8A - Wednesday, October 31, 2012 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com .0 FOOTBALL Ko vacs, Taylor not buying into stats Redshirt junior running back Fitzgerald Toussaint hasn't gotten off on the right foot this fal, and Michigan is running out of time in the season. Still no answers at tailback By ZACH HELFAND Daily Sports Editor - A one-dimensional offense. became a zero-dimensional offense with senior quarterback Denard Robinson out of the game on Saturday, the running backs so stifled they gained just six yards in the second half. A seven-point deficit never felt so insurmount- able, nor had the tailback ques- tion seemed so perplexing. On Tuesday, redshirt junior tailback Fitzgerald Toussaint danced around explanations for yet another sluggish perfor- mance just like he danced around running lanes. The lack of pro- duction, he said, is no one's fault, it's just good defense. In other words, still no answers. The running-back question has baffled the Michigan offense all season, but it reached a head on Saturday when the tailbacks generated a paltry ;32 yards on the ground. Redshirt freshman Russell Bellomy bore most of the attention after the loss to Nebras- ka, but Toussaint and senior Vincent Smith were just as bad. And they have five full seasons of experience between them. "Because we are a running team, when we don't run well, we don't play well," said offensive coordinator Al Borges. "That's kind of been the theme since I've ity, but with his health status still been here." unresolved, the answer to the tail- The answer to the running back problem is even more press- woes has eluded seemingly ing. Toussaint has yet to rush for everyone on the Michigan team. more than 100 yards in a game In the past, redshirt junior offen- this year, and he averages just 3.3 sive tackle Taylor Lewan has yards per carry. He rushed for blamed the line. Michigan coach more than 1,000 last year but has Brady Hoke has done the muchof amassed just 321 yards this year. the same. On Saturday, each drive was Toussaint credited the defens- as good as over before it began - es. Never mind that Michigan because the drives usually began dominated those same defenses with a Fitzgerald Toussaint rush on the ground last year. And into nowhere. Toussaint rushed Borges said it seven times doesn't matter in the second who gets the half, most on rushing yards "I have to give first down. Five - running back times, he went or quarterback credit to the for one yard or - as long as less. Still, that's it's someone. defense." better than Never mind Smith, who that last year, rushed twice in Michigan said the half, both time and again they needed pro- times for a loss of four yards. duction from the tailback position "I have to give; credit to the specifically. defense that we play," Toussaint "I know the media, everybody said. "They can key on the run. always wants to blame it on one Key on the fun a lot and force us. thing," Borges said. "The depth, to pass." the quarterback, the play-calling, That was Nebraska's plan with whatever it is. I heard Bill Par- Bellomy in the game, sending cells say this years ago. It's never blitzes at will without fear of get- one thing. It's always a bunch of ting beat through the air. things." "He's not really a threat," Robinson typically bears the Nebraska safety P.J. Smith said bulk of the rushing responsibil- after the game on Saturday. "We were able to not be so (worried) about the quarterback." To a lesser extent, that's how defenses have attacked Robin- son. Yet he has generated plenty of yards on the ground. Hoke has pointed out that defenses can attack the tailbacks without being able to eliminate a mobile quar- terback. But no one has explained why defenses would be more worried about Toussaint over the explosive Robinson. Borges said again on Tuesday that he doesn't care who rushes the ball, as long as someone rush- es effectively. The offense only has problems, he said, when no one rushes the ball. He had problems on Satur- day. Hoke, too, said he was disap- pointed with the ground game, but he absolved Toussaint on any blame, saying that he "was happy with how he played." Instead, Hoke blamed the line, unlike Borges, who blamed every- thing. "There's times it's the line, and there's times it's the back," Borges said. "There's times it's the quar- terback, and there's times it's the wide receiver ... and I'm part of that, now." For the Wolverines, that leaves a lot of question marks. And they're running out of answers. By STEPHEN J. NESBITT Daily SportsEditor The Michigan football team boasts the best- passing defense in college football, but the players don't even care. Fifth-year senior safety Jor- dan Kovacs and sophomore cor- nerback Raymon Taylor, two integral members of the second- ary, both shook their heads when they heard the ranking on Tues- day. They