4- The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, November 7, 1994 Evi M I C H I G A H 45 GAME STATISTICS PASSING Player C-A Yds" Collins 15-18 191 Totals 15-18 191 TD 2 2 MICHAEL ROSENBERG Roses are Read it o Blue digs deep, finds JI RUSHING Player Aft Yds, Wheatley20148 B'butuka12100 Davis 8 41 Ritchie 1 24 Collins 2 (-)6 Totals 43307 Avg LgTD 7.4 34 2 8.3 43 1 5.1131 24 24 0 (-)3 00 7.143 4 RECEIVING Player No. Hayes 5 Toomer 3 B'butuka 2 Wheatley 1 Davis 1 R'mersmal Yds 88 38 32 9 9 8 5 2 Avg LgTD 17.6 12.7 16.0 9.0 9.0 8.0 5.0 2.0 12.7 31 16 20 9 9 8 5 2 31 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 2 Cooper Foster 1 1 Totals 15 191 PUNTING Player No. Yds Avg Baker 2 65 32.5 Totals 2 65 32.5 reasons compete W EST LAFAYETTE -- Michigan and Purdue took the field Saturday. They played football. Michigan won, 45-23. Nothing much else to say there. No great stories. No big shockers. Mostly, this game just reconfirmed what we already knew. The Wolverines showed that they are better than they were in a 31-19 loss to Wisconsin last week. But we knew that. The Boilermakers showed they're not quite as good as their 4-2-2 pregame record indicated. But we probably knew that, too. What could we tell from this game? Tyrone Wheatley is one of the best players in the country. Tshimanga Biakabutuka is as capable as any backup you could find. Todd Collins is efficient. The Michigan defense is average. The grass is green. The rain is wet. Etc., etc. Still, this game mattered. The fact is, Michigan needs a few more boring games. Games where nobody carries the team. Games where the Wolverines aren't firing on all cylinders, but still manage to win. Games where just being the better football team is enough. "This was old-time, grind-it-out football," Collins said. "A lot of the lineman were looking forward to it. We wanted to have fun out there." The season is simply too long to expect something special in every game. Some games just come down to old-time, grind-it-out football, and those are the games Michigan has to win. This game mattered because the season doesn't matter any more. Isn't that what so many people said after Michigan lost to Penn State? The season doesn't matter any more. Isn't that what everybody said after Michigan lost to Wisconsin? The season doesn't matter any more. The Wolverines heard it all. They'll tell you they didn't, but they did. The season doesn't matter any more. They heard. And they stopped. And they looked around. And they discovered something obvious, something they may have forgotten: here, amid all the waste, beneath all the criticism, in the middle of this season that doesn't matter, is a football team. To the bone, they are players. Players play. At some point, beyond the attention, beyond the hopes of any kind of title, beyond any dreams of glory, you need a reason to get up and go to practice every day. You need to love football. After the game and before the showers, almost 100 players, coaches, trainers and equipment managers stood in the locker room and had a few words. Familiar words. Hail! To the victors valiant! They were victorious. Hail! To the conquering heroes! They had conquered the Boilermakers. Hail! Hail! To Michigan ... You know the rest. It is simple, this game. Some say it's not important. Some say Michigan's win didn't matter. Fine. It may not matter to everyone. But there were 100 men in the visiting locker room in Ross-Ade Stadium Saturday, and they were all singing their school's fight song, because this game mattered to them. This was about football. Nothing more. Who needs anything more? 0 MARK FRIEDMANIDaily9 Ed Davis ran for 41 yards on eight carries during Saturday's Michigan win over Purdue. He was part of a Wolverine ground attack that gained over 300 yards for the second time this season. M'-finds time for now-heremen Lost backs Davis, Ritchie see substantial action in rout Lg 33 33 PUNT RETURNS Player No. Yds Avg Lg TD Toomer 2 7 3.5 4 0 Totals 2 7 3.5 4 0 KICKOFF RETURNS Player No.Yds Avg Lg' Hayes 3 50 16.7 20 Smith 1 28 28.0 28 B'butuka 1 20 20.0 20 Totals 5 98 19.6 28 TD 0 0 0 0 By MICHAEL ROSENBERG Daily Football Writer WEST LAFAYETTE - Search crews finally located Michigan run- ning backs Ed Davis and Jon Ritchie, and the helicopters were able to bring them to Purdue in time for Slturday's game. Davis, a junior tailback, ran for 42 yards on eight carries, his second- best output of the season. Ritchie, a sophomore fullback, played a signifi- cant amount for the first time in 1994. He ran for 24 yards on his only carry of the afternoon. "It was a must-win for us," Davis said. "We had to get a tough victory, and we did." Davis started the opening game against Boston College in place of starter Tyrone Wheatley. But he ran for only 41 yards on 20 carries. The next week, at Notre Dame, Davis car- ried the ball seven times for nine yards. Over the next six games, he carried the ball only 25 times. But Davis did not lose his focus. "My goals are basically the team's goals," Davis said. "Everyone made a conscious effort (this week) to bust their butt in practice." Davis waited almost two months to get another chance. Ritchie waited almost a year. The fullback saw extensive play- ing time as a true freshman last sea- son, but his uniform has stayed clean for most of this year. Saturday, he got an opportunity to show that