io. The Michigan Daily - michigandaiiy.cam Tuesday, November 26, 2013 - 7 PAUL SHERMAN/Da Redshirt freshman Kyle Kalis began the season as the starter at right guard. After a benching and several moves on the offensive line, Kalis started again against Iowa. He is listed atop the depth chart this week for the game against Ohio State. Offensive line carousel goes for another spin By ZACH HELFAND Daily Sports Editor This year, the situation on the interior of Michigan's offensive line has can be likened to a hor- rific game of musical chairs. And each time the music stops and the whistle blows, the result is usually a sack of redshirt junior quarterback Devin Gardner. NOTEBOOK Or a rush for negative two yards. The situation began with redshirt sophomores Graham Glasgow along with redshirt freshman Kyle Kalis. Miller was the first to go, replaced by red- shirt sophomore Chris Bryant. Then Bryant and Kalis were replaced by redshirt junior Joey Burzynski and redshirt fresh- man Erik Magnuson. Freshman Kyle Bosch filled in for Burzyn- ski after he was injured. The combination of Glasgow, Magnuson and Bosch lasted for a while. But last Saturday, Kalis got back in on the action, replac- ing Bosch. It's enough to make your head spin, but after all of the switch- ing and swapping, four of the five opening-game starters are at the head of the depth chart in the last week of the regular season. After Saturday's game, Michi- gan coach Brady Hoke declined to discuss Kalis's play until he could watch the game tape. On Saturday, Hoke said Kalis won back the starting job because "he earned it." "It's really no bigger decision than that," Hoke said. "He had earned it. He had done a good job in the week. They evaluated him. Thought it would be good for the other Kyle, for Bosch, to take a step back and watch a little bit and keep learning. And I think that's what Kalis did." With the new line combina- tion, Michigan allowed only one sack after surrendering a com- bined 19 in the previous three games. Still, Iowa does not rush the passer aggressively, and the rushing game grinded its way to just 60 yards on 29 carries. COLUMBUS, MINUS 'M's, PREPARE FOR RIVALRY: This sentence -ay look -uch different if it were -oved fro- the -ichigan Daily to the newspaper in Colu- bus. A little overboard? -aybe. But Ohio State stu- dents have covered, or tried to cover, every letter 'M' around campus with red has adopted the Woody Hayes tradition of referring to Michi- gan as "That School Up North," perhaps in response to Michigan coach Brady Hoke's preferred "Ohio" over "Ohio State." But Meyer slipped up at his Monday press conference. Answering a question about his appreciation for the rivalry, Meyer said, "Where I grew up in the 10 year war ... . . I learned Michigan) tole dislike bly given Michigan bly iven at a very u a d young age."' ousand. A report- or loss." er pointed out he said "Michi- gan." "Did I "I know (D has proba up a th( tackles f indirect shots at the Wolverines. According to Ben Axelrod of Buckeyesports.com, linebacker Ryan Shazier poked fun at the Michigan offense Monday. "I know they've probably given up a thousand tackles for loss this season," he said. That's either some mild trash talking or just a mild overstate- ment. Michigan has given up 107 negative plays this season, according to Big Ten reporter John U. Bacon. That should be welcome news for Shazier, who leads the team in both tackles (108) and tackles for loss (19.5). Later, safety Christian Bry- ant tweeted a photo of himself stepping on a Michigan jersey to accompany the tweet, "#NORE- SPECT." Later, he posted a tweet saying, "All I can think about is when (Michigan) threw the ball after the game in 2011. They had No respect for us." INJURY UPDATE: Michigan was hampered by a string of injuries against Iowa, but Hoke indicated Monday that everyone should be ready to go against the Buckeyes. Two starting linebackers - junior Desmond Morgan and sophomore James. Ross III - sustained undisclosed injuries against the Hawkeyes that forced them to leave the game in the first half. After the game, Gard- ner also appeared to be nursing a shoulder injury. He hooked his finger in his belt loop during his postgame press conference to support his right arm. "They're all going to be fine," Hoke said. "All three of them." On whether he expects them to play Saturday, Hoke added, "Oh yeah." The only exception could be junior running back Thomas Rawls. He sustained an injury to his medial collateral liga- ment, and Hoke said he would be questionable to play. Rawls plays mostly in a special-teams role. tape. It has become a tradition really?" Meyer asked. "Wow. (I) each year during the rivalry Apologize." week. Elsewhere, two Buckeyes took Ohio State coach Urban Meyer some indirect and some not-so- FOOTBALL RECRUTIN OT Erik Swenson commits to Michigan Wolverines find offensive groove 2016 commit is 6-foot-7, 290 pounds and labeled a top prospect By JAKE LOURIM Daily Sports Writer Michigan has lost three of its past four games to Big Ten teams and is a 12.5-point underdog against Ohio State on Saturday. But on Monday the Wolver- ines won a battle on the recruit- ing trail, snagging2016 offensive tackle Erik Swenson from Down- ers Grove, Ill. Swenson (6-foot-7, 290 pounds) is not yet rated in the class of 2016, but experts label him as a top offensive line pros- pect. Swenson started as a fresh- man and sophomore at left tackle at Downers