T- KA --- - ;I,,- CDADTRv vfA.. - .. .Lnr 0. 00 - 7C2 FOOTBALL The ivcigan Daiy - ru bPO vironuay - ptemuer o, . - Wae Forest upsets Wildcats for 2nd straight year - Its WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (AP) - Brian Kuklick directed three second- half touchdown drives that lifted Wake Forest to a 27-20 victory over No. 21 Northwestern on Saturday, the Demon Deacons' second upset of the Wildcats in as many years. Last September, the Wildcats came F to Groves Stadium ranked 13th after winning the Big Ten and going to the Rose Bowl. Wake Forest, struggling for * years near the Atlantic Coast ,"',a Conference cellar, scored two fourth- quarter touchdowns for a 28-27 victo- ry. This time, the Demon Deacons needed no late-game heroics, thanks in large part to Kuklick's passing and Wake Forest limiting the Wildcats to three-and-out on three of their first four t possessions in each half. Kuklick finished with 273 yards on 23-of-33 passing in Wake Forest's opener. He was nearly flawless on the Demon Deacons' three TD drives in the second half, completing 15-of-19 for 183 yards and two scores. Northwestern cut a 17-point deficit to seven on Tim Hughes' second touch- down pass to Brian Musso, this a 5- yarder with 73 seconds left, but the Demon Deacons recovered the onsides kick and ran out the clock. -*' No. 7 NORTH CAROLINA 23, INDIANA 6 Chris Keldorf's hectic offseason was followed by an inauspicious opener for No. 7 North Carolina. .:...: The senior quarterback, coming off /. back and ankle surgery and a weight . .......} a loss of 30 pounds, threw three intercep- AP POTC tions Saturday in the Tar Heels' 23-6 It was deja vu for Northwestern as the Wildcats once again lost to Wake Forest in Winston-Salem. Demon Deacon ideH victory over Indiana. r receiver Thabiti Davis celebrates after his team defeated Northwestern for the second time in two seasonsv However, the team's struggling pass- HNo. 1 Penn State gets by Panthers anks runs for career-best 203 yards in 66-0 drubbing of Northern Iowa; Badgers minus star running back Dayne scramble past Boise State in the final minute ing game was bailed out by tailback Jonathan Linton, who gained a career- high 121 yards on 22 carries. The North Carolina defense had five first- half sacks and limited the Hoosiers to two field goals in Cam Cameron's first game as Indiana coach. Keldorf, who had only five passes intercepted in 338 attempts last season, threw two in the first half and was benched on the team's third series in favor of Oscar Davenport. North Carolina kept Indiana bottled up most of the first half with five sacks and limiting the Hoosiers to 49 yards. Defensive end Greg Ellis had one of those quarterback hits, breaking Marcus Jones' career record with 24 1/2 sacks. The Tar Heels didn't do much better offensively in the opening 30 minutes as Linton had 62 of the team's 94 yards. SOUTHERN MississiPPi 24, ILLINOIs 7 Jamaal Alexander intercepted two passes, returning one 21 yards for a touchdown, as Southern Mississippi defeated Illinois 24-7 Saturday to ruin Ron Turner's coaching debut. Southern Miss (1-1) also played excellent defense last week but lost 21- 6 to No. 2 Florida. By comparison, Florida, the 1996 national champion and top point producer, beat Central Michigan 82-6 Saturday. The Golden Eagles had a much sim- pler task this time - stop an Illinois (0-1) team that has struggled offensive- ly for years. The firing of Lou Tepper and the hiring of former Chicago Bears offensive coordinator Turner couldn't keep the Illini from losing their opener for the fifth consecutive year. Six of the last seven Illinois coaches have lost their debuts. Harold Shaw had 127 rushing yards for Southern Mississippi, which also spoiled the coaching debuts of Alabama's Gene Stallings in 1990 and Georgia's Jim Donnan in 1996. The Golden Eagles held Illinois to 133 yards and six first downs in the first three quarters, built a 24-0 lead and went on to post their first victory in 41 years against a team north of the Ohio River. Alexander helped limit Mark Hoekstra to 165 passing yards and broke open the game with 5:32 left in the third quarter by picking off Hoekstra's pass and going untouched for the touchdown to make it 17-0. Alexander's second interception, with 6:51 to play, set up Shaw's 1-yard scoring run. Hoekstra finally got the Illini on the board with 2:53 left, connecting with George McDonald-Ashford on a 22- yard TD pass. Illinois' Robert Holcombe ran for 91 yards, breaking the school's career rushing