The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - November 11, 1996 - 5B . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .......... .... . . . . . . . . . . ........... ...... ........ ... .... ...... ............. . . . . . . . . . . .......... .. . .......... .......... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... ........ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .......... Colietto s departure sparks emotion in Boilennakers' win GAME STATISTICS , PASSING Player C-A Dreisbach 18-37 Totals 18-37 Yds 233 233 By Barry Sollenberger and Ryan White Daily Sports Writers WEST LAFAYETTE - After his team's 9-3 upset of Michigan on Saturday, you half expected Purdue coach Jim Colletto to withdraw his res- ignation. Colletto, who announced last Monday that he was stepping down after the season, has never had a bigger victory at Purdue. In five-plus sea- sons and 64 games, No. 9 Michigan is the highest ranked team to fall to a N0b Notebook in the preseason about the possibility of this group of Michigan seniors being the first not to win a Big Ten champi- onship at Michigan since former coach Bo Schembechler said, "Those who stay will be champions." Saturday, it became official. "It's a sad feeling," junior Sam Sword said. "It's tough, because our seniors are leaving and we wanted to send them out winning." Senior guard Damon Denson was disappointed, but admitted it was nobody's fault but Michigan's. "Penalties and turnovers have basi- cally been our demise," Denson said. "We have to eliminate those" SICKENING: If Michigan's loss to Purdue made its fans sick, linebacker RUSHING Player Aftt Williams 14 Howard 9 Woodson 1 Carr 1 Dreisbach 7 Totals 32 RECEIVING Player No. Shaw 4 Streets 3 Williams 3 Woodson 3 Tuman 2 Howard 1 Campbell 1 Anes 1. Totals :18 PUNTING Player Peristeris Totals Yds Avg 42 3.0 31 3.4 0 0.0 0 0.0 -17 -2.4 56 1.8 Yds Avg 51 12.8 65 21.7 18 6.0 43 14.3 45 22.5 -2 -2.0 4 4.0 9 9.0 233 129 No. Yds 5 200 5 200 TD 0 0 10 5 0 0 7 10 Lg 23 46 10 26 33 -2 4 9 46 Avg 40.0 40.0 Int 2 2 TD 0 0 0 0 0 0 TD 0 0 0 0. 0- 0 0 0 -0 Lg 44 44 TD 0 0 n on Saturday, quarterback saw more Ross-Ade Stadium grass than open receivers. ~ .. Colletto-coached Purdue team. Jarrett Irons can relate. Still, his decision to resign was not Except he was also sick before the made over night, and the Boilermakers game. will have a new head man on the side- Due to a bout with the flu, Irons had lines next fall. missed the entire week of practice, and This didn't dampen Saturday's upset said he was never able to really get the for Colletto or his team. defensive schemes down. "This kind of erases a lot of the "Today was my first time putting pain," a teary-eyed Colletto said after- pads on all week," Irons said. wards. "(The victory) probably means Irons got more work as the game pro- you've done something good, which is gressed, but admitted to feeling nice to feel.' fatigued. He finished with only four Before Saturday, under Colletto tackles. Purdue was 0-17 against Michigan,. HOPING TO LOSE?: The Wolverines Ohio State, Penn State and Notre Dame won the coin toss for just the second under Colletto. The victory marked the time this season Saturday. The other Boilermakers first over the Wolverines time they won it was Oct. 5 at since 1984. Northwestern, also a Michigan loss. "We've been fighting to play with the The Wolverines are now 7-0 when big boys," Colletto said. "We've been they lose the toss and 0-2 when they close before, but we hadn't done it. win it. Now we have." REMY RECORD: Perhaps the only Michigan players said they fully bright spot for Michigan on Saturday expected a fired up Purdue team. was senior placekicker Remy Michigan coach Lloyd Carr, however, Hamilton. He set the school record for thought closure might have been the field goals in a career (58) when he biggest motivator for the nailed a 21-yarder early in the third Boilermakers. quarter. With the kick, Hamilton passed "What happened here was that an Mike Gillette (1985-88) on Michigan's uncertain situation became a certain all-time list. situation," Carr said. "Emotionally, TIDBITS: Michigan's. 56 yards rush- they came ready to play and deserved ing was its lowest total since the open- to win." ing game of last season. Michigan ran Ironically, almost 20 years to the day for only 52 yards against Virginia ... of Saturday's upset (Nov. 6 1976), the Michigan hasn't scored a touchdown Boilermakers stunned a highly-ranked against Purdue since Nev 5, 1994, a Michigan team. On that day, a 3-5 span of eight quarters ... The win was Purdue team knocked off the top- Purdue's first over a top-10 team since ranked Wolverines, 16-14. 