4 - The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, November 15,_1993 E2 M I C H I 0 A H 5 GAME STATISTICS PASSING Player Collins 7 Riemersma J. Carr Tot. 11 RUSHING Player . A Wheatley Davis R. Powers Biakabutuka Hayes Ritchie Riemersma C-A Yds 7-11164 3-7 37 1-2 29 .-20 230 TD Int 1 0 0 0 0 0 10 ktt 21 8 6 5 2 4 3 1 1 51 Yds Avg 72 3.4 51 6.4 32 5.3 27 5.4 2110.5 6 1.5 3 1.0 1 1.0 -3-3.0 210 4.1 Lg 14 26 9 9 14. 6 2 1 -3 26 FOOTBALL NOTEBOOK By ADAM MILLER DAILY FOOTBALL WRITER MINNEAPOLIS - Michigan coach Gary Moeller said he wasn't satis- fied. He liked the result, a 58-7 drubbing of Minnesota Saturday. He said he thought his defense, which sacked the Golden Gopher quarterbacks five times and knocked them down or hurried them several others, played well. And his special teams were key, with their two blocked punts, two field goals and long kick returns. But Moeller still said he wasn't satisfied - with his running game. Traditionally, the Wolverines overpower the defense with their ground attack. Their offensive line opens gaping holes for speedy tailbacks and punishing fullbacks to run through. Most of the season, his complaint has seemed valid. The inexperienced offensive line struggled early on, forcing the runners to run wide, instead of through the line. Injuries and defections have depleted his depth at running back. But Saturday hardly seemed time to complain. Michigan scored six of its seven touchdowns on the ground - three by the returned Tyrone Wheatley, two by Tshimanga Biakabutuka, and one by Ed Davis - and the runners accumulated 210 net yards. "I thought we threw the ball well," Moeller said, "but my major concern is we're not rushing as well as we should. ... I have seen some improvement (however)." You can't please everybody. CAST OF THOUsANDs: Because the game was a runaway by halftime, Moeller had the luxury of playing his bench. He certainly took advantage of it. In all, 58 players saw action Saturday. One rookie made a particularly large contribution. True freshman linebacker Tyrone Noble came flying through the Minnesota offensive line untouched in the second quarter to block a Ron Holty punt, setting up Biakabutuka's first score of the day. Moeller probably will not have the same opportunity to play his reserves in Saturday's game against the No. 5,Buckeyes. WHERE IS EVERYBODY? Saturday was Senior Day, Fan Appreciation Day and the annual Little Brown Jug battle at the Metrodome. The Gophers had upset Wisconsin in their last home game, and nearly knocked off Illinois last week. So you'd think there would be a large crowd. Wrong. The announced attendance in the,63,669 seat stadium was 43,603. It didn't look like half of that most of the game - perhaps, at its peak in the second quarter, there were 30,000 fans there - and by the third quarter, with Improved running game doesn't satisfy Moeller the game decided, the crowd had dwindled to below 20,000. In fact, only a few hearty souls and some Wolverine fans stayed until the end of the game. UNDER THE DIRECTION OF ...: Michigan fans may have recognized the conductor of the Minnesota Marching Band, Eric A. Becher. Becher con- ducted the Michigan Marching Band from 1980-89, and his distinctive style of high-stepping, dancing and innovative performances became a crowd favorite. Becher, who earned his Bachelor's and Master's of Music Education degrees from Michigan, was denied tenure in 1989, (due to the University's policy of not granting tenure to its own Master's graduates) left for Arizona, where he served as Marching Band director until 1991. Now, he leads the Minnesota Marching Band, the Symphonic Band and Chamber Winds, and teaches courses in conducting. One other thing: he's tenured. It's Professor Becher now. TOP TEN: At least they have a sense of humor in Minneapolis. On the late news cast of Channel 11, the local NBC affiliate, the sports report featured a "Top Ten List of Good Things from Today's Gopher Blowout." Among the list: nobody died, everyone was watching the Notre Dame game, plenty of elbow room in the student section, we didn't want that Jug anyway, the stadium announcer had plenty of practice in pronouncing "Biakabutuka," Hey buddy, can you punt?, big losses are easy on (Minnesota coach Jim) Wacker's heart ... And the No. 1 Good Thing from Today's Gopher Blowout - at least we don't live in Iowa. TRUE CiASS: Speaking of Becher's band, the pep band distinguished itself in the second half. Though most Gopher fans had headed to the exits by the time the band started making its rounds,, the pep band had to perform (as the pep band at Michigan does). The largest audience it had by the middle of the third quarter was in the Michigan section. Never ones to hide their preference in music, the Wolverine faithful, who were without their own band (which was in Ann Arbor preparing for yesterday's Crisler concert) called for the Minnesota pepsters to play "Bullwinkle." The band admitted to the crowd that it did not know the Michigan favorite, but substituted with "The Victors." And when the band came to another Michigan gathering, it played it again. NUTS TO You: Despite several close calls (against Michigan State, Wiscon- sin and Indiana Saturday), undefeated Ohio State clinched a share of the Big Ten championship Saturday in its 23-17 victory over the Hoosiers. The No. 5 Foster T. Collins Totals 5 RECEIVING Player Toomer Alexander Smith Davis Hayes Richards Totals No. Yds 3 88. 3 74. 