48 - The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - November 11, 1996 GAME STATiSTICS B ASSING layer C-A Yds TD Int retz er 20-30 170 1 0 Ten bowl picture now clear PI PI Tr Totals 20-30 170 RUSHING Player Att Watson 17 Matthews 11 Trefzger 16 Sanders 2 Totals 46 RECEIVING Player No. Alford 6 Tillman 4 Jewell 3 Matthews 2 Watson 2 Jones 1 Light 1 Olivadotti 1 Totals 20: PUNTING Player Rogers Kaser Totals Yds 45 44 8 1 98 Yds 29 52 14 0 18 24 16 17 170 No. 4 3: Avg 2.6 4.0 30.5 0.5 2.1 Avg 4.8 13.0 4.7 0.0 9.0 24.0 16.0 17.0 8.5 YdsE 112 3 245 3 s Avg 5 23.0 6 23.0 s Avg L 5.5 1 5.5 l4 1 Lg 28 16 11 2 28 Lg 9 18 9 2 12 24 16 17 24 Avg 33.3 37.3 35.0 L9 S23 S23 L9 r 1 0 Ohio State has easy road to Big Ten championship, Rose Bowl KICKOFF RETURNS Player No. Yds Winston Don 2 46 Totals 2 46 PONT RETURNS Player No. Yds Winston Don2 11 Totals 2 11 TD 0 0 0 0 0 TD 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 rrLg 35 44 g TD 3 0 3 0 g TD 1.0 Tot 10 9 8 6 6 6 6 4 3 3 2 1 1 1 1 By Barry Sollenberger Daily Sports Editor WEST LAFAYETTE - Michigan's 9-3 loss to Purdue on Saturday helped clear up the Big Ten bowl picture. There's just one problem: If you're a Michigan fan, you're probably wishing the picture was a little more fuzzy. Because after their loss Saturday, the Wolverines are clearly not headed to the Rose Bowl. Instead, they're likely going bowling in Texas in either the Alamo or Sun Bowl. Unless the Wolverines (4-2 Big Ten, 7-2 overall) beat Penn State next weekend and then upset Ohio State, they will probably finish either fourth or fifth in the Big Ten. The Alamo Bowl in San Antonio takes the fourth- place team from the Big Ten and the Sun Bowl in El Paso takes the conference's fifth-place team. Here is the rundown on the six other Big Ten teams that have the potential to go bowling: OHIO STATE: All the Buckeyes (6-0, 9-0) have to do toreach the Rose Bowl is to beat Indiana next weekend. That should not be a problem. The Hoosiers (0-6, 2-7) can't beat a Pop Warner team let alone the No. 2 team in the land. An Ohio State victory would set up a matchup with Arizona State in Pasadena on Jan. 1. Ironically, the last time Ohio State coach John Cooper led a team to the Rose Bowl, he was at Arizona State. The Sun Devils, with Cooper as coach, beat Michigan in the 1987 Rose Bowl, 22-15. NORTHWESTERN: The Wildcats (6-1, 8-2) helped themselves out with a blowout victory at Iowa on Saturday. They can lock up second place in the Big Ten and a berth in the Florida Citrus bowl with a vic- tory over Purdue next weekend. Last week, there was some speculation that the Big Ten's second-place team would be chosen as part of the bowl coalition. The most likely scenario had Michigan winning out, knocking once-beaten Ohio State into the Fiesta Bowl. Michigan killed this speculation with the loss to Purdue, and Northwestern, the Big Ten's No. 2 team, is probably not going to be ranked high enough to be considered. IOwA: The Hawkeyes (4-2, 6-3) enjoy the advan- -ams Rose Cpper o DEFENSE Player Koeppen Okeafor Hagins Colvin Krick Brown Coleman Burroughs Winston De Smith Jones NWokorie Beasley Z urba Washington Solo 8 7 4, 4 4 6 4 2 3 3 1 1 1 1 0 Asst 2 2 4 2 2 0 2 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 PASS DEFENSE Player Int Yds Brown 1 21 Coleman 1 0 Colvin 0 0 Winston De. 0 0 Okeafor 0 0 Hagins 0 0 Burroughs 0 0 Perez 0 0 Totals 2 21 Lg 21 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 21 Brk-up 6 1 2 2 1 1 1 1 15 TD 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Purdue Aug. 31 Michigan St. Sept. 14 Notre Dame Sept. 21 WEST VIRGINIA L 10-52 L 0-35 L 6-20 Sept. 28 N. CAROLINA ST.W 42-21 Oct. 5 MINNESOTA Oct. 12' Penn St. Oct. 19 OHIO STATE Nov. 2 Wisconsin Nov.9 MICHIGAN Nov. 16 Northwestern Nov. 23 INDIANA HOME GAMES IN CAPS W 30-27 L 14-31 L 14-42 L 25-33 W 9-3 2 p.m. 2 p.m. PURDUE Continued from Page 18 play, and fumbled twice. Dreisbach's second fumble, in the fourth-quarter, may have been Michigan's biggest mistake all game. With 9:46 left in the game, Michigan took control of the ball on its