The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, October 3, 1994 - 5 I 0 w A i F y' c . FOOTBALLNOTEBOOK_ By RACHEL BACHMAN and MICHAEL ROSENBERG Daily Football Writers IOWA CITY - Right tackle John Runyan sprained an ankle early last week, so Thomas Guynes started in his place Saturday. Joe Marinaro, sidelined the first three games of the season with a knee ury suffered in spring practice, moved into Guynes' spot to start the game. Outside linebacker Matt Dyson was still recovering from surgery to repair a broken bone in his foot. Michigan coach Gary Moeller says Dyson is likely to play against Michigan State next weekend. Offensive tackle Trezelle Jenkins stood in for injured captain Walter Smith for the pregame coin toss. Smith tore his anterior cruciate ligament in August and will sit out for the season. Tight end Jay Riemersma bruised a thigh in the first half Saturday and sat out the rest of the game. Right tackle Mike Sullivan suffered m turf toe. When backup tackle John Partchenko went out with a hurt shoulder Sullivan went back in for him. Defensive end Glenn Steele also hurt his knee in the fourth quarter. Iowa tight end Scott Slutzker sprained his ankle in the fourth quarter. IF, THEN ... : The two most important factors in winning a game are turnovers, and the running game, Moeller said. In Saturday's contest, Michigan outrushed Iowa 268 yards to 75. Tyrone Wheatley had 182; Tshimanga Biakabutuka had 84. Iowa's Sedrick Shaw had all of the Hawkeyes' yards. The Wolverines won the turnover battle, too. Steve Morrison picked * a Ryan Driscoll pass - his first of the game - and ran it 13 yards. Late in the first half, Morrison recovered a Shaw fumble, taking it seven yards. Michigan fumbled twice, recovering the first. The second came when tight end Pierre Cooper hesitated on a kickoff return, then let the ball get away. MAIZE AND BLUE ZEBRAS: For the second straight game, Michigan's opponent complained of unfair officiating. Iowa was penalized eight times for 85 yards, compared to four for 46 for Michigan. "We had a lot of penalties on offense, and obviously that hurt us," *wkeye coach Hayden Fry said. Fry also expressed shock that Iowa had several holding penalties "and Michigan didn't have one." Actually, the Wolverines did have a holding penalty in the second quarter. Last week, Colorado receiver Michael Westbrook complained of having to "play 11 against 15" because the officials were biased toward Michigan. Westbrook seemed to make up for it, though. Further injuries force offensive to improvise; Dyson due back soon GAME STATISTICS PASSING Player Driscoll I Tot. 1 RUSHING Player Shaw Kahl Driscoll Filer Totals C-A L9-37 9-37 Yds 196 196 TD 1 1 Att' 18 7 2 1 28 Yds Avg 75 4.2 14 2.0 (-)5(-)2.5 0 0 84 3.0 ift L 1 Lg 12 9 0 12 RECEIVING Player Slutzker Kahl Jasper Roussell Dean Guy Banks Shaw Totals PUNTING Player Gallery Totals No. Yds 6 4 2 2 2 1 191 No. 5; 5 63 25 56 20 16 15 9 (-)8 196 Avg Lg 10.520'- 6.319 28.0 40 10.011 8.0 9 15.0 15 9.09 10340 Yds Avg ig 193 38.6 48 193 38.6848 PUNT RETURNS Offensive tackle John Partchenko grimaces in agony Saturday. The leave the action. sophomore injured his shoulder and was forced to Player Jasper Dwight Totals No. Yds 1 12 1 5 2 17 Avg 12 5 12 Lg 12 5 12 ROSENBERG tlnued from page 1 play-calling down the stretch of games has sometimes been awful. This is his biggest weakness as a coach. Unfortunately, it is also the most visible weakness a coach can have. So Moeller gets hammered for his play-calling, which everyone sees, and is rarely praised for his outstanding recruiting, which almost y sees. As for Fry, his teams have simply lost some games in recent years they had no business losing. So Moeller and Fry are not perfect at their professions. Who is? To fire either of them would be to go against much of what their universities are supposed to stand for. y have worked hard. They have n honest. They have been loyal. Most of all, they have been successful. Over their careers, these men have been winners. Fry and Moeller have not only done their best; they have done better than almost anybody else could do. Moeller's teams have been among the nation's top 10 over the past five years. Would you fire the head of the Political Science Department if his program was ranked among the nation's top 10? Fry, basically, is a victim of his own sucess. Sixteen years ago a six- win season would have been cheered. Now it is a disappointment. John Wooden, the most successful coach in major college sports history, won 10 national championships in 12. years as UCLA's men's basketball coach. In his last year, 1975, the Bruins won the national title, a year after falling to North Carolina State. "Great win, coach," a booster told Wooden after that final victory. "It makes up for you letting us down last year." Wooden stopped coaching after that game. It's a wonder anyone ever starts anymore. FIRST QUARTER:. M - Hamilton 30-yard field goal Drive: 4 plays, 6 yards,11:19 SECOND QUARTER: U -Driscoll 1-yard run (Hurley kick) Drive: 10 plays, 80 yards, 12:23 M - Wheatley 2-yard run (Hamilton kick) Drive: 14 plays, 76 yards, 1:45 M - Hamilton 32-yard field goal Drive: 4 plays, 2 yards, :34 THIRD QUARTER: M - Biakabutuka 7-yard run (kick failed) Drive: 5 plays, 45 yards, 8:49 M - Hamilton 32-yard field goal Drive: 7 plays, 32 yards, 2:35 FOURTH QUARTER: UI - Slutzker 11-yard pass from Driscoll (Hurley kick) Drive: 9 plays, 58 yards, 14:11 M - Wheatley 12-yard run (Hamilton kick) Drive: 11 plays, 77 yards, 6:56 M-Ul 3-0 KICKOFF Player Banks Dwight Williams Totals RETURNS No. Yds Avg Lg 3 8026.7 31 2 32 16 25 1 11 11 11 