10 - MTh Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday -.odyecme ,1994 Saban to replace Perles as coach of Michigan St. ,EAST LANSING (AP) - If its intensity Michigan State wants - nits football program, the Spar- tan aparetlyfound it in Nick Saban, defensive coordinator of the Cleveland Browns, was an- nounced as the Spartans' new coach Saturday. replacing George Perles. who was fired three weeks ago. * The appointment still needs the approval of the Board of Trustees batt meeting Friday, but that will beaformality, according to Michi- gan State president Peter McPherson. "I will recommend a tested and proven coach who has broad-based experiences at both the college and professional levels, including a record of excellence at this univer- sity," said McPherson while pre- senting Saban at a news confer- ence. SSaban, 43, was secondary coach and defensive coordinator for Perles from 1983-87. His "Gang Green" defense helped the Spartans win the 1987 Big Ten championship and de- feat Southern California in the Rose Bowl. During that stay in East Lansing, Saban proved an able recruiter by bringing to Michigan State such play- ers as Percy Snow, Travis Davis and Tony Mandarich. McPherson said -that was one of Saban's strongest Selling points. "Nick Saban knows how to win, that is obvious," McPherson said. But it is even more important to us that Nick shares our commitment to academic achievement ... and strict compliance with NCAA rules and regulations."' Saban left Michigan State over Perles' objections in 1988 to be sec- ondary coach for the Houston Oilers. In 1990, he was head coach at To- ledo, leading the Rockets to a 9-2 record and the Mid-American Con- ference championship. The Browns hired him away the following year. This season Cleve- land is 9-4, and Saban's defense is the best in the NFL with the lowest yield of any team this season. He will re- main with the Browns through the completion of this season, including the playoffs. "We feel like we're coming home." Saban said. "It's a place we loved when we were here." Saban inherits a team that fin- ished a disappointing 5-6 this season. He said he will review the entire program from top to bottom. -That probably means few, if any, of Perles' assistants will be retained. "We have to hire an aggressive recruiting staff," Saban said. "We want not only good athletes, but good people. We're going to work very hard to have the type of program here everybody can be proud of." His two biggest challenges will be pulling the many factions at Michi- gan State together and beating Michi- gan. It was something Perles was unable to do with any consistency in his 12 seasons. Perles was especially unhappy with his inability to defeat his instate rival from Ann Arbor. He defeated NILlabor. continue Associated Press Salary arbitration, a rookie salary cap and free agency are words be-0 coming as common in hockey "he shoots ... he scores." When NHL labor negotiations re- sume Monday in Chicago, those issues will once again be front and center. Stalemated talks broke offI Fri- day. Owners and players agreed to take the weekend to canvass their constituents before resenting them- selves at at the bargaining table. While both sides have agreed to concepts, the gap is considerable when it comes down to the fine print. "The focus has been how a player moves through the system of issues - how he comes in as an entry-level player. what happens after that and what hap- pens at the end of his career,' says NHL commissioner Gary Bettman. "And there are a whole host of other issues that have to be discussed but we have not been able to come to agree- ment on the three basic fundamental ones and that is discouraging." There are two thoughts on the deadline. Some general managers feel a deal has to be done by the end of the week while, others believe they have until Christmas to work things out. For months, the NHLPA said there would not be a rookie salary cap but the union has given in and the stick- ing point is level of pay. The NHLPA feels the ceiling should be $1.25 million for first-round picks. and NHL sources have men- tioned $900,000. Cleveland Browns assistant coach Nick Saban was announced Saturday as the new head coach at Michigan State. He replaces George Perles who spent 12 seasons as the coach of the Spartans, who finished this season at 5-6. Michigan only four times and it be- came a distraction both to himself and the entire program. Saban acknowledged as much. "I never ascribed to the theory at Ohio State where- Woody (Hayes) used to say, If we're good enough to beat Michianr, we'll be good enough to