The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, January 28, 2014 - 7 A 'big brother' and mentor away from home By JUSTIN STERN Daily Sports Writer Bryan Mone and Sione Houma are just like any other students on the Ann Arbor campus. They sit in their dorms in West Quad, watching movies like Catching Fire or playing Call of Duty: Ghosts. Their humble personalities often serve as an invisible cloak for their athletic abilities. Their skills on the gridiron are often hidden by their character. However, it's that character that makes them so close on and off the field. The same chemistry that once led the Highland Rams to a Utah state championship is now making a comeback in Ann Arbor. For Mone, an incoming football recruit, and Houma, currently a sophomore fullback, protecting one another has been apparent since the first game they wore black and white together on the Highland High School football field in Salt Lake City. Currently spending his first semester at Michigan this win- ter, the standout lineman Mone was recruited by high-profile programs such as Alabama, Flor- ida State and Stanford. When Houma packed his bags for Ann Arbor and left his hometown in the summer of 2012, he always remembered Mone, who consis- tently made the key block lead- ing to touchdowns. While Mone was protecting Houma on the field, Houma played Mone's "big brother" off the field. "Sione is an older brother to me," Mone said. "He tells me what I need to do and keeps my head straight, and helps me out a lot whether it be the recruiting process or in the classroom." In high school, the two hung out in the hallways between classes, walked out together after practices or a game and attended church together on a weekly basis. During Mone's senior year, he attended a church retreat on a spiritual trip to Sacramento, Calif. It was this trip that finally put him over the edge to make a verbal commit to Michigan. COURTESY OF MGOBLOG TERRA MOLLENGRAFF/Daily Sophomore fullback Sione Houma didn't get to see much action on the field, but his relationsip with incoming recruit Bryan Mone was crucial to landing the lineman's committment to Michigan. "For some reason Michigan was in my head when ISwas there praying about it," Mone said. "I felt like that was a sign. It was a spur of the moment kind of thing. God brought me here to Michigan." It was just a week later after the retreat that Michigan received their second prized recruit's verbal commitment from Salt Lake City. The two high-school teammates got to resurrect their bond when Mone told Highland High School foot- ball coach Brody Benson that he was committing to Michigan. "(Mone and Houma) both carry two strong characteristics that make them stand out - a caring personality and a strong work ethic," Benson said. "That is whatgotthem to the place they are today." On Aug. 1, 2012, Houma officially enrolled at the University. The time together on the field vanished between Houma and Mone, but their friendship got stronger. Still in high school, Mone tried to speak with Houma about family. once a week, but due to Houma's "(Houma) told me the coach- schedule as a student athlete ing program is one thing that it became challenging. When Michigan has that is unlike any they spoke, Houma always gave other school I received offers words that made Mone more from," Mone said. "They really comfortable with his Michigan care about their players and put commitment. their players first. I felt that right Recruits are often influenced away when I came here. All the by location, boys really their ability helped me fit to get noticed in and every- by NFL scouts "Sione is my one shows so and the chanc- ' much love." es of seeing the older brother. Family val- field early. Yet ues go hand- Mone chose to He tells me in-hand for look for three Mone, and features that what I need to he deeply ultimately d 1'believed in made his deci- do and keeps my what he saw sion easier: a ,, from the Mich- caring coach- head straight. igan coaching ing staff, aca- staff. How- demics and ever, Mone's Sione Houma. family values For those who know Mone, start with his immediate family. it's no surprise that he believes He has been forced to take in the importance of creating care of his disabled older brother special bonds with the players Filimone with his mother Sela and coaches at his new Michigan his entire life. Filimone was born with the inability to see, speak or perform daily tasks like feeding himself. He wears a diaper, which is left up to Mone to change. The battles Mone faces on the football field are pale in perspective to assisting his brother every day. "When I wake up each day, I give him a shower or feed him pills, change him," he said. "That happens two times a day, before I go to school and when I come home. "Taking care of my brother and family is a lot more rewarding than the recognition I have received from football. I play for my brother. Taking care of my brother is like taking care of my quarterback if I'm on the offensive line. My lives on the field and off the field are both similar in many ways." Mone finished his senior sea- son with 41 tackles and 1.5 sacks, while also being a student who cares about his academics - another reason he chose Michi- gan. In his last semester of high school, he