4B - The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - November 4, 1996 ............ ... ....... GAME STATISTICS Dreisbach PASSING Player C-A Dreisbach 14-23 Howard 0-1 Totals 14-24 Yds 203 0 203 RUSHING Player Att Howard 24 C. Williams19 Woodson 1 Anes 1 Butterfield 1 Dreisbach ,2 Totals 48 RECEIVING Player No. Tuman 3 Woodson 2 Shaw 3 Campbell 1 C. Williams 2 Howard 1 Streets 2 Totals 14 PUNTING Player 1 Peristeris Griese Totals Yds Avg 100 4.2 97 5.1 1111.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 -2 -1.0 206 4.2 Yds Avg 67 22.3 28 14.0 28 9.3 25 25.0 19 9.5 18 18.0 18 9.0 203 14.5 No. Yds 4 137 2 72 6 209 TD 4 0 4 Lg 13 21 11 0 0 0 21 Lg 28 26 11 25 13 18 13 28 Avg. 34.3 36.0 34.8 Int 0 0 0 TD 2 0 0 0 0 0 2 TD 2 1 1 1 0 0 0 4 Lg 39 38 39 TD 0 0 0 TD 0 0 KICKOFF RETURNS Player No. Yds Shaw 4 82 Butterfield 1 59 Totals 5 141 PUNT RETURNS Player No. Yds Winters " 2 3 Totals 2 3 Avg 20.5 59.0 28.2 Avg 1.5 1.5 Lg9 23 59 59 Lg 6 6 DEFENSE Player Sword Ray Irons Taylor Woodson Bowens Copenhaver Carr Hankins Feazell Bryant Steele Huff Singletary Gold Hendricks Jones Winters Solo 8 8 6 5 5 4 4 3 3 1 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 Asst 3 2 2 2 1 2 2 2 2 3 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 Tot 11 10 8 7 6 6 6 5 5 4 3 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 poised in face of challenge By Nicholas J. Cotsonika Daily Sports Editor So many times this season, so many words have been used to describe Michigan quarterback Scott Dreisbach - inconsistent, timid, inac- curate, bad. But Saturday, after Dreisbach com- pleted 14 of 23 passes for 203 yards and four touchdowns, one word was used over and over again - poised. "Dreisbach is an outstanding quar- terback," Carr reiterated after the game. "He played with great poise. I think he's a guy who is vastly under- rated. Many media and fans voiced con- cern with Dreisbach early in the sea- son, and negative sentiment reached a peak after Dreisbach strug- gled against Indiana two weeks ago. D r e i s b a c h threw for 218 yards against the Hoosiers, but he completed only Dreisbach 48.6 percent of his passes and was intercepted twice. Boos and hisses rained down on him from the Michigan Stadium stands, and Saturday, Carr voiced his displeasure with it. "Those people that booed him ought to turn their season tickets in," Carr said. "I told him that. The kid just came off of a major surgery, and the people that booed him ..." Carr didn't finish his sentence, but it is easy to imagine what he thought. Few have noticed that Dreisbach went 4-0 as Michigan's starting quarterback last season - before being sidelined with a thumb injury - and is 7-1 this season. But because Dreisbach isn't flashy very often - and because he is some- times shaky - there have been doubts. Carr said Dreisbach himself, how- ever, has never lost any confidence, and Dreisbach denies he even knew of the boos. "That's news to me," he said. According to some, that attitude is what allows him to win. "That's poise," Michigan center Rod Payne said. "And in a situation like his, poise is going to be as impor- tant as anything you do." Last week against Minnesota, Dreisbach threw the ball just 11 times, completing eight passes. But Saturday, he let loose and looked impressive from the first drive. Michigan's first touchdown was a 28-yard pass to tight end Jerame Tuman. The play capped a 78-yard, nine-play drive that Dreisbach engi- neered with two other completions. Dreisbach stood out in the second quarter as well, completing three touchdown passes in a two-minute sequence, giving him four for the day and tying him with six other players for Michigan's record for touchdown passes in a game. One of Dreisbach's passes, an eight- yarder to Russell Shaw, was thread beautifully through tight coverage. "Never in my life in a game have 1 sat down on the bench and gone out and scored again so quickly," Dreisbach said. "I didn't see how we got the ball each time. When the crowd goes wild, you know something happened. And then, with the crowd roaring, we run out there, and there is still time on the clock. It's a great feel- ing." The late flurry, triggered by two Michigan State turnovers, gave Dreisbach nice numbers for the first half. He was I 1-of-14 for 163 yards and a touchdown, surpassing the comple- tions, attempts and touchdowns he racked up in the entire Minnesota game. It