0 0 01ber 18, 1997 - Fa QUICK INFO- 6 - The Michigan Daily - Footbal Saturday - October 11, 1997 -NA'IMIR~C F U R %0%= Rags to riches Brian Griese returns for the season nobody thought he'd have Iowa' 1996 Record: 6-2 Big Ten (tie-3rd place), 9-3 overall Coach: Hayden Fry, 19th season Last meeting: Michigan 29, Iowa 14; Oct. 1, 1994 Overall series: Michigan leads, 34-8-4 Key players RB Tavian Banks, Sr. QB Matt Sherman, Sr. WR Tim Dwight, Sr. MICHIGAN LEADERS The two-deep4 Wman -U By Alan Goldenbach Daily Sports Editor S even games ago, there was no doubt about it. Not even a glimmer of hope for the man with such a strong genetic background in this sport to assume Michigan's starting quarterback job. Brian Griese was clearly entrenched in the role of backup. And if Michigan's fans had the choice, he still might be in that position. Scott Dreisbach was the darling of the fans, an image cre- ated after he wowed them in his collegiate debut in 1,995's season- opener, when he set numerous school records in Michigan's 18- 17 come-from-behind victory over Virginia. And three games later, after Dreisbach hurt his thumb and was forced out of the lineup for the rest of the season, he still remained in the hearts of Michigan's faithful. After taking over for the Wolverines' fallen hero, Griese took an undefeated Michigan team, led it to victory in his starting debut and then to a ... 4-4 record and a loss to Texas A&M in the not-so-glamourous Alamo Bowl. "Quite honestly, I wasn't very pleased with Brian's progression from that point to the end of the sea- son," Michigan coach Lloyd Carr said. "1 just didn't think he came along like I thought he would." So it came to no one's surprise that when 1996 rolled around, fans couldn't wait to see Dreisbach back under center and Griese back holding the clipboard on the side- lines, occasionally making an appearance as a pooch-punter. But when Michigan's biggest game of the season rolled around, the Nov. 23 affair at Ohio State, the gods were smiling upon Griese, who had defeated the undefeated Buckeyes the previous year. An ineffective first half by Dreisbach led Carr to make the gutsiest decision of his brief head coaching career - replace the golden boy for the one who many thought was responsible for Michigan's second-half decline in 1995. All Griese did was lead the Wolverines to their second- straight victory over Ohio State. He followed that up with a valiant effort in Michigan's three-point loss to Alabama in the Outback Bowl. Suddenly, the outcast, the backup, the one who many felt his most valuable limb to Michigan was his right leg, was the fans' choice. But the key was whether he would be Carr's choice come fall 1997. "I was playing well at the end of last season, and all I wanted was a chance," Griese said. "I wanted to carry that over, play hard and con- tinue to do well during spring ball." Apparently, he carried that over into fall ball as well, giving Carr no other option but to give him the starting nod just three days prior to Michigan's season-opener against Colorado. "I kind of had the feeling I was going to be the guy," Griese said. "I'd been taking some more snaps in practice, and I felt good about the way I was playing." Now, five games (and five vic- tories) into the 1997 campaign, the former backup is surpassing each and every expectation of him with every snap he takes. He has completed two-thirds of his passes, seven of them for touchdowns, thrown just one inter- ception in his 134 attempts, and is on pace to throw for the second- most yards in a season in Michigan history. It becomes all the more improb- able considering where Griese was just seven games ago and even especially, two years ago. "There isn't any question there's been an amazing transformation," Carr said. "It proves the point that as coaches, developing the quar- terback and