received all A's. Yet Houma tells him the challenges will only be greater in Ann Arbor. "At Michigan, Sione tells me to stay on top of school. The most important thing is managing your time wisely," Mone said. "You will have distractions, but the main thing is to manage your time and stay focused." The rise of Mone's stock both on the field and off is a reflection of many people . in his life. Through his humble attitude, he remains poised and still shocked that he's about to begin playing football and attend the University. From Coach Benson pushing him in the weight room to the inspiration from his older brother, to the teachers in his classrooms, Mone has been led in the right direction. However, when Mone depart- ed for Michigan in early January, it was the farthest he has ever been from his family and life in Salt Lake City. As he begins his new chapter, he will always have a reminder of where he came from with "big brother" Sione Houma by his side. Wolverines emphasize blocking shots in anticipation of Badgers By GREG GARNO Daily Sports Editor Have you ever stopped a solid rubber object flyingover 80 miles per hour? The answer, for most, is likely no. But on Monday, the Michigan hockey team didn't stop just one object flying that fast. It practiced doingso multiple times. Albeit the now 12th-ranked Wolverines never fired shots at full strength, usinghbright orange plastic balls to mimic the action without risking injury, but the message still stood. Blocking shots will be a priority this weekend when No. 9 Wisconsin comes to Yost Ice Arena. "It's about having the proper form when you go down," said junior forward Zach Hyman. "But it is repetition, getting feel for how to get in front of the defenseman in front of the lane." Michigan's style is a little bit different from the traditional form used across several pro- grams. Instead of lying on their stomachs with their arms and legs extended, the Wolverines bend to one knee and approach the shooter. They lower their sticks and keep their body - wide in order to close off the "It is re most space. g t Over and getting over, a defen- seman was fed how t the puck or ball at the blue line frontof and simultane- ously wound up to shoot. COLD HARD FACTS IN 1978... THE MICHIGAN FOOTBALL TEAM LOST TO USC IN THE ROSE BOWL, 17-10, TO END THE 1978 SEASON. THE DALLAS COWBOYS BEAT THE DENVER BRONCOS IN THE SUPER BOWL ALABAMA WON THE COLLEGE FOOTBALL NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP WHILE OKLAHOMA'S BILLY SIMS WON THE HEISMAN TROPHY. GAS WAS 62 CENTS PER GALLON. IT IS CURRENTLY AN AVERAGE OF $3.26 IN THE STATE OF MICHIGAN. THE WASHINGTON BULLETS WON THE NBA CHAMPIONSHIP. THEY CHANGED THEIR NICKNAME TO THE WIZARDS 19 YEARS LATER. JIMMY CARTER WAS THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES. THE MICHIGAN MEN'S BASKETBALL TEAM FINISHED SEVENTH IN THE BIG TEN CONFERENCE. IT IS CURRENTLY IN FIRST PLACE AFTER IT BEAT THE SPARTANS ON SATURDAY. THE UNIVERSITY CALLED ITS LAST SNOW DAY. A LLISON FARRAND/Daily Junior forward Zach Hyman sugggests that blocking a shot ina game is instinctive, but a bit tougher in practice. to the centerline in the same formation. According to Hyman and sophomore Andrew Copp, the drill isn't something that's practiced regularly. But against the Badgers, the drill will pitition, be important 1 if Michigan a feel for looks to avoid a repeat of the o get in last time the the lane." two teams played on Jan. 10 and 11 - a sweep. "At coaches want us to progress and get better at." The Wolverines fired fewer than 30 shots on net each night. against Wisconsin, thanks in part to its ability to block shots. Michi- gan finished with a combined 12 blocked shots compared to the Badgers 33 and were subsequent- ly outscored, 8-3. Against Michigan State last week, the Wolverines showed improvement in limiting the number of open looks and shots that found their way to the net. Michigan finished with 38 blocked shots last weekend, when it swept the Spartans. Senior defenseman Mac Ben- nett remains the team's leader in blocked shots with 36 this season, but it's forwards JT Compher and Derek DeBlois who face a greater burden. The pair ranks at the top in blocked shots for the Wol- verines, but have a larger area to cover in front of the net. Even Michigan coach Red Berenson got involved in the action, demonstrating to his players from time to time. On several occasions, Berenson sat calmly and quiet on the bench to watch practice, but shot blocking is one of the few events where he remains active. But what aboutbeing hit by the puck? Is it frightening to purpose- fully put your body in harm's way? "In the game, it's kind of just the heat of the moment and you just have to get in the lane," Hyman said. "So if you know how to do it, it's not really a fear of getting in front of the puck. "In the game, you're not really thinking about it. Practice is a little bit different." Meanwhile, a forward would Wisconsin, they were getting skate up to put his body in front a lot of pucks though, and we of the puck. weren't," Copp said. "It was very Afterward, the forwards lined difficult to get pucks through up on the two blue lines, and at and that's something we've been the sound of the whistle skated concentrating on. It's something 'a