4B - The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, September 29, 1997 E . E GAME STATISTICS PASSING Player Griese 1 Totals 1 RUSHING Player A Howard 1 Floyd C. Williams Thomas Griese Totals 3 C-A 6-22 6-22 1 1 tt 16 7 6 3 2 34 Yds 98 41 28 6 3 176 Yds 177 177 Avg 5.7 5.9 4.7 2.0 1.0 4.9 I TD 1 1 Lg 27 14 6 3 3 27 Lg 17 11 41 19 10 13 41 int 0 0 TD 0 1 1 0 0 2 TD 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 As Irish reach new level of futility, questions, doubts continue to mount RECEIVING Player No. Floyd 4 C. Williams 4 Streets 3 Shaw 2 Shea 2 Tuman 1 Totals 16 PUNTING Player Vinson KICKOFF RETI Player No. C. Williams 3 Totals 3 PUNT RETURN Player No. Yds Avg 35 8.5 23 5.75 77 25.7 19 9.5 10 5 13 13 177 11.1 No. Yds1 4 163 4 URNS Yds Avg 65 21.7 65 21.7 VS Yds Avg 29 14.5 29 14.5 Avg Lg 0.8 53 L 28 28 Lg9 20 20 Woodson Totals 2 2 DEFENSE PlayerS Sword Mayes Ray Copenhaver Taylor J. Williams Jones Hendricks Steele Hall Renes Woodson Whitley Weathers Peterson PASSDEFENSE Player IntN Hendricks 1 Mayes 0 Ray 0 Totals 1 Team Stats First Downs Rushes/Yards3 Passing Yards Offensive Plays Total Offense Return Yards Solo 13 9 5 4 4 5 2 4 3 1 2 1 2 1 0 Asst 2 5 6 2 2 0 3 0 1 3 1 2 0 0 1 TD 30 30 TD 0 0 Tot 15 14 11 6 6 5 5 4 4 4 3 3 2 1 1 By Nicholas J. Cotsonika Daily Sports Editor Cameras clicked and tapes rolled as the paparazzi pursued Ron Powlus out of the Michigan Stadium gates. There was no escape. As Notre Dame's quarterback, once heralded as a can't-miss-kid, Powlus now often carries a burden for his entire team. Questions dog him like defen- sive ends. Powlus had already given his take on the game, saying only that it "started the way we wanted it to start, but it didn't end the way we wanted it to end." And then, as he hugged family members, his Irish eyes crying, Powlus snapped at the reporters still watching him. "Can't a guy just issue a statement and let that be the end of it?" asked Powlus, a fifth-year senior who had been mentioned as a Heisman Trophy hopeful as soon as his first season. Apparently not. Everyone wants him to explain why the Fighting Irish (1-3) have fallen so low. They gave their most inspired performance of the season under new coach Bob Davie on Saturday but were left only with a 21-14 loss to No. 6 Michigan, their third straight. Not since 1987, when the Irish lost their final two regular-season games and the Cotton Bowl, have they endured a three-game losing streak. Not since 1985, the final year of the Gerry Faust era, have they lost three-straight games in the regular season. And if they lose this week at No. 20 Stanford, their first four-game losing streak since 1963 undoubtedly would test fans' faith in Notre Dame. The Irish's only victory came in an unsightly season-opener against Georgia Tech that they nearly gave away - when Powlus threw two fourth-quarter interceptions - and the optimism that opened the Davie era has become quite cau- tious. "This is going to be a good football team, but we've got some things we need to take care of," Davie said. "Let's be honest when we look at why we lost (Saturday). Did Michigan really beat us, or did we beat ourselves?" In all of its games, Notre Dame has had oppor- tunities but not enough firepower - or ability to perform in the clutch - to make much happen. The Irish's entire season was symbolized by Saturday's fourth quarter, when the Wolverines turned over the ball three times and the Irish couldn't convert on any opportunity. They didn't score in the half. Perhaps Notre Dame's best chance came when Michigan fumbled on its own 47 on the quarter's first play. Powlus then hit Raki Nelson for 16 yards and Malcolm Johnson for seven, and the Irish drove to the four. Penalties and miscues set up a third-and-nine situation that culminated in disaster. Powlus took a snap and rolled out to his right. Instead of running through open field into the end zone, he forced a pass to Jabari Holloway, who was stuck in triple coverage. Interception. "Ron may have had an opportunity to run it in," Davie said. "He obviously didn't think he did, because he threw it. There's a point where players have to line up and play against other players. That's what it comes down to." Many have criticized the Irish for being too fancy and refusing to play hard-nosed football. With a sluggish receiving corps, the passing game hasn't won games for them, even though Powlus has posted good numbers. He was 20-for-27 for 205 yards and a touchdown, but his first-quarter, 34-yard completion to Johnson was his longest of the season. But the running game hasn't been punishing, either, making it difficult to roll up the sleeves and pound it out. Running back Autry Denson can shine behind an experienced line, but a good defense can neutralize him. After Powlus's error, Davie decided to run after Michigan's next fourth- quarter turnover. Denson, who rushed 25 times for 72 yards, got the ball four straight times. He gained seven yards, then one, then none - then none again on a fourth-down play. "I really think we need to get a yard and a half there to win the football game," Davie said. "They tried to get their bread-and-butter going on us," Michigan cornerback Charles Woodson said. "They tried. But that's all they could do -- try. You've got to get it done in those situations if you want to win." There are other problems, too. Defensively, the Irish replaced five of their front seven this season and are plagued by inexperience. The secondary left many Michigan players snickering on the side- line for its lack of toughness. Michigan fullback Chris Floyd scored a touch- down in the fourth quarter on a 14-yard run, bar- reling straight at cornerback Ivory Covington. Floyd smashed through him into the end zone, while the Wolverines dubbed Covington "Highway 14" for