I The Michigan football team climbed back over the .500 mark with a resounding 44-13 victory over Purdue in West Lafayette last weekend. Denard Robinson is back on a roll and so is the 2 0 1 2 S defense, but Fitzgerald Toussaint hasn't quite gotten going yetA this fall. The Wolverines now tangle with Illinois, which has a new Alabama(Sept.1): Michgan's memory needsto head coach but has suffered the same, painful result this season. be short after this one. It should be anyway with some of the hits the Crimson Tide dealt out. Ben Estes, Zach Helfand, Stephen J. Nesbitt, Luke Pasch Air Force (Sept. 8): Air Force ran all over TA BL E OF CONTENTSMichigan, but Denard Robinson returned the favor to squeak out the 31-25 victory. Q&A: Illinois quarterback Nathan Massachusetts (Sept.15): Michigan thoroughly Scheelhaase sat down with the Daily's dominated its weakest opponent, trouncing Ben Estes at Big Ten Media Days in July. Massachusetts, 63-13. Notre Dame (Sept. 22): Robinson threw four The Legend of Slippery Rock: The polar interceptions and Vincent Smith added another, opposite of Michigan, how has a tiny Penn- as the Fighting Irish barely scraped out a 13-6 win. sylvania university captured our hearts? Purdue (Oct. 6): Kirk Herbstreit picked Purdue Advance: Michigan has downed Illinois in to win the game and the Big Ten before the consecutive seasons, and the scales have " game. He went tail-between-the-legs quickly. 8 cnsewtipdevseasns dthe scaM's have now tipped even futher in 'M's favor. Illinois (Oct. 13): Michigan will miss Ron Zook, ILL IS who was fired after an 0-6 stretch to end last Cover illustration by Marissa McClain season. But it might like Tim Beckman more. schedule 7W -W w w Sa Michigan State (Oct. 20): Wolverines could snap a four-game losing streak to Sparty. If it happens, avoid fans' (or players') raging fists at all costs. Nebraska (Oct. 27): Michigan handed the Huskers a rude welcome to the Big Ten in 2011. Prime time in Lincoln could be different, though. Minnesota(Nov.3):This game was a confidence booster last year - a 58-0 drubbing. The Little Brown Jug will stay in Ann Arbor again. Northwestern (Nov. 10): In a late season matchup, we'll find out who scraps harder: A wildcat or a wolverine. Iowa (Nov. 17): It's not heaven. It's Iowa - the utterly mediocre squad that handed Michigan one of its two losses in 2011. Ohio State (Nov. 24): The reincarnation of the Bo-Woody dynamic, Hoke and Meyer will com- pete in 'The Game' for the first time at the Shoe. council and works for the fire department. "We've got kids on our team now that aren'tgetting a dime to play football. They love to play football, and they love to play for Slippery Rock." Mihalik stood in front of these football players, these students. "I haven't seen that look in a while, fellas," he said. "We're ready to play tonight. You know what's on the line tonight. You know what we can do tonight. "The Rock's ready." And with that, they streamed out the locker room, through a small concrete corridor that serves as their tunnel, through a gate in the chainlink fence in front of the bleachers - where there was no banner to touch - and onto the field. High up above the field, on a hill above the visiting team's bleach- ers, Slippery Rock President Cheryl Norton watched the game from the Gail Rose Stadium Lodge with donors and other administrators. It's the Slippery Rock version of a luxury box, more homey and with fewer corporate frills. Nor- ton watched from the inside of the wooden structure through big win- dows. Then she moved to the patio outside, where on a nearby picnic table sat the quarterback of the Slip- pery Rock High School team, which had won the nightbefore. The president here likes foot- ball. She likes it just as much as she likes women's soccer - she took in that team's game against Shippens- burg before she went to the football game. She likes football, it seems, as much as anything else at the uni- versity. Football is nice, but football isn't king. Three fumbles and abysmal spe- cial teams play had given Kutztown a 41-21 lead. In the Lodge, Norton cheered and grew quietlike the rest of the crowd. But she kept perspec- tive. "It's not a live-or-die sport, peo- ple can actually play football for the love of the game," Norton said. "And not because theythink they're going to go pro, not because they think they're the best thing next to sliced bread, but because they really love the game. And that's wonder- ful." Back down in the locker room at halftime, there was little of that perspective. "I've never been a bitch in my life," Jeff Thompson, a fifth-year senior defensive end and one of the team's leaders, told his teammates. "That's how we're being treated every play." Mihalik, frustrated, began a rant. "You can't beat an opponent and also try to beat ourselves," Mihalik said. "And we're just knocking the shit out of ourselves. Special teams, you're killing us tonight." And