Etj £irditgAhAzdg I 111111111pill!!''Impm!''I'l Imp'' y ' owe mic igo'O t Ai i N .k«Y R"i U Y T y ry: x ps N Y The great game that shouldn't %ave been r the moment, forget the ugli- ness. Forget the seven fumbles and the six penalties. Forget the two missed field goals and the two blocked kicks. Forget the offense that wasn't generated and the defense that good but could've been better. forget the downpour and the near- loss that almost dampened everything the Wolverines had accomplished seven days before. Forget it. Those mistakes will be examined all week. Now, for the moment, con- sider what this ho- Jm1 game ame. NICHOLAS J. This was a COTSONIKA game Michigan The Greek should've won Speaks big, something like 49-0 or 35-3 or 26-6. This was a game that an eighth-ranked team should've relished like a packed, hot, cheering section relishes a cool rain. This was a game where criticism I uld've been washed away and hesi- y replaced by boldness --big, intimidating boldness that makes noise. This game wasn't like that. But a great game it was. For the moment, try to understand what it's like to be down, 14-7, in the third quarter. Try to imagine it happen- ing in your place, in front of 105,219 of your fans, at the hands of a team no one respected, a week after one of the bi est wins of your life. or the moment, consider the driving rain, the fumbles that weren't caused by wetness, just hands that weren't strong enough. Consider the fear of letting progress disappear into more doubts and more questions about what is wrong with your team. And then, for the moment, consider that Michigan faced all of those things Saturday and won. It doesn't matter how bad Boston College was. It doesn't er whether it's Florida or Purdue. When you beat yourselves, as the Wolverines did much of the game, you lose your confidence. This was a game in which that should've happened. But it didn't. "When you're down, and you fight back like that, that's encouraging," Michigan coach Lloyd Carr said. "Our kids showed a lot of fight and a lot of heart to come back." The quarterback who seemed like he & dn't complete a long pass, Scott Dreisbach, hit Jerame Tuman for 58 yards and a touchdown. The defense that was mostly strong - but soft enough to allow two touch- downs - stopped Boston College's final four drives. Co-captain Jarrett Irons came up with the game-clinching interception with 41 seconds remain- ing, cradling the ball like a child he 't want to lose, cradling the ball :ause he didn't want to lose. But with all of the heart and desire the Wolverines showed while overcom- ing poor play, it was confidence and composure that allowed them to win. For the moment, remember the Wolverines traveled to Boulder, Colo., with nothing to lose and beat the No. S team in the nation. That was a game they should've lost. But they didn't. *nd then, consider how much it must have taken to beat Boston College with so much to lose. Consider how hard it is to nearly "self-destruct," as Carr put it, and then come back. Sometimes it takes more composure to survive when you struggle against the weak than it does to beat the strong. This was a game that shouldn't have been more difficult to win than the try- *Colorado game. But it was. We were on a high after Colorado, and we needed this game to bring us down to earth," said Clarence Williams, who fumbled twice and still ran for 133 yards. "But coach has instilled in us that we're Michigan, we're special. We're confident" I .I Wolverines don't fumble away victory By Ryan White Daily Sports Writer Eleven fumbles. Six turnovers. Four missed field goals. One missed extra-point attempt. Twelve penalties for 108 yards. What a game. If you're Michigan, it was a victory. If you're Boston College, it stank. "We feel lower than whale crap right now," Boston College quarterback Matt Hasselbeck said after No. 8 Michigan (1-0 Big Ten, 3-0 overall) came from behind Saturday to beat the Eagles (0-1 Big East, 1-2 overall), 20-14. The analogy was appropriate since many of the 105, 219 fans who sat [ .-7through a third- Michigan 20 quarter monsoon were as wet as. Ie mwolAA whales. 