The Michigan Daily - Monday, November 21, 1988 - Page 11 ;1 I 1 ' '1 'I < .l JOHN MUNSON/Daily After failing to catch this pass, John Kolesar redeemed himself by accounting for all 100 yards on Michigna's final drive which provided the six points needed to defeat Ohio State, 34-31. Escape Continued from Page 1 Fullback Bill Matlock took the hand off and was dropped for a two- yard loss by Wolverine defensive tackle Mark Messner. On third down Ohio State tailback Carlos Snow went off right tackle and was stacked up for a one-yard loss. Messner, again, got credit for the tackle. The goal-line stand forced the Buckeyes to settle for a field goal, making the score 24-20. THE DEFENSE whooped it up and the offense responded. Brown led the Wolverines 76 yards to recapture the lead with 4:20 left in the game. The key play of the drive was a 18 yard screen pass to Boles on a third-and-five, executed perfectly by Brown under blitz pressure. Ohio State preceded to move 92 yards on six plays to regain the lead. "The best thing to happen to us was that they scored quickly." Schembechler said. So quickly that the Wolverines had two minutes to try to score. But they almost scored too quickly themselves. Kolesar returned the kickoff 59 yards and then hauled in his touchdown pass, still with over a minute and a half remaining. The Buckeyes then moved to the Michigan 39 but Frey was intercepted by Marc Spencer to seal the victory. "I couldn't take the sack," said Frey, whose team had just taken its last time out. "I was just trying to throw it away." "We were thinking about last year," said strong safety David Arnold. Last year the Buckeyes came back from a 13-0 deficit to win 23-20. "We were not going to let this be a repeat." EARLY ON, it didn't look like Michigan was going to have to worry about swings in momentum. In the first quarter the visiting Wolverines scored on a 57-yard connection between Demetrius Brown and Greg McMurtry and a 18-yard run by Leroy Hoard in the second. Mike Gillette added field goals in each quarter. His second boot was a Michigan record 56-yarder to end the half. "I always felt that the only way they could stop us was if we stopped ourselves" Schembechler said after the game. "In the second half we obliged." In that second half, the Buckeyes grabbed the momentum right away, marching 70 yards in under three minutes for their first score. MICHIGAN failed to score on its first three drives. Gillette failed on a 51-yard field goal attempt, hitting the cross bar. Brown was sacked on a third down play, stalling the second drive. And then came Boles' fumble on the first play of the next series. What did Ohio State head coach John Copper tell his defense at the intermission? "The only thing I knew to do was challenge them. I challenged their pride," Cooper said. "We just tried to get them fired up." Buckeye nose guard Mike Sullivan said, "We relaxed in the second (half) and things got going. We stoned them. The crowd was going nuts." Meanwhile the Ohio State offense was going nuts after drawing the goose egg in the first half. SNOW, Ohio State's junior running back, gained 101 yards on the first three series of the half. "It was like last year," Snow said. "I came out very emotional (after halftime. I wanted the ball." The change in quarterback Greg Frey was even more dramatic. The sophomore signal-caller, 4-of-14 in the first half, was 10-of-15 in the second. "I just tried to settle down at halftime," said Frey, who admitted to being nervous at the start of the game. "I thought to myself, 'we got nothing to lose.' I might as well go out and have some fun." F R E Y, who threw too short, too long, too early or too late all first half, started zipping balls to his receivers while moving around in the pocket. "Our defense kind of fell apart," Schembechler said. "I couldn't believe what was happening out there." The Buckeye offense moved at will, scoring twice more to take a 21- 20 lead. With each score, the cheers from the over 90,000 in attendance got louder and louder, the momentum became stronger and stronger. Although the Michigan defense came up with the stand and the interception, both offenses dominated the defenses.. The Buckeyes and Wolverines piled up 968 yards in total offense. The Schef's Specialty w BY ADAM SCHEFTER COLUMBUS - It was happening again. Shades of last year's Michigan Ohio-State game. In that game, wide receiver John Kolesar dropped two potential touchdown passes. One would have put Michigan up 20-7 at the half, another would have been a 45-yard touchdown pass. He admitted, "I messed up." Now, with Ohio State striking for its first points in the second half to make it 20-7, the Buckeyes were kicking off. Kolesar waited at the goal line. The kick I came Kolesar's way. He wondered whether to field it. His indecisiveness showed. The ball bounced off Kolesar's thigh and out of bounds at the 13. Miscue number one. "THAT GAVE them the momentum they needed," Ikolesar said. With a chance to redeem himself with Michigan trailing 24-20 in the fourth quarter, Kolesar botched up again. Quarterback Demetrius Brown faked a handoff and threw deep over the middle. The ball went over Kolesar's left shoulder, into his arms, and back out. No 44-yard touchdown pass. No celebrations. Miscue number two. . Could this be the same John Kolesar, a Westlake Ohio native, who earlier in the week said he was so excited to play in Ohio Stadium for the first time in a Michigan uniform? Could this be the Kolesar who had been known throughout his Michigan career as the big play man? Could this really be happening? _ "I was having