The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - September 22, 1997 - 5B 0D g ground game runs shod over Bears' defense GAME STATISTICS PASSING Player Watson 1 Totals 1 RUSHING Player A Watson Overstreet Burkins Douglas Totals C-A 12-24 12-24 1 that after Brian ig game last week i was about to n oto a ... gulp, i the options are a ?9 liscouraged by a week ago, where on the ground, nor ack Chris Floyd, Ir drew up a game i imarily on the erday. > o total offense, affirming that the main cog in the lorado, we didn't ng game," said sward, who rushed ouchdowns. "The ig a good ground ame and a good to do different ichigan to do was Rarely could one vould pass or run, t third and 11 with their own 7-yard line, Howard's number was called on what is often a passing down. Sure enough, the Baylor defense was thinking pass and Howard scampered up the middle for 17 yards and a first down. Three plays later, on a third and three from its own 31, Michigan opted to throw, and Griese hit Tai Streets over the middle on a slant for six yards and another first down. This is not to say that Michigan went against conventional wisdom on every third down play (the Wolverines ran on 30 of 42 first-down plays), but it did so enough to force Baylor to think twice on nearly every play. Not surprising, partly because Michigan's offense was so unpredictable, the Wolverines were able to average 5.6 yards per carry, a rate that nearly guarantees victory. Also keeping Baylor on edge was the num- ber of resources Michigan had in its back- field. Along with Howard, freshman Anthony Thomas' 122 yards gave the Wolverines their first duo of 100-yard backs since Tyrone Wheatley and Tshimanga Biakabutuka ran roughshod over Purdue on Nov. 5, 1994, for 148 and 100 yards, respectively. But the options did not end with Howard and Thomas. Clarence Williams served as an excellent complementary scatback to the power games provided by the other two. The 5-foot-9 Williams, who contrasts the 220-pound bruisers Thomas and Howard, rushed for 77 yards to go along with his five receptions out of the backfield, giving Michigan a relentless attack no matter who was the featured back. "Whenever one of these guys got tired, we brought in a new one," Griese said. "It was just like reloading." The reloading job was in the hands of assis- tant head coach Fred Jackson and offensive coordinator Mike DeBord, who did a good job divying up the carries for the trio. "Anybody that's a running back wants to get the ball," Howard said. "And the way we were spreading the ball around, Fred Jackson and Mike DeBord are doing an excellent job at giving us all opportunities to get the ball." And with the absence of Floyd, two of the three were often in the game at the same time forcing Baylor to guess yet again as to who to key on. "When you have three guys who almost run for 100 yards each, a defense can't key on any one guy," Howard said. But Michigan has shown in the past that its overload of backfield talent has been any- thing but a hindrance to its development. When Wheatley was nagged by injuries early in the 1994, season Biakabutuka received plenty more carries in Wheatley's absence and then shared the workload when the incumbent returned. So despite Griese's high quarterback rating (14th in the nation), don't look for Michigan to go away from its bread and butter anytime soon. Att 6 6 4 12 28 Yds 42 Yds Yds 62 62 s Avg 7.0 3.3 3 4.5 2 1.0 2 3.3 s Avg ) 7.3 5 3.8 L 3.7 7 7.0 2 5.2 RECEIVING Player No. Thompson 4 Overstreet 4 Mo.Anderson 3 Cogdill 1 Totals 12 PUNTING Player Atteberry TD 0 0 Lg 18 13 12 7 18 Lg 14 5 8 7 14 Avg 42.9 'g L4 3 22 0 1E 0 z No. Yds 9 386 KICKOFF RETURNS Player Burkins Douglas Total No. 3 1 4 WARRN Z INN'/Daily This Charles Woodson touchdown catch was called back because he lined up in the wrong place. The All-American said he'd like to see the ball more on offense. -DEFENSE Player Codie Smith Ma. Anderson Johnson Micheaux Henderson Sampy Snow Coy Mallory Littleton Neal Arroyo Parker AI-Amin Armistead Atteberry Baxter Bowie Foster Hamilton Jackson Yds 52 16 68 Solo 12 10 10 6 5 4 4 3 3 3 3 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 Avg 17.: 16.C 17. Asst 1 2 1 0 1 2 1 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 nt 1 1 TD 0 0 0 0 0 TD 0 0 0 0 0 AL9 68 g TD 2 0 5 0 2 0 Tot 13 12 11 6 6 6 5 5 4 3 3 13 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 Woodson getting offensive but wants the ball even more PASS DEFENSE Player