8 - Tuesday, October 22, 2013 T The Michigan Daily -- michigandaily.com ICE HOCKEY 5 Things We Learned: New Hampshire Sophomore cornerback Raymon Taylor and the Michigan secondary have looked uncharacteristically vulnerable. I n this bye week, a reversal of roles By ZACH HELFAND Daily Sports Editor When Michigan coach Brady Hoke was asked how this bye week differed from the one ear- lier this year, he addressed it lit- erally. This week, he said during his Monday press conference, the players have Tuesday's practice off. So mark that down as one dif- ference. What he didn't address was the complete 180-degree turn his team has taken since NOTEBOOK the bye week a month ago. In these schizophren- ic, lurching first seven games of the season, the offense and defense have switched places. Now, the defense appears vulnerable, while the offense has carried the team. Previ- ously, after two miserable games against Akron and Connecticut, the offense was reeling and the defense had provided the heroics. The Michigan football team now enters its toughest stretch of the year - with games, in con- secutive weeks, against Michi- gan State on the road; Nebraska; Northwestern and Iowa away; and Ohio State - with a much dif- ferent set of issues than even one week ago. Most pressing is the defense's sudden propensity to allow big plays. Defensive coordinator Greg Mattison has played his second- ary loose to prevent passes over, the top. Against Indiana on Satur- day, though, the defense allowed five plays of 20 yards or more. Now, Michigan's once-reliable, bend-but-don't-break approach has yielded 25 plays of 20 yards or more, good for 89th in the nation. The Wolverines also rank 82nd out of 125 FBS teams with six 40-plus-yard plays and 112th with 75 plays of 10 yards or more. "I know that from a schematic standpoint, I don't think there's anything we would want to do differently. From an execution standpoint, yeah," Hoke said. "You've got to make those plays when you have opportunities there." Hoke mentioned that on four different occasions, a Michigan defender put a hand on the ball but failed to make a play. On a 67-yard touchdown pass in the third quarter, for instance, fresh- man cornerback Channing Strib- ling was in position to defend the pass, but the receiver muscled the ball away. Meanwhile, safetyhelp overthe top has been inconsistent, which has allowed big gains to turn into six points. After Striblingcouldn't defend the pass, fifth-year senior safety Thomas Gordon took a poor angle and missed the tackle. On a 59-yard score, sophomore safety Raymon Taylor appeared to expect safety help from Gordon that never came. "That's something that you think you don't have to coach a whole lot, but you do and you've got to put them in situations so they'll have that confidence," Hoke said, referringto misplaying the ball and the safety play. "You do it during the week, but we have to emphasize it a little more, and we have to tackle a little more." O-LINE OK?: The situation at offensive line remains murky, though Saturday provided some encouraging progress. Against the Hoosiers, redshirt freshman Erik Magnuson and redshirt junior Joey Burzynski got the start at guard, though Burzynski missed much of the game with an injury. After Burzynski was knocked out, an array of players got a chance at guard. Redshirt sopho- more Chris Bryant and redshirt freshman Kyle Kalis, who have each started games, saw time. But mostly, it was true freshman Kyle Bosch seeing action. "I think the guards that played did a nice job," Hoke said. "Was it perfect? No. But I think all three of them did a nice job." The line has been a constantly shifting unit for much of the year. Against Indiana, the running game looked much improved - the Wolverines picked up 248 yards on the ground. It's difficult to gauge how much of that was a credit to improved blocking and how much was a shift into the spread for much of the game. Plus, Indiana's defensive line has had its own struggles. Still, any production from the running game is an improvement over week's past. "Obviously the big test in two weeks, you're playing one of the top five defenses in the country and in our conference in all the categories," Hoke said of Michi- gan State. "We've got a lot of work to do before then." Hoke indicated the line could remain in flux. Against Indiana, Michigan found the best five play- ers for that game. But could those five players change in five weeks in East Lan- sing? "It could," Hoke said. BURZYNSKI OUT: Burzyn- ski will likely miss the remainder of the season with a torn ante- rior cruciate ligament sustained against Indiana, Hoke said Mon- day. Burzynski began as a walk on but soon worked his way into the offensive line discussion. He had played in 21 games before Satur- day, but the game against Indiana was the first start of his career. He was injured