4B - The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday -- Monday, September 9, 1996 COLLEGE FOOTBALL Clement leads Miami to 52- 6Win MIAMI (AP) - The Miami Hurricanes looked both efficient and explosive Saturday, and that was with their top rusher and receiver watching from the bench. Ryan Clement threw four touch- down passes in the first half and Dyral McMillan ran for 156 yards to lead 11th-ranked Miami past The Citadel 52-6. Miami (2-0), shorthanded for the second consecutive game because of off-season troubles, played without five suspended starters. The missing included two stars expected back for Thursday's game at Rutgers - run- ning back Danyell Ferguson and receiver Yatil Green. "We're going to have a reloaded gun," Clement said. "When we get Yatil and Danyell back, I like the direction we're head- ed," coach Butch Davis said. "We haven't scratched the surface of the things we can do." Clement completed his first 10 passes and finished 13-of-14 for 196 yards. All five possessions he led resulted in touchdowns on drives of 8', 80, 6, 80 and 26 yards against the Division I-AA Bulldogs (0-1). "Today was about playing mistake- free football and feeling good about that," Clement said. "I think we accomplished that" McMillan, a sophomore filling in for Ferguson, carried 19 times and scored on second-half runs of 1 and 3 yards. "He ran instinctively," Davis said. "He ran where the holes were. And our offensive line mashed them at the point of attack." Sophomore Magic Benton scored twice for the second consecutive game, this time on receptions of 34 and 17 yards. Clement hit Chris Jones for a 10- yard score and was credited with his fourth touchdown pass when Mondriel Fulcher scored after recovering Benton's fumble. "We came out and showed we're a great team," Benton said. "Even though we didn't have a real good challenge, we came out and did the things we needed to do" The Bulldogs' loss came in Don Powers' first game as a head coach. He took over last month for Charlie Taaffe, who was suspended for the season following his second drunken driving arrest in three years. "All in all, you've got to be proud of these guys," Powers said. "It hasn't been easy. They have to keep going forward." The Citadel averted a shutout only because Corey Harris scored on the first punt return of his career, sprint- ing 80 yards untouched up the middle in the second period. Miami's special teams set up a score when Eugene Ridgley blocked a punt and Booker Pickett recovered at the Citadel 6. Following a penalty, Clement threw his prettiest pass of the day, lofting the ball over safety Anquan Gist to hit Benton deep in the end zone with a 17-yard strike for a 21-0 lead. "I saw Magic out there against a smaller guy," Clement said. "I took the ball and said, 'Hey, go get it for me.' And he did." Backup quarterback Scott Covington entered the game midway through the second quarter and direct- ed two series that failed to produce a first down. Clement returned and threw his fourth touchdown pass 37 seconds before halftime. Benton made a 23- yard reception, and when he fumbled at the 2-yard line, Fulcher scooped up the ball and scored for 28-6 lead. Benton had six receptions for 113 yards despite limited playing time. The Hurricanes finished with 27 first downs to eight for The Citadel. "After we got into the third quarter," Powers said, "it was a little bit over- whelming." Syracuse tarred and feathered SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP) - Junior college transfer Chris Keldorf, cool under the oppressive heat of the Carrier Dome, completed 22 of 32 passes for 238 yards and two touch- downs Saturday night as No. 24 North Carolina upset ninth-ranked Syracuse 27-10. Great things were expected of Syracuse (0-1), but that will have to wait for another week as the Tar Heels (2-0) reversed a season-opening loss to the Orange in 1995 in the first-ever meeting between the teams. And it was the 6-foot-5 Keldorf who outshone his more highly publicized Syracuse counterpart, Donovan McNabb. Keldorf, a transfer from tiny Palomar Junior College outside San Diego, led the Tar Heels to a 17-0 half- time lead. Then he quieted the raucous home- town crowd with some key comple- tions in the fourth quarter after a furi- ous Syracuse rally cut the lead to 17- 10. Keldorf's 18-yard touchdown pass to Freddie Jones sealed the Orangemen's fate with 9:10 left. No.8 TEXAS 41, NEW MEXIco ST. 7 AUSTIN, Texas (AP) - Ric Williams ran for 132 yards and two touchdowns as No. 8 Texas took advan- tage of early turnovers and rolled to a 41- 7 victory over New Mexico State on Saturday. The Longhorns (2-0), off next week- end before facing Notre Dame at home on Sept. 21, led 31-7 at halftime and emptied their bench in the second half. Texas has won nine straight home games dating back to 1994. New Mexico State (0-2) closed to 10 7 early in the second quarter, but couldn't contain Williams, who ran for 122 yards on 11 carries in the first half and had a 97-yard TD run called back for holding. Williams, who racked up 132 yards on just 12 carries, helped break the game open in the second quarter with a 32-yard TD run in which he blasted up the mid- dle and then darted left before picking up a crucial block from receiver Curte Jackson on his way into the end zone. The score put Texas up 21-7 with 8:41 left in the second quarter, and the Longhorns added a 21-yard field goal by Phil Dawson and a 10-yard TD run by Williams before intermission. AP PHOTO North Carolina tallback Maurice McGregor vaults into the end zone over two Syracuse defenders for the Tarheels' first score in their 27-10 upset of ninth-ranked Syracuse in the Carrier Dome. Gators put the bite on Georgia Southern; Seminoles spear Duke GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP) - Danny Wuerffel answered coach Steve Spurrier's criticism with near perfection Saturday night, missing on just one pass in leading No. 4 Florida to a 62-14 victory over Georgia