hadn't heard about it. "It doesn't matter at all,"' Kovacs said. The numbers mightnot matter to 'Team 133,' but they're impres- sive nonetheless. The Wolverines have allowed a nation-leading 145.3 passing yards per game, and they have more interceptions (7) than passing touchdowns allowed (5). For comparison's sake, Michi- gan allowed 190.5 passing yards per game last season, and over 220 passing yards per game for each of the three previous sea- sons under former, coach Rich Rodriguez. "We take pride in (our pass defense)," Taylor said. "That's a big thing. That's good to be num- ber one in any thing, so we take pride in it and appreciate it." As Michigan coach Brady Hoke was quick to point out dur- ing a weekly teleconference on Tuesday, the secondary's statis- tics could be improperly skewed byseveral factors.' Alabama threw just 21 times in the season opener - "They didn't have to," Kovacs said. Air Force and its triple-option attack ran roughshod over Michigan's front seven, but the Falcons passed just 19 times. So while Michigan is No. 1in passing yards allowed through eight weeks, it has also faced the sixth-fewest number of pass attempts (198). Kovacs cautioned that it might be too soon to label the secondary as elite. In the Wolverines' 23-9 loss to Nebraska in Lincoln last Saturday,. Cornhusker quarter- back Taylor Martinez passed for just 166 yards, a touchdown and an interception, but Kovacs said there were open receivers that, much to the secondary's delight, Martinez simply didn't see. "You can't let that happen," Kovacs said. While the Michigan offense stuttered and stalled in Lincoln, the defense held relatively fast. But Martinez engineered a drive. early in the second quarter that gashed the secondary for five consecutive completions and ended in a 32-yard touchdown pass to receiver Kenny Bell. When the defense took to the film room on Sunday, the players remembered exactly how that drive felt and, more importantly, what went wrong. Nebraska's hurry-up offense had caught them by surprise - Taylor said they hadn't been preparing for that tempo - and Martinez picked them apart with ease. The calls, selected by defen- sive coordinator Greg Mattison and then signaled onto the-field, never made it across the field to all 11 defensive players. "Basically we were out there lost for a couple plays," Taylor said. The defense's biggest goal isn't a surprising one: communication. "If you don't communicate, you're not lined up and you're not ready to play," Kovacs said. "There's guys on the other side of the field that don't see the signal. "It's our responsibility as cor- ners or safeties, whoever's closest to the sideline, to relay that mes- sage and keep relaying it until everybody knows the play." The crowd noise from the Sea of Red in Lincoln certainly played a significant factor, but considering that three of the four members of the secondary are upperclassmen, Kovacs called the communication breakdowns "very disappointing." Still, the Wolverines held Mar- tinez and the upstart Nebraska offense to its lowest passing yards, rushing yards and point total ofthe season. To remedy the communication errors for this weekend's tilt against Minne- sota at TCF Bank Stadium - not quite the ferocious atmosphere that Nebraska has at Memorial Stadium - Kovacs emphasized that there's no such thing as over- communication. "Keep echoing the call," Kovacs said. "Coach Mattison emphasized that today: you've got to echo the call and you've got to make sure you take care of your buddies." WOMEN'S GOLF MEichigan finishes fourth in S. Carolina By LEV FACHER my putting," Grogan said. "I had For theDaily two bad holes (Monday) that kind of put me in a bad spot. For Not even the threat of a hur- the team overall though I think ricane could stop the Michigan it was a very good ending to the women's golf team from setting fall season." a season-best combined stroke The Wolverines were forced total at the Edwin Watts/Pal- to overcome adverse weather metto Intercollegiate on Kiawah conditions throughout the tour- Island, S.C. nament. The Wolverines combined for "The wind was howling, a score of 894 over the weekend, probably at 25 miles per hour," which earned them fourth place said Michigan coach Cheryl in the tournament, held at the Stacy. Oak Point Golf Club. "The course played even Michigan topped its previous tougher (Monday) than it did tournament low of 930, which (Sunday). These were probably was recorded in late September the highest winds we've played in Ann Arbor at the Wolverine in this season." Invitational. Grogan agreed, talking about Michigan's total of 296 in the the concern felt throughout first round set a season best, but the weekend about the poten- the Wolverines broke their own tial effects of Hurricane Sandy, record in the next round with a which despite early worries 295-stroke