When was the last time two football teams tied for No. 1 in the weekly Associated Press poll? (For answer see page 2) Ins ideSportsMonday 'M' Sports Calendar 2 AP Top 25 2 Griddes Q&A Blame it on Niyo Football Cross Country Volleyball Ice Hockey Field Hockey Swimming 2 3 3 4 5 5 6 6 7 The Michigan Daily- Sports Monday October 19, 1992 Page 1 *Blue punches out early, 31- 3 by Albert Lin Daily Football Writer, BLOOMINGTON - The expec- tations each week are the same. Michigan is supposed to march up and down the field against some clearly overmatched opponent and run away with the victory. This weekend's matchup proved to be no exception. The Wolverines used an explo- sive second quarter and a defense that held steady throughout Satur- day's game to upend Indiana, 31-3, in the process winning their 15th straight Big Ten road game. The victory also marked 16 con- secutive triumphs in conference play, leaving the squad poised to tie the all-time streak of 17 set by three different Ohio State clubs.. "I'm obviously very happy with the win. That was the important thing, to come down here after ev- eryone said we'd have a letdown," Michigan coach Gary Moeller said. "(The record) is added incentive. I just think our kids are staying fo- cused and they're playing hard. "The nice thing about this win is this is where that 16 started. It started here in 1990 after coming off two Big Ten losses (to Michigan State and Iowa). We cane down here with a different kind of focus, and I was quite proud with the way that group acted, and the way the se- niors have contributed since then." Two of those veterans played es- pecially big roles. Quarterback Elvis Grbac rebounded from back-to-back shaky outings with a solid day, completing 13 of 17 passes for a couple touchdowns and no intercep- tions. Junior receiver. Derrick Alexander, who scored two touch- downs, had another big day, as did sophomore back Tyrone Wheatley, who ran for 134 yards and also added two scores, On the other side of the ball, se- nior defensive tackle Chris Hutchin- son was part of a defense that held the opposition to 30 yards rushing and got to Hoosier quarterback Trent Green nine times. Hutchinson led the way with three of those sacks, while six others had one apiece. "We were beaten by an outstand- ing football team," Indiana coach Bill Mallory said. "Not to take any- thing away from our opponents in our other two losses, but in those games we hurt ourselves. We weren't sound. This team, they con- trolled us." The Wolverines started off slowly, falling behind for only the second time this season. Indiana drove 60 yards, aided by three Michigan penalties, and Scott Bonnell connected on a 38-yard field goal for a 3-0 lead. The Wolverine offense was inef- fective most of the first quarter. The Hoosiers stacked against the run, but Moeller kept calling for his backs. That led to a total of 45 yards on Michigan's first two drives. "I wasn't particularly pleased or impressed with our offense ... at the beginning of the game," Moeller said. "We had three major break- downs in blocking MAs (missed as- Junior Derek Alexander returns a Hoosier punt 70 yards for a touchdown. He also had an eight-yard TD reception. Josh Dubow Wolverines clearly ,class of conference DOUGLAS KANTER/Daily Wheatley BLOOMINGTON - Saturday, Michigan won its 16th consecutive Big Ten game. Don't expect that streak to end in the near future. You can chalk up wins for the Wolverines all the way until Oct. 16, 1993, when they travel to State College to play Penn State. If they win that game, the next potential loss will be a year later when the Nittany Lions come to Ann Arbor. To state it simply, the Big Ten is bad and Michigan is good. But there is more to it than that. The Big Ten is getting worse, while Michigan is improving. The Wolverines have won their last eight conference games by more than 20 points. The average margin of victory in those games is over 32 points. Michigan hasn't lost a conference road game since 1987 at Indiana. The Wolverines haven't lost any conference game by more than a touch- down since Ronald Reagan was running for re- election. Don't expect things to change anytime soon. After Michigan trounced Indiana, 31-3, the Hoosiers left the field thinking they were as good as Michigan. Wait. Didn't