The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, September 13, 1993 -- 5 M I C H I 0 A N 2 3 GAME STATISTICS DE KoRTE Continued From Page 1 faced, he ended his press conference with a nod and left the room. The week-to-week focus has changed dramati- cally for the Wolverines. After beating Washington State last week, the team had begun thinking about the Irish before they had changed into their street clothes. After the Irish loss, Collins admitted he was thinking not about Houston (the next Wolverine opponent), but about the disappointment of the Notre Dame game, when he left the field Saturday. Surely, Houston is not Notre Dame, and the game is two weeks away. He has more than enough time to regain his mental focus and he probably will find it. However, the memory of this game will haunt him and his teammates throughout the season. They will wonder how the season got away - after just the second Saturday in September. Michigan had finally admitted to the public that it wanted the national championship. Although it had been mentioned in the past, the Wolverines simply felt they could do it this year. Unfortunately, they fully understand the sting of setting agoal and having it moved to an unattainable position. 'We got behind and we never caught up," Michi- gan linebacker Steve Morrison said. "We really have to put (the national championship) behind us now. We want to go out and win every game but we really have no say anymore." But what if playoffs existed. Indulge in a bit of fantasy. Pretend this game had notbeen played twodays ago. After playing a season, this game would be a feasible playoff confrontation. Surely, Houston is not Notre Dame, and the game is two weeks away. He has more than enough time to regain his mental focus and he probably will find it. However, the memory of this game will haunt him and his teammates throughout the season. They will wonder how the season got away -- after just the second Saturday in September. Michigan'soffensive line would have had time to gel. And with a little better protection, and Collins would have had less reason to get flustered and throw interceptions. And Michigan's defense could have prepared for an option offense. Of course, the Irish would have progressed also. They need some improvement, much like the Wol- verines. Amazingly, Notre Dame coach Lou Holtz expects improvement from all his players after play- ing one of their strongest games. The point is - you do what you have to do, you play the hand you're dealt, all those clich6s - you have to win every game you play to be a national champion. More than likely, participants in any na- tional title game would be undefeated before it started. Separately, they would not give up special teams touchdowns in two consecutive games - first a kickoff return, then a punt return. Thus, after years of setting the ultimate goal at the Big Ten title and weeks of national dreams, the trip to the Rose Bowl is back at the top menu. There is really nothing else to choose from. PASSING Player T. Collins 2 Tot. 2 RUSHING Player Wheatley Collins Davis R. Powers Totals C-A Yds 2-37 251 2-37 251 Aftt 25 4 3 2 34: Yds 146 -14 13 -6 151 s TD 1 I 1 1 Avg 5.8 -3.5 4.3 3.0 4.4 Int 3 .3 Lg 45 1 7 6 45 RECEIVING Player Hayes Toomer W.Smith Wheatley- Cooper Malveaux Burkholder Totals No. 6 5 4 3 2 1 1 Yds Avg 9616.0 5811.6 34 8.5 3913.0 10 5.0 9 9.0 5 5.0 Lg 43 23 17 19 7 9 5 22 25111.4 43 lo p yEVyN PM IE/Di ly opnup many holes in the veteran Irish defensive front Saturday, but tailback Ed Davis does find some daylight PUNTING Failure in execution of football Player Stapleton Totals No. 4 4 Yds Avg 180 45.0 180 45.0 Lg 49 49 fundamentals leads to Blue loss By ADAM MILLER DAILY FOOTBALL WRITER If the sting of defeat at the hands of the underdog Irish wasn't enough for the Michigan football team - and the si- multaneous loss of any national champi- onship hopes - the Wolverines can add this woe to the pile: fundamental mis- takes in football technique greatly con- tributed to the loss. Take, for instance, tackling. When NotreDamequarterback Kevin McDougal kept the ball on the option and scampered 43 yards for the touch- down to open the scoring, several Wol- verines had a chance to tackle him. Most tacklers that had an opportunity to stop him were on the line, as several Wolver- ines took swipes at McDougal in the backfield. All slid off, and soon McDougal had gained the left corner and was in the secondary. Strong safety Shonte Peoples, stand- ing at the 10-yard line, had the lastchance to stop him, but he was really out of position. He lunged from three yards away in a desperate attempt to make the stop. Michigan coach Gary Moeller cited such inadequate tackling as a key to the Wolverines' downfall. "The option? We've seen that before, we saw it last year," he said. "There shouldn't be anything there that's going to deceive you to the point that you can't get it straightened out.... "When something like this happens, you just go back to basics, basic funda- mental football and the techniques to be executed. It just appeared to me that we had several opportunities to tackle." Or, for a second example, blocking and controlling the line. The place where there was the most fundamental - and critical - break- down for Michigan was on the line of 'When something lke this happens, you just go back to basics, basic fundamental football and the techniques to be executed. It just appeared to me that we had several opportunities to tackle.' - Gary Moeller Michigan football coach scrimmage. Notre Dame controlled both the offensive and defensive line of scrim- mage most of the game, and this in large measure led to the Irish upset. There was little doubtbefore the game