Page 4-The Michigan Daily - Sports Monday - November 9, 1992 Rushing Player Att Yds Avg Lg Wheatley 23 143 6.2 16 Johnson 6 35 5.8 16 Powers 5 34 6.8 23 Legette 2 4 2.0 2 Collins 3 4 1.3 7 Davis 1 -1 -1.0 -1 Grbac 2 -21 -10.5 -10 Total 42 198 4.7 23 Passing Player C-A Yds TD Int Grbac 7-14 205 3 2 Collins 5-9 92 1 0 Total 12-23 297 4 2 Receiving Player No Yds Avg TD Toomer 3 112 37.3 0 Alexander 3 91 30.3 3 Johnson 3 24 8.0 0 Smith 1 35 35.0 0 Legette 1 24 24.0 0 Hayes 1 11 11.0 1 Total 12 297 24.8 4 Punting Player No Yds Avg Lg Stapleton 3 130 43.3 47 Punt Returns Player No Yds Avg gL Alexander 1 2 2.0 2 Kickoff Returns Player No Yds Ava Lg Alexander 1 30 30.0 30 Hayes 1 29 29.0 29 Burkholder 1 12 12.0 12 Total 3 71 23.7 30 Defense Player Tac Ast Tot Ware 6 3 9 Dobreff 3 4 7 Dyson 4 2 6 Brown 3 3 6 D. Johnson 2 3 5 Hutchinson; 2 2 4 Zenkewicz 2 2 4 Powers 2 2 4 Peoples 2 1 3 Law 2 1 3 S. Collins 2 1 3 Henderson 1 2 3 Horn 1 2 3 Blankenship 2 0 2 Maloney 1 1 2 Davis 1 1 2 Morrison 1 0 1 Burkholder 1 0 1 Stuek 1 0 1 Smith 0 1 1 Buff 0 1 1 i C H I G A Toomer makes FOOTBALL NOTEBOOK big impression by John Niyo and Matthew Rennie Daily Football Writers EVANSTON - Freshman wide receiver Amani Toomer had the biggest day of his promising career Saturday against North- western. Toomer caught three passes for 112 yards. His first catch was a 65-yarder from Elvis Grbac, setting up Michigan's second touchdown. Toomer caught the short pass over the middle, broke several tackles, and turned upfield. "It kind of surprised me, because I think they were trying to tackle me up high and nobody hit my legs," Toomer said. "So I just stayed on my feet and just tried to spin out." After dragging defensive backs Greg Gill and Willie Lindsey for about ten yards near midfield, Toomer seemed to have broken away, but he was tripped up at the 14-yard line. "It was real frustrating because (the defender) kind of nicked my ankle and I felt I should have stayed up," Toomer said. Fellow frosh Mercury Hayes scored Michigan's final touchdown on an 11-yard pass from Todd Collins. Big things were expected of both rookies coming into this season, and after a short adjustment period, they are delivering. "After a few games I'm getting a little more used to playing in front of these larger crowds," Toomer said. "Still, though, there's a lot of pressure, because we're going for a Big Ten championship, not a league championship in high school." Toomer added that the veteran players have not treated Hayes and him as rookies. "They've done a lot to try to make us feel more comfortable on the field," he said. "They know they're going to have to count on us, because we're playing." FUMBLE-ROOSKI: Northwes- tern tried to run the fumble-rooski play against Michigan, but the Wolverines read it perfectly. Defensive tackle C h r i s Hutchinson scooped up the ball for the Wolverines. "They were keyed on it," Barnett said. "Len (Williams, Wildcat quarterback) told the referee before the play that we were going to try something. When I looked over at their sideline, their coaches were pointing at the ground. They were on it faster than we were. It was a well-diagnosed play." THE 12TH MAN: Barnett created a bit of a stir last week by accusing Michigan of circumventing Big Ten rules by sending more than 11 players into its offensive huddle. The Wolverines' no-huddle offense often results in numerous players shuffling on and off the field just seconds before the ball is snapped. While several Wildcat defensive players admitted the no- huddle kept them off-balance, nobody felt it was the difference in the game. "The controversy had nothing to do with it," linebacker Steve Ostrowski said. "We did have some problems with the no-huddle," Ostrowski added. "They went to the quick count and had us all running around. We were a little confused." POLL TALK: Much of the talk after Saturday's game centered around Michigan's ranking in the national polls. Last week's narrow victory over Purdue prompted voters to vault an idle Alabama team ahead of the Wolverines. "I didn't like dropping last week," Moeller said. "I thought it was unfair, if you want my opinion. But that's why I say don't get hung up on the polls. "It's a great example of why you can't let your players think about it, because that would be like 'You won, but you lost.' And you never want to put yourself in the position where you're attempting with a football team to control something that is virtually out of your hands." INJURY UPDATE: Michigan inside linebacker Dave Dobreff suffered a "significant" injury to his right knee Saturday. Moeller said Dobreff will probably miss the rest of the season. Michigan's Amani Toomer caught three passes for 112 yards Saturday. MURRAY Continued from page 1 the two, and since this could be a burglary, a quiet but fast arrival is in order. "Probably some employee set it off," he says. "But you never assume with alarms. You take them for what they are. An alarm's an alarm - you have to treat it for real." The car speeds up behind another. The driver does not budge. A short burst from the siren catches her attention, and she hurriedly pulls to the side. We turn onto a road that runs behind Cranbrook Village and begin to look for Galen Circle. After reaching