4B - September 3, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Scrambling brings crossed fingers By ZACH HELFAND improvises, Gardner says, he Daily Sports Editor i keeps a straight face. His team- mates see that, he said, and Every time Devin Gardner sthey're calm too. improvises, Brady Hoke says, "I'm not really chaotic, my the Michigan coach crosses his J heads not spinning or anything," fingers. On Saturday, Gardner he said. "It's probably refreshing improvised often. for them. And then when they get Of all the attributes possessed open, I get an opportunity to hit by the redshirt junior quarter- them. And if they don't I'll just back - size, speed, arm strength run." -his best might be his creativity. Gardner is so confident that Gardner thrives amid confusion. coaches must remind him that His confidence and athleticism it is okay to throw the ball away. extend plays and converts third Gardner switched fields and pir- and fourth downs. This is a skill ouetted without looking Satur- that infuriates defenses and wins day. That didn't hurt him against games. Think Johnny Manziel's Central Michigan. Against a bet- broken play artistry (or for morea- ter defense, forcing the issue is familiar, more painful examples more dangerous. for Michigan fans, think Vince Gardner's mistakes Saturday Young in the 2005 Rose Bowl or came in the pocket. Both were Troy Smith for three years). balls he shouldn't have forced When left un-spied in Sat- but did. His second pass attempt urday's 59-9 victory, Gardner on Michigan's second offensive gashed Central Michigan with his ' play was an interception deep legs. He rushed seven times for in Michigan's own territory. He 52 yards. Only one was designed. stared down senior receiver Drew Three converted a third or fourth Dileo on an out route. The corner- down. Two scored touchdowns. back read it from the start. But Hoke crosses his fingers "A decent pass," Gardner said, for a reason. "But it was a bad read." "It's a blessing and a curse," He forced the issue againinthe Hoke said. second quarter when both receiv- For Michigan coaches, Gard- ers ran streaks. Both were cov- ner can make any play call look ered. He tried to find fifth-year smart. In coming games, defenses senior Jeremy Gallon anyway. He will use a defender as a spy, or was hit when he threw, and Cen- Gardner will run wild. But the tral Michigan had another easy coaching staff also worries that interception. he'll expose himself to hits or Gardner finished 10-of-15 with force the issue. For players, block- the two interceptions. He scored ing or running routes becomes a touchdown through the air and an adventure. Every time Gard- two on the ground. ner improvises, fifth year senior "He had a good game," Hoke offensive tackle Michael Scho- PAULSHERMAN/Daily said. "I wouldn'tcsayelite orexcel- field says, he doesn't even try to Redshirtjunior quarterback Devin Gardner ran seven times for 52 yards and two touchdowns on Saturday. Only one was a designed running play. lent or anything. But I thought he guess where Gardner's headed. had a good game." First Schofield feels the defender front of your guy as much as you then, finally, tucked and breezed, coordinator Al Borges called a down and beatcdefenses with pure Against Notre Dame and move one direction, so he adjusts. can," Schofield said. with long-legged grace, into the designed quarterback run. Gard- speed. Robinson rarely scrambled beyond, when more than good Then the defender runs the On Michigan's first offensive end zone. In all, he danced in the ner converted easily, directing effectively. Gardner, Schofield is needed, Gardner's balance other direction. Then switches touchdown, Gardner took the pocket for six seconds and cov- his blockers before ducking out said, keeps his headup. Hechang- between creative and conserva- again. Gardner, he said, is "shifty, shotgun snap and waited. He ered the 22 yards to the end zone of bounds past a defender like a es direction often. When Gardner tive will be crucial. Gardner will shifty." waited and pumped. He pumped in another four, matador. runs, his long strides make run- scramble. That will make plays "So you have no really clue and waited. He waited and Later, facing a fourth and one When Denard Robinson ran, ninglook easy, calm. and turnovers. Fingers will be where he is, you just cry to stay in dropped back and stepped up and in the second quarter, offensive Schofield said, he put his head That's by design. When he crossed. General Admission: Take one By AUSTEN HUFFORD Online Editor It started with a trickle. At 7:20 a.m., there were 16. At 9:20 a.m. there were 41. Around 100 by 11 a.m. All standing or sit- ting, talking or napping, play- ing cards or watching ESPN on an 18-foot TV in a line of mostly empty gated spaces. All waiting to enter the Big House and be in the front rows for the Michigan foot- ball season opener against Central Michigan. For the first game of general- admission student tickets in Mich- igan football history, no one knew what to expect. Was it the end of Football Saturday pregames? Would students not buy tickets? Would hundreds camp out over- night like they did when President Barack Obama came to speak? The Athletic Department over- estimated the number of students who would show up very early. The gates were too long, the pri- vate security guards were too many - 20 as of 7 a.m. - and too much free Pizza House pizza was given out to the small group of waiting students. A private security guard said he thought there would be more peo- ple. "It's 10 o'clock, man," he said. "Where is everyone?" Very few students arrived before noon. But soon, they start- ed comingin droves. The four chutes labeled H, O, K and E were opened at 11:45 a.m., and the stadium student gates were opened at 12:35 p.m. Students were given a wristband (complete with a bank advertisement) to be granted access to the first 22 rows. Once those rows were filled, the newly arriving students were given a general-admission ticket. The growing