The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, November 8, 1993 - 5 P U R B U E 1 0 EITDAII UnITEDIV GAME STATISTICS IUUI UILL nuI LDUUR PASSING Player Pike Blue overcomes another Trefzger slow start on offense C-A 3-5 17-28 20-33 Yds 19 195 214 TD Int 0 1 1 0 1 1 Saturday in the Wolverines' 25-10 victory over Purdue. The true freshman, originally from Zaire but who has lived io State takes control Big Ten Swith 1414 tie Wisconsin By'ANDY DE KORTE DAILY FOOTBALL WRITER Despite the 25-10 victory over Purdue Saturday, the Michigan offense contin- ued its trend of sluggish starts. Dropped passes and lethargic rushers stalled the offense for the entire first half, resulting in only three points for the Wolverines at the half. However, the rushers exploded in the second half. Tim Biakabutuka led the onslaught, going from 58 yards to 140 yards for the game. Fullback Jon Ritchie also improved from four yards to 36 yards total. Quarterback Todd Collins completed 76.9 percent (10-for-13) of his passes in the opening 30 minutes, yet he still improved. He went a perfect eight-for-eight in the second half to finish the game with 177 yards passing. Mercury Hayes showed the most dramatic - both figurative and literal - improvement in receiving yards. Although in tight man-to-man coverage, Hayes managed to reel in a 49-yard reception. MIXING THE 'D': While the offense struggled early, the defense on the other hand, started strong and did not let up. The disappointment with the defense after last week's loss to Wisconsin spurred a big change in its play Saturday. "Coach (Lloyd) Carr said this week in practice that whether you're a three- year starter or a freshman, the toughest players would play," Michigan defensive captain Buster Stanley said. "If you don't practice hard, you don't play." Stanley moved from tackle position to nose tackle, among many lineup changes. Stanley managed five tackles, including a sack for an eight-yard loss. IRON MAN: In this season of expanded freshman contribution to Michigan football, Jarrett Irons set a new mark for freshman tackles in a season with 12 tackles Saturday. The nine solo tackles and three assists ran his season totals to 87 tackles, which broke the mark of 77 set by Erick Anderson in the 1988 season. Irons' big game against Purdue typified his efforts this season. His 12 tackles were a team high, the fifth time in the last six games Irons has led his team in tackling. Early in the second half, Irons also showed his receiving abilities with an interception. He proceeded to return his first career pick over 27 yards, the longest return by a Wolverine this season. BiAKABuwHo?: After the game, Purdue coach Jim Colletto gave his defense as much credit for Biakabutuka's performance as he did to the freshman runner. "They ought to give us a game ball or something," Colletto said. "Every year we come in here and make a hero out of someone I never heard of. Last year, it was Jesse Johnson, this year it was (Biakabutuka)." Purdue defensive Ben Metzger summarized the emergence of Biakabutuka. After a half-hearted attempt at his pronouncing the long name, Metzger was asked if he could pronounce it. "No, I can't say it," Metzger said. "I just heard it a lot today." In fact, every time the public address announcer said "Biakabutuka" the crowd exploded with cheers, punctuating the 146-yard rushing performance. GurrY PERFORMANCE: Purdue quarterback Rick Trefzger started his third game of the season despite feeling sick to his stomach Saturday morning. Playing all of the first half, Trefzger threw for 101 yards on nine passes. However, Colletto felt moved to replace Trefzger with Matt Pike in the second half after Trefzger took some big hits and became less effective. Nonetheless, Trefzger's saga continued. When Pike hurt his shoulder in the opening series of the third quarter, he had to be replaced. Trefzger came back in and still managed 94 passing yards, 195 total despite heavy pressure from the Wolverine defense. SouR GRAPES: With 2:08 left in the game Purdue only trailed, 18-10. A defensive stand brought Michigan to a fourth down and a chance for the Boilermakers to get the ballback. Fortunately for Michigan, when Chris Stapleton punted away, the referees flagged Purdue for having 12 men on the field. Michigan regained possession of the ball and drove down the field to score the final touchdown. Colletto wanted to blame Michigan for the problem but still took responsibility. "There is a lot of discussion in the league about (Michigan's) substitution patterns up here. Sometimes there are even 12 men in the huddle, but they don't call anything," Colletto said."Once the ball is in play you have to be ready and we weren't, that's my fault." NUMBER CRUNCHER: Collins passed his way past another milestone Saturday. With his 177-yard performance he became only the third Michigan quarterback to throw for over 2,000 yards in a season. His 2,106 passing yards trails only Jim Harbaugh (2,729 in 1986), and Elvis Grbac (2,085 in 1991). Collins only needs 156 yards to become the fourth Michigan passer to crack the 3,000-yard career barrier. His 18 completions on 21 attempts improved his career completion percentage, already a Michigan best, to 64.6 percent. QUINT-A-CENT HOME WIN: Saturday's victory in Michigan Stadium represented the 500th home victory in Wolverine history. The 295 Michigan