'' CAUGHT IN THE ZIPPI TODD NEEDLE/Daily The Michigan student section (top) was stunned as Akron approached a near-upset. Redshirt junior quarterback Devin Gardner (left) committed four turnovers. Fifth-year senior running back Fitzgerald Toussaint found little room on the inside. By MATT SLOVIN ManagingEditor Quarterback Devin Gardner, who had four turnovers, called it the worst game he has played at any level. Captain Taylor Lewan called it an "embarrassment" to the Michigan football program, which "works too hard to have games like this." Coach Brady Hoke said it's like a college final - how much you study, or pre- pare, will dictate the outcome. The Wolverines were not prepared for Saturday's game against Akron, and it showed. Had it not been for a last-sec- ond goal-line stand, Michigan's season that started almost per- fectly would have been spoiled before Big Ten play even began. Instead, the Wolverines held on for dear life, avoiding one of the worst losses in the history of the Big House by beating Akron 28-24 and remaining unblem- ished on the season. "It was embarrassing," said Lewan, an offensive tackle. "We didn't prepare. This is on the seniors and the leadership of this team." Junior linebacker Desmond Morgan stuffed Zips running back Jawon Chisholm on 3rd- and-goal from the 1-yard line for a loss of two. Then with the final seconds ticking off, anoth- er junior linebacker, Brennan Beyer, hit Akron quarterback Kyle Pohl, causing his pass to fall harmlessly to the ground in the end zone. Hoke said he knew that defensive coordinator Greg Mattison's final play call would be cable zero train, a blitz. Beyer turned around, saw his team- mates celebrating and knew Michigan had survived. To set up the improbable stop, Zips quarterback Kyle Pohl, who threw for 311 yards, hit receiver L.T. Smith for 15 yards and was ruled down just shy of the goal line. Earlier in the drive, the Wol- verines forced Akron into a 3rd- and-S situation, butlike they did so many times Saturday, the Zips turned it into a conversion and a sizeable gain. Overall, Akron was 9-for-18 on third downs. "The problem is not tight enough coverage, not fitting the run well enough and no pass pressure," Hoke said. Trailing 21-17, Akron sus- tained an 11-play, 67-yard drive that included two of those nine third-down conversions and ended in a one-yard touchdown pass. Michigan got the ball back with about four minutes to go in the game and needed only four plays to cover 70 yards. Gardner hit fifth-year senior wide receiv- er Jeremy Gallon for a gain of 20 and the duo's longest comple- tion of the day. Fifth-year senior See CAUGHT, Page 3B is FOOTBALL What was that? VOLLEYBALL Wolverines drop first contest of the season T aylor Lewanused the word "embarrassing" five times after Michi- gan's 28-24 win over Akron on Saturday, and that might not have done it justice. What was that? What team was that out there? It wasn't the team that EVERETT beat Notre COOK Dame on C__K _ national tele- vision last week, it wasn't the team with a potential Heisman candidate at quarterback and it sure as hell wasn't the team that has aspira- tions to compete in the Big Ten Championship game in a couple months. This team was flat and boring and unable to execute anything on offense. This team made the Zips look competitive, never mind the fact that Akron now has a 28-game losing streak on the road, a3-34 record over the pre- vious three years and has not beaten an FBS opponent since 2010. This team made everyone forget about the magic of last week, Under the Lights II, real quick. Lewan, the All-American fifth-year senior offensive tackle, blamed iton the seniors and the leadership of the team, who he said were responsible for a poor week of preparation during practice. He didn't blame his quar- terback, redshirt junior Devin Gardner, who had four turn- overs and single-handedly let Akron back in the game with an awful pick-six on the second play of the fourth quarter. Nor did he blame the sec- ondary, which let the Zips throw for 311 yards, the second straight week the defense has allowed over 300 yards of pass- ing offense. See COOK, Page 3B Invitational 2-t. By ERIN LENNON Down by one through the first Daily Sports Writer half of the third set, the Wolver- ines (7-I) SIENA 0 Three sets into a match and Semi- MICHIGAN 3 against No. 16 Florida State, the noles trad- final match of the Texas A&M ed points MICHIGAN 3 Invitational, the No. 7 Michigan before the TEXAS A&M 2 volleyball team looked poised to Florida T fly back to Ann Arbor with a per- State sis- fect 8-0 record intact. ter duo FLORIDA ST. 3 The Wolverines entered Sat- of Nicole MICHIGAN 2 urday's contest coming off a five- and Elise set comeback win over Texas Walch - who each finished with A&M and a three-set sweep of 22 kills - found a hole in Michi- Siena. Two sets later, Michigan gan's block. The pair combined suffered its first loss of the sea- for nine of Florida State's last 11 son, finishing the Texas A&M points, sealing the 25-17 win. Three straight kills from freshman middle blocker Abby Cole kept the Wolverines with- in one through the first half. But two more late kills from Cole, and one from senior co- captain outside hitter Lexi Erwin, kept Michigan in the game late. But it was not enough to top the sisters a second time around. Despite two key service errors and a late Erwin attack error in the fifth set, Michigan was able to tie the game at 13 off a kill from Cole. But two kills from Florida State - the Seminoles See VOLLEYBALL, Page 3B (ALMOST) APP. STATE For many, Saturday's near-meltdown brought back memories of the worst loss in program history six years ago. Page2B FIELD HOCKEY * After a shutout of Louisville on Satur- day, Michigan's offense exploded for six goals to beat UC Davis on Sunday. Page3B