1984 when it beat second-ranked Ohio PROMISE UNKEPT: Much was made State. Ohio State romps Illini KICKOFF RETURNS Player No. Yds Butterfield 2 43 Totals 2 43 PUNT RETURNS Avg 21.5 21.5 Player Winters Totals No. 4' 4 } DEFENSE Player S Sword Ray Copenhaver Carr Hankins Hall Steele Taylor Swett Irons Huff Miller Gold Bowens Woodson Denson Winters Payne Washington Anes Weathers Hendricks Quinn PASS DEFENSE Player Int' Hankins 0 Sword 0 Gold 0 Hendricks 0 Totals 0 Team Stats First Downs Rushes/Yards Passing Yards Offensive Plays Total Offense Return Yards Yds 36 36 Solo 8 4 3 6 4 4 5 3 1 3 3 3 2 2 3 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 Yds 0 0 0 0 0 lg 25 25 Avg Lg TD 9.0 15 0 9.0 15 0 Asst Tot 4 12 3 7 4 7 0 6 2 6 2 6 0 5 1 4 .3 4 1 4 1 4 0 3 1 3 1 3 0 3 1 2 1 2 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 1 1 0 1 Lng 0 0 0 0 0 Brk-up 3 1 1 1 6 TD 0 0 0 0 COLUMBUS (AP) - Tailbacks Pepe Pearson and Jermon Jackson scored two touchdowns each as No. 2 Ohio State crushed Illinois, 48-0, Saturday. Quarterback Joe Germaine threw three touchdown passes for the Buckeyes (6-0 Big Ten, 9-0 overall). And Ohio State held the Illini (1-5, 2-7) to just 130 yards, 20 on the ground. Ohio State scored touchdowns on seven consecutive possessions in the second and third quarters and racked up 546 yards of total offense. Illinois was limited to eight first downs, including two in the first half. One of those two was a 29-yard pass on a fake punt by kicker Jason Higgins, who ended the half with three times the passing yardage of starting quarterback Scott Weaver. Pearson had 165 yards on 21 carries before going out in the third quarter. No. 18 NORTHWESTERN 40, No. 23 IOwA 13 Darnell Autry ran for a career-high 240 yards and scored four touchdowns and Northwestern's defense put the clamps on No. 23 Iowa in a 40-13 vic- tory for the 18th-ranked Wildcats. The Wildcats (6-1, 8-2), who beat Iowa last year to break a 21-game los- ing streak to the Hawkeyes, won at Kinnick Stadium for the first time in 13 games and kept their hopes alive for a New Year's Day bowl game. Iowa (4-2, 6-3) lost to Northwestern by the worst margin since a 44-6 set- back in 1932. Autry scored four touchdown in the second half. The Big Ten's leading run- ner was held to 67 yards on 15 carries in the first half but broke off big chunks of yardage in the final two quarters while scoring on runs of 9, 41 and 18 yards. Mich 16 32/56 233 69 289 36 Purdue 19 46/98 170 76 268 32 Comp/Att/Int 18/37/220/30/0 Punts/Avg 5/40.0 7/35.0 Fumbles/Lost 3/3 1/1 Penalties/Yards 5/47 8/62 Time of Poss 23:31 36:29 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. W 20-8 W 20-13 W 20-14 W 38-9 L 16-17 W 27-20 W 44-10 W 45-29 L 3-9 Noon Noon JOE WESTRATE/Daily Noseguard William Carr put some pressure on Purdue quarterback Rick Trefzger here, but for most of the afternoon in West . As for Michigan, you almost had to feel sorry for Carr and his players after- wards, -even though their performance was so pathetic. It wasn't as if they want- to lose. They knew what was at stake. ey knew what was lost. The first graduating class since the mid-1970s will leave Michigan without .playing in a Rose Bowl. That hurts. "I think it's very disappointing for our senior class, for everybody," Carr said. Still, it's difficult to understand how Michigan's Rose Bowl hopes were ended by such a poor team, in such a poor showing. BLast week, the Wolverines were on the Toad to Pasadena. With victories in their last three games, they probably would have made it there for the first time since 1993. Instead, they're now likely to end up in the Alamo or Sun Bowl. "We had a chance to do something Turnovers doom M' in loss to Boilermakers By Ryan White Daily Sports Writer WEST LAFAYETTE - When Michigan givith, Purdue gladly taketh away and score. Or something like that. Last week, Michigan took advan- tage of five Michigan State turnovers en route to a 45-29 victory. Saturday, Purdue gave the Wolverines a taste of their own med- icine, picking off. two passes and recovering three fumbles, as the Boilermakers beat Michigan, 9-3. "It was a tough loss," Michigan co- captain Jarrett Irons said after the game. "It just goes to show, if you tackle William Carr fumbled on first- and-goal from the Purdue two-yard line late in the first half, the Wolverines' second biggest mistake on the day. Dreisbach had Michigan's other two fumbles. Purdue's Chris Koeppen recovered two fumbles, and forced one. Linebacker Chike Okeafor, who spent most the day in Dreisbach's face, caused the other Michigan fum- ble. The Wolverines had 289 yards in total offense, but only 56 of those came on the ground. All of this, against the 10th-rated defense in the Big Ten. iGrPTP mtC +Am, th 1;+h]7M qn i di but replays showed one should have been ruled a fumble. "In order to slow down a blitz like that, you have to make plays," Michigan offensive guard Damon Denson said. "We weren't able to do that." Michigan's longest play was a 46- yard pass from Dreisbach to Streets. Michigan's longest rushing play was a 10-yard run by Clarence Williams. Rarely did Michigan pick up a blitz. Purdue, however, did. Fullback Edwin Watson got a shoulder into Irons, who came straight up the middle, on a key play midva through the fourth marter and other games, however, was that Saturday it wasn't necessarily the quarterback, running backs or receivers who weren't getting the job done. The problem seemed to be the offensive line. "We didn't protect the passer very well, and we didn't block up front very well," Carr said. And for those who were wondering about the play calling, about why there was such a difference between the games against Michigan State and Purdue? Well, Dreisbach isn't sure that there was such a difference. "I'm not 2oin to question the nlav HOME GAMES IN CAPS Team: C 3ar Northwestern~ . Iowa 42 6 Petntate 2 hg 42 2 Wisconsi 2- 0. 2 Ohio State 48 ILUNO0m I