Classifieds
Call: #734-418-4115
Email: dailydisplay@gmail.com
ACROSS
1 Luxurious
5 Decorative
bedroom item
9 As such
14 Morales of
“Jericho”
15 Improbable
16 Without stopping
17 What a party
crasher may get
20 French room
21 Signifies
22 Nuggets’ org.
23 Air traveler’s
concern, briefly
25 Mil. group that
“teaches you to
lead”
27 19th-/20th-
century South
African conflicts
33 “Stupid me!”
34 Unlikely prom king
35 Chocolate-
covered caramel
treats
38 Starting from
40 Event with
arguments
43 Habit
44 NFL’s winningest
coach
46 In the way
indicated
48 Support
49 Horror movie
characters
53 Jog
54 Petty with hits
55 Shindigs
58 Occupied
61 Shows of crowd
approval
65 Film score
component, and
a hint to words
hidden in 17-, 27-
and 49-Across
68 “Sweeney __ the
Nightingales”:
Eliot poem
69 Newbie
70 Italian meat
sauce
71 Do not disturb
72 Promote
73 Inbox clogger
DOWN
1 Lats relatives
2 Workplace
welfare agcy.
3 Caravel mover
4 Jewish campus
organization
5 Mess of a place
6 Hurt
7 Out of the wind
8 Celtics coach
before Rick Pitino
9 Lady Gaga, for
one
10 Tolkien forest
creature
11 Trigger guide
12 Uppity type
13 “Giant” author
Ferber
18 Give away
19 Sufficient, to
Shakespeare
24 Provide the bank
layout to, say
26 Brag
27 Court figs.
28 Snack
29 Horror movie
character
30 Hockey legend
31 Polishes in
publishing
32 Memorial __
Kettering: NYC
hospital
36 Sleep __
37 EPA issuances
39 Uninspired
41 Tuna type
42 Unbridled desire
45 Shorten
47 Assault
50 First-rate
51 Double
exposures?
52 Affairs of the heart
55 Dashboard
feature
56 “I’ll pay”
57 2013 Wimbledon
champ Andy
Murray, e.g.
59 Eye problem
60 Title
outranking
viscount
62 Memo letters
63 Capital west of
Moscow
64 Bathtub
buildup
66 Bach’s “Mass __
Minor”
67 Texter’s “What a
riot!”
By Gerry Wildenberg
©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
11/05/15
11/05/15
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:
RELEASE DATE– Thursday, November 5, 2015
Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle
Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis
xwordeditor@aol.com
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Sports
The Michigan Daily — michigandaily.com
Thursday, November 5, 2015 — 5A
Michigan secondary looks
to re-establish continuity
By JAKE LOURIM
Managing Sports Editor
Other than the offensive line,
perhaps no unit has had more
continuity for the Michigan
football team this year than the
secondary.
After rotating bodies in and
out constantly in recent years,
the Wolverines have stuck to
four players for most of the year.
But on the offensive line, the
goal is to establish cohesiveness
and operate as a unit. In the
secondary,
each
player
is
different,
and
each
brings
something different to the table.
There is Jarrod Wilson, a
senior safety who will make his
27th career start — second on
the defense to fifth-year senior
linebacker
Desmond
Morgan
— Saturday against Rutgers.
Wilson has earned high praise
for being the leader of the unit.
As a veteran, he has the task
of coordinating assignments in
the back end. Against Michigan
State on Oct. 17, Wilson warned
junior defensive backs Channing
Stribling and Dymonte Thomas
that the Spartans would look for
Macgarrett Kings down the left
sideline on 4th-and-18 late in the
game. Sure enough, they did, and
Stribling and Thomas broke it up
to force the turnover.
Secondary
coach
Greg
Jackson said last week that
was normal for Wilson, and
Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh
also expressed appreciation for
Wilson’s efforts.
“People listen to Jarrod when
he talks,” Harbaugh said last
week. “He’s a do-stuff-right
guy all the time and really
enjoyable to coach, and talented.
… It’s something that the public
doesn’t
see,
his
leadership
qualities, because he does it in
such a steady, non-show type of
way, but I can assure you, he’s
one of the top leaders on the
team.”
Then
there
is
junior
Jourdan Lewis, the lock-down
cornerback of the group. Lewis
defends taller receivers well
considering his 5-foot-10 height.
On the season, he has 15 pass
breakups and two interceptions,
one of which he returned for a
touchdown.
