4B -The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, September 23, 1996 GAME STATISTICS ASSENG Hasselbeck nearly too much for Blue layer C-A Yds TD tnt reisbach 19-28 292 2 1 P P D Totals 19-28 292 2 1 RUSHING Player *Att Williams 25 Floyd 5 Dreisbach 11 Shaw 1 Totals 42 RECEIVING Player No. Tuman 4 Shaw 5 Streets 4 Williams 3 Campbell 1 Floyd 2 Totals 19 PUNTING Player Griese Peristeris Yds 133 5 -7 -20 111 Yds 99 54 44 43 35 17 292 No. 2 2 Avg L 5.3 1.0 -.6 -20 2.6 3 Avg L 24.8 5 10.8 11.0 2 14.3 35.0 8.5 15.3 5 Yds A 63 31 43 21 Avg 18.0 3Avg 23.3 Asst 1 i 4 1 1 0 0 3 0 1 0 1 0 L 3 3 L 5 2 2 2 3 1 5 ai 1. 1 Lg TD 32 0 3 0 0 1 0 0 32 1. Lg TD 58 1 23 1 20 0 26 0 35 0 14 0 58 2 vg Lg L.5 32 L.5 31 Lg TD 18 0 Lg TD 31 0 Tot 10 9 7 6 6 5 5 4 4 3 3 3 By Barry Sollenberger Daily Sports Editor Coming into the season, Boston College coach Dan Henning knew his team wasn't going to be that good. Sure, he welcomed back, 15 starters, but that was from a team' that went 4-8. And most impor- tantly, the man who was sup- posed to be the 16th starter- quarterback Mark Hartsell; bolted early for the NFL. The Eagles were left without an expe- rienced signal-caller. } Hello, quarterback controver- sy. } Henning had two to chdose from - Scott Mutryn and Matt Hasselbeck. For Boston College's opener against Hawaii, Henring picked Mutryn to start. Through three quarters against th 1 Rainbows, Mutryn was runnin4 the Eagles into the grotnd. Henning turned to Hasselbeck imn the fourth quarter, and the junior responded by leading Bostoin College to a come-from-behind victory. Last week against Virgir*a Tech, Boston College ;vas bombed, 45-7, but Hasselbeck was 25-of-42 for 221 yards, j a touchdown and an intercepticon. Then yesterday, he almost led the Eagles to a stunning upset of Nk. The ball was so bad (from the rain) that it was like a shotput out there" - Matt Hasselbeck Boston College quarterback KICKOFF RETURNS Player No. Yds Butterfield 1 18 KICKOFF RETURNS Player No. Yds Winters 3 70 8 Michigan. Goodbye, quarterback contro- versy. At least, for now. While his numbers against the Wolverines weren't spectacular (I 7-of-29 for a touchdown and two interceptions), he and wide receiver Steve Everson kept the Eagles in the game. "I think our guys played hard," Henning said. "(There were) adverse conditions, tough weath- er, and an outstanding football team on the other side. I'm proud of our players." Hasselbeck and Everson hooked up on Boston College's first scoring play, a three-yard touchdown pass early in the sec- ond quarter. The junior wide receiver caught six passes for 63 yards and a touchdown. More impressively, he finished the game. In the fourth quarter. Everson took some vicious hits from Michigan defensive backs and held onto the ball - and his head. "I'm very pleased with the per- formances of some of our wide receivers," Hasselbeck said. "The ball was so bad (from the rain) that it was like a shot put out there. Then a guy like Steve Everson would make an amazing catch. They helped me out a lot." Unfortunately for Hasselbeck, the quarterback did not receive much help from his offensive line. The signal-caller spent a good deal of the afternoon with his face buried in Michigan Stadium's turf. He was sacked six times for minus-61 yards. Hasselbeck spent most of the afternoon running for his life from David Bowens and compa- ny, and he still was able to com- plete passes to six different receivers. The junior, however, gave most of the credit for the fine passing performance to his receivers. "Michigan was laying them out," Hasselbeck said. "Hitting them hard, and they kept bounc- ing up. I think it sent a messa to Michigan's defensive backs that our receivers were there to play" Despite its gutsy performance, Hasselbeck's receiving corps failed to come