a business area, Murray realizes we must have overshot the location and turns around. "There are so many new streets in Ann Arbor, sometimes you don't know what's going on." He pulls the car into a subdivision and finds Galen Circle. The neighborhood is still rubbing the sleep from its eyes this early in the morning, and only a small construction crew breaks the silence. The alarm turns out to be at a house. Murray steps out of the car and approaches cautiously, disappearing around a corner. Another officer appears in the distance. The two meet and circle the building again but see nothing suspicious. "They probably got a motion detector," Murray says. "They might have a cat in there, and it probably set it off. All the windows and doors are locked so..." We pull onto an adjacent street and Murray starts some paperwork. The dispatcher comes on, saying doesn't even flinch. After a thorough search, he steps back outside. The neighbor resets the alarm and then gives him some information. Thanking her, he gets back in the car. "You gonna do this job or what?" he grins, making a pitch for the department. But then it's time to get back to the boring part - the paperwork. "If you don't take five or seven minutes to catch up, you're gonna be here until seven at night doing it. "I have a tendency to rush. They always review my reports. But I want to get through them; I like to stay busy." ... Busy for Vada Murray always meant football. As a child to an all- American with national high school power Cincinnati Moeller to a three-year letterman at Michigan. Murray still keeps in touch with the program, working out at Schembechler Hall and watching the team practice when he can. He also is one of the few people who likes the 3:30 p.m. start, because it is the only way he can make it to games. You can take the man out of football, but you can't take football out of the man. 'In football, if you make a mistake you just hear about it from the coach. But if you make one out here, you might not go home.' "There are always ties," he says. "It's like a family down there." Murray arrived in Ann Arbor as the football team's first Prop 48 student. The stigma that tag carries their opinions no matter what. I graduated in four and a half years. I got my degree. I live well." His problem was, and still is, dyslexia. The learning disability impairs his ability to read and write. He sees sentences inverted, words flipped around. School was tough, police academy just as difficult. But tutors, study groups and his girlfriend got him through. Murray sat out his first year in Ann Arbor and then was redshirted for another. So by the time he finally got on the field in 1988, he had not played competitive football for two and a half years. But he earned a starting job right away at free safety, part of one of the Wolverines' most talented defensive backfields in recent memory - with corners David Key and Lance Dottin and fellow safety Tripp Welborne. A couple months after his career ended in the 1991 Gator Bowl, Murray received an offer from the AAPD. Suddenly, he had another option. And football went to the sidelines. "I wanted to do it. But I had other factors to consider," he says. "Playing ball is good, but I want my kids to grow up in a city and not have to worry about moving to the East Coast, the West Coast. I want them to go to the same school, to have the same set of friends. To be in a place with a diverse population. Plus, my girlfriend got a job here, and who says she wants to try to get a new job every year." Murray and his girlfriend Laura, a high school teacher, recently decided to make things official and tie the knot. They just bought a condominium and have a wedding planned for next August. "I wanted to do one or the other, stuck against a light post. The driver gives his version of the story - that a woman had her pickup stopped in the middle of the street and he couldn't brake in time. He says she pulled into the high school parking lot, but a quick search reveals nothing. "She probably went out the other side," Murray tells the truck driver. "Damn! " he snaps. They discuss the incident some more, and then Murray heads back to the car. He pulls out some forms - more paperwork - while we wait for Officer Kemp of the motor unit, which handles most traffic accidents. Murray says that, with a quick glance, Kemp will know exactly what happened and what to do. And sure enough, when Kemp arrives he describes te accident just as the driver had said. "See what I mean?" Murray smiles. Kemp snaps a few photos and then has one of the driver's supervisors back the truck out. The scene moves to a nearby street. The supervisor starts the truck speeding dn n the road and then slams the t : s, leaving long skid marks. He tua- he vehicle around and does this Twice more. The driver knocks at the window. "What's he doin'?" "Trying to figure out how fast you were going," Murray answers. "They should be goin' uphill." "You better go tell them that." Unfortunately for the man, the test is already over. Murray continues to do paperwork, at one point pulling out a stencil to draw the accident scene, and then reports back on call. The dispatcher tells him to take an '80', meaning a 20-minute break. Officers also get a '90' - a 40-