The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - October 21, 1996 - 58 Midway through the season, Michikan still isn 't showing signs of improvement GAME STATISTICS PASSING Player Rodgers Totals RUSHING Player Smith Surface Rodgers Spear Totals C-A Yds TD 10-18 124 0 10-18 124 '0 mprovement is key for every col- lege football team.To accomplish pre-season goals, teams must be better each game, each week. The Michigan Wolverines are no different. They, too, must continue to improve this season if they want to achieve their primary pre-season goal - a Rose Bowl berth. So are the Wolverines improving at a rate that will help them fulfill that goal ? Not by a long shot. Witness Saturday's game against Indiana, the worst team in the Big Ten. The Hoosiers haven't won a conference game this season and aren't likely to win one the rest of the way. And yet Michigan was only seven points better than them Saturday. "I don't think we improved in this game," Michigan quarterback Scott Dreisbach said. "We made a lot of mistakes." Enough mistakes, in fact, to keep the game in doubt until late in the fourth quarter. The Hoosiers weren't finished until quarterback Jay Rodgers was stopped for no gain on fourth-and-one at the Michigan 29 with under two minutes left. Was this the same Michigan team that won at Colorado a month ago and destroyed UCLA on Sept. 28'? Of course not. "I think we're awfully banged up," Michigan coach Lloyd Carr said. "We're not playing with the same kind of emotion we played with earlier in the year." Emotion isn't the only thing the Wolverines are lacking. The passing game. running game and defense are missing, too. Quarterback Scott BARRY Dreisbach cer- SOLLENBERGER tainly isn't Sollenberger improving. His in Paradise receivers need- ed to be about 10-feet tall to catch his passes against Indiana. He constantly overthrew them en route to a 17-of-35 day. "I missed a lot of wide-open guys," he said. "I overthrew guys that I usually wouldn't have in prac- tice. "I didn't improve this week. I went backwards." In fairness to Dreisbach, he took a hit to his left shoulder early and played the entire game in pain. But it's no excuse. "We don't have any choice but to get better for Minnesota," Dreisbach said. Michigan's running game also went the wrong way against the Hoosiers. The Wolverines did gain 171 yards on the ground, but 48 of that total came on a Charles Woodson reverse. Other than that. Michigan's longest run was 1I yards. "We're not running the ball the way I think we need to in order to be a good football team," Carr said. "Our problem offensively is that we're not making any big plays." Surprisingly, the Wolverines' defense was missing in action against Indiana. The defensive unit - the strength of the team - allowed the Hoosiers to march up and down the field, especially dur- ing the first half. Indiana led, 17-7, at one point and could have led 20-7 if an early field-goal attempt hadn't sailed wide. "I think a lot of (the problems) had to do with tackles," Michigan cornerback Woodrow Hankins said. "We may have been able to tackle better. I can't really put my finger on it." In fairness to Michigan's defense, it is not injury-free either. A number of linebackers, including captain Jarrett Irons, are nursing foot injuries. But there's one thing about injuries. Everybody has them. And Carr has said a million times that they are not an excuse for poor performances. So what's the problem'? "I don't know why we didn't improve," Dreisbach said. "We had great practices in the two weeks off. We really came together. It just did- n't come together today." Through it all, the Wolverines did survive the Hoosiers to remain in the run for the roses. But they'll be out of the race in a hurry if they play like that again. "Whatever it is, we need to get it figured out," Carr said. "Because right now, we're not a very good football team, offensively or defen- sively." Minnesota is next up for Michigan, and the Golden Gophers are bad. But so was Indiana. If the Wolverines don't improve on Saturday's performance, something bad will likely happen to them. sooner than later. They'll