through at the game's most critical juncture. Late in the third quarter, 'the Eagles enjoyed a 14-7 lead and were on the move again. improbable upset was in rea So were the cyanide capsules for Michigan fans. Facing a third-and- 1I from the Michigan 39, Hasselbeck rolled left and spotted a wide-open Anthony DiCosmo. The quarter- back's pass hit DiCosmo in the hands, but the freshman juggled the ball, allowing free safety Daydrion Taylor to make the interception at the Michigan Z If DiCosmo had made the catch, it would have been cyanide city for the Wolverines. Instead, Michigan proceeded to drive 79 yards to tie the game, and then they took the lead for good on their following posses- sion. DEFENSE PlayerS Irons Sword Bowens Carr Steele Gopenhaver Ray Feazell Winters Hankins Taylor Woodson Team Stats First Downs Rushes/Yards4 Passing Yards Offensive Plays Total Offense Return Yards Solo 9 5 6 5 6 5 2 4 3 3 2 3 MARK FRIEDMAN/Daily Boston College quarterback Matt Hasselbeck, with the help of receiver Steve Everson, nearly beat Michigan on Saturday. Mich 20 42/111 292 70 403 88 1 Comp/Att/Int 19/28/1 Punts/Avg 4/26.5 Fumbles/Lost 7/2 Penalties/Yards 6/40 Time of Poss 29:05 MICHIGAN SCHEDULE ,Aug. 31 ILLINOIS .Sept. 14 Colorado Sept. 21 BC B.C. 18 44/110 166 73 276 33 17/29/2 6/50.5 4/1 6/68 30:55 W 20-8 W 20-13 W 20-14 EAGLES Continued from Page 11B Hasselbeck was chased out of bounds for a five-yard loss on first down, and on second down his attempted pass to receiver Kenyatta Watson was tipped by Michigan free safety Chuck Winters and intercepted by linebacker Jarrett Irons. After two offensive plays, the game ended, and Michigan had barely hung on. "I don't think it was scary at all," Irons said. "Our mindset is if there is time left on the clock, we can come back and win the game." For Boston College, a team coming off a 45-7 loss last weekend to Virginia Tech, it was close, but close wasn't nearly good enough. "Maybe down the line I can say this is a confidence-building game for us," Hasselbeck said. "But right now we're really down." Probably only slightly more down than the Michigan offense, however. In spite of putting 408 yards of total offense on the board, Michigan strug- gled to put up 20 points and probably should have had 21 before the first quarter was over. Michigan fumbled the ball seven times -- twice on kick returns - resulting in two turnovers. Dreisbach threw one interception and overthrew a wide-open Streets on what would have been a sure touchdown. "We're so close to being a great offense," Dreisbach said. "I don't think we're going to let any of this happen again." Michigan opened the scoring late in the first quarter when receiver Russell Shaw made a tremendous, over-the- shoulder catch of a 23-yard Dreisbach toss ino the zone. Boston College tied the game early in the second when Hasselbeck hit Everson vith a three-yard touchdown pass, and the Eagles took the lead in the third on a 20-yard run by Omari Walker. Boston College rushed for 110 yards on the game, but 79 of those yards camte in the second half. "Today was not a Michigan style of defense," Irons said. "We came out there and let them run on us. By no means is that the way we're supposed to play." While *4ichigan sees the need for continued improvement after the game, Boston College coach Dan Henning ees only one thing to take away fronAnn Arbor. "We .take away a loss," he said. "That is the unfortunate part." front corner of the end Sept. 28 UCLA 3:30 p.m. Oct. 5 Northwestern Oct. 19 INDIANA Oct. 26 Minnesota Nov. 2 MICHIGAN STATE Nov. 9 Purdue Nov. 16 PENN STATE "Nov. 23 Ohio State :HOME GAMES IN CAPS Scoring summary First Quarter Mich - Shaw, 23-yard pass from Dreisbach (Hamilton kick), 1:50 Second Quarter BC - Everson, 3-yard pass from Hasselbeck (Matich kick), 13:12 Third Quarter BC - Walker, 20-yard run (Matich kick), 4:22 Fourth Quarter Mich - Dreisbach, 1-yard run (Hamilton kick), 14:47 Mich - Tuman, 58-yard pass from Dreisbach (Hamilton's kick blocked), 8:59 Michigan 7 0 0 13-20 B.C. 0 7 7 0-14 at Michigan Stadium A - 105, 219 USA Today/CNN The USA Today/CNN Coaches Top 25 college football poll, with first- place votes in parentheses. Team Record 1. Florida (38) 3-0 2. Florida State (22) 2-0 3. Penn State 4-0 4. Ohio State (2) 2-0 5. Notre Dame 3-0 '. Michigan 3. 