Stadium victories leads all venues. Detroit (12), Ann Arbor (18), Regents Field (87) and Ferry Field (88) also contributed to the tally, starting in Detroit in 1879. RUSHING Player Att Alstott 10 Rogers 9 Pike 1 Trefzger 5 Totals 25 RECEIVING Player No. Thorton 2 J. Hill 5 Alstott 1 Rogers 6 Green 3 Ross 2 Stephens 1 Totals 20 PUNTING Player No. Deignan 6 Totals 6 Yds 37 80 3 39 25 22 8 214 Avg Lg 13.520 16.019 3.0 3 6.5 9 8.310 11.014 8.0 10.720 Yds Avg Lg 25041.746 250 41.746 Yds Avg Lg 29 2.97 19 2.1 7 (-)8 (-)8 (-)8 (-)32(-)64 6 8 .3 7 PUNT RETURNS Player No. Yds Ross 2 17 Totals 2 17 Avg 8.5 8.5 Lg 10 10 KICKOFF Player 'Samuel Ross Totals RETURNS No. Yds Avg Lg 2 5226.0 38 2 2814.0 17 4 8020.0 38 lianaon Saturday and crushingthe Hoo- rs' Rose Bowl hopes. Indiana rallied twice from 14 points * to tie the game and appeared d to another score until Tony :tman intercepted John Paci's pass the 7 with 71 seconds to play. The Hoosiers (4-2, 7-2) were off to ir best start since their 1967 Big Ten ampionship season. They ran into a nn State team that hadn't scored a ichdown in six quarters.. Penn State (3-2, 6-2) found the of- isive balance it had lacked in losses l*higan and Ohio State. The Lions hed for 208 yards against a team that s giving up only 114 a game and ew for 215. Iowa 54, Northern Illinois 20 Ryan Terry and Cliff King each red two touchdowns Saturday to d Iowa past Northern Illinois, 54-20, t LeShon Johnson shredded Iowa's e with 306 yards on 32 carries. e Hawkeyes (1-5 overall) iassed 566 yards and scored on four their first five possessions to bolt to 4-10 halftime edge against the Hus- :s(4-6 overall). But they didn't come >se to bottling up Johnson, the nation's ding rusher coming into the game th 1,611 yards. Johnson, who scored on runs of 26 I81 yards, showed good power and g speed around the corners as he ke the Huskies' single season rush- mark of 1,719 yards set in 1973 by rk Kellar, the nation's leading rusher it-year. The 6-foot, 205-pound senior o smashed the Big West Conference hing record of 1,789 yards set by Cal State-Fullerton's Obie Graves in 1978. Johnson also eclipsed the Kinnick Stadium rushing record of 286 yards set in 1968 by Ed Podolak. Michigan St. 31, Northwestern 29 Michigan State tailback Craig Tho- masrushed for 163 yards and two touch- downs as the Spartans used a punishing ground game to beat Northwestern 31- 29 in Big Ten play Saturday. Michigan State blew a two-touch- down lead in the first half but scored 10 points in the final quarter to hang on for the win. Michigan State (5-3 overall, 3-2 Big Ten) handed Northwestern its sixth straight loss and dropped the Wildcats to 2-7 overall and 0-6 in the conference. The Spartans rolled up 414 yards in offense, including 300 on the ground. Thomas ran for 62 yards in the first quarter, the Spartans' biggest play of the year, and 17 in the second for his two scores. Reserve tailback Steve Holman put Michigan State ahead in the fourth quarter on a one-yard run. Holman was the work horse on a the 70-yard, 15-play drive. He caught a 15-yard pass from quarterback Jim Miller and carried the ball nine times during the drive. The Spartans took a 10-point lead with 1:44 to go on a 24-yard field goal by Bill Stoyanovich. But Northwestern closed the gap when reserve quarterback Steve Schnur hit wide receiver Dave Beazley with a 16-yard pass with 1 second left. Full- back Bobby Jackson plowed into the end zone for the two-point conversion. Northwestern had the ball on the 1 before the touchdown, but a 15-yard bench penalty pushed the Wildcats back after a brawl erupted on the field and several Northwestern players left the bench to join in. Northwestern had one other chance to score in the second half. Sam Valenzisi missed a 46-yard field goal when the ball hit the right goal post. Each team took advantage of turn- overs in the first half to score. Northwestern picked of a Miller pass and returned it to the Michigan State 45 and tailback Dennis Lundy put Northwestern on the board with a four-yard run. Michigan State answered with a four- play drive, keyed by Thomas' 62-yard touchdown run. It was Michigan State's longest play this year and the third longest run of Thomas' career. Michigan State tailback Duane Goulbourne scored on a two-yard run after Miller connected with tight-end Bob Organ for a 38-yard pass play. Michigan State took a 21-7 lead in the second quarter. The Wildcats had forced Michigan State to punt, but punt returner Lee Gissendaner fumbled on the return and Spartan punter Chris Salani recovered at the Northwestern 35. A pass interference call gave Michigan State a first down at the Northwestern 17. On the next play, Thomas took the handoff and started right, then darted to the left, untouched, for his second score. Quarterback Len Williams kept Northwestern in the game in the first half with a 37-yard touchdown toss to Gissendaner. Rogers DEFENSE Player Jackson Batten Nolan Pike Hagins Young Lohman Phipps Hall Kingsbury Maciag WnnAlin reboard until the end of the third arter, taking pressure off of the slow- ,g Michigan offense. e defensive line's strong rush Purdue quarterbacks Rick Trefzger d backup Matt Pike (three sacks) as l as the different looks of the sec- dary had the Boilermakers reeling. "Thev'rereallv onfngino in the Tac 2 5 9 i 6 4 1 2 9 4 I 1 Ast 0 3 1 0 2 1 0 0 I 0 I \ Tot 2 8 10 I 8 5 1 2 10 4 3 1 :~~*