..a ,Iii , .. .. r r, r ., . n. e w w _ 8 - The Mian Daily - Rose Bowl! Saturday/ Sunday, Nov. 22-21.997 HIGHLIG S AW AL -- IGHLIGHTS - urdy/Sunday. Nov. 2 97 - Rose Bowl! - .. On the way up Game No. 3: Notre Dame Michigan Stadium Coverage f e Micigan Daily Survival of the fittest Gan Coverage Morn Michigan comel drowns Hawke) Quotable "That was a win and that's all it was" Quarterback Brian Griese By Nicholas J. Cotsonika Daily Sports Editor As linebacker Sam Sword squeezed the football to his chest with less than a minute remaining in the fourth quarter Saturday. three hours of mayhem came to an appro- priate end. Swkord's interception iced No. 5 Michican's 28- [fJ Michigan 28 24 victory over No. 15 Iowa on OINowa 24 a day the Wo I y er i n e s defense saved them from themselves before 106.505 at Michigan Stadium. Sloppy play on offense and special teams put the Wolverines behind, 21-7. at halftime. Two of quarterback Brian Griese's three interceptions led to Iowa touchdowns. and the Wolverines watched Tim Dwight return a punt 61 yards for a touchdown as time expired. But none of that mattered in the end because of a defense that allowed a lone field goal in the second half - a defense that put Griese in position to throw\ the game-winning touchdown pass to tight end Jerame Tuman with 2:55 remaining. The Hawkeyes' field goal was just the third the Wvolverines have given up in the second half this season. No team has scored a touchdo\w n in the second half. No team has scored a point in the fourth quarter. "Most of the reason we were down was because of me. and I knew I had to come back and play well," said Griese. who rushed for a one-yard touchdown and fin- ished I5-for-23 touchdo% ns. Th half of football never lost confi I know %%hat w Except for t yard touchdow in the second c the season give been allo\in{ game - the W overall) shut dc in a battle of be The Wolveri the nation's top ing up 5.2 poin ond in total defi and allowed th league's top oft Banks. the I ished with 99 one of the leagt pass for seven All-America co Matt Sherman. back in the leak and finished 8 touchdo\w ns. Iowa coacl Wolverines "pr they have one We just didn't lose like that." "Our defens beginning to coach Lloyd C Jerame Tuman, Michigan's All-America tight end, eluded Iowa defenders The senior made seven catches for 85 yards, but none were bigger than WARREN ZINN/Daily all day in Michigan's 28-24 victory over Iowa. his touchdown catch with 2:55 to play. Blue settles score with 'Cats Game No. 5: Noi MichiganStad Coverage fr z e M Monday, O:. ia SARA STILLMAN Dai;, Tailback Clarence Williams outruns Notre Dame cornerback Ty Goode in the first quarter of Michigan's 21-14 victory over the Fighting Irish. Blue defense steps into spotlight against a familiar foe By John Leroi Dally Sports Fditor It was almost as ifthe Wolverines wanted the test. They started sluggish, they ended sloppy. They looked good in the middle. Beaten by the Fighting Irish through the first two quarters. Michigan had its doubts at halftime. But the Wolverines perse- Michigan 21 vered, thanks to a "gut- checked" defense, after Notre Dame 14 nearly giving the game away. But, No. 6 Michigan held on for a 21-14 victory over Notre Dame on Saturday despite fumbles in its own territory on three consecutive possessions in the fourth quarter. "It was very disturbing," Michigan tailback Chris Howard said. "We'd get one good play and make something happen, and then the next play, we'd make a mental error and fumble the ball. "That's something you can't do to yourself or your defense. We could really have sustained a drive and put this team out of the game, and we didn't" Instead, the Wolverines left it to their defense. All three times, the Michigan defense, burned for two long drives in the first half, stopped the Irish short of the end zone. Free safety Tommy Henricks picked off a Ron Powlus pass in the end zone after the first fumble and the Wolverines stuffed Autry Denson on a fourth-and-two dive with 3:30 left in the game. Notre Dame didn't look like a 1-2 team that was pummeled by Michigan State and Purdue in the two preceding weeks. Instead, the Irish proved to be the first real test this season for the Wolverines - 10-0 in non-conference games under coach Lloyd Carr - after dominating victories over Colorado and Baylor. "That was a win, and that's all it was," said Michigan quarterback Brian Griese, who completed 16 of 22 passes for 177 yards and one important touchdown. "But offensively, we cannot play like that. "Not every win is going to be like Baylor or Colorado. It's not always going to be easy with all the starters out in the fourth quarter. "I'm glad this game came down to the fourth quarter because you find something out about your team." In the first half, the Wolverines found that their defense wasn't as stingy as its No. 1 ranking would indicate. Notre Dame rolled up scoring