I The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com October 16, 2013 -- 3B The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom October 16, 2013 - 3B GAME STATISTICS Team Stats FistDown Rush/Yards Passing Yards Offensive Plays Total Offense Kik returns/yds Punt returns/yds Comp/Att/Int Punts/Avg F bes/Lost Penalties/Yards Time of Possession Michigan 54/149 240 83 389 6/154 0/0 15-29-2 6/40.8 2-1 7-62 36:13 Penn 2: PASSING Playe Totas RUSHING Player Gardner Greent Totals RECEIVING Gallon Funchess 1 Ceson Butt Hayes STotals M I C H I G A N C-A Yds T 15-28 240 15-29 240 LEARNED From Page 1B with the No. 19 rush defense in the country. Good, but that stage doesn't excuse how awful the 44/8 Wolverines' rushing attack was 305 Saturday. 89 Fifth-year senior running 90 back Fitzgerald Toussaint fin- 3/26 ished with 27 yards on 27 carries. 3-45-2 Without a 12-yard first-quarter 4/4.0 . run, Toussaint would have aver- 2-2 5-56 aged 0.6 yards per carry. Time 23:47 and again, he would receive the. ball on first down and be swal- lowed up immediately. Plain and simple, it was boring, predict- able and ineffective. 2 Hoke has said that he's cau- 2 tious to use Gardner on the ground more, even if he's the most- efficient runner on the TD roster, because of a concern for O injury. V Still, redshirt junior quarter- 0 back Devin Gardner's rushing numbers are significantly better TD than anyone else's. He rushed 1 for 121 yards Saturday, averaging 2 five yards per carry, and leads 0 the team in rushing yards while o averaging more than two yards a ° carry more than Toussaint. 3 With defenses like Iowa, Michigan State and Ohio State Ls coming up, offensive coordina- 0 tor Al Borges needs to figure out a better way to run the offense, if the running game doesn't U improve. Right now, it all goes o through the idea of a punishing U running game, which is a nice concept unless you don't actually TD have the personnel or coaching U to properly execute a punishing running game. TERRA MOLENGRAFF/Dnily Redshirt junior quarterback Devin Gardner leads the nation in interceptions. Att 24 27 3 54 No. 7 4 1 1 1 1 15 ,d5 121 27 1 149 Yds 95 112 13 9 6 5 240 Avg 5.0 28 Avg 13.6 28.0 6.0 5.0 16.0 Lgs 19 12 Lg 25 59 6 5 59 PUNTING Player No. Yds Piloe No V 245n KICKOFF RETURNS Plaer No Ys Ag Norfleet 3 88 29.3 Totals 6 154 25.7 PUNT RETURNS Player No. Yds Avg Toa' 0 0 0-0 Avg 40.8 L9 34 34 Gardner's propensity to give the ball away, Borges stopped giving him the opportunities to do so. Time after time, it was Toussaint with the ball going nowhere and Gardner standing in the back- field like a decoy. The offense stopped moving, and the game eventually went to Penn State. If Borges and Hoke.would rather keep pushing a run game that was clearly going nowhere than give the ball to their best offensive player, there's a prob- lem there. At some point, Michi- gan is going to have to figure out whether Gardner is better suited runningthe ball 20 times agame than throwing the ball into the hands of defenses, which he has done more times than anyone else in the country. With the offensive line strug- gling and the running game put on hold, this is Gardner's offense to make do with. Understand- ably, Hoke and Borges aren't ready for that, and it shows. 4. In Gardner's defense, who is he throwing to? Michigan's second-best wide receiver is a converted tight end that dropped two passes in the end zone against Penn State. The tight end, sophomore Devin Funchess, ended up having a productive day with four catch- es for 112 yards and two touch- downs, but the point stands. . The best Wolverine wide receiver is fifth-year senior Jer- emy Gallon, who has 31 catches on the year. Funchess has 19. Their 50 combined catches is 10 more than the rest of the team combined, which has totaled 40 catches. Those two can't do it them- selves, and neither can Gard- ner. Michigan's wideouts were thought to be a problem before the season, but nothing this bad. Losing redshirt freshman wide receiver Amara Darboh before the year was obviously a big blow, but it's time for someone not named Funchess or Gallon to start making an impact. Bold Prediction: Hoke's home winning streak will end this sea- son. In his third year as coach, Hoke still hasn't lost a home game in 18 tries, but that streak is going to end soon. With the way the offense has been play- ing and three tough Big Ten games on the docket (Indiana, Nebraska and Ohio State), Hoke won't end 2013 undefeated in Ann Arbor. 