The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com November 26, 2012 - 3B MICHIGAN ATHLETICS SCOREBOARD L A S T W E E K MONDAY (NOV. 19) Women's basketball: Michigan 72, Seton Hall 29 WEDNESDAY(NOV. 21) Women'svolleyball:Michigan3, Michigan Ice Hockey: Michigan 3, Bowling Green 1 Men's basketball:Michigan67, Pittsburgh 62 FRIDAY (NOV. 23) Women's basketball: Michigan 72, Harvard 61 Voleyball:Michgan 3, Ohio Stte Mens bsk6tball: Michiga 71, ansas State 57 SATURDAY (NOV. 24) Football: Ohio State 26, Michigan 21 Women's basketball: Michigan 67, Boston 58 Ice Hockey: Cornell 5, Michigan 1 NEXT WEEK TUESDAY (NOV. 27) Men's basketball: Michigan vs. North Carolina State, 7:30 p.m. (*) WEDNESDAY (NOV. 28) Women's basketball: Michigan vs. Duke, 7 p.m. THURSDAY (NOV. 29) Volleyball: First Round, NCAA Tournament: Michi- gan vs. Tennessee (Louisvile) FRIDAY (NOV. 30) Wrestling: Cliff Keen Las Vegas Invitational, 9 a.m. (Las Vegas) Men's swimming: Hawkeye Invitational,10 a.r. (Iowa City) Women's swimrming: Hawkeye Invitational,10 a.(Iowa Cty Ice Hockey: Michigan at Ferris State, 7:05 pm.. (Big Rapids) SATURDAY (DEC. 1) Westing liff Keen Las Vegas Invitational, 9 a.m. (Las, Vgas) Men's swimming: Hawkeye Invitational,10 a.m. (Iowa City) Women's swimming: Hawkeye Invitational,10 a.m. Cowa City) Women's basketball: Michigan vs. Florida, 2 p.m. Men' basektball: Michigan at Bradley, 3 p.m. (Pera), Ice Hockey: Michigan at Ferris State, 7:05 p.m. (Big Rapids) SUNDAY (DEC. 2) Men's swimming: Hawkeye Invitational, 10 a.m. (Iowa City) Women swimming: Hawkeye Invitational,,10 a.m.cowa City) - ()Allhomeeventsareeligibletoearnpoints for theAthleticDeportment'sHA.I.L program. O H IO S TA TE 2 6 M IC H I G A N 2 1 Pa nsSlats MICH OSU Pont 21 26 First Downs 13 22 Rush/Yds 27/108 52/207 Passin Yards 171 189 OffensvePlays 47 72 Total Offense 279 396. Kick returns/Yds 3/62 2/47 PuntIreturns/Yds 1/-) /3D Comp/Att/Int 11/20/1 14/19/U Punts/Avg 4/478 3/44.3 Fumbles/Lost 3/3 3/2 Penalties/Yards 5/54 9/74 Tme Po ds 23:0 3650 Payer C-A Yds TD ' Int BUCKEYES From Page lB and fourth quarter, respectively. (Gardner also lost a fumble in the first half.) But the real back-breaker was Gardner's interception on what turned out to be the team's final drive of the game. The junior often found receivers for long completions down the field on Saturday, but this was also Gardner's most mistake-ridden game when it came to taking sacks and missing receivers. The Wolverines' defense was solid for most of the afternoon, often put in tough spots in the second half because of the offense's sud- den ineptitude. Dynamic Buck- eye quarterback Braxton Miller found success through the air but was contained on the ground. Hyde, though, wasn't con- tained. The running back torched Michigan's defense for 146 yards and a touchdown on 26. carries, constantly cutting through the middle of the front seven. It was Hyde who clinched the game for Ohio State, burst- ing forward for a gain of 13 yards on third-and-7 with just several minutes remaining on the drive after Gardner's interception. "(Hyde) out-leveraged us a couple times in there because of what we wanted to do, which was a little different," said Michigan coach Brady Hoke. "It worked in the first half pretty well. Didn't tackle very well, I didn't think, from that standpoint. He's a big back, and I didn't think we wrapped him up on the first hit a couple times like we needed to." "He ran the ball hard," added fifth-year senior safety Jordan Kovacs. "We didn't get enough hats to the ball." The offense's woeful second half could be blamed partially on play calling. On the Wolverines' first drive after halftime, Hoke elected to go for it on fourth-and- two from Michigan's 48-yard line. The Wolverines then faced third-and-short on each of their next three drives. Offensive coordinator Al Borges called a running play each time, and each time, Michigan failed to convert. "You gotta look at where you're at and what you feel you may have