Sports Monday Trvia What Michigan football player holds the record for most touchdowns scored in a single game? (For answer, see page 2) InsideSportsMonday 'M' Sports Calendar 2 AP Top 25 2 Athlete of the Week 2 Cross Country 2 Q&A 3 Blame it on Niyo Football Ice Hockey Field Hockey Volleyball Men's Swimming 3 4-5 6 7 7 7 The Michigan Daily - Sports Monday October 26, 1992 Page 1 ' M' goes for Jug ular, 63-13 Grbac back on track as vvovert by John Niyo Daily Football Writer Time passes, things change. Take, for instance, Michigan football. Back in 1879, on an after- noon in late May, the Wolverines traveled to Chicago and beat Racine (Wis.), 1-0, in the schools first game. Nine hundred ninety-nine games later, the scoreboard no longer reads like a soccer score. Michigan (4-0 Big Ten, 6-0-1 overall) trounced Minnesota (1-3, 1-6), 63-13, Satur- day afternoon at Michigan Stadium in front of 106,579 fans to mark the school's historic 1000th game in spectacular fashion. With the win, Michigan also tied the Big Ten record for consecutive conference victories (17), a feat ac- complished three times by Ohio State. "If there's any single thing that makes this game special, it's tying that record," Michigan coach Gary Moeller said. "That's the thing we're most proud of." That pride was showing after the game on the smiling face of Derrick Alexander, who led the record-set- ting day by hauling in four catches for touchdowns to break Michigan's single-game record for TD recep- tions (three), formerly held by Des- mond Howard, Greg McMurtry and Ron Kramer. Alexander had tied the record by the end of the first quarter, as Michi- gan jumped out to a 21-7 lead. The first strike came on a stop- and-go route down the left sideline. Grbac found Alexander wide open for a 52-yard TD on the fourth play from scrimmage, less than two min- utes into the game. Two fade pat- terns in the end zone for 13- and 3- yard scores buried the Gophers early and reminded fans of the countless Grbac-to-Howard connections last season. "We come out to practice and get everything going together," said Alexander, who had seven catches for 130 yards Saturday. "Then we come out in games and everything gets flowing just like in practice." The first touchdown helped Grbac, whose four TD passes tied his own school record, become Michigan's all-time leader in career passing yardage. He needed 43 yards coming into the game to pass Jim Harbaugh's mark of 5,449 yards. "It's a great accomplishment for nes romp myself, but I couldn't have done it without a lot of help from other players," said Grbac, who was 14- of-19 for 208 yards and no intercep- tions on the day. "I get the credit, but it's not an individual achievement." At the end of the first quarter - between Grbac's throwing, Alexan- der's catching and Tyrone Wheat- ley's running (he finished with 148 yards on 24 carries) - Michigan had piled up 202 yards of offense. Minnesota had gained seven, six coming on one play. For the game, Smith Derrick Alexander uses a block from flanker Walter Smith to clear the way en route to his fourth touchdown Saturday. This 32-yard reception, in the third quarter gave Michigan a 42-13 lead. Michigan went on to defeat Minnesota, 63-13, for its 17th consecutive Big Ten victory. Jeni Durst IFo bete or Dur Blue can 't keep game , close even if it ties Most teams worry most about how to defeat their opponents. Michigan's biggest worry seems to be how not to blow them out. The Wolverines have outscored their confer- ence opposition 181 to 60, the smallest single- game margin ringing in at 24. So far Michigan has managed to hold the margin of victory under 30, but there are only so many ways not to score. The Wolverines appeared to try things against Minnesota to avoid the inevitable 50-point spread, even though they failed to score on only six of their possessions. The first time the Gophers got their hands on the ball, it was in the hands of kick returner John Lewis. The Michigan defense kindly left holes for Lewis and ran the opposite way of Lewis' cuts; the senior reached the end zone to tie the score. Late in the first half, leading 28-7, the Wolverines put in running back Ed Davis. The fourth-stringer preceded to lope 24 yards to widen the margin to 28. Fourth string. What can a team do to curb scoring if even the last guy on the bench finds the end zone? Not send anybody out on the field? Wolverine