Monday, August 8, 2011 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Woolfolk, Floyd return to anchor 'M' secondary By STEPHEN J. NESBITT DailySportsEditor Troy Woolfolk didn't mince words - it was painful to watch the Michigan football team last season. Woolfolk was supposed to be an integral piece on defense, locking down the No. 1 cornerback slot. But that was before a foot injury dur- ing fall camp sidelined him for the entire 2010 season. "The hardest part is just look- ing at the games and seeing how I would be able to impact the team, make them that much better," Woolfolk said last November. "I see our defense struggling. I feel like it's kind of my fault because of my inju- ry, and I can't help them out." Michigan's secondary was in shambles. Opposing quarterbacks launched an aerial raid on the sec- ondary, and did it with ease, to the tune of 261.8 passing yards per game. To make matters worse,then- redshirt sophomore cornerback J.T. #Floyd - Woolfolk's replacement at No. 1 cornerback - suffered a sea- son-ending ankle injury prior to the Wolverines' mid-season clash with Illinois. It was a recipe for disaster. But with the new Brady Hoke regime comes (another) second 4chance for the woebegone second- time on the field this season. Seeing the bulk of the time at safety will be the duo of sophomore Carvin Johnson and redshirt junior Jordan Kovacs. Take note: Kovacs finished second on the Wolverines with 75 tackles in 2009 and skyrock- eted his production with 116 tackles last year. But a safety nearly leading the team in tackles two years running means the ball is reaching the sec- ondary far too often - and that spells doom for a defense. Johnson emerged as a leader on the back line during the sec- ond half of last season. During the Spring Game in April, he picked off two passes - although credit there might go more to quarterback Devin Gardner than Johnson. While Michigan recorded just 12 interceptions last season, return- ing a more experienced cast should boost those numbers. And Johnson, a self-proclaimed ball hawk, could lead that charge. "I love making interceptions," Johnson said after the Spring Game. "I don't like to make the big hit ... I like us to have the ball" He can leave the heavy hitting to sophomore safety Marvin Rob- inson, who had some jarring hits in spring camp that sent a message to the team. At Big Ten Media Days, senior defensive tackle Mike Martin said Robinson's hits set the tempo for the defense's new mentality. Unlike last season, there is some added depth in the secondary. Despite losing Ray Vinopal and James Rogers - both productive members of the defense - players like fifth-year senior Tony Anderson and sophomores Courtney Avery, Terrence Talbott and Thomas Gor- don can learn from their increased playing time with Michigan's depleted corps in 2010. A few freshmen have a chance to come in and make an instant impact, but barring injury, Hoke will likely elect to redshirt several newcomers. Countess, Greg Brown and Delonte Hollowell have the best chance at seeing the field in their first season. Michigan's cast is still raw and largely unproven, but the top four on the secondary's depth chart are household names surrounding the football program. We call that progress. Preseason grade: C+ Projected starters: J.T. Floyd, Troy Woolfolk, Jordan Kovacs and Carvin Johnson. Key losses: Ray Vinopal, James Rogers Surprise player: Carvin Johnson CHRIS RYB Sophmore safety Carvin Johnson will play a vital role on the back line this fall. ary. Michigan's success has - and always will - depend on its defense. And that starts with the secondary. Woolfolk is back as a fifth-year senior, but after missing an entire season, he'll need a few games to adjust to the game speed. Unfor- tunately, Notre Dame's All-Amer- ican wide receiver Michael Floyd has been reinstated after a drunk driving charge and will be staring Woolfolk down in the second game of the season. There will be no rest for Troy. But junior quarterback Denard Robinson thinks that if the summer workouts are any indica- tion, Woolfolk won't miss a beat. "It's hard to go deep on Troy these days," Robinson said at Big Ten Media Days last Friday. "I tried to throw a couple deep, but he always seems to catch up to them." Floyd will also return to anchor the other side of the field, and Mich- igan has an up-and-coming corner in freshman Blake Countess thathas made a good first impression and could realistically see significant Demens leads linebackers into new defensive