4B - The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - November 23, 1998 I ~Ohio State 31 Michigan player of the game: Tom Brady Despite being forced to throw when Michigan fell behind by 18 points on three separate occasions, Brady made the most of his opportunities - among them, a touchdown to Tai Streets. But for all the Michigan records Brady set, he completed just one scoring pass. " Michigan 16 Stat line: At. 31* Camp- 56* Yards 375* Ts 1 1 * all Michigan records GAMSTAIBCS MICHIGAN PASSING Player Brady Totals cA 31.56 31-56 Yds TO 375 1 375 1 RUSHING Player Att Williams 11 Thomas 5 Shea 3 Brady 9 Totals 28 RECEIVING Player No. Streets 9 Knight 7 Johnson 4 Shea 3 Thomas 3 Tuman 2 Terrell 2 Campbell 1 Totals 31 PUNTING Player Team Vinson Totals KICKOFF RETURNS Player No. Thomas 5 Williams 1 Totals 6 PUNT RETURNS Player No. Knight 2 Totals 2 DEFENSE Player Sword Weathers Peterson Williams Jones Gold Ray Frysinger Hendricks Brooks Renes Copenhaver Johnson Knight Schanski Brackins Feazell Totals PASS DEFENSE Player Int Hall 0 Whitley 0 Totals 0 Team Stats First Downs Rushes/Yards Passing Yards Offensive Plays Total Offense Return Yards Comp/Att/Int Punts/Avg Fumbles/Lost Penalties/Yards Time of Poss Yds Avg 13 1.2 12 2.4 8 2.7 -29 -3.2 4 0.1 Yds Avg 118 13.1 116 16.6 55 13.75 23 7.7 23 7.7 24 12.0 11 5.5 5 5.0 375 12.1 No Yds 1 0 6 188 7 188 Ydls Avg 135 27.0 17 17.0 152 28.3 L9 6 4 4 3 6 L9 40 36 16 13 18 19 8 5 40 Int 2 2 TD 0 0 0 0 0 TD 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 Boston dominates, taunts weak Michigan secondary Avg t9 a 0 31.3 51 26.9 51 By Jim Rose Daily Sports Editor COLUMBUS - Consider David Boston avenged. Last year, the Ohio State receiver took his lumps after he struggled to back up some pregame trash-talk about Michigan. This season, Boston kept quiet before the game - then he dominated the action. Boston was a man among boys on Saturday. He torched the Wolverines for 10 catches and a pair of touch- downs, and his 217 yards receiving were the most ever by a receiver against a Michigan defense. And even after the game, Boston still wasn't saying all that much. But when prodded, he did acknowledge that last year's Charles Woodson-led comeuppance wasn't entirely forgotten by the Buckeyes. "There were some things said last year after the game, that one of their players was chastising me or some- thing," Boston said. "I didn't really understand the message there. But today, I just went out and proved that I'm human." Last season, Woodson said after Michigan's 20-14 win that his defense of Boston "was like a father chastising his son. " But this season, with no Woodson in the picture, Boston ran wild on the Wolverines. Michigan's defensive backs were simply unable to keep the 6-foot-3 Boston in check, and Ohio State quarterback Joe Germaine took advantage. Germaine's 330-yard passing day actually netted fewer yards than did his counterpart's - Tom Brady threw for 375 - but three of Germaine's passes went for touchdowns, while Brady tossed just one. Two of Germaine's scoring strikes went to Boston. The first came on a 30-yard sideline route to the Michigan 10, which Boston turned into a touch- down after he spun out of a would-be tackle and danced into the end zone. On the way, he managed to taunt a too-late Marcus Ray with an in-your- face finger-point on the two yard line. Boston drew an unsportsmanlike 15- yard personal foul for the taunt, but downplayed it after the game. "That just happened," Boston said. "There was no message. I just did it." While he may not have been happy with the flag, Boston's coach - the much-maligned John Cooper - couldn't have been more pleased with the overall performance of his star receiver. "What can you say about David