4A t ie14ve never played in a game where I really couldn't see the coaches on the sideline, said Michigan quarterback Scott Dreisbach, who had his best game of the season, completing 19 of 28 passes for 292 yards and two touchdowns. Still, the weather wasn't nearly as sloppy as the football game. Thanks mainly to mistakes and missed opportunities, the Wolverines entered the fourth qua-ter trailing the Eagles, 14- 7. On the second play of the final stanza, however, Dreisbach hit receiver Tai Streets for 20 yards to the Boston College one-yard line on third-and-10. Dreisbach dove into the end zone on the next play. Michigan took over its next possession at its own 29 after Boston College kicker John Matich missed on a 46-yard field goal attempt. Four plays later, Dreisbach hit tight end Jerame Tuman with a lob over the middle, and Tuman did the rest of the work en route to a 58-yard touchdown. Remy Hamilton's extra-point attempt, however, was blocked. This wasn't a surprise since Hamilton had already missed three field goals. So once again the game came down to Michigan's defense. And once again the defense came through for the Wolverines. Boston College drove the ball to the Michigan 40 on its next possession, but on third-and-seven, Hasselbeck was sacked by Juaquin Feazell. Hasselbeck fumbled and David Bowens recovered the ball for the Wolverines on the Eagles' 36. After three offensive plays and a Brian Griese punt, the defense was back on the field. Again Boston College drove into Michigan territory, but again the Eagles were stopped this time when Hasselbeck's fourth-down pass to receiver Steve Everson fell incomplete, and Michigan took over on its own 38. After three offensive plays and a Griese punt, the defense was back on the field - with 59 seconds left on the clock and only a six-point lead. See EAGLES, Page 4B MARK FRIEDMAN/Daily Russell Shaw celebrates with Zach Adami, Thomas Guynes and Jon Jansen after his first-quarter touchdown broke a scoreless tie. The 23-yard reception wasn't an easy one. Quarterback Scott Dreisbach lofted the ball high, and Shaw caught it over his shoulder in the corner of the end zone. Charging to the Former 'U' student amid pennan By James Goldstein Derek Jeter never ended up playing college contract with Daily Sports Writer baseball. Freehan sa n 18-year-old stepped onto the Ann The teenager, who started throwing the ball "could turn a Arbor scene four years ago, ready to around at age 5, knew when he moved to Ann Judging fr mbark on his freshman year. Arbor that he wouldn't stay long. Freehan's stal He did all the things that first-year students College would be but a short stop on the Jeter woul at the University tend to do. He lived in a dor- shortstop's path to his ultimate goal - the and could ha mitory with a roommate. He enrolled in intro- majors. program to on ductory courses. And he was one of the Michigan's baseball coach at the time, Bill But that'ss 106,000 screaming fans at Michigan football Freehan, wished he could have had Jeter play for The facts a games. his squad in the spring of 1993. But he knew stop for theA The kid from Kalamazoo knew early that he that the baseball phenom had one thing different Yankees, hea wanted to come to Michigan. His 3.82 grade- from any of his other players. regular seas point average at Kalamazoo Central High Jeter was already a member of a major league capture thep School could have gotten him into many acade- baseball team. The New York Yankees has Year Award. mic institutions, signed him to a minor-league contract in 1992 .318, has sev But not only did he come to Ann Arbor with and the Yankees agreed to pay for his education. 75 runs. a brain in his head, he came with a strong arm, Unfortunately for Freehan, the shortstop was Not only ai as well, too good, and the possibility of Jeter playing he gets the h A. baseball arm. college baseball evaporated when Jeter dotted in the clutcha to-p it race the Yankees in June 1992. aid that Jeter was someone who program around." om what Jeter has done since then, tement looks to be correct. d have graduated this past spring ave raised the Michigan baseball ne of the best in the country. speculation. ire that Jeter is the everyday short- American League East first-place ading into the final week of the on. He is the odds-on favorite to American League Rookie of the As of Saturday, Jeter is batting en home runs and has knocked in re his numbers strong, but it's when its that counts. Jeter came through as usual in a crucial game with the OF .", ESTAT1 l):l I