The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - September 30, 1996 - 58 GAME STATISTICS Oense steps up, but let's all wait on tkis undefeated stuf PASSING Plaer Mc own Buck Totals RUSHING Player S. Hicks McNown Buck Price Totals C-A 8-27 2-4 10-31 Yds 39 23 62 Avg L 5.9 4.7 t 2.0 0.0 14.5 TD 0 0 0 L9 49 16 2 3 49 e chant rose from a portion of TMichigan Stadium somewhere in the middle of freshman John Anes' eight-straight carries to finish off Saturday's ball game. Michigan led UCLA, 38-9, and was about to move to 4-0 on the season. And the students knew it. "Undefeated, undefeated." So what?I I don't mean to rain on the parade, crash the party, or throw out any more cliches, but what Y does being unde- feated at this RYAN point really WHITE mean? White on I'11 tell you. Target It means the Wolverines have beaten three teams they were supposed to, and one they weren't, but should have been able to play with. That's it, and there's not a whole lot more. One only has to go back to last year to realize that a little caution is in order here. Michigan opened the season with five straight wins before dropping four of its last eight games. The great start was completely overshadowed by the mediocre finish. There is still a long and unpre- dictable conference road to be traveled, and there will be plenty of chances for Michigan to wind up on a detour going in the opposite direction of Pasadena. Now, if you'll allow me to flip-flop like a presidential candidate, let's wel- come the Michigan offense to the 1996 season. Quarterback Scott Dreisbach said last week that the Wolverines were close to being a great offense. This week we know the Wolverines are one step closer. They're not great - yet - but they are good. And there seems to be a load of potential there. Michigan cranked out 559 yards in total offense, and tailback Chris Howard had an easier time going between UCLA's tackles than he does going from class to class. It was a good game for an offensive breakthrough since Michigan's defen- sive philosophy (allow three plays and a punt) was really beginning to get boring, and we needed something new to watch. A lot of things finally went right for Michigan. Dreisbach began to hit the long pass plays he was missing in the previous three games, and his receivers began to prove that when the ball is there, they'll catch it. On the ground, the Wolverines sim- ply stuffed the ball down UCLA's throat. Michigan had 300 total yards on the ground, Howard had four touch- downs and three different backs had at least 14 carries. The biggest difference between the Michigan offense that put 20 points on the board against Boston College and the Michigan offense that put up 38 against the Bruins is simple, however. Saturday, the Wolverines took advan- tage of their opportunities. They took advantage of the field position; they took advantage of the turnovers; they took advantage of UCLA's mistakes. Michigan did what it was supposed to do. So now we wait to see if that trend continues. The Wolverines will be favored next weekend against Northwestern. The same will be true in the following weeks when the opponents are the likes of Indiana, Minnesota and Michigan State. It's no different than last season when everyone around here expected Michigan to cruise undefeated into the Penn State showdown. The same is being expected now, and there is no reason why it shouldn't hap- pen. Then again, there doesn't necessar- ily have to be. A loss could just sneak up on the Wolverines, if they're not careful. As the Wolverines left the field Saturday, some one yelled that the Wildcats were next; that Michigan owed them for last season's loss. The Wolverines owe paybacks to a couple of teams coming up on the schedule, but they owe themselves the opportunity to face Penn State and Ohio State with the Rose Bowl on the line. This is a good Michigan football team. It is getting better and could be great before the year is out. As for that undefeated stuff, we'll talk in December. - Ryan White can be reached over e-mail at target(gaumich.edu. Aft 2 7 2 3 24 Yds 71 