Int Yds Codie 0 0 Smith 0 0 By John Lerol Daily Sports Editor Exhibit One: Charles Woodson was named a finalist for the Biletnikoff Award, given annually to college foot- ball's top receiver, even though he caught only 13 passes last season. Exhibit Two: In its preview of the Michigan-Baylor game, ESPN ran a 30- second commercial where college foot- ball analyst Lee Corso called Woodson an "All-American, two ways." Exhibit Three: Woodson caught only two passes in Michigan's 38-3 stomping of Baylor on Saturday, but both were huge catches that confirm that, although he probably won't win the Biletnikoff or be ' O SARA STILLMAN/Daily lordefenders like Tommie Black often found themsleves on the turf watching Wolverines like Russell Shaw fly by. Ihign gained 188 yards through the air but did most of the damage on the ground, racking up 344 rushing yards. BE ARS Continued from Page 1B Dave Roberts said. "For a game between Colorado and Notre Dame, they came out and played extremely well, which is what great football ns do." he Wolverines' biggest improve- tnent from the previous week was in the running game. They played with- out starting fullback Chris Floyd, who was suspended for violating team rules, and still managed to rack up 344 rushing yards. Last week against the Buffs with Floyd in the game, they managed just 142 yards. Baylor's defensive line was embar- gassed by Michigan's offensive front * subsequently by the running game all day. The Bears had the worst rush defense in the nation last year and it hasn't improved much. Michigan's backs ran through Baylor's line like it was tissue paper, and were thrown for just 14 lost yards.. "I think they were a little out- matched because we had the advan- e of size over them," said chigan tailback Chris Howard, who rushed for 112 yards and two touch- downs. "Overall, the offensive line did a tremendous job with their blocking. Sometimes I got into the open field and I didn't know what to do because I wasn't use to holes as big as they were today." Up next Who: Notre Dame (1-2) Where: Michigan Stadium When: Saturday, 3:30 p.m. The game will be televised nationally by ABC. Series: Michigan leads all-time, 15-10-1 The Fighting Irish visit Ann Arbor reeling from a troublesome loss to Michigan State. Notre Dame is under .500 for the first time since 1986 and, beacuse it's not a member of any conference, probably has to win the rest of its games to earn a bowl berth. Meanwhile, Michigan is hot. Jumphig two spots in the Associated Press top 25, the sixth-ranked Wolverines are fre.h off of two dominating victo- ries. ESPN Gameday will be in Ann Arbor for the second time this season. named an All-American at two posi- tions, Woodson is a world-class wide receiver. "We need for him to come in more," Michigan quarterback Brian Griese said. "If the offense dictates, it would be nice to use him more" Woodson was only in on offense for about half a dozen plays, but caught a quick slant and wove through the Baylor defense for a touchdown. His other catch was a spectacular leaping 35-yard grab. Michigan coach Lloyd Carr said before the season that he wanted to use Woodson on the offensive side of the ball now that teams knew he was a viable weapon. Woodson has seen some time on offense, but not much more than he did last year. He pulls triple-duty as a punt returner, so some argue that Woodson might get fatigued playing more at receiver. But the All-American corner- back disagrees. "I'd love to see more balls thrown my way," Woodson said. "Whenever they want to give me the ball, then I'll step up and I'll take it. "I would like to play more, but when you're winning, you're happy to be win- ning. You know, I don't want to cause any problems on the offense." As if he needed more to help his argu- ment, Woodson also caught a nifty 29- yard pass from Griese in the back corner of the end zone early in the fourth quar- ter that was called back because of an illegal formation penalty. "That was my fault,"Woodson said. "I wasn't on the lime of scrimmage." And as always, Woodson played spec- tacular defense, making five tackles, :rnlrl;:-tflra fr l -c Pa - > ~a came when long snapper Jeff Holtry messed up. After one bad snap in the first half, Holtry followed that perfor- mance with a hike about 10-yards over Vinson's head. Vinson tracked the ball back 25 yards and somehow got off a pretty decent kick. If Vinson didn't punt the ball away, the Bears would have had a first down at the Michigan 