2 25 1 21, 1 12 1 10 11230; Avg Lg 29.353 24.655 12.522 21.021 12.012 10.010 13.755 Buckeyes invade Michigan Stadium national appearance. Saturday for a 12 p.m. start and ABC PUNTING Player Stapleton Totals No. Yds AvgLg 418546.356 418546.356 MILLER Continued from page 1 of Moeller's favorite plays on the day was the play-action pass, something that consistently fooled the overaggressive Gopher defense and sprung Derrick Alexander, Walter Smith and Co. for deep completions. Or how about the sequence in the second quarter where Michigan faced fourth-and-one and decided to go for it? Even though the ball rested on its own 28. Earlier in the year - specifically in the Illinois disaster - the Wolverines punted in similar situations when they had the ball on their opponent's 40. "I'll be honest with you," Moeller said. "We were up by 17 at the time, and when we had some more freedom, some room to take some chances." Smith said it wasn't so much risk-management, as attitude. "We played with a lot more PUNT RETURNS Player No.Yds Alexander 2 21, Noble 1 28 King 1 27 Smith 1 16 Hayes 1 0 Toomer 1 0 Totals 7 92 Avg Lg 10.5 21 28.0 28 27.0 27 16.016 0.0 0 0.0 0 13.128 KICKOFF RETURNS Player No.Yds Avg Lg Toomer 2 72 36.0 49 Totals 2 72 36.0 49 confidence today," said Smith, who had Michigan's lone touchdown catch on the day - the other six came on the ground. "We came to the game with that type of attitude." Make no mistake, Saturday was great for Michigan. The victory guaranteed the team would finish the regular season above .500, gave the team a badly-needed confidence boost, and did it all on national television (even if almost everyone was watching another network at the time). But you had to stop and wonder: where was this play, this type of attitude, earlier in the year? Why didn't the Wolverines demolish Washington State, Houston or Iowa? Where was the intensity, the innovation, the performance against Notre Dame, Michigan State, Illinois and Wisconsin? In the postgame interviews, the Wolverines talked of there being "enthusiasm" in the game, which made "a difference." It shouldn't take facing a possible losing season to generate enthusiasm. And you can't tell me the Jug did it. Perhaps that is the answer to the Michigan Mystery. This year's team plays great only - and I mean only - when its backs are "up against the wall." It happened at Penn State. It happened Saturday. But it didn't happen against Michigan State or Illinois; the Wolverines were heavy favorites in both games, remember? And it didn't happen at Wisconsin - OK, no one really knows what happened there. So consider this. No. 5 Ohio State comes to Ann Arbor next week. Unbeaten. Tied once. Potent on offense and defense. Probably Rose Bowl-bound. Nobody will expect Michigan to win., Considering this team's history, I wouldn't sell my ticket. Continued from page 1 DEFENSE Player Hankins Charles Johnson Peoples Winters Law Noble King Thompson Stanley Horn Irons Evans Anderson Burch Hendrickson W. Carr B. Powers Freedman Rekowski Buff Denson Smith Hayes Bolach Saturday marked the return of Tyror did not disappoint the Michigan fail MINNESOTA Tac Ast 4 0 3 1 3 1 3 0 3 0 3 0 3 0 3 0 2 1 1 2 1 2 2 0 2 0 2 0 2 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 01 Tot 4 4 4 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 not keep up for long. Michigan sc touchdowns on five of its next si possessions. That string of touchdowns san whatever chance Minnesota had t overcome Michigan. "We had too many mistakes earl to overcome," Minnesota coach Jii Wacker said. "We had the fumble w 'Give Michigan credit they whipped us like a goat tied to a post.' - Jim Wacke Minnesota head coact recovered, the penalties, a sack, an things got worse from there. Espe cially coming off the loss last v*t you could feel the emotions deTa early. We yelled on the sidelines to gi the guys going again, but it didn work well. Give Michigan credit, the whipped us like a goat tied to a post. Gopher offensive miscues had-=a much to do with the scoring as th defense. Only one of the five touch down drives started in the Michiga half of the field. For the gam Michigan's average possession st# on its 48 yard-line while Minnesol EVAN PETRIE/Daily With his two reverses, Mercury Hayes gained more yards on the ground (21) than he did receiving (12) in Michigan's 58-7 defeat of the Golden Gophers. The Michigan air attack gained 230 yards on the day. Team Ohio State Wisconsin Illinois Penn State Michigan State Indiana Michigan Minnesota Iowa Conf. W-L-T 6-01 4-1-1 5-2-0 4-2-0 4-2-0 4-3-0 4-3-0 3-4-0 2-5-0 Overall W-L-T 9-0-1 7-1 5-5-0 7-2-0 6-3-0 7-3-0 6-4-0 4-6-0 5-5-0 ROUNDUP Ohio State grabs sh GAMES PLAYED NOV.13,3993 Michigan State, Penn State victoi ASSOCIATED PRESS Raymont Harris ran for 162 yards and became the 15th Ohio State player to rush for more than 1,000 yards in a season, but the fifth-ranked Buckeyes st~i ne-d-aastminmit, frst clon to Penn State 28, ilinois 14 Mike Archie replaced injured Ki- Jana Carter and ran for 134 yards and two touchdowns Saturday as Penn State beat Illinois 28-14, knocking the i;lini ot of the Rne Bawi rae. Paul Burmeister passed for one touchdown and ran for another Satur- day, leading Iowa to a 23-19 victory over Northwestern. The Big Ten win was the third straight for the Hawkeves (2-5. 5-5) another loss as Michigan StatcTe Ross-Ade Stadium Saturday with 27-24 victory. Colletto had Brad Bobich attem a 49-yard field goal with Purdue fat inpr a fourth-and-4 and 28 seconds