'M'passes early test By MAX BULTMAN claimed the four fastest times in For the Daily the 1,000-yard freestyle, as Jae- ger crushed his own pool record The last time the Michigan by eight seconds with a blistering and Auburn men's swimming time of 9:02. teams were in a pool together, Jaeger also won the 500-yard it was March, and the Wolver- freestyle with senior teammate ines were celebrating an NCAA Sean Ryan comingin second. championship. This time, the "I think how close the relay two teams faced off early in the meet was yesterday motivated season, with back-to-back meets people to come outreally strong." over the weekend in South Bend, said senior John Wojciechowski. Ind., when Notre Dame played Wojciechowski was a major host to the two national powers part of the strong showing, win- Friday at the Dennis Stark Relays, ning both the 100-yard butter- which also included Cleveland fly and 100-yard backstroke to State and Valparaiso. Saturday, go along with relay wins in the the Wolverines, Fighting Irish 400-yard freestyle and 200-yard and Tigers all stuck around to medley relays. compete in a highly anticipated Despite swimmingmostly but- double-dual meet. terfly last season, Wojciechowski "(Saturday's) meet was one of has stepped up this season to fill those meets that everyone in the a huge team need at backstroke country is looking at," said Mich- since Miguel Ortiz graduated. igan coach Mike Bottom. "We needed a backstroker, at The Wolverines squeaked the beginning of the year, and out an 190-186 victory over Wojo said,'Hey, I can do that!' " second-place Auburn on Friday, Bottom said. then turned around with two The Wolverines dominated emphatic wins the next day, beat- the 200-yard individual medley, ing Auburn, 195-103, and Notre senior Kyle Whitaker and sopho- Dame, 201-99. more Dylan Bosch finished first "We reallysurprised ourselves and second, respectively, before with how well everyone was going on to win the 400-yard swimming," said senior Connor freestyle relay. Jaeger. "It's jist really exciting." The relay dropped nearly two One of the most dramatic seconds off their time from Fri- moments came Friday, when day to Saturday, which Bottom junior Bruno Ortiz touched out credited to his team's constant Auburn's Alex Press by 0.06 sec- drive to improve. onds in the 400-yard freestyle "They didn't look at it like we relay - the race that ultimately won," Bottom said. "They looked decided the invitational. . at it like how to get better." The defending-champion Jaeger and the Wolverines Wolverines actually trailed will look to continue to progress Auburn, 100-88, at the midway on Oct. 25 when they travel to point Friday, in part because of a Bloomington to compete against disqualification in the 400-yard Indiana and perennial power- individual medley relay. house Texas in another early- There were no such mistakes season challenge. Saturday, as the Wolverines "The whole reason you have cruised to two big wins while fin- these kind of meets is so that our ishing first in the first six events team gets better," Bottom said, alongthe way. "The idea that we have someone Michigan opened the day with like Auburn and Notre Dame to a pool record of 1:27.85 in the race gives us a chance to be in a 200-yard medley relay and did competitive situation and make not look back. The Wolverines changes." Lg 0 TACKLES Player Morgan Boliden Tanyloo jUWommde SGordon, T Washington Beyer IHouma SlI*O*g Stribling Countess Hery Gallon Gardner Gordon, C. Avery Toas Solo 6 6 5 -4 2 4 3 2 3 2- 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 46 Asst 1 1 2 8 6 5 5 4 4 4 3 3 3 2 2 2 7 S 1 1 1 1 1 t 1 70 3. Gardner and his turnovers scare Hoke and Borges. Hoke can say all he wants about trusting Gardner, but the reality is, Hoke can't trust him. Not when Gardner throws the types of interceptions he did in the first half against Penn State, which single-handedly kept the Nittany Lions in the game. Michigan could've sealed the game in the second half with a few sustained drives, but with 0 0 1 24 P E N N S T PASSING Player C-A Yds RUSHING Zwinak 8 25 TEAM 2 -2 Robinson 1 -6 Hackenberg 6 -166 TA TE TD int 3 2 3 2 DEPTH From Page 1B front of the crease to drive the puck home for an early power- play goal. After he missed the exhibi- tion loss to Waterloo (Ont)' and season-opening win over Boston College, Guptill brought a force- ful presence around the net that frustrated a porous RIT defense. Guptill added another assist nearly two minutes later when the Tigers left another forward alone near the crease. This time, it was senior forward Derek DeBlois who knocked in the one- timer. "I thought (Guptill) got off to a great start," Berenson said. "He was effective tonight, and that's just his first game." Junior forward Zach Hyman fed both Di Giuseppe and