10 -The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, December 9, 1997 Marshall's controversial Moss is Heisman dark horse. hUNTINGTON, WVa. (AP) - - When Randy Moss showed up at Florida State, coach Bobby Bowden was almost giddy over his new wide receiver. "He can run, he can jump, but what he does best is run like a scalded dog," Bowden said before Moss ran afoul of the law and was kicked off the team. A year and another school later, Moss hasn't stop running. :And no one can catch him. "Nobody in America can cover him," Ball State coach Bill ' Lynch said after Moss caught five touchdown passes in Marshall's 42-16 victory against the Cardinals. The only sophomore among this year's Heisman Trophy candidates, Moss set the Division {-A single-season mark with 25 receiving touchdowns - five covering 70 yards or more - and has caught 90 passes for 1,647 yards to set a Mid-American Conference record. In two seasons, he has scored 53 touchdowns for Marshall. "He's doing this with people putting triple coverage on him;' Marshall coach Bob Pruett said. "They doubled and triple-teamed Randy, but he always seems to find a way to make big plays." At 6-foot-S, Moss is taller than most defensive backs and he's faster,-with 4.25 speed in the 40-yard-dash. He's also got an impressive 39-inch vertical leap and huge hands with ten- taclelike fingers that rarely drop passes. The 1997 Randy Moss highlight film begins with a 90- yard touchdown against Army. Cradling a screen pass behind the line of scrimmage on his own 5, Moss took off across the field, faking two linemen off their feet, stiff-arming another defender, hurdling yet another and, without losing a step,-accelerating dow n the left sideline while the rest of the field seemed to be in slow motion. Already named the MAC player of the year and a finalist for the Biletnikoff Award given to the nation's best receiver, Moss is setting new standards for receivers, having scored at least one touchdown in each of his 27 college games. But Moss says he would rather watch the Heisman Trophy ceremony Dec. 13 on his living room television than in per- son. He is one of four players invited to New York for the cer- emony. "I think just for the fact that I'm coming out of a small school here in Huntington, it would be very difficult for me to win it," Moss said. "Hopefully it's not that big of a factor, but deep down inside, I think it is." Moss' college career was almost over before it began. One of West Virginia's most celebrated high school ath- letes, Moss was headed to Notre Dame but the Irish revoked the scholarship after he was charged with attacking another student at DuPont High School. Moss pleaded guilty to battery and was sentenced to 30 days in jail. He was allowed to defer most of the sentence until after his freshman year in college. Florida State was quick to roll out the welcome mat, but a year later rolled it back up when Moss violated his probation by smoking marijuana. A one-year jail sentence was reduced a month later to time served after he completed algebra and speech communications classes in a worudy program. Although Moss never played at Florida State. Bowden was well aware of his talent. "He's just got so many tools, limitless tools;' Bowden said after watching Moss practice. After his release from jail, Moss walked on at Marshall and scored 28 touchdowns, leading the Thundering Herd to the Division I-AA championship and a 15-0 record. This season, Marshall (10-2) returned to Division I-A after a 28-year absence and faces Mississippi in the Motor City Bowl. But can a wide receiver in the MAC win the IHeisman? For that matter, can a wide receiver from any school win it? The last receiver to win it was Michigan's Desmond Howard in 1991. "If the Heisman Trophy is for the best college player who does the most for his team, I think Randy deserves a shot,' said Marshall quarterback Chad Pennington. "When the offense needs a big play, he's going to make one almost every time." Nonetheless, the award is expected to go to players at high- er-profile programs such as Tennessee's Peyton Manning, Michigan's Charles Woodson or Ryan Leaf at Washington State. But one-by-one, Moss has made believers out of each of his opponents. "I don't know about the Ileisman Trophy because I'm not into that. But anyone who can run that fast is special:'' said West Virginia coach Don Nehlen, whose team defeated 1arshall, 42-31. despite \1oss' tw\o touchdowns. Moss has tried to deflect some of the attention toward his teammates. But he may also be trying to avoid the kind of negative publicity that came with his arrests and frankne lie w as sharply criticized in West Virginia after he to d Sports Illustrated and the Los Angeles Times that he did not like the state and wanted to leave as quickly as possible.., Moss also drew heavy criticism when he said he didn't know much about the 1970 plane crash