The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, September 4, 2012 - 3B Gardner smoke screen proves ineffectivem By ZACH HELFAND Daily Sports Editor ARLINGTON,, Texas - They were laughing, and it was only the first quarter. There were five minutes left in the quarter when Alabama scored its second touchdown, and one Alabama fan glanced up at the scoreboard and broke into a joyful laughter, and he did it on a video board 159 feet long. The camera jumped to a set of pretty girls in a box dressed up in more formal attire. They smiled wide, until they too started laughing. It was over already, and they knew it, knew it because Michi- gan's game plan relied more on smoke than substance. Without a feature running back, Michi- gan turned to last-minute decep- tion. The offensive plan called for senior quarterback Denard, Robinson to win the game with his arm, but his go-to target on Saturday was his roommate, Devin Gardner, a converted quarterback whose inexperience showed. The smoke didn't hold up, not against mighty Alabama. Michi- gan's attempt was so futile, and -the drubbing so efficient, that the Alabama fans smiled so hard that they laughed, and the first quar- ter wasn't even over. "On both sides of the ball," said Michigan coach Brady Hoke after the game. "It was bad on both sides of the ball." After it was over, Gardner, the one who was supposed to be a difference maker, received a pat from a Alabama cornerback Dee Milliner and then walked off, his face blank. He jogged into the' tunnel alone, finally free from the secondary that blanketed him almost all night. Hoke and offensive coordina- tor Al Borges played coy with Gardner's status in the spring, declining to say outright wheth- er or not Gardner would play at receiver. During fall camp, they conceded he'd play some but Junior wide receiver Devin Gardner caught his first career touchdown pass against Alabama on Saturday. didn't detail how much. In fact, the moves actually did cause confusion. Alabama line- backer. Nico Johnson said the Tide had no way of preparing for Gardner. "You don't (prepare for a play- er like Gardner)" Johnson said. "We kind of just went over all the possibilities, and that's what we did and just went from there." That confusion just never translated to the field. Milliner harassed Gardner all game. He knocked an early pass away on a slant, ran with him step for step on a fade, and countered an impressive leaping attempt with perfect defensive positioning. "My teammates were just like, 'Why are they picking on you?'" Milliner said. Robinson went at Milliner starting from Michigan's first snap. On that play, Gardner ran a slant, and Robinson delivered a strike, and Gardner dropped the ball. Robinson tried Gardner again on the next drive, this time a third-down fade. Gardner was open, and Robinson floated it toward the sideline. Gard- ner, though, drifted toward the middle of the field, and couldn't adjust to the properly-placed pass. Two more times, Gardner's inexperience prevented a recep- tion. buring one route, Gardner stopped his route, and Robin- son's pass sailed long as a result. In the third quarter, Gardner turned over the wrong shoulder, and when he adjusted, he ran into an Alabama defensive back. Incomplete. "I'm glad they did what they did," Milliner said. "I was just prepared and ready to make plays." Milliner and Gardner fiist met years ago during an Under Armour high school game, back when Milliner was a young cor- nerback trying to improve his craft and his stock and Gard- ner was a burgeoning quarter- 'back. On Saturday, as Gardner tried to beat Milliner with his legs instead of his arm, Milli- ner said he talked trash with his good friend. After the game, his superiority established, Milliner was optimistic about Gardner's future. "He looked like a normal receiver to me," said Milliner. "He had great routes, he was, physical at the line of scrimmage when they had to block." Gardner flashed that poten- tial, but only once. His jab step in the third quarter froze the cornerback, who fell to the turf, and sprung Gardner to a 44-yard touchdown reception. Even then, though, Gardner had to adjust after turning awkwardly over the wrong shoulder, and with the touchdown, Alabama still led, 34-14. Gardner was one of Robinson's favorite targets, with seven balls thrown his way. His touchdown reception-was his only catch. "I think Devin's a.pretty spe- cial athlete," Hoke said. "To get another athlete on the field helps us." Hoke and Michigan counted on that extra dose of athleticism, especially in the absence of sus- pended running back Fitzger- ald Toussaint. With Toussaint, the redshirt junior, left in Ann Arbor, Michigan turned to senior Vincent Smith and sophomore Thomas Rawls. No one outside of the Michi- gan team knew of Toussaint's suspension until Friday after- noon, right before Michigan boarded the team plane to Dal- las. Hoke had waited until the day before the game to announce. No matter