_?.. . I?, THIS CORNR! "WE4l WIGTHlE' 0 M UEE-At4DUWLUE TRUNKS, WEIGWG UN AT Z3PUD 0 TOM BRADY By Jim Rose Michigan, on the other h Daily Sports Editor has ignited. Early in this football season "Of course, when you s - say, a little more than two what you can do out there, months ago - there were signs you play well, it's a goodf indicating that Tom Brady's ing," Brady said. "It's defin days as Michigan's starting more fun when things are g quarterback were numbered. well." From the get-go, the stars The outlook wasn't alway seemed to be aligned against rosy. Even after the initial f Brady. Fifth-year senior Scott over the quarterback situa Dreisbach was more experi- died down - even afte enced, after all; incoming fresh- became apparent that Br man Drew Henson had the fans, would be taking the majorit the Yankees and Sports the snaps - there were s Illustrated on his side. Heck, that all was not well with even Lloyd Carr called Henson Michigan offense. After c "the most talented quarterback" vincing wins over Eas he'd ever been around. Michigan and Michigan S So Brady - who came oh- the Wolverines went into so so-close to winning the job thing of a funk, averagingj from Brian Griese a year earli- 18 points per game for then er, but as backup was relegated four games. to the sidelines during the All four games resulte Wolverines' 12-0 season - did- Michigan wins - but did n n't exactly take over with his ing to silence critics of Bra name in lights. In fact, you beleaguered offense. might even say that he toiled in With a potentially murder the shadow of his backup - three-game stretch looming, Henson, the phenom everyone unthinkable occurred: play wanted to see. and critics agreed on so And after the Wolverines thing. opened the season with a pair of It was no big secret - sim losses, the cries for Henson did- put, the offense had to impr n't get any quieter. Everybody knew it. Especi With a repeat national title Brady. already out of the question by "Well, we knew along tha Sept. 12, there were more than a had an offense that could few fans who called for the sea- points on the board," Br son to become one big Henson said. "It was just a matter training session. going out and getting it don But then something hap- In the past two weeks, pened: The Wolverines started Michigan offense has roare winning - with Brady at the life - the 27 points in helm. That was on Sept. 19. game are the most by And they haven't stopped yet. Wolverines since the fou Now, one victory from an week of the season. And h improbable return trip to the this for a kicker: In both gar Rose Bowl, there's no longer Brady threw for more than any question whose team this is. yards, giving him four s With Brady guiding the offense, games in a row and pushingf the Wolverines have won nine past the 2,000-yard mark for straight games - and the season. Just three of Henson experiment is a distant Michigan quarterbacks hi memory. What looked at the thrown for more in a singles beginning of the season to be a son. bona fide quarterback contro- Is it mere coincidencet versy has fizzled in the past Michigan's offense is hitting several weeks - while stride just as Brady seems t SPECIAL PREVIEW EDITION FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1998 Je THE' AIN EVENT WHEN OHIO STATE AND MICHIGAN SQUARE OFF TOMORROW, ALL EYES WILL BE ON THE QUARTERBACKS and, how and feel- itely oing ys so furor ation r it rady y of igns the con- tern tate, me- just next d in oth- dy's rous the yers me- nply ove. ally t we put ~ady r of e." the d to each the iurth ow's mes, 200 uch him rthe ther have sea- that g its o be By Sharat Raju Daily Sports Editor For the past three seasons, Ohio Stat headed monster. Coach John Coo Stanley Jackson and Joe Germaine at q The creation was ugly. With Jackson the Buckeyes were a dynamic and u offensive unit. They ran the option, the in the oackfield, they ran exciting rollo But if and when that approach d Jackson was yanked like a rotten tooth the unassuming Joe Germaine. With under center, the Buckeyes took a 180- around. Germaine's traditional drop-back p was in stark contrast to Jackson's athle for Cooper, the move worked most oft at other times it failed miserably. It was a classic case of beauty and th "I'm just going to be the same pl always been," Germaine said. Well, the beast is gone. Ohio State Germaine and the passing game -- ren "He is a much-improved quarterba and as I watch him, he has really develo year," Michigan coach Lloyd Carr said. the ball well down the field and has gre Joe does all the things that you expecta terback to do." Germaine looks like a quarterback.1 American, freckled look and high-scho captain appearance, Germaine's traditic style suits him perfectly. He looks like N a Norman Rockwell painting, returning 'The Big Game' with his cleats over hi The hypothetical painting wouldn't inaccurate. Germaine has been in the Even some of the biggest. "Anytime you've been in as many b Joe Germaine and had the success he ha he'll play his best football in the latte ME M 11 371W -71 AND IN THIS CORNER! WEARNG SCARLET AD GRAY, EIHNG IN AT 20S ,PUNDS EGI'4 JOE GERMAINE 0 senior year;" Carr said. "He's a guy that brought his team back from behind to win the Rose Bowl as a e was a two- sophomore." per rotated The Mesa. Ariz., native drove the Buckeyes quarterback. downfield in the late-game drive against Arizona at the helm, State the 1997 Rose Bowl. With 1:40 left to play, npredictable Germaine marched the Buckeyes 65 yards in 12 y serambled plays, finding David Boston in the end zone with 19 ut passes. seconds left in the game. didn't work, It's that kind of excellence Germaine has dis- h in favor of played this season. Without having to worry if he"' h Germaine play the next series or not, the 6-2, 205-pou degree turn- senior has been tearing up the airways with a 151.46 passing efficiency. He's thrown 21 touchdowns, assing style averaging 277.8 yards per game. eticism. And He has had four straight 300-yard passing games the time and and six on the season. "If you don't get pressure on Germaine, with the he beast. receivers they have, he is going to kill you," Carr ayer as I've said. One of the keys to Germaine's game has been 1s beauty - consistency. Just like Brian Griese for t mains. Wolverines last year, Germaine has managedW ck this year keep the interceptions low, only tossing seven in 10 ped over last games. "He throws "He's played like we've expected him to play," cat accuracy. Ohio State coach John Cooper said. "He's had a real a great quar- solid year for us." Germaine has had the benefit of throwing to With an all- some of the best receivers in the nation - namely ool-football- David Boston. With his 6-foot-3 inch receiver anal playing frame, Boston is able to haul in passes over shorter to belongs in defensive backs. home from As last week's Big Ten offensive player of t s shoulder. week, Boston caught five passes for 163 yart be entirely against the Buckeyes. With 1,138 yards on the sea- big games. son, Boston is a shoe-in for the Biletnikoff Award, given to the nation's top receiver. )ig games as Tight end John Lumpkin, standing at 6-8, is as, you know another big target. Flanker Dee Miller, tailback r part of his Michael Wiley - the list of offensive threats for Germaine to exploit is lengthy. "Offensively, when you score 35 points per game, average 500 yards of total offense and pass for 300 yards a game, you are going to be successful a will list among the national leaders, much like Ohio State does," Carr said. "They have great talent offensively at the specialty positions and their line is very good." Germaine's offense is No. I in rushing offense, total offense and scoring offense - fourth national- ly in scoring offense. "The OSU offense has the ability to score from any position of the field at any time," Carr said. , . ~And now that Germaine knows that he's the only one calling the plays, everything is going his wa "We have a lot of expectations, a lot of big gait expectations," Germaine said. "But we have to do it on the field. We have to battle it out there." hitting his? Probably not. But it sure seems to be pretty good timing. And it's the kind of thing that can catch the eye of an oppos- ing coach. "Brady does a good job," Ohio State coach John Cooper said. "Like Griese last year, he does a good job running (Michigan's) offense. "He's not flashy. He's not spectacular, but he does what the coaches ask him to do. He stays within the game plan and doesn't beat himself." And so, after eight wins in a row, Brady and his team are in position to salvage what looked, early on, to be a lost season. In fact, to simply say as much doesn't do their turnaround jus- tice - a win tomorrow sends the Wolverines back to Pasadena with a second straight Big Ten title. A loss, however, means the Wolverines will suf- fer through the winter knowing they're co-champs with at least one other team. It's not some- thing Brady wants to see hap- pen. "Anytime you win a few in a row, you start to feel good about yourself," Brady said. "Fortunately, we've been able to keep winning - and now we've got one more to go." s ; V_ ' " U Return to the basics provides Williams with second chance By Mark Snyder Daily Sports Editor Traveling up and down the field against Indiana, Clarence Williams remained a focused man. His eyes followed the action of Michigan's offensive line, the defensive lines and the holes that opened. And in his hand was a football. All were normal elements for any senior tail- back at Michigan, except for the most obvious - Williams was watching the action from the sideline. Last season, Williams observed most of the games with the reserves, sitting out with a pulled groin. The injury didn't hurt as much as not being able to play, but he'knew that the pain was too severe. Against the Hoosiers, however, he was watching under coach's orders. He committed the ultimate sin in Lloyd Carr's program - he fumbled - and the penance was a two-game observation drill. "There have been a lot of ups and downs;" Williams said. "The way you measure an individual is how