his rookie season was not a fluke. "Today was a satisfying day for me," Ritchie said. "I've been working hard in practice and I've been work- ing hard watching films." It wasn't hard to figure out why Davis hadn't gotten the call. Wheatley and fellow tailback Tshimanga Biakabutuka are averaging more than 200 yards per game combined. With two players doing that well, coach Gary Moeller had little reason to use Davis. On numerous occasions, Moeller went to lengths to avoid any tailback controversy. "Ed Davis is a good kid," the coach said more than once. "He'll help us before the season's over." For his part, Davis avoided moan- ing about his lost playing time and worked to get another chance. "I just thank God for giving me the opportunity," Davis said. "I'm happy I was able to take advantage of it." Ritchie is a different story. Che Foster has been Michigan's only reli- able fullback this season. Nobody re- ally knew why Ritchie had disap-0 peared from the rotation. "The coaches didn't tell me," Ritchie said. "It troubled me some- what but I wasn't about to ask them about it. I just tried to improve my- self." Like Davis, Ritchie concentrated on helping the team instead of com- plaining. Even Saturday he said his main contribution was not the 24- yard run but his blocking. "My role is as a blocker," Ritchie said. "Today was my best blocking day by far. I think that today really helped me with my confidence, and if that helps me play more, then great." Davis PURDUE Continued from page 1 fans in attendance. Wheatley showed why he talks the talk. With 7:48 left in the third, he capped an 80-yard, nearly eight-minute drive by jogging seven yards to the end zone to make it 31-17. The Wolverines continued to roll in the fourth quarter. Inside linebacker Rob Swett's interception with 13:38 to go led to Davis' two-yard TD run, which made it 38-17. At the 4:49 mark, running back DEFENSE Player Morrison Thompson Johnson Irons Law Pryce Horn Mondry W. Carr Powers King Henderson Anderson Zenkewicz Winters Hankins Huff Steele Hamilton Floyd Howard Howell Denson Solo 4 5 6 3 5 5 4 3 2 3 2 1 1 2 2 2 2 2 1 1 0 0 0 Ast 5 3 1 4 1 1 2 2 2 0 1 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 Tot 9 8 7 7 6 6 6 5 4 3 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 Edwin Watson provided Purdue's last gasp, a 12-yard touchdown run. After Bobich's kick sailed wide, it was 38- 23. Biakabutuka finished the scoring with 2:18 left to play. He cut down the right side for 43 yards, setting up his six-yard TD run. Remy Hamilton's kick made it 45-23. The game showed a reversal in some negative Michigan trends. The Wolverines scored early - four plays into the game. They also scored often - six touchdowns and just one field goal - and inside the 20-yard line - seven of seven attempts from the red zone. In addition, the Wolverine sec- ondary improved over recent games. In his first career start in place of the injured Rick Trefzger, Purdue quarterback Billy Dicken couldn't find many open receivers and was forced to scramble. His 51 yards led the Boilermakers in first-half rush- ing. Michigan also managed to stop the run, holding All-American candi- date Mike Alstott to 70 yards rushing. "Everything seemed to be work- ing well," Collins said. "We got off on the right foot." FOOTBALL NOTEBOOK: Linebacker Waldroup calls it quits; gridders still attracting yellow flags Swett By RACHEL BACHMAN and MICHAEL ROSENBERG Daily Football Writers WEST LAFAYETTE - Michigan's perpetually depleted linebacking corps took another hit this week. But this time the Wolverines will have to deal with more than just an injury to a key player. Outside linebacker Kerwin Waldroup has quit the team. Circumstances surrounding Waldroup's decision were unclear. He hurt his ankle last week, but told the coaches Tuesday and Wednesday he would be ready to play against Purdue. Late last, week, he left the team. Coach Gary y . Moeller said he :Y avoided announc-_ ing Waldroup's decision because of a hope that theE player would re- turn. "Kerwin's a good kid," said Moeller, who in- Waldroup dicated academics may have played "A couple of them were legit," the coach said. THE WHEATLEY FILE: Senior tailback Tyrone Wheatley continued his campaign to rename the Michi- gan record book "Tyrone's Diary." Wheatley ran for 148 yards Saturday, the 20th time in his career he has hit the century mark. His two touchdowns against the Boilermakers gave him 51 touchdowns overall, 11 more than any Wolver- ine in history. He has 45 rushing scores, also a Wolver-' ine record. "That is a lot of touchdowns," Wheatley said. "I'm just glad the coaches have the confidence in me to give me the ball at the goal line." Wheatley now has 306 career points, one shy of the record held by former Michigan kicker Mike Gillette.* Was this Wheatley's best performance of the sea- son? p "I still have two games left," he said. THERE GOES ANOTHER ONE: Gillette seems to be losing all of his records. His mark for most field goals in a season was broken Saturday by sophomore Remy Hamilton, who booted his 19th of - the year. THAT'S WHY PURDUE IS KNOWN Purdue scoreboard FOR ITS ENGINEER- ING PROGRAM: Purdue has a cool multi-color scoreboard. It would be nice if they learned how to use it. One of the graphics used throughout the game read, INTERCEPTIONS Player No. Yds TD Swett 1 19 0 Totals 1 19 0 « ;;