in the first quarter and didn't reenter the game. "You feel bad for Joey because he's worked so hard to get to this point," Hoke said. NOTE: Hoke noted that Burzynski is the only player out for an extended period of time. That means senior wide receiver Drew Dileo, who was injured on Saturday, should be available against Michigan State. By ERIN LENNON Daily Sports Writer 1. Zach Nagelvoort provides a solid backup in net. Less than two minutes into the third period Friday against No. 13 New Hampshire, sophomore goaltender Steve Racine was lay- ing on his front side in noticeable pain and unable to continue play in a tie game on the road. He was assisted off the ice by sophomore forward Boo Nieves and fresh- man defenseman Nolan de Jong, and did not returnfor the remain- der of the game. His early exit prompted the regular-season debut of Nagel- voort, the freshman, who hadn't seen ice time since coming in halfway through an exhibition game against Waterloo (Ont.). He made 15 saves in 15 minutes with- out allowing a goal en route to a 1-1 tie for No. 4 Michigan (3-0-1). Nagelvoort made his first career start the following night with Racine - who recorded a career-high 42 saves against Rochester Institute of Technolo- gylastweekend - sidelined again by what was described as a lower body injury. After a solid first period, Nagelvoort surrendered a pair of scores on just 12 shots in the sec- ond. The second goal bounced in off his own skate. Still, in his impromptu debut weekend, Nagelvoort recorded his first career win and kept Michigan out of the loss column two nights in a row. "For his first college hockey experience to have to come in and then face a penalty shot, it's pret- ty good," said Michigan coach Red Berenson. "And plus killing a penalty, I thought he did really well." 2. Michigan can survive the OT. After a 7-4 victory over RIT last Saturday in which the Tigers erased a 4-0 deficit in a single period, Bennett said that he was unsure if last year's team would've secured the victory. But twice this weekend, the Wolverines were forced to play in front of a reputably hostile sellout crowd at the Whittemore Center Arena in Durham, N.H. Twice, they came away unscathed. Without their starting goalie in the net, Michigan and Nagel- voort held off New Hampshire through five minutes of overtime hockey on Friday, tying the Wild- cats 1-1.And the Wolverines came away with a 3-2 overtime-victory on Saturday when freshman for- ward Tyler Motte netted a goal 1:37 into the extra frame. "Those were two good games," Berenson said. "We felt (Friday) night we didn't put our best foot forward, and the home team was better. But we survived the tie. In every category, we were outplayed or outworked or out- faceoffed or out-chanced." For a young team looking to build its identity froni the get-go, this weekend's resilient performance could be a defin- ing moment. If nothing else, the Wolverines proved they are con- ditioned enough to survive extra hockey when necessary. 3. Guptill provides both power and flexibility. On Friday, junior forward Alex Guptill moved up to the first line alongside sophomore Andrew Copp and senior Derek DeBlois. The trio contributed to the Wolverines' lone goal, but after- ward Berenson decided Guptill would be better suited on a bigger line with Nieves and junior Phil Di Giuseppe, who had trouble connecting in the first game. It took just 10 minutes on Sat- urday for the new line to connect. Guptill took a pass off the side- boards from Nieves and fired a shot off the inside of the post and in - his first goal of the season. Di Giuseppe picked up an assist on the play. Later in the period, Guptill took a feed from Nieves near the right circle and slid through the New Hampshire defense before netting his second goal of the game over the shoulder of goal- tender Casey DeSmith. 4. The freshmen are ready. On a larger ice surface - one that stretches 15 feet wider than regulation - and an even bigger stage this weekend, Michigan's nine contributing freshmen were as unfazed as they had been in the season opener against Boston College. Freshman forward Tyler Motte played the hero on Satur- day when, less than two minutes into overtime, freshman forward JT Compher found DeBlois who fed Motte for the game-winning goal. Freshman forward Evan Allen - on an all-freshman line with Compher and Motte - near- ly gave the Wolverines a lead before regulation expired, but his rebound chance flew high over the net Nagelvoort, alate commit from the United States Hockey League, saved 22 shots in 24 attempts, allowing just one goal. But Nagelvoort's first win might not have been possible without the efforts of freshman defenseman Michael Downing, who threw his body and stick to block a shot in the first period. Freshmen have scored the game-winning goals in two of Michigan's three wins this sea- son. "They're