12 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, October 31, 1997 I Staff Picks - all picks made against the spread. Game (HOME TEAM IN CAPS) MICHIGAN (-26) vs. Minnesota Ohio State (-6) vs. MICHIGAN STATE INDIANA (-4 1/2) vs. Illinois IOWA (-11) vs. Purdue The matchups Wolverines should bury tough Gophers NICHOLAS J. COTSONIKA Minnesota Ohio State Indiana Iowa [ 1- - A ALAN GOLDENBACH JOHN LEROI DANIELLE RUMORE Penn State (-16 1/2) vs. NORTHWESTERN Penn State ARIZONA ST. (-3 1/2) vs. Wash. St. Wash. St. FLORIDA (-20) vs. Georgia Louisiana State (-6) vs. KENTUCKY SYRACUSE (10 1/2) vs. West Virginia TEXAS A&M (-9) vs. Oklahoma State Best Bet Last week Overall Overall best bet Florida Louisiana State West Virginia Oklahoma State Ohio State 7-3 51-37 3-5 Minnesota Michigan State Indiana Iowa Penn State Wash. St. Florida Kentucky West Virginia Texas A&M Washington State 6-4 43-45 3-5 Minnesota Ohio State Indiana Iowa Penn State Wash. St. Georgia Kentucky West Virginia Oklahoma State Ohio State 5-5 43-45 3-5 Minnesota Ohio State Indiana Iowa Penn State Arizona St. Florida Louisiana State West Virginia Oklahoma State Ohio State 7-3 44-44 2-6 hTtp://wwwpbuih dlal By John Leroi Daily Sports Editor Minnesota coach Glen Mason received a few encouraging e-mails after his Gophers almost upset then- No. I Penn State two weeks ago. One message read, " just wanted to say what a great game your team played against Penn State. I am real- ly delighted I had a chance to talk to your dad at the game. 'Take care, your Aunt Gladys." Only problem is, Mason's father died 18 years ago. Must have been one exciting conversation. That's the kind of two weeks Mason has had. After a heart-break- ing loss to Penn State, Mason benched running back Thomas Hamner, whose fumble cost Minnesota a huge upset. Then Mason received a call from the Big Ten offices apologizing for blowing a pass interference call that also would have secured the upset. Tuesday, Hamner said he didn't feel wanted in Minneapolis and announced he was transferring. Wednesday, he rescinded his state- ment. And things aren't looking up now: Minnesota (0-4 Big Ten, 2-6 over- all) is still winless in the Big Ten and must face the nation's No. 3 defense tommorrow. To make mat- ters worse, it's Homecoming for Michigan (4-0, 7-0). The Gophers haven't beaten Michigan and taken home The Little Brown Jug since when Chip Lohmiller kicked a 30-yard field goal as time expired to give Minnesota a 20-17 victory over the No. 2 Wolverines in 1986. And Michigan doesn't exactly take this game lightly. While the Brown Jug is just a smoky restaurant to some people, it means a whole lot more to the football team. Michigan has won 27 of the last 29 meetings, and both of the Minnesota wins - in 1986 and in 1977, when the Gophers trounced No. 1 Michigan 16-0 - ruined an otherwise perfect season for the Wolverines. Mason may need his "surrogate" families' support after this one, too. MICHIGAN PASSING OFFENSE VS. MINNESOTA PASSING DEFENSE: Lamanzer Williams, tops in the Big Ten and second in the nation with 10 1/2 sacks, is celebrating a sort of Homecoming as well. Williams is from Ypsilanti and will have plenty of family in the crowd (maybe Mason can borrow them). The Gophers do a decent job get- ting pressure on the quarterback, but after that, the Minnesota defense has been horrible. The Gophers have the 98th rated pass defense in the country and have picked off just six passes all season - a number that Michigan equaled last week. Michigan signal caller Brian Griese has proved to be just what Michigan needs:.a vocal leader and a smart player. As the Big Ten's sixth-rated pass- er, he has surpassed all expectations. The offensive line has done a terrif- ic job of protecting him and there is no reason why it can't handle Williams. Wide receiver Rusell Shaw has been bothered by an ankle injury that kept him out of the second half against Michigan State. In his abs- cence, the Wolverines rarely went to the air, which drew critisisim from fans and the media. But Griese should have few prob- lems picking apart Minnesota's sec- ondary when he has a chance. Look for him to spread the ball around and connect with Tai Streets, who's had a disappointing year thus far, or Jerame Tuman on a long ball. EDGE: MICHIGAN RUNNING OFFENSE VS. MINNESOTA RUNNING DEFENSE: This is the one area in which the Gophers have excelled on an otherwise unim- pressive squad. Minnesota ranks 39th in the country in run defense and did a decent job holding Penn State's Curtis Enis under wraps. Strong safety Tyrone Carter (70 tackles) and linebacker Parc Williams (67) have led the cha*, but six other Gophers have at least 35 tackles. Michigan is averaging 192.1 yards on the ground per game - good enough for 26th in the nation. The Wolverines have a bunch of players nicked up in the backfield, includingistarting fullback Chris Floyd who has a bum ankle and starting tailback Chris Howard, who is playing with bruised ribs. Michigan is chugging along n the ground, especially when Michigan coach Lloyd Carr is able to rotate Howard, Clarence Williams and freshman Anthony Thomas in and out of the lineup and they always seem to be able to break a big runwhen they need it. EDGE: MINNESOTA PASSING OFFENSE VS. MICHIGAN PASSING DEFENSE: No need to say anything, really. Michigan wins this matchup with ease. The Wolverines sport the best pass defense in the country. d now players like Marcus 1W, Tommy Hendricks and Andre Weathers are getting credit instead of just All-Everything Chuck Woodson. Minnesota quarterback Cory Sauter is averaging just 119.2 yards per game through the air and has thrown as many interceptions (five) as touchdowns. If it weren't for Tutu Atwell, third in the conferencn catches, the Gopher passing atf would be barren. Sauter can't be looking forward to this game. EDGE: MINNESOTA RUNNING OFFENS#. MICHIGAN RUNNING DEFENSE: The Gophers are averaging 159.5 yards on the ground, but their leading rusher, Hamner, accounts for only 67.5 yards. Minnesota has had its difficulties moving the ball this year and have had trouble coming from behind. No matter, the Wolverines' defense hasn't allowed a touchdown after halftime all year and that stok should continue tomorrow. Michigan is ranked fifth nationally against the run. Hamner may want to reconsider transferring. EDGE: SPECIAL TEAMS: Ah, special teams. The Wolverines haven'ibeen very good at anything. Their punt- ing is OK and Jay Feely has done a good job on kickoffs, but returns haven't been spectacular, though Woodson is due to break a punt return anythime. Minnesota on the other hand't too shabby. Most impressive is ie Gophers kickoff returners, ranked No. 7 in the country. They should have plenty of opportunities to, show their stuff tomorrow. EDGE: Michigan is very good. Minnesota is not. And while Minnesota is just another team to most of us, the Wolverines actually care about the Little Brown Jug. Don't look for a letdown here. Mason is in a heap of trouble. Michigan wants to-be 8-0 going into next week's game against Penn State and there's no re they shouldn't be. PREDICTION: Michigan 34, Minnesota 10. Is I w