The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com October 17, 2012 -- 3B MICHIGAN ATHLETICS SCOREBOARD L A S T W E E K TUESDAY (OCT. 9) Men's golf: Fightin'Irish Classic:11th (South Bend) Baseball: Michigan 8, Ontario Blue Jays 5 (Ann Arbor) Men's soccer: Michigan1, Oakland 0 (Ann Arbor) Hockey: Michigan 7, Windsor3 (Ann Arbor) W EDNESDAY (OCT. 10) Women's Soccer: Michigan 2, Michigan State 1 SAnn Arbor) Volleybal Michigan 3, llinois 0 (Ann Arbor) THURSDAY (OCT. 11) Hockey: Rochester Institute of Technology 5, Michigan4 (Ann Arbor) FRIDAY (OCT. 12) Men's XC: Wisconsin Adidas Invitational: 7th (Madison) Field Hockey: Michigan 3, Michigan State, 2 (Ann Arbor) Hockey: Michigan 7, Rochester Institute of Tech- nology,2 (AnnArbor) SATURDAY (OCT. 13) Women'sXC:NCAA Pre-Nationals:3rd(Louisville, Ky.) Football: Michigan45, Illinois,0(Ann Arbor) Men' soc:e Wisnsin 2, Michigan T (Madison) Volleyballi Michigan 3, NNohwestern 0(Ann Abor) Women's golf: Tar HeeInvitational (Chapel Hill, N.C.) Field Hockey Michigan3,OhioStateS1(Ann Arbor) Women'ssoccer:Michigan 2, Purdue, 0(Ann Arbor) Women'sgolf:Tar HeelInvitational: 18th (Chapel Hill, N.C.) Menssoccer Akon 2, Michigan1 (Akron,Ohio) Men'sgolf: Alister MacKenzie Invitationl:14th (Fairfax,Calif.) N E X T W E E K WEDNESDAY (OCT. 17) Volleyball: Michigan vs. Michigan State, 7pm. (') T HURSDAY (OCT. 18) Women's soccer: Michigan at Ohio State,8 p.m. (Columbus) Women'stennis: ITA Regionals, TBA (Champaign) Men'stennis: ITA Midwest Regionals, TBA (East Lansing) FRISDAY (OC T. 19) Field Hockey: Michigan at Indiana, 4 p.m.(Bloom- iegtoN)l Women's XC: EMU Fall Classic, 4:30 p.m. (Dexter) Men's XC: EMU Fall Classic, 5 p.m. (Dexter) Men's soccer: Michigan at Indiana, 7 p.m. (Bloom- ington) Ice Hockey: Michigan vs. Bentley, 7:35 p.m. (') Women'stennis: ITA Regionals,TBA(Champaign) Men's tennis: ITA Midwest Regionals, TBA (East Lansing) SAT URDAY (OC T. 20) Football: Michigan vs. Michigan State,330 () Men's soccer: Michigan at Wisconsin (Madison) Volleyball: Michigan vs. Penn State, 7 p.m. (') Women's tennis: ITA Regionals, TBA (Champaign) Mens tennis: ITA Midwest Regionals, TBA (East Laning) SUNDAY (OCT, 21) Field Hockey: Michigan vs. Miami Ohio,1 P.m.() Women's soccer: Michigan at Penn State,T p.m. (State College) Woes Rowing: Head of the Charles, 3 p.m. (Boston, MA.) Women's tennis: ITA Regionals, TBA (Champaign) Men's tennis: ITA Midwest Regionals, TBA (East Lansing) - ()l2hUome even~te eligible to ear oitsfor the Athietic Department's .. progrOTs. M IC HIG AN F O OTB8AL L TeamStats MICH ILL *oint45 0 First Downs 21 7 Rush Yards 353 105 Passing Yards 174 29 Oensive Plays AU 53 Total Offense 527 134 Kickreturns/Yds 8/499 1/51 Puntreturns/Yds 3/56 0/0 Comp/Att/Int 9/15/0 7/16/1 Punts/Avg 4/34 8/367 Fumbles/Lost 1/1 2/1 Penalties/Yards 5/45 5/45 Time of Poss 32:14 27:46 PASSING, Player C-A Yds TD Int Robinson, D. 7-11 159 2 0 Bellomy 1-3 N 0 0 Kennedy 1-1 7 0 0 Totals 9-15 174 2 0 RaysH Att Yds Avg Lg TD Robinson, 0. 11 128 11.6 49 2 Rawls 9 90 10.0 63 1 Hays 10 EU EU6 24 0 Toussaint 18 62 34 1 BeNory 2 8 40 7 0 Nortlect 1 -1 -1.0 0 0 Totals 51 364 6.9 63 4 RECEIVING Player No. Yds Avg Lg TD Roundtree 1 3 3.0 3 0 Gardner 1 17 17.0 17 0 Toussaint 1 15 15.0 1s 0 Robnson, . 1 8 80 8 0 Funchess 1 8 8.0 8 1 Esterline 1 7 7.0 7 0 Total 9 174 19. 2 71 ON TWITTER: @theblockm @michigandaily ZIPS From Page 1B Quinn slid a ball past redshirt sophomore goalkeeper Adam Grinwis in the 13th minute to give Akron the one-goal advan- tage. "We were a little bit careless in our possession," McMenemy said. "It was always gonna be an uphill battle. (We) need to learn how to take care of the ball. We made some adjustments after the goal, and I think we made a very good response." The Wolverines managed several chances from the wings, but those opportunities ended with headers that rolled wide left and wide right. Just before halftime, Michigan had its best chance when a header from junior forward Malcolm Miller struck the crossbar. A minute later, the referees may have ended Michigan's chance for an upset in Akron. Senior defender Brian Klemc- zak was shown a red card for a hard challenge during the Zips' quick transitional attack. The half ended with Akron leading 1-0. In the second half, Michigan had even more to overcome with just 10 men on the field. The Wolverines came out with ener- gy and a chip on their shoulder, but Akron still proved to be too Redshirt sophomore forward Tyler Arnone sCOred in Michigan's previ IAN/Dal s game. much. "They have an incredible home support, (and) when you go down a man you don't make life easy for yourself," McMene- my said. "We don't make excus- es, and we don't believe in moral victories. I don't think you'll find many teams who played Akron that well with IO men though." McMenemy was spot on regarding his team's perfor- mance in the final 45 minutes. Michigan hit the woodwork yet again, adding several scoring