The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, February 10, 2014 - 3B SPORTSMONDAY COLUMN Separating an investigation and its response In keeping with Michigan's mishandling ofthe aftermath of former kicker Brendan Gibbons' expulsion for sexual misconduct, Michigan coach Brady Hoke's press conference on Wednesday was, again, unacceptably lacking. ZACH Hoke had HELFAND putouta statement to a secretive meeting of five select news outlets Monday. Asked again about the Gibbons situation Wednesday, Hoke made references to that nebulous statement. He made a prolonged, stern stare. He made more references to that statement. He talked freely about recruiting - it was National Signing Day, after all - but in his first open press conference after the Gibbons incident came to light, he said almostnothing at all. He said he has "no idea" how student misconduct is investigated. He said, of those who feel the University is hiding behind something, "That's your opinion." He said, again, "Did I give you a statement?" This was another misguided, discomforting response to the questions over how Michigan handled allegations of sexual misconduct against Gibbons. But it has now become too easy to confuse Michigan's botched response for a botched investigative process. The Athletic Department and the University still must answer questions about that. But there are two distinct issues here: how the University pursues charges of sexual misconduct, and Michigan's unsettling lack of transparency. To be clear: The idea that the University or the Michigan "Fort Schembechler" - the nickname bestowed upon the football program's nothing-in- nothing-out tendencies - is nice for football games, but it is less so for more important matters. So it comes with little surprise that the Athletic Department's first reaction was to deny knowledge of Gibbons' expulsion. It comes with little surprise the University's first reaction was to cite privacy laws, despite the fact that they explicitly exclude "a student who is an alleged perpetrator of any crime of violence ... or a nonforcible sex offense." It comes as little surprise that Bill Martin, Michigan's athletic director at the time the alleged incident occurred, denied knowledge of any incident involving Gibbons. And it comes as little surprise that at the first public comments made by Hoke followingthe Daily's reporton Gibbons's expulsion, the Daily and other outlets were not invited. It matters little when the press conference was initially scheduled. Still, all of this is evidence of a mishandled response to Gibbons' expulsion. That shouldn't be confused for a cover-up or a delay in investigating his misconduct. Currently, no evidence supports that claim. We can't change how the University investigated Gibbons or anyone else in the past. But we can engage in a debate over how the University can better create a safe space;while protecting the rights of all involved. We can ensure the other incidents, the ones that don't involve football players, are handled properly. But that would require transparency. The University and the Athletic Department have shown that's a non-starter. Helfand can be reached at zhelfand@umich.edu or on Twitter @zhelfand Michigan football coach Brady Hoke and the Michigan Athletic Department have responded poorly to the Brendan Gibbons case, writes Zach Helfand. football team would in any way obstruct or cover up sexual misconduct allegedly committed by Brendan Gibbons doesn't seem logical. Consider: Gibbons was, in 2009, a mediocre freshman kicker who was in his redshirt year; better players have been kicked off or disciplined for less; it doesn't make sense for Hoke to risk his job by playing Gibbons in an effectively meaningless game against Iowa on Nov. 23 - a few days after a University body found him responsible for sexual misconduct. The Ann Arbor police, apparently, did not have enough to press criminal charges. The University's sexual misconduct policy at the time required a complainant to initiate an investigation. Unless a complainant came forward, the University had no options. With no action from the police or from the University, the football team did nothing. In 2013, the same year the University implemented its new sexual misconduct policy, Gibbons was investigated and expelled. To this point, the University acted exactly as it should. Assuming no complainant came forward, it had no recourse against Gibbons. The football team refrained from punishing someone who had not been charged by the police or investigated by the University. When the new policy allowed, the University took action. Here, though, the questions begin. When was the Athletic Department notified? And, more importantly: this case receives public attention because it involves a football player. But what about the others? The most recent statistics released by University Police under the Clery