TEXAs A M 22, MICHIGAN 20 A ft//yoAlg;-gve/im time ~,4 oloo GAME PASSING Player Pullig Totals RUSHING -] By Scott Burton Daily SportsWriter SAN ANTONIO - Michigan quar- STATISTICS terback Brian Griese didn't have any answers after Michigan's 22-20 loss to Texas A&M in the Alamo Bowl. No explanation as to why he couldn't coun- teract the Aggies' blitzes. No reasons C-A Yds TD Int why he couldn't find his open receivers downfield. Norationale why Michigan's 12-22 136 0 0 season ended with a defeat, despite com- ing into San Antonio on an emotional 12-22 136 0 0 high. "Wejustdidn't win the game," Griese Player Aft Yds Avg Lg TD 21 56 2.7 11 0 Bernard Hardeman Connell Pullig Totals RECEIVING Player I Hardeman Connell Parker Sanders Spiller Totals PUNTING Player 15 50 3.3 13 1 6 41 6.8 19 0 1 7 7.0 7 0 said. But what Griese And every team - e did have after Michigan's fourth loss of the season was a sense of consola- tion. He knew that what is great about sports is that once one season's national champion is crowned,thenext season begins. from Nebraska to season, led Michigan to a stunning upset of powerhouse Ohio State. What will likely be remembered in- stead is the assortment of tough games that he had during the regular season, his inability to generate any offense in cru- cial junctures during Michigan's four losses. They will remember the sight of Aggie cornerback Andre Williams in- tercepting a Griese pass to seal the Wol- verines' loss in the Alamo Bowl. Not all of this is entirely fair. True, Griese did not perform at a level neces- sary for Michigan to be a Rose Bowl team. But when in the recent history of college football has a first-year starter ever lead a team to championship glory? The almighty Ron Powlus was a bomb in South Bend in his first year. Tennessee's Peyton Manning was good as a freshman, but not good enough to elevate his team to the Southeastern Conference title. Indeed, ifyou look at the quarterbacks of the elite teams this season, what you have is acollection ofexperienced helms- men: Nebraska's Tommy Frazier, a se- nior; Florida's Danny Wuerffel, a jun- ior; Ohio State's Bobby Hoying, a se- nior; and Florida State's Danny Kannell, a senior. Hence, the fact that Griese often couldn't get the job done in 1995 should not have brought out the wolves. Nei- ther Griese nor his coach, Lloyd Carr, never laid out lofty expectations for Griese; they admitted from the get-go that the sophomore was going to struggle sometimes. That's simply what rookie quarterbacks do when faced with the fierce level of competi- tion in Division I football. And while Michigan did have pre- tenses of a Big Ten championship, that goal was based on what it thought it could do as a team, not what it thought Griese, or any other one player, could do. Likewise, no one player - espe- cially not Griese - should be made to answer for what went wrong against Texas A&M, or in 1995. 1::. I r' ; . : , - 2 (-)14 (-)7.0(-)14 0 45 140 3.1 19 0 Michigan to Middle Tennessee State - pursues perfection anew with the exact same record: zero wins, zero losses. Ifonly Griese himselfcould enterthe No. Yds Avg Lg TD 1996 season with the same degree of 3 41 13.6 22 0 renewal. It's not often that a team that compiles four losses escapes without 3 36 12.0 14 0 its share of scapegoats. And Griese, who.had a 5-4 record as Michigan's 3 23 7.6 12 0 starter after taking over a 4-0 Wolver- ine team from Scott Dreisbach in late 2 30 15.0 20 0 September, has been the favorite target 1 6 6.0 6 0' of scorn. As Griese battles Dreisbach and a 12 136 11.3 22 0 slew of young quarterbacks for the start- ingspotthis spring, the cynics will likely forget that the sophomore threw for 323 yards against Penn State, Michigan's third-highest single passing game ever. No. Yds Avg Lg Or that Griese, who joined the team as a walk-on in 1993 and never threw a pass 5 215 43.0 51 in a college game entering the 1995 Michigan's third straight appearance in an also-ran bowl game didn't go quite as well as the last two. Aggies'me Mchigan Totals 5 215 43.0 51 By Darren Everson Daily Sports Editor SAN ANTONIO - Even if the Wolverines remembered the Alamo, it didn't help them any. There was nothing in there