also clinched his sixth 150- yard passing performance. "We work on sudden changes in practice, to capitalize on turnovers, and I credit that to my oreparation," Charles Woodson's only rushing attempt of the day was this one, which SPARTANS Continued from Page 1B Though Michigan outrushed Michigan State, 206-98, it was a series of quick turnovers and touch- downs that boosted the Wolverines over the Spartans. With Michigan State leading, 10- 7, and controlling the play late in the second quarter, things changed dra- matically. Dreisbach hit receiver Russell Shaw with an eight-yard touchdown pass with 2:09 remain- ing, and the Wolverines took the lead, 14-10. Five plays later, Michigan State quarterback Todd Schultz was inter- cepted by Ray, and the Wolverines capitalized in just two plays. Dreisbach threw over center to tight end Jerame Tuman, who ran for 15 yards and a touchdown. Michigan led, 21-10. "He was telegraphing his passes, Ray said of Schultz, who was inter- cepted four times. "I knew that when he looked at his first receiver, he was We feel we're a good football team, but it'!s hard to say that when you go out there and play like crap." going to him." There were just 15 seconds remaining in the half after Tuman's touchdown, but more excitement was to come. Jay Feely's ensuing kickoff tum- bled into the hands of Michigan State's Aric Morris and then tumbled out. Kevin Bryant recovered the fumble for the Wolverines. "(Morris) should have fair-catched the ball," Michigan State coach Nick Saban said. "We practice fair-catch- ing the ball." On the next play, Dreisbach threw over center again for a touchdown, this time to Charles Woodson, and PASS DEFENSE Player Int Yds Ray 2 51 Copenhaver 1 10 Woodson 1 0 Hankins 0 0 Hendricks 0 0 Totals 4 61 Lg9 35 10 0 0 0 35 Brk-up 0 0 1 1 1 3 TD 0 0 0 0 0 0 MICHIGAN SCHEDULE Aug. 31 ILLINOIS Sept. 14 Colorado Sept. 21 Boston College Sept. 28 UCLA Oct. 5 Northwestern Oct. 19 INDIANA Oct. 26 Minnesota Nov. 2 MICHIGAN ST. Nov. 9 Purdue Nov. 16 PENN ST. Nov. 23 Ohio St. HOME GAMES IN CAPS W 20-8 W 20-13 W 20-14 W 38-9 L 16-17 W 27-20 W 44-10 W 45-29 TBA Noon Noon .fIrst QutW't MA ih -Tuman, 8-yard pass f. rome . sbach (Hamilton. SocondI rtor Ma~te - IY aso revnytrd ss fromScaaltz ~adnr~e Mich - Shaw, htyle[asftr DreisbaG.~~~tnkc) 209. M~c -Thmn.15-yr asfo Drfiesbac H lamitokift k),~ Jicth -Woodsmn, 26-yard pass from Dreisbac h fHamito -,Third Quar Mis h -Howard, 13yar'd run (Hamiton kick}~, 8:52 Mae- Ervinl, four-yard ruts (Gard1ner kick), 7:28 ForhQuarter Clarence Williams ran for 97 yards on 19 carries against Michigan State. TARGET Continued from Page 1B Michigan State's jugular. After Marcus Ray's interception with 27 seconds left in the first half, it took two plays before Scott Dreisbach hit tight end Jerame Tuman in the end zone. When Kevin Bryant recovered a ftim- ble on the ensuing kickoff, it took Dreisbach just one play to find Woodson alone for the touchdown that got Carr off his feet. Two turnovers, three plays and 14 points. In nine seconds. Nine seconds? The Wolverines took an 18-point lead into the lockerroom at halftime, and made it stand up. There was no second half collapse like there was against Northwestern. There was no relying on the defense to win the game. Saturday, Michigan's offense simply put up too many points for the Spartans. And when the Wolverines needed first downs to hold onto the ball and run the clock out, they got them. Michigan players talked after the And when Michigan State scored its final touchdown, Michigan nose tackle Will Carr came off the field shouting, "shit, damn!" The touchdown, meaning- less to the outcome of the game, meant something to Michigan. It was a game the Wolverines couldn't afford to lose, and they didn't. And the result was something that seemed inconceivable after the Northwestern loss. Michigan now con- trols its own bowl destiny. If the Wolverines win their remaining three games, they'll go to the Rose Bowl. It's that simple. But before we get too high here, not everything is rosey for Michigan. The defense played far from its best game of the season, allowing 29 points. The secondary allowed Michigan State receiver Derrick Mason 150 yards on 10 catches. Mason almost single- handedly keeping Michigan State in the game in the second half. Of course, the Wolverines also came up with four interceptions. Carr will also be upset with