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October 08, 2015 - Image 5

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The Michigan Daily

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ACROSS
1 Night table
6 Covers a lot of
ground
13 One learning the
ropes
14 Stir-fried dish
with rice noodles
15 Receipt datum
16 Sources of inside
info?
17 Heart
18 European coal
region
19 Your, to Pierre
20 Pre-splashdown
stage
22 Rice source
24 Sports media
consultant
Fleischer
26 Hiding places
27 Moo goo __ pan
28 Good times
29 Blue Devils’
school
30 Strolled in the
shallows
33 Invite as one’s
date for
35 UFO crew, so it’s
said
37 Willow twig
38 Cut even shorter,
as a green
39 Chips source
41 R&B group __
Hill
42 Ristorante suffix
43 “Pearls Before
__”: Stephan
Pastis comic
44 Tuba syllable
45 Supernatural
benefactors
47 Do-it-yourselfer’s
website
49 Boxer Laila
50 Typically
rectangular glass
piece
51 Hatch in the
Senate
54 Attractive
57 Numbers game
58 Produce eggs
59 Online
newsgroup
system
60 Pangs of
conscience

61 Largely
submerged
threats

DOWN
1 Cargo carrier
2 Common
comedy club
requirement
3 Cyberbullying,
e.g.
4 Xbox 360 rival
5 “NYPD Blue” rank
6 Attacks in a hose
fight
7 Tango team
8 Byways: Abbr.
9 LAX tower
service
10 “Where was the
mistake?”
11 Like highways
12 Actress Spacek
13 ’60s hot spot
16 Wall Street
phenomenon
suggested by this
puzzle’s circled
letters
18 Stir up
21 __-turn
22 “Right Ho,
Jeeves” writer

23 Remote
batteries
24 Way out yonder
25 Trick
31 Designer
Saarinen
32 One frequently
hit on the head?
34 “Un-break My
Heart” singer
Braxton
36 Sudden increase
40 Verse starter?

43 Jolson classic
45 Swamp thing
46 Lycée student
48 Monastic group
50 Cherry discards
52 Turner and
Clanton
53 Aficionado
55 Gaza Strip gp.
56 It covers a lot of
ground
57 One coming off
the bench

By C.C. Burnikel
©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
10/08/15

10/08/15

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

RELEASE DATE– Thursday, October 8, 2015

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

xwordeditor@aol.com

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PARKING

Sports
The Michigan Daily — michigandaily.com
Thursday, October 8, 2015 — 5A

Dawkins looks to build
upon freshman success

By LEV FACHER

Managing Editor

Ask Aubrey Dawkins if he

expected to enter the 2015-16
season as a player who’d racked
up
substantial,
meaningful

minutes against top-tier Big Ten
competition during his freshman
year. The sophomore guard won’t
hesitate.

“No, I did not,” Dawkins said

Friday before the Wolverines’ first
practice of the season. “You could
say it’s a blessing in disguise.”

While
Dawkins
benefited

immensely from being thrown
into the fire, the circumstances
that led to his opportunity were
far from ideal for the Michigan
men’s basketball team. Junior
guard Derrick Walton Jr. and
senior guard Caris LeVert both
succumbed
to
mid-season

injuries,
forcing
then-junior

Spike Albrecht to take over the
leadership role in the Wolverines’
backcourt.

It also forced Dawkins and

fellow freshman Muhammad-Ali
Abdur-Rahkman off the bench
and into the limelight.

“Obviously, I always want the

best for Caris,” Dawkins said. “I
think he’s going to have a great
season this year, and I can’t wait
to see him back on the court. But
yeah, it was a blessing in disguise.
It happened, and I got better from
it.”

The improvement during last

season’s final months and over
the summer has been readily
apparent, even to the point that
Michigan coach John Beilein

singled out Dawkins this offseason
as one of the Wolverines’ most
improved players.

The extra attention Dawkins

is dealing with could have added
some level of extra pressure. But
not so, he claimed — Beilein’s
comments were flattering, but
nothing more.

“It’s good to hear,” Dawkins

said.
“It’s
good
positive

reinforcement.”

Dawkins added inches to his

vertical and improved his handle
during his summer in Ann Arbor,
which gave him the opportunity to
work out in a calmer environment
than the frenzied winter months
on campus.

“It was great,” Dawkins said.