doing a good job," Berenson said. "We knew they would. Tonight's the first game we put three freshmen on a line. We put Allen on a line with Com- pher and Motte, and I thought they played well." 5. Racine listed as week-to-week. Racine watched practice from stands of Yost Ice Arena on Mon- day. Accordingto Berenson, Racine suffered a groin injury from an odd save on Saturday. Racine is unlikely to practice in pads at all this week, and will miss this weekend's games against Boston University and Massachusetts- Lowell. The injury, though, isn't one that worries Berenson for the longrun. "It's not that serious," Beren- son said. "But for a goalie who has to go down all the time, it's more serious than a regular skater." As it did this weekend, the offense will likely have to com- pensate for the setback. "(Racine's injury) is not a worry, that's for sure," said senior forward Mac Bennett on Friday. "We have four talented goalten- ders, and any one of them can play. Obviously, it's bad to see Steve go down, but Nagelvoort came in, stepped up, made a huge breakaway save right away, and that definitely has to help his con- fidence." 1I Sophomores blossom By NATE SELL DailySports Writer Last year, the Michigan field hockey team had only one senior - one lone member of the class of 2013. This would spell disas- ter for many teams, but Michi- gan coach Marcia Pankratz saw a great opportunity to develop the young talent she had recruited. She took the team's 11 freshmen and threw them into the fire, and they responded by showing that they belong at Michigan. "Last year, it was almost like they didn't even know they were supposed to be nervous," Pan- kratz said. "They held their own and really solidified some ques- tion marks we had." These freshmen were thrown into starting roles from the first game of the season, with many expected to be key contributors on a team that lacked upperclass- men. At any time during the year, it was possible that freshmen made up more than half of the team on the field. This was made possible by the confidence that Pankratz had in the class. "I wasn't nervous," Pankratz said. "That's why we recruited them. They're Michigan women, and they can handle anything outside their comfort zone and adversity." Handling the pressure was not a problem for Lauren Thomas, who is now a sophomore. Thom- as is from Aylesbury, England, where she already had a lot of experience playing against top- notch competition in a country ERIN KIRKLAND/Daily Back Lauren Thomas is one of a bevy of sophomores leading Michigan. where field hockey is much more popular. She admitted she felt comfortable in a Michigan uni- form from day one and has used that sense of belonging to help herself and her team this year. "It's just really nice to take that experience from freshman year and give that to the freshmenthat have been thrown into the fire this year," Thomas said. Sophomore Shannon Scavelli was also expected to be a major contributor early last year but took longer to get comfortable. "Every day was just such a new experience," Scavelli said. "It was a privilege to wear the block 'M' and towards the end of the sea- son, I started to relax a little more and just go out there and play." Now, as sophomores, Thom- as, Scavelli, Caroline Chromik, Jaime Dean and Taryn Mark have a season of experience that most players their age don't. They've started every game for the Wolverines this year, which has proven to be a distinct advan- tage, adding depth to the team. With an experienced sophomore class, Pankratz is often able to use around 20 players per game and rotate often. This allows them to stay fresh and gives them an advantage over teams with fewer players to rotate in. "They play like upperclassmen already," Pankratz said. "So it bodes well." Added Scavelli: "It was great to have that experience last year, but now it's time to really get on the field and your teammates and coaches and myself expect a lot out of one another because we have been through it already." This group of sophomores isn't just making things happen on the field - they have also grown to be a very tight group. After being in the same situation together last year, they grew closer through the adversity of being freshmen playing key roles on the team. "If we were homesick at the same time, we were able to talk to each other, or on the field if we had any problems, you were able to talk it out," Scavelli said. "You didn't feel alone and always had people to lean on." This bond has become stron- ger this year and has started to spill over to the rest of the team. With a young core that already knows what it means to play field hockey in a Michigan uniform and great team chemistry, there is no telling how much this team can accomplish. They have their sights set on a Big Ten Champion- ship, and that isn't too far out of reach. I k