4; , r .,,, , I '- - i , t ,, . , ,, , . ': F ia > UP IN THE AIR RRAMOLENGRAFF/Dly Penn State 43, Michigan 40 Ryan (left) played in his first game since an ACLtear. Michigan coach Brady Hoke (right) blamed a late penalty on himself. A team searching 5 Things We Learned: Penn State for an identity STATE COLLEGE - he ball danced through the night air and up into a blur of white and ZACH a glare of HELFAND lights. Fresh- man corner- back Channing Stribling waited for it to come down near the one-yard line and so did Penn State's Allen Robinson. It emerged from the glow, a loud and charging object close enough for Michigan to grab and put away, just like Penn State had been. Stribling jumped first but too quickly. As he came down, the ball slipping above his fingers, Robinson jumped and snatched it away. The crowd turned rap- See HELFAND, Page 3B By EVERETT COOK DailySports Editor 1. Michigan badly needs some help on the offensive line. The problems on the offensive line were supposed to be fixed when redshirt sophomore guard Chris Bryant replaced redshirt sophomore center Jack Miller in the starting lineup against Min- nesota two weeks ago. Bryant is bigger, and the move allowed Graham Glasgow to move from guard to center, which was seemingly a better fit for the red- shirt sophomore. The switch in the offen- sive line also allowed for some stacked formations, where fifth- year senior tackles Taylor Lewan and Michael Schofield - Michi- gan's best offensive linemen - would line up on the same side of the ball. . This was supposed to be the big, nasty Wolverine offensive line. Instead, Michigan was blown off the ball against Penn State. The stacked offensive line was sniffed out and rendered use- less almost immediately. Bryant was replaced at one point, while Lewan left the game at halftime and never returned due to an apparent head injury, though Michigan coach Brady Hoke said Monday that the injury had more to do with his hip than anything else. Make no mistake, Michigan lost this game because of its inability to move the Nittany Lions off the line of scrimmage. The run game never got going, which completely halted the passing game. Hoke said that Lewan will play against Indiana next week, but if the undisclosed symp- toms of the apparent head injury don't fix themselves shortly, the already struggling offensive line is going to be in a world of hurt. 2. Michigan's offense isn't anything without a running game. This, too, ties into the strug- gles of the offensive line, because if the holes were bigger, the running game would be much improved. But without halfback produc- tion, Michigan's offense is going to be difficult to watch the rest of the year. Penn State came into the game See LEARNED, Page 3B Behind depth of offense, the Wolverines hold off late barrage by RIT By GREG GARNO The Tigers ultimately scored in Daily Sports Writer. overtime to upset Michigan and kick off one of the roughest sea- ROCHESTER, NY - The sons in recent memory. Michigan hockey team had been Fast forward one year, and here before - just last season, in Michigan was staring at the same fact. scenario after it surrendered a With a 3-1 lead a year ago, the four-goal lead to RIT in the sec- Wolverines allowed the Roches- ond period on Saturday. ter Institute of Technology back But rather than succumb to the into the game to force overtime. surge this time, the 11th-ranked Wolverines responded thanks to freshman forward Even Allen, whose goal late in the period proved to be the game winner. Michigan closed the third period with two more goals to win 7-4 and remain unbeaten two games into the season. "I like the start of the game and I liked the end of the game, but I didn't like the middle part, obviously," said Michigan coach Red Berenson. "You could see this coming." Junior forward Phil Di Giuseppe had two goals while ,junior forward Alex Guptill had a pair of assists to lead the Wolver- ines in front of a crowd of more than 10,000. The score, though, didn't indi- cate the lopsided shot total, as Michigan was out-shot 46-27. "We weren't playing as hard, and as smart and as defensive as we should have," Berenson said. "Pretty much everything hap- pened in our zone." Allen's goal, which swung the momentum back in Michigan's favor, looked like more of an acci- dent than a shot attempt. Tiger goaltender Jordan Ruby, in the midst of repositioning himself, misplayed the shot from outside the left circle and never saw the puck slide behind him. Michigan kicked off the scor- ing less than three minutes into the first period, when Guptill slid through the right circle and glided the puck to an untouched Di Giuseppe, who was waiting in See DEPTH, Page 3B 200 MILES NORTH As the Michigan football team was los- ing it in Penn State, the hockey team was figuring it out against RIT. SportsMonday column: Page 2B UPSET TUESDAY Freshman Lars Eckenrode picked a good time for his first collegiate goal in Michigan's first win over a ranked oppo- nent this year. Page 2B C # 4