10A - Wednesday, September 5, 2012 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Remorseful Toussaint ready to fight for starting RB spot Borges not planning to adjust game plan By ZACH HELFAND Daily Sports Editor The Michigan football team was beaten and broken Saturday, and 1,000 miles away, Fitzgerald Toussaint was a spectator. From the house of assistant basketball coach Bacari Alexan- der, Toussaint watched as sopho- more cornerback Blake Countess hopped off on crutches after the game. He watched redshirt junior tackle Taylor Lewan hobble away on one good leg, and he watched Michigan coach Brady Hoke address the media, his voice tired and hoarse. In -his mind, Toussaint was imagining what he could have done, what would have gone dif- ferently had he been on the field with the men he calls his broth- ers, he said Tuesday. Toussaint said that Alexander had extended an invitation to Toussaint on behalf of the team, because "they wanted me to feel wanted." Toussaint had not been wanted in Texas, and it was no one's fault but his. Hoke suspended the red- shirt junior running back along with sophomore defensive end Frank Clark for the opener after separate legal issues. No, Toussaint had not been wanted. But he was needed. Without the former 1,000-yard rusher, Michigan's ground game was suffocated by the Crimson Tide. His replacements, senior Vincent Smith and sophomore Thomas Rawls, combined for just 42 yards on 19 carries. As senior quarterback Denard Robinson struggled to find consistency through the air, Alabama crowd- ed the box, and Michigan had no answer in the backfield, not with- out Toussaint. Toussaint spoke with the media on Tuesday for the first time since his arrest. Redshirt junior running back Fitzgerald Toussaint has been reinstated following a one-game suspension. For a few seconds after he strode into Schembechler Hall, finally free from the weight of the suspension and Hoke's own rebuke - which both declined to discuss - a smile stretched across Toussaint's face. When he approached reporters, the grin disappeared, and for four minutes, he earnestly answered questions about his own personal failings. Had he learned? "Guys my age, they feel they know everything up until they get in trouble," Toussaint said. "That day really brought a lot of things to me and showed me about my character." Was he angered by the suspen- sion? "I kind of knew I messed up," Toussaint said, "and I was ready to face any consequences." In jail that July night after he was arrested for driving a vehicle while intoxicated, Toussaint said the worst part was the feeling that he had let down his team. In the span of four minutes on Tues- day, Toussaint mentioned letting down his teammates a total of seven times. Now that he's back, the job remains up for grabs. "We're not going to want to put him in and say he's the starter," said offensive coordinator Al Borges. "I don't think that's fair to the other guys. So we'll go this week and see how everything works out and make a decision." Toussaint, though, remains the No. 1 running back on the depth chart and is the likely leader to start. Though the Alabama defen- sive frontblanketed the Michigan backfield on Saturday, Smith and Rawls didn't create any seams for themselves in Toussaint's absence. Rawls, heralded since spring as a bulldozer, was bull- dozed. Smith was never supposed to be a feature back, and aside from one 22-yard scamper on a burst of speed to the outside near the end of the third quarter, he gained just 11 yards on 12 other carries. Still, with just 33 yards, Smith led Michigan in rushing. On Saturday, back in Alexan- der's house, Toussaint said he analyzed the game. No one knows how Toussaint would have fared, but, of course, he wondered any- way. Before the team left for Texas, Toussaint said his team- mates visited or spoke with him individually to show him their support. He said Robinson had the biggest impact, and one day, Robinson showed up at Tous- saint's house with fellow captain Jordan Kovacs, the fifth-year senior. The visit, and Robinson's phone calls, showed Toussaint the team still had his back. Senior receiver Roy Roundtree said he didn't speak with Tous- saint individually, but he said he never lost faith in him. He sup- ported him from the beginning. "The whole team did," Roundtree said. "That's our brother. He just made a mistake, and you learn from it, watching us Saturday wishing he could be out there." ByZACH HELFAND Daily Sports Editor After an ineffective offensive performance and a lopsided loss against, Alabama on Saturday, Michigan offensive coordinator Al Borges said he was ready to rip up the playbook, run more and pass less. Right? Well, Borges has eight words for you. "No. No. Nope. No. Not at all. No." The plan will remain the same, Borges said on Tuesday, despite criticism that he didn't properly utilize senior quarterback Denard Robinson's ability to run. He said that he wouldn't change his plan even if he were playing Alabama again. When the defense stacks the box to try to stop Robinson, Borg- es will favor pass. With fewer men in the box, Borges will favor run. Borges' philosophy isn't particu- larly new or radical, but perhaps more than ever, Robinson must pass efficiently for the offense to succeed. Under former coach Rich Rodriguez, Robinson was asked to run