Act, from 2012, show 21 reports of forcible rape, 21 reports of forcible fondling and three reports of sexual assault with an object. Yet, there were zero permanent separations in the 2011-2012 academic year, accordingto the recent data from the Office of Student Conflict Resolution. With the new policy in place, what is being done about the others? Why was Gibbons' expulsion so rare? There are answers to these questions. The University owes its students and stakeholders the transparency that can provide them. Unfortunately, transparency is not the default response for the Michigan Athletic Department. This is a university that, according to a 2009 report by the Daily, holds an unusually narrow interpretation of Michigan's Freedom ofInformation Act. This is an athletic department that gives no access to football practices; limits player availability to internally selected players (Gibbons faced questions just once in 2013, followinga triple-overtime victory against Northwestern on Nov. 16); and prohibits contacting players' families without department consent. Some Michigan sports are more restrictive than others. Nobody likes to hear reporters complain about access. And when we do complain, we are more often concerned with writing stories about depth charts than with serving as a public watchdog. Would increased access to Gibbons or other players or families have shed any light on his expulsion earlier? Maybe not. What this does show, though, is an athletic department whose first reflex isto obscure. Iowa drops Wolverines 7 . Hawkeyes' Marble scores 22 in half By DANIEL FELDMAN Daily Sports Writer IOWACITY- Outrebounded, outhustled and outmuscled, the No.10 Michiganmen'sbasketball team couldn't silence the crowd or stop Iowa, suffering its largest loss of the season. With the open concourse of the Carver-Hawkeye Arena, it's hard to contain the noise that flows throughout the building. As the sound carries, hitting the ceiling and windows paneling the concourse, the volume seems to grow louder and louder as action unfolds. Hoping to contain or stop that flow - highlighted by Iowa's Roy Devyn Marble outstanding performance in the first half - proved to be impossible for the Wolverines on Saturday. "Iowa punched us early today," said Michigan coach John Beilein, "and it was hard to respond." After scoring 13 points in the team's last meeting in January, Marble poured in 14 of his team-high 26 points - on four 3-pointers - in the game's first 10 minutes to give the Hawkeyes (7-4 Big Ten, 18-6 overall) a 14-point lead - one they never looked back from in their 85-67 win. "We knew they were going to come out strong," said sophomore guard Nik Stauskas. "We knew the crowd was going to be a big part of this game. But that's the same for any game inthe Big Ten. It means what are we going to do in response. And I think we did an OK job at times but overall it wasn'tgood enough." As Iowa made six out of its first seven triples, No. 10 Michigan (9-2, 17-6) made only one of its first seven attempts. "You know, it changes everything," said Iowa coach Fran McCaffery regarding Iowa's hot start. "(Do) you shoot threes? Do you not shoot threes? Do you drive it? Do you grind it? When you're behind, it changes your entire approach." Stauskas didn't score his first basket of the game until 7:01 left in the half, so the Wolverines rode the hot hands of sophomore guard Caris LeVert (22 points) and freshman guard Zak Irvin (19 points). Behind the duo, Michigan was able to go on an 8-0 run to cut the lead to 33-25. But Marble was there to silence the Wolverines and ignite the Hawkeye faithful as he had been from the beginning of the game. After making a three to end Michigan's run, Marble made his sixth triple - for 22 points in the half - as time expired to end No. 17 Iowa's 7-0 run as it went up 14. "That was a Player of the Year candidate performance today," Beilein said. "Iowa is blessed to have a player like him. He is hungry because Iowa was so close last year. It is players like him that are going to make it happen. He is tremendous." Marble enabled Iowa to shoot 53.3 percent from the field and 73 percent (8-for- 11) from behind the arc thanks to an 8-for-13 shooting performance from the field in the first stanza. Meanwhile, the Wolverines struggled to match that shooting, going 27 percent from deep as they were outrebounded 20-11 with Iowa's Melsahn Basabe and Aaron White gathering six apiece. Even after it shut down the Hawkeyes to begin the second half, Michigan failed to box out and mark defenders in the zone. The Wolverines allowed nine offensive rebounds as a result, while collecting just 17 rebounds - nine fewer than Iowa. Offensive rebounding may have helped put the nail in the Wolverines' coffin, but it was Iowa's defense that ultimately overpowered Michigan. "We feltlike,tobeatMichigan, you have to play the kind of defense we played," McCaffery said. "They have so many different weapons. You know, so it was not only getting stops, but it was getting stops and then running, and getting offensive opportunities in transition and not givingthem seconds." The Wolverines were unable to reduce the deficit below 14 in the second half and never had a chance to replicate their second-half play against Michigan State - where it put together a stretch of small runs before unleashing a rash of play to overcome the gap. PAUL SHERMAN/Daily Freshman goaltender Zach Nagelvoort was pulled after surrendering three first-period goals Saturday night. 