about the Texans using the blitzkrieg to steamroll the opposition. That military tactic wasn't even conceived until the next century. However, these Texans - or Aggies, more precisely - used the blitz quite often to shut down Michigan's passing game. What's more, the Wolverines seemed un- able to cope with the extra pass rush- ers each time they came. And you thought only Colt.45 works every time. "When you blitz so many people, it's kind of hard to get the ball off," Michi- gan quarterback Brian Griese said. The Aggies certainly were bring- ing a lot of people; on several occa- sions, there were more guys to block than there were blockers. That's just part of the game, though, and to his credit, Griese wasn't making any excuses. "(When they blitz) is when it's my job to take advantage of the situation," Griese said. He did a good job of that in the first half. Griese completed 4-of-5 passes then, including a 41-yard touchdown pass to split end Amani Toomer. On that play, the Wolverines did exactly what they had to against A&M's ag- gressive defense. The offensive line protected Griese, Toomer beat the man- to-man coverage and Griese's pass was on target. Such execution was nowhere to be found in the second half. Also AWOL were the officials, who often allowed the Aggie defensive backs to mug the Wolverine receivers. "That was very critical in the game," Michigan receiver Mercury Hayes said. "Those plays that they did call were big for us." ba One such call, a pass interference pen- se( alty in the first quarter, got the Wolver- efi ines started on their only touchdown drive of the half. The Aggies often went of unpunished, though, particularly at one mi point in the third quarter. Tl On a first-and-10, Griese tried to con- nect with Toomer, who again was cov- ered one-on-one. Toomer was unable to catch up with Griese's pass because he it had been held up by the Aggie defender co before the ball was thrown. thi The official nearby threw his pen ev alty flag, but the flag was later waved off because the pass was ruled we. uncatchable. th "I don't know if the official on that side of the field understand the differ-.Al ence between holding and interfer- tiv ence," Michigan coach Lloyd Carr said.Sh "If the ball is thrown and the (receiver) ho is being held, then the timing of the an play is distorted." Illegal contact by A&M defensive ha PUNT RETURNS Player Mickens Totals No. Yds Avg Lg TD 3 52 17.3 26 0 3 52 17.3 26 0 KICKOFF RETURNS Player No. Yds Avg Connell 1 26 26.0 Lg TD 26 0 Lowery Totals 1 00.000 2 26 13.0 26 0 Solo Ast Tot 5 2 7 Exosure in Texas 5% a a Blue s recruiting - DEFENSE Player Walker R. Brown B. Mitchell S. Horn Holdman Mickens Nguyen McMullen P. Williams Meyers Allen Jasper K. Mitchell Little Crowley Venetoulias Terry Crabbe Jennings Jones Q. Brown A. Williams Oliver Driver Fisher TEXAS A&M SCHEDt SEPT. 2 LSU 5 4 2 3 3 4 3 2 2 1 6 1 5 2 4 1 4 1 4 0 0 0 0 2 3 *| |*"' ......|..| ...........,.... MARK FRIEDMAN/Daily 0 0 Texas A&M's Kyle Bryant kicked a Alamo Bowl record five field goals. 2 0 0 SLNBERGER 2 0 0 Continued from Page 2B 1 1 2 close to losing a game this year. Nebraska scored more than 50 points 2 0 0 in agame six times andreached the 70s 1 0 0 twice. The Cornhuskers' closest mar- gin of victory was the win over Wash- 1 0 1 ington State, and it seemed like they could have scored 100 against Florida 1 0 0 if they had wanted to. The Gators never had a chance after 1 0 1 the first quarter. 1 0 1 Florida did have an opportunity, though, to make the final score re- 1 0 1 spectable. With 1:29 left in the third quarter, Ike Hilliard made a nifty over- 1 0 1 the-shoulder touchdown grab of a 1 0 1 Wuerffel pass (although the replay showed that Hilliard was out of 0 1 1 bounds). The subsequent two-point conversion made the score 42-18 with 0 1 1 just over a quarter left to be played. While not in position to win, the Gators 0 1 0 hadachancetogetoutoftown without ULE being massacred. But then there was the problem of 33-17 tackling Tommie Frazier., On the following series, Frazier kept By Antoine Pitts Daily Sports Editor SAN ANTONIO-Michigan's trip, to the Alamo Bowl could spawn even more players from the state of Texas to