The Michigan Daily - Sports Wednesday - January 6, 1993 - Page 5 ,*- I I A S H I N 0 T 0 3 1 g FOOTBALL NOTEBOOK Crowd is small, but Wheatley plays big by Josh Dubow and Matthew Rennie Daily Football Writers PASADENA - The Rose Bowl crowd of 94,238 was the smallest Rose Bowl crowd since 1955, when the Ohio State- USC game drew 89,191 fans. In fact, this was the fifth largest crowd the Wolverines have played in front of this season. Both Washington and Michigan failed to sell out their share of tickets. Michigan re- quested 21,000 tickets and as of last Tues- day had 5,000 unsold tickets. The athletic department gave those tick- ets to Ticketmaster to sell in California. The athletic department does not yet know how many of those tickets were sold. Michigan is responsible for all the un- sold tickets, and at $46 each, the athletic department could lose up to $230,000. The money will be deducted from the Rose Bowl payout of $6.5 million. R ECORD SETTER: Michigan's Ty- rone Wheatley set a multitude of records in the Wolverines' Rose Bowl victory. 'The sophomore tailback ran for 235 yards on 15 carries. The 235 yards were the most ever for a Wolverine in a bowl game, breaking Jamie Morris' record of 234 in the 1988 Hall of Fame Bowl. The Rose Bowl record for most yards rushing is held by Charles White of USC, who ran for 247 yards in the 1980 game against Ohio State. Wheatley also had three touchdown runs covering 56, 88 and 24 yards respectively. The 88-yarder, on the first play from scrimmage in the second half, set a record for the longest run in Rose Bowl history. Wheatley's four career Rose Bowl touchdowns ties the Rose Bowl record held by Eric Ball of UCLA and Sam Cunning- ham of USC. Michigan quarterback Elvis Grbac's 17 completions set a Wolverine bowl record. Grbac also now holds Michigan's career records for touchdown passes (seven), pass- ing yards (601) and completions (46) in bowl games. Michigan's five touchdowns against Washington gave the Wolverines 59 TDs on the season, which is the most ever by a Michigan team. CLOSE SHAVE: After ending a five- year college football career with a victory in the Rose Bowl, Chris Hutchinson did the natural thing. He got his hair cut. Hutchinson emerged from the locker- room after the gune with a cigar in hand and a block 'M' shaved in the back of his head. Corwin Brown got out his clippers to do the honors for Iutchinson, who made good on a promise made four months ago. "Back in August, I shaved my head for the pre-season and Corwin said, 'Aw, man, why didn't you let me do that for you?' So I told him, 'Corwin, if we win the Rose Bowl, I'll let you do whatever you want to my head,"' Hutchinson explained. Brown wavered as to how exactly he would celebrate the victory. "Yeah, I gave him a block 'M'. I was going to cut it all off, but it took him so long to grow it back last time, I felt bad," he said. LONG-LOST FRIENDS: Brown con- ducted his post-game interviews clad in a Washington jersey, a gift to him from Husky running back Beno Bryant. Bryant and Brown became friends after being involved in an altercation in last year's Rose Bowl. Brown wanted to talk to Bryant after the game to apologize for the incident, but he was unable to find him. Through a Washington public relations rep- resentative, Brown gave Bryant his phone number and asked him to call. Bryant did call, and the two talked for nearly two hours. The two were looking forward to seeing each other this year. "After the game, we were in the locker- rroom, and the guys came up to me and said, 'There's a Husky here to see you.' I went outside and saw it was Beno," Brown said. "He gave me his jersey as a gift." BOWL GRIDDES WINNER: Greg Williainson won Bowl Griddes by guessing 14 of the 18 games correctly... on one of his thirty entries. There was some contro- versy surrounding the victory,. however. Apparently a Daily staffer claimed to have spotted Williamson submitting the win- ning entry on Jan. 3, after all bowl kamnes had been played. Willianson denied the ac- cusation. "That's impossible," he said. "I haven't left my house since 1984." Brunell McGee scoots into the endzone, scoring the first ens tied a Rose Bowl record. 