The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Friday, October 5, 2012 - 7 ,w - The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Friday, October 5, 2012 - 7 Breakdown: Blue will answer questions against Purdue By ZACH HELFAND Daily Sports Editor Things happen when you're a football team with a .500 record or when you've committed six turnovers in your most recent game. Things like being just a three-point favorite against Pur- due. The unranked Michigan foot- ball team's first Big Ten game looks a lot more questionable than it did four weeks ago when it was ranked No. 8. It's not just the two losses this early in the season, losses that came against two top- 10 teams. It's not the record so much as how the Wolverines have arrived at that record. At times, the defensive line has been gashed in the running game and the offensive line has been bullied. Michigan has missed too many assignments and turned the ball over too many times. Last year's glut of turnovers for the defense has turned into a famine. Redshirt junior running back Fitzgerald Toussaint has stalled. Yet despite it all, a wide-open and talent-deficient Big Ten beck- ons. The Wolverines remain one of the favorites to win the con- ference, but the gap between the Michigans and the Purdues of the. Big Ten world is as close as its ever been. Michigan pass offense vs. Pur- due pass defense In the pass game, Michigan can expect quite a different look than it saw against Notre Dame. That cannot possibly be a bad thing for the Wolverines. Two weeks ago, the Fighting Irish defense pressured senior quarterback Denard Robinson into four consecutive intercep- tions. On three of those intercep- tions, Robinson was hurried or knocked down, and was hustled into poor decisions. (His final interception was a Hail Mary). Purdue tends to not bring pres- sure at all, though defensive tackle Kawann Short, who averages a sack per game, can wreak havoc all by himself. Instead, the Boil- ermakers will rely on its talented secondary to shut down Michi- gan's receivers while Robinson enjoys time in the pocket. Cornerback Josh Johnson should shut down any Michi- gan receiver he covers - he has recorded two of the team's eight interceptions this season - and there isn't much drop off in the rest of the secondary. Robinson's best option will likely be freshman tight end Devin Funchess who should exploit Purdue linebackers that have struggled in coverage. Notre Dame and Marshall had success through the air against Purdue this year, combining for 763 passing yards, mainly because the Boilermakers couldn't get to the quarterback. Still, Michigan has a lot to prove in the passing game. The edge goes to the team that has generated plenty of inter- ceptions this year. Edge: Purdue Michigan rush offense vs. Pur- due rush defense The Purdue rush defense begins and ends with Short, who commands attention from the offensive line. Other than Short, though, Michigan has the advan- tage. Robinson should have success on designed runs, but the lack of blitzes frees up Purdue lineback- ers to spy and limit Robinson's scrambling ability. Toussaint's production could dictate the outcome of the game. Last week's game showed the effects of shying away from the run on the road. Michigan must control the edge and spring Tous- saint. Edge: Michigan Purdue pass offense vs. Michi- gan pass defense The big question mark entering Saturday's game is the status of quarterback Robert Marve Marve tore his ACL for the third time of his career in the fourth quarter against Notre Dame on Sept. 8. Purdue coach Danny Hope said that he "couldbe ready" for Saturday's game. Caleb TerBush has played in Marve's absence, as he did for much of last season, and he has performed solidly, if unspectacu- larly. TerBush has completed nearly 64 percent of his passes for seven touchdowns and 531 yards, with four interceptions. But as Michi- gan and its five consecutive inter- ceptions against Notre Dame can attest, four interceptions isn't too bad. Whoever gets the start will have plenty of speedy options at wide receiver. Antavian Edison (24 receptions, 285 yards and five touchdowns) is the main target, though O.J. Ross has hauled in 27 receptions and Gary Bush adds four touchdowns. The screen is the staple of the Purdue offense, though. They love slip screens. They love tunnel screens. They love bubble screens. That puts pressure on the sec- ondary to make tackles in space against some shifty ball carriers, something it has struggled to do this year. Edge: Push Purdue rush offense vs. Michi- gan rush defense Michigan's line play has been frustrating this year. Purdue's has too. Despite the mediocre play in the trenches, Purdue averages more than 200 yards per game on the ground, largely due to running back Akeem Shavers, who aver- ages 4.1 