Classifieds

Call: #734-418-4115
Email: dailydisplay@gmail.com

ACROSS
1 Aboveboard
6 Triumphant cries
10 Hurdle for a jr.
14 Lose some
ground
15 Berry rich in
antioxidants
16 “Pygmalion”
author
17 *Star of Comedy
Central’s
“Insomniac”
19 Sleek, in car talk
20 Best
replacement?
21 Exercises, in a
way
23 Daily Planet VIP
25 Insensitive
26 “The Good Wife”
field
29 Man cave fixture
32 Caller in a mask
35 Get up
37 Dupe
38 “bye 4 now”
39 Praise
40 Big letters in
home security
41 Islamic decree
42 “Of __ curls on
calmed brows”:
E.B. Browning
43 City where
Perry’s flagship
Niagara is
exhibited
44 “Which is to 
say ... ”
45 Viewed
46 1988 Oscar
winner for Best
Picture
48 Bread for
Reubens
49 Roasting aid
51 Shutter piece
53 Smooches
57 Justice Kagan
60 Snack with a
Thins variety
61 *Home
business?
64 Layer on a wall
65 Not again?
66 Mall map symbol
67 Press supplies
68 Got up
69 “I rock!”

DOWN
1 Spearheaded
2 Big Band and
Swing

3 C-SPAN subject
4 Often
unreachable goal
5 Fragrant hybrid
blooms
6 Bean topper?
7 Didn’t have to
putt on
8 Angel hair topper
9 10-Down feature
10 Item in a five-
section Bible
book
11 *Popular
cosmetic
moisturizer
12 Boomer
advocacy group
13 Ark units
18 Tidy cut
22 Lexus GX, e.g.
24 Exotic vacation
26 Lures for anglers?
27 Its capital is
Oranjestad
28 *Leonardo
DiCaprio feature
30 “The Kiss”
sculptor
31 Symbols on poles
33 Classic hit that
begins “And now,
the end is near”
34 Control tower
concern

36 Lad
38 Highland cap
41 Ultimate authority
... or what’s
hidden in the
answers to
starred clues
43 Issue an
embarrassing
retraction
46 2016 Olympics
city
47 On the safer side

50 Maps out
52 Aquarium fish
53 Point sets, in
math
54 One is often used
in the rough
55 Ball game
56 Santa’s burden
58 __ a one
59 Tiny energy
source
62 Finch creator
63 Woolly mom

By C.C. Burnikel
©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
03/10/16

03/10/16

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

RELEASE DATE– Thursday, March 10, 2016

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

xwordeditor@aol.com

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6 BEDROOM FALL 2016‑17
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Parking, Laundry, Lots of Common area
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ARBOR PROPERTIES 
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THESIS EDITING, LANGUAGE,
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NEAR CAMPUS APARTMENTS 
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SERVICES

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Sports
The Michigan Daily — michigandaily.com
Thursday, March 10, 2016 — 5A

‘M’ heads to Hawaii

Wolverines play 
four games in 

Honolulu for first 

time ever

By SYLVANNA GROSS 

Daily Sports Writer

The Michigan baseball team 

will be flying over, and to, 
uncharted waters this weekend. 

The 19th-ranked Wolverines 

will 
travel 

to 
Honolulu 

to 
face 
the 

University 
of 

Hawaii for the 
first time since 
2008 
— 
and 

just the second 
time 
ever. 

The last time 
Michigan and 
the 
Rainbow 

Warriors 
met 
was 
at 

the 
Arizona 

State 
Coca-

Cola 
Classic 

tournament, where the then-
18th ranked Wolverines stole 
the game, 11-5. 

Since then, however, a new 

face has taken over the program 
from former Michigan coach 
Rich Maloney. 

“I’ve 
never 
coached 
or 

played a game (in Hawaii),” 
said 
fourth-year 
Michigan 

coach Erik Bakich. “I spent a 
lot of times calling coaches who 
have coached there multiple 
times asking about how to best 
prepare for the time change. 

“Another thing I heard quite 

often from other coaches and 

players is that when you’re 
coming from the Eastern or 
Central time zones, you need to 
build in some down time, some 
rest time, some nap time. I think 
that’s important for conserving 
their energy and making sure 
that they have everything they 
got for game time.” 

To adjust to the time zones, 

the team shifted its training 
hours this past week so that 
practice was at night and 
academic work was in the 
afternoon. It seems like a 
minor adjustment — typically 
the schedule is reversed — but 
the first game is at 6:30 p.m. 
Hawaii time, which is 11:30 p.m. 
Eastern time. The new training 
schedule is helping the players 
adjust to competing later in the 
night. 

According to the advisory 

coaches, it’s important to get 
the players some beach time, but 
they warned that it’s imperative 
the players get out of the sun 
before the heat kicks in mid-day.

But the goal isn’t just to get a 

tan. It’s still about baseball.

“We’re just looking to make 

more positive strides, that’s what 
we talked to the team about,” 
Bakich said. “To continue to 
advance the program, (and) to 
continue to get better.” 

The team is looking to improve 

on 
execution 
and 
getting 

the pitchers to continuously 
attack the zone. Even more 
importantly, Bakich is looking 
to improve defensively. 

This 
year, 
Michigan 
is 

heading into the series with a 
7-3 overall record — a promising 
start considering its opponents’ 
6-7 start to its season. As of 

now, Hawaii is batting .299 
while posting a 4.49 earned-
run average through 13 games. 
A Rainbow Warrior to watch 
will be senior infielder Jacob 
Sheldon Collins, who boasts a 
.404 batting average and a .429 
on-base percentage. 

