The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Friday, October 26, 2012 - 5A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Friday, October 26, 2012 - 5A Wolverines end regular season at home vs. Illinois MARISSA MCCLAIN/Daily Senior quarterback Denard Robinson will have to out-play Nebraska quarterback Taylor Martinez for Michigan to pull out the victory on Saturday. Michigan-Nebraska matchup has Big Ten title 1mplications By LUKE PASCH day." Daily Sports Editor Martinez sits behind Rob- inson and Ohio State quarter- Saturday's matchup between back Braxton Miller in rushing Michigan (3-0 Big Ten, 5-2 over- yards this season, but Nebraska's all) and Nebraska (2-1, 5-2) will offensive attack tends to be a bit feature one of the best dual- more balanced than Michigan's. threat quarterback showdowns Martinez doesn't have to take this college football season has to on quite the same load of carries offer. with a very effective tandem of Wolverine Michigan tailbacks in sophomore Ameer senior' Denard NAbdullah and senior Rex Burk- Robinson and Nebraska head. Cornhusker Matchup Burkhead is questionable for junior Taylor Michigan 5-2; Saturday's game after he aggra- Martinez have Nebraska 5-2 vated a former ACL sprain last been leading weekend, so the Wolverines will their respec- urday $ p.m. be focused on Martinez and tive offenses Abdullah in the Cornhuskers' very effectively Where: run-heavy offense. in conference Memorial "(Abdullah) is very fast," said play this sea- Stadium defensive coordinator Greg Mat- son, and both TV/Radio: tison. "He's more of an edge guy. have their ESPN2 He can get on that edge and he teams in the can go. He's broken some big thick of Big plays for them. He's going to be a Ten title contention. fast guy that we're going to have "(Martinez is) a great quarter- to contend with." back, he's a great runner," Rob- Michigan's front seven will inson said. "So he's a dual-threat certainly have its hands full stop- quarterback and I enjoy watch- ping Abdullah and Martinez. ing that. So, we'll see on Satur- Nebraska's rushing attack is tops in the Big Ten, statistically, and it may be the best the Wolverines have seen since Week 1 against Alabama, if not all season. Still, the Wolverine- second- ary must be ready, especially if sophomore cornerback Ray- mon Taylor isn't ready to go after hurting his arm last week. Nebraska coach Bo Pelini has become adept at using the run to set up the occasional play-action pass over the top. This year, Michigan's rush defense has been mediocre, allowing 143 yards per game, but it has fared much better in recent weeks. In its three confer- ence games, the Wolverines have surrendered just 91 yards on the ground per game. On the other side of the ball, Nebraska's front seven hasn't done as great a job, and Robin- son should see some open field on Saturday. The Cornhusker rushing defense ranks lOth in the Big Ten, giving up 188 yards per game. And being that Nebraska's secondary is very effective, Rob- inson should be more inclined either to keep it himself or hand off to redshirt junior running back Fitzgerald Toussaint on most snaps. "I don't think they play a high-risk, high-reward type of defense," said offensive coordi- nator Al Borges. "They're basi- cally in the right position most of the time. Their coverage is sound. They don't do anything that you look and say, 'Oh my God, we can take advantage of that."' But Borges was able to take advantage of Nebraska's defense last season, when Michigan toppled the Big Ten-newcomer, 45-17, at the Big House. Robinson and Toussaint combined for 221 rushing yards and four touch- downs, and.Robinson added two more touchdowns through the air. One of the biggest factors in Saturday's game will be the gameday atmosphere. As Michi- gan fans found out last season, Nebraska fans, dubbed the Sea of Red, travel very well - an indication that they'll show up in droves for a key home match- up against the Wolverines. And Michigan hates the color red. Michigan could finish unbeaten at home with win over Fighting Illini By ALEJANDRO ZUNIGA Daily Sports Writer It's a scene that has played out at every home game this season. The catchy tune of the latest pop hit blasts through the crisp fall air at the U-M Soccer Com- plex. On the pitch, members of the Michigan women's soccer team bounce from left to right, dancing and laughing. loi Minutes OlSat before kick- Michigan off, they are Matchup: relaxed, con- Illinois 8-7- fident and 2; Michigan composed. But 13-3-2 when the whis- When: Satur- tle blows, they day 4 P.M. dominate. This season, U-MrSoccer the Wolverines Complex (7-1-2 Big Ten, 13-3-2 overall) are undefeated at home. In the process, they have outscored opponents 21-3, recorded six shutouts, and they have defeated three opponents in overtime. On Sunday night, No. 24 Michigan