Boston? He had another great ball- game for us," Cooper said. "David made some great catches. He had his best ballgame at Ohio State, no ques-1 tion." Cooper also questioned the merits of the Biletnikoff Award, given annually to the nation's top receiver. Boston was not one of three named finalists for the award, and his coach was not too pleased with the deci- sion. "I couldn't believe it when he wasn't a finalist," Cooper said. "We've had solhe great wide receivers come out of here, and David Boston has broken all? of their records. If David Boston isn't an All-American football player, I don't know who is." t9 57 17 57 t9 3 3 Yds A 3 3 1 Solo 8 7 4 4 2 2 1 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 a'1 0 39 Yds t; 0 0 0 0 0 0 MICH 18 28/4 375 84 379 155 31/56/ 2 7/26.9 1/0 7/55 32:59 Avg 1.5 1.5 Ast 6 0 1 0 2 2 2 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 17 TD 0 0 0 TD 0 0 Tot 14 7 5 4 4 4 3 2 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 56 TD 0 1 0 2 0 MARG~ARET MYERJ/Uiy Ohio State wide receiver David Boston got plenty of high fives on Saturday. Boston hauled in 10 catches for 217 yards and scored two touchdowns in the game. Cooper finally gains some respect after hom& victory Ir~u 1 Ohio State 14 32/132 330 60 462 67 16/28/0 5/41.4 1/1 8/93 27:01 OHIO STATE PASSING Player Germaine Totals RUSHING Player Wiley Montgomery Keller Germaine Totals C-A 16-28 16i-28 Yds TID 330 3 330 3 Att 2 9 2 9 32 RECEIVING Player No. Boston 10 Miller 4 Keller 1 Wiley 1 Totals 16 PUNTING PlayerI Bartholomew Totals KICKOFF RETURNS Player No. Wiley 2 Togas 2 Yds 120 16 5 -9 133 Yds 217 59 49 5 330 No. 5 5 Ys 38 38 Yds 27 2 29 Avg 10.0 1.8 2.5 -1.0 4.1 Avg 21.7 14.8 49.0 5.0 20.6 Yds 207 207 Lg 53 8 4 12 53 Lg 58 27 49 5 58 !M 0 0 TO 1 0 0 0 1 TO 2 1 0 0 3 By Mark Snyder Daily Sports Editor COLUMBUS - John cooper had beaten Michigan before - twice. In fact, Cooper beat Michigan to win the Rose Bowl. But that was in 1987 when he was Arizona State's coach and the only team he had trouble beating was Arizona. And, as Ohio State's coach, he beat Michigan in 1994. But that was only after Michigan wide receiver Walter Smith's wish to "get Cooper fired" was broadcast around Columbus. With Saturday's 31-16 victory over the Wolverines, Cooper took what many consider his most complete team to pinnacle of athletic achieve- ment in this city - a football win over hated Michigan. But Cooper remained modest after what may be the biggest win of his football coaching career. "I am so happy for the team, especially for our senior football players," he said. "I'd like to salute all of those seniors, as well as some of the upperclassmen." For the players, though, it was Cooper's day to be showered with praise. They presented him with the ball from the final series. "That was a team ball," he said. "I'm happy for the program." The win catapults his record against Michigan to 2-8-1 in his 11 seasons at Ohio State and secured his third Big Ten title since coming to Ohio State in 1988. His 84-23-3 record in the 1990s ranks sixth =9 in the nation during the decade. Despite all the criticism in the press and from fans during that time, Cooper has perse- vered enough to have the third-longest tenureW of any Ohio State coach. Though Cooper is generally considered to be one of the top coaches in the country - his teams have finished no lower than second in the conference since 1991 - the past three seasons have all been tarnished by a late-sea- son defeat to the Wolverines. He was deter- mined not to let such issues affect his team's performance this year "We were not going to go against Michigan and try to do something we haven't done before," he said. "We did the same thing today we've been doing all