4B - The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, October 28, 1996 :.:J:"J: ': i " l: t::'::"SJ. f n {i J i.{'lt :ti1 : :fTf.'f:'J::. l:'. t'. ':: . ':.'.l t t is ': t f GAME STATISTICS Offense finally comes PASSING r! Player CGA Yds TD hn io r s:he 811184 10 through for 'M ' in big wa Brady 2-3 13 0 0 Griese 1-1 40 1 0 Totals 11-15 237 2 0 RUSHING Player Att Howard 12 C.Williams15 Floyd 4 Gold 3 Anes 2 Jackson 1 Dreisbach 2 Totals 39 RECEIVING Player No. Tuman 3 Shea 2 Howard 1 Shaw 1 Knight 1 Streets 1 Campbell 1 C. Williams 1 Totals 11 PUNTING Player Peristeris Yds 127 83 20 9 7 4 2 252 Avg 10.6 5.5 5.0 3.0 3.5 4.0 1.0 6.5 Yds Avg 101 33.7 13 6.5 12 12.0 9 9.0 40 40.0 36 36.0 27 27.0 -1 -1 237 21.5 No. Yds 3 128 Lg 86 26 11 5 6 4 7 86 Lg 63 7 12 9 40 36 27 -1 63 Avg 42.7 KICKOFF RETURNS Player No. Yds Butterfield 3 76 Totals 3 76 PUNT RETURNS Player No. Yds Winters 2 17 Totals 2 17 'Avg 25.3 25.3 Avg 8.5 8.5 L9 37 37 12 12 TD 2 1 0 0 1 0 0 4 TD 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 2 56 gTD l0 gTD 20 20 Tot 9 9 8 6 6 5 5 4 3 3 2 1 1 1 1 1 0 By Barry Sollenberger Daily Sports Editor MINNEAPOLIS - For Michigan football coach Lloyd Carr, it had almost become an obsession. The big play. Why was it missing? Where had it gone? Why had Michigan's offense had such trouble breaking it in the past two games? "We're just not breaking any big plays," Carr would say at every press conference. Indeed, the Wolverines seemed des- tined to live by the three-yard run and the seven-yard pass for the rest of the season. But in the past, many teams have healed their wounds against Minnesota, and Saturday night, Michigan did the same. The Golden Gophers gave up exactly what Carr and the Wolverines had been starving for. Big play after big play after big play. "You just cannot give up those big plays," Minnesota coach Jim Wacker, said. "It's that simple." Simple or not, Minnesota gave them up to the Wolverines - seven plays for over 20 yards, to be exact. Michigan's rushing attack was espe- cially impressive. The Wolverines rolled up 252 yards rushing on 39 car- ries, an average of almost 6.5 yards per attempt. In their past two games, Michigan running backs Clarence Williams and Chris Howard had not broken a run for more than 11 yards. Against Minnesota, the two backs combined for three carries over that mark and had two more runs that equalled 11 yards. Late in the first quarter, Howard took a handoff from Dreisbach at the Michigan 14-yard line, broke a couple of tackles, and didn't slow down until he had reached Minnesota's end zone 86 yards later. "The coaches stressed that that was our goal," Howard said. "I just didn't know that I was going to break it. I just didn't know it was going to be 86 yards." The run tied for the fifth longest in Michigan history and was the Wolverines' longest since the 1993 Rose Bowl when Tyrone Wheatley ran 88 yards against Washington. "(Howard's) run is the one that broke our backs," Wacker said. "That was the big one." After that, Michigan's running game was far from finished. Leading 14-7 early in the second quarter, Michigan had the ball first- and-10 at the Minnesota 26. Williams took a handoff from Dreisbach and beat the entire Minnesota defense to the sideline. He then scooted down the sideline for the touchdown, and the murder of the Gophers had begun. "(Minnesota's) overcommitted defense allowed us to make some big plays," Carr said. "When you get eight or nine men on the line of scrimmage, it gives you a chance to break a big one." You just cannot gh11+u those big Oly, WtO that *nple" -Jim Wacker x , Minnesota coach Quarterback Scott!t Dreisbach and the rest of the Michigpn passing attack also god into the act.x Dreisbach com- pleted 8-of-Il I passe for 184 yards and a tquchdownl. He; and his receivers had their way with th eMinesota sec- ondary, connecting on four plays that covered more than 210 yards. And they set the =too~ early against the Gophers. On the Wolverii~ts' second posses- sion, Dreisbach hit Mark Campbell; for 27 yards to the I4innesota 38. One play later, Dreisbach found a wide- open Tai Streets 36 yards