sopho- more forward Boo Nieves for the third and fourth goals, respec- tively, as Michigan closed the period on top. But RIT took advantage of seven penalties by the Wolverines in the second period, scoring four goals in less than tenminutes. An early whistle gave RIT the chance to strike back when forward Mike Colavecchia tore through the defense single hand- edly and poked the puck past sophomore goaltender Steve Racine. they scored four goals, he made Racine faced an onslaught of some point-blank saves on guys shots from the Tigers, laying out that were wide open, that should time after time to turn the puck never have been wide open." The defense, though, looked disorganized in its own zone "It' alduring the second period and in other spurts during the game, you're going the leaving RIT forwards with too yOU e g~ng emuch time to set up. other way" Tiger forward Ben Lynch took advantage when he found himself in the right place four minutes later. A deflection off the other way. Despite struggling the pads of Racine went into the to corral the rebound at times, he slot where Lynch fired the puck still finished with 42 saves. into the upper right corner to "I thought (Racine) kept us in reenergize the crowd. the game in the second period," "Obviously, you have to get Berenson said. "Even though off your toes and start working again," Di Giuseppe said. "I think it just made us realize that the game wasn't over. I thought they did a great job of comingback, but I thought we did abetter job mak- ing sure we won that game." Freshman forward Tyler Motte scored his first goal of the season with just under five min- utes remaining to put the game out of reach before sophomore forward Andrew Copp added another to make the margin of victory seem much worse than it actually was. "We maybe thought it was going to be a little easier, but it's never easier," Berenson said. "It's all out, or you're going the other way. 32 "1.0 -6.0 -27 RECEIVING Felder ~ .James Anderson Totals 12 0 0 13 Lg9 29 20 36 7 36 0 0 0 No. 6 6 3 2 1 23 Yds 97 67 26 24 7 305 Avg 16.2 11.2 12.0 7.0 13.3 TD 2 1 0 0 0 3 HELFAND From Page 'lB 4 turous. One quarterback sneak PUNTING later and the score was tied, Plaere No Yde Avon CO nutrworth 4 113 448 66 thrusting the game into a frenzy Totals 4 179 44.8 66 and the Michigan football team into a four-overtime battle to Ple r No, Yds Avg Lg claim not only the victory, but ones 1 25 25.0 25 also some semblance of an iden- Uo" 1 14 lAO 1 4 tity in this timid, discordant half Totals 2 39 19.5 25 ofaseason. After 55 minutes and 27 sec- TACKLES onds full of failed opportunities, PlerI Solo Annt Tot o p ru iis Hly 4 6 10 Michigan would have four more Carson 2 8 10 chances. Each time, Michigan's Jes 5 4 9 decisions or execution exposed Olenyan 4 4 0 Wrtn 1 7 n a team unsure of its personality. Amos 5 2 7 Each time, the Wolverines failed Willis 4 2 6 to convert Baubitz 1 3 4 After the 43-40 loss to Penn narnes ' 2 1 3 State on Saturday in four over- Wlons 2 1 3 times, Michigan has reached Oben-Agyapong 1 2 the halfway point of the regular Posuie 1 1 2 season. Each game peels off a eser 1 1 2 new layer from this enigmatic Thompon 1 1 2 ohno 1 1 2 team, yet after each game, the Smith 1 0 1 Wolverines know precious little Chiappialle 1 0 1 more about themselves. Is Gard- Geea V 1 1 ner more likely to throw for 300 Total 42 48 90 yards or for three turnovers? Will the offensive line move any- one off the ball? Can the defense be elite? Definitive answers con- LIKE US ON tinue to elude. FACEBOOK Saturday, when the ball came down into Robinson's hands with a minute left in regulation, the center fell apart and the game descended into a loud madness. Decisions presented themselves with remarkable speed. Here, www.facebook.com/ teams rely on their strengths. m ich iga n d aily What would Michigan rely on? After six games, Michigan is, a team without an identity. The offense isn't sure what it is. The line was blown off the ball for much of the game. Even with Gardner extending drives with the scramble, the Wolverines still finished with 2.8 yards per attempt on the ground against Penn State. Fifth-year senior running back Fitzgerald Tous- saint finished Saturday with 27 yards on 27 attempts, the low- est yardage for a back with that many carries in program history, according to Andy Reid of Rivals. com. At times, the passing game has been a force. Gardner completed 15 passes against Penn State for 240 yards and three touchdowns. But constant turnovers make throwing the ball a dicey propo- sition. Gardner had three more of those Saturday. With about 90 seconds remaining, Michigan had the ball