4 - The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday. September 27, 1993 GAME STATISTICS M I- C H I 0 A N 4 Cougars' mistakes allow Wolverines to PASSING Player Collins 21 Tot. 2 RUSHING Pl ayer Wheatley Davis Ritchie R. Powers J. Johnson C-A ?0-34 :0-34 Yds 267 267 TD 1 1 o take advantage, score easy points D. B IhC KEN I SU IRA Att Yds 26 171 7 44 4 23 6 23 2 14 2 4 3 2 1 1 1(-)11( 52 271 Avg Lg 6.6 25 6.3 17 5.8 10 3.8 11 7.0 12 2.0 3 .7 4 1.0 1 -)11.00 5.2 25 Foster Biakabutuka Hayes Collins Totals RECEIVING Player Hayes Toomer W.Smith Wheatley Foster Borkholder Ritchie Totals No. 6. 5 3 2 2 1 1 20' Yds Avg 127 21.2 9418.8 16 5.3 13 6.5 9 4.5 8 8.0 0 0.0 26713.3 Lg 43 40 8 11 5 8 0 43 Dy nc ulm DAILY FOOTBALL WRITER With a Pepsi in his hand, defeat on his face and tired written all over him, Houston coach Kim Helton was in no mood to put a pretty face on his team's 42-21 thumping at the hands of Michi- gan. "The bottom line is we just didn't execute well," he said. "No matter what you coulda done, shoulda done, woulda done, it don't matter. You didn't do it, so ..." Helton's Cougars didn't do it early, and that cost them dearly. A slew of Cougar miscues and the inability to stop the Michigan offense early on left them in a hole that would compare favorably with the Grand Canyon. Before the first half had ended, Helton's squad found itself on the wrong end of a 28-0 score. On their first four possessions, the Wolverines scored touchdowns. On Houston's opening four drives, two came within 10 yards of the Michigan end zone, but both yielded nothing. Field position did Houston no fa- vors, either. On their first four posses- sions, as they fell behind by four touch- downs, the Cougars' beginning field position averaged their own 13-yard line. No Michigan drive began from behind its own 20, and its first com- menced at Houston's 35. The poor start overshadowed a com- mendable career debut for Houston's freshman quarterback, Chuck Clements, and left him lamenting what could have been. "I think it would have been a differ- ent game if we could have converted some of those routes into some touch- downs but they just stopped us," Clements said. The Cougars got a head start on their error-filled first half on the open- ing kickoff, which Helton termed "an unpleasant experience." Tommy Guy hauled in Remy Hamilton's kick at the two. The momentum carried him to- wards the end zone, and Guy downed - ~ ~1. . .~. L .! l.,WI.- i was not impressed with our defense at all. Whether it was in the first quarter, second quarter, or any other point in the game.' - Kim Helton the ball in the end zone, expecting a touchback. However, the officials ruled the Cougars were to start at the point of reception, the two-yard line. The drive, which included two false starts and a near safety, traveled a grand total of one yard. Backwards. Michigan started its drive 35 yards from the Houston end zone, and it took the Wolverines only four plays to hit pay dirt. When Tyrone Wheatley bounded into the end zone, his team was on the board with less than four minutes gone by. Seven possessions later, despite deep penetration by Houston, the game was over. On the Cougar series follow- ing Wheatley's first score, Clements marched the offense 77 yards before the drive stalled, and Houston went for a field goal. Cougar long snapper, Tho- mas McGaughey, sent the ball sailing over holder Clay Helton's head. On their fourth series, the Cougars moved from theirown 23 toMichigan's three-yard line in only six plays. Guy capped off the drive by fumbling the football at the three. A respectable 222 yards of offense in the first half yielded seven points. Meanwhile, the Wolverines were not only moving the ball, but scoring as well, with four touchdowns and 320 yards of total offense at the conclusion of the first thirty minutes of play. "I was not impressed with our de- fense at all," Kim Helton said. "Whether it was in the first quarter, second quar- .ter, or any other point in the game." DOUGLAS KANTER/OaiI Houston holder Clay Helton attempts to recover a botched field goal-snap during the first quarter of Saturday's 42-21 Michigan victory Cougar mistakes helped the Wolverines to their second win of the season. DE KORTE Hayes Continued from page 1 The Wolverines understood that they had to improve after their weak perfromance against Notre Dame, and they figured they could. Now, who knows? No one can explain what is happen- ing. Moeller continually stresses the fundamentals that are lacking. But as he will tell you, he has been doing that for the previous three seasons as well as this year's first three contests. No matter who you asked, perplexed facial expressions gave unsatisfying replies concerning the way the defense performed. "I thought about (defensive play) after the Notre Dame game, and I'll think about it tonight," linebacker Bobby Powers said. "Why we haven't played better I don't know. It doesn't feel good. This isn't Michigan foot- ball. Michigan football is three (downs) and out." Knowing conference play begins Saturday against Iowa brought forth the most forlorn responses of all. "We're not playing Michigan de- fense," senior nose tackle Tony Henderson said. "This is the worst shape the defense has been in going into the Big Ten in the three years I have been playing." While the doom and gloom may be on the money for the soggy perfor- mance Saturday, the fact that the de- fense helped win the last two outright conference titles left more room for demise than development. Fortunately for the Wolverines, the team philosophy has kept any criticism from crossing the line of scrimmage. While running back Tyrone