4 - The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, October 18, 1993 M I C H I G A N 2 GAME STATISTICS Improved offensive line sparks Blue to victory PASSING Player C-A Yds T. Collins 13-16 132 Tot. 13-16 132 TD Int 2 0 2 0 RUSHING Player Wheatley Powers Davis Foster Ritchie T. Collins Totals Att Yds 32192 5 19 3 15 2 9 2 2 2 -7 46230 Avg 6.0 3.8 5.0 4.5 1.0 -3.5 5.0 Lg 47 9 14 5 2 -6 47 RECEIVING Player ! Alexander Toomer Wheatley Smith Hayes Ritchie Foster Totals PUNTING Player I Stapleton Totals No. 4 2 2 2 1 1 1 13' No. 5 5 Yds 48 32 9 9 16 13 5 132 Avg Lg 12.019 16.022 4.5 6 4.5 7 16.016 13.013 5.0 5 10.122 By ADAM MILLER DAILY FOOTBALL WRITER STATE COLLEGE -The Michi- gan offensive line, maligned and often inefficient for much of the season, finally lived up to expectations in Saturday's 21-13 victory over Penn State. Following a forgettable perfor- mance in East Lansing, where Tyrone Wheatley's 33 yards were the total of the Wolverine ground attack as a swarm of Spartans plugged all run- ning alleys, the line cleared the way for a 230-yard onslaught that allowed Michigan to control the clock and the game. "Their offensive line was tough," Nittany Lion inside linebacker Brian Gelzheiser said. "They played hard, and blocked well." The game's first offensive play indicated that Michigan's interior blocking had much improved over earlier in the year, when most rushing plays required the running back to run around the end for lack of holes in the line. Wheatley, who finished the day with 192 yards, ran through a hole in the center of the line, cut left, and cruised for 13 yards. In fact, Wheatley gained 21 yards on that drive alone, 27 in the first quarter, and 72 by halftime. The difference in the line from last week? The return of senior center Marc Milia is an obvious factor. Milia missed the Iowa and Michigan State games with a neck injury. The most experienced member of the unit, Milia has played a leadership role on the line, assisting the younger and less-experienced members in games and in practice. "When I got hurt," Milia said, "it kind of made the other guys nervous because they don't have the experi- ence that I do." The line showed no nervousness Saturday, and played especially well in the second half. The 14-play, 80- yard drive - including 11 rushes for 51 yards - consumed seven minutes of the third quarter and gave Michigan a 14-10 lead. The drive suggests the offensive line strength Michigan has traditionally enjoyed. The line's performance shows in the final rushing statistics. In addition to Wheatley, tailback Ricky Powers 'Their offensive line was tough. They played hard, and blocked well.' - Brian Gelzheiser Penn State inside linebacker had 19 yards and tailback Ed Davis 15. "They were persistent," Penn State coach Joe Paterno said. "They didn't have to go to the pass since they kept getting three or four yards every rush." Additionally, quarterback Todd Collins enjoyed sufficient time to throw. Collins, who finished 13-of-16 for 132 yards, two touchdowns and no interceptions, was never sacked. One time he was hit as he was attempting a pass. The crowd called for a sack and fumble, but the play was ruled an incompletion. Considering the strong defenses of Ohio State, which yielded its first rush- ing touchdown of the year Saturday, and Wisconsin, the two remaining un- defeated teams in the conference, Michigan will surely need repeat per- formances from the line if it is to stay in contention for the Rose Bowl. PS U's Ki-Jana Carter is stopped on third down during the Wolverines' cruical defensive stand at the end of the th'rd consecutive downs, preserving a 21-13 victory in the first-ever meeting between the two schools. 'M Idf s a ie deese sC tands andGelvers' Yds Avg Lg 222 44.4 66 22244.466 PUNT RETURNS Player Alexander Totals KICKOFFI Player , Alexander Wheatley Totals DEFENSE Player Irons Winters Aghakhan Powers Peoples Anderson Henderson Horn Stanley Law Burch Pryce S. Collins D. Johnson Davis Freedman King Charles Dudlar Dyson Totals No.Yds 1 48 148 Avg 48.0 48.0 RETURNS No.Yds Avg 1 20 20.0 1 13 13.0 2 3316.5 Tac 1 6 5 3 2 4 3 1 2 2 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 32 Ast 14 5 4 6 5 0 0 2 0 0 2 2 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 45 rLg )48 )48 1Lg )20 )13 20 Tot 15 '11 9 9 7 4 3 3 2 2 2 2 1 1 0 1 1 1 1 1 77 By KEN SUGIURA DAILY FOOTBALL WRITER STATE COLLEGE - The Wol- verines were on the run. After taking a 14-10 lead midway through the third quarter, Michigan was attempting to break service, and was not having much success. Penn State tailback Mike Archie was doing his best Ki-Jana Carter impersonation, scooting his 5-foot-8 body in and around the Michigan de- fense and picking up bunches of yards at a time. On his last scamper from the Michi- gan 12, he burned around right end, falling to the Beaver Stadium turf at the 1 before his momentum carried him into the end zone. Undoubtedly, the Nittany Lions would soon blast in for a score. Even Tyrone Wheatley was not optimistic about the situation. "In my heart, yes, I knew we were going to stop them," he said. "But, really, you're still kind of skeptical." But Michigan provided a goal-line stand for the ages, changing the tenor of the game and perhaps the season for both teams, as the Wolverines' defense stopped the Nittany Lions on four straight attempts from the 1. "It switched the momentum of the game," Nittany Lion quarterback Kerry Collins said. "It was a big, big job by their defense. It was the turning point of the game." Undoubtedly, the plays will enter the lore of both teams. Wolverine fans will fill with pride at the notion of the Michigan defense rescuing the team from the spectre of a lost season, and Penn State