chances from corner kicks as the game progressed. Though Michigan headed SPARTY From Page 1B want. They lined up, ran the football and knocked us off the football. And wedion't like that." It was more than that. More than any other team, at least any other team in the Big Ten, Michigan State has stopped Michigan quarterback Denard Robinson through the air and on the ground. Robin- son rushed for just 42 yards last year. Two years ago, he gained just 86 yards on the ground. In the two meetings, the Spartans ILLINOIS From Page 1B the Illinois matchup, tweaking what appeared to be his right- hand pinky on an eight-yard rush down to the Fighting Illini one- yard line. That drive was capped by an 18-yard field goal from redshirt junior kicker Brendan Gibbons, but all eyes were on the side- line, where Robinson was being attended to by a trio of trainers. "It was just a boo-boo," Robin- son joked after the game. "Every- body gets hurt." . The injury put the pressure on the Michigan defense to pro- tect a 10-point lead with untested and unproven sophomore backup quarterback Russell Bellomy tak- ing the reins for Robinson. "We want to win the game on our side of the football," said fifth-year senior middle line- backer Kenny Demens. "Watch- ing Denard go down like that, we knew that we had to step our game up. If they don't score any more points, then we win the ballgame." And Illinois never did score a single point. From the moment Robinson stepped off the field on, the Michigan defense allowed just 97 yards and five first downs in the remaining 51 minutes of game time. Robinson missed only one series, though, and got right back to work. He handed off three times, then finally ran, first for three yards and then again for 33 yards before stepping out of bounds and inadvertently top- pling an alumni cheerleader. His shoe came off mid-run. Shoelace was back, wet socks and all. Three plays later, Robinson finished with a six-yard scamper into the end zone to put Michigan up 17-0. Illinois, too, ran into quar- terback troubles when junior quarterback Nathan Scheelhaase was ridden down from behind by junior cornerback Court- ney Avery and junior defensive end Jibreel Black. Scheelhaase stayed on the turf for a few min- utes before exiting the game with an apparent head injury. He was replaced by freshman quar- terback Reilly O'Toole for the remainder of the contest. Michigan held a 17-0 lead at halftime, but Robinson extended forced four interceptions. There was no trickery, no smoke and mirrors in what Borges called a "figurative fist fight."' The Spartans were just better and played harder. That's not something you change with a scheme, accord- ing to Borges. - "You go out there with an attitude that you're going to exceed their intensity and you don't let people do that to you," Borges said. "It's that simple. ... And if you don't think that way, don't come to this game." For the players, the memories that stick never come from dur- that score early in the second half with his 49-yard touchdown run. Everyone in the Michigan Stadium crowd - an announced attendance of 110,922 - knew Robinson would be on a short leah in the second half and likely wouldn't finish the game at quar- terback considering Michigan's sizeable and ever-expanding lead. So he made the most of his last 15 minutes. Robinson found freshman tight end Devin Funchess for an eight-yard touchdown pass with 10:10 left in the third quar- ter. Seven minutes later, two plays after freshman defensive end Mario Ojemudia recovered a fumble on the Illinois six-yard line, redshirt junior running back Fitzgerald Toussaint punched it in for his first touchdown and put Michigan up 38-0. Bellomy returned to the field for the fourth'quarter to end Rob- inson's day. Robinson finished 7-for-11 passing for 159 yards and a touchdown, and 11 carries for 128 rushing yards and two rush- ing scores. Sophomore running back Thomas Rawls capped the scor- ing with a 63-yard touchdown run with 6:01 remaining in the fourth quarter. In the victory, Robinson became the eighth player in Big Ten history to surpass 10,000 yards of total offense, and he posted his 18th 100-yard rush- ing effort, putting him in a tie for fourth place in Michigan history. The statistics, though, mean nothing to Michigan's senior captain. Robinson said the only statistic he pays attention to is turnovers. And that's where this game stood out. On the other side of the field, the Michigan defense stood tall for the fourth-consecutive game, after impressive showings against Massachusetts, Notre Dame and Purdue. In the second half, Illinois gained just 13 total yards. The linebacker corps shone especially bright. Senior middle linebacker Kenny Demens inter- cepted an O'Toole pass in the third quarter, redshirt sopho- more strongside linebacker Jake Ryan wreaked havoc in the Illinois backfield all afternoon - registering two sacks and a fumble forced - and sophomore