6B -The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday Monday, November 18, 1996 GAME STATISTICS PASSING Player C-A Richardson20-34 Totals ' 16-30 Yds 183 183 RUSHING Player ' nis Harris Eberly leary Totals Att 21 10 7 3 42 RECEIVING Player No. Jurevicius 6 Enis 6 'ambell 2 Olsommer 1 Harris 2 Stephenson 1 Eberly 2 Totals 20 PUNTING Player Pidgeon Totals Yds 114 31 24 17 170 Yds 59 49 26 18 16 10 5 183 No. 7; 7' Avg 5.4 3.1 G 3.4 5.7 4.0 Avg 9.8 8.2 13.0 18.0 8.0 10.0 2.5 9.1 Yds 282 282 TD 0 0 Lg 38 11 13 8 38 Lg 13 13 19 18 9 10 6 19 Avg 40.3 40.3 nt 0 0 TD 1 1 0 0 2 TD 0 0 0 '0 0 0 0 0 Lg 50 50 KICKOFF RETURNS Player Watson Fields 'Totals No. 1 1 2 Yds 20 18 38 PUNTRETURNS Player No. Yds Macklin 1 15 Campbell 1 8 Ab. Collins 0 3 Totals 2 38, Avg 20.0 18.0 19.0 Avg 15.0 8.0 0.0 19.0 Lg TD 20 0 18 0 20 0 JOE WESTRATE/Daily Penn State running back Chris Eberly lunges forward as Michigan's Charles Woodson gives chase Saturday at Michigan Stadium. Eberly had 24 yards rushing on the day. Special teams doom Wolverines in loss Michigan has one punt blocked and returned for touchdown, returns punts poorly Lg 15 8 3 15 TD 0 0 1 1 DEFENSE Player S Herring Filardi Prater Aa. Collins Lee Nelson Fornadel Tate Noble Short Gatten Snyder Six players with PASS DEFENSE Player Int Y Herring 2 'Lee 1 Tate 1 Filardi 0 Totals 4 Team Stats First Downs Rushes/Yards 3 Passing Yards Offensive Plays Total Offense Return Yards Solo 8 9 5 4 4 3 3 4 3 2 2 2 one Asst 2 1 2 1 1 2 1 0 0 1 0 0 Tot 10 10 7 5 5 5 4 4 3 3 2 2 tackle apiece Yds Lg 0 0 5 5 0 0 0 0 5 5 Mich 19 36/143 247 68 390 81 Brk-up TD 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 PSU 22 42/170 183 76 353 64 Comp/Att/Int 15/32/420/34/0 Punts/Avg 5/26.4 7/40.3 Fumbles/Lost 2/1 1/1 Penalties/Yards 4/38 3/20 Time of Poss 26:48 33:12 By Ryan White Daily Sports Writer It's safe to say that Michigan coach Lloyd Carr has a bit of an opinion on his team's kicking game Saturday against Penn State. "We were totally inept in that phase of the game," Carr said. "You take the kicking part out of it, and we have a great chance to win." He has a point. With 4:47 left in the third quarter, Penn State's Brett Conway hit a 25-yard field goal to bring the Nittany Lions to within a point, 17-16. The Wolverines then took control on their next possession at their own 23, and after two incompletions and a rush- ing play that lost five yards, Michigan punted from its own 18. Before Paul Peristeris could get the kick off, however, Penn State's David Macklin broke in untouched from the left side, and blocked the punt. Ahmad Collins scooped the ball up and took it into the end zone. The extra- point gave the Nittany Lions the lead. 22-17, and they never looked back. "It's special for us," said Larry Johnson, who coaches Penn State's punt and kickoff coverage units. "We said (special teams) had to make a dif- ference, and when we do, it feels good." The blocked kick didn't come as a surprise to Johnson, who had found a weakness in Michigan's punt protection. "It's a very technical thing, but it's something we thought we had a shot at," Penn State coach Joe Paterno said. Complex, or not, Johnson tried to explain Penn State's strategy. Johnson said Michigan's wing man was backing up too fast, and the Nittany Lions were trying to influence him to stay up field. On the block, Penn State sent two players directly at the wing man, who chose to block the outside defender, leaving the player on the inside with an unobstructed route to Peristeris. "We had two weeks to prepare for PENN STATE Continued from Page 1B said. "But other than that, it was two good defensive teams." Michigan trailed, 13-10, at the half, but took the lead early in the third quarter, courtesy of linebacker Jarrett Irons. The Nittany Lions had the ball near midfield when Irons blitzed senior quarterback Wally Richardson. Irons hit Richardson while the quarterback was attempt- ing to lateral the ball to fullback Aaron Harris. The ball went awry and Will Carr recovered for Michigan at the Penn State 30. One play later, Michigan running back Chris Howard went untouched 27 yards down the Penn State sideline for a touchdown. Remy Hamilton's extra point gave the Wolverines their first lead, 17- 13. But the Nittany Lions went back (the Wolverines);' Johnson said. "So we saw some things we thought we could use against them. "The kids came offthe field and said, 'Hey coach, it's there."' The block was clearly the turning point of the game, but it wasn't Michigan's only special teams mistake. On the game's opening kickoff, Tyrone Butterfield grabbed the ball at the one and fell at Michigan's own two- yard line. That play was Butterfield's last on a kickoff return. He was replaced by Charles Woodson the next time out, and Woodson returned the ball to the Michigan 