own 37- yard line. Dreisbach looked to pass on first down, but was stripped of the ball from behind by Purdue linebacker Chris Koeppen. Koeppen recovered the fumble at the 33, his second recovery of the game. On first down, after the fumble, Purdue fullback Edwin Watson took the ball 14 yards up the middle to the Michigan 19. Tailback Kendall Matthews took the handoff on the next play, and carried it to the five yard line. Two plays later, Watson made maybe his biggest play of the day. On second-and-goal from the five, Michigan blitzed linebacker Jarrett Irons up the middle, but Watson got a shoulder into Irons, allowing quarter- back Rick Trefzger to scramble. With the extra time, Trefzger hit receiver Brian Alford in the end zone for the game's only touchdown. Shane Ryan's extra-point attempt was blocked by Woodson, but the dam- age was done. "After scoring the touchdown, it gave us a lot of confidence," Alford said. "You could tell from the looks on the faces of the Michigan players that they were stunned." At 9-3, however, the game was still within the Wolverines' reach. Michigan drove to the Purdue 35 on its next possesion, but on second-and- eight Dreisbach was picked off by safe- ty Derrick Brown. The Wolverines then held the Boilermakers on three straight plays, and got the ball back with 2:31 left in the game. Michigan again drove into Purdue territory, but on third-and-10 from the Purdue 44, Dreisbach was intercepted by cornerback Jamel Coleman. After the interception, the Boilermakers simply ran the clock out. Dreisbach, who was slow getting up on numerous occasions, said the hits didn't daze or confuse him. "I got hit, but I get hit every game," Dreisbach said. "It was nothing I could-, n't deal with. It was nothing I couldn't shake off." The Michigan offense couldn't shake off Purdue's defense, however. Michigan coach Lloyd Carr said Purdue blitzed when Michigan didn't expect them to blitz, and kept the Wolverines guessing all day. "The thing we tried to do was stay in our game plan," Carr said. "But they did a good job keeping us off balance on offense." Purdue held the ball nearly 11 min- utes more than Michigan did in the first half, and took a 3-0 lead on a 28-yard Ryan field goal with 7:22 left in the second quarter. As bad as things were for the Wolverines, however, they still could have held the lead at halftime. With the help of two Purdue penal- ties, one for pass interference and another a personal foul for roughing the kicker, Michigan drove the ball from its own 13 to the Purdue two-yard line late in the half. On first-and-goal, Dreisbach handed the ball to nose tackle William Carr, who fumbled, and Purdue linebacker Chike Okeafor recovered. The play allowed the Boilermakers to run the clock out and take a three- point lead into halftime. Despite the fumble, Lloyd Carr said he would have no problem giving William Carr the ball again. "We have run that play, at least in practice," Lloyd Carr said. "I don't sec- ond-guess that call because I know the kind of athlete Will Carr is." The Wolverines would have one other opportunity to put the ball in the end zone, but again fell short. Michigan's only score came with 10:07 left in the third quarter, when Remy Hamilton hit a 21-yard field goal, after the Wolverines had the ball first-and-10 at the Purdue 11. For Purdue coach Jim Colletto, who resigned last Monday, the victory was extra sweet, and, he felt, deserved. "It was not a fluke," he said. "The game is measured by your heart. This kind of erases a lot of pain." Michigan players said they expected a little more emotion out of Purdue because of Colletto's situation, but that it was no excuse. None of the players would say they First Quarter No scoing Second Quarter Purdue - Ryan, 28-yard field goal; 7:22 t rih. v-IHamiton, 2 .yadfied goal, 10:07 Fourth Qut <=>; Purdue -- Alfordt, five-yard as from Trefzger (#ranhks : bx$ked), 7;2Q Mvichigan 0 o a 0-3 Purdue 0 3 4 6-9'. at Ross-Ade Stadium A - 4t24. Clarence Williams didn't go anywhere here. The Michigan offense went nowhere nearly the entire game.