November 30, 1998 - SportsMonday - The Michigan Daily - 58 *uotable: "So I was relaxing, drinking water and chewing gum. Then somebody told me to get loose again, and I was like, 'Get loose again?"' --Anthony Thomas on being reinsert- ed into Saturday's game. :.: i 3,-. ~ ' F # " z . s ;. . 1 t 1 t t 1 t 1 1 1 1 i i By the way ... Michigan's 48 points resulted in a total of 192 back flips by Michigan's cheerleaders, an average of more than three back flips per minute. And with only six cheerleaders mak- ing the trip, that's an astounding 32 back flips per cheerleader for the afternoon. 1 1 1 i 1 1 1 t 1 1 1 1 Michigan 48 Hawaii 17 Spartans shut out of bowl opportunity by Nittany Lions Game progression 1st Quarter ____ The Rainbowstake U tH - 9:13 the lead on a 1t UH 3 yard field goal by Chad Shrout. STATE COLLEGE (AP) - Eric picking off a pass by Bill Burke and McCoo rushed for 206 yards, and running it back 55 yards for his first David Macklin and Anthony King career touchdown in the first quarter returned interceptions for touch- to put Penn State ahead 21-7. downs as No. 23 Penn State beat King's 25-yard interception return Michigan State 51-28 on Saturday to came on Michigan State's first series strengthen its case for an eighth of the second half and put the Lions straight Jan. 1 bowl. in front 42-14. McCoo also scored a touchdown Macklin has six interceptions this and Travis Forney kicked a career- season, tied for the Big Ten lead. high five field goals LaVar Arrington for the Nittany Lions tipped another pass by (5-3 Big Ten, 8-3 over- Burke in the first quar- all), who now have a *1 flR N ter, and Brandon Short chance to go to the CONFERENCE picked it off to set up Outback Bowl after the first of Mike finishing their home Cerimele's two touch- schedule unbeaten for the first time downs. since 1994. Courtney Brown and Mac Michigan State (4-4, 6-6), a team Morrison each had two of Penn that beat Notre Dame and then-No. State's seven sacks. 1 Ohio State this year, still won't Brown has 11 1/2 for the year, and qualify for a bowl after Saturday's Penn State's 47 this season leads the loss. conference and ties the school "We're not a 6-6 team," Michigan record. State running back Sedrick Irvin Burke finished 17-of-44 for 286 said. "People might think I'm crazy yards and two touchdowns, but Inost for saying this, but this is a top 15 of that came with the game decided. team. The ball just didn't bounce our Irvin rushed for 76 yards and a way this season." touchdown against a defense that Macklin helped the Lions early, has not allowed a back to rush for 100 yards this season. Cerimele's touchdown runs cov- ered 2 and 31 yards. Forney booted a pair of 37-yard field goals along with kicks from 22, 40 and 23 yards. Penn State's offense, ineffective much of the first half, came through with a 70-yard touchdown drive right after Burke connected with Plaxico Burress on a 61-yard touch- down to cut the lead to 21-14. Thompson was 4-for-4 for 52- yards on the drive and McCoo scored from the 5. Thompson was 8-of-16 for 103 yards and no interceptions in just over a half. Julian Peterson scored Michigan State's third touchdown by returning a fumble 40 yards, and Chris Baker caught a 6-yard touchdown pass from Burke late in the fourth quarter. Penn State coach Joe Paterno said the Lions wanted to make amends for last year's rout. "I think their pride was hurt last year, particularly the defensive kids," Paterno said. "We were more aggres- sive and we were able to do a better job of stopping the run. They've played with a lot of emotion." 3 AP PHOTO Penn State denied Michigan State a chance at a bowl berth by running rampant UVUF 11W *I pel..riwas, O-S@7 The A-Train makes its first stop of the night in the end zone. as Anthony Thomas rolls 38 yards for a score. - --- - -- - After three -4 straight handoffs to Clarence Williams, Tom Brady hits Tai Streets for a 28- yard TD pass. 2nd Quarter Thomas scores a four-yard run. - - -- - - - - Thomas scores-... again, this time on a 16yard rumble. Streets catches his second TO pass, a six-yarder. Hienson in at QB. Henon in at poster. 3rd Quarter Henson scramblesO* 3d yards for a TD (Feelys kick fails). tleu Kate _ catches 22-yard TO pass(kick blocked by Dhaniones). 4th Quarter Jauron Pigg score" on a one-yard run. calvin Minscatch- es twopoint con- version. Thomas rans 80 yards for a TD. ANAL.SCORE - M - 4:59 UH 3, M 7 M - 2:57 U3,M 14 M - 14:17 UH 3,M21 M -10:02 UH 3 M 28 M - 4:51 UH 3, M 35 M - 1:21 M - 0:41 M - 10:45 UH 3, M41 H -1:05 Ul49,M41 -H --10:58 U H 17 UH 3, M48 M -- 1.041 UH17,M48 over the@ Spartans, 51-2S. ols hang on acuse blows away Hut NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -Tee Martin threw for a touchdown and ran for another as the top- ranked Volunteers routed Vanderbilt 41-0 on Saturday. If Tennessee (8-0 Southeastern Conference, II- 0 overall) beats Mississippi State in the SEC title game next weekend, the Vols will probably get to play for the national championship in the Fiesta Bowl. he Vols are currently No. I in the Bowl Campionship Series rankings, ahead of two other undefeated teams, UCLA and Kansas State. The top two teams in the BCS standings will meet in the Fiesta Bowl on Jan. 4. UCLA and Kansas State each have a game left next Saturday. The Bruins play at No. 19 Miami, while Kansas State meets No. 6 Texas A&M for the Big 12 championship in St. Louis. Tennessee intercepted four passes, recovered two fumbles and converted those turnovers into *oints to beat Vanderbilt (1-7, 2-9) for the 16th straight time. SOUTHERN