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Michigan at NOTRE DAME

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Hart wants to dominate the Irish
Running back knows U-M stars have made reputation by excelling against name schools.
Angelique S. Chengelis / The Detroit News
ANN ARBOR -- Mike Hart has never wanted to be considered just another tailback.
He says all the right things, that he is all about winning no matter who does the scoring, and he wholeheartedly means that.
But do not doubt Hart's desire to be the player who lifts his game and his team along with him.
Hart, Michigan's junior starting tailback, is a showcase back who loves the big-game setting and national spotlight. He relishes the opportunity ahead to prove himself Saturday in the road opener against Notre Dame.
"A lot of people are watching," Hart said of the matchup against the No. 2 Irish. The Wolverines are No. 11.
"This is when guys make names for themselves. Guys like (Tim) Biakabutuka, when he played Notre Dame and Ohio State, he always had big games. Tyrone Wheatley, A-Train (Anthony Thomas), Chris Perry, that's where you make your name, in big games. If you don't perform in these big games, then you're just an average back."
Two years ago, Hart was the Big Ten freshman of the year after taking over as the primary back, gaining 1,455 yards and scoring nine touchdowns. That's hardly average production for a freshman. Hart's sophomore season, however, was marred by injury, starting against Notre Dame when he pulled his hamstring in the first quarter.
Now, two games into his junior season, Hart is in the best physical condition of his career and has been productive in what has been a smash-mouth approach by the offense. He is averaging 131 yards and has carried the ball 50 times.
He remains the sure-handed, go-to back, although his streak of touches without a fumble ended at 450 last week against Central Michigan.
"He comes out every day with high energy and does the things he needs to do to help us win," said Jake Long, Michigan's starting left tackle. "When the game is on the line, there's no one's hands I'd rather have it in than his. He knows how to deal with the pressure and everything. He's a big-game, big-time player."
Said Hart: "If the game is tight, I'm going to want the ball."
Hart clearly is the emotional leader of the offense. Although dwarfed by the linemen in front of him creating seams, the 5-foot-9, 196-pound Hart knows his presence looms large for the Wolverines.
"I do bring something -- I don't know what it is," Hart said. "Maybe it's confidence. Maybe it's confidence that they know if I'm back there ? we had a young back last year in Kevin (Grady) that they didn't know if he was going to get the job done. Whereas, when I'm back there, they know I'm going to get the job done. It might be different this year because Kevin is older, he knows what he's doing, and people have confidence in him. If I (give) a little lift, it's emotionally, I guess, because I talk a lot. Maybe that's what it is."
Without a doubt, being unable to play last season was difficult on Hart. He missed most of the Notre Dame game and the next two games. Michigan was 2-2 and unranked by the end of September.
"When I was injured, after every series, I still talked, but it's hard for guys to listen if you're not in there, doing what you're saying," Hart said. "That's one thing -- what I say, I'm going to go out there and do, and that brings a lot of motivation in itself. If you speak and you go out and do it, then guys have to trust you, they have to have confidence in you."
A year ago, with Michigan staggering for respect, out of the rankings and at .500 heading into 11th-ranked Michigan State, Hart made his return. He let everyone know he was there, vocally -- Hart frequently was spotted demonstrably rallying the Wolverines -- and through his performance. He gained 218 yards rushing on 36 carries, and scored on a 1-yard run in the fourth quarter of Michigan's 34-31 victory.
"I just knew we had to win," Hart said.
While Hart played sparingly last season against the Irish, he is no surprise to them or to coach Charlie Weis.
"A lot of times when you see a guy that's like 5-9, a shade under 200 pounds, people don't think he can run with power, that they're just elusive," Weis said. "The thing is, he runs with power. This guy can run inside and outside. Any time a guy can do that, now, you can't say, 'OK, great, Hart is in there, now he can run inside, we'll just press the edge and give away the inside run.' You can't give away anything with the guy, because he's got vision, he can cut, and he's got wheels, too."
Hart insists there is no pressure heading to Notre Dame. But he badly wants to shine on the national stage.
He knows that for some fans, this will be a one-time shot at watching him. He wants to do the most with that opportunity.
"Any time you play Notre Dame it's a big game," Hart said. "You have to go out there and produce, and if you produce then people are going to look at you and think you're a lot better player, or (if you don't produce, you're) a lot worse player if you don't go out there and play and you're not all you're hyped to be."
Still, while the stage is set for Hart, he knows what he wants the Wolverines to do.
"Of course you want to be the back that does it for Michigan," Hart said. "The last two years I have been unfortunate against them. I am just going in there with the mind-set to win. I do not care if we have two running backs rushing. If we win the game, that's all I care about. (Kevin) Grady can go in there and have 300 yards rushing, and I can have two yards, and if we win the game, then that is fine with me."
 
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SB Tribune

Woodley, U-M know Weis has mysterious ways

COMMENTARY

JASON KELLY

LaMarr Woodley gets it. He understands that defending Notre Dame these days requires more than mere intelligence gathering. Whatever statistical data and surveillance footage exists, it reveals less about what to expect from Charlie Weis than most opposing play callers.

