The Michigan Daily - Sports Monday - November 16, 1992 - Page I L L I 0 I S 2 2 r/f_ ~N nnrvn nn n Cn nnl nnC C nn n-C FOOTBALL NOTEB00K J Moeller '5 decision leaves Blue in tie by Albert Lin Daily Football Writer- After scoring the go-ahead touchdown midway through the fourth quarter, coach Gary Moeller elected to go for a two-point conversion rather than try the more certain extra point. That decision would come back to haunt the Wolverines. The touchdown put Michigan up, 19-15, and the staff probably reasoned that Illinois would have to score a touchdown whether Michigan was up five (with an extra point) or six (with the two-point conversion) points. So Elvis Grbac's pass to Burnie Legette was knocked away, and the Wolverines remained up by four, Illinois scored on its next drive and went up three, forcing Michigan to score a touchdown in order to win, which it did not do. After the game, Moeller related that he thought through situations Friday night and Saturday morning, and that he has a chart which helps him decide - based on point differential - what move to make. . If Michigan had kicked that extra point, Illinois would have been down five, and at most could susequently go up by three provided the Illini scored a touchdown and converted for two. And if they didn't go for two, Michigan would be down a pair with a chance to win on a field goal. But signals were crossed, so when Pete Elezovic lined up with 19 seconds left, the best that could happen was a tie. And that's what happened. A reporter pressed Moeller afterward, and he appeared dumb- founded. "I'll be honest, you got me at a blank," he said. The best the coach could do was acknowledge that the chart may have been misread, but he insisted the staff had everything planned out and that going for two was the right thing to do. TIES: The two ties on Michigan's record marks the first time, since 1976 that a Wolverine team has twice in a season come away from a game as neither winner or loser. That Bicentennial club finished 8-2-2, with back-to-back ties in Verduzco Running back Jesse Johnson led the Michigan rushing attack as he carried the ball 23 times for 121 yards. The Wolverines totaled 523 yards on offense, including 245 on the ground. ILLINOIS Continued from page 1 turnovers, the Wolverines still clinched their second consecutive outright Big Ten championship and a return trip to the Rose Bowl against Washington. "It's kind of a sad way to get yourself into a big party," Moeller said. But the Wolverines were lucky to get into that party at all Saturday. After the Illini scored on a Jason Verduzco two-yard run with 2:26 remaining, the Wolverines needed a clutch drive for the tie. Michigan took over with 2:22 to play on its own 13-yard line. Quarterback Elvis Grbac completed six straight passes to move the Wolverines down to the Illini 34 with 1:14 remaining. Moeller then called for a second-down draw play that Jesse Johnson broke for 17 yards. Moeller followed that call with another draw to Johnson that went for a six-yard loss. Grbac took a shot at the end zone on second down, be- fore Moeller called for a third-down run. On fourth down from the 22, Moeller sent in kicker Pete Elezovic to tie the game. "What I thought a lot about last night, this morning and with six minutes remaining about this situa- tion was to move my ballclub into field-goal range," Moeller said. "We ran one play to try to get the ball to the center of the field and then take a shot at the end zone. We didn't need an interception with that little time remaining. "We wanted to be Big Ten champions. That's our goal." Michigan called time out with 19 seconds left and sent Elezovic in for the game-tying 39-yard field goal. Elezovic had made five of nine field goals on the year, but none longer than 33 yards. He also missed an earlier extra point. "I told Pete on the sideline that he made the kick against Notre Dame. He made the kick at Purdue. He's made the kicks whenever we needed it," Moeller said. Elezovic made this one too. Jay Riemersma placed Marc Elliott's snap two yards inside the left hash- mark, and Elezovic split the uprights with 16 seconds remaining. But the game never should have Wolverines into, only one punt, but forced six turnovers. "The turnovers certainly kept us in the game early," Illinois coach Lou Tepper said. "Michigan domi- nated the first quarter, but I think in the second half our players really believed they could win." After a lackluster first half of- fensively, the Illini started to move the ball in the third quarter. Illinois put together touchdown drives of 13 and 10 plays. "Regardless of what happened today, Michigan is still an outstand- ing defense," Illini offensive tackle. Brad Hopkins said. "That Michigan didn't do well today is not the case, we played a good game today." After a first half in which the Wolverines held the Illini to 106 yards, Moeller