first, and, well, run second. To shake things up, Robinson could fake the read option and look for a receiver over the sleeping second- ary, though if things broke down he could always - you guessed it - run. Last year, Borges adjusted, though Robinson still ran the ball 17 times per game. Good defenses, like Michigan State's, shut down the Michigan offense by crowding the line of scrimmage and daring Robinson to throw. The opener and remarks from Borges indicate Michigan will try to exploit that defensive philoso- phy this season. Robinson ran just 10 times against Alabama, and his first designed run came with just 30 seconds left in the first quarter. "I would not have run Denard Robinson any more than we ran him Saturday," Borges said. "Absolutely not. No.I know alot of people think that, but no way. That wasn't going to happen." Borges is betting that Robinson has improved his decision-making and mechanics enough to catch defenses creeping in. Against Ala- bama, Robinson limited the num- ber of throws off of his back foot, but still appeared flat-footed at times. He made one catastrophic decision - a second-quarter inter- ception returned for a touchdown - but also connected on a beau- tiful deep ball to redshirt junior Jeremy Gallon and found junior Devin Gardner for a long touch- down. "The game plan, obviously we know they were going to try to stop me from running, so we went in with a different mindset, and we took what they gave us." Rob- inson said "The play-calling was great.... We've just got to execute." Against a lesser defense, Rob- inson will have bigger passing lanes. The backs will take some of the pressure off. Alabama simply made plays that other defenses do not. "Never in my life have I seen a corner knock a guy out of bounds, run back and intercept. a fade," Borges said. "In 37 years of coach- ing, I've never seen that happen." Though Borges said he will limit Robinson's touches to keep him healthy, Michigan will likely run him more against the remain- der of the schedule than against Alabama. Borges said he takes a game-by-game approach in decid- ing how much to utilize his quar- terback's legs, and the Crimson Tide's past success against mobile quarterbacks spelled doom. Yet the blueprint is out there. The defenses that turned Robin- son into a one-dimensional player have shut Michigan down. It's up to Robinson to prove he can beat them with his arm. "Whatever coach calls,"he said, "I'm with him 100 percent.", 0 Dantonio criticizes Spartans for 'disrespectful' tweets Michigan State players bash Denard Robinson for play against Alabama By STEPHEN J. NESBITT Daily Sports Editor While the Michigan football team was getting manhandled by No. 2 Alabama in the Cowboys Classic on Saturday night, Mich- igan State players were sitting at home watching. But a handful of them decided it would be smart to get on Twit- ter and critique Michigan senior quarterback Denard Robinson on his performance, setting off a firestorm of criticism. The tweets were deleted, but not before being captured by MLive.com. Some of them included:, " "DENARD IS SOOOOO BAD!" wrote safety Kyle Artin- ian. "And it makes me feel so good." . "I can play quarterback for the school in blue," added line- backer Jamal Lyles. "(Spartan tailback Le'Veon Bell) for Heis- man > the other guy in the great state of michigan." . "Is this guy really a QB I'll say my mans (walk-on quarter- running back Nick Hill. back Tommy Vento) is a bet- "Even a blind squirrel can get ter QB lol," linebacker Denicos a nut ever once in a while ..." Hill Allen tweeted. tweeted. "S/O to my boy Allen, real- vento by the izing the fire- way." "Our guys storm he'd set Robinson off, put in the passed for 200 need to keep final word on yards on r-of- Sunday after- 26 passing, their mouths noon. but threw two "Lol well interceptionsshut." apparently I He complet- hurt a lot of ed a 71-yard feelings sorry pass to red- guys lolI guess shirt junior wide receiver Jere- we have 'to wait till October my Gallon in the second quarter, 20th to play some real football but that didn't impress Spartan #GoGreen," he wrote. "I heard about it," Robinson said on Tuesday. "But I'm think- ing about Air Force, I'm not even worrying about it now." But did it bother him? "No," he said. "It doesn't both- er me at all." Michigan State coach Mark Dantonio was prepared for the question during his Tuesday press conference and roundly rebuked his players. "Our guys need to keep their mouths shut," Dantonio said, adding that the tweets were "dis- respectful." "You need to approach this game with humility," he said. "When this becomes personal, that's when it crosses the line." In his two career games against Michigan State, Robin- son hasn't seen much success. In Michigan's 34-17 loss in 2010, he threw three interceptions. In a 28-14 defeat last season, Robin- son was just 9-of-24 passing with an interception. But for Dantonio, not only are the personal attacks uncalled for, he also remembers being lambasted by Alabama recently - Michigan State lost the 2011 Capital One Bowl, 49-7, to the Crimson Tide. 0 6 6 Join Come to one of our mass meetings *Sunday, Sept. 9 -Wednesday, Sept.12 -Thursday, Sept.13 -Wednesday, Sept. 19 -Sunday Sept. 23 All meetings at 7:30 p.m. -d 420 Maynard St. @michigandaily | Facebook.com/michigandaily 6 r F' t