he was right. The Rock had lost a fumble, punted for just 20 yards, missed a field goal, allowed a 51-yard kickoff return, lost two more fumbles and allowed a 53-yard kickoff return just in the first half. Mihalik promised his team one of the biggest comebacks in Slip- pery Rock history. But for a room full of players payingtheir own way through school, playingin front of a few thousand fans, Thompson said it best. "Act like you love it!" And Slippery Rock ran back out onto the field. The quarterback here is recog- nized by some on campus, but no one takes pictures with him. No one asks for an autograph. Nigel Barks- dale is the backup, actually, filling in for the starter who sustained a head injury the previous week. But Nigel Barksdale can play. After the game, after Barksdale had rushed for169 yards, thrown for 261 more and combined for five touch- downs with no interceptions, Miha- lik would make a comparison. "He reminds me of someone you watch, doesn't he?" Mihalik asked. That someone is Denard Robinson. On the field, Barksdale is quick and creative, capable of outrunning any defender. He's also reckless and had to leave the game with a knee injury at multiple badly timed junc- tures. But his explosiveness can change games. After a Thompson sack started the half, Barksdale seized control. He rushed for a touchdown, then threw for another. After one touch- down, a teammate lifted Barksdale into the air, much like Taylor Lewan does with Robinson. A third touchdown in the half, a run by Akeem Satterfield, evened the score, and then another Barks- dale touchdown suddenlygave Slip- pery Rock the lead. For the moment, Barksdale was the hero. And yet he'd still probably go largely unrecognized around campus. "Being a student football player at Slippery Rock ... you have your people," Barksdale said. "You see them in the stands - there's a lot of people at our games. We have them when you're walking through cam- pus. Good game here, good game there, you guys could've done better here, you guys could've been better there. It's nothing like rah-rah-rah walking through the halls (like) you're the big man on campus." But right now, Barksdale was the big man on campus. With 10:35 remaining in the game, Slippery Rock led 49-42. There is no instant replay here. No coach's challenges. When the referees say the ball is fumbled, the ball is fumbled and that's that. It doesn't matter that Slippery Rock had clawed back from three scores down and let the lead slip away ontwo straight Kutz- town touchdowns. It doesn't matter that the Slippery Rock receiver's knee had likely been down. After it was over, Mihalik dis- cussed the game with Steele, the equipment manager. Mihalik was upset, but calm. He looked at the box score, saw the five turnovers, the large total yards differential that favored Slippery Rock and gave an aw-shucks shrug. He glanced over. "I told the team, 'We have to win for the Michigan guys,' " Mihalik said. STAFF PICKS The Daily football writers pick against the spread to predict scores for the top-25 and Big Ten in the 2012 football season. No.25 Michigan (-21)vs.Illinois No Alaao a(-17.5)atMissoui N5o. 3SouthtCaroiinaat No. 9LSU (-4) No.4Fioridai(-85iat'Vanderb t No5stVirgnia (-4)atrTexasTech No.6tKansas State (-7.)iaIowa Stat, N. 7Notre axet(-7) v.5No.17 Stanford No. 0 Ohio State (-19) at Indiana No. 10 regon State at BYU (-5) Nol 2SoihenCai(- 27atWashington No. 2 Florida State (-27)vs. BC No.13 Oklahoma (-2.5) vs. No.15 Texas No. 18 Louisville (-1.5) at Pittsburgh No. 19 Miss. State (-1.5) vs. Tennessee No.20Rutgeers(-8.5)vs.-Syracuse No. 21 CincinnatjiNS) vs. Fodham No. 22 Texas A&M (-7.5) at Louisiana Tech No.24 Boise Statei(9.5) vs. Fesno State MichiganoState (-13) vs. Iowa Minnesotavs. Northwestern (-3.5) Last Week 0 ai Zach Helfand Alabama Fiorida Best Virginia Kavsas State Staford Ohio State Oregon Washington Forida State Texas Louisviiie Tennese Rtgters Cincinnati LouisinaTech i scons i 84-66-4 Aabama Soth Caroinea Forida Best Vireiisa Notre Dame Ohio State Oregon State Sothe nCai BostonCoiiee Texas Pittshorgh Tenres Cincinnati Louisiana Tech MichiganaState 79-7 s t-4 79-71-4 Aiabaoa South Caeolina Fiorida BestVirgiaia Iowa State NotFe Dae Ohio State Oregon State SoternCa Boston Colee Oklahoma Louisvilie Mississippi State Rters Cincinnati Texas A&M Boise State nowa No2th2-en8- Bisconsin 12-8-i 82-68-4 SouthCarolinea Forida Best Virginia Kensas State Stanford Indiana Oregon State Washington BostonCoilege Oklahoma Louisville Misissippi State Cicinnati Louisiana Tech Michigan State Wiscoesin 86-64-S Aiabaoa South Carolina Fiorida West Virginia NotreDae Ohio State Oregon State Sothe,, Cal Florida State Texas Louisville Mississippi State Rutgers Cincinnati Texas A&M Boise Stain Michigan State Nortestern FOLLOW US ON TWITTER AND FACEBOOK @THEBLOCKM FB.COM/MICHIGANDAILY IT'S GOOD FOR YOUR SOUL 2 FootballSaturday - October 13, 2012 TheBlockM - www.theblockm.com 1 7