performance, mark- didn't cause substantial dam- ing the team's first two rounds age in South Carolina or disrupt of the season with total scores Michigan's travel plans. under 300. The tournament "This tournament was pretty marked the end of Michigan's tough from a weather stand- fall campaign - the Wolverines point," Grogan said. "Everyone don't compete again until Feb- was concerned about the poten- ruary. tial hurricane around the coast. Sophomore Linda Luo led "A couple days ago going into Michigan by tying for 15th place it we knew the weather could be overall with a total score of 222, pretty dicey, there wasn't neces- shooting a 71 in Sunday's early sarily so much rain but the wind round, 75 later in the day and 76 made it pretty cold. (Monday) on Monday. turned out to be very nice. It was Sophomore Lauren Grogan just windy overall. also finished in the top-25, tying "We've played in wind before, a career-best with a one-under- but it's just a matter of us being par score of 71 over the first 18 smart. You need to adjust holes on Sunday. accordingly." Grogan added a 74 in later "Our team scores were a lot play on Sunday and finished at better at this (tournament) than 79 on Monday. they have been for the year," "One of the biggest things Stacy said. "There's good chem- I've been trying to work on is istry." Faceoffs troubling Wolverines By LIZ VUKELICH DailySports Writer Go to any Michigan hockey game and you'll see the Children of Yost getcrestless for the faceoff. "Drop the puckt" they scream at the referee, who dangles it in front of the centers for what feels like eternity to fans who just want the game to resume play. For most fans, the faceoff is a blip in the game that doesn't last more than a couple of seconds. They're not too interested in it. There are more exciting things to focus on, like who scores or who slams who into the boards. For most hockey players, it's just a routine part of the game. They win some, they lose some, but it shouldn't be anything to lose sleep over. But for eighth-ranked Wol- verines, faceoffs are becoming a troubling issue, and they're get- ting more anxious for them than they should be. Michigan (1-1 CCHA, 3-2 overall) has been plagued with a slew of bad faceoffs lately, the most recent of which resulted a crucial third-period goal for Miami (Ohio) in the Wolverines' 4-3 loss on Saturday night. "I can't tell you (faceoffs) are (always) a concern as they've jumped up and bitten us already," said Michigan coach Red Berenson. "We give up ... a handful of goals (that) have been on faceoffs. That shouldn't be." In Saturday's miscue, Curtis McKenzie scored Miami's game- winninggoal just moments after a quick breakaway from the circle in Michigan's zone. With the whole play happening in just seconds, the Wolverine defense barely had time to react to losing the draw before their goaltender had been beat. PATRICK BARRON/Daily Sophomore forward Travis Lynch is one of the Michigan hockey team's primary faceoff-takers. "I think (the goal) was just a communication error," said sophomore forward Travis Lynch. "I know the defensemen didn't talk to the forwards on that one, so that's why there's some confusion on that. It cost us for sure." That goal reflected the worst of the faceoffs in the Miami series, in which Michigan won less than half of the draws. But it's still a major concern, espe- cially when the Wolverines con- sider that they're losing most of the draws in the most dangerous part of the rink: their own defen- sive zone. On Friday, for example, Mich- igan went 1-for-12 in faceoffs in its own zone. As Berenson points out, he can't expect the players to win draws in their opponents' end if they can't even win enough to protect their own goal. Senior forward A.J Treais is arguably the Wolverines' stron- gest center, and Berenson usu- ally trusts the captain enough to pit him against the opponent's best center on the draws. But against the RedHawks, Treais' position at the point on the power play meant that faceoff responsibilities fell to someone else. It shouldn't have been a problem - according to Lynch, the team prides itself on the draws - but something about the system got lost in translation last weekend. "(We) have to take each draw, make it more important and really focus on winning those," Lynch said. "If we lose a draw, then we have to get in shooting lahes (and) make sure no one gets outof place and is notopen." Berenson didn't even try to hide his frustration about the faceoffs after the series. Though he plans to put more emphasis on draws in practice this week, there's still no guarantee of any improvement during games. "Part of it is mental and the other part of it is actually tech- nique and working on it," Beren- son said. "We will definitely be working on faceoffs. And we have been (working at it) enough to be better at it than we are."