33 4 0 108 Int 3 0 3 TD 0 0 0 0 0 RECEIVING Player No. McBride 2 Ayers 1 Clark 2 Pierce 1 S. Hicks 1 Price 3 Totals 10 PUNTING Player Sailer Yds 28 8 8 8 7 3 62 Avg 14.0 8.0 4.0 8.0 7.0 3.0 6.2 Lg 21 8 5 8 7 2 21 Avg 37.6 9 L9 3 2 ) 28 4 28 No. Yds 9 338 KICKOFF RETURNS Player I K. Brown R. Roques Total No. 4 1 5 r MARK FRIEDMAN/Daily yOrds against the Bruins. His touchdown total was one short of the school record set the feat in 1992. DEFENSE PlayerS Wilimer Cobbs Guidry Magee Neufeld Ward McCullough Kirschke A. Roques Colbert Forde Huma Thompkins Williams Atkins Cline Holland Serwanga Smith PASS DEFENSE Player Int1 Ward 2 Williams 0 Yds 69. 28 97 Solo 12 9 9 3 4 4 6 2 3 2 2 2 1 1 0 2 1 2 1 Yds 59 0 Avg 17.;: 28.C 19.4 Asst 3 0 0 6 4 4 1 4 3 2 2 1 2 2 2 0 1 '0 1 TD 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 s L9 50 g TD 7 0 8 0 8 0 Tot 15 9 9 9 8 - 8 7 6 6 4 4 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 2 I IiIOM / IA BRUINS Continued from Page 16 junior rushed for four touchdowns and a career-high 109 yards on 16 carries. "Chris played the best he's played at Michigan," Carr said. "I think you saw today the back he's capable of being." Howard scored on runs of 31, 10, six and seven yards as the Wolverines built their 35-3 lead. Michigan quarterback Scott Dreisbach also had a superb day. The sophomore completed just two of his first 1 I passes, but rebounded to finish 13 of 25 for 236 yards with a touch- down and an interception. His counterpart, Cade McNown, had a horrendous outing. The UCLA ::..: ;.U" .. quarterback was eight of 27 for a minuscule 39 yards and three intercep- tions. The Bruins only touchdown came on Philip Ward's 42-yard inter- ception return on the first play of the fourth quarter. UCLA is now 1-2, and the road doesn't get any easier for first-year coach Bob Toledo. The Bruins travel to Oregon next week and host No. 5 Arizona State on Oct. 12. A 1-4 start seems likely. "We are not about to point our fin- gers at anyone," UCLA coach Bob Toledo said. "Everyone needs them pointed at them. (Michigan) is a real physical football team, and I think some of their skilled players showed up today." If the blowout had a key series, it took place midway through the second quarter with the Wolverines leading, 14-0. UCLA running back Skip Hicks had given his team a first-and-goal at the Michigan four-yard line with a 49-yard run. The Wolverines' defense stiffened, and three plays netted negative three yards. The Bruins had to settle for Bjorn Merten's 25-yard field goal, cutting the lead to 14-3. On their next possession, the Wolverines went 67 yards in five plays. Howard's 10-yard scoring jaunt and Remy Hamilton's extra point made the score, 21-3, with under two minutes remaining until halftime. Michigan put the game out of reach on its second possession of the second half. Faced with a third-and-four at the UCLA 37, the Wolverines ran a reverse to Charles Woodson. The sophomore faced a wall of Bruins and a probable 10-yard loss on the left sideline, so he cut back to his right and raced 31 yards to the UCLA six. Howard scored on the next play and the Bruins were done, trailing, 28-3. "You have to give them credit," McNown said. "They played hard and OPU stuffed us in nearly every aspect. But it was one of those things when we stopped us more than they did." The small amount of UCLA fans who made the trip must have won- dered if they were actually watching their volleyball team in football jer- seys. The 29-point loss was the Bruins' worst in nearly four years. All this from a team that gave then- No. 2 Tennessee trouble before losing, 35-20, three weeks ago "I thought it would be a much clos- er game, from looking at them on film," Woodson said. "We didn't really know what to expect." Michigan held UCLA to 108 yards rushing, with the majority of that total coming on Hicks' long run. The mismatch allowed Carr to go to his bench midway through the third quarter. Brian Griese and Tom Brady both saw time at quarterback. Griese completed two-of-three passes for 10 yards, and Brady was one-of-two with an