Sports Momday Trivia When was the last time the Michigan football team tied Ohio State? (For answer, see page 2) 'M' Sports Calendar 2 AP Top 25 2 Griddes Athlete of the Week Q&A Blame it on Niyo Women's Swimming Football, Men's basketball 2 2 3 3 3 4-5 6 The Michigan Daily- Sports Monday November 23, 1992 Page 1 iTie aramba! Another draw Moeller blames field, injuries in 13-13 lock by John Niyo Daily Football Writer COLUMBUS - Michigan took on the whole world Saturday, and played it even. But nobody wearing Maize and Blue seemed very pleased about it, considering the 13-13 tie against Ohio State in front of 95,330 fans in Columbus left the Wolverines with their second consecutive tie, and their third of the year. The last time Michigan finished a season with three ties was 1910, when the team ended the year with a 3-0-3 mark. "I'm very proud of this team," Michigan coach Gary Moeller said after Saturday's dreary contest, "but I'm not happy with the tie. In fact, I'm not happy at all. "But we showed the character of this team. We fought and fought and fought. The whole world was against us out there today. I never saw it like it was today." Rose Bowl officials weren't happy with the day, either. They watched Michigan (6-0-2 Big Ten, 8-0-3 overall) which is headed to the Rose Bowl as the Big Ten champion, rack up another tie, while Washing- ton, the Pac 10 conference champ, lost badly to rival Washington State, 42-23. Ohio State (5-2-1, 8-2-1) will play in the Florida Citrus Bowl, and it remains to be seen whether that game on Jan. 1 will be the last for Buckeye coach John Cooper. Rumors that he would be fired if he lost again to Michigan (he was 0- 4 against the Wolverines until Satur- day) surrounded the team all week, but Cooper didn't care to speculate about his future after the tie. He wanted most to praise his team. "We played our guts out," Cooper said. "For this team to go out there today and lay it on the line af- ter all the adversity we've been through, I just couldn't be more proud, particularly of our seniors." Much-maligned quarterback Kirk Herbstreit was one such senior who elevated his game for The Game, as the Michigan-OSU rivalry is called. Herbstreit, who has been knocked in the past for having a weak arm, completed 28 of 47 passes for 271 yards on a wet and soggy afternoon in which the Buckeye running attack was held in check by Michigan's de- fense. Michigan outgained the Buckeyes 200-91 on the ground. "Is that how many I threw?" Herbstreit asked when a reporter told him the final statistics. "We knew we'd have to mix things up today. But never 47 times. I can't believe we threw the ball 47 times." Herbstreit did it with an array of See TIE, Page 4 The Michigan defensive line looked exhausted after a long day of sloshing through the mud and rain at Ohio Stadium on Saturday. The defense held Ohio State to 91 rushing yards, but the Wolverines could not keep the Buckeyes from scoring 10 fourth-quarter points to make the final score, 13-13. For Buckeye fans, the rivalry is the thing COLUMBUS - Many Michigan fans disagree about which contest during the season is the big- gest. Notre Dame? Michigan State? Ohio State? Any of these rivalries could arguably be the one. However, in the minds Jeni of the Buckeyes, there is no Durst question which matchup represents 'The Game'. Ohio State takes its meeting with the Wol- verines very seriously, both in Ohio Stadium and all over campus. Maybe a bit too seriously. We're talking about o people who wear replicas of nuts on their heads. Saturday's game object- ively didn't mean a thing. The Wolverines are still headed to the Rose Bowl come January; the tie with Illinois realistically doomed any chance Michigan had at a national title. Ohio State is still guaranteed a trip to the Florida Citrus Bowl. Possibly John Cooper's job was at stake. But there is another level on which this contest meant a lot and Buckeye fans made that fact abso- lutely clear. On the eve of the game, OSU students and fans crammed into bars and fraternity parties celebrat- ing the Wolverines' impending doom and their team's soon-to-be victory. Chants of "Michigan sucks" and obscenity-ridden versions of 'The Victors' resounded throughout the