wide receiver Walter Smith at- tempted to give the Gophers a break by turning around and running the wrong way on a reverse, but Smith's efforts ended instead in another Michigan touchdown. A seemingly certain mis- take equals another six points. Jay Riemersma, the third-string quarterback got the nod after the Wolverines had notched all of their 63 points. It was third down and five, and it looked as though the Gophers would get a break as Minnesota defenders rushed Riemersma. But instead of conceding the sack, Riemersma scrambled for the first down. And Michigan looked further down the bench to Jason Carr. The Wolverine coaching staff doesn't want to See DURST, Page 4 the Wolverines outgained Minnesota 621 to 227. "Minnesota is a better team than it demonstrated on the field today," Moeller said. "Hopefully, we were the reason for that." Minnesota's two touchdowns both came on big plays. The first came immediately after Alexander's initial score, when John Lewis re- turned Peter Elezovic's kickoff 88 yards to tie the game at seven. Lewis scored the other TD on a 94-yard bomb from Marquel Fleet- wood. That was the end of the Golden Gophers' fun, though. "One bright spot was John Lewis, who had two big plays," an animated Minnesota coach Jim Wacker said after the game. "Well, actually that was two (bright spots). The other bright spot for us was when the clock ran out; I never thought that sucker would end." See FOOTBALL, Page 4 Third-period rally ices weekend sweep Goldie by Rachel Bachman Daily Sports Writer G. Gopher by Tim Rardin Daily Hockey Writer BIG RAPIDS - What the Michigan hockey team did more than anything this weekend against Ferris State was show that it knows how to win. Good teams win the easy games, - like the Wolverines' 7-2 victory Friday - but great teams win the not-so-easy ones. "The experience of Michigan re- ally showed tonight," Ferris coach Bob Daniels said after his team's 5-3 loss Saturday. "They've been through a lot together. That team knows not to buckle, and they know how to win." The No. 2 Wolverines (2-0 CCHA, 3-0 overall) proved that Saturday against the Bulldogs (1-2, 0-2), coming back from a 3-2 deficit with just over 6:30 remaining in the third period. chalked up four goals for the week- end to give him eight for the season. "It's tough on the goalie with six guys standing in front of the net. I don't even think he (Mazzoli) saw it." "They were winning the face-offs consistently and that hurt us," Daniels said. "We blew our cover- age. We probably should've had a guy right on him (Oliver). It was a big goal for them." That goal seemed to deflate Ferris, while it breathed some life into the Wolverines. Only 48 sec- onds later, center Cam Stewart raced down the left side of the Bulldog zone, snuck behind the net, and punched in a wrap-around goal past the helpless Mazzoli for the game- winner. "I was back into our end and Shields was yelling at me to go," nnesota mascot In his masterfully tailored suit and with his head held high, he struts onto the gridiron. Because of his influential occupation, he knows that he can do anything he wants today and get away with it. Is this Mike Ditka preparing for a Sunday matchup? Nope. It's Goldie, the mascot of the Minnesota Golden Gophers. Before you write him off as just another overgrown nut gatherer (he's no chipmunk), walk through a day - a game day - in his fuzzy feet. Three hours before kickoff, he suits up. (To protect his true identity, the Minnesota sophomore will be called "Dave".) Dave makes his rounds at bars, restaurants, and picnics in the shadow of the Metrodome, Minnesota's home field, in lviii entertains fans "By then I'm sweating buckets," he said. "The suit is so hot, it's like running a few miles wearing a bearskin rug." Upon Goldie's arrival at the dome, he greets the usual pack of young fans doing their impression of Mexican jumping beans as they vie for his attention. "I try to sign autographs but I've got these huge furry hands and no downward or peripheral vision," Dave said. Soon after appeasing the thirty kids who think that a scrawled "G.G." on a napkin will be worth something someday, the game begins and Goldie takes to the sidelines. The game begins and so does a whirlwind of high-fiving, visiting team mascot-battling, cheerleading, and dancing for Dave. "One thing that separates me from other mascots is that I boogie M m-:,