The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Friday, November 1, 2013 - 7 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Friday, November 1, 2013 - 7 Breakdown: Beware big-play Spartan defense By MATT SLOVIN Michigan State pass offense vs. ManagingEditor Michigan pass defense ERIN KIRKLAND/Daily Redshirt junior linebacker Jake Ryan should play expanded minutes Saturday, in what will likely be another physical battle with Michigan State in East Lansing. An in- state rivalry re es this tiewt ihrsae By ZACH HELFAND Daily Sports Editor Michigan coach Brady Hoke was asked this week to compare the Michigan State rivalry to the one with Ohio State. This game, especially in East Lansing, always feels like a playground fight. This time, when the No. 23 Michigan football team meets No. 24 Michigan State on Sat- urday, the field will be muddy, the forecasts say. Windy again. Last time the game was in East Lansing, trash. swirled around Spartan Stadium as if this game wasn't being held in a stadium at all, but in a dirty lot anywhere in the state, in Detroit or Michigan Farmington Michign Hills or Grand Rapids, and State two teams met Matchup here to fight Michigan 6-1; and settle old MSU 7-1 scores. Hoke didn't 3n atur- take the bait. "I think Where: Spar- they're both tan Stadium important," he TV: said. ABC But this one has gotten more and more so since Mark, Dantonio became Michigan State's coach in 2006. Michigan hates the Buckeyes. But at least it respects them. For this game, the rhetoric has become familiar. "We labeled them as a little brother," said fifth-year senior running back Fitzgerald Tous- saint on Tuesday. "And, you know the little brother always want to prove themselves and try to beat up the big brother one day. I think they really take offense to that." This game, always, is brutish and ugly, and it's that brutish ugliness that makes it beautiful. This year, the stakes are higher. The game will be as close to a divisional championship game as it gets at the start of Novem- ber. Michigan is 2-1 in the con- ference, with a tough month ahead. Michigan State is 4-0 with few tests remaining. For Michigan, a win means it con- trols its own Legends Division destiny. A loss all but hands the Spartans the division. For Michigan State (4-0 Big Ten, 7-1 overall), not much has changed. Offensively, Michigan State relies heavily on the ground game. Its passing game has been inconsistent. Michigan's defense has been vulnerable to the big play, but the Spartans hardly generate any. They rank second- to-last nationally in plays of 40 yards or more. Defensively, the Spartans are dominant. Its defense is ranked first nationally in total defense and rushing defense. It is ranked third in passing defense and- scoring defense. On both sides of the ball, the strategy is no secret: win the running game. "There's not a lot of gim- micks," said Michigan defen- sive coordinator Greg Mattison. "And I love that." When opposing teams have had success against the Spar- tans, it has been through the air. Cornerback Darqueze Dennard is one of the conference's best, but so is Michigan's fifth-year receiver Jeremy Gallon. Last time Gallon played, he set the Big Ten record with 369 receiv- ing yards. The Spartans' cornerbacks are especially physical, but Michigan (2-1, 6-1) is well-suited for that. The 5-foot-8 Gallon is Needing a win against a bitter rival on the road to keep control of its Big Ten title hopes isn't exactly an ideal position for the Michigan football team. But that's where the Wolverines stand entering Satur- day's showdown with Michigan State. The Spartans clearly have the advantage on defense, while the Michigan offense is by far the bet- ter of the two. So where will this game be won or lost? Probably in the trenches. Michigan pass offense vs. Michi- gan State pass defense Chances are, the record-setting offensive display against Indiana two weeks ago willifeel like a thing ofthe past once the Hoosiers'slop- py pass coverage is replaced bythe Spartan secondary, led by Dar- queze Dennard. Michigan coach Brady Hoke called Dennard, who has a pair of interceptions this season, a "high-round pick," and redshirt junior quarterback Devin Gardner will need to take extra. care when throwing in his direc- tion. Gardner surely won't be throw- ing for 503 yards this week as he did against Indiana.He would be extremely fortunate to escape the Big Ten-leading Michigan State defense without a turnover. Sophomore tight end A.J. Wil- liams's one-game suspension shouldn't cause too much damage to Michigan's aerial attack. Sopho- more Devin Funchess will still get his reps on the outside, and fifth- year senior wide receiver Jeremy Gallon is coming off the best sin- gle-game