record. He has 2,943 yards, surpassing Thomas Rooks (2,887 yards from 1982-85) and Jim Grabowski (2,878 from 1963-65). In the first half, Southern Miss had an edge in almost every statistic but managed only Tim Hardaway's 20-yard field goal with 7:10 to play. Illinois didn't get a first down until 6:20 remained and didn't crosshinto Southern Miss territory until the final play from scrimmage. The Golden Eagles opened the sec- ond half with an 80-yard drive, capped by Lee Roberts' passes of 34 yards to Sherrod Gideon and 26 yards to Brandon Francis for the score. STATE COLLEGE (AP) - Mike McQueary threw for a school-record 366 yards and two touchdowns as No. 1 Penn State won its season opener, 34-17, over Pittsburgh on Saturday. McQueary, a fifth-year senior, also Ca school record for total offense with 370 yards. McQueary completed 21 of 36 passes before he was pulled with 12:38 left in the game. Joe Jurevicius was his favorite receiver, catching seven tosses for 108 yards and a touchdown. Chafie Fields had three receptions for 80 yards. Penn State started slowly, leading 40-3 after one quarter, but put the ame away in the second and third with 24 straight points. Pittsburgh had two late touchdowns. Curtis Enis gained 85 yards on 20 carries and scored two touchdowns for Penn State. No. 20 Iowa 66, Northern Iowa 0 Iowa coach Hayden Fry hopes the $300,000 Northern Iowa earned to play the Hawkeyes on Saturday was worth it. "I imagine that they're happy for e money, but can you imagine how those players feel, 66-0?" Fry said. Tavian Banks ran for a career-best 203 yards and two long touchdowns and caught one of Matt Sherman's three scoring passes to lead No. 20 Iowa to its most lopsided win since 1914. "'We've got the numbers on them and obviously we get better people in Spa recruiting," Fry said. "We wore them down with our numbers and with the heat and humidity." Although the two teams aren't scheduled to play again in the near future, Northern Iowa defensive back Ty Talton said he hopes the series will resume. "We didn't show how good we were today, and a lot of people will probably say Iowa shouldn't be play- ing a small school like (Division) I- AA Northern Iowa, but I think it's good for our program and their pro- gram," he said. "We just didn't execute the way we should have executed. We made them look a lot better than they were," Talton said. The Hawkeyes stunned Northern Iowa on the first play of the game with a fake reverse that resulted in Banks zipping untouched 63 yards down the left sideline just 20 seconds into the season opener. "I don't know how I do it. I just do it," Banks said. "There's 10 other guys out there to block for me and to help me run like that." It only got worse for Mike Dunbar, making his debut as Panthers coach after Terry Allen left to become coach at Kansas. Iowa scored on six of its first eight possessions in the first half. Northern Iowa mistakes made Iowa's job easier. "We can't beat ourselves," Dunbar said. "The game is hard enough as it is. We're going to play other tough opponents. We can't contribute to it. "I think we'll learn from those mis- takes and be able to regroup and improve from that. And we needed to play somebody - it just didn't have to be somebody so good." It was the Hawkeyes' biggest vic- tory margin and the Panthers' worst loss since Iowa's 95-0 drubbing of Northern Iowa, then known as Iowa Teachers College, in 1914. It was the most points scored by Iowa since a 69-7 defeat of Texas-El Paso in 1986. Iowa's 658 yards was the fifth- highest in school history. Iowa led 38-0 and was at the Northern Iowa 1 when the half ended. The Hawkeyes scored three touch- downs on the first play of a quarter, including Banks' TD run to open the game, his 40-yard scoring jaunt to start the second quarter and Randy Reiners' 26-yard touchdown pass to Richard Willock on the first play of the fourth quarter. Banks' performance was the sev- enth-best in school history and eclipsed his previous best of 182 yards last year against Iowa State. Banks' 40-yard scoring run was set up by Plez Atkins' end zone intercep- tion of Shane Fortney's pass with 2:29 left in the first quarter. Fortney, a transfer from Washington, had four passes inter- cepted.. Banks' score staked Iowa to a 17-0 lead with 14:53 left in the half. Northern Iowa's Mike Furrey fum- bled the ensuing kickoff and Ryan Hansen recovered for Iowa on the Panthers 27. The Hawkeyes again struck quick- ly, with Sherman hitting wide-open Tim Dwight over the middle to push the lead