The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - October 13, 1997 -58 Offense cashes 1n on 3rd down GAME STATISTICS PASSING Player Hughes Totals RUSHING Player Autry Marshall Collier Hughes Totals C-A 16-22 16.22 Yds 135 135 By Alan Goldenbach Daily Sports Editor Brian Griese calls it the "money down." Lloyd Carr has stressed its importance after every game. It's third-down conversions, and Michigan toyed with Northwestern all game Saturday, moving the ball hesitant- ly on the first two downs and then break- ing the Wildcats' backs on third down just when they seem pinned. "Third downs are what enable you to maintain possession," Carr said. "Anytime you're around 33-34 percent, you're very good. If you're over 40 per- cent, it's excellent." So what would Michigan's 11-for-20 performance Saturday constitute? On Michigan's final drive of the first half, the Wolverines converted four straight third-down situations, all with six or more yards to go. The first play came on a third and seven at the Michigan 24, when Griese hit Clarence Williams in the flat, three yards shy of the first-down marker. But Williams bullied his way over Northwestern cornerback Gerald Conway's tackle for the extra yardage, keeping the drive alive. If the Wolverines don't convert there, it's fourth down from deep in their zone and unless Jason Vinson can get off a whopper of a punt, Northwestern is look- ing at some pretty good field position. Money down, money play. Four plays later, on a third and seven, Griese hit Charles Woodson streaking over the middle. Woodson caught the ball plenty deep enough for a first down but instead, fought off a few would-be tack- lers and stretched the play into a 30-yard gain, bringing it all the way down to the Northwestern 34-yard line. Money play from a money player. "It's one thing we stress as one of the key aspects of a good football team," right tackle Jon Jansen said. "It's a tremendous lift for a team to put together a string of those plays." A 12-yard completion to Russell Shaw on a third-and-eight brought the ball down to the 11 and set up Griese's first touchdown pass to Jerame Tuman three plays later with less than two minutes remaining. And of course, that play hap- pened on ... third down. That touchdown, that drive turned out to be the game's turning point as Michigan went into the lockerroom up 13-3 rather than just three. It isn't the first time this season Michigan worked wonders on third downs. Against Indiana last week, the Wolverines were 10-for-19, and an amazing eight for 14 versus Baylor, a 57- percent success rate. On the season, Michigan is 38-for-79 on third downs. That's 48 percent of the time the Wolverines have converted. To put it in a defensive perspective, that's cutting the number of punts down nearly in half. But Michigan's defense on third downs has been almost equally as impressive. The last two weeks com- bined, the Wolverines' opponents have converted only five times on 27 third downs. For the season, the opposition is successful less than 30 percent of the time in 77 opportunities. Those are your money downs. Att 15 5 1 9 30 Yds 35 18 3 -21 35 Avg 2.3 3.6 3.0 -2.3 1.2 RECEIVING Player No. Musso 5 Waterman 5 Burden 3 Hartl 1 Autry 1 Stewart 1 Totals 16 PUNTING Player Hughes Totals Yds Avg 60 12.0 29 5.8 28 9.3 10 10.0 4 4.0 4 4.0 135 8.4 No. Yds 4 177 4 177 TD 0 0 Lg 6 10 3 9 10 Lg 20 11 12 10 4 4 20 Avg 44.3 44.3 Int 1 1 TD 0 0 0 0 0 TD 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Lg 71 71 TD 0l 0 0 KICKOFF RETURNS Player No. Yds Burrell 3 76 Gooch 2 32 Total 5108 Avg 25.3 16.0 21.6 Lg 30 17 30 DEFENSE Player Gardner Nelson Collier Conoway Dailey Barnes Holmes Russ Wilkerson Emmerich A. Jones Buck Letts DuBose M. Jones Schmidt Lozowski Solo 15 6 3 5 4 4 3 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 Asst 4 2 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 Tot 19 8 6 5 4 4 4 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 thwestem's Tim Hughes for one of his two quarterback sacks. The Wolverines sacked Hughes four times. LSU stuns Florida; Volunteers take Dogs for a walk PASS DEFENSE Player lnt Yds Wilkerson 0 0 Collier 0 0 Totals 0 0 Tennessee beat No. 13 Georgia 38-13 on Saturday. The Volunteers (2-1 SEC, 4-1) won their seventh straight over Georgia (2-1, 4-1) by shredding what had been the SEC's leading defense for 628 yards, nearly triple what the Bulldogs allowed on average through their first four games. The Georgia offense wasn't far behind with 430 