The Michigan Daily michigandaily.com I April 15,2013 SPRING GAME 2013 Behind Gardner, a cast of unknowns Both Cleary and Swieca see playing time By EVERETT COOK Daily SportsEditor On the first play of the Michi- gan football team's Spring Game on Saturday, redshirt junior quarterback Devin Gardner let one fly toward the rightsidelines, showing off the arm strength that wowed scouts before his arrival in Ann Arbor three years ago. Freshman wide receiver Amara Darboh made the over- the-shoulder catch for a gain of 29 yards. After the scrimmage, Gardner brought up the play and smiled, saying that he liked to throw the ball deep. One play, insignificant in the context of the season, but in April, a big indicator of how this team and this offense is going to run. Last year, Gardner's role on this team was a little more mud- dled. He played in the Spring Game as a quarterback but switched to wide receiver in the summer, only to be thrust into the starting quarterback role after then-senior Denard Robin- son suffered an elbow injury on Oct. 27. He did well, but it wasn't his team. Robinson, the star quarter- back and the face of the program, was still in the picture even with the injury. Now, there's no more Robin- son, and nobody else above Gard- ner on the depth chart - it's his squad, his offense and his posi- tion. Stats aren't kept for the spring game, but unofficially, Gardner finished 11fori16 for 145 years and one touchdown. "It's his throne now," said fifth-year senior safety Thomas Gordon. "That will definitely make him feel better back there. I could see it in his play in the spring, he's a lot more comfort- able back there and has taken control of the offense. It's really exciting." Behind him isa cast of relative unknowns. The presumed back- up, redshirt sophomore Russell Bellomy, tore his anterior cru- ciate ligament last month, and highly touted incoming fresh- man Shane Morris hasn't arrived in Ann Arbor yet. So at the SpringGame, thatleft redshirt freshman Brian Cleary and redshirt junior Alex Swieca as the two Wolverines behind Gardner. Both have never seen a minute of game action, and See QUARTERBACKS, Page 3B One freak and one sprite Michigan's pass hreom wn w nhomlkr rush improves Il .' ~ 1.l1 , 1.. , . 5 /v v If 5- 1..J 5-111.Lt4.x 1 %./ 1E~ Clark on defense and Gallon on offense By ZACH HELFAND Daily Sports Editor One is a freak, the other a runt. Junior Frank Clark is a 274-pound behemoth at defen- sive end. Fifth-year senior Jeremy Gallon is a 5-foot-8 speedster at receiver. In stature, the two are opposites. But with the loss of Michigan's two playmakers from 2012 - Denard Robin- son to graduation and redshirt junior linebacker Jake Ryan to injury - each has become the most exciting player on the field. And in Saturday's Spring Game, each was the player to watch on his side of the ball. Redshirt junior quarterback Devin Gardner took Gallon to his church a few weeks ago. A young fan approached Gallon. "A little kid walked up and was like, 'Hey you play high school. I'm going to high school too!' " Gardner recalled, laughing. "I was like, 'Ooh. Gonna have to get a little bigger, a little taller or lift or something, you know?"' Then Gardner introduced Gallon to the pastor. The pas- tor didn't recognize Gallon. He pegged the receiver at 6-foot-3. "That just speaks a lot for the way he plays and how tough he is and how big he actually plays." Gallon is so short that diminutive senior receiver Drew Dileo likes to remind the press that at 5-foot-I0, Dileo is actually two inches taller than his teammate. "Don't let him tell you differently," Dileo says. But when Robinson went out with an injury last year, Gallon filled the big-play void. In Michigan's last five games, with Gardner as quarterback, Gallon caught 31 passes for 511 yards and three touchdowns. In the Outback Bowl against South Carolina, Gallon hauled in nine passes for 145 yards and three touchdowns. Again on Saturday, Gallon was Gardner's favorite target. See PLAYMAKERS, Page 2B its physicality Orange jerseys ignored, at least on Saturday By LIZ VUKELICH Daily Sports Editor The orange was supposed to have said it all. After backup quarterback Rus- sell Bellomy, a redshirt sophomore, tore his anterior cruciate ligament in practice on March 29, the Mich- igan coaching staff wasn't going to risk any more injuries before the 2013 season actually started. Protection, then, became the top priority. At practices and at Saturday's Spring Game, all the quarterbacks, from the starter (redshirt junior Devin Gardner) to the third stringer (redshirt sopho- more Alex Swieca), wore orange jerseys in hopes that the team could stay healthy. See RUSH, Page 3B MEN'S BASKETBALL Even after two years, Burke leaves eternal legacy the eve of last week's basket- they just smacked us. They just came just before, instead of The futures of each teams' to a better team and that was national title game, ball. We took it up to another level. They after, halftime, the similarities brightest star was a near cer- hard to swallow, but I felt like ESPNU aired its net- stayed in played like champions play." between the games run paral- tainty following the losses. And we're goingto get a couple more work's 30 for 30 documentary, the game, It was an eerie foreshadow of lel. Louisville, like Duke, was here the storylines, the parallels, cracks at it," Rose said. "Every- "Fab Five." we were what was to come 24 hours later, the tournament favorite with its ultimately go astray. body says that, but I really Shortly after 10:00 p.m., near executing, at 10:18 p.m., when, after trail- roster full of veterans and Final Headlined by Chris Webber, believed it." the midway point of the film, the playing ing for 19 of the game's initial 20 Four experience, coached by one the stars of the former team But since he decided last April storyline reaches the first of the hard," said minutes, top-seeded Louisville of the game's best. all returned, making a run to to return for his sophomore sea- team's two championship-game Jalen Rose DANIEL entered the locker room with The Wolverines, in each case, the ensuing title game in a year son, Trey Burke's fate following losses, a blown first-half lead to in the film. only a one-point deficit and all of were the young, inexperienced where a championship wasn't a the conclusion of Michigan's top-seeded Duke. "In the sec- WASSERMAN the momentum. team who shocked the world goal, but the expectation. next season - whenever it came "First half, we played good and half, While the Cardinals' run with championship runs. "I felt like we at least did lose See BURKE, Page 3B The third annual Schefters honor top ' Softball has won 17 in a row, including a athletes and teams. See what award weekend sweep of Michigan State. Michi- Denard Robinson took home. gan took the first game by 19 runs. ,g 4