.J The Michigan Daily - SPORTSTuesday- Tuesday, September 3, 1996 - 19A I.-' I L AU ~~fl Batk. shie sh.ne41 I S 8 7 . te 'I, N. to the old days, Woodson Sbot ways for Michigan L Is Cornerback tries By Nicholas J Cdtsonika Daily Sports Edit The Deion Sanders imitation was Charles Wood,*n idea. Sitting with a lunch of recruits and Michigan coac Lloyd Carr at breakfast last spring, Wo' adson, who was named Big Ten Freshi ian of the Year for his play at cornerl ack in 1995, made his modest proposl etween bites. "How abou1T I play some receiver?" Woodson aske 0l sailing, half-serious. Carr listendOI smiling, 100-percent serious. Woodson's E the Wolverint Illinois on " Stadium was n experiment. It festering for a When Carr i )pparance on offense in s' 20-8 victory over aturday at Michigan one-time, spontaneous ac been a faint thought I time. inserted Woodson at EVAN PETRIE/Special to the Daily Sott Dreisbach is back as Michigan's starting quarterback. And Saturday, when wasn't being crunched by Illinois linebackers, he tried a little bit of everything. Dreisbausty, rsky, rea y Inx return to QB Running, catching join passing in arsenal receiver in pra( tide this past spring, he was simply fal4 illing a vision he'd had several times Ijsince helping recruit Woodson out f Ross High School in Freemont, Ohio . Carr toyed A ith the thought: Charles Woodson at re : ver - even Charles Woodson at t Lilback - despite his defensive repu ton. At Ross, V )dson was named a .first-team All-. merican and the No. 2 safety in the r!ttiion by Prep Football Report. He ws the No. 2 defensive back on the BlueChip Illustrated Dream Team.. knd he was the No. 9 defensive bac on SuperPrep's All- America team. Collegecoatc' es drooled puddles. In his spare ti me, Woodson was able to graduate as .oss' all-time leader in rushing yards ( ,861) and scoring (466 points), accurr .lating 5,996 all-pur- pose yards. The coache' drooled some more. Puddles becam streams. And Woods( n knew it. But he was uncertain he cuIid play both offense and defense in ( lllege as well as he had at Ross. "Yeah, I pla ed both ways in high school," Woo< on said. "I thought about playing b th in college then, but I wasn't sure I co Ild do it. Now I know I can, but defens( is more fun." Maybe, but oodson's stiff, busi- wide receiver ness-like demeanor melts when offense is brought up. His blue blazer and bright white shirt can't take away from the soft, coy smile that pokes through. Scoring is "cool," he admits. Carr likes scoring too, and he feels Woodson can be the man to do it at times. In the second quarter, Michigan ran a play that had running back Clarence Williams reverse the ball to Woodson, who lined up as a receiver. Woodson gained 57 yards, nearly scoring before being pushed out of bounds at the seven-yard line. "I told him he was caught from behind," Carr joked. Woodson denied it, of course. Two plays later, quarterback Scott Dreisbach tried to hit Woodson in the end zone with a lob pass. It fell incom- plete, but Woodson is likely to get more chances. "It's the nature of the game now with all the limitations on the number of players," Carr said. "You have to utilize players who have special abilities." Woodson's abilities are so special, Carr said he even considered, trying the 6-foot-1, 192-pound sophomore at tail- back after Tshimanga Biakabutuka left for the NFL. But Carr felt tailback would've been too much to learn for Woodson; receiver would've been easi- er. So when Woodson hinted he might be interested in receiver, Carr took him up on it. "Him wanting to play both had a lot to do with it," Carr said. "It's hard to play both ways, as talented as these ath- letes are. "But I've never known one who did- n't want the ball." Woodson still practices his defense much more than his offense; Carr does- n't want Woodson to lose any of his defensive prowess. But Carr wouldn't mind another Deion Sanders, even though Woodson has grander ideas. "No, I don't want to be the second Deion Sanders,' Woodson said. "I want to be the first Charles Woodson." He already is - in two ways. 