take on the rest of them,"' Saban said. "I think this is one of the top 20- 25 programs in the countryc." Saban also tried to put aside fears that he would stay at Michigan State only long enough to carve out a win- ning record, then return to the NFL. Such flirtations with the NFL led to some of Perles' problems with both alumni and administrators. "I'm committed to staying at Michigan State for as long as it takes to be a championship team," Saban said. "If I wanted to be an NFL coach, I could just as well stay where I am. But I wanted to come back." Saban said he still considers Perles a friend, but hasn't spoken to his former boss. "I wanted this job all along and made that clear to President' McPherson," Saban said. "I have a, specific plan for how this program should be run." In addition to his own intensity. Saban carries a little baggage from working with Browns coach Bill Belichick. Belichick frequently is criticized by his players in Cleve- land for being a poor communica- tor. ,I think I am fair and honest," Saban said. "I think I'm demanding. but I'd never degrade my players as people. I've never had a problem deal- ing, with players. I can't say anything about anybody else." Other candidates for the job in- cluded Penn State offensive coordi- nator Fran Ganter. Bowling Green coach Gary 'Blackney and Colorado offensive coordinator Rick Neuheicel. B lackney withdrew his application earlier in the week, and Neuheisel was hamped to replace Bill McCartney as coach at Colorado. Terms and length of Saban's con- tract weren't disclosed, but it is be- lieved he will sign at least a five-year deal. It will cost the university $1.3 million to buy out the remaining three years on Perles' contract. Ailkman-less Cowboys retain enough firwr to run past Eagles, 31-19 Associated Press Even without Troy Aikman, the IDallas Cowboys had more than enough firepower to clinch their third straight NFC East title. Start with Emmitt Smith, who -camred 25 times for 91 yards and two Itouchdowns to lead the Cowboys over the Philadelphia Eagles 31-19 Sun- day. ' 11Toss in Michael Irvin. who had 17 yards and a touchdown on four receptions - including a falling- down catch that covered 46 yards - and it's not difficult to understand ,i why the Cowboys (11-2) were able to hand the Eagles their fourth straight loss. It was Dallas' 14th successive NFC East victory. The Eagles (7-6) rallied when Randall Cunningham's second touchdown pass of the game cut the Dallas lead to 24-19 in the fourth quarter. But after a 49-yard punt return by Jeff Sydner gave Philadelphia the ball on the Cowboys' 12, Darren Woodson intercepted Cunningham's pass and ran it back 94 yards for the touch- down that sealed the victory. Patriots 24, jets 13 Ricky Reynolds raced 11 yards with an interception for a touchdown, carrying New England closer to the playoffs and stomping on New York's hopes as the Patriots beat the Jets 24- 13 Sunday. Tortured by turnovers this season against the Jets, the Patriots finally capitalized on one of their own. Reynolds' theft gave them a 17-13 lead with 3:51 left in the third quar- ter. With three games left, the Pa- triots improved to 7-6 with their fourth straight win as they seek their first playoff berth in eight years. Their AFC East rival Jets fell to 6-7 with their third loss in four games. Art Monk tied Steve Largent's NFL record of 177 straight games with at least one catch on a 7-yard reception in the first quarter. Buccaneers 26, Redskins 21 Craig Erickson's quarterback sneak with 32 seconds remaining Sunday gave the Tampa Bay Bucca- neers a 26-21 victory over the Wash- ington Redskins. It was the first time Tampa Bay won consecutive games sice Septem- ber~ 1992. Erickson capped an I11-play. 80- yard drive featuring the running of Errict Rhett, who gained a Tampa Bay rookie-record 192 yards on 40 carries, and completions of 19 yards to Courtney Hawkins and 13 yards to Lawrence Dawsey. The Redskins, who used Andre Collins' 92-yard interception return and long scoring passes from Heath Shuler to Desmond Howard and Olanda Truitt to take a 21-17 lead, squandered an opportunity to stop the march when a potential game- saving interception bounced off Darryl Morrison's chest. Tampa Bay, which beat Minne- sota 20-17 in overtime last week. improved to 4-9. Washington (2-11) has lost five straight. Erickson was 1 8-for-M5 for 251 yards and one touchdown. Rhett. who has gained 774 yards, broke Tampa Bay's single-game rookie rushing record as well as the season rookie record of 690 by Jerry Eckwood in 1990. U U 30ARS ShtinStrint -'4Sdoor smsoth onli ibirty-995-34300 -I - m -