an opportunity," Hoke said of the three calls. "Upstairs you see a lot of different things." The Wolverines were in no mood to second-guess or dwell onmissedopportunities afterthe game. Their faces were somber, and they spoke with the low voic- es one would expect after they let a rival beat them and complete an undefeated season in doing so. Hoke talked briefly of the future, of the freshmen and other underclassmen that "will remember" this loss and use it as motivation. But nothing could ease the pain of Saturday. "You don't want to come down here and lose," a weary Kovacs said. "That's about all I can say about it." TIP-OFF From Page 1B game against Pitt and a hard- fought game today." The game was broken wide open after Michigan's six- minute run in the first half, and it was evident by the way the Wolverines played. Michi- gan cut down on its transition game and started shooting more outside shots, and fresh- man forward Glenn Robin- son III and Hardaway even attempted dunks - something that's only been done late in Michigan's previous blowout wins. Hardaway, the tourna- ment's Most Outstanding Player, left the game early on precautions for a concussion, but was flanked by perfor- mances from Robinson and Burke. The Columbus, Ohio native was silent for the first half - he didn't attempt a shot and had two turnovers - but found the open lane and his groove in the second half, put- ting up 10 points, six rebounds and four assists. Robinson was close to his first career double- double, as he contributed nine points and 12 rebounds. Freshmen Nik Stauskas and Mitch McGary contributed nicely off the bench with 10 and six points, respectively, and with his career-high 12 boards, Robinson paced the Wolverines to a 42-30 mar- gin in rebounding. Michigan coach John Beilein was pleased with his team's rebounding performance in the semifi- nals against Pittsburgh and was similarly happy with the rebounding . efforts against Kansas State. "We haven't been able to (rebound) in the past," Beilein said. "We're doing it well now. of blocking out and getting our own offensive rebounds like you saw today." The first half wasn't so easy for Michigan, though, as the Wildcats were a force in the paint. Despite shooting 29 percent, Kansas State kept it close with 12 points on eight offensive rebounds in the first stanza. The Wildcats finished with 12 offensive boards and 18 second-chance points, sig- nificantly less than their 25 offensive rebounds per game average. "I thought rebounding was the big difference in the first half," Weber said. "Going into the four-minute mark, they got three or four of them down the stretch and they kept the lead. ... Rebounding has been our strength, and they end up pun- king us on the boards. That's supposed to be our strength, and they made it their strength this game." The Wolverines also got into foul trouble in the first half, which forced Michigan coach John Beilein to look to his bench. - Redshirt junior forward Jordan Morgan and Burke sat out 10 and six minutes of the first half, respectively, when each picked up his second per- sonal foul. McGary and freshman guard Spike Albrecht filled in nicely for the veterans, but Michigan struggled offen- sively without Burke. In the final six minutes, the Wolver- ines went 2-for-7 from the field while Kansas State cut Michi- gan's lead by seven, putting the Wolverines up by five at the end of the first half. "(Foul trouble was) not con- cerning at all," Beilein said. "Burke had two fouls and we have a lot of confidence in Spike. Then we have that third big guy if we needed him ... and thank God (redshirt sophomore forward) Jon (Hor- ford) was there to help us. We haven't always had this luxury of having that extra big guy to help us or extra point guy. You don't want to see anybody sit- ting on the bench, but we know when we turn to the bench, we have some guys that can get in there." Hardaway and Burke were named to the All-Tournament Team along with Pitt's Talib