his number. "We were watching him on film," one player said. "It was just like that. Highway 14. Roll over him all day." Injuries are also a concern. Four starters are down - linebacker Bobbie Howard (left knee), tackle Chris Clevenger (back), noseguard Corey Bennett (right knee) and fullback Joey Goodspeed (right shoulder) - and the normally deep Irish are somewhat thin. But the greatest concern to Irish fans has been coaching. Faust, who was a high school coach before he was hired at Notre Dame, went 30-26-1 in five seasons, and his woes are a common con- versation topic now. Lou Holtz went 5-6 in 1986, his first season, but past successes sustained him. Davie, a rookie like Faust was, has no laurels on which to rest. And when Notre Dame was stung by penalties Saturday (10 for 92 yards), some questioned Davie's disci- pline. "We felt we played better, and in all honesty, we came here planning to win," Davie responded. But the Irish, who began the season ranked 11th andquickly dropped from the polls, are in trouble. And questions continue to hound them, following them as they fade. Irish quarterback Ran Powlus quieted h which held Michigan without a sack for t Yds Lg 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Mich. 16 34/168 177 56 345 94 Brk-up TD 0 0 1 0 1 0 2 0 ND 16 44/149 205 71 354 49 Younger Irons juM Offensive line bullies young Irish defensiv Comp/Att/Int 16/22/020/27/1 Punts/Avg 4/40.8 7/45.9 Fumbles/Lost 3/3 0/0 Penalties/Yards 6/37 10/92 Time of Poss 24:16 35:44 MICHIGAN SCHEDULE Sept. 13 COLORADO W 27-3 Sept. 20 BAYLOR W 38-3 Sept. 27 NOTRE DAME W 21-14 Oct. 4 Indiana 12:30 p.m. Oct. 11 NORTHWESTERN TBA Oct. 18 IOWA - TBA Oct. 25 Michigan St. 12:30 p.m. Nov. 1 MINNESOTA TBA Nov. 8 Penn State TBA Nov. 15 Wisconsin TBA Nov. 22 OHIO STATE Noon HOME GAMES IN CAPS Scoring summary First Quarter ND - Brown 15-yard pass from Powlus (Sanson kick), 3:16 Second Quarter Mich - C. Williams, four-yard run (Baker kick), 13:40 ND - Driver two-yard run (Sanson kick), 00:18 Third Quarter Mich - Streets, 41-yard pass from Griese (Baker kick), 14:36 Mich - Floyd, 17-yard run (D..1,ar kirlIA By NIcholas .Cotasnika Daily Sports Editor Two seconds still remained on the clock Saturday when Jarrett Irons darted from the Michigan sideline, searching amid the fracas for his brother, Notre Dame freshman linebacker Grant Irons. He wove through the crowd, and when he spotted him, he made the tackle with a smile. Wrapping his arms around Grant, Jarrett couldn't hide his pride. He was an All-America linebacker and captain at Michigan (1993-96) and said he was ecstatic that the Wolverines beat the Fighting Irish, but seeing his brother start in the Big House was thrilling, too. "Good game," Jarrett told Grant, thumping his back and inquiring about his health. "You all right?" "Yeah, man," Grant said with a grin. "I'm just fine." Many Michigan supporters had hoped Grant Irons would become a Wolverine. A high-school star last year in The Woodlands, Texas, he had narrowed his college choices to Michigan, Notre Dame and Nebraska, where the oldest of the three Irons brothers, Gerald, played. And when he chose Notre Dame, many of those same supporters blamed it on Greg Mattison, who recruited him as Michigan's defensive coordinator but landed him for the Irish, to whom he jumped for the same job late last season. Regardless of how Grant Irons ended up with the Irish, he has made a quick contribution. He has played in all of the Irish's games thus far, and when junior Bobbie Howard went down with a torn ligament in his left knee last week in a loss to Michigan State, he stepped up to start Saturday. "Obviously he did pretty good," Mattison said. "Because (the Wolverines) didn't run the ball as much as I think they had" in previous games. Grant Irons made four tackles, three solo. "I've been here many times - three or four games a year" Grant Irons d. "My brothers and parents always tol e to be prepared. I think I got myself ready, My brothers and my dad (Gerald Sr., who played six NFL seasons) got me ready. "It was kind of funny looking on the opposite sideline and seeing my older brother, but I knew * 0 -that he was support- ing me in the heart. Zte654dtk It was kind of funny D at first." Jarrett Irons, io watched the game in at T-shirt and jeans, signed as a free agent with the Arizona Cardinals this summer but was cut in training camp. He is now in graduate school at Michigan, studying facilities management, and remains a die-hard Wolverines fan. LINE IMPROVING: Though running back Clarence Williams didn't say d "never seen holes so big," as he did last week after the Baylor game, Michigan's young offensive line showed promise against the relatively formidable.- though also young - Irish defensive front. The line, which replaced its entire right side to start the season, opened enough holes for the Wolverines to gain 168 yards rushing and didn't allow the Irish tc sack quarterback Brian Griese. Penals were not as large a problem as the.1 two weeks. "We're coming together real well,' Michigan right tackle and captain Jon Jansen said. "It was nice to see us do well against a good defense like Notre SARA STILLMAN/Daily Although Michigan allowed its first two touchdowns of the season, the Wolverines' defense cracked down in the second half, holding the Irish scoreless. With 11 tackles, Marcus Ray (above) was one of three Wolverines with 10 or more. IRISH Continued from Page 11B 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 Anminat nar , atnipa. vrt. n'ln".,.An and 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 i 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 rl m, t-tun-arA 4lino u..,4.4.121 eft in+the 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 *ia Pman In a tfa a ,aco nnzant1 d - -T-I _,41w4%