6B - The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, September 16, 1996 COLLEGE FOOTBALL B.C. mauled at home . by Virginia Tech, 45-7, BOSTON (AP) - Nineteenth- ranked Virginia Tech felt it knew exact- ly what type of defense it would see. How right it was. The Hokies, facing former defensive coach Phil Elmassian, used a no-huddle offense to near perfection in the open- ing quarter, scoring on the first three possessions en route a 45-7 defeat of Boston College and a school-record 12th straight victory. "I guess they run our defense," said Hokies quarterback Jim Druckenmiller, who completed 13-of-24 for 214 yards and two TDs. "No one runs it any better than we do. We see it every day in prac- tice." Elmassian coached the Hokies' defense in 1993 and '94 before leaving for Washington. He joined the Eagles this season. Brian Edmonds and Shyrone Stith each had two scoring runs as the Hokies surpassed their school-record of 11 consecutive victories set from 1917 through 1919. They also extended the second-longest active winning streak in the nation, behind two-time defending champion Nebraska's 26. "I haven't mentioned it (the winning streak), and I don't think the players have mentioned it either," Virginia Tech coach Frank Beamer said. "We had a. great win. If we keep it in that frame, that's what's important." Virginia Tech (2-0), coming off a surn- prisingly close 21-18 opening-week, victory over Akron, built a 35-7 lead after three quarters. The Eagles (1-1), who defeated Virginia Tech, 20-14, last Sept. 7 at Blacksburg, Va., suffered their large Big East loss and dropped their fourth straight home opener. "All I can say, gentlemen, is I can't imagine how bad it would have been if- we hadn't been working at it," Boston College coach Dan Henning said.- "Obviously, they're a better football team than we are. We've got a long way to go to catch up to a football team like, Virginia Tech." HAPPY HOUR MON-FRI 9:00-11:30 AM 9:30-CLOSE $4.00 Meet the Michigan defense's next target - Boston College quarterback Matt Hasselback. Hasselback and the Eagles fell to Virginia Tech, 45-7, on Saturday. Buffaloes not the only team bitten by upsets Washington sacks Sarkisian 8 times on way to upset; Texas A&M shocked by Cajuns TANS NO SERVICE CHARGES!! TAN FASTIC 627 SOUTH MAIN (AT SOUTH MAIN MARKET 213-2279 K..sthff * RUNNING SAIRWALK SPFFDO2 adidas RUNNING UMBRO CLEAT SOCCER "LAMP POST PLAZA 2414 E. STADIUM 973-9960 S~meeT SEOTS IN BIVOUAC 761-7615 .JNNIN 123 E. LIBERTY (AT 4THAVE.) 769-5016 SEATTLE (AP) - The Washington Huskies may have a good defense after all. Beaten up by Jake Plummer and Arizona State in a 45-42 loss in the opener, Washington defenders looked like an entirely different group against No. 14 BYU on Saturday. The Huskies sacked highly regarded Steve Sarkisian eight times - and even tackled him in the end zone for a safety - in a 29-14 victory. Sarkisian, who threw 10 touchdown passes in the Cougars' first two games, had two scoring passes, but was unable to overcome a Washington defense that limited the Cougars to 14 net rushing yards or a mistake-prone offensive line. "Their defense played extremely well," BYU tight end Itula Mili said. "They're not as big as Texas A&M, but they're a lot faster." "They kind of out-physicaled us the whole game," Sarkisian said. "After we got behind, they knew we had to throw and it was easy for them to come after us." Jason Chorak, who had three sacks, delivered the final indignity by tackling Sarkisian in the end zone for a safety with 1:21 to go. Redshirt freshman nose tackle Mac Tuiaea had 3 1/2 tackles for the Huskies. "Last week, I think we all had first- game jitters," Chorak said. "The whole defense is just coming together." "We really tried to emphasize con- tainment all week after the way Plummer ran around on us last week, Tuiaea said. "What a difference a week makes, Washington coach Jim Lambright said. "We controlled the line of scrimmage." Washington (1-1) won its 11th con- secutive home opener before a Husky Stadium crowd of 71,165 on a day when Shane Fortney ran for one touchdown and passed for a score, and Rashaan Shehee rushed for two touchdowns. BYU came into the game with nation- al championship aspirations. The Cougars, who won their opener at No. 25 Texas A&M, felt a win in Seattle would have been a springboard to an unbeaten season. "This game meant a lot nationally," BYU coach LaVell Edwards admitted. That may have affected the way the Cougars played. "I think all the hype got in a lot of players' heads," middle linebacker Shay Muirbrook said. The Huskies' defensive pressure was too much for BYU's offensive line. The Cougars (2-I) committed 15 penalties for losses of 119 yards. The Huskies rolled up 