Page 4-The Michigan Daily - Sports Monday - September 14, 1992 N 0 T R E 0 A Rushing Plaver Att Vd. Ava La asmwwg Brooks .Bettis Mirer Becton Miller 13 15 7 7 1 69 82 54 44 -12 5.3 4.5 7.7 6.3 -12 20 18 14 14 -12 Totals 43 237 5.5 20 Passing Player C-A Yds TD 1nt "irer 14-26 161 0 0 Totals 14-26 161 0 0 Receiving Player No Yds Lg TD Dawson 6 89 21 0 'C. Johnson 3 22 11 0 Bettis 2 25 17 0 1. Smith 2 18 10 0 Miller 1 7 7 0 Totals 14 161 21 0 Punting Player No Yds Avg La Hentrich 3 139 46.3 50 Punt Returns Player No Yds Avg Lg Miller 1 5 5.0 5 Kickoff Returns Player No Yds Avg La Johnson 2 27 13.5 20 Burris 2 25 12.5 14 Becton 1 18 18.0 18 Tota1 5 70 14.0 20 Defense Player Tac Ast Tot Born in a small town Mirer feels close to his rural Indiana home by Albert Lin "Let me put it this way: every Daily Football Writer Goshen is always on (the Notre Dame GOSHEN, Ind. - This is small-town Saturday afternoons," Swartz said. America at its best. Take the Indiana Toll Road pretty excited about Rick. I used to v until Exit 101, and then head south 10 miles on the chain gang at the high school, so I State Road 15, and you are there. him throw 80-yard passes flat-foote Along the way you pass things you won't whole town is very enthused about him see anywhere but rural Indiana. The big letters, Mirer's father, Ken, coached Gosh on the building that houses the local fraternal for 10 years, winning the school's first lodge, blazing, "GOSHEN MOOSE." A small tle in 1978. But he quit before Ric billboard pointing in the direction of the Story- aboard, so there would be no conflic telling Festival. An old-time movie theatre terest. with a marquee advertising a place of worship. Mirer was clearly the best playei This is the town Rick Mirer calls home. The team, though, and that forced the ne' high school he led to a state title as a senior is Randy Robertson's hand. right on S.R. 15. Friday nights, Foreman Field "You could tell right off the bat tha is the only place to be if the Goshen High a cut above everyone else," said Rober Redskins are at home, and this week much of Yet Mirer also knew what it meani the town has turned out to see the 1-1 '92 team young player in a team situation. The ti open its Northern Lakes Conference season his family bred certain values that he against NorthWood. to, then and to this day. Rick Mirer, Notre Dame quarterback, "I remember he refused to start as a hasn't forgotten where he is from - despite all more, because the team had a policy the accolades and attention that follow him. kid was a senior, he would start becaus That is why he still returns to Goshen fre- earned the right," said Swartz, who has quently. After all, South Bend is but a mere 40 the chain gang for 30 years. "So he re minutes to the northwest. start - he would go in any time a "I'm happy it's my home. I like going back played a lot, but he wasn't listed as a s to it," Mirer said. "It's a good place to go to a sophomore because he thought the get away from big city problems." should go for everyone." But when Mirer comes back to relieve some "He never made it seem like he wa of that stress, he faces other obstacles: You can than anybody else," Robertson added. be sure everyone knows when he's in town. That attitude is a big part of his pres "His biggest problem is he can't say no," cess. Irish coach Lou Holtz acknov said Dick Swartz, a lifelong Goshen resident. Mirer's upbringing as a key in being "I heard that on Thursday afternoon, he was handle perhaps the most pressure-fille back visiting and someone saw him going into tion in college football. the stadium. They asked him to stop for a pic- "The only changes I see in Rick are ture, and of course he did, and the next thing better," he said. "I think a lot of the cre you know there were 30 other people in line." to his parents. They give him tremendc Goshen is clearly in love with its favorite port and have their priorities in line." son. Mirer is the only member of that 1988 "I think all in all (Goshen's) a lot state titlist playing Division 1-A football, so people," Mirer said. "I think there's as there is definitely only one team - and espe- family atmosphere as you can have th cially one player - to support. lot of good people, a lot of togethernes McDonald Young Flanigan 'cGill Bercich Peterson Carter lane Burris Covington Holden Ratigan Saddler Taylor Taliaferro Lalli 0 4 4 0 2 1 1 3 2 4 7 2 1 0 1 1 0 0 4 5 5 5 7 3 8 8 7 6 1 3 1 1 1 In good hands Notre Dame quarterback Rick Mirer completed 14 of 26 passes for 161 yards in Saturday's 17- 17 tie against Michigan. Mirer, a senior, passed up the chance to enter the NFL Draft last spring after he completed his junior year in exchange for the opportunity to lead the Irish to a national title and possibly win the Heisman Trophy. Mirer was projected as a top-ten pick. This year, he has a chance to be the top selection in the 1993 draft. 