lose. Barr -so/enberger can be reached oi er e-mail at jsOl/@uiicflhi(h.edu. Att 34 1 10 6 51 RECEIVING Player No. Smith 1 Wilkerson 2 Ward 3 Yds 99 29 11 1 140 Yds 47 35 18 16 7 124 No. 4 4: Lee Klusmeyer Totals 2 1 10 Avg 2.9 29.0 1.1 .2 2.7 4Avg 147.0 17.5 6.0 8.0 7.0 12.4 Yds 178 4 178 4 S s Avg 2 21.0 7 27.0 9 23.0 Lg 8 29 5 4 29 L9 47 24 8 10 7 47 Avg 44.5 4.5 2Lg 25 S27 27 PUNTING Player Sutkowski Total Int 1 1 TD 1 0 0 0 1 w TD 0 0 0 0 0 0 Lg 59 59 TD 0 70 70 Tot 12 8 8 6 6 6 4 4 3 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 KICKOFF RETURNS Player Stoner Allen Total No. 2 1 3 Yds 42 27 69 DEFENSE Player S Warnecke Baisley Surface Allen Allotey Robinson Jones Shaw Ogunleye Davis Gall King McGrath Glaser Haywood Miller Smith PASS DEFENSE Player mt1 Warneke 0 Allen 2 Totals 2 Solo S0 7 8 4 4 5 2 4 2 1 2 2 2 1 0 0 1 Yds 0 73 73 Asst 3 1 0 2 2 1 2 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 Indiana a forgettable game for Dreisbach, but a win nonetheless Lng 0 42 42 Brk-up 1 2 3 TD 0 2 2 [iink one-way Iton moxed into fifth place on Michigan's je scoring list, kicking two field goals and pt-afters to record nine points. His 242 assed Heisman Trophy-winner Tom on, who accumulated 237 points from 40. Anthony Carter is in fourth place, just Dints ahead of Hamilton. ;nilton is also t'wo field goals short of Mike te's all-time field goal record of 53, set 1985-88. Hamilton is third in career kick rg. ranwhile, Irons led the Wolverines in tack- ith 12 and moved from seventh to fifth in tackles. He now has 388, vaulting him Calvin O'Neal (378, 1974-76) and 1annavino (385. 1977-80). Irons is a is Award semifinalist. NDREDT1 HiiowcoMING: Saturday d Michigan's 100th homecoming game. gan is now 74-24-2 (.750) in homecoming ; and has won 26 of its past 29. The game marked Michigan's 133rd consecutive I of over 100,000 fans. I~let Minnesota (0-3 Big Ten, 3-3 overall) ire: Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome 669) dp: Oct. 27, 8 p.m. EDT (ESPN 2) is: Michigan leads all-time 60-23-3 the annual battle for the Little Brown when the 10th-ranked Wolverines face esota. The game takes on added rtance for Minnesota coach Jim dker. Wacker agreed to resign at the I*he season if the Golden Gophers ' win at least five games this season. By Ryan White Daily Sports Writer Here's what Michigan quarterback Scott Dreisbach will remember about Saturday's game: it was a win. Other than that, Michigan's 27-20 victory will be rather forgettable. Actually, one could forgive Dreisbach if he came down with a case of selec- tive amnesia. "I made mistakes; I threw bad passes: my stats were horrible," said Dreisbach. summing up his own performance. It would be hard to argue with him. On the day, Dreisbach completed just 17-of-35 passes. His 48.6 completion percentage was the third-lowest of his career. He threw one touchdown pass, but he was picked off twice. Indiana safety Eric Allen had both interceptions. He returned the first 42 yards for a touchdown. "I was playing a little DB, and a little free safety," Allen said. "I don't know if' he knew I was there or not (on the inter- ceptions), but he was telegraphing all of his passes." Statistically, Dreisbach was coming off his best game in a Michigan uniform. He connected on 20-of-28 passes for 214 yards against Northwestern two weeks ago. And it may be the Northwestern game, in part, that was responsible for Dreisbach's performance against the Hoosiers. Midway through the second quarter of Michigan's 17-16 loss to the Wildcats, Northwestern linebacker Casey Dailey blitzed, and blindsided Dreisbach. Not only did Dreisbach cough up the ball, but he also hyper extended his elbow and partially separated his shoul- der on the play. The shoulder injury was re-aggravat- ed in the first quarter against Indiana. Dreisbach didn't tell anyone. because he didn't want to leave the game, even though it was affecting him. "I think he was releasing the ball in a way that made the ball sail on him." Michigan coach Lloyd Carr said. And sail it did, right over most of Michigan's receivers' heads. Dreisbach overthrew receivers in the end zone, tight