445 yards, 264 by rushing, to BYU's 293. Sarkisian completed 23-of-35 passes for 279 yards and two touchdowns, but the Cougars netted only 14 rushing yards. Fortney was 16-for-24 for 172 yards and one touchdown. Shehee rushed 21 times for 131 yards, while backup Corey Dillon had 82 yards on 10 carries. Fortney directed the Huskies in all but two of their offensive series. Brock Huard, Washington's redshirt freshman quarterback, played in only two series after directing the Huskies to three fourth-quarter touchdowns at Arizona State last week. "Coach is going to go with whoever has the hot hand and that's going to be that way all year long" Fortney said. Shehee bounced back after a lacklus- ter 50-yard rushing day at Arizona State. He had his fourth career 100-yard rush- ing game. "Going into this game, I was so well prepared I knew I couldn't be stopped," said Shehee said he couldn't prepare prop- erly for Arizona State because of a ham- string injury. Trailing 21-7 at halftime, BYU dom- inated most of the third quarter, but got only a career-long 42-yard field goal by Ethan Pochman with 3:27 gone to show for it. Pochman missed a 33-yard field goal midway through the quarter. Fortney passed 29 yards to Dave Janoski for a touchdown with 1:53 left in the third quarter for a 27-10 Washington lead, capping an 80-yard drive that broke the Cougars' backs. In the fourth quarter, Sarkisian marched BYU 68 yards, running out of the pocket and finding Mili in the end zone for a 1-yard touchdown with 6:04 left. AP PHOTO Brigham Young's Brian McKenzie attempts to catch a first-half pass in the Cougars' 29-14 loss to Washington. Brigham Young and Texas A&M were two ranked teams that fell to unranked opponents this week. Washington got its 21-7 lead as Fortney scored his team's third first-half touchdown on a 1-yard option run with 13 seconds left before halftime. The Huskies had to go only 46 yards for the score after a 26-yard punt return by Jerome Pathon. The Huskies used a ball-control, 13- play, 84-yard drive with the opening kickoff to take a 7-0 lead. Shehee capped the drive with a 4-yard touchdown run with 5:07 gone. Washington made it 14-0 in the sec- ond quarter when Shehee found lots of holes in the BYU defense for his 45- yard scoring run. Shehee took a pitch left from Fortney, got outside the Cougars defense and then got an outstanding block from Pathon at the BYU 25 that got him into the end zone. Sarkisian combined with Kaipo McGuire for a 32-yard touchdown pass to cut Washington's lead to 14-7 at 8:22 of the second quarter. The BYU loss came in Edwards' 300th game as coach. Washington is 2-1 against BYU and 21-4-1 against Western Athletic Conference opponents. SOUTHWESTERN LOUISIANA 29, No. 25 TEXAs A& M 22 LAFAYETTE, La. - Southwestern Louisiana managed only one long drive against No. 25 Texas A&M on Saturday night. Thanks to the defense, that was all that was needed. Britt Jackson had one of two Southwestern Louisiana interception returns for touchdowns, a 30-yarder for the deciding touchdown, and the Ragin' Cajuns took advantage of eigh* turnovers in a 29-22 victory over the Aggies. "As many turnovers as we had tonight, I don't think there's a team in college football we could have beat," Texas A&M coach R.C. Slocum said. Damon Mason's interception of Branndon Stewart's pass at the. Southwestern 13 with 31 seconds left finally finished Texas A&M (0-2) an. touched off a massive celebration. Fans flooded the field, hugging players and ripping down a goal post. Police surrounded the other one; before fans could tear it down. It was Southwestern Louisiana's first victory over a ranked team. "There's never been anything this sweet;' Southwestern coach Nelson: Stokley said. "I've been around a lot of big wins, but our heart was in this one,. I've never seen such an effort." Southwestern (1-1) turned three Texas A&M turnovers into touchdowns, including Mason's 46-yard interception: return and Charles Johnson's 17-yard; return of a fumble that gave the Ragin't Cajuns a 14-7 first-quarter lead. "It seemed like every time we gained momentum, we turned it over," Stewart said. "Practically nothing went our way." In the second quarter, Southwester went 92 yards on a drive that consume 7:42, going ahead 21-7 on Jake Delhomme's 1-yard pass to Cody Romero. The drive included four third-: down conversions and two fourth-dowry conversions. D'Andre Hardeman, whose 1-yard run gave Texas A&M a brief lead in the first period, ran 39 yards for his second, TD to cut A&M's deficit to 21-13 at halftime. I == 1 " S p ® . t '-mac ao a a o UCa o ace °6 Qfl0a0t aa a=pa . Q oa+ i r ~ J a n " $1 w I II f t 1 II aooo a o00o m1t E. { :. OQO QQ N It t Q C} . a . " t Op -I t sl 11 -as nnnIsn MAlieLIn