The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com November 18, 2013 - 3B KICKING From Page 1B_ wins. So what? This was a battle between the Legends Division's bottom dwellers, and it showed. Now, the game hung in the balance on this final drive of regulation. To start it off, Gardner looked to Dileo. His first reception went for six yards. He hurried back to the line as the clock ticked away. The race was on. Only on big plays would Gib- bons stop and watch. Back, back, back, back. Right, right. Pause. Now it was 4th and four, so Gibbons looked up. Gardner found Devin Funch- ess. Michigan stayed alive. Gib- bons resumed, striding over that awkward divot. Thump. Dileo's struggles continued. On the next play, Gardner threw another pass Dileo's way, but it was incomplete again. Two more plays, and Michigan faced anoth- er 4th and four. Again, Funchess made the reception. But now time had become an issue. Gardner was sacked for a loss of 13 yards. The field goal would be 60 yards from there, out of range. Less than 30 seconds remained. Another pass went incomplete. Michigan needed yards, but it also needed to stop the clock, and it was third down and no timeouts remained. At some point, Matt Wile, Michigan's long-distance kicker, grabbed Gibbons and took him near the line of scrimmage and close to Michigan coach Brady Hoke. Gardner flung a pass to Jeremy Gallon. He caught it 16 yards down the field, inbounds. Twelve seconds remained, and counting. Half the team was running off the field and the field goal unit was running on. "Hurry, hurry up!" Gibbons heard Hoke yell, as the coach waved his hands. "Hurry up!" And so he ran onto the field. Dileo had run a route on the opposite sideline, so he was the farthest player from the line of scrimmage. The line was just about set, but Dileo, the holder, was still on the wrong side of the ball. Six seconds remained, then five. Michigan practices these hur- ried field goals often. The team runs them four or fives times a week during fall camp, Hoke said. Each Friday during the season, it practices more. Hoke counts down, and he counts fast. Still, Hoke said he's never been in a game situation this tight. Now, the crowd counted down for him "Four!" Rain had fallen steadily throughout the second quarter, and the field was muddy. "Three!" Dileo sprinted, and he needed to stop, quick. As Dileo ran, Gibbons started his routine. Back, back... "Two!" There wasn't enough time. Gibbons shuffled to a spot that looked right. The field was slick and divoted, and now, one more obstacle: time. For 59:48 this was a miserable, meaningless game. But now the win was achievable, and the side- line buzzed. Michigan was play- ing for their teammates and for themselves and it didn't matter what it was playing for because it was playing to win. Still, the Wolverines only had aprayer. Dileo slid like a baseball player does into second base. Gibbons is a lefty, so Dileo was already on the correct side. Now, kicker and holder were together. "One!" Gibbons didn't even havea chance to pause. Jareth Glanda threw back the snap. Soon, the rain picked up, and the wind whipped up loose objects and made it so loud that you had to yell to the person next to you. Michigan would dogpile after three overtimes, victorious 27-19. Fans would crowd over the stands lining the walkway next to Michigan's locker room likea canyon. Gallon and Gardner and Taylor Lewan lingered there in the driving rain, basking in the feeling. Lewan disappeared into the locker room, then reemerged to give a sweatband toa young child. Hoke would say, "It might be the best single play I've ever seen. 'Cause it was a team play." Michigan didn't need any-- thing extra to play for. There was a game to be won. But Gibbons still had to make the kick. The routine had gone to hell. There was another obstacle to dodge. Dileo's slide stopped him at, the right place. Thump. Gibbons knew it was good the moment it left his foot. Helfand can be reached atzhelfand@umich.edu and on Twitter @zhelfand. ESCAPE From Page 1B been holding onto the ball for too long while working with a helpless offensive line, one of the best athletes in the Big Ten rendered ineffective by way of brutality. Northwestern dropped four woald-be interceptions against Gardner. Two of those likely would have been returned for touchdowns. Gardner ran for jest 19 yards and completed 56 Tercent of his passes. He was by no means perfect. But at the end of the game, a Northwestern player crouched in the end zone, head down and eyes closed before flinging his helmet away. That was because of Gardner. On the last drive of overtime, on 3rd and 23 with 16 seconds left and no timeouts, he com- pleted a sixteen-yard pass to set up the game-tying field goal from fifth-year senior kicker Brendan Gibbons. He threw the go-ahead touchdown pass in the first overtime, and then in triple overtime, he faked an option pitch and barreled through two Wildcats for what would wind up being the game-winning touchdown. The two-point conversion was finished by a Gardner run, too, even though it was a designed quarterback run and Northwestern knew it was coming. "At that moment, you aren't worn out," Gardner said. "If you're worn out, you're not a competitor. I gotta give it all I got, and that's what I did." Gardner looked like a com- pletely different player once the regulation clock turned off Like us on Facebook! We'll friend you back! And then stalk your photos! Really, though. www.facebook.com/ michigandaily and overtime rules were on the table. With his back to the wall and a fire of disappointment licking at his heels, Gardner made Michigan's season into something