within field-goal range on the Penn State 27-yard line after nine straight runs chewed tp the clock. Score a field goal here, or geta first down, and it would render moot any late heroics from Robinson or Penn State quarterback Christian Hack- enberg. It was third-and-9 and Michigan faced a choice: go for the kill with a pass, or call a'run and risk a 44-yard field goal. The Wolverines hesitated and sent in the wrong play. Instead of calling a timeout, Michigan took a delay of game penalty. Instead of passing, Michigan called. another run and lost another three yards. The 44-yard field goal became 52. Instead of risk- ing that, Michigan called a pooch punt, which netted 15 yards. The problem was, the defense, in its own way, is still looking to define itself. It's close, but not yet a defensive juggernaut, like Michigan State, because the defense is incapable of generating big negative plays. The defense has bailed out the team more than once, but it is too young to be consistently dominant. Penn State drove 80 yards in 29 seconds and made it look easy. Yet Michigan still had a chance to win before overtime. Gardner threw 25 yards to Gal- lon. Though Gallon stepped out of bounds with eight seconds left, Gardner spiked the ball, wast- ing a second. Gardner completed another pass for five yards. Now seven seconds remained. But even the coaching staff suffered from an identity crisis against Penn State. Through more than two years, Michigan coach Brady Hoke has estab- lished a style of aggression. If he erred, he'd doit going for a fourth down instead of punting, going for the win instead of the tie. But when Michigan had the chance to ice the game for good, it turned to a running game that was doomed as soon as the play call came in. "We had all.kinds of oppor- tunities at every position," Hoke said. "As coaches we had oppor- tunities. And we all, we're in this together, and we all have to make sure that we're taking advantage and executing when those oppor- tunities come." Each time those opportunities came, Michigan looked timid. On a team still searching for its core competency, apprehension ruled as the game hung in the balance. Against Notre Dame two years ago, with eight seconds remain- ing, Hoke had opted for one more chance to win the game. He called a long fade to the end zone. Roy Roundtree caught the pass with two ticks left. Now, with seven seconds remaining, Hoke called for a 52-yard field goal. Fifth-year senior kicker Brendan Gibbons's try was true, but short. In overtime, the Wolverines had to choose again: would they risk the pass or play for the field goal with the ineffective rushing game? Offensive coordinator Al Borges called nine runs com- pared to five passes in the four overtime periods. Bad luck, too, plagued the team: Michigan had a 40-yard field goal blocked, and Gibbons - usually automatic - missed a 33-yard field goal to the left. Yet the Wolverines never threatened the end zone. In the third overtime, Frank Clark jumped on a Penn State fumble. Michigan just needed points, any points, to win and stay unbeaten. Yet on third-and- 1 before the missed 33-yard attempt, the offense couldn't pick upa yard with a Toussaint rush up the middle. Penn State won the game with an authoritative decision. Faced with fourth-and-l, needing a field goal to tie, Penn State coach Bill O'Brien didn't waver. "I felt like it was time for somebody to win the game," O'Brien said. "We could sit here and trade field goals all day. I think eventually it was time for somebody to win the game, and I had the opportunityto do it. I felt like it was time to go for the win." The Nittany Lions converted, and four plays later, they found the end zone. The players swarmed victorious running back Bill Belton in the corner of the field. Nearby, Gibbons walked past the celebration alone, hel- met in hand. He inhaled and let out an animated breath. For awhile, Gardner didn't move. He looked up, hand on his chin, no expression on his face. "It hurts," Gardner said after the game. "Lose in overtime, if you let it take a toll, it will," Hoke said. And now Michigan stares at a crossroad. The conference is weak enough that every team left on the schedule is beatable, even Ohio State. Yet there are no easy games from here on out, begin- ning was a pesky Indiana team next week. For a5-1 team, Michigan teeters close to the edge. It had hoped to come into this atmo- sphere and forge an identity from a messy but victorious string of early games. Instead, what emerged from the white sea of Beaver Stadium is a team as con- fused as ever. -Helfand can be reached at zhelfand@umich edu or on Twitter @zhelfand /