“The kid’s a competitor,” said
secondary coach Mike Zordich.
“I enjoy coaching him, enjoy
watching him play. We match
him up against the best receiver
every week, and he embraces it.
He really does.
He’s just fun
to watch and
fun to coach.”
Lewis’
toughest test
of
the
year
came against
Michigan
State’s Aaron
Burbridge,
but he could
have another
battle
this
weekend
against
Rutgers’ Leonte Carroo, who
is questionable for Saturday’s
matchup. In just five games this
season, Carroo has caught 24
passes for 527 yards and nine
touchdowns.
The spot opposite Lewis has
been the only one with much
fluctuation.
Stribling
started
the year at cornerback, but
redshirt junior Jeremy Clark,
who leads the team with three
interceptions, has started three
of the past four games. Zordich
said Wednesday that the two are
competing for time along with
other players.
Behind them in the defensive
backfield,
redshirt
freshman
safety Jabrill Peppers garners the
most attention in the secondary.
While most of it
has been for his
offensive
and
special
teams
play lately, he
spends
most
of
his
time
on
defense,
starting
all
eight
games
there so far.
Peppers
ranks fifth on
the team with 26 tackles and
sixth with 4.5 tackles for loss. He
often makes plays coming off the
edge in blitz packages.
Unless something changes,
those four or five — with
contributions from players such
as Thomas and junior safety
Delano Hill — will see the bulk
of the time in the secondary
again Saturday. They will try to
regroup after giving up 26 points
to the Big Ten’s worst scoring
offense.
“Last
week,
not
taking
anything away from Minnesota,
we just laid an egg defensively,”
Zordich said. “Especially in the
secondary, we just played poorly.”
Having two coaches in the
secondary helps to shore up
those issues before they escalate.
Zordich and Jackson’s primary
emphasis with the defensive
backs is eye control.
Most of opponents’ big plays
have come when their receivers
sneak behind the secondary.
When the Wolverines watch film,
they watch the wings on players’
helmets, making sure they’re
focused forward toward the
receiver and not toward the ball.
Consistency with personnel
has enabled the Wolverines to
work tirelessly on that. While
their unit has been dominant
for most of the season, each
individual
brings
something
different to the table.
“As a group, they’re great.
But just as all of you here are
different,
everybody
in
our
room
is
different,”
Zordich
said. “Everybody has their own
personalities, which is beautiful.”
ALLISON FARRAND/Daily
Senior safety Jarrod Wilson will look to lead Michigan’s secondary back to its dominant ways this weekend.
“As a group,
they’re great. ...
Everybody in our
room is different.”
WOMEN’S BASKETBALL
Experience drives
Ristovski as senior
By BRANDON CARNEY
Daily Sports Writer
Through
the
first
three
years of her career, Madison
Ristovski learned from her older
teammates, but now she fills the
veteran role.
The guard is one of just two
scholarship
seniors
on
the
Michigan women’s basketball
roster.
In
previous
seasons,
Ristovski found herself adapting
to roles wherever the team
needed her. From appearing off
the bench as the Wolverines’
sixth player in her sophomore
season to being an outside
shooting
threat
in
certain
situations last year, Ristovski
has collected an assortment of
experiences.
Ristovski has been able to
contribute wherever she has
played, averaging five points and
two assists per game through her
career as well as proving herself
to be a 3-point threat.
But the senior’s consistency
has been the strongest asset of
her game, and Michigan will
need it now more than ever.
With
a
lack
of
proven
upperclassmen,
Michigan
coach Kim Barnes Arico has
been working hard at grooming
Ristovski into her new role as the
Wolverines’ go-to leader.
“I think being a senior and
having a lot of experience, I’ve
been able to talk to the younger
girls about the games I’ve played
in and the way we practice,”
Ristovski said. “Having that
experience, I can help them.
With my help, the freshmen
and others can become better
players.”
Whether
showing
the
freshmen the ropes on the
court or confidently answering
questions at Big Ten Media Day
in Rosemont, Ill., three weeks
ago, Ristovski is proving herself
as a vocal force in all areas.
In the weeks preceding the
Wolverines’
opening
set
of
games, Ristovski has stressed
to her young teammates the
importance of staying focused.
The 5-foot-10 guard has been
a part of several talented rosters
in the past few years but admits
this year’s squad could have the
highest ceiling of them all.