6 12320.5 31 3-7 10-7 13-7 19-7 22-7 22-14 29-14 NATURAL ontinued from page 1 wd to roar every time he touched e ball. It was his name. Each occasion "Biakabutuka" came over the public address system the crowd roared with delight. "I guess my name just started ev- erything," says Biakabutuka as he flashes a smile as quick as he fakes a linebacker trying to tackle him. He knows plenty of other Tshimanga's, including an uncle and ousin, but the only Biakabutukas he can think of are his family mem- bers. That means quite a few people with the indentical surname. He has 10 brothers and sisters - some of whom remain in his native Zaire. Their presence in that African country, where political stability ri- vals the steadiness of the San Andreas Fault, causes Biakabutuka to worry. His memories of Zaire are vague. e remembers his house. He remem- bers his best friend. Due to the politi- cal tension, Biakabutuka and his fam- ily immigrated to Quebec when he was five. He has never been back to Zaire. "My mom's proof of what I re- playing. He let her know he meant American football. Growing up in the province of Quebec, Biakabutuka was exposed to mostly French and developed his En- glish skills by watching television. He left Longueuil, Que., in order to attend football tradition-rich Vanier, an En- glish-speaking school in Montreal, in 1992. Although he could speak four languages at the time (two African dialects, French and English), he still had problems with English. "He was very quiet," Matuzewiski says. "He wasn't boisterous. He sat back and watched." The old axiom of actions speaking louder than words certainly held true for Biakabutuka. He played only one season for Vanier in the Quebec Col- legiate Triple-A League, and oppo- nents were thankful. He gained over 1,300 yards on 140 carries, caught 15 passes for 200 yards, averaged 20 yards per kickoff return and scored 12 touchdowns. All in just 10 games. The number collecting would have continued but he injured his left shoul- der in the final game. In addition to a separated clavicle, he was hurting with a sprained ankle. His absence in the first playoff game greatly affected the just to make sure Michigan was the place he wanted to be. It's been a good choice so far, with one exception. If it wasn't against Michigan's policy, he would like to take off his helmet to celebrate a touch- down. "I like intimidations," he says as he smiles once again. "I love that confidence. I'll duck walk and point at the other team. When I get off the field I look at 'em and say 'Yeah, yeah, you know we're coming. You shouldn't have come here."' Emotion is much of the reason Biakabutuka enjoys playing football but that pathos has its dark side. He'll joke around, but when the kidding becomes too much, the best advice would be to leave the room because Biakabutuka admits to having a short- fuse. One emotion that's not part of his game is fear. "I don't get scared on the field," he confidently admits. "I don't know anyone who gets scared. If they're scared going out there, I don't think they should play football." Biakabutuka's fear may not ap- pear when he scampers all about the football field but did show up during his job this past summer. trimming the front, putting the mower away and hanging out with his friends about the neighborhood. Besides his laziness, Biakabutuka still holds on to his shyness. He does not like being in public too much, which makes his job choice at 15 years-old perplexing. "I sold chocolate. They dropped me somewhere at two in the afternoon and picked you up at eight at night. I quit after two days. It was hard work." The real reason he sold chocolate becomes apparent - he loves choco- late. No matter what kind of choco- late exists, Biakabutuka eats it - brownies, fudge, white chocolate. He ate three Hershey bars with almonds after practice one night last week. He might want to cut down on his splurges now that his 6-foot-1,192-pound frame consists of a grand seven percent of body fat - the highest percentage he's ever carried. Sometimes eating a lot of chocolate can become a bit much. "One Easter, I ate a lot of choco- late. I ate so much I got tired of the taste. The taste was just burning my tongue. I was just eating, eating, eat- ing it." Now the only people he makes sick are the ones trying to tackle him. "I don't like nicknames. Touch- down Tim? That's silly." He can score in a variety of ways. He'll streak down the sideline. He'll carry tacklers with him. Or he'll sim- ply bowl you over, as he did against the Hawkeyes. Biakabutuka gave a little fake, was hit, kept going, turned the corner, pulled a tackler with him, ran toward the goal line, bowled over another Hawkeye in front of him on his way into the end zone. Even while playing at Vanier he demonstrated the same skills. "He had determination," Mateuwiski said. "He would not let anyone else stop him." "(The game) tests your strength, courage and determination against someone you've never seen before." Biakabutuka says. "You get to a point where your body's tired and your hurting and you're trailing behind. You've got to realize you can win and break down your opponent. I'm not a quitter." Despite all the accolades, Biakabutuka shuns the spotlight and crowds, worrying about overexposure. College football remains a mystery to him. He doesn't understand why 106,000 people show up at Michigan Fry DEFENSE Player Diaco Porter Wilderman Chambers Ennis-Inge Henlon Bennett McKinney Coats Boone Robinson Jackson LaFleur Tac 10 6 4 4 4 4 4 3 3 2 2 1 2 Ast 2 4 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 2 0 Tot- 12 10 6: 6- 5 5 5 4 4 4 3 3 2