crowd was easy- going and no one seemed drunk - very different than the lower bowl at games in prior years. Radio- friendly songs were played, some students danced on their seats and simple contests were held: a tricycle race across the field, a guess the Michigan legend on the billboard and a field-goal contest for an iPad. Simple things kept the crowd from going crazy during the wait. Army veteran is first student in line By MATT SLOVIN months without football." ManagingEditor Doug dragged them here, out of bed early on a Saturday morn- The first Michigan student ing, when even some of the most arriving to sit in the first row of overzealous pregamers had yet Michigan Stadium on Saturday to stir. He didn't introduce them wasn't a wide-eyed freshman. to football without a little deceit, Nor was it a senior who showed though it wasn't intentional. The up at dawn to ensure a close seat three women had believed the to the opener against Central game would start at 8 a.m. They Michigan despite the switch to had no way ofknowing the mara- general-admission seating. thon day that lay ahead of them, Instead, it was a father. A hus- nor the history they'd soon be band. A 10-year military veteran making as the firstguinea pigs of with tours in Iraq and Afghani- the Athletic Department's new stan. blueprint. Doug Krusell, technically an Lochmann said Saturday that Engineering junior by credit the main intention of the general hours, turned 31 on Sunday and admission policy was to fill the his first football game as a Uni- seats, after plenty of them had versity student was a perfect gift. been left open well after kick- The celebration, about an off in recent seasons. The move 11-hour ordeal altogether, began proved to be a smash hit - barely at 7 a.m. when he became the any room remained by the time first to walk through the roped kickoff rolled around. lines outside the Big House, The shocking turnaround securing his place in the front from years past - a near-full row. His party had a disc jockey student section for a non-mar- (hired by the Athletic Depart- quis opponent - surprised even ment to provide entertainment Doug, who began his studies at while students waited for entry), Grand Valley State University plenty of guests (112,618 of them, knowing all along he wanted to to be exact) and a pizza lunch end up in Ann Arbor. (hand delivered to the waiting "I don't want to make enemies area by Chief Marketing Officer with the Athletic Department," Hunter Lochmann). he said. "But the people they're Along with other early ris- trying to encourage to show up ers, Doug got a first look at the early ... this won't do anything." Athletic Department's new gen- Later, sitting in his long- eral admission policy. He waited sought-after prize, the concreted patiently in the shadow of the Big Row 1 of Section 26 at Michi- House until 12:30 p.m., when the gan Stadium, Doug changed his hundreds of students were final- mind. ly able to enter the stadium. First "I may be eating my words," come, first served, and Doug was he said. "If general admission is the first to arrive. responsible (for the increased But he didn't come alone. early attendance), then maybe it Beside him sat three more stu- is a good thing." dents who would've been wide- Some students might be sat- eyed had it not been for their isfied with a one-week spot at exhaustion. This was their first the front of the sea of maize, time at the Big House. This was near where the Wolverines sang their first time attending a foot- 'The Victors' after the 59-9 vic- ball game - they had transferred tory. Once isn't enough for Doug, from China's Shanghai Jiao though. This week was merely Tong University, which doesn't practice. The Notre Dame game, have a team. And this was their under the lights at the Big House first couple weeks in the United next weekend, is where his focus States. has been since he found out "They think I'm crazy, but about the new ticketing system. you've got to be crazy to do this," "That's the big one," Doug Dougsaid. "It'sbeen a long seven said. I I q TERRA MOLENGRAFF/Daly Some of the students who waited in the general admission line for good seats get some company after Saturday's win. As of 1:20 p.m., only the first 14 rows of student seating were filled, so superb seats were still up for grabs. The first rows were filled with a younger crowd - lots of freshmen and sophomores - in a space previously held by upper- classmen. An hour before kickoff, the student bowl was more than half full. The general-admission policy seemed to be a success. They had convinced students to show up to a game not only before kickoff, but an entire hour before. The few students at 7 a.m. had turned into a horde of fans by 2:30 p.m. Athletic Department Chief Marketing Officer Hunter Loch- mann said Saturday morning that one reason for general admission was to "create an atmosphere" for coach Brady Hoke by kickoff. That had certainly been accomplished. After the game, Hoke men- tioned how cool it was to have the section full during warmups and how much he appreciated that from the students. However, everything wasn't perfect. The normally packed or beyond capacity lower bowl was filled but not crazily so. From a faraway camera, it looked complete, but on the ground there were empty seats and everyone had plenty of room - certainly not the norm in previous games. The traditional hierarchy of seniors in the front, freshman at the back has been destroyed. Classes were mixed together and some traditions were certainly lacking in the front rows: students were not thrown up in the air after a Michigan score. This only occurred in the back. Traditions will still get passed downfrom class to class,but it will be more complicated. About an hour before kickoff a group of younger students tried to start a wave. Other students start- ed to join the effort, even though the non-student sections of the stadium were not filled. An older student yelled, "The wave is for the third quarter." The others stopped. 0 40