Tuesday, May 5 , 2009 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 11l THREET SPEAKS Daily Sports Writer Joe Stapleton sits down in an exclusive interview with the soon-to-be Sun Devil QB Steven Threet Stapleton: Why Arizona State? Threet: The first thing I looked at for any school I was going to go to was the offense they run and the coaching staff. Arizona State, I feel it fits me offensively with the type of offense they run, it's a pro-style offense. I get along very well with the coaching staff, I feel like they will be able to help me get better every day in practice and through- out the season and help me devel- op. S: A lot ofpeople look at the situa- tion you had at Michigan, with a good chance you'd enter the season as the starter. What don't they know that made it not that favorable for you? T: If you really look at the situa- tion I was in, it really doesn't fit me. My friend likes to say it's like com- ing to Michigan to go to be a doctor, and then they get rid of the Medical school, you knowySo it's disappoint- ing to me because I love Michigan, I've said thatbefore, I grew up a fan of Michigan, but it's a situation now where I have to try to do what's best for me. That's the situation I'm in, and now I love Arizona State, too. S: How important is the system you're playing in to the success of a quarterback? T: I think it's more important for the quarterback than any other position. I have a specific skill set as a quarterback, and that skill set doesn't match up with the offense at Michigan. I don't want to overstate it, because I ran the offense - some would say not very well - but ulti- mately it comes down to wins and losses. ButI think alot of times peo- ple overlook certain things. Michi- gan fans were used to Chad Henne as a junior and a senior, and not too many people were thinking about how he did in his freshman year, or John Navarre's freshman year. It comes down to wins and losses, but you have to put it in perspective. S: How bigofa role did all the crit- icism of last year play in your deci- sion to leave? T: None at all, to be honest with you. During the season, and even now, I don't really read the news- papers, and I don't read the blogs, because even if there are people saying positive things you can't only listen to them and block out the people saying negative things. I'm my own harshest critic anyway. S: There was one quote that stood out for me from last season. It was after the Michigan State game when Michigan's offensive coordinator Calvin McGee described your play as "inconsistent, as always." T: I guess I feel like that's a dif- ference of philosophy from the previous staff. Granted, coaches do different things to get the most out of their players. Some people close to me were upset that a coach would call me out in front of the media, but you know, in the end it didn't really matter to me. And to be honest, my play in the Michigan State game was inconsistent. Is it right to say that at the press conference after the game? I mean, we had just lost a big rivalry game, so I would chalk most of that up to emotions after a big game like that. S: What do the coaches at Arizona State provide that Rich Rodriguez and his staffdon't? T: It's mostly the difference in the offense. The offense here is pretty much set in stone, while Coach Erickson and Coach Olsen have been in the pros, they run a pro system, and it's just a difference in offensive philosophy. S: So it's strictly a difference in offensive philosophy, not in dealing with players? T: They could deal with players differently, but like I said, every coach has a different way of trying to get the most out of their players. But I wasn't switching because the coaches were too hard on me, or anything like that. It wasn't a situ- ation where I hate getting yelled at or anything. I mean, I'm a football player. S: You're the latest in a pretty long line of guys who came to play for Lloyd Carr and left when Rich Rodri- guez came. Why do players leave? T: I don't know. I think when they came, they knew what they were getting, the system was in place, and so was the coaching staff. I mean, Michigan, before Coach Rodriguez, had had the same basic offensive philosophy and group of coaches for 30-some years. I know (former offensive lineman) Justin (Boren) left because he felt that it wasn't Michigan anymore, at least not the same Michigan. S: In this system, had you stayed, do you think you would have been able to keep the starting job the rest ofyour career? T: With the way they run the offense, no. But, it's tough to say. I know a lot of people say, you know, "Oh, he saw the writing on the wall, with the freshman quarterback coming in," but that's not it. It's not that I couldn't be successful ina sys- tem like this, I just think it's better for me to be ina different system. S: So you're giving up a starting job just to be in a system you think fits your skills? T: It is the single most important thingfor a quarterback. It's why you don't see a 5-foot-9 kid who's really fast running the style of offense that we had here a year ago. So people say, "you come to the school for Michigan." Yeah, but at the same time, can you imagine any of the guys who came before me - Chad (Henne), Tom Brady, Brian Gri- ese, Navarre - can you imagine any of them runningthis offense? It wouldn't happen. S: What do you think when people say you're transfer- ring because you're scared of the compe- tition? -o T: I justr laugh at it. I transferred to Michigan to compete with Ryan Mal- lett for the starting quarter- back job, and now I'm going to trans- fer away RODRIGo GAYA/Daily because Former Wolverine quarterback Steven Threet decided to transfer they to Arizona State after last season, the second transfer of his career. brought in two freshmen who are supposed everyone is putting the work in to to be good in this system? And getting better at executing their it's not like the cupboard's bare at job. There were a lot of times last Arizona State, either. You're never year where maybe one guy didn't going to find any Division I teams do his job at 100 percent, and that's telling you that if you come there, the difference between a touch- you will automatically be the start- down and a three-yard loss. Work- ing quarterback. ing together like that is especially S: What does Michigan need to do important offensively. Defensively, to make sure last year doesn't hap- you can get bailed out sometimes, pen again? but offensively it really does take T: They need to make sure that all 11 guys. 'M' finds a win after a no-hit affair By RYAN KARTJE ManagingSports Editor The bases were loaded in the sixth inning of Saturday's first game at Bill Davis Stadium in Columbus. Ohio State designated hitter Ryan Dew came to the plate against Michigan senior pitcher Chris Fetter, who had been firmly entrenched in a pitcher's duel with Buckeye pitcher Alex Wimmers until that point. Dew launched Fetter's fastball straight up behind home plate, but junior catcher Chris Berset lost it in the bright sun, and Dew took Fet- ter's next pitch into the outfield for two runs. The hit was all the momentum Wimmers needed to shutdown the Wolverines in no-hit fashion, 6-0. It was the first time Michigan (7-11 Big Ten, 24-21 overall) has gone without a pitch 27 years, with Ohio State (13-5, 34-11) dealing the Wolverines' National Pitcher of the Year candidate his second loss of the season. "You never want to be no-hit;" Berset said. "It's discouraging. But what's most disappointing about it is Chris Fetter not being able to get the win he deserves." Through five and a half innings See NO-HITTER, Page 12