C41v r~trun 4,W" ews: 76-DAILY dvertising: 764-0554 One /undred seven years of editoriil feedom Monday November 24,1997 --- --- ------ - - - v y IN x 3 ~~- 1111 '1 1,IN1 - MICHIGAN 20, OHIO STATE 14 ext stop r unbeaten olverines: asadena MIan Goldenbach ports Editor Charles Woodson's grin stretched longer than sual, even for the confident All-American. It eemed to extend from end zone to end zone at ichigan Stadium. And in the middle of Woodson's mouth was a weet symbol of perfection - a rose. "It just doesn't get any better than this,' said oodson, sporting a fresh, bright-white "1997 ig Ten Champions" cap. stately was the rose, yet so simple was the Michigan's 20-14 victory over Ohio State on aturday concluded the Wolverines' first perfect eason in 26 years and sent them to the Rose Bowl or the first time since the 1992 season. A year of dreams culminated in a day of magic, hich so drained the Wolverines physically and motionally that some could hardly muster the nergy to describe it. "I'm still emotionally out of it," junior safety Mcus Ray said. "This is my dream: to go unde- beat Ohio State at home and go to the Rose owl. That's why I came here and that's why my eammates came here." Since first setting foot on Michigan Stadium rf, each Wolverine had waited for this moment. o current Michigan player had ever earned a Rose Bowl berth, making all unsure of what true uphoria felt like or exactly how to react. "I came back into the lockerroom and we were elebrating, and we sang "The Victors," said fifth- e senior Brian Griese, who almost opted to skip hu nal year. "I just wanted to go back out on the field and be back out there one more time, like an encore." The fans who had lambasted Griese during his tumultuous career now embraced the quarterback with similar intensity. "I just wanted to shake every fan's hand in the stands. I wasn't able to do that, but I think I got about 50 percent of them." Griese played through the pain of losing four games in each of his four previous seasons, but he nr gave up hope that this perfect moment would come to fruition. His coach also waited patiently. Lloyd Carr sur- vived both good and tough times as an assistant for 19 seasons. And when he finally became a head coach in 1995, he ignored criticism and pres- sure, looking instead to the day when he could call his team the best in the land. "For us, it's truly a dream season," Carr said. "When you can line up and play hard for 11 straight weeks against the caliber of competition that we've fbi- and never play when you didn't play hard -fat's the thing I'm most proud of." Michigan played hardest in its most important game. Sure, there had been rivals such as Michigan State and talented, intimidating oppo- nents such as Penn State. But no team presented a complete test quite like Ohio State, making victo- ry over the Wolverines' arch-rivals an appropriate finish to a season full of challenges. "This is a big rivalry just like Michigan- Michigan State," Ray said. "The only difference in t game is that Michigan-Michigan State is like aeighborhood street fight and this is like world war." Now that Michigan has won that war, it can stand on top of the world and smell the roses - the scent of perfection. "It's lonely at the top," said senior co-captain Eric Mayes, who was injured in the fourth game of the season and had to sit out the last seven games. "It's lonely at the top." Teammates hoist injured senior co-captain Eric Mayes above the crowd following Michigan's Rose Bowl-clinching victory over Ohio State on Saturday. taside: The Daily's commemorative wrap-around section. Inside. b Charles Woodson Fans storm field, streets in celebration An estimated 8,000 fans rush onto turf; thousands more crowd South University "I've been waiting 21 years to do this and it feels great," said Education senior Dave Hebert. "Oh, my God, it feels great. It's like I've been reborn as a Michigan fan." Whn th. am rink r achd m _ha- alike as they stayed on the field for nearly an hour after Michigan's triumph. Others took pieces of the actual field as a souvenir, digging up chunks-of the turf to save for posterity. "I ont nd from the SO-yard line. two nairs of _ _ - ..U IL~W7J