they deal with adversity and how they deal with things when they aren't going well. I think I've handled myself very well." That composure has been crucial to his frame of mind. Sitting on the sidelines watching other backs - last year Chris Howard and Anthony Thomas, this year Thomas and Fargas - frustrated Williams, who consistently "waited my turn." "I kept a positive attitude, always believed in myself and I think things have turned out well," said Williams, who enters the Ohio State game leading the Wolverines at 4.9 yards per carry. "I've prayed, believed in myself and increased my work ethic. I don't think anything is wrong with my skills. I just needed an opportunity to go out and play." That opportunity to play wasn't coming against Indiana or Minnesota as Williams watched, itching for his next chance to stabilize the ground game. While both Carr and Williams contend that the attachment of the ball to Williams' forearm was not premeditated as a signal, the action was more than just Williams hanging on for fun. He wanted to be prepared to enter the game, he says now, and at any moment his number (33) could have been called. "I wanted to be ready in case I was sent in," he said last Saturday, recalling the incident. The other reason? He didn't -want to forget the ball's unusual shape. For a veteran of football, a game he's played and starred at throughout his life, moving back to the basics kept him focused on hard running - a nec- essary element for when he got his next shot. "Sitting out was one of the hardest things I've had to do," Williams said. During Williams' two-game hiatus from the playing field, all questions about the tailback's sta- tus were brushed aside by Carr and his assistants. When's Clarence coming back? How come he didn't get any carries? Each time the answers, from Carr, offensive coordinator Mike Debord and running backs coach Fred Jackson were consistent. If you fumble, you don't play and against Northwestern, as Carr said, he "put the ball on the ground." So when Williams started the game against the Nittany Lions, confusion abounded among observers. He quickly dispelled the negative notions, giv- ing Michigan 83 yards on the ground and a shot of confidence in its running game. After a minus-23 yard team running effort against Minnesota, Carr saw the need for a change in the backfield. Jackson said he wanted Williams so Carr agreed. Now, after his 121 yards led Michigan for the second straight week, Williams is focused on his final Big Ten game. And after four years of ups and downs in the Michigan backfield, he's back atop the heap heading into Columbus. "I overcame everything" he said. "It's all behind me now and I'm a better person because of the adversity I faced earlier." As a senior, Williams understands the impor- tance of the rivalry from a technical aspect - "we definitely have to run the football" - but also from a teaching perspective. The freshmen "will get an idea (of the intensity) by the practices," he said after the Wisconsin game. "When it's very intense they'll be like, 'Wow! This is different than the average week." There's no doubt Williams will agree. After missing last season's huge Ohio State game with the injury, he'll get his chance for carries in a big- time atmosphere - a chance many believed may never come. "Clarence was disappointed in the way that he played and I'm sure that he was not happy about some lost playing time in there," Carr said. "I think if you combine the fact that Clarence is a confident and mentally strong person, he knew his opportuni- ty would come again. He was ready." Whether he's on the field or not, Williams should be easy to spot. He'll be holding the ball. WARNhLN L ~I/Daily Clarence William redeemed himself in the past two weeks, leading Michigan in rushing In both games. Carr recalls first game, Michigan coach Lloyd Carr knows all about Michigan versus Ohio State. Earlier this week, he recalled his first experience with the Big Ten's most heated rivalry. (Note the parallels to the 1998 season.) .,.. ... .... ..... ....---a e- ---- ----- - "MY FIRST MICHIGAN- OHIO STATE GAME WAS 1980... "We won our first game of the season, then Cooper plagued by Blue irk Snyder orts Editor ry week this season, with one exception he had a prior commitment, John Cooper ly addressed the media on Tuesday after- comments on the Big Ten teleconference began addressing the Buckeyes' previous - usually a victory. But consistently, when estions began, the conversation turned to his ion with Michigan. a 1-8-1 record against the Wolverines dur- But the Ohio State agitation about the Wolverines still pervades the Woody Hayes Center, Ohio State's football building. Rumors abound that inside the complex, a sign hangs prominently, questioning all who pass by. "What have you done to beat Michigan today. This is a problem that Cooper will face until he dominates Michigan. "We've had a pretty good year so far and I'm anxious to get it going this week," he said on Monday. Lloyd Carr, himself just one national champi- I I 11 1! I7iMI A . r s