Michigan win by 28 points? Didn't Michigan outgain Indiana in total yards, 425-149? And the Wolverines didn't even play that good a game. Michigan committed 10 penalties for 124 yards, twice negating touchdowns. Pete Elezovic missed a 38-yard field goal. And Jesse Johnson fumbled in the Hoosier end zone. Michigan still won by 28 points. The Indiana players and coaches boil the game down to an Emmitt Pride fumble at the Michigan 22-yard line in the second quarter with the Hoosiers down, 14-3. "That turnover gave them good field posi- tion," Indiana coach Bill Mallory said. "It was costly. We thought we had something going and it took the wind out of our sails. If we could have punched it in there, it would have been a whole See DUBOW, Page 4 signments), and that gets a back rat- tied, and everybody rattled, because the guys handling the ball, they think, 'What's happening?' "Then finally Tyrone settled down a little bit and we didn't put all the pressure on him. We got some holes for him and he got loose." A poor possession by Indiana, in which the team lost 16 yards, led to a short punt and great field position for Michigan. Alexander and Wheatley then went to work, ac- counting for all 36 yards of the drive. Grbac lofted an eight-yard GRIDDERS, Page 4 No by Rachel Bachman Daily Sports Writer Three and a half minutes have passed, and Monica Maiorana's legs are starting to burn. Methodically and painfully the numbers on the digital display of the ergometer rowing machine tick down. "I've got to get through this part," the member of the women's varsity crew team thinks to herself, as the burning spreads to her entire body. With the shouts of a few people and the grinding wheeze of the "erg" chain as her only encouragement, Monica finishes the 2000-meter piece in just over seven minutes and 17 seconds, faster than anyone else on the team. "For some reason I could just pull the numbers," the junior in Japanese Studies says of her lung- bursting performance. "I gave myself certain cutoffs for split times, and I just did it." The combination of this personal best erg time, as well as her 116 bench pulls (a 70-pound barbell lifted while lying face-down on a bench) in six minutes are feats worthy of praise. These two accomplishments helped her earn a spot on the Olympic development team last summer. I simp le parts 'M' rower balances books, work, crew warm up and get on the water. During the rest of her day, Monica must also eat, study Japanese, go to class, and work out on the erg or in the weight room, which she usually ends up doing on her lunch hour. "I don't like wasting time," she says. And she can ill afford to, what with keeping up with pen pals from Iowa and New Jersey and holding down a job at LSA Media Services as extracurricular activities, not to mention keeping up a social life. Her job, however, is high on Monica's list of priorities; she couldn't be on the team without it. "With dues, clothing, travel costs, and the trip to Tampa for spring break, crew costs about $1,000 a year," Monica says. Because Michigan's team is not funded by the University, rowers also pay for coaches' salaries and new equipment, which is not cheap. An eight-person boat starts at about $10,000. Rather than lamenting the fact that she doesn't go to Wisconsin or Princeton, where the crew teams are fully funded by their schools, Monica points to the future. "This year, we're getting a new Vespoli (brand of racing boat). , , ... ,,. r.c EVAN PETRIE/Daily David Oliver eludes a Notre Dame defender in Saturday's 6-1 victory. ICers open season "on rishin 61 win by Chad A. Safran Daily Hockey Writer Michigan hockey coach Red Berenson knew he had a strong de- fensive club going into the season's opener against Notre Dame, but the question was where the goals were going to come from each night. Saturday, David Oliver was the an- swer to that question as he scored four goal in the Wolverines' 6-1 After drawing the second de- fenseman to him, Wiseman dropped the puck off to Stewart who fired it between the legs of Notre Dame goalie Greg Louder to give Michigan a 1-0 lead. "I think the defense got a little confused on it," Wiseman said. "They didn't know which guy to take. Standing me up or switching off. I got through ant' Cam made a :; h , -777