-W -w -W 7 4v _W -- w Week 1 was a glorified exhibition game. The real season starts Saturday against Notre Dame. The game is usually a measuring stick for the rest of the season. Two years ago, when Michigan won it's first night game ever, the Wolverines went to the Sugar Bowl. Last year, the Fighting Irish won and went all the way to the National Championship Game. You don't want to miss this one. Everett Cook, Zach Helfand, Matt Slovin and Liz Vukelich TABLE OF CONTENTS Breakdown: The ghosts come out at night at Michigan Stadium. Who will step up this year? Here's a look. The Ticket Issue: The student section is general admission. Single-game tickets are "dynamic." What it all means to you. What to Watch For: Can Devin Gardner han- dle the pressure? Will atmosphere be like 2012? Michigan's most-pressing questions. Cover illustration by Amy Mackens and Nick Cruz 2013 Schedule Central Michigan (Aug. 31): Michigan beat the Chippewas by their largest opening-day margin since 1905. Notre Dame (Sept. 7): The real winner in this game is the electric company. Lights for days, yo. Akron (Sept. 14): Zip-a-dee-doo-dah, zip-a- dee-a, the Akron Zips are coming to play. Connecticut (Sept. 21): No really, this game's going to be played in Connecticut. Seriously. Not lying. Minnesota (Oct. 5): Jerry Kill kind of looks like a walrus. Happy homecoming! Penn State (Oct.12): Happy Valley at night usually isn't so happy for opponents. Kickoff is at 5 p.m. ID Liz Vukelich Indiana (Oct.19): Long Island Bowl 2013. Win- ner drinks from the keg of glory and gets the fin- est bagels and muffins in all the land. Michigan State (Nov. 2): Michigan State's defense is really good. Michigan State's offense is really not. Nebraska (Nov. 9): The problem with Nebraska fans is they're much too nice to hate. Unless, of course, the'Huskers win again this year. Northwestern (Nov. 16): Don't sleep on this one: a road game - officially at least - against one of the Big Ten's best. Iowa (Nov. 23): Vodka Sam! Ohio State (Nov. 30): The Game is The Game. STAFF PICKS The Daily football writers pick against the spread to predict scores for the Top 25 and Big Ten in the 2013 football season. Zach Everett Matt Helfand Cook Slovin No. 14Notre Daoe (+4) at No.17Michigan No. 2Oregon (-23) at virginia No.3OhioState(-28)vs San DiegoState No.4 Clemson NILvs. South Carolina State No 5 Stanford (-26.s) vs. San Jose State No. 6 South Carolina (+3) at No.11Georgia No.7 Texas A&M(NL)vs.Sam Houston St. No. 8Louisvile (NL) vs. Eastern Kentucky No. 9LSU- t5)vs UAB No.12 Florida(-3i)atMiami(FL) No.13 Oklahoma State(-27)atTexasS.A. No.15 Texas (-7.5) at BYU No. 16Oklahoma(-21)vs.westvirginia No 19 Northwestern -12) vs. Syracuse No 21 wisconsin(N vs. Tennessee Tech No.22Nebrasa(-28)o.Soouthern Miss. No. 23uByor (-275) on. Buffalo No. 24 TCU (NLi vs. SE Loiinae St. Nu 25USCs-15) v.WashingtoooStt Illinois (+8) vs. Cincinnati MichiganState (-23.5)vs. South Florida Peno State -4ivs. EasternMichigan iowaNL)vs.MissouriState Purdue(NL)vs.IndianaState Indiana(-13) iv. Navy Minnesotao(-3.5) at New Mexico State PennState(-8.5)vs. Navy Iowa(NS)vs. NorthernIowa Lastwnne overall Michigan Oregon Ohio State Clemsono San Jose State Georgia Texas A&M Louisville UAB Florida Oklahoma State Texas West Virginia Northwestern wisconsin SouthernMiss. TcU USC Cincinnati MichiganSato Peon Sltt Iooa Purdue Navy Minnesota PennState Iowa t9-1 19-10 Michiean Oegon Ohio State Clemnson Stanford South Carolina Texas A&M Louisville LSU Florida OklahomaState Texas Okihom Northwestern wis s on sc Cincinnati South Pioida Poon Stato Iowaoo Purdue ndiana New Mexico State Navy Iowa 18-11 18-11 Oregon Ohio State Clemson San Jose State South Carolina Toxas A&M Louisville LSU Miami (FL) OklahomaState Texas West Virginia Northwestern wisconsin Nebrska Sayior TCU Washingotott Cincinnati SouthFliorida Purdue Indiana New Mexico State Penn State Iowa 17-12 Michigan Oregon Ohio State Clerson San Jose State Georgia Texas A&M Louisville LSU Miami (FL) Okiahoma State Texas Okiahoma Northwestern wisconi n SouthornM iss. TCU Illinois Michigantate Penn State owa Purdue Navy Minnesota Penn State owa 14-1 14-15 Josh Bartelstein, Former Michigan basketball captain Michigan Oregon Ohio State Clerson Stanford Georgia Toxas A&M Louisville UAB Florida Oklahoma State BYU West Virginia Northwestern wisconsin Nebraka Buffalo TCU cincinnati SouthFlorida Purdue Indian New Mexico State Penn State Iowa Michigan students who expected to have seat assignments before the season were disappointed in the new general admission policy. to get people to understand how important this was." The Athletic Department declined comment for this story. To Brandon's credit, the Daily's analysis shows, assigned-seating policies across the nation seem endangered. Michigan was the last school in the Big Ten to use a pure assigned- seating policy, and just eight out of 129 schools - none in the Big Ten - currently use an assigned-seating poli- cy. Twelve other schools employ a hybrid model, par- tially