The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, October 31, 2013 - 8A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Thursday, October 31, 2013 - 8A 5 Things We Learned FOOTBALL Bosch to be tested By SIMON KAUFMAN After nailing a 3-pointer with Daily Sports Writer 7:13 left in the first half for the first points of his college career, 1. Nik Stauskas still shoots bet- he came back down the floor and ter than he dances. knocked down a mid-range jump- er. Then he did his best Burke After the Michigan players are impression - stealing the ball at announced pregame, they circle half court and finishing a layup at up and get pumped. On Tuesday the other end. night before the game against ."I sat at home a couple of times Concordia, sophomore guard Nik and watched him just play guys at Stauskas had the honor of being half court," Walton said. the rah-rah guy in the middle Perhaps Burke's style has influ- of all of them. He shared some enced him more than he knows. inspiring words and then went In a span of 39 seconds, the for- into his bestlean-back-brush-the- mer four-star recruit scored dirt-off-the-shoulders dance. In seven points and introduced him- the middle of the circle, he looked self to a team eager to meet a new unpracticed and unconfident. On pointguard. the court though, he looked much the opposite. 3. The point-guard position is Stauskas scored the Wolver- still up in the air. ines' first points of the season after sinking two shots from the If you were looking for the tree-throw line a minute into answer as to who would be this' the game, He went 2-for-3 from team's starting point guard, behind the are and had 12 first- keep looking. Sophomore Spike half points before Concordia Albrecht started, but Walton scored 10, The sophomore fin- replaced him less than four min- ished with 23 points on the night. utes into the game and the two Stauskas said he didn't know traded off time all night. Walton he would be the man in the mid- logged 24 minutes compared die of the circle until just seconds to Albrecht's 21 minutes. And before and admitted his pregame Beilein is leaving his options performance was "weak," But if open: he didn't rule out sopho- he puts the same amount of work more guard Caris LeVert from into his pregame dance that he getting minutes at point guard, has into his shooting, he'll be one either, of the best dual-threat guards in "If we can put three point the country, guards out there at one time, it would be really good," Beilein 2. Too early to compare Trey said. "I think all our guys have a Burke and Derek Walton Jr.? point-guard mentality. We give. Maybe not, them reps so that they can work," Expect Albrecht to get the At Michigan Media Day last starts at the beginning of the sea- week, freshman guard Derrick son while Walton becomes more Walton talked about not trying comfortable in the system. But to replace Trey Burke. He said he Albrecht's 17-point performance wants to be true to himself and in the championship game last play his own game. He might not season won't be enough to lock be trying to replace Michigan's him in as Michigan's point guard last point guard, but luckily for all season. He'll need to prove he Walton, his game looks a lot like can consistently generate offense Burke's. on the court; otherwise he'll Sophomore guard Carls LeVert scored 16 points in 21 minutes"on Tasday, quickly find himself coming off the bench for Walton. 4, Carla LeVert-icle is not a freshman anymore. Add six months since April and four letters to sophomore guard Caris LeVert's last name and you have the most improved player on Michigan's team, With time expiring at the end of the first half, he ran up on a fast break, caught a pass from Staus- kas and finished with a loud dunk - and like that, Levert turned legit. LeVert, who averaged 2.3 points per game in 10.8 minutes last season, proved to last year's critics that he knew he had more potential. He went a perfect 6-for-6 from within the arc, putting up 16 points in 21 minutes. Most impressive though, he helped cre- ate offense with his 10 assists. Michigan coach John Beilein calls LeVert his defensive quar- terback, and the guard did help in the backcourt with three steals. His ability to be a threat on both ends of the court will make it hard for Beilein to limit his minutes, 5. It's too early to start thinking Arlington,. Yes, Michigan dominated in its first showing, but don't book your flight to Arlington, Texas, for the Final Four any time soon. The Wolverines weren't playing a low-level Division-I team - they were up against an NAIA team. Concordia's roster features just three players taller than 6-foot-6 - four of Michigan's starting five were that height or taller. It's easy to get caught up in the lopsided score and highlight-reel dunks that Michigan had, espe- ciallyafteramagicalrunlastyear. But this exhibition game was just that, an exhibition, and one against much weaker talent. This team has the talent to go deep in the tournament again this year, but it still has much to prove over the next five months. By MATT SLOVIN ManagingEditor If Saturday's game at Michi- gan State will indeed be the Michigan football team's most physical