“Much more relaxed. Campus is a
little more quiet. It was fun, (and)
I got a lot better.”

Despite
the
physical

improvements,
Dawkins
cited

a heightened basketball IQ as
his most substantial gain of the
offseason.

“There’s no need to rush,” he

said. “Coming in as a freshman,
I was kind of deer in the
headlights. You’re shocked — you
want to play as fast as you can.
But you don’t need to do that. In
slowing down and just making
smart plays is where I think I
grew the most.”

Between spending the summer

on campus and working at Adidas
Nations camp in early August,
the sophomore said his father
— Stanford head coach Johnny
Dawkins — didn’t get the chance
to see him play in a formal setting
over the offseason.

Dawkins
said
not
much

has changed in terms of their
dynamic, a hybrid of father-son
and coach-player relationship,
even though he now has a season
of Division I competition under
his belt.

“Same old, same old,” Dawkins

said. “(He’s) always giving me
teaching points, telling me what
I need to get better at. That’s how
it’s always going to be.”

The
three-hour
time

difference makes staying up
to date tougher for the elder
Dawkins, but his son said the
Cardinal’s
eighth-year
coach

manages to record all of the
Michigan games, nonetheless.

As much as seeing Aubrey earn

substantial minutes at shooting
guard last season must have been
a pleasant surprise for the entire
Dawkins
family,
Michigan’s

budding star is showing no
signs
of
complacency.
With

the unexpected advantage of
experience, a bolstered vertical
jump, a higher basketball IQ and
a less-frenetic on-court mindset,
a breakout sophmore season for
Dawkins wouldn’t come as a
surprise.

There’s only one problem:

LeVert, Walton and a plethora
of other capable guards are all
expected to be fully healthy
and ready to contribute for a
Michigan squad that could have
at least a dozen players earn
substantial time on the floor.
Nobody is immune to the battle
for minutes, but Dawkins is as
well-positioned as anybody else
to earn his time.

MEN’S BASKETBALL

Michigan wins thriller

Wolverines

victorious despite
trailing early in

match

By JESSE KLEIN

Daily Sports Writer

After rallying for a tough

3-2 win over Michigan State
last Wednesday, the Michigan
volleyball team traveled to Iowa
City hoping to dominate from
the start rather than play from
behind. But the Wolverines got a
taste of déjà
vu as they
once again
rallied
from a 2-0 deficit for another 3-2
victory.

In the first set, Michigan (3-2

Big Ten, 13-3 overall) hit a slump
due to changes in the starting
rotation. Iowa (0-5, 10-8) held
a narrow lead before Michigan
redshirt junior outside hitter
Ally
Davis
and
Michigan

sophomore
middle
blocker

Claire Kieffer-Wright cut the
lead with four kills each.

But it wasn’t enough to fend

off the Hawkeyes, who stayed
ahead the entire set and won it,
25-23.

The Wolverines held on for

the first half of the second set by
tying it up at seven before Iowa
went on a 4-0 run. Michigan
called a timeout in hopes of
reigniting its offense as the
Hawkeyes continued to stretch
their lead. The timeout was
ineffective, though, as Iowa
scored six straight points to take

the second set, 25-13.

“Tonight we had to change

our lineup a lot because of some
injuries, so it took us a while to
find a combo that worked,” said
Michigan coach Mark Rosen.
“We kept changing all night.”

One
of
those
injuries

included sophomore defensive
specialist Caroline Knop, the
only Wolverine who had played
in every set of every match this
season.

“She was a real point of

emotional
and rotational
stability
for

us,”
Rosen

said.
“So

tonight,
everyone had
to step up.”

The
third

set
started

out to be more
of the same with a 4-1 run by
Iowa. However, Michigan’s next
timeout was more successful,
as the team regrouped before
scoring five straight points.

“No one was making eye

contact (in the first two sets),”
Kieffer-Wright
said.
“Our

captain said that we should find
someone to make eye contact
with after every point, and
then communication started to
increase.”

But Iowa battled back to gain

a 21-20 advantage. Two straight
kills from junior middle blocker
Abby Cole while facing match
point tied the score at 24 and
kept Michigan from succumbing
to defeat.

The Wolverines refused to

give up. A kill by Davis, a block
by Cole with help from senior

setter Carly Warner and an Iowa
error forced the Hawkeyes to
call a time out. Michigan then
fought off four match points
to win the third set, 28-26, and
avoid a shutout.