using assigned seat-. ing. Wisconsin, for example, has a general-admission policy for each section, but allows students to pre- select a section so they can sit with friends. Brandon named Nebras- ka, specifically, as a school the department researched. Nebraska switched to gen- eral-admission in 2008, with one tweak: students are assigned to sections of the stadium, and seniors get to select a section first. "It gives upperclass- men priority in their seat- ing location, and allows students the freedom to sit with large groups of friends at our games," said Keith Mann, Nebraska's assistant athletic director for media relations. Mann said the policy has improved attendance and involvement. Michi- gan made no such tweaks, though Proppe had lobbied for the policy to grandfather in upperclassmen. Plus, some wondered whether the general-admis- sion policy would actually solve the attendance issue. "General admission may do that, but it is not guar- anteed to do that," said Dr. Nod Fort, a professor of Sport Management at the University and co-director of the Michigan Center for Sport Management. "I have seen other stadiums where general admission leads to 'reservation protection' behavior. For example, a campus social group may simply send four of their people in early - or in line - and then require that they save two blocks of seats." By 2:07 p.m. before the Central Michigan game, though, the department had handed out all of its wrist- bands for early-arrivers. To improve the student expe- rience and avoid a situation like Atlanta, the Athletic Department reached out to Proppe and others. Chief Marketing Officer Hunter Lochmann personally deliv- ered pizza. There was water and toilets. TVs showed College GameDay and disk jockey's played music. By the 3:37 kickoff, the student section was full. Some upperclassmen nonetheless expressed frustration with the policy. which no longer guaran- tees them the best seats. In the first CSG meeting of the school year, Proppe said that the resolution - calling for more student involve- ment in Athletic Depart- ment decisions that affect students - had worked. "(The Athletic Depart- ment) got some bad press on it and now they are turning it around," Proppe said. But that's only partially true. The Athletic Depart- ment will send representa- tives to the Sept. 17 CSG meeting. Proppe said they assured him students will be advised on future ticket- ing issues. But for now, the football policy seems to be set in stone. Before Proppe spoke at the May Regent's Meeting, he received an 8 a.m. phone call from Brandon. "I think he definitely understood there was nega- tive reaction from the stu- dents and so he, I would speculate, he wanted to get buy-in from students," Proppe said of the 30-min- ute call. Brandon said he under- stood the complaints, according to Proppe, but the decision had already been made. Know a student One alumni said that even though he graduated, he still knows a few current students and used them to buy season tickets this year. It's technically against the rules, but getting a current student to buy you season tickets is by far and away the cheapest way to get tickets, even if you only go to a couple games. Technically, your M-Card will expire anywhere from a year to five years after you graduate depending on whether you get a new one issued, but the ushers never check dates and you don't have to scan anything to get in. Join the football Saturdays program through the Alumni Association If you are too far out of school to pass as a student, the Football Saturdays program through the Alumni Association is a great way to get cheap tickets. In the spring, you have to fill out an application ranking the games yourwant to go to. Your name is then entered in a lottery for the games you marked. Get selected, and you get tickets in the south end zone for face value. Some games are harder than others to win -there were 6,000 applications for the 1,000 allotted Notre Dame tickets - but the system is pretty straight forward and not revenue- driven, which makes everything cheaper. The program is free as long as you are a member of the Alumni Association in good standing Wait This might be the hardest option, becauseit's basically a gamble. The. athletic department released the tickets on July 31, saying to buy them earlier rather than later because ticket prices would rise the closer the event got. For Notre Dame this week, that simply wasn't true. In the middle of August, the cheapest dynamic pricing ticket was $266. which is about $100 cheaper when they were when originally released. OnMonday this week, the cheapest tickets started at $214 on StubHub, but by Thursday, the cheapest had dropped to around $180. Tickets might be even cheaper than that is you wait until after kickoff and go to scalper that is growing desperate to unload their tickets. It's risky but could ultimately end up being a lot less expensive than buying in advance. TheMichiganDaily - www.michigandaily.com 7 2 FootballSaturday - September 6, 2013