'M' STIFLES HUSKIES' BRUNELL IN THE CLUTCH Defense holds tight in final minutes e Rose Bowl: cm scrimmage: 88 yards ,ns; career: 4 (tie) eptions, game: 2 (tie) ards, bowl game: 235 owl game: 17- ses in bowl games, owl games, career: 601 howl games, career: 46 59 s- over: in style 3ly a high draft pick in April, who 11 be remembered for something ceptions against Notre Dame. He itermined to avenge the loss to year earlier. He started watching, lanuary. an obsession," Grbac said, pinned [. by a group of reporters. "I just .Oe and win." iee had something to prove, too. go, he was the tight end who no- >ur. catches he had caught since. hlea-lded prep star. Six receptions e.though -two going for touch- Moeller saying, "I don't know if tight end in the nation," linebacker Steve Morrison stood A lockerroom, a few steps away d Grbac and a mass of reporters. d- such an unbelievable Ijob, ,-e said. "They were just great." ore the jersey of Beno Bryant, nIjured running back, as he talked .r. the game. It was the subject of ,It was a trade, he said. A sign of e is what he wanted to talk about. ut the thrill of seeing Dwayne ier senior - stop Washington lark Brunell on fourth down, . the victory, on the Huskies' rive of the game. I a day hadn't passed in the last n't thought about the last trip to ne day. the rest of his veteran cohorts on ne : Joe Cocozzo, Doug Skene y had a score to settle as well. incoln Kennedy got all the media ason, while they were busy each ge-holes for Wheatley and Co. rna all the hroken hones and by John Niyo and Matthew Rennie Daily Football Writer PASADENA - Michigan's traditional defen- sive philosophy has been, "Bend, but don't break." But for the first three quarters of the Rose Bowl, the Wolverines did nothing but break. And then in the game's final period, they didn't even bend. After surrendering the lead three separate times in the first three quarters, Michigan's defensive unit put the clamps on Washington's high-pow- ered offense. The Huskies came up empty on their last five possessions of the contest. Washington quarterback Mark Brunell had baf- fled the Wolverines all afternoon long, bringing the Huskies back with both his running and throwing. Brunell bought himself enough time to connect with tight end Mark Bruener and split end Jason Shelley for touchdown plays. "In the first quarter, I was hurting worse than anybody because I hate big plays in the sec- ondary," Michigan free safety Corwin Brown said. "We just needed to step it up a notch, and I think we did in the fourth quarter." The key to stopping Brunell proved to be not an increase in aggression, but rather just the op- posite. Michigan's pass rushers were so eager to get a shot at Brunell that their enthusiasm re- sulted in overpursuit. Consequently, Brunell was able to get to the outside and find room to run. "It's a tribute to him that he was able to get away so many times. I thought our rush was pretty good," defensive tackle Chris Hutchinson said. "We knew he was a very mobile quarter-' back, but we wanted to make him do his running up the middle and not allow him to get around the corner." Brunell, who now holds four career passing marks in the Rose Bowl record books, was at his best on third down, making the game even more demoralizing for the Wolverine defense. "All scrambling quarterbacks make you frus- trated," strong safety Shonte Peoples said. "When he would hit a big play on third down, that takes the air out of you. But those are the things that great defenses can overcome." However, while Michigan was giving up points at a wholesale rate, the Wolverine offense was keeping pace. For a while, it looked like whoever had the ball last would win the game. The Michigan defense welcomed the chal- lenge. With five minutes left in the game, the Huskies had the ball first-and-goal on the Wolverine four-yard line. Michigan turned away three Washington rushing attempts, and Travis