Michigan 
will 
send 

sophomore left-hander Oliver 
Jaskie 
to 
the 
mound 
first 

on 
Thursday, 
since 
Jaskie 

hasn’t pitched since Feb. 29 at 
California. The Wolverines will 
follow with left-hander Brett 
Adcock on Friday and Ryan 
Nutof and left-hander Evan Hill 
for Saturday. The defense will 
have the same 10 players that 
have consistently started. 

With more than two weeks 

until Michigan’s home opener, 
the Wolverines will have to be 
comfortable on the road for now. 

AMANDA ALLEN/Daily

Redshirt junior Mike McCray should play a much larger role at linebacker this fall.
New linebacking 
corps ready for a 
challenge in 2016

With Morgan, Ross 
and Bolden gone, 
young group takes 
over in new season

By JACOB GASE 

Daily Sports Editor

When looking for statistics to 

explain the Michigan football 
team’s success in 2015, a few 
jump out right away: Three 
straight 
shutouts. 
Fourth-

fewest total yards allowed in 
the nation. Only one touchdown 
conceded in a 41-7 Citrus Bowl 
victory over Florida.

There’s 
no 
question 
the 

Wolverines’ 
biggest 
strength 

was their defense, led by then-
defensive 
coordinator 
D.J. 

Durkin, who has since parlayed 
that success into a head coaching 
job at Maryland. To replace 
him this year, all Michigan did 
was hire former Boston College 
defensive 
coordinator 
Don 

Brown, whose 2015 defense was 
the best in the nation.

Under Brown’s leadership, the 

Wolverines believe they have a 
chance to be just as good — or 
better — in 2016. Nearly the entire 
defensive line will return, as will 
most of the secondary. Even 
the departure of hard-hitting 
defensive 
tackle 
Willie 

Henry, 
who 

forwent 
his 

final season of 
eligibility 
to 

enter the NFL 
Draft, could be 
offset by the 
arrival of No. 1 
recruit Rashan 
Gary, 
who 

plays the same 
position.

However, 
one 
looming 

challenge 
remains 
for 
the 

defense. With the graduation 
of 
linebackers 
Joe 
Bolden, 

Desmond Morgan and James 
Ross, 
Michigan’s 
most 

experienced 
position 
group 

suddenly becomes its least.

In order to maintain the level 

of performance it enjoyed last 
season, the defense will have to 
find a way to replace a trio that 
accounted for 758 career tackles 
— 189 last year alone. To do so, 
the Wolverines will need to rely 
on a combination of returning 
talent and fresh blood.

It will also have to do so 

under new leadership, as Chris 
Partridge replaces Durkin as 
linebackers coach.

Five practices into Michigan’s 

spring 
season, 
Partridge 
is 

well aware of the challenge, 
but he doesn’t seem worried at 
all. In fact, he’s enjoying the 
experience.

“It’s 
awesome,” 
Partridge 

said. “And then Coach Brown is 
there with me, with the backers, 
and he’s a seasoned, veteran 
coach that understands how 
to get guys ready to go. So, it’s 
been pretty smooth. They’re 
working hard.”

Even the Wolverines’ most 

veteran backers — senior Ben 
Gedeon 
and 
redshirt 
junior 

Mike McCray — have very little 
starting experience this late in 
their careers. 

Though Gedeon has made 42 

appearances and registered 70 
tackles over the last three years, 
he has started only one game. 
McCray, on the other hand, has 
appeared in just 11 games and 
recorded two tackles. He didn’t 
see the field at all last season 
because of a shoulder injury.

Despite their meager career 

statistics, though, both players 
turned heads last week with 
their play during Michigan’s 
practices at IMG Academy in 
Bradenton, Fla. 

“Ben Gedeon has stepped in 

and been an incredible leader 
right off the bat,” Partridge said. 
“(McCray) has been incredible 
the first five practices. He’s a 
pleasant surprise. You kinda 
knew he had it in him, and his 
first five practices have been 
phenomenal.”

If Gedeon and McCray are 

as 
good 
as 

advertised, 
the remaining 
challenge will 
be to get some 
of the younger 
players 
acclimated. 

Partridge 

said that all 
freshman 
recruits 
will 

have 
the 

opportunity to compete for a job, 
citing linebacker Devin Bush — 
a 6-foot, 200-pound freshman 
from Pemberton Pines, Fla. — as 
a player who has adjusted well to 
the college environment so far 
and will be “looked highly upon” 
to contribute this season. 

And if that doesn’t work 

out, the Wolverines even seem 
willing to play their ever-present 
wild card: do-it-all safety Jabrill 
Peppers, who played multiple 
reps at linebacker in Bradenton 
last week.

Replacing 
last 
year’s 

linebackers is no easy task, but 
it’s one Michigan is already 
willing to tackle head-on, even if 
it has to get creative to do so.

“It’s 
what 
I 
live 
for,” 

Partridge 
said. 
“I 
love 
it. 

When I came in here, it was a 
challenge. I’m a competitor — I 
wouldn’t want it any other way. 
We’ll get those guys going, we’ll 
take on the challenge and we’ll 
make it work.”

“I love it. When 

I came in 

here, it was a 
challenge.”

AMANDA ALLEN/Daily

Michigan coach Erik Bakich had his team practice at night this week in preparation for its trip to Hawaii this weekend.

Michigan 
at Hawaii

Matchup: 
Michigan 7-3; 
Hawaii 6-7

When: 
Thursday 11:30 
P.M., Friday 
11:30 P.M., 
Saturday 6 
P.M./9 P.M.

Where: Les 
Murakami 
Stadium

