The Michigan Daily-Sports Wednesday- January 8, 1992 - Page 3 Washington cancels Magic act Husky defense holds Howard to one reception Jeff Sheran by Jeff Sheran Daily Football Writer PASADENA, Calif. - Desmond Howard always main- tained his priorities - win first, then amass statistics. "I could go through a game without any catches or touchdowns, and if we win, I'm the happiest guy on the field," he said throughout the season. "I just want to help my team win games." So Howard was understandably sad after Washington not only trounced his team in the Rose Bowl, but held the Heisman winner to one catch and no touchdowns. "I haven't felt this out of the game since Florida State," Howard said, referring to Michigan's 51-31 defeat Sept. 27. But even in that game, Howard burned Thorpe Award winner Terrell Buckley for two touchdown receptions. But Howard could hardly be blamed for his anonymity in the game. Quarterback Elvis Grbac tried to throw to Howard only five times, and only once in the second half. In fact, the last attempt to Howard came with over 11 minutes left in the third quarter, when the score still read 13-7. "They doubled him a lot," Michigan coach Gary Moeller said. "If we had time to throw, or throw in rhythm, maybe he could have been a factor." Grbac overthrew Howard twice on the right sideline, and threw deep into excellent coverage by free safety Shane Pahukoa once. "Our free safety did a tremen- dous job of breaking up those passes," cornerback Dana Hall said. "Most of the time it wasn't de- signed double coverage on Howard - (Pahukoa) just read the coverage real well." Midway through the first quar- ter, Grbac faked a reverse and threw deep over the middle toward Howard. But Pahukoa tipped the pass, and cornerback Walter Bailey pulled down the carom. The heralded Grbac-Howard tan- dem, which combined for an NCAA-record 19 touchdown recep- tions this season, did connect once. Grbac heaved the ball downfield toward Howard, who was covered by Hall. The two jumped and Howard came down with the ball * for a 35-yard gain, which set up a second-quarter touchdown. Michigan did not go to Howard in any short-pass or screen forma- tions, despite his explosiveness in these situations all season. "If screen passes were there, (Moeller) would have called Sheran My Thoughts Despite loss, Moeller has winning attitude PASADENA, Calif. - Michigan coach Gary Moeller wanted to be a head coach in. the Rose Bowl. He got his wish, but he also found out he had wished for the wrong thing. "It's very special for me to be able to say that I get to take my team to the Rose Bowl," Moeller said on more than one occasion. What he should have wished for was to be the winning coach in the Rose Bowl. Because, as he admitted the morning after his team got crushed, 34-14, he wasn't having fun. Of course, he still kept his sense of humor. He poked fun at his former boss, Bo Schembechler. Schembechler will be remembered as one of the greatest college coaches ever, but also as one who didn't have much luck in Pasadena. "I wish Bo was here," Moeller said to a sparse group of reporters. "He's got a lot more experience at this than I do." But this was no joking matter. Though Moeller is an even-keeled per- son, he's also a sincere one. He could not hide his bitter disappointment. The conversation turned to the Big Ten's showing, a poor one at that, in the other bowls. Moeller's best interests dictated defending the Big Ten. Every team is tough, he should have said. Each team gets so beat up from week to week that they're decimated by bowl time, was the proper answer. But Moeller separated himself from the mediocrity of the Big Ten. "We were the ones that should have done better," he said. Michigan won the Big Ten Championship and went to the Rose Bowl, at least half of Moeller's season-long goal. Yet he seemed to convey a greater disappointment than this would normally warrant. That's because Moeller feels each loss more than the average person. "Gary Moeller is one of the most competitive men I have ever known," defensive coordinator Lloyd Carr said. "Bo was, too, and you knew it by the way he threw his headphones. Mo doesn't throw his head- phones, but don't let that fool you." Moeller's competitive streak is not a negative force. Rather, it stems from the closeness he feels with his players. "God, this is a great bunch of kids," Moeller said of his fifth-year se- niors. "I'd love to have them all back again. I'd love to send them out as winners." Moeller works as hard as any coach in college football, and he loves the game as much as the biggest fan. And he hates losing more than any- thing. He revealed this during the press conference at Crisler Arena follow- ing Desmond Howard's winning of the Heisman Trophy. Moeller was asked if America had finally forgotten the controversial two-point con- version play against Michigan State the previous year, during which the ball, and Michigan's No. I ranking, tumbled out of Howard's hands. He sat and pondered the question. "What a run we could have had go- ing if it wasn't for that play," he replied, re-imagining the painful mo- ment in his mind. Entering last week's game, Moeller smelled a national title, and it smelled good. Then he felt a Rose Bowl defeat, and it hurt. But Moeller has a good perspective on winning and losing. It was he who quelled the media after Greg Skrepenak guaranteed victory over Ohio State by saying "He should say we're going to win. If he didn't, I'd get a new tackle in there." But no matter how nonchalantly he handles losing, Moeller hates each defeat more than he lets on. Michigan has finished in the middle of the top 10 for a long