4B - The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, September 30, 1996 4 GAME STATISTICS PASSING Player C-A Dreisbach 13-25 Griese 2-3 Brady 1-2 Totals 16-30 Tailbacks spell doom for UCLA Yds 236 10 13 259 RUSHING Player Att Howard 16 Anes 17 C. Williams14 Woodson 1 Dreisbach 3 Ford 2 Floyd 1 Griese 1 Totals 55 Yds 109 83 65 31 17 -1 0 300 3 3 5 L L } RECEIVING Player No. Yds Streets 3 88 C. Williams 3 83 Campbell 3 30 Shaw 3 28 Woodson 1 13 Howard 1 9 Tuman 1 6 Anes 1 2 Totals 16.259 Avg 6.8 4.6 4.6 31.0 5.7 -0.5 0.0 t-4.0 )5.4 Avg 29.3 27.7 10.0 9.3 13.0 9.0 6.0 2.0 16.1 Yds 100 76 TD 1 0 0 1 Lg 31 18 17 31 19 3 0 0 31 39 53 15 13 13 9 6 2 53 Avg 33.3 38.0 Int 1 0 1 2 TD 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 TD 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 Lg 46 39 TD 0 0 0 By Nicholas J. Cotsonika Daily Sports Editor The hits and the hurting were becom- ing a bit much for Clarence Williams, while he seemed to be carrying the ball every other down for the Wolverines. Williams needed help, and last week, he looked to fellow running back Chris Howard for it. "He was getting nailed pretty hard out there," Howard said. "And he told me, 'Man, please hurry up and come back."' Howard had missed two of Michigan's first three games. He could- n't play in the Wolverines' opener against Illinois, because he had incom- plete coursework. Banged up ribs kept him out of the Boston College game last weekend. That screwed things up a bit for the Wolverines' offense. Michigan coach Lloyd Carr said before the season that he wanted to use Williams and Howard equally. And without Howard, Williams became the Wolverines' running game, carrying the ball 77 times for 307 yards in three games. Fullback Chris Floyd, Michigan's third option in the backfield, carried the ball only 15 times for 33 'yards. Matters didn't seem to be improving last week, either. Carr didn't expect Howard to play against UCLA, and the junior practiced lightly on Tuesday. By Wednesday, however, Carr said he looked ready, and Howard said he felt fine. "I took a couple of shots in practice early," Howard said. "I knew the UCLA guys would hit a little harder in the game, but then I knew I would be all right." Howard's sore ribs didn't slow him down Saturday, and Carr finally was able to execute his plan, distributing the ball to both tailbacks. Though Howard had seven carries to Williams' 13 in the first half, Howard gained 63 yards to Williams' 62 and scored two touch- downs to Williams' none. With about 7 1/2 minutes left in the second quarter, Howard went off right tackle and broke wide for a 31-yard touchdown run, helping put the Wolverines ahead, 14-0. "It was one of those fortunate plays where the defense was in the wrong place at the wrong time," Howard said. "Thank God it was the right time for me." He scored another touchdown five minutes later, starting at left guard and cutting back for 10 yards to cross the goal line. After Remy Hamilton's point after, Michigan led, 21-3. In the second half, Howard complet- ed what he called his "coming out party." He ran for 46 more yards, and - oh, yes - he scored two more touch- downs. He scored on six- and seven- yard runs less than five minutes apart in the third quarter. Howard was just one touchdown short of Michigan's record for touchdowns in a game, which was set when Ron Johnson scored five against Wisconsin in 1968. "I haven't scored that much since high school," Howard said. PUNTING, Player Peristeris Griese No. 3 2 KICKOFF RETURNS Player No. Yds Butterfield 3 44 Woodson 0 13 Totals 3 57 PUNT RETURNS Player No. Yds Avg 14.7 0.0 19.0 Avg 3.8 -1.0 2.8 L9 13 23 L9 9 9 3 3 3 Winters Shaw Totals 4 1 5 15 -1 14 DEFENSE Player Carr Copenhaver Feazell Winters Ray Sword Bowens Hankins Woodson Mayes Renes B. Williams J. Williams Solo 4 4 3 3 4 3 2 0 2 2 1 1 1 Asst 2 2 2 2 0 1 1 3 1 0 1 1 1 g TD S0 ) 0 9 0 Tot 6 6 5 5 4 4 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 Michigan's Chris Howard scores one of his four touchdowns against UCLA on Saturday. The junior rushed for a career-high I by Ron Johnson against WLconsin in 1968. Derrick Alexander was the last Wolverine to score four touchdowns, accomplishli Woodson's more than just window dressing 6 < PASS DEFENSE Player Int Yds Woodson 2 27 Swett 1 15 Elston 0 0 Ray 0 0 Totals 3 42 Lg 27 15 0 0 27 Brk-up 2 0 1 1 4 TD 0 0 0 0 0 Team Stats First Downs Rushes/Yaj'ds.c Passing Yards Offensive Plays Total Offense Return Yards Mich 25 55/300 259 85 559 71 UCLA 7 24/108 62 55 170 97 By Nicholas J. Cotsonika Daily Sports Editor Charles Woodson is not a stand-in. IHe does not play offense, defense and special teams for the Wolverines to fill in, help out, or patch up anything. He is there to electrify. But until Woodson, a cornerback by