come play in Ann Arbor. Eight Wolverines on this year's ros- ter - Mercury Hayes, William Carr, George Howell, Jarrett Irons, Daydrion Taylor, Kenneth Jackson, Steve Frazier and Josh Williams - hail from the Lone Star State and the Michigan coaching staff can't wait to get more. The week long stay in the Alamo city gave the Wolverines plenty of local coverage on television and in the newspapers. "It's important in that every day the high school players and coaches see and read about our players from Texas," Michigan coach Lloyd Carr said. "It's an opportunity to get some media ex- posure we normally wouldn't." Texas not only has a wealth of excel- lent high school players, it also has a good number ofgreat football programs to grab them up. With all the available talent, recruiters from the schools in the north don't seem to bother Texas A&M coach R.C. Slocum. "R.C. is as fine a recruiter as there is," Carr said. "He can't take them all, so there's enough for the rest of us." An avenue Carr thinks works best in recruiting in Texas is to have his cur- rent Texans talk to the recruits. "Our best recruiters have been our players from Texas," Carr said. "Those kids have an impression on all the recruits. Once you break that barrier it becomes easier." One such player is Hayes, an All- Big Ten Second Team wide receiver, who made one of this season's most spectacular plays. Hayes' tippy-toe last-second touchdown catch to beat Virginia made everyone's highlight reel. Hayes, a Houston native, tells the players exactly what they should ex- pect at Michigan. "I tell them the truth," Hayes said. "You going to come to a place where you're going to have a chance to es- tablish yourself. You can't go wrong. Just look at what me, Jarrett Irons and the others have been able to accom- plish." Nose tackle William Carr almost ended up an Aggie before he became a Wolverine. He didn't bite on Texas A&M's take it or leave it scholarship offer. "They recruited me for all of three days," Carr said. "They wanted to give me a scholarship but I wasn't ready to commit early. I told them I wanted to wait and I didn't get any more phone calls from A&M." Carr, a native of Dallas, was also a Second Team All-Big Ten selection. He tells the recruits that it's tough being away from home no matter where you go, but coming to Michigan is the right choice to make. "You're going to get homesick wher- ever you go," Carr said. "Michigan is like no other school, though. You're on TV every weekend. If you chose Michigan, you'll be happy." "The only thing is the weather, but you can stay inside all the time." With the ensuing extra point, the scoreboard blinked49-18 andtheGator fans headed for the exits. Predictably, Spurrier wasn't happy about that play or the game in general. "We were outmatched," he said. "We got smashed up front ... Tommie Frazier made us look like we weren't trying at times. We have to come to the ballpark prepared to play, like they were. We got clobbered. I'm embar- rassed we couldn't make a game of it." While Gator fans muttered to them- selves on their way to the parking lot, the large contingent of Nebraska fans were having a party in the confines of Sun Devil Stadium. They whooped and hollered until the final gun. After that, they whooped and hollered some more. A few even climbed onto the turf to be a part ofthe post-game festivities. In fact, in the distance on that crisp evening, you could almost hear the entire state of Nebraska roar its ap- proval for their 1995 Cornhuskers, one of the greatest teams in college foot- ball history. Can you imagine anyone ever being Amani Toomer won't be celebrating any moi uniform, as his career as a Wolverine Is over Texas for a replacement for the senior split players in the Lone Star State In recent year Texas A&M exposes Michigan 's By Darren Everson Daily Sports Editor SAN ANTONIO - The Alamo Bowl may have taken place in 1995, Wolverines relied heavily on Biakabutuka. He led the team in rush- ing with 1,818 yards - 1,591 better than the No. 2 rusher, Clarence Will- age 3.7 yards per carry, compared to Biakabutuka's 6.0. Williams ran well, in the Alamo Bowl - seven times for 36 yards - but neither Howard nor, A ye