"It's kind of hard to prepare for it, because you never know what he is going to come out in," the Michigan defensive end said. "Saturday he might be in one offense and then the Saturday coming up, when we play him, he might be in a totally different offense."

Exactly.

When a job on his staff opens, Weis should hire Woodley since he understands at his tender age what eludes seasoned former coaches and players broadcasting their expertise.

Teams "catching up" to Weis and his adaptable offensive designs -- a common theme as he goes through the batting order for the second time like some hot-shot power pitcher -- will not happen.

Don't confuse that with the idea that Notre Dame will win on pure brain power, or that Weis knows secrets other coaches cannot decode.

Michigan coach Lloyd Carr, despite the dour caricature he has become, summoned enough defensive ingenuity last year to snuff out most of what the Irish tried to do. To the tune of 244 total yards, their lowest output of the season by far.

Failing to figure out how to punch it in after recovering a fumble on the Ohio State 15-yard line helped deflate Notre Dame in the Fiesta Bowl too.

So this is not a letter of recommendation for Mensa membership, just an explanation that Weis operates in a way that doesn't lend itself to routine preparation.

His style is not to have one. He is not an innovator. He wouldn't buy into a gimmick if it offered him two-for-one touchdowns with no interest and no money down until President's Day 2007.

The foundation of Notre Dame's offense is more sturdy than that, simple in its philosophy, complex in its design, flexible in its execution.

In the constant dance of schemes and trends, Weis doesn't own the patent on any one idea, he just understands how all the moving parts fit together.

Weis does have his tendencies. Like ... well ... let's see ... opponents now know, for example, that he likes to begin the second game of every season in a no-huddle offense. Michigan experienced it last year, Penn State last week.

Whether or not the Nittany Lions expected it, the plan limited their defensive intricacy, leaving them off balance and, before long, out of breath.

"I think towards the end of the first half, we were hanging on in there," Penn State coach Joe Paterno said. "Notre Dame had really been coming at us at a good pace, the whole bit. Started the game right out of the huddle, things like that."

Notre Dame started that way, and with a few other ideas to feel out the Nittany Lions that didn't work quite as well.

So Weis scrapped that part of the plan, modest adjustments not to be mistaken for a sign of offensive genius.

To Weis himself, it represented a football mind one step up from a vegetative state. Like Joe Theismann before him, Weis realizes it doesn't take a Norman Einstein to decipher defenses.

As Penn State teed off on the inside run early, Weis decided to go around those thudding white helmets instead of continuing a hard-headed commitment to a futile effort. Not because he's so smart. Because, "I'm not brain dead."

Time for a short intermission. Enjoy this interlude entitled "Fun With Anagrams":

Brain dead calls killed Irish = Bill Diedrick era had all sins.

Now back to our regularly scheduled programming ...

Those firing synapses will have to direct another game of full-contact chess Saturday against Carr, who likewise knows where all the pieces go.

Carr has one particular piece, LaMarr Woodley, who possesses more than just the experience and athleticism to make Notre Dame's freshman right tackle Sam Young act his age.

Woodley also has enough savvy to know that what he has seen from Weis and the Irish through two games will not be what he gets Saturday.

That agile mentality will keep him on his toes in situations where the element of surprise has put other teams on their heels.
 
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I am actually hoping tsun wins all of em up to THE GAME. We could possibly be looking at another 1 vs. 2 matchup if they do and that would be absolutely sweet in my book. Crushing two #2 teams in one season and then a third in a bowl game would have to be the most impressive college football season in history.
 
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Dispatch

COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Michigan, Notre Dame headline big day

Saturday, September 16, 2006


FROM WIRE REPORTS




Brady Quinn still hasn?t figured out the Notre Dame offense.
Sure, the Dublin Coffman High School graduate knows the plays in coach Charlie Weis? playbook. With all but three starters back from the team?s record-setting offense last season, Quinn has some ideas about what the unit can do. But until it starts producing consistently, the Irish senior said the offense will continue to search for its identity.
"We still face that year in and year out, trying to adjust with the new changes that have occurred," he said. "The process isn?t something you could necessarily put your finger on. I think it?s different for every player."
The second-ranked Irish (2-0) are averaging 266 yards per game passing and 124 yards rushing, heading into the game today against No. 11 Michigan, well below the average last year of 330 yards passing and 147 yards rushing.
The game is one of seven pitting two Top 25 teams. No. 3 Auburn plays host to No. 6 Louisiana State, No. 19 Nebraska travels to No. 4 Southern California, No. 7 Florida plays at No. 13 Tennessee, No. 12 Louisville plays host to No. 17 University of Miami, No. 15 Oklahoma visits No. 18 Oregon and No. 20 Texas Christian welcomes No. 24 Texas Tech.
The Irish didn?t have that offense down last season when they played Michigan in the second game of the season. Quinn threw for a season-low 140 yards and the Irish had a season-low 244 yards total offense in a 17-10 victory. Michigan isn?t counting on a similar performance. "I think Notre Dame is going to score points," Michigan coach Lloyd Carr said. "They?re too good not to."
 
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