The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - November 17, 1997 - 5B ugh finds spotlight h Dayne on sideline GAME STATISTICS PASSING Player Samuel Totals RUSHING Player Mccull. Samuel Martin Faulkner Totals C-A 8-22 8-22 freshman running back Eddie Faulkner at first.t When that didn't work and the Badgers' first two drives stalled in four plays each, McCullough got his chance. He gained eight yards on his first carry, the most Wisconsin had gained on any play to that point, and he took off from there.E Alvarez gave him the ball 10 times on the Badgers' next drive - during which the Badgers ran 14 plays - n and McCullough responded by gaining 44 yards. The Badgers ended up kicking a field goal to reduceh Michigan's lead to 13-3, getting the crowd back into I the game and stealing a bit of momentum.X McCullough broke a 22-yard run to open the sec- ond half. Samuel took over from there, running the option often and eventually scoring a touchdown on a x one-yard run to put his team within a touchdown of the lead. The option "killed us," said Michigan cor-{ nerback Charles Woodson, who slipped late in the fourth quarter and gave up just the second touchdown reception to a Michigan opponent this season. The Wolverines were able to recover from Samuel's score with an 85-yard drive that culminated in a field . goal. Michigan coach Lloyd Carr called that the "key to the game," but the damage was done already. Poor tackling doomed Michigan to its second-worst defen- sive performance this fall. "We had trouble tackling and made mistakes we can't afford to make," Steele said. "Wisconsin played hard; WARREN ZINN/Daily their backs played hard. If you don't tackle against peo- Russell Shaw just missed his third touchdown of the season when Wisconsin's ple like that, they're going to make their yards." Leonard Taylor caught him from behind on the one-yard line after a 39-yard catch. AROUND THE Buckeyes roll, prepare for battle with 'M'; Lions rebound after loss Att 20 15 2 4 41 102 154 Yds 81 82 i Avg 2 5.1 3.3 2 1.0 1 0.3 4 3.8 RECEIVING Player No. Hayes 3 Grams 2 Simmons 1 Mccull. 1 Martin 1 Totals 8 PUNTING Player Stemke KICKOFF RETL Player No Huntley 2 Cantrell 1 Martin 1 King 1 Total 5 Yds Avg 35 11.7 11 5.5 21 21.0 11 11.0 3 3.0 8110.1 No. Yds 5 197 TD 1 1 Lg 22 27 2 2 27 Lg 17 7 21 11 3 21 Avg 39.4 g Lg9 5 4C ) 18 D 16 ) 11 4 2 URNS . Yds, 2 61 1 18 1 16 1 11 597 Avc 30.E 18.C 16.t 11.C 19.4 Int 1 1 TD 0 1 0 0 1 TD 0 0 1 0 0 1 Lg 44 gTD 0 30 30 10 Tot 13 11 10 8 7 6 5 4 3 3 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1. 1 DEFENSE Player Solo Lysek 7 Thompson 7 Adamov 9 Doering 8 Myers 6 Taylor 4 Burke 4 King 4 Campbell 3 Kolodziej 0 Janek 2 Knight 2 Ghidorzi 2 Cruickshank 1 Mahlik 1 Favret 0 Innis 0 Wagner 0 Schneck 0 PASS DEFENSE Player Int YdsI Taylor 0 0 Thompson 0 0 Wisconsin Schedule Asst 6 4 1 0 1 2 1 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 COLUMBUS (AP) - Pepe Pearson ran for two touchdowns in his final home game and Ahmed Plummer returned an interception 83 yards for a score as No. 4 Ohio State set the stage for next week's show- down with No. 1 Michigan by beating Illinois, 41-6. The Buckeyes (6-1, 10-1) need a victory at Michigan next Saturday to grab a share of the conference title. A victory would also keep alive hopes of a return appearance in the Rose Bowl, where the Buckeyes beat Arizona State, 20-17, to finish No. 2 last sea- son. The loss was the 16th in a row for the Illini (0-7, 0-10), the longest streak in school history. They have also lost their last 13 conference games, the last 12 games against ranked teams and haven't won on the road in more than two years. The victory pushed Ohio State to 700-274-53 in its 108th season. No. 6 PENN STATE 42, No. 23 PURDUE 17 Penn State's defense took care of yet another Purdue comeback, and Curtis Enis did the rest. Enis rushed for 186 yards and three touchdowns and caught a 67-yard pass from Mike McQueary for a fourth score on Saturday as the sixth-ranked Nittany Lions rebounded from their worst home loss under coach Joe Paterno and beat No. 19 Purdue, 42- 17. The Boilermakers (5-2 Big Ten, 7-3 overall) trailed by I I and were poised for another comeback after scoring on Billy Dicken's second touchdown pass early in the final period. They threat- ened again on the next series before Jason Collins intercepted a pass at the Penn State nine-yard line and returned it 53 yards. It took only three plays for Penn State (5-1, 8-1) to score, and a 29-yard touchdown run by Enis with 7:20 remaining put the game out of reach. NORTHWESTERN 15, No.22 IowA 14 Brian Musso made a one-handed catch and turned it into a go-ahead, 40-yard touchdown play as Northwestern beat No. 22 Iowa, 15- 14, keeping the Hawkeyes from quali- fying for a bowl berth. Iowa (3-4, 6-4) must defeat Minnesota next week to qualify for postseason play, because one of the Hawkeyes' victories this season was over Division I-AA Northern Iowa. Northwestern, after back-to-back Big Ten titles, finished 5-7 overall and 3-5 in the Big Ten. The Wildcats stopped the Hawkeyes twice inside the 30-yard line in the final quarter to preserve the victory. Iowa missed four field