yards. Robert Edwards gained 131 yards on 17 carries and Mike Bobo completed 20-of-31 passes for 267 yards. Tennessee put together touchdown dri- ves of 79, 80, 99, 80 and 75 yards before 106,656 fans, the third-largest crowd in Neyland Stadium history. Lng 0 0 0 2 1 3 TD 0 0 0 The last Tennessee score came against Georgia reserves with 1:44 remaining to play on 15-yard pass from Manning to Derrick Edmonds, and it left Georgia coach Jim Donnan pointing his finger and yelling at the Tennessee sidelines. NEBRASKA 49, BAYLOR 21 ' Ahman Green scored four touchdowns and rushed for 158 yards Saturday night as No. 3 Nebraska overwhelmed Baylor 49-21 in a rain-drenched Big 12 game. Green, unfazed by the occasional rain and slick artificial turf, scored on runs of 3, 58, 2, and 30 yards as the nation's top- ranked offense had its way with the NCAA's 94th-rated defense. Nebraska (2-0 Big 12, 5-0) got a brief early scare from the 39-point underdog Bears after Green's first touchdown run. Baylor (0-2, 1-4) came right back on the next play from scrimmage when Jerod Douglas dashed 80 yards for a touchdown around right end. Quarterback Scott Frost, who passed for 103 yards and rushed for 71, scored Nebraska's seventh touchdown on a 1- yard run in the third quarter. FLOmDA STATE 51, DUKE 27 Thad Busby ran for two touchdowns and threw for a score as No. 4 Florida State took advantage of second-half turnovers in a 51-27 victory over Duke on Saturday. Florida State (3-0 ACC, 5-0) entered the game with the nation's top-ranked defense (186.5 yards per game) but gave up 246 yards to the ACC's third-worst offense. But the Seminoles' defense smashed any hopes of a Duke comeback early in the second half with Florida State already up 35-14. With 12:24 left in the third quarter, Florida State's Tony Bryant ripped the ball away from Duke quarterback Kevin Thompson, linebacker Sam Cowart scooped it up and went 24 yards for a touchdown. Two minutes later, Dexter Jackson blocked a punt by Brian Morton and Derrick Gibson recovered the loose ball in the end zone. Duke dropped to 0-3 in the ACC and 2-4 overall. NORTHWESTERN SCHEDULE Aug. 23 Oklahoma* Sept. 6 Wake Forest Sept. 13 DUKE Sept. 20 RICE Sept. 27 Purdue Oct. 4 Oct. 11 Oct. 18 Oct. 25 Nov. 1 Nov. 8 Nov. 15 WISCONSIN Michigan MICHIGAN ST. Ohio State PENN STATE Illinois IOWA W 24-0 L 27-20 W 24-20 L 40-34 L 21-9 1 26-25 L 23-6 3:30 p.m. 3:30 p.m. TBA TBA TBA HOME GAMES IN CAPS * Pigskin Classic at Soldier Field At a gance Key Performers For Michigan, Brian Griese complet- ed 23 of 36 passes for 244 yards and two touchdowns, both to tight end Jerame Tuman, who caught five passes for 79 yards. Charles Woodson picked off his third pass of the season, the 13th of his career, and recorded his first quarterback sack. For Northwestern, Brian Musso caught five passes for 60 yards and linebacker Barry Gardner made 19 tackles, 15 unassisted. Key Play On it's first drive, Northwestern drove to the Michigan seven yard-line before two Michigan sacks knocked the Wildcats back 28 yards, forcing a 52-yard field goal attempt that Brian Gowins nailed. Northwestern went up 3-0, but Michigan.kept the Wildcats out of the end zone. Big Ten Standlng Team Cof. Ovmai Wisconsin 3-0 6-1 Micigean 20 so Michigan State 2-0 5-0 Penn State 2-0 5-0 Purdue 2-0 4-1 Ohio State 1-1 5-1 Iowa 1-1 4-1 Minnesota 0-2 2-4 Northwestern 0-3 2-5 Indiana 0-3 1-5 Illinois 0-3 0.6 r ' MARGARET MYERS/Daily AP PMUIU W LDCATS Continued from Page 1B to negative rushing yards at halftime. The Wildcats had -2 rushing yards at the half, courtesy of three first-quar- ter sacks, which more than negated tailback Adrian Autry's 27 yards on the ground heading into the locker- room. Northwestern quarterback Tim Hughes was taken the Wildcats their only lead of the game, 3-0. "Their game plan was to use the clock and possess the ball," Michigan coach Lloyd Carr said. "Hughes did quite a job to draw us offsides. There were 11 minutes gone (after the first drive), and that's not how we want to play." On the drive following the Wildcats' field goal, the Wolverines dove down to the Northwestern 28-yard line The Wildcats fumbled on the kickoff return, setting Michigan up on Northwestern's 36-yard line, but the Wolverines, once again were stymied and had to settle for a field goal. Things changed on the Wolverines' next possession. Michigan capped off a 16-play, 90-yard drive with a touchdown to give them a 10-point lead at the half. On second and nine from the Northwestern 10-yard i