Zanna, Delaware's Devon Sad- dler and Kansas State's Angel Hernandez. CORNELL From Page 1B for a high stick, negating the rest of the man-advantage. After Ryan left the box, a huge hit to freshman forward Jus- tin Selman in the Cornell zone spurred a rush that ended in a five-hole goal from the left circle through Michigan freshman net- minder Steve Racine. In the wan- ing moments of the period, the Wolverines seemed to generate momentum again, but freshman defenseman Jacob Trouba took a tough boarding penalty when a Big Red skater turned his back to him right as he delivered the hit. Michigan (3-5-1-1 CCHA, 5-7-1 overall) started the second period far crisper than it had looked in the first. But as is so oftenthe case in hockey, it's not which team gets the most opportunities, but who finishes on them. That was ,Cornell (1-3-2 East Coast Athletic Conference, 4-3- 2) once again at the 12:42 mark of the second period, when a pass from behind the net set up Teemu Tiitinen to put the Big Red up 2-0. Three minutes later, Cornell extended its lead to 3-0 when a rebound from a point shot squirt- ed to a crashing Greg Miller who found the back door. Despite out- shooting the Big Red 11-5 in the middle frame, the Wolverines walked back to the lockeroom trailing by three goals. The Big Red put the final nail in the coffin with just over 12 min- utes to play in the game, ensur- ing there would be no late-game drama like last year when the two schools met in Green Bay, Wisc. Eric Axell netted his first goal of the year off a wrister from the slot. The Wolverines did end up on the board two minutes later when junior defenseman Mac Bennett launched a shot from the blue line that finally beat Cornell goalten- der Andy Iles. Berenson described the environment at Madison Square Garden as having an NHL- like feel after the game, but Sat- urday his team didn't have the enthusiasm to mirror the crowd. "I'm just sorry we didn't repre- sent Michigan better," Berenson said. Gardner 11-20 1 Totals 1120 1 RUSHING Player Att Yds Robinson, D. 10 . 122 Gardner 7 -28 Totals 27 108 RECEIVING Player No. Yds Gallon 6 67 Roundtre 3 92, Katkowski 1 92 Dileo 1 6 Totals 11 171 PUNTING Player No. Hagerup 4 Totals .4 KICKOFF RETURNS Player No. Yds Dileo 2 35 Norfleet 1 27 Totals 2 62 1 t 1 7 Avg 12.2 -4.0 4.0 Avg 11.2 307 6.0 15.5 L9 67 6 67 Lg 30 75 5 75 TD 1 0 0 1 2 TD 0 1 0 0 75 FAILURE From Page 1B Michigan's failure to adjust doomed the Wolverines on third down. There were fumbles and inter- ceptions, questionable calls and misreads. Michigan managed just 21 plays and a meager 60 yards and zero points in the sec- ond half, as the offense - electric in the first half - went out with a whimper. Michigan faced three third downs in the final 30 minutes. They ran with sophomore run- ning back Thomas Rawls for no gain, then again with senior Vincent Smith for no gain and with Smith once more for a loss of two yards. On Michigan's final drive, junior quarterback Devin Gardner finally threw on a third down, and the Wolverines finally converted. Michigan led, 21-20, by the time it faced its first third down of the second half. At that moment, Michigan running backs had rushed just three times for a col- lective eight yards. Robinson, meanwhile, ignited the offense with six rushes for 124 yards and a touchdown in the first half, while Gardner threw for 107 yards and a score and rushed for another touchdown. It was third down and three from Michigan's 48-yard line. Gardner, at quarterback, handed off to sophomore running back Thomas Rawls over the right guard. He didn't gain a yard. Fourth down. After a time out, Michigan coach Brady Hoke elected to go for it. Rob- inson, lined up in the shotgun. Ohio State's defenders had been coached to focus on Robinson, shut off the edge when he lined up in what they viewed as a Wild- cat formation. . Robinson rushed over the left guard. He lost two yards - a turnover on downs. The Wolver- ines wouldn't get as far as their own 48-yard line for