The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, November 15, 1993 - 5 M I H N E S 0 T A 7 Three TDs, 72 yards mark Wheatley's return GAME STATISTICS By ANDY DE KORTE DAILY FOOTBALL WRITER Anyone underestimating Tyrone Wheatley's importance to Michigan's football team can certainly stop now. While no one would give all the credit to Wheatley for Saturday's 58- 7 blowout against Minnesota, the dra- matic difference between Saturday, with Wheatley, and the last few games, without Wheatley, cannot be consid- ered coincidence. A shoulder injury incurred against Illinois three weeks ago kept Wheatley out of the following two games against Wisconsin and Purdue. Michigan lost to Illinois on a late touchdown and then lost to Wisconsin. After both games, slow starts and a ghost-like running game were the culprits by consensus. Wheatley returned to the starting lineup against Minnesota with 55 yards in the first half and three touchdowns for the game. His first two scores came in the opening quarter and pushed . the score to 17-0. Michigan had not scored in the first quarter since its Big Ten opener against Iowa. The quick scores played a major role in deflating the opposition and did not go unnoticed. Wheatley's praise came from both sides. "Wheatley is the best running back in the nation and he proved it again today," Minnesota coach Jim Wacker said. "We couldn't catch him, then we couldn't tackle him." His own coach welcomed him back to reestablish the rushing game and the ball control that comes with it. "Tyrone certainly helped us, there's no question of that," Gary Moeller said. "I actually wanted to get him some more carries. If the game had been closer, I would have kept him in there." Wheatley accomplished every- thing he intended despite wearing a shoulder harness as a precaution to the injury. EVAN PETRIE/Daily "I was not really 100 percent. There junior tailback were still phases in my game that felt tight," Wheatley said. " I had a shoul- I was not really 100 percent. There were still phases in my game that felt tight. ... I did everything I wanted to do, but I didn't want to do too much.' - Tyrone Wheatley Michigan tailback der harness on the whole game. I did everything I wanted to do, but I didn't want to do too much." Minnesota cornerback Juan Hunter did a little too much to Wheatley when he tried to drag him down on a first quarter run -- a flagrant face mask penalty. With Wheatley headed for his sec- ond touchdown of the first quarter, he put a move on Hunter. Hunter's frus- tration apparently made him feel cor- ralling Wheatley's head would be his only means of a tackle. "I feel lucky my helmet came off," Wheatley said. "It's a good thing I was sweating, maybe this (pointing to a closely shaven head) haircut helped. Otherwise my head might have stayed in the helmet." Hunter's reprieve did not last long. Wheatley added to all the Gopher's frustration when he sped into the end zone just two plays later. The result seemed almost inevi- table to Michigan quarterback Todd Collins. "Anytime we get in there, inside the five- or 10-yard line," Collins said. "We expect a guy like Wheatley to score, even if the blocking isn't great." As the disappointment grew for Hunter and his teammates, weeks of Wheatley's frustration continued to dissipate with each stride. "It was real frustrating not being able to play," Wheatley said. "It was a new view watching the game on tele- vision." PASSING Player C-A Eckers 22-40 Schade 2-11 Jones 4-6 Conzemius 1-1 Tot. 29-58 Yds TD1 277 1 57 0 28 0 25 0 387 1 Int 3 1 0 0 4 RUSHING Player Levine Jones Darkins Carter Rios Eckers Totals Att Yds Avg Lg 1 1 7 3 2 5 19. 17 :17.0 17 17.0 13 1.9 6 2.0 5 2.5 -43 -8.6 15 0.8 17 17 4 8 3 -1 17 RECEIVING Player I Douglas Rios Early Dalen Carter Tangen Garrison Rosga Jackson Darkins Whitw Long Totals PUNTING Player Kimbell Holty Totals No. 7 4 3 3 3 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 Yds 123 66 41 36 30 23 19 25 11 7 4 2 Avg Lg 17.630 16.437 16.627 12.026 10.012 11.512 9.511 25.025 11.011 7.0 7 4.0 4 2.0 2 20 27413.742 No. 3 3. 