophomore forward Luke Moffatt scored on Michi- gan's first attempt, but the next five skaters didn't even put the puck on cage. Berenson explained that the goaltender holds a clear advan- tage in shootouts. "In a normal game, the average goalie has a save percentage of 90 percent on his shots," Berenson said. "Now he's not going to have that same save percentage on breakaways, but it's not going to be under 50 (percent)." Michigan is 2-for-15 on shoot- out attempts. Do the math: that's an 87-percent save percentage. On average, the Wolverines score 11 goals per 100 attempts in game situations. They're on pace for just two more goals per 100 attempts in shootout situations than they score skating five-on- five. You don't need to know any- thing about hockey to know that that's not good. A player can approach a penal- ty shot from any number of mind- sets, and each player has his own personal style and preference. Some players prefer to shoot from the slot. Those with better hands may prefer to deke. There are skaters who come in fast. Some try to lull the goalie to sleep by advancing very slowly. Nei- ther move is any more effective than the other. The key, Brown said, is to keep the goalie moving and to make him uncomfortable. And what happens when he gets uncomfortable? Many, like Brown, simply react to what the goalie gives him. "Hopefully, by the top of the circle, you know what you're going to do," Brown said. "If you don't, you're kind of just throw- ing it at the net and praying it goes in." Moffatt takes a different approach. He scored in his first- career shootout attempt on Sat- urday, and he said he knew all along that he would deke twice and finish with his backhand. "I have a few moves that I'm very confident in," Moffatt said. "I picked one beforehand, and that's what I was doing the whole time, and I stuck with it, and it worked out." Eventually, all of the planning and styles, all of the machina- tions and mental poker, can just devolve into absurdity. Brown said the team is simply thinking too much - in shoot- outs most notably, but also just in general. Berenson recalled someone who once asked him why he made the move on Maniago. "They said, 'Well, why did you make that move?'" Berenson said. "And I said, 'Because he knew that I would do it, but he knew that I was smarter than that, so he guessed that I wouldn't do it.' "So there's a little bit of think- ing in that one. Yeah." I think so. 0 0' 0' 0 A, A. ,