ends in the flat and running backs over the middle. He overthrew nearly everyone, despite the fact they were usually wide open. Dreisbach nearly waited too long to throw to tight end Jerame Tuman on Tuman's 19-yard touchdown catch in the fourth quarter. Wide receiver Tai Streets, who had 12 catches for 150 yards against Northwestern, finished Saturday with 63 yards on only two receptions. According to Streets, however, it was just one of those days. "It's there" said Streets of the chem- istry between Dreisbach and his receivers. "Just today it didn't click." Without the ability to throw the ball effectively, Michigan's offensive options were consequently limited. Cornerback/wide receiver Charles Woodson was Michigan's second-lead- ing rusher on the day. All 48 of Woodson's yards came on a second halt' reverse that went for a touchdown. "I knew we were going to have trou- ble moving the ball on the ground if we couldn't throw," Carr said. "We have to be able to throw the ball with more con- sistency than we did today." So it's back to the drawing board for Carr, Dreisbach and the entire Michigan offense. The Wolverines face Minnesota next week knowing that they'll have to play better if they want to retain any hope of winning the Big Ten and going to the Rose Bowl. "We didn't play well at all, particular- ly offensively," Carr said. "Certainly we have to play better than that. "We've got some improvements to make. If we don't, we'll have a long road to go." Indiana Sept. 7 Sept. 14 Sept. 21 Sept. 28 Oct. 5 Oct. 12 Oct. 19 Oct. 26 Nov. 9 Nov. 16 Nov. 23 Toledo MIAMI (OHIO) Kentucky N'WESTERN Illinois (2 OT) IOWA Michigan PENN STATE Michigan State OHIO STATE Purdue W 40-6 W 21-14 L 0-3 L 17-35 L 43-46 L 10-31 L 20-27 HOME GAMES IN CAPS At a glance Key Performers For Michigan, Charles Woodson was, once again, Charles Woodson. The sophomore cornerback/wide receiver had a 48-yard touchdown run off of a reverse, caught four passes for 55 yards and made two tackles. For Indiana, running back Alex Smith picked up 99 yards on the ground. He also had a pass reception good for 47 yards. Quarterback Jay Rodgers of was 10-of-18 in his first collegiate start. Key Play With Indiana driving deep into Michigan territory late in the fourth quarter, Michigan forced a fourth-and -one on its own 29-yard line. Rodgers kept the ball on an option-left and was stuffed by Michigan's David Bowens for no gain. The Wolverines took possession and ran out the remaining 1:35. MARK FRIEDMAN/Daily Michigan quarterback Scott Dreisbach completed this pass to tight end Jerame Tuman for a third-quarter touchdown. It was one of the few passes Dreisbach con- nected on all day. He finished the game just 17-of-35 and was intercepted twice. The first interception was returned 42 yards for a touchdown by Indiana's Eric Allen. 4 Ohio State romps; 'Cats win again Big Ten S Team Northwestern Ohio State Iowa Michigan State Michigan Penn State Illinois Purdue Minnesota Wisconsin Indiana Standings Conf. Overall 4-0 6-1 3-0 6-0 3-0 5-1- 3-1 4-3 2-1 5-1 2-2 6-2 1-2 2-4 1-3 2-5 0-3 3-3 .0-3 3-3 0-4 2-5 COLUMBUS (AP) - Pepe Pearson rushed for 152 yards, including a 64- yard touchdown run, as second-ranked Ohio State overcame its biggest deficit of the season to defeat Purdue, 42-14, Saturday. Purdue (1-3 Big Ten. 2-5 overall) shocked Ohio State (3-0, 6-0) with two long touchdown pass plays in opening a 14-0 lead. rrti4,fr.Im 11"Pr trxA 1 A1_ d t -ll{ (2-2, 6-2) for the first time since 1983. Banks, who also had a five-yard touchdown run in the second quarter, had 116 yards on 26 carries. Iowa's Tim Dwight had an 83-yard punt return for a touchdown, finishing with 172 all-purpose yards. No. 14 NORTHWESTERN 34, WisCONSIN 30 Steve Schnur took advantage of an back Ron Dayne. He gained seven yards on the first carry but defensive tackle Joe Reiff disrupted the second handoff and Dayne fumbled. Safety Eric Collier recovered at the Badgers 41 with 49 seconds left, set- ting up the final touchdown. MICHIGAN STATE 27, MINNESOTA 9 One pass and one sliver of daylight. That was all Octavis Long needed :. 1-r W--I, MA RAC TCAU ItJ J-xDC3' 1 I