who carried the ball, though, no one found any daylight. Smith gained 37 yards on 13 carries, Rawls managed just 11 yards on 6 touches, and even Robinson was limited to just 37 yards. Like the Gardner move, the late announcement of Tous- saint's suspension affected the Tide's preparations. Alabama's players prepare breakdowns of the opposition each week. On Thursday, Johnson, the line- backer, stood in front of the team and addressed the tendencies of Michigan's running backs. First on his list? Toussaint "It kind of messed my tenden- cies up," Johnson said. "It was a big deal for this game, because the way we game plan was on certain running backs. Because (Smith), he's ta more shifty back than (Toussaint) is, so it's kind of difficult with him in it because we didn't really prepare for him all week." Didn't matter. Alabama's sub- stance stomped Michigan's flash, and by the second half, the Ala- bama side of the stadium had already begun celebrating the first step on the way to another national championship run. They beamed. They high-fived and drank and waved pom poms. One woman rubbed her eyes with her fists and mocked a crying face on the big screen. Inside the Alabama interview room with glass windows facing the field, Milliner talked about what it was like to be challenged by Michigan with a player who had never.played a snap at receiv- er. On the glass, Alabama fans yelled "Roll Tide" and chanted "S-E-C" and smiled, as the cel- ebration three quarters in the making continued. connected on a big pass play, finding a streaking Jeremy Gal- lon for 71 yards.) Offensive coordinator Al Borges seemed to make more of an effort to keep the ball in Robinson's hands after halftime, with the Deerfield Beach, Fla. native making five rush attempts out of 11 plays in Michigan's first two drives of the third quarter. He averaged 4.4 yards on those carries, compared to just under two yards per carry on the rest of the team's 24 attempts. That's when Robinson went down hard after taking a big hit while extending for the first down on a scramble. Whether it was fear of fur- ther injury, or the thought that the Wolverines needed to use the passing game if they had any hope of coming back from a 34-7 deficit, his running essen- tially ceased for good after he returned. "I thought with the running back being out, I thought (Robin- son) would've got more touches, because he's a playmaker, he's a good athlete, good player," said Alabama linebacker Nico John- son. "And I don't know, it was a shock." Johnson said the game plan was to keep Robinson in the pocket, and they did well in doing so. Perhaps, then, the quarter- back's woes on the ground can be partially explained by his inabil- ity to make Alabama respect him through the air, save for the-pass to Gallon and a 44-yard touch- down to junior Devin Gardner. Overall, he went just 11-for-26 with two interceptions. Robinson didn't question the game plan, instead saying he and his teammates just needed to improve. "Everybody has to focus up and listen to our coaches," Rob- inson said. "I know Coach Borges has a lot to say to me, because I didn't play well." ALABAMA From Page 1B total carries. "They did exactly what we thought they'd do," said fifth- year senior safety Jordan Kovacs. "They tried to run it down our throats and that's what happened. There wasn't anything pretty about what they did today. They just played some smash-mouth football and beat us." It wasn't until a field goal and a 20-yard interception return for a touchdown that Michigan finally cut into the 31-0 deficit. Robinson put Michigan on the board with a six-yard touchdown run with 2:20 remaining in the first half - on just his second rush of the day. At halftime, Michigan had just four first downs and 119 total yards to Alabama's 12 first downs and 280 total yards. Michigan finally gashed the Crimson Tide defense - which allowed an average of 8.2 points per game last season - in the third quarter, exactly doubling its first-half offensive output in that quarter alone (119 yards of total offense, seven points scored). After a 51-yard Alabama field goal pushed the lead to 34-7, Rob- inson found junior wide receiver Devin Gardner - a converted quarterback - open in the left flat for a 44-yard touchdown, the first score of Gardner's career. Then, on an evening that went as poorly as expected for Michi- gan, it got even worse. The air left the building for a few minutes late in the third quar- ter, when Robinson lay writhing on the ground with an apparent back or hip injury after diving just short of a first down. He was taken to the tunnel but returned for the next series. It was an uncharacteristic game for Robinson. After rush- ing just twice for three yards in the first half, Robinson ended up scampering 10 times in the game for 27 yards, while going 11-for-26 passing with 200 yards, a touch- down and two interceptions. Alabama closed the scoring midway through the fourth quar- ter with a