salvageable. "I don't know if there's any one thing," Michigan coach Brady Hoke said. "I wouldn't think he was any more focused or anything else, maybe he just got into more of a rhythm." Of course, none of this hap- pens without a miracle field goal at the end of regulation that required a slide from hold- er Drew Dileo and a conversion from Gibbons on a wet, windy field. Without that, there are no smiles or two-point conver- sions. If Gardner leads Michi- gan down the field but Gibbons misses, it's a completely differ- ent story. But the hypothetical game doesn't exist in college foot- ball, so Gardner ran off the field with his arms outstretched and a grin on his face, ready to slap hands with the fans who booed this team a week ago. He took their praise, took their congrat- ulations, and ducked into the locker room to sing The Victors. Before heading to the media room and after hugging his family, he stopped for the group of children. In unison, they raised their hands. Some held up one, some held up two. Gard- ner slapped them all. Walking into the media room, where he would smile in a press conference for the first time in a while, Gardner heard one of the children say, "That was awesome! I got a high five from.Devin Gardner!" He turned around and grinned. Being Devin Gardner was fun again. FIVE From Page 1B over once. But that was largely because Northwestern dropped four would-be interceptions.And when it counted, Michigan often came up short. There was the failure to capitalize on the short punt. And then on the next drive, Michigan went for it on a fourth-and-two instead of kicking the game-tying field goal. Gardner ran the ball on a keeper. He lost ayard. "Well we wanna score more," said Michigan coach Brady Hoke. "But I think everyone in the coun- try wants to score more. But I like how we ran the ball. That's the first time I guess we were in posi- tive yardage. That's the first time in three weeks, so we'll take that." 2. The kids are alright. Fitzgerald Toussaint stood on the sideline Saturday, his helmet in hand. For about two and a half seasons now, Toussaint has been the Michigan football team's pre- ferred choice at running back. But now the fifth-year senior watched as two true freshmen took the snaps that usually go to him. Hobbled with an unspeci- fied injury, Toussaint was unable to practice for much of the week, according to Hoke. He didn't play a single snap. Hoke said he held him out of the game because he didn't get enough work in practice. Instead, Green and De'Veon Smith shared every carry from the tailback position. Together, they totaled 120 yards on 27 carries. It was Michigan's first game in posi- tive rushing yardage in the last three weeks. Green got the start and the bulk of the carries, but Smith rushed just as well. He averaged 5.1 yards per carry on eight rushes - the highest average from a Michigan running back except for Green's 5.3 yards per carry in the season opener. Toussaint's highest aver- age was 5.0 against Connecticut. Hoke said Toussaint will still the be the starter moving forward, but the Wolverines finally saw some life from its young rushers. 3. Found: Pass rush. Michigan has been searching for a pass rush all year, and it may have finally found the right combi- nation. Senior Jibreel Black,junior Frank Clark and freshman Taco Charlton pressured each of North- western's quarterbacks for much of the game. The Wolverines finished with two sacks, but the pass rush showed life and collapsed the pocket often. On one play, Clark beat his lineman with a spin move, but he was unable to get the sack. Still, the pressure forced a quick throw and an incompletion. "We're trying out new stuff," said Black, the only defensive line- man with a sack Saturday. "We're not going to get it right away. And I feel like we're really starting to jell together." 4. Dileo is a good base runner. Gardner ran off the field so quickly on the final play of regu- lation that he missed the last- second, 44-yard field goal from fifth-year senior Brendan Gib- bons. That meantS he also missed fifth-year senior Drew Dileo's rather unusual hold. After the game, Gardner said, "A lot of guys were in the locker room talking about, 'Did you see Dileo?' "I was like, 'He's the holder, TERESA MATHEW/Daily Redshirtjunior Devin Gardner led Michigan to an overtime win on Saturday. what do you mean did I see Dileo?' What he missed was a play more often seen in baseball. Dileo was the furthest player from the line ofscrimmage, so he had to run to get back for the snap. With awet field, Dileo slid like a base runner to stop himself at the right spot. In fact, Dileo was a talented baseball player in high school, winning three varsity letters and two Louisiana state champion- ships. For Michigan, that paid off. 5. Bold Prediction: Derrick Green will get more carries than Fitzger- ald Toussaint for the rest of the season. Toussaint is still the presumed starter, but Green showed promise on Saturday. At this point, is he a better option that Toussaint? It's close. But Green is the running back of the future. My guess is Michi- gan will work on his development. I Bring in this coupon for one FREE bagel! I Featuring 20+ flavors including PUMPKIN! Limit One offer per customer with coupon. Cannot be combined with any other offer Valid at Barry Bagels Ann Arbor location ONLY BAGELS Barry Bagels Westgate Shopping Center 2515 Jackson Ave, Ann Arbor, MI 48103 (734> 662-2435 www.barrybagels.com Expires: November 24, 2013 Majoring in PoliSci, History, Econ, IntlStd, German, Spanish, French, or Italian and want to specialize in Europe? 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