felt his injury- plagued defense tired. "Our defense played well in the first half, but we had all we could handle in the second," Moeller said. "We're banged up defensively and that started to take it's toll. We started to goof up a bit." Michigan inside linebacker Steve Morrison anchored the Wolverine defense all day. Morrison had 15 solo tackles and 17 overall on the day. He also broke up a Jason Verduzco pass to John Wright in the end zone to hold Illinois to a field goal in the first half. "I thought the defense played well, but we can't let up like we did in the fourth quarter," Morrison said. "You can't use the injuries as an ex- cuse. You have to have people step up and play. We've had that all " Despite the disappointment in falling out of the national title race, the Wolverines are already looking forward to next week's annual Ohio State clash. "This tie is already out of my mind," Grbac said about 15 minutes after the game. "I'm from Ohio, and Ohio State is all that's on my mind. I want to play my best game down there." Passing Player C-A Yds TD Int Verduzco 25-38 192 0 1 Wright 1-1 -6 0 0 Total 26-39 186 1 0 Rushing Player Att Yds Avg Lg Boyer 13 64 4.9 12 Feagin 12 49 4.1 11 Jackson 3 8 2.7 '4 Verduzco 8 7 0.9 10 Totals 36 128 3.5 12 Receiving Player No Yds Ava TD Wright 8 57 7.1 0 Boyer 3 19 6.3 0 Dilger 3 18 6.0 0 Jackson 3 9 3.0 0 Klein 2 25 12.5 0 Koester 2 20 10.0 0 Olson 2 12 6.0 0 Fisher 1 17 17.0 0 Harrison 1 15 15.0 0 Verduzco 1 -6 -6.0 0 Totals 26 186 7.1 0 Punting Player No Yds Avg Lg Wells 3 127 42.3 51 Larsen 1 27 27.0 27 Richardson 1 25 25.0 25 Total 5 179 35.8 51 Punt Returns Player No Yds Av ! L Voelker 1 4 4.0 4 Kickoff Returns Player No Yds Ava La Feagin 2 40 20.0 25 Lynch 1 16 16.0 16 Total 3 56 18.6 25 Defense Player Tac Ast Tot Grbac Michigan tailback Tyrone Wheatley finds the endzone for a first quarter score. The play went for 50 yards and gave the Wolverines a 7-0 lead. the second and third games of the season, against Stanford and Baylor, respectively. In 1963, Michigan also finished the season with a pair of ties, coming away even from games against Big Ten rivals Michigan State and Iowa.. And a long, long time ago, the 1910 Wolverines set the school record for ties, going undefeated in a six-game campaign with a mark of 3-0-3. The following year Michigan tied twice, so over a two-year span the Wolverines' record was 8-1-5. MILESTONES: Even though he didn't play much in the second half - because of his problems holding onto the ball, Moeller said - tailback Tyrone Wheatley became the 13th player in Michigan history to have a 1,000-yard season. His 86 net yards rushing give him 1,022 on the year, good for 17th place on the all-time Wolverines single-season list with two games remaining. Quarterback Grbac also surpassed a magic number. Michigan's all-time leading passer became the first Wolverine to go over 6,000 career passing yards, and now has 6,266 in his four years. Illinois QB Jason Verduzco did Grbac one better, going over 7,000 career passing yards. His 192 yards through the air give him 7,128 in his career. IT'S CROWDED ...: Michigan established the NCAA single-sea- son average attendance mark with the crowd at Saturday's game. The 106,481 fans who packed Michigan Stadium - the third largest in Michigan history - brought the season total to 635,201, giving the Wolverines an average of 105,867. That breaks the mark of 105,588 set by Michigan in 1985. BUT THERE'S NO NOISE: Grbac was less than complimentary to the crowd in his postgame comments. "It's been like that for a while since I've been here. Maybe because it's a big stadium and there's so much tradition," Grbac said. "I don't know. I can't put a finger on it. I hope it improves and fans hear what I'm saying. When we got the ball at the end, the crowd should have got going. 'What I thought a lot about last night, this morning and with six minutes remaining about this situation was to move my baliclub into field-goal range.' -- Gary Moe//er come down to that final field goal. Michigan marched up and down the field in the first half only to be held to seven points because of turnovers. Michigan had 309 total yards in the first half but had five consecu- tive drives end in turnovers. For the game, the Illini forced the Howard Holecek Leach Arneson Foggey Hardy Crumpton Copher Washington Johnson Rucker Roberts Sidari Rice Russell Cole Cox McCloud 12 7 7 7 7 6 6 6 4 3 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 x g ._ r t " f m i 1 } Scoring Summary FIRST QUARTER: No scoring SECOND QUARTER: Richardson 22-yd FG, 4:16. Illinois 3, Michigan 7 Richardson X33-yd FG, 0:05. Illinois 6, Michigan 7 THIRD QUARTER: Boyer 8-yd run (kick failed), 0:11. Illinois 12, Michigan 13 FOURTH QUARTER: Richardson 40-yd FG, 11:01. Illinois 15, Michigan 13 Verduzco 2-yd run (Richardson kick), 2:26. Illinois 22, Michigan 19 ....~ 4' Y. '' __