becoming a quarter- back is a process. It takes time. "Brian Griese has developed leaps and bounds from wherc he was (two years ago)." Seven games later, there still is no doubt about Griese's position on this team. Wide Receiver 18 Damon Gibson 4 Richard Carter Left Tackle 81 Chris Knipper 78 Billy Brann Left Guard 76 Matt Reischl 69 Shalor Pryor Center 64 Derek Rose 67 Chad Deal Right Guard 79 Mike Goff 57 Keith Rigtrup Right Tackle 68 Jeremy McKinney 72 Josh Burr Wide Receiver 6 Tim Dwight 25 Richard Willock Quarterback 12 Matt Sherman 13 Randy Reiners Fullback 85 Michael Burger 35 Trevor Bollers Running Back 22 Tavian Banks 31 Rob Thien Tight End 82 Jed Dull OR 86 Austin Wheatley Placekicker 38 Zach Bromert 17 Kurt Hintz -1 Defensive End 56 James Hall 57 Chris Singlet Defensive Tackle 91 Josh William: 95 Pat Kratus Nose Tackle 58 Rob Renes 94 Eric Wilson Defensive End 81 Glen Steele 90 Juaquin Feaz Outside Unebac 43 Clint Copenh 45 Jeff Holtry Cornerback 30Andre Weath 5 James Whitley PASSING Player C-A Griese 89-134 Brady 12-15 Yds 1052 103 TD 7 0 Int 1 0 Kapsner 2-3 21 0 0 RUSHING Player Att Howard 71 Thomas 54 C. Williams 36 Floyd 32 RECEIVING Player No. C. Williams 17 Howard 16 Streets 14 Tuman 13 Shaw 12 Floyd 7 Thomas 6 Woodson 5 McCall 5 PUNTING Player Vinson Griese Yds 347 226 181 117 Yds 121 117 187 249 133 83 57 125 32 No. 19 2 Avg 4.9 4.2 5.0 3.6 Avg 7.1 7.3 13.4 19.2 11.1 111.9 9.5 25.0 6.4 Yds 778 76 :1 1 1 L 1 4 5 A 4 .g TD 30 3 L9 2 L6 1 .4 2 Lg TD L9 0 L3 1 11 2 >3 2 24 1 1.3 0 26 0 35 1 L0 0 vg Lg .9 53 LO 39 Lg TD 28 0 s Left End Linebacker 28 Jason House 54 Brandon Phearse 19 Jeff Kramer 49 Jeff McCracken Left Tackle Cornerback 94 Jared DeVries 26 Ed Gibson 98 Ed Saidat 11 Joe Slattery Nose Guard ยข Strong Safety 90 Aron Klein 15 Kerry Cooks 96 Corey Brown 33 J.P. Lange Right Tackle Free Safety 55 Jon LaFleur 21 Eric Thigpen 72 Epenesa Epenesa 19 Matt Bowen Right End Corerback 42 Tariq Peterson 2Plez Atkins 48 Ryan Loftin 2 Tarig Holman Linebacker Punter 37 Matt Hughes 86 Austin Wheatley 44 Raj Clark 26 Kit Kyarsgaard Wide Receiver 86 Tai Streets 85 Marcus Knig Left Tackle 79 Jeff Backus 73 Paul TannouE Left Guard 76 Steve Hutchi 67 David Brandt Center 68 Zack Adami 64 Steve Frazie Right Guard 52 Chris Ziemai 68 Zach Adami Right Tackle 77 Jon Jansen 71 Jeff Potts PAUL TALANIAN/Daily Brian Griese wasn't expected to be one of the Big Ten's top-rated passers, but the fifth-year senior has been almost perfect, throwing only one interception all season. Defense will have to lead this Michi an team You can hear them now. All the believers counting down until the Penn State game, making plane reservations to California (and Florida, just in case). But this time, there is no doubt the Wolverines have the kind of defense that can win games all by itself. Two touchdowns allowed all season. The six points that Northwestern put on the scoreboard actually raised Michigan's points per game average from 5.0 to 5.2, still tops in the nation. Well, if the 5-0 Wolverines want this year to different from the last four, their defense bet- ter win games, because the offense probably won't. Not that they've been bad with ball - they haven't -- but Mike DeBord's offense is meant to control the ball and make the most of its opportunities. The only problem is, sometimes, Michigan can't even hold onto the ball. Twice against Northwestern, Michigan fum- bled the ball away. The first time Michigan quar- terback Brain Griese was smacked, but the sec- ond time, Russell Shaw just caughed the ball up. Three times in the fourth quarter against Notre Dame the Wolverines fumbled the ball in their own end of the field. And three times the defense came to the offense's rescue, hold- ing the Fighting Irish pointless when a Notre Dame touchdown could have cost Michigan the game. "We just can't keep giv- ing away