year." As the No. I team in the nation for most of the season, Ohio State was primed to roll to its first national championship since 1968, but those dreams were dashed when Michigan State knocked off the Buckeyes, 28-24, two weeks ago. So now, after regrouping to topple Iowa and Michigan in consecutive weeks, Cooper thinks WARREN ZINN/Daily the future remains bright. Ohio State coach John Cooper finally earned his second victory over Michigan Saturday at Ohio Stadium "This is the most important win we've had in in Columbus. Despite the signifcance of the win, Cooper maintained post-game modesty. a long time," he said. Avg tg 41.7 49 41.7 49 PUNT RETURNS Player Ross Mitchell Totals DEFENSE Player Moore tWinfield Katzenmoyer Diggs Clements Plummer Bellisad Berry Johnson Rudzinski Collins Pickett Wayne Cotton Bailey Walter Brown Ross LaVrar Totals No. 1 1 2 Solo 10 9 7 6 6 5 3 3 3 1 2 2 1 2 1 1 1 1 0 64 Avg 2y; 19.0 23 19.0 23 Avg Ig 27.0 27 2.0 2 14.5 27 Asst 1 2 1 3 1 0 1 2 1 1 3 1 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 20 TD 0 0 TD 0 0 0 Tot 12 10 10 7 6 6 5 4 4 4 3 3 3 2 1 1 1 84 Jansen fights through injury, pursues record Questions or comments? Catch a mistake? E-mail daily.football@umlch.edu. Big Ten Standings Team conf. overall Ohio State 7-1 10-1 Wisconsin 7-1 10-1 Michigan 7-1 8-3 Purdue 6-2 &4 Penn State 4-3 7-3 Michigan State 4-3 . 6-5 Minnesota 2-6 5-6 indiana 2.6 4-7 Illinois 2-6 3-8 Iowa 2-6 3-8 Northwestern 0 8 2-9 , By Sharat Raju Daily Sports Editor COLUMBUS - Jon Jansen, Michigan left tackle and co-captain, sat down after Saturday's game with red eyes and spoke with concentrated effort. The game had long been over - long enough for Jansen to have shed his uni- form in place of a jacket and tie. But still, a pain still lingered for the senior. "That happens in football, especially where we play," Jansen said. "But some- times youjust gotta suck it up and play." In the second quarter, a player fell on the back of Jansen's leg while he was blocking, twisting his left ankle under- neath him. But his choked-back sobs were not in response to the physical pain that he probably was feeling from injuring his ankle. Losing in his final game in Ohio Stadium was far more painful for the Clawson, Mich., native. "Whenever you're playing in such a historic series like Michigan-Ohio State, you want to finish on top," Jansen said. "It's unfortunate that we can't this year. "It's such an emotional game and emotional series that the highs are real high and the lows are real low" Although he went down with the record that shows just how durable he is. As a freshman, Jansen started in hi first game in the trenches. Since then, he hasn't looked back and has -played in every game since arriving in Ann Arbor. The Michigan team record for games. played is 49, set by defensive tackle Mark Messner in 1988. Jansen is second on the list and in an ordinary season, he would have tied the record. But if Jansen runs the slate and plays against Hawai'i and in the bowl game, he will set the all- time record with 50. By virtue of the extra game this sea* son in Honolulu, Jansen has an opportu- nity to further emboss his name in Michigan's annals by bettering Messner's total by one game. But this recent injury may hamper his chances at setting record. "We're going to check it out; Jansen said. "It is something to do with my Achilles. I don't think it's too major but it's a pain in the butt." . Jansen, who has served as captain for two years, had an all-around rough game. Along with being hobbled, the running game struggled and amassed only four yards. Jansen also handles the., long-snapping duties. Punter Jason. Vinson fumbled Jansen's high snap,,-. AM NEI 'WRAO, 41-15QlQQ--%*Zl':, 2011-m- Sik'La"M