will host Illinois in the friendly confines of the U-M Soccer Complex with a chance to guarantee the No. 2 seed in the Big Ten Tournament. With a win, or a tie, the Wolverines will become just the second team in the program's history to complete an undefeated home schedule. For the Wolverines to beat the- Fighting Illini, they will have to slow down Vanessa DiBernardo. The midfielder leads Illinois (5-4-1, 8-7-2) with six goals and an assist this season, including a hat trick against Michigan State earlier this month. At just 5-foot-4, the diminu- tive junior won't pose much of a threat in the air, but her speed will force Michigan's defense to be cautious when she has the ball. When the Wolverines attack, they will face a struggling back line that has surrendered two or more goals in four of its last five contests. During that stretch, the Fighting Illini dropped three games and fell to sixth in the conference. The defense is led by goalkeeper Steph Panozzo, the 2011 Big Ten Tournament defensive MVP. If Michigan earns a win, it will finish second in the confer- ence - its best result since 2002. If it loses, it will finish third, unless Ohio State also loses its game at Indiana. And if the Wol- verines tie, it will take a Buck- eye victory to drop Michigan to third. But regardless of Sunday's result against the Illini, the match will mark the last home contest of a successful 2012 cam- paign. Just as it's done all year, the team will face the stands and begin to chant "The Victors." The fans who pack the U-M Soccer Complex will join them, their breath visible in the chilly October air. As the Wolverines jog into their locker room for the last time this season, children will hold handmade signs over the railing and ask for autographs, just as they have all year. Parents will smile and wave and yell their congratulations. Music will blare out of the speakers. And as the minutes pass, the music will shut off, the parents will escort their children out to the parking lot, and the mur- mur of the crowd will lessen until silence and a brightly illu- minated soccer field are all that remain. Ime a vvsvv mt Little attention given to 'M' at.Big Ten Media Day Cardinals fan Beilein, 'U' alum Matheny strike up friendship By GREG GARNO Barnes Arico, the program's Daily Sports Writer fjrst-year coach, will have time to adjust before it matters, though, ROSEMONT, Ill. - After plac- as Michigan takes on preseason ing seven teams in the NCAA favorites Nebraska, Penn State Tournament last season, pre- and Ohio State in three of its last season honors would be hard to four regular season games. come by at the Big Ten Media MIXED REACTIONS: Three Day on Thurs- NOTEBOOK days after Connecticut women's day. basketball coach Geno Auriem- So it came as ma spoke about his idea to lower little surprise when the Michi- rims in college basketball seven ganwomen'sbasketballteamwas inches, BigTen coaches and play- given little recognition. Michi- ers provided their reaction to the gan coach Kim Barnes Arico said hot topic. she didn't pay any attention to it, Auriemma, who supports though. lowering the rim to 9-foot-5, "For myself, I don't think I cited the difference between the can worry about (preseason height of the net in men's and polls)," Barnes Arico said. "I women's volleyball as a reason- think all we're concerned about ing behind the idea to draw more is Michigan's women's basket- fans to games. ball, which is getting better "You have to look at chang- each and every day. We have a ing things if you feel like they're great players in our league and not working," said Northwestern it's just getting better and bet- coach Joe McKeown. "I'd like.to ter." see us use a big ball again and I Penn State was projected to think we miss a lot of lay-ups. I win the conference by both the don't know about lowering the media and coaches after finish- rims, but I do think we shouldn't ing first in the Big Ten last sea- beintimidatedby change,either." son with a 13-3 record. Michigan State junior guard The Nittany Lions also boast Klarissa Bell, who had yet to hear one of two of the coaches' pre- about the idea, was indifferent season player of the year picks in toward the topic but was con- senior guard Alex Bentley - who cerned about the logistics of it all. aims for her third straight All- "I think that it would be inter- Big Ten honor this year. esting because a lot more girls Nebraska junior forward Jor- could actually dunk," Bell said. dan Hooper, Ohio State senior "I couldn't imagine having to guard Tayler Hill - the other change my shot seven inches preseason player of the year lower and making a lay-up - I selection - and Penn State think my ball might go over the junior guard Maggie Lucas were backboard." all members of the All-Big Ten Barnes Arico was not sup- team last year also. portive of the