'y Nicholas J. Cotsonika Daily Sports Editor Three hundred forty-nine days after his last football game, Scott Dreisbach was so excited to return to Michigan Stadium, he seemed ready to do every- thing but pump air into the footballs. Dreisbach returned as Michigan's starting quarterback Saturday in the .Wolverines' 20-8 victory over Illinois. &nd with his extra energy, he sum- oned enoujh adrenaline to masquer- ade as a running back and wide receiv- er, elude tacklers like a Tyrone Wheatley wanna-be, and charge down the field with such hard-headed deter- mination, he went helmetless at one point. "I gained confi- dence in every- Wing as the game went along," Dreisbach said. "It was like my first game again, not Dreisbach knowing if I was ready or prepared. I had to wait for the true test, and the true test was (Saturday)." For a season-opening performance, reisbach and Michigan coach Lloyd arr felt the test was passed. Two off- season surgeries carved a four-inch, snaking scar into Dreisbach's right thumb, which he hurt last September in practice between Michigan's games against Boston College and Miami (Ohio). But Saturday, the scar was the injury's only lingering effect. Dreisbach used his repaired thumb and everything else to leave little doubt that he is capable of being more than a op-back-and-pass-or-hand-the-ball- uff quarterback. Dreisbach completed only 47.8 per- cent of his passes, going 11-for-23 for 1 -7 yards and a touchdown. Ever-cock- sure, however, he showed flashes of the man who led the Wolverines to a 4-0 record last fall. He forgot the thumb. He forgot the worries. He had fun. On Michigan's second drive, reisbach tried to play receiver. He lat- eral led to wide receiver Tyrone Butterfield on the left. Then Butterfield lofted a high pass to back to Dreisbach, who had an open lane down the right sideline. Dreisbach waited, turned, started to churn his legs, and the ball fell into his hands. But he dropped it. "We're not going to throw any more passes to Dreisbach," Carr said with a smile efter the game. On the Wolverines' next drive, Dreisbach tried to play running back. He dropped back to pass, but with no open lanes, he elected to run to the right. He almost made it out of bounds, but an Illinois defender grabbed Dreisbach's face mask and yanked. Dreisbach's helmet came off, and after he went down, he made sure his head was still attached. "I checked my nose to make sure it was still there," Dreisbach said. "I was looking for my ear pads and stuff, but that was about it." Learning from that experience, Dreisbach stayed away from the large men in orange and white the next time he ran. Forced to scamper early the second quarter, Dreisbach kept his helmet on. He squeaked by four tacklers and com- pleted the third-longest quarterback rush in Michigan history -the second- longest for a touchdown. He went 72 yards to give the Wolverines a 7-0 lead with 13:01 left in the half. "I had to make up for the last one," Dreisbach said. "That's the longest I've ever run in my career. I put some moves on, and they worked for the first time." Although Carr and Dreisbach hinted there may be additional creativity on offense as the season progresses, Dreisbach's passing gane is being monitored closely. Dreisbach played much like he did in last season's opener with Virginia, over- throwing most of the time but connect- ing for one highlight play. Last year, he hit Mercury Hayes for the winning touchdown with no time left. This year, he found Russell Shaw in the end zone with 10:53 left to put the Wolverines up 17-8. Both times, however, his completion percentage was less than stellar. "I thought he was very hesitant in the first three series," Carr said. "He rushed well, and he settled down, though. I thought he played well in the last series, hitting some of his passes. Remember, he's still a young guy. We might play him some at tailback if he keeps run- ning that well." EVAN PETRIE/Special to the Daily Charles Woodson claimed the idea was his, but Michigan coach Lloyd Carr had envisioned Woodson playing offense and defense long before the sophomore brought up the idea over breakfast last spring. Carr even considered playing Woodson, a cornerback and the 1995 Big Ten Freshman of the Year, at taliback when Tshlmanga Biakabutuka left for the NFL. The stat Michigan PASSING Player C-A Dreisbach 11-2 Butterfield 0 RUSHING Player Att Williams 27 Dreisbach 11 Woodson 1 Floyd 7, RECEIVING Player No. Tuman 4. Campbell 2 Williams 1 Streets 1 Shaw 1 Shea 1 3 t Yds 117 0 TD 1 0 I nt 0 0 I. Yds 95 77 57 18 At 3 7 57 2 Avg 13.° 8. 13.t 13.1 10. 2. (ds 54 16 13 13 10 2 vg L .5 1 '.0 7 .0 5 .6 g Lg 5 20 0 1 0 13 0 1; 0 1( 0 Avg 35.5 47.0 PUNTING Player Griese Peristeris No. 2 1 Yds 71 47 DEFENSE Player Solo1 Irons 12 Ray 7 Sword 7 Woodson 7 Copenhaver 6 g TD 6 0 2 1 7 0 5 0 TD 0 0 2 0 3 0 3 0 0 1 2 0 Lg 37 47 Total 15 13 10 10 7 Int 0 g TD 3 0 1 0 0 Ast 3 6. 3 3 1 i Illinois PASSING Player Weaver C-A 25-38 Yd 179 is a9 14 '5 ,.. TD 0 RUSHING Player Att Douthard 13 Holcombe 15 Weaver 9 RECEIVING Y Avg 4.5 3.6 -2.8 Mr 1 13 1 7 Ha I ,, I 11 I