time. It must move up to the next echelon - an undefeated season. Moeller is the right coach to take the Wolverines to that level. Even if he still makes jokes after a defeat. Even if he doesn't throw his head- phones. Even though he lost the Rose Bowl. KKIS i UH L altI 1It/ Wolverine split end Desmond Howard eludes linebacker Hillary Butler following Howard's only catch of the game. Michigan scored its first touchdown three plays later on a 9-yard pass from Elvis Grbac to Walter Smith. them," Howard said. "As far as Michigan's running game. Trailing fender in double coverage. Hov their pursuit is concerned, I don't by six with three minutes remaining Washington showed no weakn' think screen passes would have been in the second quarter, Howard took its rushing defense. effective." a second-and-13 double reverse "They doubled him more Washington similarly stuffed around the right end for a 15-yard you'd anticipate, but we should Howard on punt and kickoff re- gain and a first down. But three in- been able to run the ball," M turns, on which he averaged seven complete passes later, Michigan said. "We could not run the ba and 13 yards, respectively. With punted. Howard was not handed the their team-speed advantage, the ball again. "We knew we had to do Huskies seemed to close holes as But even without carrying the thing," Hall said. "Shutc soon as they appeared. ball, Howard usually helps the Desmond Howard and make Howard also tried to boost ground attack by drawing away a de- team one-dimensional." wever, ess in than J have foeller all." one down their No Califor a sunshine for team. by Theodore Cox Daily Football Writerk PASADENA, Calif. - Many think the Michigan football team's bowl trip is a wild time in California. The players did get to venture around Southern California every so often, but most of their time was spent either relaxing at the Doubletree Hotel or practicing at Citrus Junior College, both located in Pasadena. "Everyone says, 'stay at the beach,"' Michigan coach Gary Moeller said. "So then you can say you stayed at the beach, but you never use it." The team flew out of Michigan Christmas Day with the first full practice beginning the the next day. Here's a day-by-day account of what *happened during the rest of the week: THURSDAY: The Wolverines enjoyed dinner at the famous Lawry's restaurant which sponsored the annual Beef Bowl. FRIDAY: The team headed across Los Angeles to Disneyland. Washington joined Michigan in Anaheim. Wolverine defensive back Corwin Brown decided he wanted to tell Husky wide receiver Mario' Bailey how much he respected him before they faced each other New Year's Day. However, Brown never got the opportunity. "I don't know if they were giving me the runaround or what," Brown said. "But they were saying he was over here, he was over there. But I didn't get a chance to meet *him. Maybe they were doing it to tire me out before the game." CNN/USA Today Coaches Poll 1. Washington 12-0-0 1449 1/2 2. Miami (Fla.) 12-0-0 1440 1/2 3. Penn State 11-2-0 1321 4. Florida State 11-2-0 1292 5. Alabama 11-1-0 1191 6. Michigan 10-2-0 1071 7. California 10-2-0 1027 8. Florida 10-2-0 1020 9. East Carolina 11-1-0 1003 10. Iowa 10-1-1 944 11. Syracuse 10-2-0 891 12. Notre Dame 10-3-0 815 13. Texas A&M 10-2-0 799 14. Oklahoma 9-3-0 694 15. Tennessee 9-3-0 617 16. Nebraska 9-2-1 608 17. Clemson 9-2-1 450 18. UCLA 9-3-0 443 19. Georgia 9-3-0 407 20. Colorado 8-3-1 366 21. Tulsa 10-2-0 233 22. Stanford 8-4-0 216 23. BYU 8-3-2 149 24. Air Force 10-3-0 145 25. NC State 9-3-0 142 Jefff -Sagarin's Michigan coach Gary Moeller feels, loss to Washington. KHISTOFFER GILLETTE/Daily the effect of the Wolverines' 34-14 Michigan quarterback Elvis Grbac prepares to hand the ball off to tailback Jesse Johnson. Grbac was 13-for-26 in passing for 130 yards. 1. 1 Computer Rankings 1. Washington 12-0-0 2. Miami (Fla.)12-0-0 3. Penn State 11-2-0 4. Michigan 10-2-0 5. Florida St. 11-2-0 6. Nebraska 9-2-1 7. Florida 10-2-0 8. Texas A&M 10-2-0 9. California 10-2-0 10. Notre Dame 10-3-0 11. Oklahoma 9-3-0 12. Stanford 8-4-0 13. UCLA 9-3-0 14. Alabama 11-1-0 105.49 97.15 95.89 95.41 94.44 93.07 91,89 91.51 91.03 90.54 89.94 88.00 87.29 86,97 RENNIE Continued from page 1 No excuses. How could this happen, Michigan fans wondered. How could this offense, which steam- rolled over conference opponents all season long, be shut down with such apparent ease? The answer is quite simple: Washington is really good. Michigan's regular season was no fluke - few teams in the nation are better than the Wolverines. Washington just happens to be one of those few. The Wolverines aren't used to playing teams that are distinctly better than they are. This game of- fered a new -ri-nc lying on top of him. With the average Wolverine pos- session lasting about six plays, no- body was surprised when the Michigan defense, which hung to- gether admirably in the first half, slowly began to disintegrate after the intermission. "We had to come out here and dominate," senior split end Mario Bailey said. "We dominated every phase of the game. We could have. scored 50 points." As the Huskies racked up the points, the scoreboard revealed what those in attendance had been suspi- cious of since the early moments of the contest: this was a mismatch. So it was that Michigan's latest Rose Bowl experience was the first of it, hin - htnvntt Ta eventually recover in time for the game. SUNDAY: It poured, causing flooding everywhere. Moeller mnved nractire into the Douhletree their tickets, but first were forced to wait in line for hours with one person distributing all the tickets. At a luncheon in Pasadena, Wnshingtnn'e Marin Rnhilev mc