yards per carry. The Boilermakers' rushing stats become much less impres- sive when you take out the 392- yard anomaly against Eastern Michgian. Purdue gained just 90 yards on the ground against Notre Dame, for example, significantly less than Michigan's total against the Fighting Irish. The Michigan defense has been slowly improving and had its best showing of the seasons last week. A forgettable Purdue rushing attack won'treverse the trend. Edge: Michigan Special teams Remember that Short guy? He even dominates on special teams. Short has blocked a mind- blowing three kicks in just four games this year, adding to the two he blocked in 2010 and the one he blocked in 2011. Purdue's place kickers are even less tested than Michigan's. Sam McCartney and Paul Griggs have each made the only kicks they've attempted. Return man Raheem Mostert has struggled to get going this sea- son, averaging less than 23 yards per return. Last year he averaged 10 yards more per return and a scored touchdown. Edge: Michigan Intangibles Michigan has many questions to answer on Saturday. How will it respond to the tough loss to Notre Dame? Can it play well on the road? Will Toussaint be a factor? The bye week helps. Plus, Michigan recognizes its road struggles and has taken steps to correct past mistakes. The Wol- verines' goal is always a Big Ten title, and that campaign starts Saturday. Michigan gets the edge. Edge: Michigan FINAL: Michigan 31, Purdue 21 Seniorferward A.1. Treais is Michigan's lone captain this fall, flanked by assistants Lee Motfile and Mac Bennett. Berenson, captains axze freshman hazing at 'M' By LIZ VUKELICH Daily Sports Writer The most nerve-racking part of Michigan hockey coach Red Berenson's early days in the NHL was lying in a bunk bed on a train traveling to games, waiting for the rookie hazing to start. He didn't know exactly what he was Blue vs. waiting for, White but it would come sooner When: Sunday or later - and 4:50 p.m. it wouldn't be, Where: Yost fun. Ice Arena Berenson didn't go into specifics on the treatment he received at the hands of his teammates in the "old-time hockey" days of the early 1960s. Though he says that the hazing didn't bother him too much at the time, he recognizes that similar kinds of treatment can be rough on rookies, espe- cially freshmen starting their collegiate careers. That's why Berenson instituted a policy change in advance of the season that aims to remove the fresh- men hazing and humiliation from the Michigan hockey team. "We've taken the freshmen things out of our program," Berenson said Wednesday after- noon. "There's no more fresh- men carry the pucks, no more freshmen load the bus, freshmen eat last. They've earned the right to be here." Berenson uses sophomore for- ward Alex Guptill as an example. By the end of his freshman cam- paign, Guptill established him- self as the Wolverines' offensive leader, walking away from the Wolverines, and Berenson even season with team-high 16 goals, notices a difference in their on- 33 points and a CCHA Rookie of * ice demeanors. the Year trophy to show for it. "(Treais) is a little bull out But at the end of every away there," Berenson said. "Whether game, those accolades didn't it's a sense of being a senior or mean much - Guptill still had being a captain, I notice a change to fulfill his freshman duties and in him on the ice." load the bus for the return trip to The coaches anticipate the Ann Arbor. captains to have their best sea- Granted, doing the team's son yet - if the trio plays any- grunt work isn't as bad an ini- where close to as well as they tiation into Michigan as the did last season, Michigan will kind Berenson experienced in have answered some of the ques- the NHL. But he sees how it can tions surrounding its offensive become a slippery slope. production. Treais' 15 goals put him in second place for Michigan scoring and Moffie led the team inassists while drivingthe defen- "W e've taken sive corps. Already, it's become fairly easy to characterize the the freshmen captain's different leadership styles. Treais is the self-pro- things out of claimed "even-keeled guy" who quietly leads by example, while our program . Moffie is easily the most vocal of the three ("Gregarious and even outrageous at times," according to Berenson). Bennett finds him- "I never liked the whole haz- self situated somewhere in the ing thing," Berenson said. "I middle of the two. think some of the players think The three personas seem to it's a chance to get back at what compliment each other, and -for happened to them. They want to now, the captains say they're make it worse rather than better. focusing on settinga good exam- "We've had captains that got ple for the team as the season too carried away, and they forgot gets underway. what they're supposed to do." "I feel like