weakside linebacker Desmond Morgan was honored with the back to Ann Arbor with a loss, there were positives to be found. The shorthanded Wolverines shut out the Zips in the second half. For 45 minutes, Michigan may very well have outplayed one of the nation's top programs with 10 men. "We were very threatening in set pieces," McMenemy said. "The way the boys followed the game plan and the adjust- ments, it's very heartening that they can execute instructions the way they did. You cant do anything without an incredible work ethic. and I think that's what gives us the .most hope going up against Indiana." ing the game. Listen to Demens or Gordon or Roundtree. The pain always comes at the end. Last year was an especially hol- low feeling, knowing that the Wolverines' four losses tied the longest losing streak against the Spartans in program history. Indeed, for all the memories, none can remember walking by the Paul Bunyan Trophy in the Schembechler Hall trophy case. "I saw it on my official visit, but not after a victory," Gordon said. "I bet it looks a whole lot better after the victory." That would be something worth remembering. No. 48 Gerald Ford legacy jersey. Michigan is back in action next Saturday at Michigan Stadium against Michigan State, who lost 19-16 to Iowa earlier on Saturday afternoon. NET From Page 1B to find his replacement. Berenson had a pair o on the roster - redshir more Luke Dwyer and Adam Janecyk - but r' two more to cap this ye call. In the preseason, B spoke highly of freshm minder Jared Rutledge, w a gold medal in the 2012 18 World Junior Champ: with the U.S. team. But Rutledge failed an and underwent surgery t him from taking many practice before the star season. "We thought he wa Berenson said. "I think sight is fine, but as fai timing and his confider getting into a groove, he ably not there yet." In the home opener las day, Rutledge proved he quite ready, earning t overtime loss against Rn Institute of Technology. he notched 21 saves and t verines carried a leadi final frame, Rutledge suc- cumbed to' a late Tigers " surge and allowed a C three-goal third period to to tie the game at four. "Here's a freshman goalie coming then he misses the bette two weeks of skating and skates for a week and w' him to play well," Berent "In the third period, her run outofgas alittle bito focus....It was the thir that jumped up and bit h: Though Rutledge gav game-winning goal just onds into overtime, B said he believes that sin formance didn't reflec Rutledge is truly capable "It's a big test for thes play their first game - y know how much presss put on themselves," B said. "They never score good goal on him. All tl were kind of tainted. As he have saved most o Yeah." Nevertheless, Berenson called on freshman Steve Racine to close the series. Racine recorded the same number of saves as Rutledge but f goalies allowed just two goals during t sopho- Michigan's 7-2 win. I junior Berenson was pleased with ecruited Racine's debut efforts and feels ar's roll that the Williamsville, N.Y. native took the pressure off erenson of Rutledge "or put some on, san net- depending on how you look at who won it." Under- Berenson remains uncertain ionships as to who will be the consistent starter that Hunwick was last eye test season. While he weighs the hat kept options, there's a strong pos- shots in sibility the dueling goalies will t of the split time. Berenson split time between is fine," Hunwick and then-senior Bryan his eye- Hogan in the first half of the r as his 2010-13 season before Hogan nce and was injured during warmups 's prob- before the Big Chill at the Big House against Michigan State. t'Thurs- "It's just a little healthy e wasn't competition," Rutledge said. the 5-4 "There's no hard feelings ochester between us.... We're going to be Though together forfouryears, so there's :he Wol- no point in butting heads." into the With Rutledge and Racine fighting for the start- ing spot in Rutledge is the lineup, Janecyk )ming off a and Dwyer remain ugh game." benched. Janecyk had a meager performance in and in the exhibition against Wind- r part of sor, giving up a pair of goals [then he in the third stanza. Berenson e expect expressed his disappointment in son said. his eldest netminder, who land- might've ed an unsatisfactory 3.17 goals rlosthis against average and 0.897 save d period percentage last year in just five im." games. e up the of the goalie quad, Dwyer has 14 sec- not seen icetime through two erenson seasons. Berenson will continue gle per- to evaluate his staff between the ct what pipes and fill the lineup slot on a e of. game-by-game basis. e kids to "I can't tell you anything ou don't is permanent, but right now ure they Racine looks a little more ready," erenson Berenson said. "Rutledge is d a real coming off a tough game and he goals he'll bounce back. nd could "I've been a one-goalie coach, & them? but I've also been a two-goalie coach." --- -- -- -