6- The higan Daily - Footbal urday-- October 11, 194 FeATu Us- 1 0t4 QUICK INFO Se~mber 20, 1997 --- 1 i Getting their kicks Trio of kickers off on the right foot Northwlestern 1996 Record. 7-1 Big Ten (tie-ist place), 9-3 overall Coach: Gary Barnett, 6th season Last meeting: Northwestern 17, Michigan 16; Oct. 5, 1996 Overall series: Michigan leads, 44-13-2 Key players WR Brian Musso, Sr. DE Casey Dailey, Sr. RB Adrian Autry, Sr. MICHIGAN LEADERS The two-deep By Alan Goldenbach Daily Sports Editor The path to a spot on a major college football team involves hard work, dedica- tion, committment, and ... lying. The Michigan kicking triumvirate - punter Jason Vinson, placekicker Kraig Baker and kickoff specialist Jay Feely - was supposed to be Michigan's greatest liability coming into this season. Now, it's more like they are liable for a good deal of the Wolverines' success four games into the campaign. "The kicking game can be momentum changing plays," Michigan coach Lloyd Carr said. "There's a lot of things that can go wrong, and when they do. they almost always create momentum shifts in the game. Fortunately for Michigan. there hasn't been an instance where the kicking game has created such a shift. Three of Michigan's four victories haxve been of the blowout nature, meaning that special teams really does not have much of an impact. In Michigan's seven-point win over Notre Dame. the kickers did their job, upholding the sports adage which says. if a typical problem spot isn't making any noise, then it's no longer a problem. But if Vinson hadn't had his gift for gab when he approached Carr about walking on two years ago, this story may be all about those former problems still present. Anyone who thinks that lying xwill only get you in trouble appearantly has not heard Vinson's story. As a freshman. Vinson was like any ordinary newcomer to Ann Arbor. A biol- ogy major, he worked at the University Hospital, attended football games, and complained about Michigan's abysmal punting game. But what has subsequently made Vinson anything but an ordinary fan is that he actually put his money where his mout - er, foot - is and tried out for the Michigan football team as a punter. The man who was the second-stringer on his high school team was seeking to become the punter on one of the elite pro- grams in the nation. - "At the time I told them I was a punter,"Vinson said. "I had never punted. but I figured that might get me in the door quicker." It got him in the door all right, and it almost slammed the door in his face just as quickly. When Vinson's first real punt- ing test came in the 1996 spring game. Carr had to wonder whether or not he was wasting his time with Vinson. "He went out in the spring game and punted poorly" Carr said. "He couldn't have punted worse." But a year and a half later and a wk hole lot of practice behind him, Vinson is now the averaging 41.8 yards per kick, a fig- ure that if he maintains. would be better than any Michigan punter since Monte Robbins averaged 43.5 yards in 1987. 'He's punted in this stretch as well as anybody we'xe had in here in a long time:' Carr said. "It's a really wonderful story. Jason Vinson has made us a much better football team." Feely and Baker don't have the drama behind their stories. yet the do equal Vinson's drive to earning major con- tributing roles. Coming into fall practice Feely. responsible for kickoffs last season, bat- tled his good friend, Baker, for the place- kicking duties. Whichever of them won the job knew that he was already starting out on shaky ground having to replace the graduated Remy Hamilton, the most efficient kicker in school history. Rather than trying to exceed their pre- decessor, Feely and Baker just tried to exceed each other, which was not only was challenging, but beneficial as well. "The competition made. us better because if you're the only one out there, whether you miss it or make it, you're still the kicker," said Baker, who has con- verted five of seven field goals and all 15 extra points this season. And even though the battle was cut- throat at times, Feely thinks that their friendship only impoved the caliber of both their games. "There wasn't any animosity betwen us," Feely said. We were both there for each other. It was a great situation because Kraig and I are so close. We \were both pulling for each other." Relegated