it's my team now, But Berenson doesn't expect which is a pretty special feeling," his current trio of captains - Moffie said. "There are no days senior forward A.J. Treais and, off for me anymore. Maybe some senior defenseman Lee Moffie days, I'd come here and hide out and junior defenseman Mac Ben- a little bit, (but) now all the spot- nett - to take part in any haz- light's on us." ing. Though none of them have Added Bennett: "The last two been a captain before, all three years I would come in and kind of have happily embraced their worry about myself. Now I have new leadership positions for the to worry about everyone now." WOMElS S OCCEaRl i dl l Oeads m1iild By ALEJANDRO ZUNIGA Daily Sports Writer Sitting in prime position to make a run for the conference championship, the No. 23 Michi- gan women's soccer team has taken the Big Ten by surprise this season. The Wol- verines (4-0- Michigan at 1 Big Ten, N'Westem 10-2-1 overall) Matchup: have relied on Mich. 10-2-1; stout defense N'Western 11-2 and timely When: Sat- goals by junior urday 7 p.m. forward Nkem Ezurike and the Where: Lake- offense to mark side Field their second Stats: 10-win season MGoBlue.com in three years. But overshadowed by Michigan's remarkable back four and its opportune offense is a solid mid- field that has been instrumental inthe team's success: The Wolverines' midfield has already accounted for eight goals and nine assists, but its confident style of play has provided the big- gest boost to the team. Anchored by fifth-year senior Clare Sta- chel and junior Meghan Toohey, the middle four sets up offensive attacks, supports the defense and effectively controls the pace of the game. Perhaps the most exciting member of Michigan's midfield is sophomore Christina Murillo. Since her return from the under- 20 women's World Cup in Japan, Murillo has tallied only one goal and one assist, but contributes to the team in ways that aren't reflected on a statsheet. The sophomore controls the ball like a professional, makes pinpoint passes from 30 yards away and has surprised many goalkeepers with long-range, powerful shots. And she does it all with a soft- spoken humility. "I don't care how many goals I score, as long as the team is win- ning," Murillo said. Michigan coach Greg Ryan knows that having a player like Murillo is rare. After she scored the game-winning tally against Oakland on Sept. 9, Ryan said he felt like Murillo was playing at a level above everyone else: faster, stronger and smarter. "I don't see many college play- ers playing the way she is right now," Ryan said. "She's not play- ing like a college student - she's playing like a pro." The Wolverines face North- western on Saturday on the road knowing that if they don't win, they risk dropping further behind conference-leading Penn State. The fourth-ranked Nittany Lions (5-0,11-2) are perched atop the Big Ten with 15 points. Despite being undefeated in conference play, Michigan trails by two points because of a draw with Iowa. The Wolverines have never finished first in the Big Ten, but Murillo hopes to change that this fall. "We're performing to the best of our abilities right now," Muril- lo said. "Our biggest goal is to win the Big Ten championship." Halfway through the confer- ence schedule, Michigan is poised to do just that. The midfield has controlled the tempo of every match, and its ball movement and precise passes have worn down opponents. It will look to assert its dominance in the remaining Big Ten games, but that won't be easy. Standing in their way on Saturday are the Wildcats, who have not lost to the Wolverines since 2005. This year, Northwestern is struggling to find the back of the net, but has improved since last year. The Wildcats (0-5, 4-7-2) have already doubled its 2011 win total. Northwestern's attack, led by junior forward Kate Allen, has only scored once in five confer- ence matches, but the Wildcats' solid defense has kept them in almost every game this season. Breaking them down will pres- ent a challenge for Michigan's midfield, but Murillo knows how much a win would mean for the team. "Beating (Northwestern) this weekend would prove how much the soccer program has improved," Murillo said. Facing a conference opponent on the road is never easy, espe- cially in a must-win scenario. But the Wildcats are a college team. And, according to Ryan, Murillo just isn't at that level. OCTOBER 11,2012 n 3:00 P.M. Rackham Auditorium . 915 E. Washington St., Ann Arbor Keynote policy lecture by Ambassador Nancy G. Brinker, founder of Susan G. Komen for the Cure Miki Orihara, soloist of the Martha Graham Dance Company Tribute remarks from President Mary Sue Coleman, family members, and other special guests Information: 734-615-3893 fordschool.umich.edu Gerald R. Ford K School of Public Policy ' I & t a