The Michigan Daily - Friday, October 14, 1994 - 5 To morrow 4 . .' J' . AT Paterno Moeller Offense overpowers on both sides of the ball ,toffensesclearlyovermatch Thdefenses.You'regoingtosee a lotof points. It's going to be morelikeaWAC (game)thana BigTen game. 31-28, Michigan. - Chris Fowler ESPN Despitethe polls, this is probably a game between the besttwoteams the country right now. You have #throwoutthefactthatMichigan losttoColorado because they dominatedthe game. And Penn State has had overwhelming productivity. - Tim Layden Sports Illustrated l like Michigan but Penn State's *ota No.1 at tight end,two future No.1 'sat wide receiver,a No.1 attailback and a solid quarterback.Theyoutshoot Michigan,41-38. - Chris James ESPN By CHAD A. SAFRAN Daily Football Writer The monster Michigan's opponents feared has awoken. The Wolverines' running backs are on a rampage, combining for over 600 yards the last two games. Neither Iowa nor Michigan State possessed the defenders Penn State has. However, the Nittany Lions have not faced a tailback tandem as talentede as Tyrone Wheatley and Tshimanga Biakabutuka. Wheatley has shown that M at full strength he is still one of the best players in college football. Meanwhile Biakabutuka has rushed for 100 yards in four of Michigan's five games. The pair presents an immense challenge for a Penn State defense allowing 134.6 running yards per game. Michigan coach Gary Moeller wants even more from his runners this week. "The backs have to go out there and get some hidden yardage," Moeller said, "That's yardage after contact which keeps the ball (and) the chains moving." One thing the Wolverines have not been able to do successfully on offense is put the ball in the end zone once inside their opponent's 20- yard line. Michigan has almost as many field goals (13) as touchdowns (15). It won't get any easier against a defense that has allowed only 10 touchdowns Linebacker Brian Gelzheiser is the key run-stopper and although not at full strength since a preseason knee injury, he leads the team in tackles. The inexperienced Penn State pass defense has been almost as leaky as Michigan's, allow- ing 241.6 yards through the air. But that doesn't mean Moeller will unleash quarterback Todd Collins, despite Collins' fine numbers (84-for- 123, 1,083 yards, five touchdowns). And the Lions know it. "We don't expect Michigan to do anything different than they've done all year," said cornerback Tony Pittman. "They throw the ball when they have to and they throw it well." If Penn State manages to shut down Wheatley and Co., the Wolverines have a pair of excellent wideouts in Amani Toomer and Mercury Hayes, Tight end Jay Riermersma has shown his abil- ity to come up with the big play. The whole key to the Wolverines' offense is the line. When completely healthy the front five has been excellent, opening monster holes for the running backs and providing ample time for Collins to locate his targets. The line will have a tough time holding off a Penn State front four that has posted 15 sacks for negative 131 yards. Advantage: By CHAD A. SAFRAN Daily Football Writer Just when the Michigan defense thought it had seen enough high-powered offenses in one season, the Wolverines must now contend with Penn State's turbo-powered machine. The Nittany Lions possess just as many weapons as Colorado. Penn State's artillery has enabled it to climb to the top of the NCAA charts in two; offensive categories - aver- age yards per game (556.6) and scoring per game (51.6 points). Even though that quarter- back Kerry Collins posts the top quarterback efficiency rating in the country, Nittany Lions coach Joe Paterno re- lies on his potent rushing game. Ki-Jana Carter gets most of the load, averag- ing 8.3 yards per carry. If Carter's dislocated thumb hampers him in any way, Paterno won't hesitate to call on versatile Mike Archie. Near the goal line fullback Jon Wittman gets the call. He has scored five times this season. Michigan dominated Michigan State's mas- sive front but face one of the conference's most experienced offensive lines in the Lions - all five are in their fourth or fifth seasons. Should Michigan manage to stop Penn State's rushing game, the defense must deal with the Lions' revived passing game. After struggling a year ago, Collins has stepped up as the leader of the Penn State of- fense, completing nearly 70 percent of his passes. "Kerry has always had a lot of ability," Paterno said. "He's playing as well as any quarterback we've ever had at Penn State." Collins has a pair of dangerous receivers in Bobby Engram and Freddie Scott. They each average over 23 yards per catch, but have differ- ent skills that pose problems for defensive backs. "Freddie may be a little bit faster, and I may be a little bit stronger," Engram said. The one difference this week for Penn State is the fact that they face one of the worst pass defenses in the Big Ten. While Ty Law has done his best, the rest of the Michigan secondary must come up to his level in order to halt the Lions. The front line finally demonstrated it can consistently rush the passer against Michigan State. While the line can pressure the passer, the rest of the Michigan defense needs to keep its eyes open for tight end Kyle Brady, arguably the nation's best tight end. The biggest weakness