that Notre Dame's defensive line would make life difficult for Michigan's inex- perienced offensive line, and this indeed happened. For the second consecutive week, Wolverine runners were forced to run wide, around the ends, insteadof through holes in the center of the line. The pattern was established on Michigan's first pos- session. On his first carry, Tyrone Wheatley ran over right guard for no gain, but his second carry was around right end for 11 yards. Later in the drive, Michigan quar- terback Todd Collins was sacked by cornerback Bobby Taylor, and while he would only be sacked once more on the day, he was under relatively constant pressure from the Notre Dame rush the rest of the afternoon. Collins admitted that "They were rushing the passer well." Taylor agreed. "I thinkfirst of all, the front four, they were getting great rushes on'em and the coaches were putting us in perfect de- fenses at any particular time," Taylor said. "We knew they were going to go deep, they have four, five great receivers, and they came up with a lot of big plays, but overall, I think we contained them to a minimum." What many observers were not ex- pecting was the ability oftheNotreDame offensive line to hold out the Michigan defensive line, allowing Notre Dame to establish the running game. Especially early in the game, the Irish line opened big holes for tailback Lee Becton, fullback Ray Zellars, and the mobile McDougal. "I had confidence in my offensive line the whole time," McDougal said. "I've got (center) Tim Ruddy, and (right tackle) Todd Norman and (left tackle) Aaron Taylor also. They're great blockers. I had confidence in them the whole time, it was just a matter of going out and doing it." "What I couldn't believe is after one game we could run the ball that well," Notre Dame coach Lou Holtz said. The Irish had 192 gross rushing yards, and 163 net, Saturday. Finally, there is special teams. Most shockingly, and just as against Washington State, Michigan allowed a kick to be returned for a touchdown. Last week it was a kickoff. This time, a Chris Stapleton punt was returned 56 yards by speedster Mike Miller. "You just can't do those things," Moeller said. "It's very disappointing because on thatpartof our football (team) we had worked very hard." Examining the fundamental break- downs in every phase of the game - offense, defense, and special teams, in- cluding a rash of untimely penalties on each - Moeller put the loss in perspec- tive. 'We've just got to get back to the drawing board," he said, "and obviously we've got a lot of work to do." KICKOFF Player Wheatley Hayes Totals RETURNS No Yds Avg Lg 4133 33.3 49 1 1414.0 14 5147 29.4 49 Anotherattenance recordfis at 'M AU-Big Ten team, Miliacarries a 3.48 GPAas a Biology/Pre-Med student, and has been admitted to Michigan's medical school for next year. BO-UTIFUL: Former Michigan head coach Bo Schembechler was honored at halftime Saturday as an inductee into the Rose Bowl Hall of Fame. Schembechler, who compiled a 194-47-5 record in his 20 years at Michigan, was the winningest active coach in Division I football at the time of his retirement in 1990. His record in the Rose Bowl, two wins in nine tries, has often been joked about, luding by Schembechler himself. But the fact remains: his 13 teams who won or tied for the Big Ten championship, 17 bowl appearances, and nine trips to Pasadena truly distinguished Schembechler as one of the game's greats. MAGIC, IS THAT YOU? No, former Wolverine and Heisman Trophy winner Desinond Howard still plays for the NFL's Washington Redskins. But wide - iceiver Mercury Hayes' diving touchdown catch in pregame warmups did bring uo mind Howard's grab that defeated the Irish two years ago, and brought a hearty tound of cheers from the early-arriving faithful. 4. STREAK SNAPPED: Michigan was undefeated in 20 consecutive regular season games going into Saturday's contest (17-0-3). The streak dated back to orida State's 51-31 drubbing of the Wolverines in the third game of the 1991 n. However, Michigan's 21-game Big Ten unbeaten streak and 22-game conference road unbeaten streak remain. . Such are the benefits of a non-conference game. HAPPY ANNIVERSARY, REDUX: Saturday's affair marked the 25th meeting between the Wolverines and the Fighting Irish. The on-again, off-again series dates b, k to 1887. Including Saturday's loss, the Wolverines lead the series 14-10-1 LUCK OF THE ... : Despite Michigan's overall series lead, Notre Dame y has held the upper hand of late. The last time the Wolverines won two in w from the Fighting Irish was in the 1985 and 1986 seasons, when they won X3-12 in Ann Arbor and 24-23 at South Bend. Since then, Notre Dame is 5-1-1, Acuding a four-in-a-row streak from 1987-90. The"luckiest" game in that stretch (in terms of good ol' Irish luck) came in 1990 at South Bend. Though Notre Dame raced to a 14-3 lead, Howard teamed with quarterback Elvis Grbac to lead Michigan to a 24-14 lead late in the game. Irish quarteback Rick Mirer then earned his "Golden Boy" label, throwing the winning pass to Adrian Jarrell with mere seconds remaining. IT'S GETTING OLD, ALREADY: Throughout their short career, Michigan's Five basketball players (Chris Webber, Juwan Howard, Ray Jackson, Smith DEFENSE Player Peoples Morrison Stanley Winters Dudlar B. Powers Irons Law Aghakhan Horn Burch D. Johnson Dyson W. Smith Thompson Bolach Henderson Freedman Davis i Tac Ast 9 -3 6 5 5 1 5 0 5 0 4 1 4 0 3 1 3 0 3 0 2 1 1 2 2 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 Tot 12 11 6 5 5 5 4 4 3 3 3 3 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 ND 19 7-16 163 208 371 TEAM STATISTICS MICH First Downs 19 Third Down 5-14 Rushing 151 Passing 251 Total Offense 402 I OR