mindset By TIM ROHAN his personnel to blame for a histor- Daily Sports Editor ically embarrassing defense. As the team's third-leading Kenny Demens had already won. tackler in 2010, Demens is the He wasn't Obi Ezeh. That's all that most experienced starter of a line- mattered in the fans' eyes. backer corps that could be the key Ezeh, one of the most puzzling to the Michigan defense's ulti- players in the storied Michigan mate comeback. The secondary is football program's recent history, finally healthy and has young tal- started his Wolverine career before ent across the board. The defensive he was vilified for his drop-off in line will be a strength of the entire play once Rich Rodriguez changed team, with both talent and depth at defensive schemes. Ezeh would the position. Surely the defensive have thrived in the downhill, backs will have the most to prove knock-your-teeth-out approach with how poorly the group played Greg Mattison will surely expect under Rodriguez, but injuries were out of his middle linebacker. to blame. The linebackers are just Demens is lucky in more ways supposed to be seen, not heard. than one. The redshirt junior back- If any problems start, they'll be flipped into relevance during every heard. It'll be on Demens to carry Mock Rock skit that the football the group. He has the skill, and team has done since he arrived on now has the experience to take the campus. He's fast, athletic, mobile next step. He shouldn't have to rely and can still knock your teeth out. on just his physical tools anymore. Last season, it seemed no one could Flanking Demens is former wide get a handle of what Greg Robinson receiver/safety and physical speci- wanted to do on defense. We may men, Cam Gordon. The 6-foot-3 soon find out if it was the coach or Gordon looked bigger near the end of spring practice and undoubtedly spent his summer preparing for his newest position. Mattison raved of his potential in the spring. As a former skill-position guy, Gordon has the mobility to drop into coverage and could give Mat- tison the versatility that he is rarely afforded at the linebacker spot. Even Rodriguez noticed that Gordon was more effective when he was closer to the line of scrim- mage, opting to move him from safety to the hybrid "spur" position midway through last season. The only questions are how big did Gordon get over the summer, which we'll discover soon enough, and how physical can he be? Demens may have enough physi- cality in himself for the other two linebackers, but Gordon may have to mix it up with huge Big Ten line- men and may get pushed around a bit. That's a hard lesson Rodriguez learned when he ran the 3-3-5, and that's why the alumni are so supportive of Brady Hoke and his emphasis on physical play. Can Cam Gordon make his third posi- tion change in three years? Can he do it mentally? We'll find out. The third and final starter is the prodigal Marell Evans. Once a line- backer under Lloyd Carr, Evans transferred after his sophomore year in 2008, Carr's final season, only to return once Rodriguez had left. Now a fifth-year senior, Evans was the penciled in starter during the Spring Game. He may have some young, ath- letic linebackers nipping at his heels, though. Jake Ryan really impressed the coaches with his relentless motor and athleticism getting to the quarterback and dropping into coverage. Senior tight end Kevin Koger said at Big Ten Media Days in Chicago that Ryan had added weight to his listed 6-foot-3, 224-pound frame. After he starred in the Spring Game, picking off a pass for a touchdown, that was one of the only knocks on Ryan: he needed to add weight and, of course, the redshirt freshman wasn't experi- enced. If the stories are true, he'll run through a brick wall to get that experience. Senior J.B. Fitzgerald, who has primarily been a spe- cial teams player throughout his career, and redshirt sophomore Mike Jones, as well as fifth-year senior Brandon Herron were also in the mix. Jones is smaller than the other two, as he was converted from safety to linebacker. But none of the two projected starters at outside linebacker have enough of a vice grip on their posi- tions to ward off highly ranked incoming freshmen, Antonio Poole or Frank Clark. These spots will be fought for in camp. The constant will be Demens roaming the mid- dle. I know what you're thinking: at least Ezeh is gone. Preseason grade: C+ Projected starters: Cam Gor- don, Kenny Demens, Marell Evans Key losses: Jonas Mouton Surprise player: Jake Ryan 2