down field for a touchdown. Later, on, Dreieach. hooked pup with tight eno1 Jerame Tuman on a coupile of plays th~at totaled .33 and 63 yard, respectively. Even backups quarterback Brian Griese -)lad soW.e big-play fun. On Michigap's finEO possession;. he threw 40 yards~to Maus Knight for a touch- down. The reception was, Knight's, first-ever touchdiown.. i DEFENSE Player Solo A Ray 7 Irons 5 Bowens 6 Hankins 5 Copenhaver 3 Sword 3 Woodson 5 Carr 3 Hendricks 3 Taylor 1 Feazel 2 Steele 1 Hall 1 Huff 1 Blackwell 1 Swett 0 Gold 1 PASS DEFENSE Player Int Yq Hankins 1 Totals 1. Team Stats Mich First. Downs 18 Rushes/Yards 39/252 PassingsYards 237 Offensive Plays 54 Total Offense 489 Return Yards 38 ;comp/Att/Int 11/15/C Punts/Avg 3/42.7 Fumbles/ Lost 0/0 "Penalties/Yards 6/35 Time of Pass 26:25 sst 2 4 2 1 3 2 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 From left to right William Carr, David Bowens and Glen Steele walk over a downed 4 i Yd 2: 2: IsLg 1. 21 1 21 Minn 23 38/76 283 75 359 0 TD 0 0 BROWN JUG Continued from Page 16 The Wolverines took over, and on the first play following the missed field goal, Dreisbach rolled to his right and hit a wide-open Jerame Tuman for 63 yards to the Minnesota one. Tuman, a tight end, had the best receiving day of his career, catching three passes for 101 yards. On the following play, full- back John Anes went off left tackle for a touchdown. The Gophers, who moments earlier had a chance to cut the lead to 14 or even to 10, now trailed, 34-10, with 14:37 to play in the game. When Woody Hankins picked off an errant Sauter pass on the next series, Minnesota fans said bye-bye to their team. So did Michigan. From that point, the Wolverines rolled to the victory, playing backups the majority of the fourth quarter. "Our offense gained confidence," Carr said. "We ran the ball well. We came out relatively healthy, which will be very important down the stretch:' After losing to Northwestern and then struggling against Indiana, the Wolverines wanted to take the Gophers out of the game early. And that's exactly what they did. After Bailey missed a 38-yard field goal, Michigan marched 79 yards in six plays to take a 7-0 lead. Dreisbach threw a 36-yard strike to wide receiver Tai Streets for the touchdown to end the drive. On their next possession, the Gophers were forced to punt, and Michigan needed just one play to make the score 14-0. On first-and-10 from the Michigan 14, Howard broke a cou- ple of tackles and raced 86 yards down the Minnesota sideline for a touch- down. The run was the fifth longest in Michigan history. In the first quarter alone, the Wolverines rolled up 173 yards of total offense and outrushed the Gophers, 110 to five. Minnesota finally got moving early in the second quarter, marching, 80 yards in nine Iplays. to cut Michigan's lead in half, Running back Byron Evans' four-yard touchdown run capped a drive that was highlighted by a 38-yard p4ss play from Sauter to Greg Nelsos. With 10:12 left until halftime, thei Wolverines led, 14-7. On the next possession, Michigan needed just; 3:15 to increase its lead to 14 again. Facing a. third-and-seven from his own 41, EDeisbach caught Minnesota in a blitz. hIe dumped the ball over the middle to' human, and Tuman raced 33 yards to the Minnesota 26. On the next play, runnig back Clarence Williams got to thW outside and motored 26 yards for a touchdown. With Remy Hamilton's extra point, Michigan led, 21-7. On their next possession, the Wolverines put the game away - for the most part. A nine-yard touchdown run by Howard capped a 46-yard, nine-play drive. On the carry, Howard broke the 100-yard rushing mark in the first half. He finished the half with 108 yards on six carries and two touchdowns. Hamilton missed the extra point, but the Wolverines still led, 27-7, at half- time. In addition to Howard's numbers, Williams had 91 yards rushing and Michigan rolled up 206 yards on the ground as a team in the first half. Dreisbach didn't throw the ball much, but with Howard and Williams bk ing like cannon fire through the Minnesota defense, he didn't need to. Driesbach was 4-of-5 for 101 