the rest of the game. "They were a little bit predict- able in the first half," said Ohio State co-defensive coordinator EverettWithers. "Youknow,they put 16 (Robinson) back there, he was gonna run it. And they put 12 (Gardner) back there, they were gonna throw it. And after a while that became something that we keyed on." Michigan had run the same play it ran on fourth down three times in the first half, all for gains. Robinson, though, chose the wrong gap, according to Hoke. The play still would have picked up the first down, but red- shirt junior Taylor Lewan missed a block on linebacker Ryan Shazi- er. It was Shazier who made the stop. Next possession, the Wolver- ines trailed 23-21 and had a first down on their 44-yard line after a 30-yard completion. Robinson again set up in the shotgun, and the safeties started creeping in. "The defensive coaches told us that we needed to stop No. 16 because we knew he wasn't going to throw the ball because of his wrist," said safety Christian Bry- ant. So with Robinson in the game without Gardner, they crept up. If they were lined up on the slot receiver, they changed their leverage and pinched into the box. Robinson took the snap and ran up the middle. Bryant, play- ing near the box, met him there and put his helmet on the ball, which Robinson held in his left arm. Earlier in the week, Michi- gan offensive coordinator said he was not concerned that Robin- son's injury forced him to carry the ballin his non-dominant arm. The hit jarred the ball loose, and Ohio State's Nathan Williams fell on it. Two possessions for Michi- gan in the half. Two turnovers. "Too many turnovers," Robin- son said. "We had big turnovers in the second half, and in order for you to win this game, you gotta control the ball." After Michigan got the ball back, the Wolverines faced third down again, this time third-and- two from their own 30-yard line. Robinson was in at quarterback again, and he handed to senior running back Vincent Smith. Smith didn't gain asyard. Before the run, Michigan running backs had rushed for 11 yards on six carries. "You kinda look at where you're at and what you feel you may have an opportunity," Hoke said of the third-down calls. "You know, upstairs, you see a lot of different things." Michigan was again forced to punt. Through three posses- sions in the second half, the Wol- verines rushed eight times for six yards. Gardner passed three times, all complete, for 46 yards. The Wolverines faced a third, third down in the fourth quar- ter. This time, Gardner was in at quarterback, needing one yard. He handed off to Smith. Smith lost two yards. Hoke said Gardner didn't pass more, because "they just weren't called." Gardner fumbled on his next possession, and by then, Michi- gan had lost its offensive rhythm after three second-half turn- overs. "When we gave the ball back as many times as we did in the second half, your rhythm kinda fades away a little bit," Hoke said. "And thenthe clock's against you a little bit." By Michigan's final drive, Meyer and the Buckeyes didn't have to worry about Robinson. He was out of the game, as Mich- igan needed to pass more, Hoke said - though Hoke also said Robinson could have thrown on Saturday. Ohio State had done its job. Robinson actually lost two yards in the second half. Michgian, its star neutralized, found no other answers. Yds Avg Lg 191 47.8 56 191 47.8 56 I Avg 7 27.0 2 20.7 Lg TD 20 0 27 0 27 0 PUNT RETURNS Player No. Yds Avg Lg TD Galon 1 1 -1.0 -1 0 Totals 1 - -10 -1 0 BIG TEN STANDINGS Legends Division Big Ten Overall Nebraska 7 1 10 2 Michigan 6 2 8 4 Northwestern 5 3 9 3 Michitan State 3 9 6 6 Minnesota 2 6 6 6 Iowa 2 6 4 8 Leaders Division Big Ten Overall Ohio State' 8 0 12 0 Penn State' Wisconsin Purdue Indiana Illinois 6 4 3 2 0 2 4 5 6 8 8 4 7 5 6 6 4 8 2 10 THIS WEEKEND'S RESULTS NEBRASKA 13, Iowa 17 NORTHWESTERN 50, Ilinois14 OHIO STATE 26, Michigan 21 PURDUE 56, Indiana 35 MICHIGAN STATE 26, Minnesota10 PENN STATE 24, Wisconsin 21(OT)