The Michigan Daily I michigandaily.com I September17, 2012 Michigan blows Saturday afternoon, manhan- dling FBS newcomer Massachu- out Minutemen setts from start to finish. On the first drive of the day, the in return trip to Wolverines looked like they were playing against a scout team. Ann Arbor Massachusetts kicker Brendon Levengood booted the ball out of By LUKE PASCH bounds on the opening kickoff, Daily SportsEditor and senior quarterback Denard Robinson led Michigan 65 yards in the midst of a grueling regu- to the house in just five plays. lar season schedule, the Michigan From there, the rout was on. football team caught a break on Michigan beat down Massachu- setts 63-13. Robinson completed two pass- es on the first drive - a 16-yard toss to fifth-year senior tight end Mike Kwiatkowski and a 26-yard touchdown strike to freshman tight end Devin Funchess. With those completions, he moved to sixth on Michigan's all-time pass- ing yards list, passing current New England Patriots quarter- back Tom Brady. Later in the first quarter, Michigan was finally able to get redshirt junior running back Fitzgerald Toussaint going. He had a rough start in his return to the backfield last week when he picked up only seven yards on eight carries after he served a one game suspensionthe week before. Against the Minutemen, Tous- saint matched his rushing total from last week on his first carry of the game. And on Michigan's second scoring drive, he slipped a couple of tackles on an 11-yard scamper to the end zone. Toussaint finished the con- test with 85 yards on just 15 car- ries, and this may have been the bounce-back performance that coaches say he needed to get back in a rhythm. On the Wolverines' next scor- ing drive, early in the second quarter, Robinson completed a quick pass to wide-open junior receiver Drew Dileo in the mid- dle of the field, who ran the ball another 50 yards after the catch down to the Massachusetts five- yard line. "I did think I was going to score," Dileo said. "But I guess that's why they call me, 'the white receiver.' On the play, Robinson moved up another spot on Michigan's all-time passing last, jumping current San Francisco 49ers head coach Jim Harbaugh for No. 5. "To be honest with you, the only thing I think about is just winning and going out there and See UMASS, Page 3B Notre Dame outlasts Michiganindouble OT By JEREMY SUMMITT Daily Sports Writer Coming off a disappointing loss to No. 17 Marquette (6-0) on Friday night, the Michigan men's soccer team had high aspirations coming into Sun- day's home match against No. 8 Notre Dame NOTRE DAME 1 in Ann MICHIGAN 0 Arbor. Those aspirations seemed to become more real as the match progressed - until the 103rd minute, that is. The Wolverines (2-4) fell to the Fighting Irish (7-0) early in the second period of extra time off a 30-yard cross delivered from Notre Dame senior mid- Redshirt junior running back Fitzgerald Toussaint finished with 85 yards and a touchdown against the Minutemen. Hoke not satisfied Redshirt sophomore goalie Adam Grinwis directs traffic in front of the net. fielder Dillon Powers to senior tory. forward Ryan Finley, who head- Michigan had its chances, ed the ball in the left corner to but so did Notre Dame. The give the Fighting Irish a 1-0 vic- See IRISH, Page 3B with running By BEN ESTES goal line, the play concluded with Daily Sports Editor Toussaint crashing in for No. 17 Michigan's second touchdown of It was when Fitzgerald Tous- the afternoon. saint paused that the inevitable It was a sign of things to come. outcome became clear. After putting up a mere 57 yards It happened late in the first in the first two games of the sea- quarter on Saturday, when the son and looking lethargic in doing redshirt junior running back so, Toussaint and the rest of the broke a tackle after having running backs broke out against bounced to the outside. Toussaint the Minutemen. He, fifth-year stopped briefly to regain his bal- senior Vincent Smith and sopho- ance. Upon recovery, he found more Thomas Rawls combined himself about 10 yards from the for 149 yards on 24 carries, almost end zone. There were no Massa- tripling their collective yards- chusetts defenders in immediate per-carry average from the initial sight. two games. After a sky-high dive across the Finally, someone other than game senior quarterback Denard Rob- inson was getting it done on the ground. "We took a step forward in just getting off the ball in our running game and getting a good push up front, but we still need work," Smith said. "We'll just continue to strive in all areas." As is the case in such uneven matchups like the one between Michigan and Massachusetts on Saturday, the outcome was decid- ed well before time expired in the Wolverines' 63-13 victory. That meant that Michigan was even able to get its backups in on See RUNNING BACKS, Page 3B FOOTBALL Cooper Barton reigns as king of Michigan Stadium By ZACH HELFAND Daily Sports Editor A 5-year old held court in the press box of Michigan Stadium on Saturday. About 15 reporters gathered around Cooper Barton, the boy from T K Oklahoma NOTEBOOK City with a thick mane of blonde hair. He wore a painted Wolverine claw and a timid smile on his face and toyed nervously with the thing that got him here in the first place: a Michigan t-shirt. On the fieldMichigan scored, and then it scored some more, and by the second half, the atten- tion span for most of the fans matched Barton's. The game was never really in doubt, and even in the first half, the crowd had been more concerned with Barton - the kindergartener who, last month, was forced to turn his Michigan shirt inside out at school - than the game. Maybe the fidgety 5-year old is too young to long remember much of Saturday. Maybe in a few years, the game will be as lost to him as it will be to the rest of the 110,000 fans on hand. His parents will have to remind him of the time he was the king of Michigan Stadium. For one break in the action, he See BARTON, Page 3B . HEART OF BAND 115 IRISH FIGHT ON U The Michigan Marching Band has - Michigan couldn't topple No. 8 Notre endured much more than you probably Dame at home on Sunday, but there were know. It's time to find out. Page 2B some promising signs. Page 2B