The Michigan Daily - Sports Monday - November 26, 1990 - Page 5 FOOTBALL NOTEBOOK. Powers runs wild, then misses game winner by Ryan Schreiber Daily Football Writer COLUMBUS -Ricky Powers, who has been grabbing more playing time each week, exited the Ohio State game as the obvious offensive star. The first-year tailback rushed for 128 yards on 27 carries, while the rest of the Michigan running corps totalled just 16 yards in the Wolverines' 16- 13 victory. 3 Powers accounted for over half of Michigan's total offense, and was instrumental in the Wolverines' lone touchdown drive as he carried the Mall on five of the nine plays preceding the score. In the meantime, Michigan's touted running back, Jon Vaughn, saw extremely limited action, carrying the ball four times for no yards. "I guess his ankle was still bothering him a little bit, but he'll be 100 percent probably by the bowl game," Powers said. BLIND FAITH: Powers was also exhilarated by his first Michigan- Ohio State match-up, but he missed the final play of the game, J.D. Carlson's game-winning 37-yard field goal. "I didn't look at it," Powers said. "I was holding hands with a couple of the other players, and I looked at the other side of the field. I was looking at the scoreboard. "I heard it get real quiet after a while, and our team was going nuts and our fans started going nuts, so I figured we won the game." Joining Powers was Otis Williams, Mike Evans, Vada Murray and John Milligan. "John looked," Powers laughed. "He cheated, but I didn't look." INCONSISTENT OFFICIATING: Ohio State coach John Cooper was overly frustrated about the inconsistency of the Big Ten officials on the crowd noise violations. In the third quarter, the Buckeyes received two warnings after complaints were made by Michigan quarterback Elvis Grbac on a fourth- down play. One snap later, referee Tom Quinn charged Ohio State with a time-out, an action that did not occur two weeks earlier when the Buckeyes faced similar circumstances at Iowa. "To me, and maybe I shouldn't even comment on that, we faced the worst conditions at Iowa that you can face," Cooper said. "We talked about it before the ballgame with the officials, and I don't like it (the noise violation). "I'll be honest with you - if you come here, there ought to be a home field advantage. I thought it was a bad call, to be honest with you. We go on the road and officials don't give us that courtesy." I WHO'S IN FIRST?: Michigan's victory muddled an already confusing situation at the top of the Big Ten. Iowa dropped its game to Minnesota, and Illinois and Michigan State each won, leaving all four teams at 6-2 in the conference. Even with the four-way tie for first place, Iowa earned the trip to the Rose Bowl, having beaten all three of the other teams this season. Incidentally, Ohio State, who would have gone to the Rose Bowl with a victory Saturday, finished in fifth place at 5-2-1. Fourth, A Woody Hayes defensive type game. by Mike Gill Daily Football Writer & one Gary Moeller smiled and said, "This was kind of a Woody Hayes- type game. He'd look back and say, 'That's the way that game is supposed to be played."' Throughout Woody Hayes' time as Ohio State coach, many a defensive battle took place. In the 28 games against Michigan from 1951- 78, Hayes' Buckeyes averaged 15 points per contest, while holding the Wolverines to just over 12. Saturday's 16-13 Michigan win had all the makings of a defensive battle typical of the two neighbor- ing, but not friendly, states' schools. And it all came down to one play. Ohio State still had flirtations with a Rose Bowl birth - if Minnesota could defeat Iowa (as it later did). A tie did them no good - except guarantee them a spot in the Gator Bowl. Michigan needed a win to gain a Gator berth - and with an Iowa loss, it could share in the Big Ten Championship. After a clipping penalty nullified a first down and John Milligan stop- ped Raymont Harris on third and short, the play of the game occurred. Facing fourth and less than a yard from their own 29, Ohio State coach John Cooper called time out and decided to gamble to keep his Rose Bowl aspirations alive. Quarterback Greg Frey started running wide but could not find an opening. He froze and soon was brought down by Mike Evans. It was Chris Hutchinson who snuffed out the option, hitting the Ohio State quarterback Greg Frey is stopped on 4th and inches on the most crucial play of Satuday's game. fullback and leaving Frey to keep the ball himself. When Frey attempted to come back inside Eric Knuth and T.J. Osman shut down the path. "That's the first time we went into that defense," Moeller said, of a goal-line defense. "We worried about them trying to draw us offsides. We thought they might come up there and yell 'GO! GO! GO!' and one of us would be drawn offsides." For defensive coordinator Lloyd Carr, the moment was redemptive. In Michigan's three losses, he watched his defense allow prolonged scoring drives in the fourth quarter. Now, when Michigan couldn't afford a tie to grab a shot at the Gator Bowl, his defense stopped a run whose percentages were highly in favor of the visitors. "There were situations earlier in the season where our defense let us down," Carr