With a lot of excitement
surrounding a top-20 freshman
class and a rising star, sophomore
guard
Katelynn
Flaherty,
Ristovski has managed to keep
Michigan’s
best
intentions
within Crisler Center and not let
the hype get to the team.
“One of the biggest things
this team is focused on is that
we’re not going to worry about
what others are saying about
us,” Ristovski said. “The only
people who we care about what
they think are in this gym right
now. We have expectations for
ourselves,
and
remembering
that, we’re not going to get
rattled by what anyone else says.”
Working with the group of
nine underclassmen has been
challenging, but the senior is
enjoying it. She doesn’t feel as
much pressure on Michigan
than in years past, and it’s
been Ristovski’s job to remind
the underclassmen not to take
anything for granted.
“This year, I think because
we are so young, we bring a
lot of energy,” Ristovski said.
“But we need to also bring the
understanding that we can’t take
any possessions off. Everyone
here is talented, but we’ll have to
see when the games start if we’re
mature.”
While the guard brings a lot
of expertise to the table, she
lacks the experience of playing in
several consecutive high-minute
contests. Ristovski has appeared
in 102 games in her career but
has landed in the starting five
just 19 times.
Even
for
a
veteran
like
herself,
educating
others
could very well be a unique
opportunity even for Ristovski.
Not only can Ristovski help the
Wolverines reach the high bar
they’ve set for themselves, but
she can also begin to instill the
championship
mindset
that
Barnes Arico desires to establish
in order to sustain a rising
Michigan program.
MEN’S SOCCER
Slow start dooms
‘M’ at Ohio State
By ORION SANG
For the Daily
The Michigan men’s soccer
team came into Wednesday
night’s
matchup
looking
to
avenge last
year’s
season-
ending loss to Ohio State.
But the 15th-ranked Buckeyes
scored
off
two
Wolverine
miscues in the first half, and
Michigan was unable to respond,
falling 3-1. The regular-season
finale leaves the Wolverines (3-3-
2 Big Ten, 8-5-4 overall) without
home-field advantage in the
conference tournament.
“It’s a difficult one,” said
senior forward James Murphy.
“Unfortunately, we just didn’t
catch a few breaks tonight.”
Michigan had a chance to earn
a share of the regular-season
conference title, but it was Ohio
State (5-2-1, 11-5-2) that was
celebrating its championship-
clinching win at the end of the
game.
Both teams had chances to
score early on, with possession
fairly even between the two
rivals. However, the Buckeyes
started to control the ball on the
Wolverines’ side of the field, and
their efforts soon paid off.
Ohio
State
was
able
to
capitalize off a key Michigan
mistake to score its first goal.
Junior defender Andre Morris
misplayed a ball, and Buckeye
midfielder
Kyle
Culbertson
pounced on it and launched it
past sophomore goalkeeper Evan
Louro.
Less than 10 minutes later,
another crucial mistake allowed
Ohio State to extend its lead.
Louro blocked a corner from
Ohio State’s Liam Doyle, but
the deflection bounced off the
backside of Buckeye midfielder
Zach Mason into the goal.
“There weren’t any defensive
breakdowns,”
said
Michigan
coach Chaka Daley. “There were
just mistakes. They were very
fortunate. We made mistakes,
and they didn’t.”
Following
Mason’s
goal,
Michigan headed into the second
half down two goals despite its
good start. The deficit proved to
be insurmountable.
However,
the
Wolverines
began to up their play in a game
that became increasingly chippy
— the second half alone included
five yellow cards.
“I think there was a little bit
of frustration,” Murphy said.
“We were desperate to win the
game.”
In the 54th minute, Ohio State
scored to extend its lead when
Culbertson received a pass from
forward Yaw Amankwa and
slipped the ball past Louro once
again for his second goal of the
night.
The Wolverines finally got
on the scoreboard in the 84th
minute when Murphy scored his
second goal in two games off an
assist from freshman defender
Peter Brown. But it was too little,
too late.
With the loss, and other
conference-wide results from
other games Wednesday factored
in, the Wolverines will enter this
weekend’s Big Ten Tournament
as the No. 6 seed in a road game
at Maryland.
“We said afterwards that we’ve
got some more soccer to play,”
Murphy said, “and we’re going to
go into this Big Ten Tournament
and continue to battle.”
MICHIGAN
OHIO STATE
1
3