4 Scoring Summary Notre Dame First Quarter: Brooks 20-yd run (Hentrich kick), 5:22 Notre Dame 7, Michigan 0 Fourth Quarter: Bettis 2-yd run (Hentrich kick), 17n1:23 Michigan 17, Notre Dame 14 Hentrich 32-yd FG, 5:28 Michigan 17, Notre Dame 17 Michigan Second Quarter: Wheatley 27-yd pass from Grbac (Elezovic kick), 0:57 Michigan 7, Notre Dame 7 Third Quarter: Elezovic 28-yd FG, 6:17 Michigan 10, Notre Dame 7 Fourth Quarter: Alexander 30-yd pass from Grbac (Elezovic kick), 14:54 Michigan 17, Notre Dame 7 IRISH Continued from page 1 Michigan free safety Corwin Brown stepped into the hole and hit Bettis, forcing the ball loose. Linebacker Steve Morrison caught the ball in the air and. returned it to Michigan's 49. "Both teams hit very hard and there were a lot of great individual efforts, and typical of an early-sea- son game there were some mis- takes," Holtz said. "We lost three fumbles, which were critical, they threw a couple (three) of intercep- tions, which were critical." After Morrison's recovery, Michigan moved the ball to Notre Dame's 30 as the third quarter ended. On the first play of the fourth, Grbac faked to Wheatley and lofted a pass to the left corner of the end zone, where Derrick Alexander cradled the ball for the touchdown, giving the Wolverines a 17-7 lead. Notre Dame responded quickly from that 10-point deficit. The Irish took the kickoff and marched down to Michigan's 26. However, the drive appeared to have stalled there, and the Irish were faced with a fourth and 10 from the 26. Holtz opted to go for the first down in lieu of attempting a field goal. Earlier in the second half, Nate Holdren blocked a Craig Hentrich field goal attempt. The Notre Dame line gave Mirer time to throw, and he found Lake Dawson open at the 15 for the first down. "We've gotta get pressure on him on fourth down," Moeller said. "We had to get a pass rush. You just can't let the guy go back and sit." Four plays later, a Jerome Bettis' touchdown run brought Notre Dame within three. The Irish had a chance to take the lead later in the fourth after intercepting Grbac at the Michigan 20. However, Notre Dame could not take advantage of the field position and settled for a 28-yard field goal. While the Michigan defense stopped this Irish possession on three plays, it did not do that once in the first half. The Irish rolled up 232 total yards and 16 first downs in the first half before being limited to 166 yards and nine first downs in the second. "We played a lot better in the second half, but we knew we would coming in," Moeller said. "One rea- son, we tackled better. We fronted people up and tackled like Michigan. The first half wasn't Michigan. We didn't tackle, we didn't front." The epitome of Michigan's tack- ling blunders came on Notre Dame's second drive of the game. With the ball at Michigan's 20, Mirer ran the option to his right and flipped to tailback Reggie Brooks. Brown read the play, came up and hit Brooks at the line. However, Brooks spun out of that tackle and broke five more before collapsing at the end of a 20- yard touchdown run. "We were a little over-anxious in the first half," Brown said. "We were flying around, and we weren't making the plays. But we came back in the second half and played like we have to." While the Wolverines finally contained the Irish ground attack in the second half, Notre Dame con- trolled Michigan's talented trio of tailbacks - Wheatley, Johnson and Ricky Powers - all game long. "Our only breakdown offensively was run blocking," McGee said. "Notre Dame ran stacked defense, and we wanted to block down on the linemen before releasing to the linebackers. But sometimes guys re- leased before blocking the linemen." DEFENSE Continued from page 1 awful hard to anticipate any of their moves." Corwin Brown led the defense, laying some hard hits on a few plays and finishing with 11 tackles to tie Coleman Wallace for the team lead. Shonte Peoples and Alfie Burch, the other members of the starting sec- ondary, were next on the team with 10 and nine tackles, respectively. Brown even lived out a fantasy, hitting Bettis in the last minute of the third quarter and knocking the ball loose. "I told him in the series before that one that he was gonna fumble," Michigan defensive lineman Chris Hutchinson puts the wraps on Notre Dame running back Reggie Brooks during third quarter action Saturday. "'i~nr z7XU kJ I SCHOOL TIES Sponsoed by UAC See tomorrow's Michigan Daily for details. .y READ THE.... DAILY ' CLASFEDS 4, U _____________________ &j DEPARTMENT OF RECREATIONAL SPORTS INTRAMURAL SPORTS PROGRAM SOCCER Entries Taken: Tuesday 9/15