8A -Wednesday, November 6, 2013 The Michigan Daily.- michigandaily.cam 01 To change results, Hoke changes little By ZACH HELFAND Daily Sports Editor The Michigan football team's leadership council meets every Sunday, but the most recent meeting felt different, said fifth- year senior wide receiver Jere- my Gallon. Because it was a loss, he explained. And they knew "we need to up the ante." These upperclassmen have dealt with tough losses before, but this most recent one, to Michigan State on Saturday, may have been the toughest during Michigan coach Brady Hoke's three seasons here. The 1 29-6 loss was the most lopsided in that span besides the defeat to Alabama. The Spartans didn't just beat the Wolverines, they beat them up. Michigan State's defense abused weak protection and battered redshirt junior quar- terback Devin Gardner for seven sacks. Seeing his friend hit so many times, Gallon said on Tuesday, "it broke my little heart." So what has changed this week? Not much, said-numerous players and coaches. That's by design, and for Hoke, it's been successful - except for losses to Ohio State and South Carolina last season, Michigan has never dropped two in a row under Hoke. And even the consecutive defeats last year were hardly back to back - they were sepa- rated by more than a month. The secret is, there is no secret. Hoke said he doesn't recall what he did after losses to prevent another from occur- ring. "I wish I could remember," Hoke said. "It's probably being consistent in what we do." Hoke has shown emotion on the field but remains even- keeled off. He has rarely, if ever, raised his voice in a press con- ference. After the loss Saturday, he was in control. That, offen- sive coordinator Al Borges said, makes it easier for the team to bounce back. "The team will react a lot the way the head coach reacts," Borges said. "The head coach sets the tone. The key to not los- ing a lot of games, in my opinion, or not going into the tank, is not overreacting. Reacting, don't get PATRICK BARRON/Daily Fifth-year senior left tackle Taylor Lewan's plays on Saturday are under review by the BigTen, according to an ESPN report. Dantonjo accepts Lewan's apology, ITRKA MULENGRAF/Uaily Michigan coach Brady Hoke (left) said he tries to stay consistent, meaning he doesn't alter his planning for the week after a loss. me wrong, that game was not played well and there has to be a reaction, no ifs, ands or buts. But not overreacting so much that you do something that pulls the team right in the tank. "And he's as good as anybody I've ever seen about making sure mistakes are fixed but not dwelling on it so much that the next opponent will beat you, too." Still, Michigan will be tested Saturday ' against Nebraska. Besides South Carolina, the Cornhuskers will be the tough- est team it has faced following a loss, from a list that compris- es Purdue, Illinois, Air Force, Purdue (again), Minnesota and Indiana. Borges admitted that in a lot of ways, Saturday's game was frustrating. The failure to pro- tect Gardner and to establish a run game felt maddening at times. "Several cuss words came out of my mouth during that game," he said. He added that he has been on teams when the coach has overreacted, and the team has tanked. The key is to make the necessary changes but let go of the frustration. "Do you want your leader to freak out?" Borges said. "Do you want George Patton to go crazy in the middle of a battle and get everyone killed? No. He had a bad temper, and Brady does, too. So do I. But if cooler heads prevail at the end of the day - you can have your explosions - but at the end of the day when everything settles, if your leader shows a leadership composure, then generally they'll recover." Anyway, Borges said, he cursed several times during the Indiana game two weeks ago, too. Michigan broke several offensive records that day. After Saturday, players said they couldn't notice a difference in Hoke. There was no extra running, no added tension, no emotion out of the ordinary. Junior defensive ends Frank Clark and Brennen Beyer said they would prefer a younger teammate have a level head than be over-eager to avenge a loss they can't change. The key to that, Gallon said, is to provide an example. "We feed off of each other," Gallon said. "If I see (fifth-year senior left tackle Taylor Lewan) and Devin smiling and ready, I'm ready." And at the first practice, after Michigan's toughest loss in years, what did Gallon see? "Smiles," he said. "I didn't see nobody hanging their head feel- ing sorry for themselves." By MATT SLOVIN Hoke said in his Monday press ManagingEditor conference. "Him and I have had a discussion regarding that. It's On the Big Ten coaches tele- not who we are." conference Tuesday, Michigan When asked if he believes State football coach Mark Dan- Lewan should be suspended like tonio said he accepts Michigan Gholston was in 20t1, Dantonio fifth-year senior offensive tackle said he'll leave that decision up Taylor Lewan's apology forsev- to the powers that be. He added eral on-field incidents Sunday. that he would've chosen not to "Football is football, and it's a suspend Gholston, but the Big Ten tough game," intervened. Dantonio said NOTEBOOK "Some people may refute that, on the call. "I especially ifthey wear blue," Dan- accept people's apologies. I don't tonio said on the call. "But they hold things against people. So see how we feel now on the other yeah, I accept his apology, no side of the bench." problem." According to an ESPN report Dantonio did what Lewan Monday, the conference is review- and Michigan coach Brady Hoke ing the Lewan incident. wouldn't do earlier in the week - BORGES DEFENDS GAME compare the