two-yard touchdown run by running back T.J. Yeldon, pushing a blowout even further out of reach. =Trudging well behind their teammates were sophomore GROWING PAINS From Page 1B "I think we're on the short end of the measuring stick right now," Hoke said with half a voice. Yes, if this game was a mea- suring stick for how Michigan has progressed as a program in the Brady Hoke era, the team came up way short on Saturday. night - much closer to the bot- tom than fans thought it was following last season's Sugar Bowl victory over Virginia Tech. The measuring stick isn't magical, though. There's no DaVinci code to crack. No sor- cery, no black arts. You need time. A starting running back and healthy sec- ondary would help also, but you need more time. Saban has been pulling four- and five-star recruits to Tusca- loosa for six seasons now. Each year, it seems, the Crimson Tide lose their top performers to the first and second rounds of the NFL draft, and the following season they recharge with play- ers who are equally talented and have been waiting three years to take on starting roles. Exit star linebacker Rolando McClain, enter Dont'a High- tower. Exit Hightower, enter Nico Johnson. Round and round it goes. to keep count. Michigan doesn't have the Those are the dependable same luxury - not yet at least. veterans that should be leading This fall, Hoke had nobody to the freshmen by example. replace the physicaliev of Junior And sometimes, you have to Hemingway in the receiving give credit where credit is due. corps, so he was forced to line The Crimson Tide played how up junior quarterback Devin champions play. Their defense Gardner at wideout. Though he smothered Robinson's receiv- wasn't targeted often on Satur- ers and sealed off running lanes day night, it was clear Gardner with almost inhuman consisten- is already senior quarterback cy. On the other side of the ball, Denard Robinson's biggest and their offensive line opened up most athletic receiver. gaping holes for running backs But he's not a receiver yet. He T.J. Yeldon and Eddie Lacy. But Alabama isn't necessarily a more talented program than Michigan. Alabama is the fin- We're on the ished product. short end of the Four of the 17 Wolverine freshmen who traveled with measuring stick." the team for Saturday's game spurned an offer from Saban to instead play ball in a winged helmet, and four more Michigan needs time to make his routes commits in the class of 2013 are sharper, to time his jump balls prepared to do the same. better. He's an unfinished prod- Hoke is successfully bringing uct. top talent to Ann Arbor - more And if the individuals on the talent than Rich Rodriguez was roster are an unfinished prod- ever able to bring over his three- uct, then so is the team. year span at the helm. To be perfectly clear, alack of But even the talented kids need development was far from the a good whooping in the backyard only issue on Saturday. Robin- before they could hang with the son crumbled in the limelight, bigboys. making mistakes coaches said he had rid from his game this - Pasch can be reached fall, and his co-captain Jordan at lpasch@umich.edu oron Kovacs missed too many tackles Twitter: @lucaspasch. Senior quarterback Denard Robinson threw a touchdown and two picks. cornerback Blake Countess, in a track suit and crutches after leav- ing the game in the second quar- ter, and redshirt junior offensive tackle Taylor Lewan, leaning on a coach's shoulder for support. A reeling Michigan team has' seven days until its home opener against Air Force. Kovacs sees only two options: dwell on a loss to a top-caliber program or admit defeat and move on, realizing that. the team's stated goal of a Big Ten championship is still athand. With a minute remaining on the clock, Michigan had a full- cast of bench players in on defense after the Crimson Tide picked off redshirt freshman quarterback Russell Bellomy's first career pass. Then it began again, that song of the South. This time it wasn't just a boom. It was a chant that started in the northeast corner of the stadium and worked through Activation upgrade fee/line.:up to $ half of the crowd. IMPORTANT CUSTOMER INFORMA Offers & coverage, varying by svc, not S-E-C, S-E-C, S-E-C, S-E-C. the roerty oftheir respective owners SN PHON ES FOR STU DENTS! Wireless Zone of Downtown Ann Arbor welcomes University of Michigan freshman to their first year as college students! Leave your tharger aerat home? TMĀ® HOME I ANY ANDROID, BLACKBERRY* wihMECHARGER BASIC PHONE, MOBILE withanotherofferanepercusto"mer BROADBAND DEVICE OR In-tockiems on X.Voidif copie ACCESS'RY. transterred. Void wh.r. prohibited. r* AC ESSORY. *Cash redemption value 11tthfsat with thiscoupon. Phones, Tables and Mobile Broadband devices3 1 Ause of this coupo nsoi require new 2-yr activation. anust be scobined with any other thnas proided consitutes fraud. t offer. Void if espied or transferred. 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