ar ; t"Y) 1'ss' :-:i t -", ' j , 1..'..:.., };h:- a . The Michigan Daily I michigandailycom I October 29,2012 By BEN ESTES Daily Sports Editor LINCOLN - This wasn't sup- posed to be Russell Bellomy's game to win. Sometimes, though, that's how it goes - the backup is forced into duty and must overcome his lack of experience, must play above any reasonable expectations that could be set for him. That was Bellomy's job in Sat- urday's game against Nebraska, after senior quarterback Denard without achieving a first down. "Russ, he probably had some Robinson exited with a nerve The redshirt freshman quar- mistakes, but we were getting injury in his throwing elbow. But terback went 3-for-16 through in the redzone, we were catch- he and the rest of the Michigan the air with three interceptions ing the ball ... it was just the mis- offense couldn't erase the Corn- and the running game generated takes." huskers' moderate lead, and the almost nothing. Bellomy - also victimized on Wolverines fell, 23-9, in their first "You've got one of the (most) several occasions by dropped trip to Lincoln since 1911. dynamic quarterbacks in the passes - finally got a first down The performance was, at times, NCAA," fifth-year wide receiver late in the third quarter thanks ugly. After Bellomy took over the Roy Roundtree said of Robinson. to a double personal foul call on reins on the Nebraskseight-yard, "Ireaks h l .e _re s. When the Cornhuskers. A third penalty line late in the second- quarter, he went down, yeah it w as a big 'later on the drive helped Michi- No. 20 Michigan (3-1 Big Ten, 5-3 factor, but you can' t just let that gan to its third field goal of the overall) went four straight drives mess up your offense. night, a 38-yarder by redshirt junior Brendan Gibbons that cut the deficit to seven points. But that would be all the scor- ing for the Wolverines, who fell into a first-place tie in the Big Ten Legends Division with Nebraska. By virtue of losing the would-be tiebreaker should the teams end up with the same number of loss- es, Michigan no longer controls ts destlnVto get to acbnference championship game. The poor offensive effort, amounting to 188 total yards, merely continued a trend - the Wolverines haven't scored a touchdown since the fourth quar- ter of the Illinois game two weeks ago. It also overshadowed another strong performance by the team's defense, which held the Big Ten's top statistical offense to its low- est point and yardage total of the seaso-n. Only on two long drives did the defense look vulnerable. Both saw See SHUCKS, Page 3B FOOTBALL Defense the lone bright spotin loss to Nebraska By STEPHEN J. NESBITT Daily Sports Editor LINCOLN - There were few positives to be found in the Michigan football team's 23-9 loss to Nebraska. One brightspot under the Memorial Stadium lights, though, hit like a freight train. It was senior defensive end Craig Roh, who sprang out of his stance on a crucial third down early in the fourth quarter and plowed straight through his blocker until the stunned line- man fell backward into Nebras- kaquarterback Taylor Martinez. The sack put the Cornhuskers out of field-goal range and gave redshirt freshman quarterback Russell Bellomy and the fledg- ling Michigan offense the ball back facing just a seven-point deficit. On the next play from scrim- mage, Bellomy reared back and lofted a pass nearly 30 yards downfield that fell neatly into the arms of Nebraska safety Dai- mion Stafford. That scenario repeated itself over and over againat Memorial Stadium on Saturday. The matchup not only pitted the Big Ten Legends division favorites against each other, it set up a faceoff between what are arguably the conference's top offense and defense. Facing a Nebraska offense See DEFENSE, Page 3B Redshirt freshman quarterback Russell Bellomy was 3-for-16 passing with three interceptions against Nehrasa. The quarterback gamble Wolves, RedHawks split series LINCOLN- The irony of Russell Bellomy's final interception, the one he heaved into double cover- age in the end zone, is that the receiver he was target- ing could've been the quarterback. Probably should've. But Devin Gardner ZACH at receiver Z A ND was a get- HELFAND rich-quick scheme, a bad gamble, and like any bad gamble it started with three things: a man, a choice and a misguided optimism. Michigan coach Brady Hoke bought into the scheme. He lost. He didn't lose his shirt or his house but he lost the game, 23-9, to Nebraska on Saturday. And he just might have gambled Michigan out of a shot at the Big Ten title, too. Here's how the scheme worked: In the beginning, there were just good intentions. And some imagination, too, you need that for the scheme to win you over. Imagine the best two athletes - senior quarterback Denard Robinson and junior quarterback Devin Gardner - on the field at the same time. Imagine Robin- son's legs and his arm, Gardner's size and his leaping ability at receiver. Imagine throwing past overmatched Big Ten defenses all the way to Indianapolis. That's what Hoke must have thought. He must have. And at the time, it made too much sense. The third-string quarter- back, redshirt freshman Russell Bellomy, was improving. Was he improving enough? The wide receivers were pedestrian. Gard- ner could bring life. No need to develop young wide receivers, you could get rich quick. Imagination. Opportunity cost. Risk. Choice. The choice, yes, here's where it gets interesting. The imagina- tion cedes to the rational. The See QUARTERBACK, Page 3B By LIZ NAGLE Daily Sports Writer The No. 6 Michigan hockey team gained confidence in a mild upset over No. 3 Miami (Ohio) in its CCHA opener. But on Satur- day, with MIAMI (OH) 2 a change MICHIGAN 4 in the wind, the MIAMI (OH) 3 Wolverine MICHIGAN 4 defense deteriorated and gave the Red- Hawks a triplet of goals in the third period before losing 4-3. On Friday, senior forward A.J. Treais headlined Michi- gan's 4-2 win, tallying a pair of goals off of 6 shots against Miami, plugging his second multi-goal contest this year. PAUL SHERMAN/Daily Sophomore Alex Guptill and the Wolverines nearly swept visiting Miami. Treais credits his timely suc- ing fun and what not," Beren- cess to making "lucky" shots, son said. "But when the game's but Michigan coach Red Beren- on, there's something going on son translates it as something in him, whether it's passion or different. pride and responsibility. But "He can come in here and sit he's definitely finding a way to and dead pan that he's just hav- See SPLIT, Page 3B PLAY-CALL PROBLEMS Who's to blame for the Michigan offense's futility this fall? How about offensive coordinator Al Borges? Page 2B PUSH FOR POINTS e The Wolverines settled for a weekend split with ranked Miami (Ohio), but that's not going to be good enough. Page 2B