that wiped out Marshall's team in 1970, and while calling it a tragedy, he said it "wasn't nothing big." Pruett says he and Moss have not discussed the HReisman or Moss' future. But he thinks Moss will go to the NFL rather than return for his junior season. Moss says he has set no timetable and has enrolled spring semester classes. The Heisman. Moss says wit a shrug, would be nice, but losing won't break his heart. In fact, he's weary of answering questions about it. "This Heisman thing is not so big to me. If the trophy comes, great. I mean, if it wouldn't hurt anybody's feelings, I'd watch it on TV I never really did set any individual goals for myself." Kansas tops Penn, 89-71; Blue Devils hold on to top spot in AP poll WASHINGTON (AP) - That losing feeling doesn't come around very often for the Kansas Jayhawks. This time, they were able to get rid of it in a hurry. Raef LaFrentz had 25 points and 11 rebounds as No. 3 Kansas rebounded from its first loss of the season by rolling past Penn, 89-71, last night to take third place in the Franklin National Bank Classic. "The good thing about basketball is that you can come back quickly and play again the next day sometimes and make yourself feel better," Kansas coach Roy Williams said. "l'd hate to be a football coach and have to wait seven days before playing again." Paul Pierce added 14 points and T.J. Pugh had 13 as Kansas' formidable front- court trio was simply too tall and too strong for Penn (3-4). The Jayhawks (9- 1), able to punch the ball inside early and often, shot 57 percent and outrebounded the Quakers, 35-28. Kansas, which dropped one spot in the top 25 after Sunday's 86-83 loss to No. 19 Maryland, failed to win a regular sea- son tournament for the first time since 1992. Yesterday's game was its fourth in seven days - with just one practice squeezed in. "We've just got to get to Christmas break," said Williams, whose team next plays Massachusetts at home tomorrow, "when we can have a lot of practices, and that will help us." Riding LaFrentz's inside game, Kansas led 16-7 with 12:45 left in the first half. Three consecutive inside bas- kets -two by LaFrentz and one by Pugh - combined with three turnovers by Penn made it 28-17 with 8:51 left. "Their size overwhelmed us;' Penn coach Fran Dunphy said. "LaFrentz, Pierce and (point guard Ryan) Robertson - great team, with an inside-outside combination." it was 37-29 at halftime, and the lead hit double digits for good when Billy Thomas hit a 3-pointer early in the sec- ond half. Thomas was 5-of-8 from 3- point range, including 4-for-4 in the sec- ond half, and finished with 15 points. Against Maryland, he was 1-of-9 from 3- point range. "I'll never stop slhooting," said Thomas, who needs seven more threes to become Kansas' career leader. "(Coach) gave me permission to shoot 50 in a row as long as I play strong defense." Penn is a team that relies on its guards, but Garett Kreitz and Michael Jordan were unable to penetrate consistently against Kansas' man-to-man defense. Kreitz, a solid 3-point shooter, was shad- owed by Pierce most of the first half and was unable to get off his shot. He was open more often in the second half, and finished S-for-10 from behind the arc and scored 17 points. Jordan had 12 points. Kansas has never lost to an Ivy League school in six games. "We just wanted to play as well as we can, and represent the university,' junior forward Paul Romanczuk said. "I think we did that." IN THE POLLS: Duke held on the No. I spot in the AP college basketball poll yesterday, while North Carolina moved up to No. 2 in a week that saw nine top 25 teams lose and. none fall out of the rankings. In addition to the top two places, the Atlantic Coast Conference kept five other spots in the top 25, its second straight week with seven ranked teams. The only other time it happened, January 1993, the Big Ten lost one of its seven teams the next week. Duke (8-0), which won its three games last week by an average of 52 points$ had 49 first-place votes and 1,728 points from the national media panel, 34 points more than the Tar Heels (9-0), who got 19 first-place votes. Kansas (8-1), which beat Arizona'ear- lier in the week but lost to Maryland on Sunday, dropped one spot to third, receiv- ing one first-place vote. Kentucky, which beat Purdue and Indiana last week, jumped three spots to fourth and was followed by South Carolina, Arizona and Xavier, the only other team to get a first-place vote. Purdue, Utah and Iowa rounded out the Top Ten. Stanford moved up one spot to lead the Second Ten, and was followed by UCLA, Connecticut, New Mexico, Arkansa . Florida State, Clemson, Fresno St Maryland and Temple. The last five teams in the rankings were Mississippi, Princeton, Georgia, Georgia Tech and Wake Forest. Besides the top two teams, the other ACC teams are Florida State, Clemson, Maryland, Georgia Tech and Wake Forest. Of the nine