for Penn State is the kicking game, specifically kicker Brett Conway, who replaces school career scoring leader Craig Fayak. Conway has hit on 30 of 31 extra points, but his field goal abilities remain untested. He has attempted only four field goals. Advantage: .Rivalry reaches intense proportions By RACHEL BACHMAN Daily Football Writer if you were going to create a foot- ball rivalry, you'd start with the basics. First, it would help to have geog- raphy on your side - Michigan State, for instance, is within spitting distance of Ann Arbor. Second, col- ,orful coaches would spice up things - Ohio State's free-swinging head coach, Woody Hayes, was a perfect foil for Michigan's Bo Schembechler. Most important of all, though, is the Rivalry Rule of Thumb: If you play a given opponent enough times, you'll grow to hate it. But what happens when two teams ave no history with each other? Can ou, the average Michigan fan, still summon the fist-pounding emotion to adequately despise a rival? You'll find out tomorrow, when the Wolverines play Penn State. Michigan and the Nittany Lions have played just once - last year's 21-13 Wolverine win in Beaver Stadium. But the history of the two programs is so storied, their current teams so success- ul, that Michigan coach Gary Moeller has already put the rivalry in a class with those nearly a century old. "It's in there," Moeller said. "It jumped in last year. It just goes back to (former Michigan coach) Fielding H. Yost ... to the tradition that both schools have. When you put them up against each other, no matter what happens, it's going to end up in a rivalry." Michigan's victory total (743) is the highest of all time; Penn State's (679) is fifth. Today, the Wolverines are ranked fifth in the nation. The Nittany Lions are No. 3. "Any time you have two programs with the backgrounds that Penn State and Michigan have, and then you start meeting every year, you're going to have great games," Penn State cornerback Tony Pittman said. "Therefore, you're going to have a big rivalry. "Last year's game really got that off to a good start. It was a great game between two teams that were playing well at the time." Added Penn State receiver Bobby Engram: "Michigan's going to have a good football team year in and year out. We look forward to playing Michigan because they're playing so well now. "I was optimistic it would get to this point." It appears the two teams and their coaches have already decided that this matchup is a rivalry in the mak- ing. Do Ann Arborites agree? Yes, says John Gabriel, sometime 'We look forward to playing Michigan because they're playing so well now.' - Bobby Engram Penn State receiver Michigan student and T-shirt vendor on the corner of South and East Uni- versity Avenues. "Unlike Michigan State, (Penn State) is actually a good team with a lot of tradition and a good head coach," said Gabriel, adding that this has been "one of the better weeks as far as (selling) T-shirts." Gabriel added that given the "Rose Bowl implications" of the game, its outcome bears heavily on the success of his business. "If we lose, I basically just go home and cry," he said. "If we win, I sell a lot of shirts." Gabriel isn't the only one benefit- ing from the budding rivalry. Scalp- ers outside the Union were asking as much as $120 for a prime seat. Most fans won't get any monetary gain from a Penn State-Michigan ri- valry. To them, tomorrow's game is just a dream matchup between two excellent football teams. DOUGLAKAT /aiy Michigan's defense laid the rivalry's foundation with a goaline stand against Penn State last season. Tailbacks sure to be m spotlight on big stage By BRETT FORREST Daily Football Writer Is there a soul in the crowd of 106,000 who can't stand watching top-notch tailbacks turn tidbits into touchdowns? ... No? Good. Because you're sure to see plenty of high-steppin', six-point scorin', end around-runnin', shoulder-droppin', good ole fashioned tailback domina- tion in tomorrow's game between Penn State and Michigan. In this corner we have Michigan's Tyrone Wheatley - everybody's all- everything. Rumor has it this guy wears an "S" under his shoulder pads. Nittany Lion opportunity. He also scores a touchdown on every eighth carry. What is it with these guys? We'll have to conjure up another corner for Stephen Pitts, Penn State's second leading per game rusher at tailback. If you believe what the people in Happy Valley say, these three guys are the best of friends. Sure they are. One thing is certain, though, Penn State's tailbacks can jet down the side- lines with the best of them. "People don't realize how fast this offense is," Penn State assistant coach Kenny Jackson told the Philadelphia Inquirer, "probably because of our grouping than Penn State's, have also put up impressive stats. After missing the season's first two games due to injury, Wheatley leads the team in rushing, gaining 128.3 yards per contest. Biakabutuka, more than filling in for his elder early on, averages 106.8 yards each game. Biakabutuka leads all Michigan tailbacks with a 6.4 yard average per carry, compared to Wheatley's 5.1. "We can give the defense a differ- ent look at a different type of running back," Wheatley said of the Michigan system. "(Biakabutuka) gives us an- other dimension. He complements me Carter lfl WE LMAIM,