a terrible game," Kolesar said. But winners don't quit, and Kolesar is simply a W inner. When Michigan fell behind 31-27, as Bill Matlock scored his second touchdown, this time from 16 yards out, Kolesar fought back with a vengeance. HE TOOK the ensuing kickoff and raced up field. He got outside. He broke a tackle. He had one man, the kicker O'Morrow, between him and a new page of history in one of the oldest rivalries. "(Kolesar) was running possessed on that kickoff return," said Michigan coach Bo Schembechler. But the 5-foot-11 O'Morrow got in the way. "When I saw him come through the hole, my eyes lit up," 'Morrow said. "I dove at him and sacrificed myself and my ribs." Thanks to Kolesar, Michigan had 41 yards to go for the outright Big Ten title. The first play was an incomplete pass. On the second, Brown rolled out. He thought about running. He thought about throwing to Chris Calloway. But when he saw Kolesar in the corner of the endzone, he let go. And Kolesar went up against Ohio State's David Brown and Zack Dumas for the ball. WHAT WAS Michigan even doing in this come from behind situation? In the first half, Leroy Hoard decided he didn't like being tackled and gained 116 yards. Wide receiver Greg McMurtry ran past the Buckeye defense for a 57-yard touchdown pass. And after a Mike Gillette record-breaking 56 yard field goal, on the last play of the half, Michigan led 20-0. But there's something about a Michigan-Ohio St. Kolesar returns to hero's role game. Neither team is supposed to be blown out, especially in its own stadium. The game isn't supposedt to be a sleeper. But weren't those yawns I was hearing at t the end of the first half? "Let's face it. We've got to do everything we can forl TV and I'm sure they didn't like the first half, " Schembechler said. The second half did all it could to help out the Nielsen ratings. Ohio State marched up and down the field against the Michigan defense, like no other team since f the Miami (Fla). They ran. They passed. They scored. And they scored again. "I COULDN'T believe what they were doing," said Michigan defensive lineman Mark Messner. When Buckeye quarterback Greg Frey hit wide receiver Bobby Olive on a crossing pattern, the Michigan lead which had seemed insurmountable, had been surmounted. Each time Ohio State scored, the Buckeye special teams players would take the field and cheer on the crowd. They did jumping jacks. They waved their arms. The noise level became louder. The players were pumped. The fans were pumped. This was a 4-5-1 team trying to salvage their season in one afternoon. But this was a Michigan team that was trying to win the Big Ten title outright. The Wolverines had a chance to win the game. They had the ball on the Ohio State 41-yard line. They had Kolesar. KOLESAR SAW the ball released. He thought it was a matter of who wanted the ball more. Playing in front of his home state, in his last regular season game, having the memories of last year, and already having messed up twice during the game, you can imagine Kolesar wanted it pretty badly. He braced his knees, and went up for the pass. He had the ball. He had the moment. Touchdown. Hero. 100 yards in 25 seconds - all Kolesar. "I almost had a heart attack," Brown said. Kolesar called the play the "jump ball" play where he and the defender both go up for the ball. He practices it 1with wide receiver coach Cam Cameron. But usually the play is with one defender. This time, Kolesar had double the fun, with two Buckeyes trying to win the tap. "I was sure glad we spent time on that play in practice, "Kolesar said. HIS TEAMMATES mobbed him, a scene very familiar to Kolesar. Big plays are his trademark. Last season, he caught a game-winning 20-yard touchdown pass against Alabama in the Hall of Fame Bowl. In his first year, he caught a 77-yard touchdown pass against Ohio St. to send the Wolverines to the Rose Bowl. He was back in the spotlight. It was happening again. "This is the biggest play of my career," Kolesar said. "This just tops everything because it's the culmination of four years. It's my senior year. Playing against Ohio State. It seems like a fairytale." And who could have written a nicer ending? The Taubman Program in American Institutions invites you to attend the discussion: "A GUIDE TO JOB HUNTING IN THE PUBLIC SECTOR" Alan Lopatin Tuesday, November 22 12N-1:00p.m. Kuenzel Room, Michigan Union (Alan Lopatin is Council of the Post Office & Civil Service Committee) I i ' M i i LM } 4 3 t M x i 6 i 9 k R i Don't Be A Turkey... Work at Michigan TELEFUND -$5.00-6.50/hour plus bonuses -Gain valuable communication skills -Speak with the University's alumni -Build your resume' -Flexible evening hours stop by HOW WOULD YOU LIKE THE #1 RATED JOB IN INDUSTRY? BE AN ACTUARY Join an elite profession. There are less than 900 Property/Casualty Actuaries in the U.S. today, so the demand for talented people is great. Your ad- vancement is limited only by your dedication and commitment to achieving professional certification. As an Actuary you will combine your math, business and people skills in a prestigious professional career where you are responsible for developing the pricing structure of our insurance products, and for statisti- cally analyzing economic trends and our company results. Great American is the largest privately owned prop- erty/casualty insurance company in the U.S. with over $1 billion in premiums annually. If you are a Math, Stat, or Actuarial Science major, come to our reception and learn about our Actuarial Manage- ment Training Program. 1'a Dae Tunesdav November 29. 1999M 0 t