ranked teams that lost last week, seven lost another member of the Top 25. The only ones that didn't .g Mississippi, which lost to host Ball state in the championship game of }the Cardinal Varsity Classic, and Georgia Tech, which lost to North Carolina State in overtime in the ACC opener for both'. Mississippi's loss was cause fbr tthe week's biggest drop as the Rebels (44 -) fell from 14th to 21st. New Mexico (54), which lost to UCLA in the Woodein Classic, dropped six spots to No. 14. The biggest jump was Maryland's 4 from 23rd to 19th after beating Kansasin the opening round of the Frankhin National Bank Classic. AP PHOTO Nq. 3 Kansas rebounded from its loss to No. 19 Maryland Sunday with a 89-71 victory over Pennsylvania last night in the Franklin National Bank Classic. ,.O " Pont W!it Capture our undefeated Michigan football team and its journey to the Rose Bowl in the 1998. Michiganensian! Men's basketball falls to Bradley BRAVES Continued from Page 9 field was exemplified in their 34 per- cent performance from the field in the stanza. Neither team was able to generate a sustained run at any point during the half. Asselin provided one of the few bright spots in the half for Michigan. After extending his 6-foot-I1l frame to block a shot with less than a minute to play, the freshman raced downcourt ahead of the pack. Bullock picked up the loose ball and fed Asselin for a tomahawk dunk. With the Braves converting two baskets amidst an array of steals and hustle late in the first half, Michigan may have encountered a flashback. The groundswell of vocal support reached a feverish pitch near the end of the period, so much like Crisler sounded in support of Michigan just two days before against the Rebels. The atmosphere surrounding the game had all the elements of a circus show. Before the tipoff, all the lights were shut off for the national anthem, high- lighted by a fireworks and spotlight show. T-shirts were launched into the stands by the cheerleaders. In addition to the abundance of red in the audience, open seats were scarce. Behind the Michigan net in the first half were more than 50 stu- dents packed together like sardines - all in black Bradley t-shirts. They stood the entire game and maintained their intensity. The public address announcer was also in on the act, encouraging the fans to "remain standing at the begin- ning of the half - until Michigan scores." MICHIGAN (58) FO FT REB MIN M-A M-A O-T A F PTS Baston 24 2-4 2-3 2-6 0 4 6 Ward 33 3-14 2-2 5-11 3 2 9 Traylor 36 8-13 0-4 810 2 4 16 Reid 24 3.5 0-0 0.3 5 0 8 Bullock 36 3-15 2-2 1-5 1 1 10 Conlan 24 2-6 0-0 0-3 2 1 5 Oliver 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 1 0 Asselin 19 2-3 0-0 3-5 0 1 4 Smith 4 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Totals 200 23.0 6-1. 194313 14 58 FG%: .383 FT%:.545. 3-point FG: 6-15, .400 Bullock 2-6, Reid 2-4, Ward 1-3, Conlan 1.2). Blocks: 4 (aston 2, Asselin 2). Steals: 5 (Conlan, Reid, Ward). Technical Fouls: 1. BRADLEY (63) FG FT Rae MIN M-A M-A 0.T A F PTS Schairer 12 0-1 0-0 0 1 2 2 0 Cage 32 4-8 2-2 1-4 1 0 10 Akinkunle 37 9-15 1-1 2-7 3 3 19 Dye 38 7-18 1-3 O-1 2 2 16 Roberson 32 3-5 2-2 3-6 4 4 8 Lee 11 1-2 0.0 2.4 1 1 2 Koita 7 0-0 0-0 0.1 0 0 0 Collins 19 2-4 24 02 2 1 6 Atkins 12 1-4 0.0 0-1 0 0 2 Team 0 0-0 0-0 01000 Totals 200 27-57 &12 828 1513 63 FG%: .,474. 1=1%:.-.667. 3-poit FG: 1-12, .083 {Dye) Blocks:6 (Akinkunle, Cage, Roberson, Lee). Steals: 11 (Roberson 4, Cage 2, Dye 2, Akinkunle 1, Lee 1, Atkins 1). Technical Fouls: none. Michigan-........24 34 - 58 Athletes.........-28 35 -63 At: Carver Arena HOOPS Continued from Page 9 marquee team on the Tigers' schedule. Compounded by the fact that Michigan served as bait to sell ouitthe Towson Center for the Tigers' first game on a newly installed hardvwood floor, the Wolverines ran into another energized crowd and team, and were barely able to eke out a 75-72 victory. PRECIOuS TICKS: The Wolverines tried to turn back the clock for the-s- ond time this season in the final onds of yesterday's game. This time, however, Michigan's wish was not granted. The Wolverines, trailing Bradley, 61-58, with approxi- mately 17 seconds left, fouled the Braves to stop the clock. But. the scoreboard operator did not stop. the clock until it read 14.8.- Ellerbe protested to no avail while the raucous crowd watched Rob. D miss the front end of the one-andao t While the crowd was loud, the refer- ee's failure to acknowledge Ellerbd's plea may have been a reaction to his protest of an.earlier call that earned him a technical foul. Against Detroit earlier in the sea- son, Ellerbe persuaded the officials-to add three-tenths of a second to.he clock in the waning moments of the game. - . a The clock read 0.1 when.:t. Wolverines scored the winning basket. --a --- m m m m ma m minm minmer s a Im /At 0 UU I1 REGISTRAR'S BULLETIN BOARD 4 4 4 4 __ £ * ~ A ~ A~ . I I I * I I