The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Wednesday, October 30, 2013 - 7A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Wednesday, October 30, 2013 - 7A Hoke tries to crack Spartan defense Redshirtjunior midfielder Lauren Hauge tore her anterior cruciate ligament, then her medial collateral ligament, then her ACL again, hefore her retarn thin season. Lauren iHauge: Staying made hrstronger, By LIZ VUKELICH Daily SportsEditor Monday, Michigan football coach Brady Hoke - who had spent the earlier part of his press conference admiring the Michi- gan State defense - was asked, if given the opportunity, would he switch the Wolverines' defense with that of the Spartans? Hoke looked incredulously at the reporter. "No, no," he said. "I love these kids." Few coaches would prob- ably want to swap their team for another. But for as frequently as he used the word "consistency" when describing how the defense would ideally perform, there have to be times where the defensive- minded Hoke wouldn't mind if the Michigan defense took a page out of the Spartans' book. Michigan State boasts argu- ably the top defense in the nation, ranking in the top five for all major defensive categories with nine upperclassmen starting. "They've done a nice job," Hoke said. "Probably five or six pro play- ers on that defense that they do a nice job with." And how many NFL-caliber players do the Wolverines have on their defense? "Less than five or six," Hoke said. Come Saturday, Michigan will be up against that staunch Spar- tans defense, and all eyes will-be on how the matchup between that defense and the Wolverines' elec- tric offense plays out. For as many big offensive plays the Wolverines make, there are an equal number of big mistakes in execution. "Turnovers" and "ball securi- ty" have once again become buzz- words associated with the key to beating the Spartans' defense. Offensive coordinator Al Borges talked Tuesday about how fre- quently and effectively Michigan State capitalizes on turnovers, saying that if Spartans are able to force redshirt junior quarterback Devin Gardner into makinga mis- take, it could easily turn "a bad play (into) a disaster." "You're goingto have a certain number of plays during the course of a game that are a little ugly," Borges said. "As much as you'd like to think that everything's going to turn out exactly as you planned, that's just not the real world of football." The Spartans allow just 3.55 rushing yards per attempt - the second-lowest number in the nation. Michigan has spent most of this season tinkering with its offensive line to try and maxi- mize the ground game even more. Fifth-year senior running back Fitzgerald Toussaint guaranteed that the interior line would be ready to show up on Saturday to help him run the ball. Freshman guard Kyle Bosch got into a skir- mish with junior linebacker Jake Ryan on Sunday, so Toussaint and the coaches know the line is pre- pared to be aggressive enough to counter Michigan State. Scuffles during practice aside, the rest of the Wolverines are doing as much as they can to pre- pare for the weekend. Fifth-year senior left tackle Taylor Lewan said he has already watched 12 hours of film on the Spartans' defense, defensive end Shilique Calhoun in particular. Fifth-year senior wide receiver Jeremy Gallon said the receivers have an increased emphasis on blocking this week to try and cre- ate even more opportunities for Toussaint. Hoke said he's liked the focus from practice so far thisweek, and that the other major key to crack- ing Michigan State will be the coaching staff making the right play calls. "We'll have a planthat will give our guys the best chance to win," he said. BySIMON KAUFMAN Daily Sports Writer 0 n Oct. 6, the Hauge family went out to dinner to celebrate a family birthday when Lori Hauge took out her phone to record a video of the family - 20 in all. It wasn't to capture the waiter bringing out a special birthday dessert with a candle in it. It was a congratulatory video for her daughter, Lauren, a redshirt junior on Michigan's field hockey team. Lauren had just scored her firstcollegiategoalbyknockingin a rebound late in a game against Ball State. 900 miles away back honie in Tulsa, Okla. her fam- ily had been following the game online. Hauge made her college debut earlier this year in the Wolver- ines' first regular-season game against Massachusetts. Hauge won't remember the details of either game though - she'll remember that, for the first time in her college career, she got to be out on the field. Playing for the first time and scoring her first college goal four years after she graduated from high school wasn't Hauge's plan, but injuries didn't adhere to her schedule. Hauge made a hobby of col- lectingvarsity letters on the fields and A's in the classroom in high school. The four-year honor-roll student earned 12 total varsity letters in soccer, field hockey and track and field. For a while, she thought that soccer would be the sport she would pursue in college. The three-sport athlete had the opportunity to stay close to home in Tulsa, where she could have played soccer at Tulsa or Okla- homa. She would have been able to go to school where she grew up, close to friends and family. "As my senior year rolled around, I was like, I kind of want to get away, and see the world and do all that," Hauge said. And with that see-the-world mindset, she decided to forgo soc- cer - a sport she'd played since she could walk - and instead pursue field hockey, which she'd only played during high school. She took an official visit to Michi- gan in January 2010, and being on campusewas a "game changer" for her. She watched the men's bas- ketball team take on Indiana, met former Michigan