Lewan play, a twist PLAN: Offensive coordinator Al of the helmet of Spartan defen- Borges faced questions Tuesday sive end Isaiah Lewis, to the play about whether, in retrospect, he of then-Michigan State defensive would make changes to Michi- end William Gholston in the 2011 gan's game plan for Michigan game in East Lansing. State. Similarly, Gholston yanked the The Borges-led offense rushed facemask of former quarterback for negative 48 yards Saturday, Denard Robinson. He also deliv- the worst ground performance in ered a punch to Lewan, for which program history. Redshirt junior Gholston was suspended one quarterback Devin Gardner was game by the Big Ten. sacked seven times. Hoke said Monday that, had Borges said he "won't answer" he felt Lewan deserved to be a question about what he would suspended for his role, he would do if given the opportunity to have already punished him. The play the game over again, calling co-captain has chatted with Hoke it "loaded." He did add, however, since the game about the play. that "obviously, we thought we "My assessment is ,that's not were doing what was best." what we want to portray or be," Borges also said that the plan was to throw the ball on first down more than he had all sea- son in order to set up the run. The Spartan defense is one of the best in the country at stopping the run, and Michigan has struggled to get its rushing game going this season. "Our approach was not to throw the ball up and down the field," Borges said. "The idea was to pick your shots, but pick them at times that were less predictable passing downs." FLASH FORWARD: Also on Tuesday, Borges recalled a time while in the same position at Auburn that he started three true freshmen on the offensive line and earned a huge road win at Florida. . Four years later, the Tigers were national champions. Borges used this example to show that two years could make all of the difference for his inex- perienced offensive line. "You're looking at a completely different team (after two sea- sons)," Borges said. Borges added that one reason the offensive line is one of the easier positions to develop is that so much growth can come from learning and chemistry there. He expressed his dislike for having to shuffle players in and out of the starting lineup so often this sea- son but said it's a necessary evil in order to find the right group of five. 0 0 Despite losses, Pearson enjoys return toYost By ALEJANDRO ZUNIGA Daily Sports Editor Mel Pearson's return to Ann Arbor last weekend was no happy homecoming. After a 23-year stint as an assis- tant coach of the Michigan hockey team, Pearson accepted the head coaching position with Michigan Tech in 201. Last weekend, the Wolverines welcomed the Huskies (1-6-1) to Yost Ice Arena - the first time in almost three decades that the two teams met on the home ice of either school. Pearson's team put up quite a fight, but both games of the two- game series ended with close Michigan victories. The Wolver- ines (6-1-1) triumphed on Friday in overtime, 3-2, and staved off a comeback the following night to win 2-1. "We've had a real tough sched- ule, and I put our team in a tough spot," Pearson said after Satur- day's game. "I did that for a rea- son. We want to play good teams in good buildings.... It can be frus- trating." It doesn't get much more dif- ficult than facing No. 2 Michigan at Yost, but the competitiveness of both games was a testament to how far Pearson has brought the program in just two years. In 2010-11, the Huskies won four games and lost 30. But last year, Michigan Tech beat No. 1 Min- nesota, No. 7 St. Cloud State and No.14 Nebraska-Omaha, marquee wins for a program that hasn't won a national championship since 1975 or made a Frozen Four since its last NCAA Tournament appearance in 1981. And last December, the Hus- kies routed the Wolverines at the Great Lakes Invitational, going on to claim the tournament title for the first time in 32 years. Pearson's teams won 29 games in two years entering this season, good for the best two-season stretch in the last 18 years of Michigan Tech hockey. But last weekend, the Huskies' only victories were moral ones. "We've taken our lumps right now," Pearson said. "I think the record is a little misleading. I like the way we're playing right now." Despite leaving Yost without a win, Pearson said his return was "awesome." He already helped facilitate two more scheduled games between the programs - in Houghton, Mich. next year and back in Ann Arbor for 2015-16 - and hopes the former CCHA rivals continue to play regularly. "(Yost) is a place I love," Pear- son said. "I know it's ahard place to play and a hard place to win at, but I think it's a great experience for our players." And though he and Michi- gan coach Red Berenson insisted the meeting between the two longtime friends and former col- leagues was purely business, the two spared some time to catch up. Pearson brought with him a pack- age of frozen pasties - the Upper 0 PATRICK BARRON/Daily Michigan coach Red Berenson enjoyed a pasty with Mel Pearson this weekend. Peninsula culinary staple - as a gift, and the two promised to stay in tguch until they meet again. "I love coach Berenson and Michigan hockey," Pearson said. "I'm glad they're doing well, and I'm really happy for them and I know they're going to have a great year." Note: Berenson confirmed that defenseman Kevin Lohan suc- cessfully underwent surgery on Monday afternoon. The fresh- man suffered a right knee injury after sliding awkwardly into the boards on Friday. Berenson called the injury a "worst-case scenario" and that the procedure involved reconstruction. Lohan will miss at least three months. I 1 4 4 i