drives of 78 and 98 yards to take a 14-7 halftime lead. Powlus was nearly flawless, completing 11 of 14 passes for 138 yards including two beauties to flanker Bobby Brown, one that set up the Irish's first touchdown and the other that was good for the score. The 98-yard drive came after a Jason Vinson punt was downed at the Notre Dame two-yard line with 4:13 left in the half. But a 22-yard run by fullback Ken Barry on third-and-four from the Notre Dame 21 and two deep passes from Powlus to Malcolm Johnson kept the drive going, culminating in a two- yard run by Tony Driver with just 18 seconds left before halftime. "That was a real gut check for us," Michigan safety Marcus Ray said. "We knew we had to come back and play much better defense in the second half" Notre Dame controlled the clock for.much of the first. holding on to the ball for 19:11 and giving Michican only four drives before the half. three of which ended after four plays. The Wolverines gained just 39 yards rushing and 71 passing. But the Wolverines came out firing in the second half. After Williams took the second-half kickoff 28 yards to the Michigan 44-yard line. Griese hit Tai Streets in the left flat for 15 yards to move into Notre Dame territory. On the next play, Streets got a step on his man on a quick slant and outraced everyone to the end zone to tie the score at 14. The Wolverines took advantage of good field position on their next drive, waltzing down to the Notre Dame 17 before fullback Chris Floyd bullied his way into the end zone to put Michigan up for good. After that, the defense took over, stopping the Irish on six straight second-half possessions. "This was the first time all season we needed our offense to give us a spark," cornerback Charles Woodson said. "It was our challenge to go in and play in sudden change situations. Our offense would've bailed usout if we needed it." Quotable "Most of the reason we were down was because of me, and I knew I had to come back and play well." Quarterback Brian Griese By Danielle Rumore Daily Sports Editor The way the first quarter w\as going,.it appeared that the cycle was coinc to continue. Two offsides penalties in the first six plays of the gam~e. seven penalties overall and trouble finding the end zone from the red zone early on made it look like Michigan LiL Michigan 23 was still struggling to rip its albatross, Northwestern. from Northwestern 6 around its neck. But after another reliable defensive performance. timelv third down conversions down the stretch and a little bit of luck, the sixth-ranked Wolverines put together a good enough game to beat Northwestern for the first time in three attempts. 23-6, in front of 106.048 at Michigan Stadium. The Wildcats have given the Wolverines fits the past two years, beating Michigan two years ago at Michigan Stadium and last year in Evanston. The Wolverines, like in Saturday's game, entered each of the previous two contests with a No. 6 ranking and an undefeated record before los- ing both games, leading to back-to-back subpar seasons. "Yeah, it (the two losses) was brought up a lot, Michigan wide receiver Russell Shaw said. "I'm just glad we beat them, because they have been in our way the past two years." The Wolverines were plagued by another shaky offen- sive effort, including two consecutive turnovers in the third quarter. The Wolverines amassed 141 total rushing yards, but tailback Chris Howard was the only Michigan player tc rush for more than 20 yards. He carried the ball 18 times for 90 yards. 39 more yards than fullback Chris Floyd tail- back Clarence Williams. running back Anthony Thoma:adqatrakBinGis obnd and quarterback Brian Griese combined. Griese was steady in the pocket, completing 23 of 3( passes for 244 yards and two touchdowns. But he and the rest of the Wolverines had trouble converting in the red zone early on. and he was sacked once. The Wolverines' offensive sputter forced them to rely or their defense, which turned in vet another near-perfect per formance. For the second-straight game, the defense held its oppo nent to negative rushing yards at halftime. The Wildcat: had negative-two rushing yards at the half, courtesy o three first quarter sacks, which more than negated tailback Adrian Autry's 27 yards on the ground heading into the lockerroom. Northwestern quarterback Tim Hughes wa: taken down four times overall, and the three sacks in thi first quarter resulted in 29 lost yards. The Wildcats were held to just 35 total yards on the ground. 94 yards short of their 129 average entering the game. "Defensively, we came out and played hard," Michigar cornerback Charles Woodson said. "We came out a littlk flat. You got to buckle down and play more aggressively Anytime another team's in the endzone, you buckli down." S Dhani Jones and the Michigan defense kel back Tim Hughes on the run all afternoon. with 31 tackles, -had oneof the Wolverine,