to 24-0 with 14:29 left in the half. The Panthers, ranked No. 4 in Division I-AA, were ineffective all day behind Fortney, a fifth-year senior. Wisconsin 28, Boise State 24 The Wisconsin Badgers struggled without star running back Ron Dayne on Saturday before shaking off heavy underdog Boise State 28-24 on quar- terback Mike Samuel's 12-yard touchdown scramble with just 49 sec- onds left. Samuel was benched for 2 1/2 quarters after throwing two intercep- tions - and he lost a fumble upon his return late in the fourth quarter before an indignant crowd of 72,209 at Camp Randall Stadium. But he came back to set up the winning score with a 28-yard scram- ble on third-and-12 to the Boise State 25 after somehow slipping the grasp of blitzing cornerback Ross Farris in the backfield. Boise State was a 36-point under- dog. But with Dayne watching from the sideline with a shoulder injury, the Broncos (0-2), who lost by 40 points to Division I-AA Cal State- Northridge last week, nearly pulled off the biggest upset in their history. AP PHOTO Penn State quarterback Mike McQueary completed 21 of 36 passes for a school record 366 yards as the top-ranked Nittany Lions held off Pittsburgh. rtans turn over Broncos in rout Broncos commit seven turnovers as State jumps out to 42-0 lead in first half; reserves take care of rest Mig Ten Standings Team Cot - Overall Iowa 0-0 1-0 Michigan State 0-0 1-0 Penn State 0-0, 1-0 Ohio State 0-0 1-0, Northwestern 0-0 14. Wisconsin 0-0 1 Michigan 0-0' 0-0 llinois 0-0 0-1 Indiana 0-0 0-1 Minnesota 0-0 0-1 Purdue 0-0 0-1 EAST LANSING (AP) - ichigan State's defense teased the Woffense: Which would score more points? The Spartans, ranked 25th, got three touchdowns from the offense and three from the defense and spe- cial teams Saturday in routing Western Michigan 42-10. The Broncos (1-1) committed seven turnovers and the Spartans (I- 0) turned four into touchdowns. *Ahead 42-0, Michigan State sent in the reserves before halftime. "The second quarter just wasn't our day," Western Michigan coach Gary Darnell said. "You can't turn the ball over that much and expect to beat a bad team, much less a superior team like Michigan State." turnovers last season, grabbed four interceptions and three fumbles Saturday. Some of those Broncos blunders helped Michigan State double a 21- point lead in less than two minutes. Cornerback Amp Campbell returned an interception 43 yards for a score in the second quarter. On the next possession, quarterback Tim Lester's fumble was returned 37 yards for a touchdown by Michigan State's Robaire Smith. Two plays later, the kickoff bounced off Jesse Turner's shoulder pads, and Scott recovered the ball during an end zone scram- eyes got so big," he confessed. "I was trying to switch the ball to the outside hand like they teach running backs. "I'm just a linebacker." Michigan State quarterback Todd Schultz completed 8-of-I8 passes for 92 yards in his first test since reconstructive surgery on his left knee. He didn't play at all in the second half. "It's tight but it doesn't hurt," Schultz said. Western Michigan's points came on a 3-yard TD pass to Frank Bosworth in the third quarter after a blocked punt. Brad Selent added a 34-yard field goal. The sold-out Spartan Stadium crowd became silent on the second classroom." TOLEDO 36, PURDUE 22 Dwayne Harris ran for 159 yards and a touchdown, Chris Wallace passed for two scores and Toledo ran off 27 straight points to overcome an early deficit and beat Purdue 36-22 Saturday night. The loss spoiled the Purdue debut of coach Joe Tiller. Toledo, a member of the Mid- American Conference, came into the game having lost eight of its nine encounters with Big Ten teams. The Rockets ran off three touch- downs in less than seven minutes of the first quarter after Purdue had pounded to a touchdown on its first possession. Ed Watson scored on a 45-yard run to put the Boilermakers up 7-0 Harris carried 32 times in his first collegiate start. Purdue was forced to punt again after running three plays and this time Toledo went 69 yards in eight plays, with quarterback Chris Wallace finding Freeman on a 29- yard pass for the touchdown and a 21-7 lead. Chris Merrick added field goals of 25 and 37 yards to push the advantage to 27-7 before Purdue ended the half with Brian Alford scoring on a 73-yard pass from Billy Dicken. Toledo put the game out of reach by scoring the only points of the third quarter on a 21-yard field goal by Merrick. They opened the scoring in the fourth quarter on a 6-yard pass from