goals on a snowy, blustery day, including a 47- yard attempt by Chad Johnson with 2:57 left. Earlier in the quarter, Iowa went on fourth-and-three from the Wildcats' 27-yard line, but Anwawn Jones drove quarterback Randy Reiners out of bounds for no gain. Iowa's Tavian Banks gained 169 on 30 carries and scored two touch- downs, becoming the school's season rushing leader and career touchdown leader, passing Sedrick Shaw. MINNESOTA 24, INDIANA 12 Another game without a touchdown for Indiana was all Minnesota needed to give first-year coach Glen Mason his first Big Ten victory. Cory Sauter threw two first-quarter touchdown passes and ran for a clinching score with 2:50 remaining as the Golden Gophers held on for a 24-12 victory, snapping a seven-game losing streak. Minnesota (1-6, 3-8) won for just the fourth time in its last 34 confer- ence games. The Hoosiers (1-6, 2-8) came in with just one offensive touchdown in their last five games and managed only four Andy Payne field goals. That matched a school record, but it still was a disappointment considering the Hoosiers had 443 total yards, their second-highest total of the season and well above the 270 yards they aver- aged through their first 10 games. Indiana was shut out in the second half even though each of its first five drives reached Minnesota territory. Lng 0 0 Brk-up 1 1 TD 0 0 Aug. 24 Sept. 6 Sept. 13 Sept. 20 Sept. 27 Oct. 4 Oct. 11 Oct. 18 Oct. 25 Nov. 8 Nov. 15 Nov. 22 Syracuse BOISE STATE San Jose State SAN DIEGO ST. INDIANA Northwestern ILLINOIS Purdue Minnesota IOWA MICHIGAN Penn State L 34-0 W 28-24 W 56-10 W 36-10 W 27-26 W 26-25 W 31-7 L 45-20 W 22-21 W 13-10 L 26-16 Michigan's Chris Howard had another stellar offensive day, gaining 100 yards on the ground for two touch- downs, while catching four passes for 38 Up next Who: Ohio State (6-1 Big Ten, 10-1 overall) Where: Michigan Stadium, 102,501 When: Saturday, noon, EDT (The game will be tele- vised on ABC (channel 7) gN06 HOME GAMES IN CAPS At a glance Key Performers For Michigan, running back Chris Howard rushed for 100 yards and two touchdowns. Wide receiver Tai Streets had five receptions for 108 yards. After not having a single reception in the two games prior to this one, Streets led all Michigan receivers on Saturday. For Wisconsin, running back Carl McCullough carried the ball 20 times for 102 yards to pace the Badgers' ground game. He replaced Ron Dayne, who missed the game with a sprained ankle suffered against Iowa. Key Play. Streets caught a 38-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Brian Griese to put Michigan up 13-0 early in the second quarter. The touchdown allowed the Wolverines to hold a double-digit lead at halftime. yards. MARGARET MYERS/Daily ability to motivate this hat this far into the sea- al ranking is not com- nt level; the Wolverines ean any other team in g for Michigan to be es it compromise its on. ut underdogs rising up nocking off the power- ent is not the sole indi- p ballclub. ing about this group is olve," Carr said. "They s ons, and we hadn't eMason." gotten something done. ionship of the nation's s a huge accomplish- ugh of an accomplish- I team. share (the conference n said. "We want to win to us this year." If Ohio State returns the ugly deed that Michigan has given to the Buckeyes two straight years - and the Buckeyes' chances of doing so this year are much greater than Michigan's the past two Novembers - what- ever bowl the Wolverines wind up going to will be underachievement, however ridiculous that may seem. "We want to win the Big Ten championship," Griese said. "So our goals have not been satis- fied yet and we have one week to go." And don't think for a second that Ohio State does not know about ending Rose Bowl dreams for Michigan; the Buckeyes made a habit out of it in the early 1970s. Ohio State victories in 1970, 1972, 1974 and 1975, and a tie in 1973, sent the Buckeyes to Pasadena and the Wolverines home (except a trip to the 1976 Orange Bowl). The scene is set for the Wolverines to cap a historic regular season. Every November, even if a Rose Bowl bid is not on the line for either team, Michigan and Ohio State's seasons are deemed a success with a victory in this game. Now, a victory over the arch-rival and a trip to the most tradition-laden bowl before it loses Series: Michigan leads all-time 53-34-6 The Michigan-Ohio State rivalry has grown in intensity in the 1990s. Each of the past two years, the Buckeyes have entered the game ranked No. 2 in the nation and undefeated. The Wolverines beat the Buckeyes each time, ending their national title hopes, and destroyed their Rose Bowl hopes in 1995. The Buckeyes, however, have hurt Michigan's plans for Pasadena, especially in the early 1970s. The Buckeyes ended the Wolverines' undefeated seasons in 1970, '72 and '74, and a tie between the two in '73 sent Ohio State to the Rose Bowl and Michigan home. Big Ten 5 Team. Michigan Ohio State Penn State Wisconsin Purdue Iowa Northwestern Michigan State Minnesota Indiana Illinois Standings Conf. Overall 7-0 10-0 6-1 10-1 5-1 8-1 5-2 8-3 5-2 7-3 3-4 6-4 3-5 5-7 2-4 5-4 1-6 3-8 1-6 2-8 0-7 0-10 _ _ _Y _ ______._ .____ ___ _ _ W _.