10-yard line. "Baylor used a little bit of a stunt on the punt rush, so I think Jeff was think- ing about the man he had to block,' Carr said. "Vinson made an absolutely tremendous play. That's something you like to see. he turned a real negative play into something a little bit better field- position wise." GETTING EXPERIENCE: Michigan's large margin of victory gave Carr the opportunity to play a lot of freshmen and other backups that otherwise wouldn't have seen as much playing time. Anthony Thomas got 21 carries and rushed for 122 yards to lead the Wolverines. Freshman fullbacks Demetrius Smith and Ray Jackson gained valuable experi- ence playing for starter Chris Floyd, who was serving a one-game suspension for violating team rules. J.R. Ford, Patrick McCall and Tate Schanski all got carries and Schanski scored the game's final touchdown. ZACH IS BACK: Senior offensive line- man Zach Adami, who didn't play in Michigan's 27-3 win over Colorado returned for Saturday's win over Baylor. Adami, who started all 11 games at guard last season, started Saturday at center. This year, he is expected to anchor an offensive line that starts two freshmen and a sophomore. Michigan runningback Clarence Williams threw a lot of the credit for the Wolverines' successful ground game Adami's way. "He's an experienced guy coming in, so you know he was going to make the right calls,"Williams said. "We missed a few calls last week, but the communica- tion was a lot better and I think that's a direct result of him being in there." DISAPPEARING ACr: Maybe Griese went to the well too many times last week, throwing five times to tight end Jerame Tuman for 152 yards. Griese completed just one pass to a tight end - a 23 yarder to Tuman in the second quar- ter - against Baylor. INJURY UPDATE: Defensive end Glen Steele dressed but did not play against Baylor because of an ankle injury. Center Steve Frazier sat out with a pinched nerve in his neck. Fr.P a. atyr s rnn T . r rfirne At a glance Key Performers For Michigan, freshman Anthony Thomas carried 21 times for 1 yards and a touchdown. Chris Howard rushed for 112 yards on 19 carries, giving the Wolverines a pair of 100-yard rushers in a game for the first time since 1994. 4 For Baylor, Nikia Codie led the Bears with 13 tackles, 12 unassisted. Key Play There were many, How about Charles Woodson dropping Morris Anderson for a five-yard loss on a pass play and coming back on the next play and tackling the receiver four more yards into the backfield? Big Ten Standings Team Conf. Overall Iowa 0-0 3-0 Michigan State 0-0 3-0 Ohio State 0-0 3-0 Penn State 0-0 3-0 Michigan 0.0 2-0 Wisconsin 0-0 3-1 Minnesota 0-0 2-1 Purdue 0-0 2-1 Northwestern 0-0 2-2 Indiana 0-0 1-2 Illinois 0-0 0-3 Last Week (HOME TEAM IN CAPS) MICHIGAN 38, Baylor 3 Michigan State 23, NOTRE DAME 7 OHIO STATE 28, Arizona 20 Penn State 57, LOUISVILLE 21 Rice 40, NORTHWESTERN 34 PURDUE 28, Ball State 14 Iowa 63, IOWA STATE 20 WISCONSIN 36, San Diego State 10 Washington State 35. ILLINOIS 22 Lng 0 0 Baylor Aug. 30 MiAMI, (Fla.) L 45-14 Sept. 6 Fresno State W 37-35 Sept.20 Michigan L 38-3 Oct. 4 TEXAS TECH Oct. 11 NEBRASKA Oct. 18 Oklahoma Oct. 25 Iowa State Nov. 1 TEXAS Nov. 8 Texas A&M Nov. 15 Missouri Nov. 22 OKLAHOMA STATE Brk-up 1 1 TD 0 0 HOME GAMES IN CAPS down and penalized the Wolverines 10 yards. In the fourth quarter at third and 22, quarterback Brian Griese hit cor- nerback Charles Woodson in the far left corner of the endzone. But the Wolverines had just six men on the line of scrimmage and were flagged for illegal formation. Woodson was lined up behind the line. The touch- down was called back and the Wolverines were penalized five yards. The Bears opened up the scoring early in the first quarter. After Michigan quarterback Brian Griese hit Howard on a screen pass, Baylor's left end Glenn Coy forced a fumble . t.-. - a I .* blocks for a 5-yard touchdown run. Michigan guard Steve Hutchinson pulled a Baylor defender to the right just as Howard cut left for the score. The Wolverines went 47 yards in five plays to go up, 14-3. On the Wolverines' next posses- sion, Howard capped off a 16-play, 92-yard drive with a one-yard run. Kraig Baker converted to give the Wolverines a 21-3 halftime lead. The Wolverines opened up the sec- ond half with a rushing touchdown from Thomas. In the fourth quarter, Jay Feely hit a 51-yard field goal and running back Tate Schanski ran for a one-yard touchdown. « "Our offense got moving in the sec- I