Wheatley refused to say his teammates are strug- gling, he made it clear he will do his best to compensate for their lackluster performance. "If the defense is sagging, then the offense always tries to compensate," Wheatley said. "If the offense isn't playing well then the defense has to pick it up." This statement shows a stark rever- sal from the preseason chatter. The defense, with large numbers of return- ers, planned to carry the team. The linebacker unit has been decimated by injuries to Butkus candidates Matt Dyson and Steve Morrison. However, the rest of the defense has little excuse. The down linemen, with one sack to their credit, have not been able to put much pressure on the quarterback with- out help from linebackers.The second- ary, which wanted to be known as "The Lynch Mob", is not worthy of any favorable nickname. The team lost to the Irish and de- feated the Cougars, with both the of- fense and the defense playing at about the same level each week. The loss just did not seem to regis- ter two weeks ago. Michigan had con- soled itself with a promise of better performances in the future before they left the stadium's vicinity. The inconsistent effortSaturday left the players unsteady. Three shaky per- formances have led to two victories in three games. The Wolverines knows they need to pick up the pace. Just being bigger and stronger than the op- ponent will not work in conference play. The defense needs toplay smarter. "I think it's a confidence problem right now," Henderson said. "I don't think it's a matter of blowing someone out, we kind of did that today. I think we need to play a solid full game." Stangely, a team that talked about winning a national championship just a few games ago is now worried about having the confidence to play a com- plete game. The Wolverines will not be laughing if they do not find that confi- dence and some answers before tht Hawkeyes come in next Saturday. PUNTING Player No. Stapleton 3 Totals 3 Yds Avg 90 30.0 9030.0 Lg 37 37 PUNT RETURNS Player Hayes Law Totals KICKOFF Player Hayes Winters Totals No Yds Avg 3 3812.7 1 4 4.0 4 4210.5 RETURNS No Yds Avg 2 5427.0 1 1010.0 3 6421.3 Lg 26 4 26 Lg 29 10 29 DEFENSE Player Thompson Law Peoples D. Johnson B. Powers Winters Dudlar Irons Burch Dyson Freedman Henderson Stanley Vanderbeek Charles Aghakan Buff Tac 5 5 4 3 3 2 3 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 As t t t t { { t { { t st Tot 1 6 1 6 2 6 3 6 1 4 2 4 0 3 0 3 0 2 0 2 0 2 0 2 0 2 0 2 1 2 0 1 0 1 HOUSTON Continued from page 1 with 5:13 left in the first half. Then, the Cougars' offense sud- denly came alive. On the drive after Powers' score, Houston mounted a 9- play drive that went from its own 23 to the Michigan 30. The 10th play, a 30- yard touchdown run around left end by tailback Lamar Smith, set the tone for the rest of the afternoon. Several Wol- verines had a chance to stop Smith, but he bounced off their diving tackles and breezed in for the score. 'When you put 42 points on the board, you're doing a pretty good job.' - Todd Collins "The first half was the worst dis- play of tackling by a defense in the history of the stadium." defensive co- fenders took flying leaps at their oppo- nent. While the collision that occurs when this tactic succeeds is quite dra- matic, such playing invites missed tack- les. "The defense obviously didn't tackle," Moeller said. "You've never seen a good defense that can't tackle, and that's where we're at right now. And that's why we're not a good de- fense." Nevertheless, Michigan took a 28- 7 lead into halftime and pushed the lead to 35-7 midway through the third quarteron Wheatley's third touchdown of the day. Then the day's most comi- cal play - and one that typified the Wolverines' mixed status - occurred. On Houston's first play from scrim- mage, Houston quarterback Chuck Clements, who filled in for the injured Jimmy Klingler, threw a pass deep down the left sideline. Michigan cornerback Ty Law intercepted at the Michigan 31, and returned the ball 25 yards. However, as Law was tackled 'You've never seen a good defense that can't tackle, and that's where we're at right now.' -Gary Moeller - Michigan football coach not coming back for another 61-7," Wheatley said. "They came out and they played very hard ... and they played very well." With 5:56 remaining in the game, Houston scored again on another swing pass to Smith, cutting the lead to 14. However, on the next drive, Michigan sealed the game, and brought some of the remaining 104,196 fans to their feet, as well. After driving from their own 13 to the Houston 4, freshman tailback Tim Biakabutuka got the call and carried the ball through a big hole at right end for the score. As they did with the rest of the game, the Wolverines said they only Michigan tailback Tyrone Wheatley ASSOCIATED PRESS Michigan State and Central Michi- gan finally got it right. The big school from the topflight conference beat the smaller school from the lesser-known league. That's the way it was supposed to be for all three of their meetings in East Lansing. But Central Michigan (1-3) of the Mid-American Conference won the first two games by a combined score of 44-23 and threw a scare into the Big Ten Snartans (0-0lBig Ten 2-1 overall goal and a 73-yard Tunpf TD run The Chippewas also threw scare into the Spartans. .i Three Michigan State defenders gc their hands on Timpf but couldn't keel him out of the end zone on a 17-yar draw early in the fourth quart & Selinger's kick tied the game at 27-2 and quieted the near sellout crowd a 66,533 at Spartan Stadium. Tunpf hit 16-of-26 passes for 21. yards and no interceptions. Michitznn State quarterback:t 1