to kickoffs and the occa- sional long field goal. Feely has excelled at giving the Wolverines a near-automat- ic in an area that is often overlooked. Five of his kickoffs have gone clear out of the end zone and seven others have been wisely downed for touchbacks. Pinning opponents deep in their zone to start is always a boost for the defense according to Carr. "When they start at the 20 it's a tremendous advantage as opposed to starting at the 30 or 35.' Carr said. "That's another first down they have to earn on the line of scrimmaue." " E Wide Receiver 22 Brian Musso 7 Aaron Burrell Left Tackle 79 Brian LaBelle 71 Jack Harnedy Left Guard 70 Brian Hemmerle 68 Neil Carroll Center 63 Nathan Strikwerda 57 Ty Garner Right Guard 69 Chris Leeder 56 Mike Souza Right Tackle 74 Paul Janus 67 Leon Brockmeier Wide Receiver 18 Toussaint Waterman 80 John Burden Quarterback 8 Tim Hughes 4 Chris Hamdorf Fullback 46 Matt Hartl 34 Levelle Brown Tailback 32 Adrian Autry 37 Fajari Leary Tight End 84 Jay Tant 87 Joel Stuart Kicker 13 Brian Gowins 39 Shannon Jones Defensive End 56 James Hall 57 Chris Singl( Defensive Tack 91 Josh Williar 95 Pat Kratus Nose Tackle 58 Rob Renes 94 Eric Wilson Defensive End 81 Glen Steele 90 Juaquin Fey Outside Lineba 43 Clint Coper 45 Jeff Holtry Cornerback 30 Andre Wea 5 James Whitl PASSING Player Griese k Brady Kapsner RUSHING Player / Howard Thomas C. Williams Floyd C-A 66-98 12-15 Yds 808 103 TD 5 0 Int 1 0 2-3 21 0 0 Att 53 47 29 25 RECEIVING Player No. Howard 14 C. Williams 13 Streets 12 Tuman 8 Shaw 7 Floyd 6 McCall 5 Woodson 4 Thomas 4 Yds 257 213 167 97 Yds 112 81 161 170 89 86 32 95 37 Avg 4.8 4.5 5.7 3.9 Avg 8.0 6.2 13.4 21.3 12.7 14.3 6.4 23.8 9.3 Lg 27 19 16 14 Lg 13 19 41 53 24 43 10 35 26 TD 3 2 1 2 TD 1. 0 2 0 1 0 0 1 0 - - L MA urn m After a slow start, placekicker Kraig Baker has settled into five of seven field goal attempts on the season. his role. He has hit Floyd does it all for rejuvenated offense By Danielle Rumore C.ulv Sports ,it r hris Floxd doesn't play the cheerleadin role well. For the past three years. he has been an instrumental part of Michigan's backfield. starting 12 games over the past two seasons. At 6-feet-1. 227-pounds. he is a bruising fullback who is as comfort- able running through a defender as he is run- ning around one. He blocks, he catches. he runs. and he has done it week in and week out, with the excep- tion of Michigan's second game against Baylor. He was suspended for violating team rules and missing that game was difficult for Floyd, so difficult in fact that he opted to stay away from the stadium and watch the game at home. He said that would be less painful than standing on the sidelines unable to play. "I sat at home. I didn't want to come to the game because I was hurting so bad." Floyd said after Michigan's 38.3 victory over the Bears. "(Against Notre Dame in the next game). I wanted to show the world what I can do and show the coaches what I can do." And he showed what he could do against the Irish, and then again the next week at Indiana and maybe today against Northwxestern. Floyd is averaging 3.9 yards a carry, and is currently ranked third on the team in rushing with 98 yards and two touch- downs. He also has 86 receixing yards at a 14.3 average. Last week against the Hoosiers. he led Michigan in rushing. carrving the ball 10 times for 29 yards and he was third in receiv- ing. with a 43-yard recep- tion. But Floyd's breakout game was against Notre Dame. the game he said that he felt he had some- thing to prove. It was his Floyd chance to make up for missing the second game of the season. And he did make a statement. He rushed for 41 yards on seven carries, including a 14-yard touchdown run, and was Michigan's leading receiver with four catches for 35 yards. He showed that he is a versatile fullback and one of the more talented ones in the coun- try. His numbers Nveren't stellar against the Irish, but he made timely plays. including blocks, which helped the Wolverines hold on to their 21-14 win. In the first half. the Wolverines didn't have many offensive opportunities because the Irish controlled the tempo and topped the Wolverines in possession time. In fact, at the half. the Irish edged out the Wolverines 19:11 to 10:49 in possession time and held a 14-7 lead. So entering the third quarter. some of the Wolverines said that they