trade, intercepted two passes, caught a pass for 13 yards, returned a kickoff 13 yards, and ran a reverse for 31 yards Saturday against the Bruins, UCLA coach Bob Toledo thought Woodson's three-way deal meant Michigan's offense had a one-way ticket to nowhere. He quickly realized he was wrong. "When we first saw him at receiver, I thought it was because (Michigan's) receivers aren't very good," Toledo said. "But it's because you have to use his talents" Since Woodson can turn a 10-yard loss into a 31-yard gain, and then stop, change from offense to defense, inter- cept a pass, and breathe easy, Michigan coach Lloyd Carr refuses to keep him on the sidelines. And Woodson refuses to disappoint. For example, Woodson took a hand- off from running back Clarence Williams on a reverse in the third quar- ter, and the play should have been over right away. UCLA anticipated it and clogged up Woodson's path on the left side. "We had the reverse stopped," Toledo said. Carr said UCLA had the play "defended to perfection." But Woodson imitated Barry Sanders, stopping abruptly and kicking up grass as he changed direction. He avoided one tackler and then sprinted up the right sideline, nearly scoring before being pushed out of bounds at the six-yard line. "When I went around, I knew I was- n't going to get anything, Woodson said. "So I turned around and went the other way, and it was a wide open field. I was just trying to make something happen." The 31-yard run set up the Wolverines' touchdown that put them ahead, 28-3. "He made a great individual play that great individual players make," Carr said. "It gave us a real boost, because on third down, if he had made a 10-yard loss, we would have had to punt, and we wouldn't have scored." Woodson caught a 13-yard pass in the second quarter. He also chipped in on special teams, taking a handoff from Tyrone Butterfield on the opening kick- off and gaining 13 yards on the reverse. On defense, Woodson made both of his interceptions in the third quarter. On the Bruins' first drive of the second half, he picked off UCLA quarterback ;. Cade McNown'sf pass on the Michigan 37-yard line and returned it 27 yards. About 10 minutes later, Woodson picked off McNown again at the Michigan 43. The two-interception performance tied his career-high, which came against Ohio State last season. Woodson now has 93 rushing yards and 13 receiving yards on the season. He also has 18 tackles and three intercep- tions. "It's just a great feeling to know the coaches want to use you that way," Woodson said. "I'll just keep play- ing hard and trying to make things happen." Ong .t Sophomore Charles Woodson has become Michigan's first legitimate two-way player since 1964. Here's what he's done this season: Three rushes for 93 yards One reception for 13 yards ! 12 solo tackles Six assisted tackles 11 Thr~ee interceptions with a total of 28 return yards Six pass break-ups last season: No offensive plays * 65 total tackles Five interceptions for 46 return yards Comp/Att/Int 16/30/210/31/3 Punts/Avg 5/35.2 9/37.6 Fumbles/Lost 2/0 1/0 Penalties/Yards 6/53 6/44 Time of Poss 36:57 23:03 MICHIGAN SCHEDULE Aug. 31 ILLINOIS W 20-8 Sept. 14 Colorado W 20-13 Sept. 21 BC W 20-14 Sept. 28 UCLA W 38-9 Oct. 5 Northwestern12:30 p.m. Oct. 19 INDIANA 12:30 p.m. Oct. 26 Minnesota 7 p.m. Nov. 2 MICHIGAN STATE Noon Nov. 9 Purdue 1 p.m. Nov. 16 PENN STATE Noon Nov. 23 Ohio State Noon HOME GAMES IN CAPS Scoring summary First Quarter No Scoring Second Quarter Mich - C, Williams, 53-yard pass from reisbach (Hamilton kick), 13:34 Mich - Howard, 31-yard run (Hamilton kick), 7:47 UCLA - Merten, 25-yard field goal 4:39 Mich - Howard, 10-yard run (Hamilton kick), 2:42 Third Quarter z 0 W- Charles Woodson has become M 'M' breaks 2OPC i i time in 5 games By Ryan Wtethat much D~aiy Sports WriterThe offensive ex C'mon, admit it, you didn't expect have come at at Michigan to score any more than 20 Michigan. After fin points Saturday. non-conference s Exactly 20, sure, but definitely not Wolverines continu any more than that. After all, hadn't ence slate next the Wolverines hit that number the Northwestern. past four games? "I felt going into Well, Michigan hit blackjack we would have a Saturday against UCLA, scoring 21 Michigan coach Llo points in the second quarter alone. just didn't know wh The Wolverines ended up with 38 Apparently wheni points and more than 550 yards in INJURIEs: There total offense. It was their best offen- injury delays dur sive performance since last Oct. 28 game. when they piled up 623 yards and 52 With 13:55 left in noints against Minnesota. ter. Michigan left a plosion could better time nishing off th schedule, ue their con week agai the season t good offens oyd Carr 9a en. is now. were two 1 ring Saturd the second q guard Da f IMP, $r 1