Sports] onday H E JUG STAYS HERE Michigan 42, Minnesota 13 TERRA MOLENGRAFF/Daily ADAM GLANZMAN/Da The Michigan football team (top) touches the banner before its win over Minnesota. Redshirt junior linebacker Jake Ryan (left) holds the Little Brown Jug. Members of the team celebrate in the student section. This was the 100th game in the series. By LIZ VUKELICH Daily Sports Editor On Saturday, streaks continued and streaks were broken in the Michigan football team's 42-13 win over Minnesota: Michigan coach Brady Hoke improved his home record - to 18-0. The Wolverines beat the Gold- en Gophers for the sixth consecu- tive year to keep the Little Brown Jug in Ann Arbor. And redshirt junior quarter- back Devin Gardner played in his first game as starter without throwing an interception. The Wolverines waited two weeks to prove themselves after their questionable non-confer- ence play ended. Finally, on Sat- urday, they looked a little more like the Michigan team everyone had expected to see from the beginning. "We were thinking about Min- nesota, and Minnesota was it," Gardner said. "It was the first Big Ten game. Like we always say, you never get a second chance to make a first impression. It's the Jug game, it's our homecoming game. There's a lotgoing on." As a way to try to minimize turnovers, Michigan initially resorted to the only fool-proof method - not allowing Gardner to throw the ball at all. Gardner didn't attempt his first pass until a little more than half- way through the second quarter. Michigan couldn't stay pass-less forever, but the Wolverines even- tually found a happy medium between its number of runs and throws in a game that finally played out exactly as Michigan hoped. "We were going to do what was working, and (running the ball) was what was working at the time," Gardner said. "So if it's not broke, don't fix it." When the coaches did feel comfortable calling passing plays, they spread the ball between multiple receivers,' with red- See JUG, Page 3B FQOT BAw Lt 5 things we learned: Minnesota FOOT BAL Resurgent offensive line carries Michigan By ZACH HELFAND Daily Sports Editor 1. Devin Funchess:good at tight end, better at wide receiver. With sophomore tight end Devin Funchess, Michigan faced a growingly apparent problem heading into its game against Minnesota. When involved in the passing game, Funchess had developed into one of the Wolverines' most potent offensive weapons on a team with limited receiv- ing options. When blocking, though, Michigan had better options at the position in sopho- more A.J. Williams and fresh- man Jake Butt. So on Saturday, the Wolver- ines solved the problem: they shifted him to wide receiver for much of the game. The result was instantly positive. Funch- ess was Michigan's leading receiver with seven catches for 151 yards and a touchdown, the best performance of his career. Funchess still played at tight end for portions of the game, but he made the biggest impact when split wide. At 6-foot-5 and 235 pounds, Funchess can create mismatches at either position. At tight end, he is fast enough to beat linebackers and safeties. Against Minnesota, he exploited the size of the Golden Gophers' cornerbacks. On Funchess's touchdown pass, against a cornerback six inches shorter than him, Funchess ran a post, boxed out the defender with his body and broke free for the 24-yard score. In the fourth quarter, Funch- ess caught a 46-yard pass over a cornerback five inches shorter. Funchess beat the defender on a streak, and redshirt junior quarterback Devin Gardner threw a pass over the top for the completion. Funchess is talented enough to create mismatches in the passing game, and Butt and Williams are better in the trenches. Funchess's shift to a more receiver-heavy role allows Michigan to add an impact play- er at a thin position, and it will improve the offensive line, too. 2. Michigan has found an acceptable combination on the offensive line. Redshirt sophomore left guard Chris Bryant was one of the first players to hold up the Little Brown Jug. That may have just been because he was one of the first players in line. Or maybe nobody wanted to say no to the 6-foot-4, 316-pound Bryant. In any case, it was fitting: with the addition of Bryant to the front five, the Wolverines had their most impressive per- See FIVE, Page 3B By ZACH HELFAND DailySportsEditor At some point during a long two weeks off for the Michigan football team, the scuffling offensive line made a pledge to Devin Gardner. Allegedly, at least. At that point, the line had strug- gled against two meager oppo- nents in Akron and Connecticut. Gardner was, sacked four times and hurried eight, and he suffered through his two worst games as the starter. As Gardner tells it, dur- ingthe week, the line "told me they weren't going to let me get hit. So I like that." Fifth-year senior left tackle Tay- lor Lewan disputed that, saying he would never pledge something he couldn't deliver. ("If they bring too many guys, if they bring 11 guys and we have six protecting, I'm not going to be like, 'OK Devin, good luck!' " Lewan said.) And yes, Gardner was sacked once during the Wolverines' 42-13 win over Minnesota on Satur- day, and he was hurried twice. But Michigan's adjustments paid dividends. Hoke inserted redshirt sophomore guard Chris Bryant into the lineup and moved redshirt sophomore Graham Glasgow to See LINE, Page 3B BLURRED LINES U It's time to stop playing a song about rape in a stadium full of 100,000 chil- dren, families and, well, humans. Sports- Monday column: Page 2B WATER-BOO In its first exhibition game, the Michi- gan hockey team lost to Waterloo, of the Canadian Interuniversity Sport league. Page 2B A