of the season, it's only fitting that Kyle Bosch be on the offensive line for it. "You never. have to worry about him likingcontact and him being aggressive," said Greg Pur- nell, Bosch's former high-school coach at Wheaton (Ill.) St. Fran- cis, ina phone interview with the Daily on Wednesday. "The fact that he's been aggressive all his life I'm sure has helped." Earlier this week in practice, redshirt junior linebacker Jake Ryan learned just how strong the freshman's feisty side is. Bosch found himself in a scuffle with Ryan, one of the leaders of the defense, and fifth-year senior left tackle Taylor Lewan needed to intervene. "It was just practice," Ryan said Monday when asked about the incident. "Bosch is a great player. He stepped up the last game for us, It was practice. We got into it. It's over We're friends again." The fact that Bosch took it upon himself to get into it with one of the team captains isn't surprising to Purnell in the least. He recalls a practice dur- ing Bosch's junior year when he ended up in a similar scuffle - "It wasn't a fight, but it could've led to that," Purnell recalled. What is a surprise to Purnell is that Bosch is listed as Michigan's starter at guard entering Satur- day's battle for the Paul Bunyan Trophy. Perhaps that says more about the Wolverines' lack of depth at the offensive line positions than Bosch's first-year progress, but coach Brady Hoke certainly has enough trust in the 6-foot-5, 302- pound Bosch to insert him into a very hostile environment in East Lansing. "I like Bosch," Hoke said in his Wednesday press conference. "You grow up sometime. But yeah, it'll be intense. But I know one thing about Bosch: He's a pretty tough guy." That toughness showed up in Bosch's first career game, against Indiana, when he was apart of an improved Wolverines offensive line. Needless to say, facing the Spartan defense is another mat- ter entirely, but it's a task Hoke thinks the line will be ready for. But redshirt freshman Erik Magnuson will also be lining up at guard again, and that youth could' be a liability in a rivalry game, especially one on the road. "I think with (Bosch and Mag- nuson), the good thing is, there's nine other guys out there with them," Hoke said. "Believe me, there's other guys who will be out there for the first time with more significant roles." Purnell compared Bosch play- ing against Michigan State this weekend to games he played against rival Lombard (Il.) Montini Catholic in high school, Montini Catholic has won four consecutive state titles and beat Bosch's St. Francis team each year he was there, but that doesn't mean Bosch didn't show up in those games. "He played very well in those games," Purnell recalled. "Kyle feels very badly we never beat them during his tenure." But Bosch has a chance Satur- day to beat a rival his first time playing in the game. That's an opportunity he won't take light- ly. "He's mean," Lewan, the peacekeeper, said Monday: "He might not know every call. But I know, when I was on the field my freshman year, I was going 100 percent trying to take somebody out every single play. ... Bosch has that same thing about him. I'm excited about him." Racine returns to practice; freshman line jells nicely 0z PAUL SHERMAN/Daily Sophomore goaltender Steve Racine has missed three games with a groin injury. last season. "We're all the same age, and we've all been together for a few years," Allen said. "Me and Tyler have been together before that, so I think we have a lot in com- mon on the ice and off the ice." The NTDP plays across the country against top Division I opponents every season, making the program a recruiting hotbed for college coaches. Before the season, Berenson and his assis- tants hoped the trio could fill the production void left by for- mer Wolverines Jacob Trouba and Jon Merrill. They have done so thus far, and the reassurance these freshmen have provided has made coaching worthwhile for Berenson. "Part of the reason I'm still coaching is I look forward to seeing the players we've recruit- ed finally get here and see what, they can do on the ice," Berenson said. "These players have lived up to their early season expecta- tions." PEARSON RETURNS TO YOST: Michigan Tech coach Mel Pearson, a former Michigan assistant under Berenson for 23 years, will make his first trip back to Ann Arbor this weekend after taking a position as head coach of the Huskies after the 2010-11 season. In those two years, Pearson has led Michigan Tech to its second-best two-season stretch in program history with 29 total wins. Perhaps none of those wins were more meaningful than shutting out Michigan in the 2011 Great Lakes Invitational, when the Huskies went on to win their first GLI title since 1981. For Berenson and Pearson, it will be a battle between teacher and student. For the Wolverine seniors, it will be a shot to beat the coach that recruited some of them to Michigan. There will be mixed emotions on both benches come Friday night. "He was a really, really good coach," said senior captain Mac Bennett. "He was someone I looked forward to practicing with. It's kind of strange (seeing him onthe otherbench),because he was here when I got here." * I I-