'M' thrashed by Penn State By ALEJANDRO ZUNIGA Daily Sports Editor STATE COLLEGE - On Saturday night at Pegula Ice Arena, David's stone hit Goliath right between MICHIGAN 0 the eyes. PENN STATE 4 Penn State, in just its second year as a Division I program and winless through nine Big Ten games, stunned the Michigan hockey team with three first-period goals within 10 minutes to cruise to a 4-0 win. The loss keeps the 10th-ranked Wolverines (6-3-1-1 Big Ten, 14-7- 1 overall) behind Wisconsin and Minnesota in the conference standings, though Michigan has two games in hand. The Nittany Lions fired pucks at the net early and never relented. At 5:31 into the first period, Zach Saar poked a rebound past freshman goaltender Zach Nagelvoort. Six minutes later, forward David Glen slid the puck by the netminder from an awkward angle after Penn State won a faceoff in the offensive zone. And before the sellout crowd had settled from the second goal, forward Casey Bailey received a pass in the slot and ripped a shot that went five hole on Nagelvoort to find twine. "Some nights the puck goes in, some nights it doesn't," said Michigan coach Red Berenson. "The puck went in for them, and it didn't for us." The Nittany Lions' trifecta on nine shots prompted Berenson to pull Nagelvoort for sophomore goaltender Steve Racine. In his first action since Dec. 28 in the Great Lakes Invitational, Racine stopped 30 of the 31 shots he faced. "I don't think Zach was ready for at least two of them," Berenson said. Down by three, Wolverines delivered a blow of their own in the second period, though it came on the ice and not on the scoreboard. Freshman defenseman Michael Downing cleanly leveled Nate Jensen as he carried the puck up the ice, which caused a brief stoppage in play as the Penn State (1-9, 5-18-1) defenseman made his way slowly to the bench. Sophomore forward Boo Nieves nearly scored the goal Michigan desperately needed later in the period, but his slapshot effort on a rolling puck rang off the post and rebounded harmlessly up the ice. And early into the third period, freshman forward JT Compher's wraparound try crossed the goal line after a scrum in front of the net, but officials had already whistled the play dead. "The longer we went, the harder it was to score," Berenson said. Forward Ricky DeRosa sealed the game when he added the Nittany Lions' fourth goal on a slapshot from the blue line that Racine never saw. Minutes before the final intermission, junior forward Alex Guptill skated off the ice gingerly with an apparent injury when he was sandwiched between two Penn State players. He didn't return for the third period and left the arena after the game with a large pack of ice taped around his right shoulder. Berenson acknowledged that Guptill suffered an upper-body injury, but he didn't comment on the severity. After PJ Musico and Eamon McAdam split time in goal for Penn State in a 7-3 Wolverines win Friday, Matthew Skoff earned the start Saturday. The sophomore stopped all 32 of Michigan's shots on the night, and stoned senior forward Derek DeBlois' partial breakaway with 10 minutes remaining. And when the final horn sounded, the Nittany Lions poured onto the ice to celebrate their first Big Ten win of the season, an unmitigatedthrashing of the Wolverines. HOCKEY From Page 1B Bennett forgets that Michigan split a series or that both teams finished with seven goals on the weekend. And instead, the Wolverines file out of the locker room with their heads down and their mouths shut. Is there anything that needs to be said after Saturday? "Nope," Bennett said. "We'll just leave it here and move on." But he knew teams can find consistently or, letdown from a before. Now th have to go to fo Minnesota on t But now, insi that good played with a "chip on our a way to win shoulder." avoid the Outside, Bennett takes the 7-3 win the night headphones off his shoulders e Wolverines and puts them over his head. rmer No. 1 The music starts and Bennett he road. walks to the bus waiting just outside. Inside, one team savors the historic moment. Outside, one ide the locker team is haunted by it. room, Skoff talks about the confidence his team had from the beginning of the game and the way he and his teammates Garno can be reached at ggarno@umich.edu and on Twitter @GGarno