Southern. Wuerffel was 15-of-16 for 267 yards and two touchdowns for the Gators (2-0), a far cry from last week when he missed open receivers and drew the brunt of Spurrier's criticism. Georgia Southern (1-1), a Division I-AA school, flustered Florida with its flexbone option attack that took chunks of time off the clock and the kept the score from really getting out of hand. The longest of Florida's eight touchdown drives lasted three minutes, 45 seconds and featured five running plays. The Gators never punted until 8:42 was left in the game. Wuerffel completed his first I I passes and fin- ished the first half 14-of-15 for 239 yards. He played one series of the second half and threw one pass, a 28-yard touchdown to Jacquez Green for a 42-7 lead. Wuerffel had a pass efficiency rating of 275.2. His 94 percent completion percentage was the highest in school history, and his 11 straight com- pletions was the best at Florida since Terry Dean completed 11 straight in 1993 against Arkansas State. Brian Schottenheimer completed all five of his passes for 90 yards and scored on a 1-yard run for the Gators, who were 23-of-28 for 394 yards. Redshirt freshman Eugene McCaslin, suspend- ed last week for breaking team rules, had a mem- orable debut by carrying eight times for 116 yards and two touchdowns, including a 63-yard score with 2:46 left. Elijah Williams ran for 75 yards and a touch- down, and Terry Jackson rushed for 60 yards and two scores. Wuerffel was so efficient in the first half that the Eagles had the ball twice as long. But then, none of Florida's first four touchdowns took longer than 2:43. The first one lasted all of 51 seconds - Elijah Williams for 2 yards, Williams for 20 yards and Wuerffel's 32-yard touchdown pass to Reidel Anthony on a post pattern. The defense, which scored four touchdowns last week, got another one when Cameron Davis caught a fumble by Roderick Russell in the air and returned it 40 yards. The five touchdowns for the year is a school record. Florida had only one defensive score in 13 games last year. But Wuerffel made it clear early on that the Fun 'N' Gun would not be outdone this week. Although he was sacked three times in the first half, all of them on blitzes, he mixed up his passes to the receivers, tight ends and running backs in moving down the field. The Eagles weren't as big or fast as Florida, but they frustrated them early with a nice mix of run- ning and throwing. Russell's 5-yard touchdown run in the first quarter capped an 11-play, 80-yard drive that took 7:24 off the clock. The Eagles' other touchdown, a 6-yard run by Bennie Cunningham on fourth-and- goal, finished off a 62-yard drive that lasted 6:24. Kenny Robinson completed all seven of his passes for 60 yards. A week ago against South Carolina State, Robinson was 6-of-7 for 87 yards. No.3 FLOIDA ST. 44, DUKE 7 TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) - Florida State's offense didn't do much Saturday. Florida State's defense didn't let Duke do anything. Led by defensive ends Peter Boulware and Reinard Wilson, the Florida State defense set up three touchdowns and a field goal as the third- ranked Seminoles defeated Duke 44-7 in the sea- son opener for both teams. Boulware had 2 1/2 sacks and Wilson totaled 11 tackles as they kept pressure all afternoon on Duke quarterbacks Dave Green and Matt Rader. A fumble by Florida State reserve quarterback Dan Kendra at his own 7 late in the third quarter set up Duke's lone score. Lamarr Marshall scored three plays later on a 1-yard run. Otherwise, the Blue Devils managed only 91 yards offense, and just 13 rushing yards on 47 attempts while fumbling five times. Florida State's offense - annually among the nation's best - didn't fare a lot better, totaling only 221 yards. Junior quarterback Thad Busby, bothered by a sore throwing arm in recent days, passed for only 75 yards, and tailback Warrick Dunn was limited to 70 yards. Busby passed for two first-half touchdowns and Dee Feaster returned a punt 59 yards for a touchdown as the Seminoles took a 27-0 halftime lead. A_ year ago, Florida State scored 56 points in the first half against Duke and won the game 70- 26 while amassing 797 yards offense. But Florida State's defense and special teams were too much for the Blue Devils. Duke fumbles set up 17 Florida State points, while the Seminoles' special teams led to 14 more. Peter Warrick ran back the game's opening kickoff 48 yards, and the Seminoles needed only 2:03 to get their first points of the season on a 20- yard touchdown pass from Busby to Andre Cooper. Scott Bentley produced the next two scores on field goals of 23 and 39 yards before Busby con- nected with E.G. Green on a 12-yard touchdown pass as Florida State moved into a 20-0 lead four minutes into the second quarter. Kendra, a highly touted redshirt freshman, scored his first touchdown early in the fourth quarter after Corey Simon tackled Duke's punter at the 1. Bentley added a third field goal, this time from 41 yards, in the fourth quarter to complete Florida State's scoring. The Seminoles are off until Sept. 19 when they play at North Carolina State in a nationally tele- vised Thursday night game, while Duke plays host to Northwestern next Saturday. AP PHOTO Tobias Steverson could do little to prevent Florida defensive end Cameron Davis from returning a first- half fumble recovery for a touchdown in the Gators' 62-14 stomping of Georgia Southern. A~PtHOTO Andre Cooper hauls in one of Thad Busby's two touchdown passes in a 44-7 Seminole victory over Duke in both teams' season opener. f. 4 Colorado, Tennessee convincing in wins FORT COLLINS, Colo. (AP) - Koy Detmer nassed for two touchdowns and ran for another, and No. 2 TENNESSEE 35, UCLA 20 KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -The final big play of A Neyland Stadium record crowd of 106,297 was looking for a game of big plays from the Vols, but the ;; :. ., ;. . .. _ .: _,r.. ,, ..,.. ... :.. . .":'-.:4 ,. . . . .. sue.. }