fans will wonder exactly what Joe Paterno was thinking. "If I had to do it over, maybe I would have tried something else," said Paternoof his decision to send the ball up the middle on four sucessive plays. What happened before first down and goal may have allowed the stand to ever take place. Archie's run to the 1-inch line had Michigan reeling. However, the play was late com- ing in from the Penn State sidelines, and quarterback Kerry Collins had to burn a timeout. After the timeout, Paterno called for a quarterback sneak by Collins. With a strong push by the defensive front, Collins had nowhere to go. Middle guard Tony Henderson was credited with the stop. "Our philosophy on defense is for us linemen to create a new line of scrimmage, which means we got to get up under their linemen and knock them back," Henderson described. "If you let them get a surge, on a quarter- back sneak, he's just going crawl in behind those guys." On second down, Paterno called the exact same play, and it netted the same result, as Henderson was there again for the stop. "There was nowhere to go," Collins said. "I don't think you can say we weren't coming off the ball because we were. It was just your basic, up- the-gut play. Just punch it in and see what happens." "What they were doing was shoot- ing the gaps and stopping everything," Penn State left tackle Marco Rivera said. "Their linebackers were jump- ing over the pile and hitting the quar- terback." Third down brought a slightly dif- ferent strategy. Collins handed off to tailback Ki-Jana Carter, who for once did not come through. Defensive tackle Ninef Aghakhan grabbed hold of Carter's legs just as he was about to leap over the pile.. "When the chips are down, I want to get the ball," Carter said. "But I didn't come through today." The quarter ended after the play, and the tension heightened. Would Penn State go up the middle again? Would the Lions try a bootleg? Could Michigan hold them a fourth-straight time? On the Michigan sideline, the thinking was, in order, no, yes and yes. "The first three it was on the 1-inch line, and it was back about a yard," Henderson described, "so we figured they wouldn't try to quarterback sneak it from the 1, 1-1/2-yard line. We figured they would try to run a play or a bootleg or some kind of pass." On the opposing sideline, Paterno's thinking was the exact opposite. "They have a clever little scheme where they pinch in and then loop out," Paterno said. "If you run the sweep, and we were debating doing that, and then they loop out, then you're in trouble, so you have to guess again them. "It was my decision, my cal c guessed that they would loop O expecting something like a bootl pass, and I thought we would run rig at them," he continued. Paterno was accurate on the Midl gan strategy. But he wasn't counti on defensive penetration. "When you loop out, you still g to come back in," Henderson e plained. "When you loop out, you' free, you can read the play." * Which is exactly what happene Collins handed off to Carter agai who was swarmed from all sides I white jerseys. Linebacker Jarrett Iro was the first on the scene. "The fullback came off of me, a: there was a big hole," Irons said. "! I had to step up and hit the fullba and try to get to the ball." Irons filled the hole and wrI up Carter, and teammates helpedni him to the ground. "As soon as I go the ball, the were four linebackers right there Carter said."I tried to do my best, a I kept my legs moving, but the of cials blew the whistle." As soon as the play was whistl dead, Paterno's judgment was bei called to question throughout the st dium and along both sidelines.*3 "I wouldn't have minded a pass PSU wide out Bobby Engram said "We have it in the offense whe we can throw (on the goal line)," sa Collins, who said he was surpris that no pass play was called. "T coaches just didn't think it was t right time." Paterno stood resolute behind f thought process., "A couple of guys wanted to outside, and I said No, we'll take itt same way," he said. "Actually, t play we called was exactly what wanted, because (the defensive lir men) did not go out." Michigan coach Gary Moeller i frained judgment. "Everybody could second-gue every play call in the world, but wt you do is you take the dang thi@ the shortest distance to the goal Ii and sometimes those (defensi stands) just happen," he said. "Why don't know." PASS DEFENSE' Player No. Yds Peoples 1 0 Michigan quarterback Todd Collins barks out the signals during Saturday's 21-13 victory over Penn State. Collins went 13-for-16 for 132 yards. SUGIURA Continued from page 1 easily its best game of the year. "It just seemed like everything started to come together," Michigan quarterback Todd Collins said. "We started making plays when we had to. I'm not sure what it was, but I do Tyrone Wheatley, after turning in a disastrous performance a week ago against Michigan State, was as jacked up as anyone. "This was the most fired up I've ever seen Tyrone," center Marc Milia said. "He was real vocal. He was talking about Michigan tradition and getting Michigan going." same stunt a week ago in East Lansing. It might have held off the Spartans for one play, maybe two. Not four times in a row. "I think you have to give Michigan credit," Penn State coach Joe Paterno said. "A couple of times we thought we were going to put them away and they stayed with us.". For five straight seasons, But not only did the Wolverines want to beat the Lions; if they wanted a shot at the Rose Bowl, they had to. For the first time since their two-game losing streak three seasons ago, the Wolverines were truly desperate. "If we lost this game, the rest of the season would have been a grind," Collins said. ' ld~kldna p 11711"W, m