idea, describing it The Wolverines finished 8-8 as another distraction she would in conference play last year,and rather ignore. hope to improve upon that mark. "I don't know how I feel about it," Barnes Arico said. "I would probably say I don't really have a strong feeling about it. Right now I'm worried about my team and coaching my team." Auriemma also spoke about maintaining an annual location for regional sites in the NCAA Tournament and moving the final two games to a Friday-Sun- day format, rather than a Tues- day-Sunday format. Ohio State coach Jim Foster noted that he hasn't spent much time thinking about the subject, though, he did echo the senti- ments of Barnes Arico about the Huskies' man at the helm. "Geno has a got a team that allows him to have escapist moments," Foster said. "The rest of us are spending a lot of time trying to get our team better." INJURIES: Barnes Arico enters the season with three of her play- ers recovering from ACL inju- ries, but she isn't alone amongst coaches who are also working to overcome injuries. Nebraska, picked second in the preseason poll, will have to overcome a variety of injuries early in the season to fulfill those projections. , Perhaps the team that will. suffer the most is rival Michigan State, who coach Suzy Merchant expects won't be at full-strength until mid-December. Merchant listed freshman guard Brandi Agee as the most notable of her injuries, which will make the Spartans overcome a lack of depth as well. "It's really about getting the entire team back to healthy and ready to go for Big Tens," Mer- chant said. "We fully anticipate that happening." By DANIEL WASSERMAN Daily Sports Writer ROSEMONT, Ill. - In 1968, when John Beilein was living in upstate New York, he never would've predicted he'd one day be rooting for the Detroit Lions in a World Series. The Tigers had just broken his 10 year-old heart by knocking off Bob Gibson and his beloved St. Louis Cardinals. Beilein, who decided to become a Cardinals fan five years earlier in 1963, also had no idea that one day he'd become close friends with the St. Louis manager. Beilein, still a devoted Cardi- nals fan, has struck up a friend- ship with St. Louis manager and former Michigan baseball player Mike Matheny. When the Car- dinals visited Comerica Park this summer during interleague play, Beilein paid a visit to the ballpark to spend time with his friend, and the two remained in contact even through Matheny's recent playoff grind, which ended in a Game 7 loss to San Francisco earlier this week. "One of the texts I sent him after a game - they'd won a big game - and I said, 'Now you've got to hurry to get home to watch the Michigan football game,' " Beilein said Thursday at Big Ten Media Day. "He loves Michigan, but he does a good job with the Cardinals." Matheny played three sea- sons in Ann Arbor before leaving in 1989 to pursue a pro- fessional career. In the midst of his 13-year career, he won four Gold Gloves and holds the MLB catching records for most games (252) and chances (1,565) with- out committing an error, but he accomplished one of his proud- est feats off the field. Michigan coach John Beilein is a lifelong St. Louis Cardinals fan. Matheny returned to Ann Arbor in each of his first two off-seasons asa professional and completed his final 42 credits, becoming the first person in his family to earn a degree from a major university. "I didn't want to throw all that away, and I knew as I got older, it'd be harder to come -back," Matheny said in 2011 after speaking at the Michi- gan baseball team banquet. "Of the things that I've been able to accomplish in my life - and some of them were bigger than I ever thought I would - I can't tell you how many times I've gone into a conversation and stuck my chest out a little bit when somebody asked me where I went to school. "When I see their reaction, I know that I was right inthe deci- sion that I made. I truly want the message to ring clear that this is a very, very special place, and it's developing very special people" Beilein said that as he watched the Cardinals this year, he noticed that leadership attribut- ed to Matheny's Ann Arbor days remained instilled in how the first-year coach manages. "He's such a great representa- tion of what a Michigan Man is," Beilein said. "Just watch his press confer- ences and how he talks to the press, how he deals with his players, it's Michigan. It's just Michigan. He has a great calm- ing influence on his players, and his team plays with great confi- dence because of it." Beilein, who has also gotten to know former St. Louis man- ager Tony LaRussa over the years, didn't close the door on the possibility of Matheny pay- ing a visit to the basketball team in Ann Arbor. But don't expect anything to materialize before the Wolver- ines kick off their season in a week. '3