yards and a touchdown in the first half. The Gophers kicked a field goal in the third quarter, before the Wolverines took control in the fourth, and cruised to the victory. The soryr of thejug So, how did Mviichgan and Minnesota end uip painfr n f the most recog- rn~zable trophies in college football? D 23/37/1 4/30.5 1/0 3/20 33:35 Well, the story begins ail t he way #a-k in 1903, d~ Y'ost's point-a-minute teams. Michigan headed up l~ sure it could trust the Golden Gophers to provide j Michigan trainer Keene Fitzpatrick~ sent student m- to buy something to put water in. What Tommy :. Ion jug that cost 30-cents. That 1903 game ended in a 6-6 tie, and a rather ra charged the field when the game ended. Lost in Ott escape w as the w ater jug. The folowing Mond1y a Jug, and a note was sent to Ann Arbor "We have y Jwo teams met again, the Wlverines won tack t~i fing the days of Fielding. 1 M innesota, but wasn't too -ticulad{y clean water. 'atger Tommy Roberts~ out back with w a af ve~gal-o ~n so a c o frenzy and the hufried custodian discovered the rur ttle Brown Jug; come u tfl .1909, butwhenl the Upu net , Who Michigan State (441 Big Ten; 5-3 overal Wher.w Mchigan Stadium When: Nov.. 2, noon (ABC) Sense: Michigan leads all-time 57-26-5 The ninth-ranked Wolverines face a red-trot Spartan teamr, wich Comes to Ann, Arbior after heating Wisconsin, 30-13, fast week~end. fast year1 Mk igntat4 Ebelt Michigan, 28-25, behind 318 yards passing from, q rteb T }.y $ns.: Bank~s is gone this year, but junio~r Todd Schultz opte1$f-5ass against the Badgers. Michigan Statg is tooking to beat Mchga i#ne cutlv sasons Wotthe first time since .1367. The pf tans, he cuhe1 y ,):i Daugherty: beat the woterines t ree straight times, b9 reggi 95 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 Northwestern L 16-17 Oct. 19 INDIANA W 27-20 Oct. 26 Minnesota W 44-10 fNov.2 MICHIGAN STATE Noon Nov. 9 Purdue 1p.m. Nov 16 PENNSTATE Noon 'Nov. 23 Ohio State Noon HOME GAMES IN CAPS M El ct::-..HoWrd6-rdu... Seco ganrrer. Ilih-Howard, ri4U. ru... ges or late ass Carr's end of game tactics questioned after 40-yard catch By Nichalas J. Cotsonika and "ry Solelnberger Daily Sports Editors MINk4EAPOLIS - Lloyd Carr has been guilty of a lot of things while being Michigan football coach. He' las been guilty of being too conserwtive. He has been guilty of poor pay calling. And he has often been g'ilty of not smiling enough. But in his first two seasons, he has never been guilty of running up the score. Unti now. In their 44-10 victory over Minndsota, the Wolverines scored a late touchdown that was a source of much debate after the game. With Michigan comfortably ahead, 37-10, backup quarterback Brian Griese threw 40 yards to Marcus Knight for athmrr-hrinwn wth 10 ScndsI late in a 23-13 victory at Boston College. This made the end to Saturday's game all of the more surprising. "I'm sorry that we scored," Carr said. "But I don't think 44-10 is run- ning up the score. We have a lot of guys who haven't played. I feel badly that we did, but I have an obligation to my young guys that need to be rewarded for scrimmaging and prac- ticing. They need a chance, too." JUG STREAK: Michigan became the first team to win the Little Brown Jug 10 consecutive times with its victory Saturday. The Wolverines also extended their streak of victories in the Metrodome, where they are 7-0. The Jug has been awarded to the winner of the Michigan-Minnesota game since 1909, and neither side likes~ to, laseit. missed a point-after in the second quarter. MILESTONES: With four point- afters and a field goal, Hamilton t over fourth place on Michigani's- time scoring list. He now has 250 points. Chris Howard's 86-yard touch- down run was tied for fifth in Michigan's history. Heisman Trophy- winner Tom Harmon had the other 86-yard run in 1940. HOMEBOYS: Jason Kapsner and Jay Feely had several fans in atten- dance at Saturday's game. Kapsni true freshman who was a hig recruited quarterback out of Eden Prarie, Minn., had family at the game. Feely, who was born in Minnesota, had about 30 fans. in attendance. THE~ VICTORY AFTER THE VICTORY** . ........