7. Nebraska 1-1 8. Tennessee 2-1 9. Miami (Fla.) 3-0 10. Alabama 4-0 11. North Carolina 3-0 12. Arizona State 3-0 13. Kansas State 4-0 14. Texas 2-1 15. Colorado 2-1 Associated Press The new AP Top 25 College Football Poll with results from the past week. First-place votes in parentheses Team 1. Florida (52) 2. Florida State (13) 3. Penn State (1) 4. Ohio State 5. Notre Dame 6. Arizona State (1) 7. Michigan 8. Nebraska 9. Tennessee 10. Miami (Fla.) 11, North Carolina 12. Colorado 13. Texas 14. Alabama 15. Southern Cal 16. Kansas State 17. Louisiana State 18. Virginia Tech 19. Virginia 20. Kansas 21. Washington 22. Auburn 23. West Virginia 24. Brigham Young 25. Northwestern Record 3-0 2-0 4-0 2-0 3-0 3-0 3-4 1-1 2-1 3-0 3-0 2-1 2-1 4-0 3-1 4-0 2-0 3-0 3-0 2-0 2-1 3-1 4-0 3-1 2-1 16. Virginia Tech 17. Virginia 18. Southern Cal 19. Louisana State 20. Kansas 3-0 3-0 3-1 2-0 2-0 2-1 3-1 4- 3-1 2-1 21. 22. 23. 24.1 25.1 Washington. Auburn West Virginia Brigham Young Iowa Michigan receiver Russell Shaw watches the referee signal touchdown after Shaw hauled in a 2 3-yard Scott Dreisbach toss to put the Wolverines on top with 1:50 left in the first quarter. ii Arizona State stuns No. 1 Nebraska, 19-0 Wuerffel beats out Manning in quarterback duel; Notre Dame boots Longhorns The Associated Press PHOENIX - Top-ranked Nebraska had its 26-game winning streak snapped :Saturday night in a shocking 19-0 loss to No. 17 Arizona State on the same field where the Cornhuskers won their second straight national championship in January. The Sun Devils, routed by the !" - -._ -_-. 1 - - - ^7 ^1 1 _ _ _ _ _ __ .._ - - - 1- -1 mitted three turnovers against Arizona State, which was a 24-point underdog. Arizona State (3-0) pulled off the huge upset before a capacity crowd of 74,089 on a 91-degree night when the university hon- ored former coach Frank Kush, who led the Sun Devils to undefeated seasons in 1970 and 1975. The Sun Devils capped their 1975 .1 -- .~r+-,- - - second half and making it close at the end. Wuerffel had touchdown passes of 3.5,:10, 5 and 15 yards in the first 20 minutes, -vhile Peyton Manning had an unthinkable; four first-half interceptions. Manning came back strongly and completed 37-of-65 passs for 492 yards - all school records - and four touchdowns. Wuerffel was Il -of-22 fctr 155 ..,-4A but Texas punter Mark Schultis squibbed a 22-yard punt that gave Notre Dame (3-0) the ball at its 43 with 59 seconds left. Autry Denson ran for 22 yards nd Ron Powlus hit Malcolm Johnson with an 11-yard strike to set up Sanson's kick. Texas (2-1) led 24-17 and had momen- tum, but Notre Dame linebacker Lyron Cr 8,tinc int!nPnA t n' nac , Inmac DPmR rn How the top 25 fared- No. 1 Nebraska (1-1) lost to No. 17 Arizona State, 19-0. No. 2 Tennessee (2.1) lost to No. 4 Florida, 35-29. No. 3 Florida State (2-0) beat North Carolina St., 51-17. No. 4 Florida (3-0) beat No. 2 Tennessee,35-29. No. 5 Penn State (4-0) beat Temple, 41-0. No. 6 Texas (2-1) lost to No. 9 Notre Dame, 27-24. No. 7 Ohio State (2-0) beat Pittsburgh, 72-0. No. 8 Michigan (3-0) beat Boston College, 2014. No. 9 Notre Dame (3-0) beat No. 6 Texas, 27-24. No. 10 Miami (3-0) did not play No. 11 North Carolina (3-0) beat Georgia Tech, 16-0. No. 12 Colorado (2-1) did not play. No. 13 Alabama {4-0} beat Arkansas. 17-7. 4 I