felt an urgency to score whenever they had an opportunity. Floyd was instrumental in one scoring drive and some of the Wolverines' other drives, even those which ended in a punt. "He ran the ball hard, blocked hard," Michigan quarterback Brian Griese said after the Notre Dame game. "If he's not the most valuable player on offense, I don't know who is." Floyd gave the Wolverines the go-ahead touchdown and their first lead of the game on a 14-yard touchdown run with 9:21 remaining in the third quarter. His score came on the drive immediately proceeding the one which tied the game at 14, just 24 seconds into the second half. At second-and-I on the Notre Dame 33- yard line. Floyd raced up the middle for a three-yard gain and the first down. Fixe plays later at second-and-seven. Floyd raced untouched into the endzone for the score. The extra point put the Wolverines up. 21-14. "It was great blocking. just great blocking,;' Floyd said of the run. 'It was a sweep play. I thought of cutting inside but I saw that they had good blocks. So I ran around the edge. (Wide receiver) Russell Shaw had a block on the goalline. ' Although the Wolverines entered the fourth quarter with the lead, three fumbles in eight minutes almost let the game slip away. Floyd was responsible for the last one on third-and-5 when he fumbled the handoff from Griese. But with the exception of the fumble. Floyd made some big plays on second and third down opportunities throughout the game. such as on the ensuing drive after his touchdown run. Floyd ran a similar route for a 14-yard gain and a first down on a second-and-10 situ- ation. On the next play, Griese rolled right and hit Floyd for the first down. "He played hard. He caught the ball, blocked," Michigan receiver Tai Streets said. "He's a great fullback. He is probably the best fullback in the Big Ten. I'd put him up against anyone in the country." PUNTING Player No. Y Vinson 16 6 Griese 2 KICKOFF RETURNS Player No. Yds C. Williams 7 154 PUNT RETURNS Player No. Yds Shaw 4 45 Woodson 11 79 Whitley 2 8 DEFENSE Player Solo Sword 27 Ray 12 Jones 17 Mayes 15 Hendricks 12 Woodson 14 J. Williams 10 Steele 10 Weathers 10 Hall 10 Renes 8 Peterson 9 Copenhaver 7 Taylor 7 Gold 6 Whitley 7 Feazell 4 Patmon 2 Frysinger 4 Wilson 1 PASS DEFENSE Player Int Yds Woodson 2 1 Hendricks 2 0 Copenhaver 1 19 Jones 1 17 Patmon 1 0 Taylor 1 0 Ray 0 0 Left Defensive End 44 Keith Lozowski 95 Dwayne Missouri Left Defensive Tackle 88 KeJaun DuBose 99 Jeff Dyra Right Defensive Tackle 98 Bobby Russ 78 Daryl Hodge Right Defensive End 36 Casey Dailey 90 Thor Schmidt Left Outside Linebacker 55 Barry Gardner 43 Preston Letts Middle Linebacker 53 Don Holmes 47 Conrad Emmerich Right Outside Linebacker 9 Kevin Buck 10 Anwawn Jones Cornerback 6 Harold Blackmon 11 Gerald Conoway Free Safety 26 Mike Nelson Jr. 24 Rashad Morton Strong Safety 33 Eric Collier 14 Mycal Jones Cornerback 21 Fred Wilkerson 17 Josh Barnes Punter 8 Tim Hughes 13 Brian Gowins Yds Avg Lg 368 41.8 53 76 38.0 39 Not: M m 1'!7' 1'1'1 -1'17' Avg 22.0 Avg 11.5 7.2 4.0 Lg 22 20 5 iW CA TD 0 0 0 Asst 11 16 9 10 9 3 7 7 6 5 6 3 5 3 4 2 4 4 0 3 Tot 38 28 26 25 21 17 17 17 16 15 14 12 12 10 10 9 ,8 6 4 4 Staff Picks - all picks made against the spread. Wide Receiver 86 Tai Streets 85 Marcus Kn Left Tackle 79 Jeff Backus 71 Jeff Potts Left Guard 76 Steve Hutc 67 David Bran Center 68 Zack Adan 64 Steve Frazi Right Guard 52 Chris Ziem 67 David Bran Right Tackle 77 Jon Jansen 72 Ben Mast Game (HOME TEAM IN CAPS) MICHIGAN (-24) vs. Northwestern Michigan State (-18 1/2) vs. INDIANA PENN STATE (-6 1/2) vs. Ohio State WISCONSIN (-13) vs. Illinois Purdue (-6) vs. MINNESOTA ARIZONA ST. (-2 1/2) vs. Southern Cai CLEMSON (-5 1/2) vs. Virginia Colorado (-3) vs. OKLAHOMA STATE Florida (-15 1/2) vs. LOUISIANA STATE TENNESSEE (-10) vs. Georgia Best Bet Last week Overall Overall best bet Lg TD 28 0 -e-t CO Mon NICHOLAS J. COTSONIKA Northwestern Michigan State Penn State Wisconsin Purdue Arizona St. Clemson Colorado Louisiana State Tennessee Colorado 6-4 31-27 ALAN GOLDENBACH Northwestern Michigan State Ohio State Wisconsin Purdue Arizona St. Clemson Oklahom State Florida Tennessee Michigan State 5-5 25-33 2-3 JOHN LEROI i Mict Michiga Penn Wisc Pui Arizor Cler Oklahor Flo Tenn Tenn 29 Lg 1 0 19 17 0 0 0 Brk-up 0 0 0 1 0 0 3_ TD 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2-3