receiving performance in the history of the Big Ten. But again, this isn't the Hoo- siers, and the Wolverines won't move the ball with anywhere near as much ease. Edge: Michigan State Michigan rush offense vs. Michi- gan State rush defense This is where the Spartans are at their best. Teams simply do not run the football on them. They haven't allowed a 100-yard rusher all season. And fifth-year senior running back Fitzgerald Tous- saint probably didn't do himself any favors by referring to Michi- gan State as "little brother" earlier this week. Freshman guard Kyle Bosch will be making his first-ever start Saturday as Hoke continues to try to piece together the best offen- sive line possible. He may have finally found the right combina- tion, but against the Spartans, it could easily be moot. Expect almost all of the carries to go to Toussaint as the coaching stafftries to prevent any turnovers from Derrick Green, who might be prone to them in his first battle for the Paul Bunyan Trophy. Edge: Michigan State Defensive coordinator Greg Mattison has said there are still passes that Michigan defensive backs should be picking off but have not. With that said, the sec- ondary has shown it can force turnovers in key spots, with fifth- year senior safety Thomas Gordon sealing the Indiana game with two late picks. But Connor Cook, the start- ing Spartan quarterback, doesn't make many mistakes. He has thrown just two interceptions, compared to 12 touchdowns, this season in eventually winning the top spot on the depth chart. Last week, he completed 15 of his 16 pass attempts, though it was against lowly Illinois. Edge: Michigan Michigan State rush offense vs. Michigan rush defense Most of Michigan's efforts will be focused on stopping the run, and rightfully so. Spartan tailback Jeremy Langford has nine rushing touchdowns this season and has racked up 655 yards. The Michigan State offensive line is much improved from the early weeks when the Spartans failed to move the ball with any consistency. Michigan State coach Mark Dantonio will run the foot- ball early and often, trying to wear down the Wolverines' defense. The Spartan offense may not have many explosive playmakers, but it has shown it can grind teams down, and Michigan is in trouble if that happens Saturday. Edge: Michigan State Special teams Mike Sadler is almost enough to singlehandedly give this category to the Spartans. Not only is he an outstanding punter, but earlier this season against Iowa, he car- ried the ball for 25 yards on a fake. Meanwhile, the Wolverines have had problems punting the ball. Michigan State relies on fresh- man Michael Geiger to handle its kicking duties, and he's 6-for-7 on the year. Edge: Michigan State Intangibles The Spartans can sense that they are on the verge of a berth in the Big Ten title game, with the schedule shaping up favorably the rest of the way. With 27 players back from the Michigan team that was beat up in East Lansing in 2011, the Wol- verines should be prepared for the physical game that lies ahead. That means no excuses if they are again bullied at Spartan Stadium. Edge: Michigan Prediction: Michigan State 20, Michigan10 Fifth-year senior runningback Fitzgerald Toussaint averages 3.7 yards per rush. often pressed, with little suc- cess. Sophomore Devin Funch- ess is a converted tight end, where he grew accustomed to bigger defenders. Redshirt junior quarterback Devin Gard- ner has flourished since Funch- ess moved to receiver, but he is also turnover-prone, and the Spartans secondary has returned four interceptions for touchdowns this year. But the game is usually decid- ed on the ground, and team that has won the rushing battle has won the game in 40 of the past 43 meetings. Michigan State defensive coordinator Pat Nar- duzzi has terrorized Michigan in the past with A-gap blitzes to generate pressure up the middle. The Wolverines enter Saturday with major question marks on the interior of the offensive line, where they have yet to find a successful combination of block- ers. Fifth-year senior running back Fitzgerald Toussaint aver- ages just 3.7 yards per carry this year. Michigan State's defense averages just two. Michigan's offense is weakest where Michi- gan State is best. Like most things in this rivalry, the Wolverines take Michigan State's physical supremacy personally. Michi- gan won in 2012, but it was a defensive struggle. In 2011, the Spartans dominated the line of scrimmage. They pulled Denard Robinson's facemask after the whistle. Fifth-year senior left tackle Taylor Lewan said it felt like Michigan was bullied. "If somebody came up to you and hit you right in the face, would you take it personally?" he said. "Yeah, I take it person- ally." His fellow fifth-year