fpotball coach Lloyd Carr and went to a field hockey morning workout. A basketball win over Indi- ana and a.handshake with Carr were enough to convince Hauge that Michigan was the place for her. She eventually left home and headed to Ann Arbor. Hauge elected to redshirt her freshman year in order to develop as a player. "Lauren's very competitive," said Bob Hauge, Lauren's dad. "So I think the mindset of her redshirting her first year there was that if (Michigan coach) Marcia Pankrat could teach her the skills that she would need to play at that level, what Lauren (already) had engrained in her was the competitive spirit or that drive.... I think Lauren wanted to get her skills up to a place where she would beoa contributing mem- ber of the team." She didn't know at the time, though, that she'd be on the side- line for another two years after that because of injuries. The summer before her red- shirt freshman year, Hauge got hurt during a summer scrimmage at a field hockey camp she was at in Michigan. A player fell on her knee the wrong way, causing it to swell up so muchthat thetraining staff couldn't even tell the extent of her injury. Hauge didn't know it at the time, but she had torn her anterior cruciate ligament. "I actually didn't think it was torn," Hauge said. "I went up north with one of my teammates that weekend, and I kayaked and talked about water skiing and then I was like, 'You know, my knee hurts. I probably shouldn't do that.' Then the next week, I went to the doctor and found out I had torn my ACL." Just like that, her season ended before it even began. She had to turn her attention from refocus- ing on field hockey to rehabbing her knee. She went back home to Tulsa for surgery, where doctors completely immobilized her knee, forcing her to use crutches. "It was really hard," Hauge said. "Because you redshirt and you make that decision that you're going to develop as a player, and I felt like I made some really great strides my freshman year. So to have (the injury) happen in the summer before I even got a chance to show what Ican do was really hard." Despite the setback, Hauge didn't give in. She got up, worked hard during her rehab as she was forced to learn to walk again, pre- pared for her junior season and was back practicing just four and a half months later. *** But injuries would hinder her progress again. During the pre- season of her junior year, she tore her medial collateral ligament. She continued to play, though, because an MCL injury heals by itself over time. But it weakened her recently recovered knee, and while warming up for a game at Bucknell, Hauge felt the same knee pop. Another torn ACL. Another season on the sideline. "It was just complete disbelief, and I had second guesses about what my body could do which is scary," Hauge said. "Because when sports is your life and sports is what you do, you almost feel like your body is betraying you, and when you can't do the thing that you love the most, it's really scary. The second time (the inju- ry) happened, it felt completely out of my control." Hauge chose field hockey over soccer. She chose Michigan over staying close to home. But now, for the third year in a row, she could only watch. What if she had stayed in Oklahoma? What if she had chosen soccer? "I feel like everybody sort of wonders, and it's sort of the whole 'the grass is greener,' "H Hauge said. "When you're in the dark- ness of your rehab, you might think about ita little bit.... I made the right choice because even going through all of this has made me a better person. Is it unfortu- nate, and would it have happened if I was playing a different sport? I don't know. I think it made me stronger at the end of the day." It did make her stronger. The injury made her a better team- mate and abetter person. Unable to playand stuck on the sideline for the third consecutive year, Hauge did what she knew best: recovered and supported her teammates. During her inju- ries, she traveled with the team to all their games except for one that directly followed her surgery. She was also designated as the unof- ficial warm-up music selector. Pankratz doesn't like her play- ers each plugged into their own worlds on long bus rides. She likes them listeningto music as asteam. Hauge was in charge of providing the bus mixtape for trips to away games - a job that allowed her to feel like a part of the team and that she was contributing. "I think that if you're injured and you can't do your first-best thing, which is being successful yourself," Hauge said, "at least having your best friends (around) and seeing your best friends be successful is great." Recovering from an ACL injury isn't easy - recovering from two of them is an even greater chal- lenge. "To have that devastating inju- ry once is really hard," Pankratz said. "And the ability to be resil- ient, persevere, train like she did and be focused on getting back - she really was remarkable in her rehab, and I admire her fortitude and her strength to be able to do that. To have it happen again and start all over was super tough." After surgery she worked hard to recover again with hopes of playingduringher redshirt junior year - and earlier this season she finally did. More than three and a half years, two ACL injuries and countless hours spent rehabbing later, Hauge made her college debut against Massachusetts. Pankratz entered Hauge as a sub, and it was as if the clouds that had hovered above the field for the game in Orono, Maine had suddenly cleared away. "We have this whole thing that we talk about all the time," Hauge said. "It's representing the block 'M.' So going in against Massa- chusetts was the first time I actu- ally got to represent and wear the block 'M.' I can't even