the football," Michigan coach Lloyd Carr said. "We can't do that against the teams that JOHN were going to play next. LEROI "Offensively, we were Out of bad in the red zone. But Bounds our defense rose to the occasion again and con- tinued to give us the ball." Sure enough, there was Charles Woodson with his third interception of the season. There was Josh Williams dragging down Northwestern quarterback Tim Hughes two times for sacks. There was Dhani Jones stop- ping Adrian Autry for no gain. Granted, the Wolverines haven't been play- ing the deadliest of offensive teams lately, but their defense seems to get better and stingier every game. They've only allowed two touch- downs all year. Both of Northwestern's scores were pretty weak - a 52-yard field goal from Brian Gowins and a 42-yarder that clanged off the post before it went in. For the second straight game, Michigan's opponent had negative rushing yards in the first half. Northwestern didn't fare much bet- ter in the second, gaining just 35 yards on the ground. It's almost as if the Wolverines' defense is playing a game, seeing if they can outplay an opponent all by itself. Nothing fancy, just tough, aggressive defense. "If our offense scores one touchdown, that should be enough," Michigan outside line- backer Clint Copenhaver said. "Our offense isn't a problem right now, but even if it were, we'd good enough to win games anyway." Griese certainly isn't the problem. The fifth-year senior turned in another fine perfor- mance Saturday, completing 23 of 36 passes for 244 yards two touchdowns and no inter- ceptions. But Michigan can't seem to shake off its pension for stupid penalties and turnovers that may prove costly when the big boys start rolling into town, starting with next week's game with Iowa. "We still haven't put an entire game togeth- er yet," Carr said. "And that means not turn- ing the ball over." Because if the defense holds up and offense doesn't turn the ball over - we all know what happened last year against Ohio State - only good things can happen. Right now, though, that's all contingent on the defense. "As an offense, we feed off our defense," Griese said. "Our defense was just outstand- ing, we can't ask for anything more. Now we have to do our job and get the ball in the end zone." - John Leroi can be reached via e-mail at jrleroi@umich.edu. KICKOFF RETURNS Player No. Yds C. Williams 9 192 PUNT RETURNS Player No. Yds Shaw 4 45 Woodson 12 87 Whitley 2 8 DEFENSE Player Solo Sword 28 Jones 24 Ray 18 Mayes 15 Hendricks 15 Woodson 17 J. Williams 14 Steele 12 Renes 12 Hall 11 Weathers 10 Copenhaver 9 Peterson 11 Taylor 10 Whitley 8 Gold 6 Feazell 5 Wilson 3 Patmon 3 Frysinger 5 PASS DEFENSE Player int Yds Woodson 3 3 Hendricks 2 0 Copenhaver 1 19 Jones 1 17 Patmon 1 0 Taylor 1 0 Ray 0.0 Asst 15 13 18 10 10 5 8 8 7 8 7 7 4 3 2 4 5 4 4 0 Tot 43 37 36 25 25 22 22 20 19 19 17 16 15 13 10 10 10 7 7 5 Avg 21.3 Avg 11.5 7.3 4.0 Staff Picks - all picks made against the spread. Lg 22 20 5 TD 0 0 0 Mm*AA N Game (HOME TEAM IN CAPS) MICHIGAN (-7) vs. Iowa Michigan St. (-13) vs. NORTHWESTERN OHIO STATE (-34) vs. Indiana PENN STATE (-34) vs. Minnesota PURDUE (-2) vs. Wisconsin Florida (-1 1/2),vs. AUBURN FLORIDA STATE (-23) vs. Georgia Tech NOTRE DAME (-6) vs. Southern Cal STANFORD (-1 1/2) vs. Arizona State Tennessee (8 1/2) vs. ALABAMA Best Bet Last week Overall Overall best bet NICHOLAS J. COTSONIKA Michigan Northwestern Ohio State Minnesota Wisconsin Florida Florida State Notre Dame Arizona State Tennessee Tennessee 7-3 38-30 2-4 ALAN GOLDENBACH Michigan Michigan State Ohio State Minnesota Wisconsin Auburn Florida State Notre Dame Arizona State Tennessee Michigan State 8-2 33-35 3-3 JOHN LEROI Michig Michigan Ohio S Minnes Wiscor Aubu FloridaS Notre C Stanfo Tenne Tennes 6-4 35-1 2-4 Lg 2 0 19 17 0 0 0t Brk-up 0 1 0 1 0 0 3 TD 0 0 0 0 0 0 0