22. Michigan's average starting position in the first quarter was its own 17 1/2- yard line. Michigan's best starting field position all day was its own 35, which happened twice when Conway kicked the ball out of bounds. To make things worse, Peristeris averaged just 33 yards per punt. Aside from the block, he had a punt tipped, and a few other close calls. Woodson fumbled a kickoff, and Chuck Winters dropped a punt. Both recovered their own miscues, however. "When you mishandle balls in the kicking game, you know you're going to have problems," Carr said. "And we knew this was going to be a field posi- tion game." The breakdown in the kicking game had to be particularly disappointing to Carr since he had worked hard on that facet of the game during the off season. Before the season began, he said at least three of Michigan's four losses last season were attributable to the kicking game. So while Saturday's game created more problems for Carr, it gave Paterno a different situation to deal with - how to deal with Collins after he scored the winning touchdown. "Did he score that'?" Paterno asked. "Great. He'll be tough to live with this week." on top, 22-17, before the quarter ended, thanks to a Conway field goal and a blocked punt that was returned for a touchdown. "After they got ahead of us, our kids stayed in it," Paterno said. For the game, Enis carried the ball 21 times for 114 yards to break the 1,000-yard rushing barrier this sea- son. Penn State quarterback Wally Richardson completed 20 of 34 pass- es for 183 yards with no touchdown passes or interceptions. Penn State now leads the all-time series with Michigan, 3-1, including three-straight victories. The Nittany Lions defeated the Wolverines, 31- 24, at Michigan Stadium two years ago and 27-17 last season in State College. So what's the secret to Penn State's continued success against Michigan? "I don't know if there's a secret," Enis said. "I just know when we play a rivalry, we come ready to play." PENN STATE SCHEDULE Aug. 25 Southern Cal Sept. 7 LOUISVILLE Sept.-14 N. ILLINOIS Sept. 21 Temple Sept. 28 Wisconsin Oct. 5 Ohio State Oct. 12 PURDUE Oct. 19 IOWA Oct. 26 Indiana Nov. 2 NORTHWESTER Nov. 16 Michigan Nov. 23 MICHIGAN STA' HOME GAMES IN CAPS W 24-7 W 30-7 W 49-0 W 41-0 W 23-20 L 7-38 W 31-14 L 20-21 W 48-26 RNW 34-9 W 29-17 TE TBA Fist Quarter Penn - Coniway,; 34-yard field gpal, 11: 41; Penn - Conway, 46-yard fied go. 4:38 Seond Quarte Mc -- Ham~lon, 33-yard fel goal, 11:50 Penn - Harris, one. yard fun {Coniway kick}; 5; Mich - Shea, 25-yard pssfrom reisbac h (Hamilton ; ik o), Third tQuarter~ Mich -- Howard, 27-yard run. E:toarnton kuick k. .2 ... K\I61IN-iUHnrtctH/ u'y Cornerback Charles Woodson took over the punt and kick return duties for Michigan on Saturday. He returned three kickoffs for a total of 65 yards and three punts for 16 yards. On the whole, the Wolverines have struggled with kick and punt returns all season. Cotn* fromPe 1Ihgn-o t taes eH te. a in CA P S M g se MIchigan 21, PENN STATE 13 :.. . Penn State 31, M CH tGAN 24 the sPENNtSTATEtrechigan 17 A6 fseans tely, utterlysGA . 1 COTSON IKA Continued from Page 1B wise, glossing over every negative insinuation with an orchestrated, positive naivete. Then Saturday, Dreisbach was awful. He overthrew receivers. He threw critical interceptions. He fumbled with the game in the balance He was a big reason Michigan lost the game, and he was pulled by his biggest supporter, Carr, down the stretch. And, for perhaps the first time, he was completely, utterly honest. "I actually thought it should've happened earlier," Dreisbach said of his bench- ing. "I shouldn't have been making those decisions. No Division I quarterback should be making those decisions. "I haven't lost confidence; I'll never lose confidence in myself. But it's my job to get them the ball and not to make stupid decisions." Dreisbach showed a lot of moxie. That's class. But there he sat. Defeated. Sometimes, class isn't enough. Everyone who cares about Michigan football - everyone from coaches to play- ers to fans - feels some sort of pain this morning. Michigan should be this and that. Michigan is Michigan. Right? Tradition. The name. The winged helmet. All the lofty ideals that make up ,- man Tlhv ch n A ,.ar + ~n tInn A 10rnnincr nA RncRnwanl nnar- By all accounts, Saturday was a b es with three interceptions and no thrown five interceptions In the past, National Roundu Colorad BOULDER, Colo (AP) --Freshm cornerback Damen Wheeler had interceptions and defensive tackle 'Ry Olson had a key fourth-down sack, a No. 6 Colorado blanked No 9 V-s State, 12-0, Saturday night. Herchell Troutman ran for 112 yar and a touchdown for the Buffaloes ( 1), who have one game remaining against Nebraska on Nov. 29 - determine the conference's No Division champion. Up next r