interception. Neither quarterback led a touchdown drive, although the game ended with Griese behind center and the Wolverines on the move. "In the fourth quarter, we got to play a lot of guys," Carr said. "I think we're in position right where we want to be in this Run for the Roses." Lng 42 0 Brk-up 0 2 TD 1 0 UCLA Sept. 7 Tennessee Sept. 14 NE LOUISIANA Sept. 28 Michigan L 35-20 W 44-0 L 38-9 Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Nov. Nov. Nov. Nov. 5 12 19 26 2 9 16 23 Oregon ARIZONA STATE Washington California STANFORD WASHINGTON STATE Arizona USC HOME GAMES IN CAPS MRK FREDMAa'i" l two-way player since 1964. Fot fis111 Oarterback Tom Brady would prob- ably like to forget all about his first career pass. Under heavy pressure, Brady fired the ball toward the right sideline and into the arms of UCLA's Phillip Ward. Ward rumbled 42 yards to the end zone for the Bruins' only touchdown of the day. A BETTER START: Freshman full- *ck John Anes had a much better debut for the Wolverines. Anes found his way into the line- up in the second half a carried the ball a team high 17 times for 83 .yards. His performance put him sec- ond on Michigan's rushing list for Up next Who: Northwester (1-0 Big Ten, 3-1 overall) Where: Dyche Stadium, Evanston When: Oct. 5, 12:30 p.m., EDT (The game will be televised, but the station will be announced pend- ing the Major League Baseball playoffs.) At a glance Key Performers For Michigan, Chris Howard rushed for 109 and four touchdowns. Howard missed last week's game against Boston College with a rib injury. Aside from having two inter- ceptions, defensive back Charles Woodson had a 31-yard run on a reverse. For UCLA, linebacker Ryan Neufeld recorded 15 tackles, 11 solo, on what was a very busy day for the UCLA defense. Key Play With Michigan up, 7-0, in the second quarter, the Wolverines drove the ball down to the UCLA 31-yard line. After quarterback Scott Dreisbach threw deep and incomplete to receiv- er Tai Streets on first down, tailback Chris Howard took a second-down hand-off 31-yards for the Wolverines' second score. Big Ten Standings Team CoOf. overall Michigan 10 4.0 Michigan State 1-0 2-2 Northwestern 1-0 3-1 Penn State 1-0 5-0 Minnesota 0-0 3-0 Ohio State- 0- - 3-0 Iowa 0-0 2-1 Illinois 0-1 1-3 Indiana 0-1 2-2 Wisconsin 0-1 3-1 Purdue 0-2 1-3 Se ': Michigan leads all-time 41-12-1 The sixth-ranked Wolverines return to the Big Ten portion of their schedule with something tq prove. Last season, Northwestern made Ann Arbor just one more stop on its way to the Rose Bowl. The Wildcats handed Michigan its first loss of 1995 with a 19-13 win. It was Northwestern's first win in Michigan Stadium since 1959. Northwestern returns top players on both sides of the ball. Darnell Autry ran for 1,675 yards last season and, despite a late-season injury; line- backer Pat Fitzgerald finished the year with 130 tackles. MARK FRIEDMAN/Daily UCLA quarterback Cade McNown is pursued by David Bowens on Saturday. Too strong: Buckeyes roll over Notre Dame The Associated Press SOUTH BEND, Ind. - Ohio State showed coach John Cooper that his third-ranked team really is as good as he thought after a 29-16 win over No. 5 Notre Dame. "They were pretty good (Saturday)," Cooper said of his team. "We iust need ing kickoff, which Dimitrious Stanley returned for 85 yards before being dragged down at the Irish 13. Four plays later, Pepe Pearson scooted three yards into the end zone. PENN STATE 23, WIsCONSIN 20 Brett Conway's 25-yard field goal with 1:23 remaining lifted Penn State yards for Penn State. NORTHWESTERN 35,INDmLANA 17 Darnell Autry rushed for 128 yards and three touchdowns and D'Wayne Bates caught two touchdown passes as Northwestern used big plays and big Indiana mistakes for a 35-17 victory. Indiana (2-2. 0-1) came in ranked yards and scoring three touchdowns as the Boilermakers beat North Carolina State, 42-21, Saturday. The Boilermakers (0-1, 1-3) accu- mulated 493 yards in avoiding their worst start since 1982. The Wolfpack (0-3) nearly matched Purdue's produc- tion. finishing with 436. but didn't seri- i