Grove South, which went 6-4 this season and lost to Naperville Central in the first round of the Division 8A play- offs, 36-0. . Swenson said he committed so early because he has always wanted to go to Michigan and didn't feel the need to prolong the decision. "Erik is just a pretty simple kind of kid," said Swenson's s father, Swen. "He's not into trav- eling across the country and doesn't want to take official vis- its and waste people's time and money. He truly had no desire to go anywhere else. He loves the school, the tradition and every- thing that is Michigan. He will get a great education and will get a chance to play at a high level." Swenson made an unofficial visit to Michigan for the Notre Dame night game on Sept. 7 and will visit again this weekend for the Ohio State game. He also attended camps at Michigan the past two summers. Along with Michigan, Swen- son held offers from Ohio State, Notre Dame, Northwestern and Illinois. Illinois was the first school to offer Swenson on Dec. 7, 2012. Ohio State followed on May 10, with Michigan coming 12 days later. Northwestern offered him a scholarship on June 7 at a camp, and he came to Michigan's camp on June 16. Along with 134 years of tradi- tion, Swenson cited the caliber of Michigan's coaches and their leadership styles at the camps he attended as major factors in his decision. In Chicago, a solid Michigan recruiting location, Swenson is familiar not only with the coach- es, but also with some players, including freshman guard Kyle Bosch. Bosch is from St. Fran- cis, Ill., 25 miles from Downers Grove. From the current roster, freshmen linemen Kyle Kalis, Erik Magnuson, Kyle Bosch and Ben Braden will be seniors when Swenson arrives in 2016. Four- star offensive tackles Juwan Bushell-Beatty and Mason Cole have also committed for the class of 2014. By JEREMY SUMMITT Daily Sports Editor Last week was a particularly special one for the No. 3 Michi- gan hockey team. Friday, the Wolverines finally found an offensive surge in a 6-0 rout of Niagara. Most impor- tantly, players who have been looking to get on the score sheet for much of the season were able to do so, including freshman for- ward Alex Kile, who scored the first goal of his Michigan career. "There's a little more confi- dence, absolutely," said Michi- gan coach Red Berenson. "Anytime a kid scores his first goal, it's going to jump-start his confidence. You saw that with JT Compher and hopefully you'll see that with Alex Kile now." Until Friday, even freshman forward Tyler Motte - who's been one of the most produc- tive freshmen this season with five goals and two assists - had been held without a goal since Oct. 25. Motte netted a goal just 34 seconds in, which was the fastest goal he could remember scoring dating back to his youth hockey days. Completing the trend of Fri- day's accomplishments by the freshmen class, goaltender Zach Nagelvoort picked up the first shutout for any Wolverine goal- tender this season. GUPTILL'S NEW GROOVE: Junior forward Alex Guptill was able to find the back of the net twice on Friday - once when he found himself wide open in the slot and again after spinning off a defenseman and scoring from an awkward angle. Guptill has been in a bit of a slump this season after leading Michigan in scoring during last year's campaign. He doubled his season total for goals on Fri- day with two tallies, giving him eight points on the year - good for fifth on the team. Friday was one of Guptill's better games thus far, and it isn't just because his name stood out in the box score. Guptill simplified things for himself. He played deep in the offensive zone and exhibited patience to put his potent goal-scoring abili- ties to good use. "Not much went for him, but it was good that he stuck with it," Berenson said. "And then finally in the third period the puck went in for him. Up until then, it was a lot of hard work but no results. But I think we're getting him back onto his game." THANKFUL FOR HOCKEY: While most of the country will be rushing to put a turkey in the oven on Thursday morning, the Wolverines will be on the ice practicing. For the players that live near Ann Arbor, most will be lucky enough to make it home for a mid-afternoon dinner with their families. But for the players not stay- ing, senior captain Mac Bennett isn't worried that they'll miss out on a quality meal. He says there are plenty of good cooks on the team, and anyone who JAMES COLLER/Daily Junior forward Alex Guptill scored twice Friday to break out of a scoring slump. lives too far away to travel back home will be enjoying a hockey Thanksgiving at Bennett's house with Derek DeBlois, Adam Jane- cyk and Mike Chiasson. "It's Thanksgiving, man," Bennett said. "We'll probably just make a ton of food, and whoever shows up shows up. There definitely won't be any- one who doesn't have anywhere to go." Bennett thought long and hard before admitting the sophomore class probably has the best chefs on the team. He mentioned that DeBlois's break- fast lineup isn't anything totake for granted, though. It's too bad that eggs, hash browns and pan- cakes aren't a staple on Thanks- giving menus. To be fair, Bennett said the Thanksgiving spread might be light with the Big Ten opener against Ohio State looming the next day at 7 p.m. However, there was no hesitation when Bennett mentioned stuffing his face with turkey and taking a nap as being among his favorite holiday traditions. t