senior right tackle, Michael Schofield, said the seniors talk about that game constantly. "We don't want to forget that," he said. Schofield said the veterans have tried to prepare the fresh- men for the intensity of the rivalry. But Hoke said it's impos- sible to understand the game until you play in it. But, at the very least, even the young players know what's at stake. When Mattison stepped to the podium for his weekly press conference Tuesday, he didn't waste words on what everyone already knew. "Michigan State week," he said. "Here we go." With lots of film, and a Final Four run, a folk hero is born By NEAL ROTHSCHILD Daily Sports Editor ROSEMONT, Ill. - They can't all be Mitch Mcdary. There are the guys that have been recruited since they were underclassmen in high school, with others not being noticed until senior year, and in Spike Albrecht's case, not until senior year was almost over. It wasn't until the spring recruiting period of his senior year that Albrecht was recog- nized, pursued and finally signed by Michigan. His alternative plans were to play in the mountains of North Carolina for Appalachian State. Rather than the National Championship, he would have been playing to finish above .500 in the Southern Conference. "It was probably the shortest time period of an evaluation with the most in-depth evaluation," said Michigan coach John Beilein at Big Ten Media Day about the time from when he noticed Albrecht, to when Albrecht com- mitted in early April 2012. The move on the 5-foot-11 point guard from Crown Point, Ind. may very well have been spurredby the possibility of Trey Burke leaving for the NBA after his freshman year. Beilein asked for five high- schooltapes ofAlbrecht's games at Crown Point High School, as well as three or four prep-school tapes from Northfield Mount Hermon in Massachusetts. He then had his staff edit the tapes into 300 to 400 cuts of every possession that Albrecht had the ball. In the heart of the Big Ten sea- son as Michigan worked its way toward its first conference cham- pionship since 1986, Beilein would watch Albrecht's edits while trav- eling. He'd watch those same cuts over and over again. "I see him score 30 points in a high-school game and then 30 more the next game," Beilein said. "But then I'd see him not even shoot it in prep school, then become the MVP." Beilein was referring to Beilein has often likened to an "altar boy" wasn't a tough deci- sion. "This one, it wasn't as hard as you think for me," Beilein said. "Because I knew what I was look- ing for. A kid that embraced aca- demics, that wanted to be part of a Big Ten team and also was not going to be going pro. He had no illusions of leaving to go pro early." Beilein's success in recruiting Albrecht was no aberration. The blueprint for pulling in the unher- alded recruit and turninghim into a glory boy had been long estab- lished. Beilein reeled in just one top-100 player in his time at West Virginia, and converted lightly recruited nobodies like Kevin Pittsnogle and Joe Alexander into household names. Alexander, who became the eighth overall pick in the 2008 NBA Draft, averaged just two points a game in prep school, according to Beilein. Albrecht's ceiling likely won't reach shouting distance of the NBA, but there's plenty else going his way. "He just wanted to come in and be a great teammate on this team, no matter what his role was," Beilein said. "It worked out pretty good for him." Beilein expected Albrecht to come in and play five to 10 minutes a game, not to take on folk-hero status after a 17-point outburst against Louisville in the National Championship. Albrecht nailed 3-pointer after 3-pointer, crafted nifty drives to the basket and kept the Wolverines competitive while Burke sat on the bench in foul trouble in the first half. "There was a moment in the Louisville game where he was on his run. One of our walk-ons who guarded him every day, Eso Akunne, was sitting there. And he couldn't gather himself, what he was watching," Beilein said as he clutched his face, mimick- ing the former Wolverine guard, turning his head to the side. "He was just shaking his head saying, 'I can't believe what I am seeing right now.' Those are the great moments in coaching." Sophomore guard Spike Albrecht wasn't recruited by Michigan until the 11th hour. Albrecht winning the NEPSAC us with what we're looking for," Class AAA MVP in 2012, a top Beilein said. prep-school tournament where And so Albrecht was offered a Northfield Mount Hermon beat scholarship to play point guard at McGary's Brewster Academy. Michigan. Even with the limited "I just said, he's not gonna pass amount of scholarships available, the eye test, but this kid can help gambling on the plucky kid that