The
combined
efforts
of

Kieffer-Wright and Cole helped
Michigan dominate the fourth
set and take a 25-21 win. Davis
and Cole totaled double-digit
kills and Kieffer-Wright tallied
a career high of 12.

“It couldn’t have been a more

competitive
atmosphere
to get a career
high,” Kieffer-
Wright
said.

“Our
setters

put us in really
good situations
to get kills.”

The

Wolverines

finally seemed to be in a groove
as they tied the game with two
sets apiece.

In the decisive set, the lead

continued to change back and
forth between Michigan and the
Hawkeyes, but neither was able
to take control. Cole proved just
as effective on defense, teaming
up with Warner once again to
fend off an aggressive Iowa
attack.

Though Iowa fought off two

match points, the Wolverines
had just enough stamina to
outlast the Hawkeyes to win
the match point, 15-13. The
Wolverines once again won
three straight sets to come out
victorious.

“We find a way to win,” Cole

said. “If it’s ugly or it’s pretty, it
doesn’t matter.”

MICHIGAN
IOWA

3
2

VOLLEYBALL

“If it’s ugly or
it’s pretty, it

doesn’t matter.”

‘M’ ties Notre
Dame on road

Wolverines draw
against top-10 foe
for the second time

this season

By RILEY NELSON

Daily Sports Writer

With two seconds left in

double
overtime,
sophomore

goalkeeper Evan Louro snatched
the ball out of the air, saving the
Michigan men’s soccer team
from a last-
minute
defeat.

It
was

one of the career-high eight
saves Louro made Wednesday,
helping the Wolverines to a 1-1
draw at No. 7 Notre Dame.

The draw marks Michigan’s

second against a top-10 team
this season, and the Wolverines
remain unbeaten in their last
five games. Expectations were
high ahead of
the
matchup

with
the

Fighting Irish,
so
Michigan

was uncertain
about how the
game
would

play out.

“They’re
a

good
team,”

said Michigan coach Chaka
Daley. “We’re a good team (too),
so our expectations were to go in
and win the game. It was a good
result. We got a point on the road
at Notre Dame, who is ranked
high up in the NCAA.”

The Wolverines (2-0-2 Big

Ten, 5-2-3 overall) had a quick
start with many scoring chances
in the opening minutes of the
game, but it took until the 23rd
minute for them to score their
lone goal.

Freshman midfielder Francis

Atuahene slotted the ball into
the right side of the net off a
pass
from
fifth-year
senior

midfielder Colin McAtee, who
was positioned just outside the
box. Atuahene leads the team in
scoring and has netted a goal in
each of the last five matches.

With two minutes left in the

first half, the Fighting Irish
scored after a long ball beat the
Michigan defense and wound up
at the feet of forward Thomas
Ueland, who finished off the
play by putting the ball into the
net.

The rest of the game was

dominated by tight defense and
stellar goalkeeping from both
sides.

“I think defensively, (junior

defender Lars Eckenrode, junior
defender Andre Morris) and
certainly (Louro) down the
stretch did an outstanding job
of keeping things solid,” Daley
said.

Louro had two noteworthy

saves in the second half. One
came in the 77th minute, when a
Notre Dame player had a point-
blank shot from the middle of
the box, which Louro grabbed.

“Every game, he’s kept it

solid,” Daley said. “He had an
opportunity to make some saves,
and certainly he helped change

the game.”

With three

and
a
half

minutes
left

in regulation,
the
Fighting

Irish
were

awarded a free
kick
after
a

controversial
penalty.
The

shot was placed in the lower left
corner, but Louro was there in
time to save the Wolverines once
again.

“Obviously Notre Dame is a

good team,” Louro said. “We
have confidence in ourselves
that we can go in and win games
like that. We settled for a point,
but if the opportunity came to
win the game, we were going to
take it. But we weren’t going to
give up a point.”

With an arduous sudden-

death game now behind them,
Michigan’s main priority these
next few days is to get rest ahead
of its game against Rutgers on
Saturday.

“The main thing now is to

recover,” Louro said. “We’re
playing for the same thing: three
points.”

MEN’S SOCCER

MICHIGAN
NOTRE DAME

1
1

“Every game
he’s kept it

solid.”

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