6 Yds Avg Lg 79 26.334 120 40.0 45 19933.145 Batley to the Wolverines' starting lineup. Seen here scoring the second of his three touchdowns, thej aining 72 yards, enroute to the Wolverines 58-7 thumping of Minnesota. . #'w4.s :rives began on the Minnesota 29. Three and out described the Go- phers first drive, but regardless of the :escription, the drive was anything t conventional. Minnesota went e penalties and out, not three plays. On the next drive the Gophers managed two first downs. Michigan inebacker Jarret Irons then stepped up and knocked away passes on first and second down. When Eckers' third pass of the series floated out of bounds, the stage was set for Wolverine Walter ball and rambled to the Minnesota 17 before the punter tackled him. With their second consecutive start inside the Gopher 25, the Wolverines needed to prove that they could still take ad- vantage of their breaks. Before this game, Michigan had not scored in the first quarter since Oct. 2 against Iowa. The killer instinct, so long dor- mant in the Wolverine offense, arose in many forms in the rest of the half. Three plays and 55 seconds later, Michigan led 10-0. Three and out for Minnesota, this time three plays, gave the ball back to Michigan with 5:12 left in the first quarter. After two Wheatley rushes, Todd Collins found Derrick Alexander for 55 yards and first down on the Minnesota 7. "The way they play defense some- times you need to get big plays," Michi- gan coach Gary Moeller said. "We knew our receivers were fast enough to beat one-on-one coverage, and we got some big plays and had (an ap- proximately 50-yard completion) to (Mercury) Hayes wiped out by pen- alty." Three rushes later, Wheatley jumped into the end zone and the rout officially began. Second quarter drives of 1:29, 1:03 and :06 all ended in Michigan touchdowns. Michigan led 41-0 at halftime, just one point less than the previous season high for points in a game. Biakabutuka's nine-yard touch- 'I think it showed that we were ready to play right from the start. We knew they were going to be blitzing, but we picked it up right. This is what we were supposed to be doing. It felt good to blow someone out.' - Todd Collins Michigan quarterback down run represented the total of the :06 drive. Collins said that preparation played the biggest role in offensive explo- sion. "I think it showed that we were ready to play right from the start," Collins said. "We knew they were going to be blitzing, but we picked it up right. This is what we were sup- posed to be doing. It felt good to blow someone out." Regardless of how the offense handled the blitz, they would not have had so may opportunities without the heavy pressure of the defense. More than half of the 17 Minnesota drives lasted four plays of less. Five first-half drives contained only three plays. PUNT RETURNS Player No. Yds Avg Osterman 2 3015.0 Totals 2 3015.0 FIRST QUARTER: MI - Elezovic 35-yard field goal Drive: 6 plays, 4 yards, 2:03 MI - Wheatley 13-yard run (Elezovic kick) Drive: 3 plays, 17 yards, :55 MI - Wheatley 3-yard run (Elezovic kick) SECOND QUARTER: MI - Smith 22-yard pass from Collins (Elezovic kick) Drive: 4 plays, 42 yards, 1:29 MI - Davis 18-yard run (Elezovic kick) Drive: 3 plays, 36 yards, 1:03 MI - Biakabutuka 9-yard run (Elezovic kick) Drive: 1 play, 9 yards, :06 MI - Hamilton 47-yard field goal Drive: 9 plays, 44 yards, 2:36 THIRD QUARTER: MIl- Wheatley 1-yard run (Elezovic kick) Drive: 6 plays, 58 yards, 3:09 MN - Dahlen 26-yard pass from Eckers (Chalberg kick) Drive: 7 plays, 77 yards, 1:46 FOURTH QUARTER: MIl- Elezovic 23-yard field goal Drive: 3 plays, 47 yards, 1:01 MI - Biakabutuka 5-yard run (Elezovic kick) Drive: 2 plays, 34 yards, :35 Ml-MN 3-0 10-0 17-0 24-0 31-0 Lg 16 16 KICKOFF RETURNS Player Heath Darkins Rios Totals No. 5 3. 2 10 38-0 41-0 Smith. Smith burst through the offen- sive line and smothered the punt at- tempt by Gopher punter Ron Holty. "I think it was a missed assign- ment. I came straight through," Smith said. "I was afraid of missing the ball (because he was untouched) but we've *n working on that in practice." Steve King picked up the loose 48-0 48-7 51-7 58-7 DEFENSE Player Sauer Hunter Cappella Rosga Ru. Heath Conzemius Holmes Narcisse Hawthorne Veit Garrison Ro. Heath Taylor Cockrell Holte T. Wolkow D. Williams Mays Cunningham Hoefer Early Rogers Blayne Green Yds 79 63 42 184 Tac 6 5 3 3- 2 4 4 3 2 0: 2 2 1 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 Avg 15.9 21.0 21.0 18.4 Ast 2 2 3- 3 4 1 0 1 2 4 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0. 0 0 0 1 Lg 31 34 25 34 Tot 8 7 6 6 6 5 4 4 4 4 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 re of Big Ten crown us in race for bowl position In of a Rick Trefzger pass at the (Michigan State 30 with 1:59 to play. But the Boilermakers got the ball back once more with 57 seconds left at he Purdue 28 when Michigan State ;unted. Trefzer hit Hill and Ross Purdue (0-7, 1-9). "We've got to start playing with more intensity." The victory was Michigan State's first on the road this year, and insured the team's first winning season in three years. ". '+ . .... .. ::'" ..a. : .:>,: ...,... :a: >.. .,e... .i t? .o .fo- .a +:;9c:xS.:''.<: .. t ....: ............. , .... :..:._; "_. _ fi a%' t