campus. Harassment of anything even remotely associated with Michigan is first priority.. One Wolverine fan hadn't realized how serious this whole rivalry thing could be and is one hat poorer and one head contusion richer because of it. One OSU faithful decided to express his hatred for the state to the north (and everyone in it) by rip- ping the unsuspecting Wolverine's Michigan hat to shreds, while his fellow Buckeye kicked him in the head. Another Wolverine was forced to wear his Michigan sweatshirt inside out while in Columbus because of his Buckeye comrade's warning: "If you wear it, they will hurt you." These people don't kid around. And they definitely weren't kidding on game day. Though the Wolverine players didn't face quite this much rage, the outlet of Buckeye ag- gression against them definitely had its effect. It's safe to say that the support of what Elvis Grbac calls "the greatest fans in the world" made itself a factor in Michigan's disappointing tie with Ohio State, the second tie in the last two weeks for the Wolverines. OSU's stadium is built up high in order to fil- ter sound onto the field, and when OSU fans are involved there is a lot of noise to be filtered. "The crowd was like a 12th man out there" Michigan running back Ricky Powers said. "They See DURST, Page 4 MOLLY STE Ohio State's Tim Williams attempts the PAT that tied the score at 13. Blue spikers keep NCAA hopes alive Becoming a by Rich Mitvalsky Daily Sports Writer After dropping a tight four-game contest with regionally top-ranked Illinois, 16-14, 15-4, 14-16, 15-11, the Michigan women's volleyball team recovered in splendid fashion, trashing Northwestern in three Against the Illini, ranked sixth nationally, the Wolverines fell vic- tim to long strings of scoreless play, allowing Illinois to recover from deficits and claim leads it would not relinquish. The Wolverines commanded play early in many of the games, particu- larly in the first and fourth, both of which they eventually dropped. In the first, Michigan held a 9-4 lead before the Illini recovered to win, 16-14. In the fourth and final contest, Michigan held an 8-4 lead, only to watch its advantage dwindle, as Illinois reeled off ten consecutive points to take a 14-8 lead before eventually capturing the game and match, 15-11. "We gave our points away in chunks at a time," outside hitter Michelle Horrigan said. "That just has to do with staying mentally into the game. We have to get more ag- gressive and stop those strings and by Chad A. Safran Daily Hockey Writer The Boston Bruins are one of the most historic franchises in the NHL. The championships, Bobby Orr and a distinctive physical style are all part of the Bruin mystique. Growing up in Canada, Cam Stewart always had an eye on the happenings at the Boston Garden. The junior left wing was a Boston Bruins fan. His favorite player? Bruin winger Cam Neely. So when the Bruins drafted Stewart in 1990, it was quite a memorable moment. "I was ecstatic," Stewart said. "I really didn't know if I was going to go in the draft. Before I came here, I talked to a couple of teams, but it was my underage year, and they said, 'Well, if you're around and it's a good time to take you, we'll take you.' All of a sudden I was watching the World Cup in the spring of 1990, and Mike Milbury (former head coach of the Bruins) called me and roughs it up for Bli Bruin The dream story continued 9 r with Stewart's first trip to the Boston Garden. Michigan was in town for games with Boston u e University and Boston College and practiced at the Boston Garden. "That was really neat," Stewart said. "I got to go in and have an interview with Milbury. We talked for a little bit and then he let me take any stick I wanted off the rack. I took Cam Neely's stick home." But it will be a couple of years before Stewart gets his opportunity to step on the ice for the Bruins. Until then, he will remain one of the Wolverines' most physical players. It is a bit of a different role than when he first arrived in Ann Arbor. While playing for the Elmira Sugar Kings, Stewart was the team's top scorer, ranking second in the Midwestern Junior B League with 115 points in 40 games. 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