The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com £ 7 i .a . - M. Wednesday, September 25, 2013 - 7A _._ Lewan: 'I'm not going to apologize for being 4-0' By LIZ VUKELICH Daily Sports Editor When fans watched the Mich- igan football team scrape by Connecticut on Saturday, it was almost like a horrible sense of deji vu. The Wolverines didn't see it that way, though. After beating the Huskies, Michigan sauntered off the field, patting each other on the back and smiling. The mood was jovial. You wouldn't have been able to tell the Wolverines just survived another close call, another narrow win against a team they were supposed to have run circles around. It was a far cry from the Akron game a week prior. After that disappointment, Michigan didn't celebrate its win. It walked off the field in silence. Fifth-year senior left tackle Taylor Lewan cursed during his postgame interview, while redshirt junior quarterback Devin Gardner sat by his side in silence. Fans may not have been able to tell the difference between the team that played the Zips and the one that faced the Huskies, but Michigan coach Brady Hoke certainly could. "It was a much different team," he said when asked if he saw an improvement in the Wol- verines from Akron to UConn. Lewan agrees. The captain used the word embarrassing five times to describe Michigan's performance against Akron. Tuesday, though, he was more optimistic about the Wolverines' future as they head into their first bye week on the eve of Big Ten play. "I'm not going to apologize for being 4-0," Lewan said. "I saw a huge sense of urgency in those young guys. They understand we want to be successful every sin- gle week. I think it really clicked for them in the second half of the game." But for as much as the pro- gram says it's improved over the last week, there's one main area of concern - the coaching staff is still looking for a way to reign in Gardner's unpredictable play that manifested Saturday with his eighth interception of the season. Last week, offensive coordina- tor AlBorges said Gardner wasn't generally the type of player to make the same mistake twice. Hoke contradicted that state- ment on Tuesday, though, saying that Gardner now has to be "re- coached," since he's become such a wild card on the field. The issue of Gardner as a Superman figure has also been addressed this season - does Gardner try and do everything himself because he simply doesn't have enough trust in the rest of his teammates? Hoke says no. "I think he's been a Superman a long time," Hoke said. "I think when you grow up being Super- man, you have that in your mind, and he's competitive. It's in his DNA." Lewan has been Gardner's staunchest supporter, putting much of the quarterback's woes on his shoulders after the Akron game. As he reminded Gardner's critics, there are still 10 other players on the field, and a missed assignment from any one of them can be responsible for Gardner's unpredictability. "We haven't played a perfect game yet," Lewan said. "Our job is to perform like a Michi- gan team every year. You look around, there are banners every- where of successful Michigan teams. That's what we need to live up to." TERRA MOLENGRAFF/ Redshirt junior quarterback Devin Gardner has struggled to balance making plays and trying to be "Superman." NOTABLE QUOTABLE I think the media takes opponents and downplays them. You know, I feel they did that with UConn and did that with Akron. Those are two great football teams and two great programs. -Senior defensive end Jibreel Black 620 Opponenstetal yardage Despite a barrage of shots, still no goals TRACY KO/DaiT Redshirt junior goalkeeper Adam Grinwis finished with a season-high 10 saves against the Grizzlies, the second-highest total in Michigan program history. 'M' can't break tie at Oakland By JESSE KLEIN increase in speed of play and pas- For TheDaily sion from the Michigan side. "I thought the passion was OAKLAND, Mich. - The win greater in the second half," said against West Virginia last week- Michigan coach Chaka Daley said. end was a brief hiatus from the "We moved it and we connected frustration it. I thought we dug ourselves out that has MICHIGAN 0 of the hole we created in the first become the OAKLAND 0 half and essentially kept the ball in Michigan their half." men's soccer season. The team's Michigan threatened in the half second overtime game in a row when Fabio Pereira fired a swift didn't end with the heroics of the shot to the left, but Oakland's goal- past weekend. This time the team keeper came up with a diving save, tied Oakland with goose eggs on one of two on the night. either side of the scoreboard Tues- Junior midfielder Marcos day night. Ugarte, who had been providing Oakland slightly controlled much needed speed down the left the first half because of Michigan side of the field for Michigan, was hand balls and fouls that forced injured halfway through the sec- the ball back into Michigan's half. ond half on a blocked cross and Oakland forward Shawn Claud had to leave for the remainder of Lawson got the first shot off in the the game. 10th minute, managing to pull an Michigan tried to capitalize on ultimately unsuccessful corner. its corner kicks as