describe the elation. I didn't even feel tired. I was just running all over the place. I wasn't even thinking. I feltso honored, and it was such a long time coming." Since her debut, Hauge has appeared in 11 games this season for Michigan (1-2 Big Ten, 8-6 overall). One of the things she is most excited about now is getting the opportunity to play with her class - the fellow seniors on the team. "I want to make an impact. I want to play the role that I'm meant to play," Hauge said. "I want to put some points on the board. That would be great. I can't wait for the first time my name shows up on the stat sheet as far as goals and assists. I think that's the next big milestone com- ing forward." And on Oct. 6, with her family followingback home, she checked that off her list. Every year the Wolverines win the Big Ten, the team gets cham- piopship rings. Each player can choose something to engrave into the ring..Hauge's freshman year, she and the other members of her class chose "Those who stay" as the words to adorn their Big Ten championship ring. They hoped to finish the saying on their senior rings. After winning the Big Ten again her sophomore year, Hauge chose to engrave "It made me stronger" on her ring. "I put that in there because, even though I wasn't on the field and playing in the games, I felt like I played a role in our success," Hauge said. "I felt like I support- ed everybody else's successes, and even though it's definitely not the way you wanta season to turn out, just being a part of anything like that, when it doesn't go your way, makes you stronger." Hauge was stronger, and so was Michigan.,Her presence on the field and not on the sideline will matter that much more this season, and she won't get tired anytime soon of going out to play. "At the end of the day, you're playing for Michigan, and what you're doing is so much bigger than you," Hauge said. "Because you're on the team - not only are you on the team, you're on the Michigan team. At the end of the day that's just something that'll put fire in your belly no matter what."' She could've chosen a different sport, or given up, but now, with two Big Ten championship rings engraved with "Those who stay" and "It made me stronger," Hauge is working for one more that will read "Will be champions." A call for offense from Michigans 'D' By GREG GARNO "If the shooting lane is blocked, Daily Sports Editor we have to find a passing lane. We've got to get the puck behind Fact: The Michigan hockey the first layer of forwards and get team has scored more than three it to the net. goals once this season - in a 7-4 Freshman defenseman Nolan win over the Rochester Institute De Jong and Bennett stand out of Technology. as the Wolverines' top offensive Fact: The Wolverines' offense defensemen among the six that sits exactly in the middle of the have seen time thus far. nation in total team offense with Bennett, who excels in bring- 2.83 goals per game. ing the puck up the ice, has given Fact: Michigan's defense his team the best chances to hasn't scored a goal this season. score by not only sparking odd- "We know right now that man rushes, but also pushing his goals are at a premium," said own team down the ice faster. Michigan coach Red Berenson. "The good thing about the "We can't afford to give many defense is that it's our job to play goals up because we can't score defense," Bennett said. "But at many goals." the same time, I think if you kind Despite the defense's lack- of be like a fourth forward in the ing role in the production, the zone, that can cause trouble for a fourth-ranked Wolverines still lot of teams." hold a 4-1-1 record. But with De Jong, younger and lankier only five assists, one of which than most of his teammates, uses came this weekend, Michigan his powerful shot for a leg up but will be looking for more produc- has struggled to tally shots con- tion from its blue-line pairings sistently. This weekend against against Michigan Tech. Boston University and UMass- But signs like senior defen- Lowell, . De Jong combined for seman Mac Bennett's pass this just two shots, and most of his weekend show just how impor- attempts never made it to the tant the defense's role on offense goaltender past the traffic. is to the team's success. But don't fault De Jong for Just above the left circle in the lack of offense. Along with Friday's game against Boston freshmen teammates Michael University, Bennett stood han- Downing and Kevin Lohan, the dling the puck amid a flurry of focus has been on playing sound traffic in the middle of the ice. defense, the primary role they In a matter of seconds, Bennett were brought in to perform. looked to his left, drawing the "I'm still getting a feel for get- defense like a quarterback draws ting pucks at the net," De Jong a linebacker, and slipped a pass said. "I think I'm being put in a between traffic to his right. He good position right now to help found freshman forward Tyler produce offense, but I think Motte standing alone with an there's a lot of guys who can do open net, and he got the credit that." for a goal that Bennett devel- Part of the slow start is due oped. in part to the forwards up front, For the Wolverines, these who asa collective group need to plays can be just as important as find the defense more. But for an a goal but won't show up on the offense that hasn't been able to scoreboard. Those plays have find the back of the net without also been few and far between. a bit of luck, any type of produc- "We've got to take more pride tion is welcome. and be smarter about what we're If the offense can increase doing with the puck," said Michi- its scoring this weekend, the gan assistant coach Billy Powers. defense should likely fall in line. I I