Hanson missed the chip-shot 22-yard field goal attempt. "We knew before the game that it would come down to the fourth quarter,"'linebacker Steve Morrison said. "As a defense, we knew that we were going to have to make a stop. We got the job done." That defensive stand gave the Wolverines the momentum they needed. After the Hanson miss, Michigan scored on the ensuing possession to take a 38-31 lead, the game's final margin. But the victory was not without one last scare. With 1:03 left, Michigan was forced to punt, and the Huskies partially blocked Chris Staple- ton's kick and took over on the Michigan 44-yard line. "That didn't change anything," Morrison said. "It just enhanced what we had to do." The Wolverines did it, stopping Brunell on four straight pass attempts, and Michigan had a 38-31 victory. In the lockerroom after the game, Brunell had nothing but compliments for the Wolverine defenders. "I've never played a defense that's been more disciplined," he said. "We tried to get outside and run it outside the pocket, but there was always their outside linebackers there containing us. "Those guys never made any mistakes. They were always in the right zone it seemed like. They did leave some lanes open, but I thought they were solid and aggressive and they hit pretty darn hard." Michigan's defenders, almost to a man, re- turned the compliments, saying that Brunell brought more to the Washington offense than the previous Husky starter, Billy Joe Hobert, who was suspended earlier in the season for accepting improper loans. "lie's a much better quarterback than Hobert, no question," Brown said. "With his mobility he creates a lot of opportunities for their offense." - But Brunell's record-breaking passing day provided some opportunities for Michigan. "We wanted the opportunity as a defense to win a game," Hutchinson said. "It's an unbeliev- able feeling." Rushing Player Att Yds Avg L Kaufman 20 39 2.0 5 Brunell 10 32 3.2 18 Turner 5 18 3.6 9 Thomas 2 8 4.0 4 J. Barry 4 4 1.0 3 Jones 2 4 2.0 3 Total 43 105 2.4 18 Passing Player C-A Yds TD Int Brunell 18-30 308 2 0 Bjornson 0-1 0 0 0 Total 18-31 308 2 0 Receiving Player No Yds Avg TD Bruener 4 85 21.3 1 Shelley 3 100 33.3 1 D. Barry 2 61 30.5 0 Mack 2 33 16.5 0 Kralik 2 16 8.0 0 Jones 2 10 5.0 0 Kaufman 2 -1 -0.5 0 Turner 1 4 4.0 0 Total 18 308 17.1 2 Punting Player No Yds Ava Lg Werdel 5 196 39.2 53 Punt Returns Player No Yds Avg Lg Shelley 2 19 9.5 11 Kickoff Returns Player No Yds Avg Lg Kaufman 2 68 34.0 47 J. Barry 3 61 20.3 22 Jones 1 14 14.0 14 Total 6 143 23.8 47 Defense Player Tac Ast Tot D. Hoffmann 6 2 8 Pahukoa 2 5 7 Clifford 5 1 6 Smith 4 2 6 Fields 4 1 5 Butler 3 2 5 Fountaine 3 1 4 Farr 3 0 3 S. Hoffmann 3 0 3 Reser 3 0 3 Moore 2 1 3 Killpatrick 2 0 2 Mason 2 0 2 Bailey 1 1 2 Conwell 1 0 1 Washington 1 0 1 Springstead 0 1 1 Scoring Summary FIRST QUARTER: Turner 1-yd run (Hanson PAT), 3:58. Washington 7, U-M 3 SECOND QUARTER: Shelley 64-yd pass from Brunell, (Hanson PAT), 9:20. Washington 14, U-M 17 Bruener 18-yd pass from Brunell, (Hanson PAT), 3:14. Washington 21, U-M 17 THIRD QUARTER: Kaufman 1-yd run, (Hanson PAT), 12:12. Washington 28, U-M 24 Hanson 44-yd field goal, 8:42. I The top 25 teams in the final Associated Press 1992 college football poll, with first-place votes in parentheses. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. Team Alabama (62) Florida St. Miami (Fla.) Notre Dame Michigan Syracuse Texas A&M Georgia Stanford Florida Washington Tennessee Colorado Nebraska Washington St. Record 13-0-0 11-1-0 11-1-0 10-1-1 9-0-3 10-2-0 12-1-0 10-2-0 10-3-0 9-4-0 9-3-0 9-3-0 9-2-1 9-3-0 9-3-0 How they fared beat No. 1 Miami (Fla.), 34-13 beat No. 11 Nebraska, 27-13 lost to No. 2 Alabama, 34-13 beat No. 4 Texas A&M, 28-3 beat No. 9 Wash., 38-31 beat No. 10 Colorado, 26-22 lost to No. 5 Notre Dame, 28-3 beat No. 15 Ohio St., 21-14 beat No. 21 Penn State, 24-3 beat No. 12 N. Carolina St., 27-10 lost to No. 7 Michigan, 38-31 beat No. 16 BC, 38-23 lost to No. 6 Syracuse, 256-22 lost to No. 2 Florida St., 27-13 beat Utah, 31-28 / mom