regulation drew Overall Michigan had trouble to a close. Freshman midfielder maintaining possession in Oak- Brett Nason fired a cross to sopho- land's half, losing many headers more midfielder Colin McAtee, to the Grizzlies. At the half, Oak- the hero of last game, for a shot land led the game with eight shots. that went wide of Oakland's goal. Michigan had just five. Again Michigan missed a The second half saw a dramatic chance to end the game with 1:30 remaining with a header from sophomore forward James Mur- phy that dinged off the crossbar. In overtime, Michigan kept its momentum, getting a shot on goal in the first minute. Oakland responded with two quick shots and redshirt junior goalkeeper Adam Grinwis saved both in extraordinary fashion. This was Grinwis's first shutout of the season, and he finished with 10 saves, his season high. Passions and tempers started to run high as the referees continued to make few calls that Michigan agreed with. Daley was almost ejected and two separate fore- heads-pressed-together moments between players occurred in the first half of overtime. "We are disappointed that we weren't protected enough by the referee but those things happen and we dealt with it and moved on," Daley said. In the last 10 seconds of the first overtime session, senior forward Malcolm Miller broke away, pull- ing the Oakland keeper to the top of the 18-yard box, resulting in a collision that gave Miller a con- troversial yellow card. It was the third of four for the night, two to the Grizzlies and the fourth to freshman defenseman Lars Eck- enrode. In the second overtime, Oak- land outshot Michigan 5-4, but Grinwis kept the shutout intact by forcing a bouncing ball wide of the goal post. The frustrations and stressors continued for Michigan up until the final seconds, as the game clock was stopped for an Oakland corner with 14 seconds remaining in overtime. The game remained tied, though, leaving Michigan to con- tinue its struggles on the road. The Wolverines lost six road games last season, and won just two. In 2013, they are now 1-1-2 on the road. But according to Daley, their biggest improvements could still come in the offensive half where he said they need to score goals. "There were five or six really quality chances, but we need to connect them on target," Daley said. "We got to make the keeper make a save or put in the back of the net and we didn't do either." Michigan fired 17 shots, but offensive crisis builds By JEREMY SUMMITT Daily Sports Editor OAKLAND, Mich. - In a 0-0 overtime draw against Oakland on Tuesday, the Michigan men's soccer team struggled to garner many quality chances, despite firing 17 shots. Quality over quantity is what Michigan coach Chaka Daley urged his squad to focus on offensively, but Michi- gan could muster just six strikes on goal. Nothing epitomized the Wol- verines' struggles more than when the Grizzlies' goalkeeper, Sean Lewis, made his first save in the 59th minute of the match. After that, he coasted to a relax- ing evening. "There's only one save I think I remember him making that I think he had to make," Daley said. There aren't issues with the attacking build-up or the posses- sion battle, though. Both of those went according to plan for the majority of the match. Specifically in the overtime sessions, Michigan controlled the ball in the final third as it toyed with Oakland's back line. The Wolverines continued to string creative passes together but could never break through. Shots from sophomore mid- fielder Colin McAtee and senior forward Tyler Arnone barely crept wide, while others sailed over the crossbar at crucial moments. In the final 90 sec- onds, sophomore forward James Murphy's header bounced off the crossbar before it was cleared to ensure extra time. The list of missed opportunities goes on and on. The Wolverines were close, but putting 31 percent of their shots on goal is far from desirable. "I know them all," Daley said. "I remember every single one of the missed chances in the 18, in and around the box, that were better than what you'd call half chances, and we didn't take them." Michigan was often passive while peppering the Grizzlies' defense, which hindered the chance for quality opportuni- ties that Daley was looking for. Rightly so, frustration began setting in after regulation, as yel- low cards were shown to Mur- phy and freshman defender Lars Eckenrode for retaliations in the offensive third. "I thought we tried to be a lit- tle bit too precise at times in the final third, as opposed to kind of being a little more aggressive and assertive," Daley said. Similar offensive setbacks have plagued the Wolverines all season. Michigan has been shut out three times already this sea- son with four goals in the past six games. A 5-2 thrashing of Loyola-Chicago in the season opener fooled everybody. A 228-minute scoring drought before netting two goals at West Virginia this past weekend was the most recent episode of the Wolverines' offensive shortcom- ings. The woes are slowly turn- ing into something resembling a crisis for Michigan. With Big Ten season looming this week- end, the Wolverines are urgently searching for answers. LIKE US ON FACEBOOK www.facebook.com/ michigandaily