said. "We talked all this week about big games and when you have an opportunity to make a big play, you've got to make it. We told them that this game was going down to the fourth quarter and we were going to be on the field in a situation where we have to stop them to win the game." For Cooper, the move took the Buckeyes from a Rose Bowl berth to a fifth place finish. "Why not go for broke," he said. "A tie didn't do us any good at all. If I go for a tie and Minnesota beats Iowa, then I couldn't face our football team." Bandfinally hits the road COLUMBUS - The Michigan Marching Band finally got to make a road trip, after staying home since Notre Dame. They didn't make the most of it - rerunning their (fill in the blank) Beatles salute. Since the Ohio State band played Christmas songs, we won't harbor on this Beatles fact. Instead, we're in the holiday giving mood. 'Let's question why the athletic department can't spring more money for the band to make more trips. The football team flew home from Columbus. Despite their small head start over this driving writer, they arrived home only an hour earlier. Was flying that important? Second, there is an amazing interest in Columbus for the Buckeye Band. The band, as well as Michigan's, ran through their shows an hour and a half before the game, which is nothing uncommon. How- ever, in Columbus, they do it in St. John's Arena - and in front of a standing room only crowd. It certainly would be nice if Michigan could start this kind of tradition. What could be better than a little pep rally for fans inside Crisler Arena an hour or so before the game begins? The pregame was something to behold. First Michigan's band high stepped to the Victors. Then came OSU, complete with the script Ohio, and dotting of the 1. Tradition and excellence at its best. Merry Band Day. -'MIKE GL - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Although Vaughn tallied no yards on the day, his seven yard scamper on Michigan's final drive set up the game winning kick. OPPONENT ATT YRD AVG TD LONG GILL Continued from page 1 defense rapped Ohio State and let Carlson try to redeem his misfire of a few minutes ago. Out onto the field with only three seconds left came 10 huge men - and one who would decide the game - a walk-on, no less, from Florida. How many times do you get that second chance? Here was Carlson, walking head down off the field with 4:16 left, missing his chance to give Michigan a lead with a 38 yard attempt. Then the defense held the Buckeyes and Carlson knew some- thing was waiting in the wings. "It felt great, just great," Carlson said of the fourth down defensive stampede that left Buckeye quarter- back Greg Frey with no where to turn, no where to run, no daylight to find. "I said, 'This is God giving me a second chance to make this one."' So Carlson, who had booted two field goals earlier in the day, one just barely sneaking through, would have a chance to turn from goat to prince with one swing of the foot. There were worries, big worries. This was not the artificial turf he was used to kicking on. The grass was what he blamed his miss and near miss. This was not an extra point attempt - it would be a 37 yard attempt. This was no kick that would up a lead from 28 points to 31. This was The Kick. In The Game. And it would be all anyone remembered or talked about for days. The past would be recalled. Remember the field goal missed at Notre Dame? Michigan State? And Iowa too? Well, Carlson could become a name thrown to the tigers, scorned at Michigan drinking holes from the mining oountry in the Upper Peninsula, to the Ohio border. It had to gnaw at you. The Kick in The Game for The Win. "On every kick, I can't be too excited or too sad. I just got to concentrate on the fundamentals and do the best I can," Carlson said. So an imposing crowd of 90,000 made no difference to Carlson. Neither did the importance of the kick. Only one thing rang back and forth in his mind as the armies posi- tioned themselves for one final offensive thrust. "Keep your head down. Keep your head down." Which is exactly the opposite of what Dave Ritter and others told him minutes earlier. They had said, "Keep your chin up, we're going to get the ball back for you."~ They did. And Carlson came through. When he looked up, there was reason to keep his chin up. The battle was over. A low scoring squeaker had seen its last shot fired - fired by 5-foot-10, 179 pound kicker, and it sent an entire state down as losers. On the field lay Buckeyes in disbelief. The Wolverines danced. The lockerroom was rather boisterous, the Victors rang throughout the land. "I'm very very pleased," Moeller said. J.D. Carlson just gave Ohio the boot. Notre Dame UCLA Maryland Wisconsin Michigan St. Iowa Indiana Purdue Illinois Minnesota OoSt. Totals 22 32 22 15 26 18 12 25 14 7 4 201 288 89 94 162 93 91 139 56 28 0 9.1 9.0 4.0 6.3 6.2 4.8 7.6 5.6 4.0 4.0 0.0 0 3 2 1 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 24 63 26 35 42 13 47 35 11 9 7 Derrick Alexander is hit by Ohio State cornerback Vinnie Clark in the second half of Saturday's game. FREE* Student Directories (to U-M Students with I.D.) 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