CAL 10, No. 9 NOTRE DAME 0: With its quarterback sidelined, Notre Dame fig- ured it had no choice but to run against Southern California. - The Trojans knew it, and stacked their defense accordingly. "You know, it's hard to run when they basical- ly know you're going to run," Notre Dame coach Bob Davie said. Notre Dame hurt its own cause by committing ff turnovers, and managed only 217 yards in toTl offense - 182 below its previous average. Southern Cal scored on a 2-yard bootleg by freshman quarterback Carson Palmer, capping a 64-yard, five-play drive. No. 17 GEORGIA TECH 21, No. 12 GEORGIA 19: Brad Chambers kicked a 35-yard field goal with two seconds remaining as Georgia Tech (9-2) ended a seven-year losing streak against Georgia (8-3). The Yellow Jackets, co-champions of the * ntic Coast Conference, had not beaten Georgia since 1990, losing the last three years by a combined margin of 13 points. Joe Hamilton, to No. 1; Trojans shut out Notre Dame ricanes; Texas running back Williams breaks Dorsett's NCAA rushing record who committed three turnovers, redeemed him- self by directing a nine-play, 52-yard drive that set up the second field goal of the game by Chambers. The Bulldogs called two straight timeouts hop- ing to distract Chambers, who earlier had missed a 37-yarder. But his final kick sailed straight down the middle. No. 16 VIRGINIA 36, No. 20 VIRGINIA TECH 32: Ahmad Hawkins caught a 47-yard touchdown pass from Aaron Brooks with 2:01 remaining to cap a big second-half comeback by Virginia. The Cavaliers, who overcame a 29-7 halftime deficit, marched 93 yards in six plays forthe win- ning score. Virginia (9-2) is going to the Peach Bowl, while Virginia Tech (8-3) is still waiting for a bowl bid. Officials from the Music City and Gator bowls were among those on hand. No. 21 SYRACUSE 66, No. 19 MIAMI (FLA.): Donovan McNabb ran for three touchdowns and threw for two as the Orangemen won the Big East title and earned a berth in the Bowl Championship Series. Syracuse (6-1, 8-3), which will play in the Orange Bowl or Sugar Bowl, scored the most points against Miami (5-2, 7-3) since the Hurricanes lost to the Orangemen 56-16 in 1970. It was Miami's second-largest margin of defeat behind a 70-14 loss to Texas A&M in 1944. WILLIAMS SETS RECORD: As the field opened up before him, Ricky Williams smiled. The record was his. The Texas star became the leading rusher in Division I-A history Friday in the Longhorns' 26- 24 victory over No. 6 Texas A&M. Williams' daz- zling 60-yard run in the first quarter smashed the 22-year-old record held by 1976 Heisman Trophy winner Tony Dorsett. "It was vintage Ricky," Texas center Russell Gaskamp said. "What a great way to break the record." Williams, the favorite to win the Heisman Trophy, finished with 259 yards on 44 carries, giving him a career total of 6,279 yards. Dorsett rushed for 6,082 at Pittsburgh from 1973-76. P PHOTO Texas' Ricky Williams set the Division I-A rushing record Friday on a 60-yard touchdown run in Friday's victory over Texas A&M. M' destroys Raznbow WamriOrs RAINBOWS Continued from Page 1B Thomas accounted for Michigan's first score of the game, a 38-yard jaunt in the first quarter. For closure, Thomas also notched the final Michigan score in fourth quarter with an 80-yard touchdown sprint after Carr decided to return the starters to quench any chance of a Rainbow upset. "I didn't care about the bowl" rankings, Carr said. "I wanted to gain control of the game so we could have the opportunity to play as many kids as we could." Although Carr managed to get a lot of lesser- known faces into the game, the more familiar ones did most of the scoring. Wide receiver Tai Streets scored two touchdowns. The first one in the first quarter came on a 28-yard slant pass from Tom Brady. His second score was the play that every team has undoubtedly been prepared for but still cannot stop - the fade pattern to the comer of the end zone. Streets hauled in the six-yard pass for Michigan's final tally of the first half. "Any time the ball is in the air, I think that it's my ball," Streets said. "That's how a receiver should feel." Streets caught five Brady passes on the night and picked up 90 yards. Brady completed 9 of 10 passes and finished with 142,yards after playing virtually just one half of football. Even the Michigan punt and kick return game looked good against the Rainbows. Marcus Knight had his best return game with 75 punt return yards. Freshman Walter Cross returned kicks for the first time and racked up 59 yards on two returns. Hayden Epstein, while continuing to boot kickoffs out of the end zone, also handled the punting duties and averaged 40.3 yards per punt. In short, almost everything worked for Michigan. And with the offensive explosion Carr had an opportunity to play some of the freshmen and give others playing time. Freshman quarterback Drew Henson played for a short time in the first half and most of the sec- ond half. Early in the third quarter Henson dropped back to pass but opted to keep the ball and scampered along the sideline for a 34-yard touchdown. "The main thing is that we wanted to improve as a football team," Carr said. The only thing that may have failed the Wolverines on Saturday was the pass defense. The Warriors racked up 328 yards in the air and quar- terback Dan Robinson connected with a wide- open Eleu Kane on a 22-yard touchdown pass in the third quarter. Later in the fourth quarter, the Warriors marched down the field and scored on a one-yard, fourth down touchdown run by Jauron Pigg. But with the loss, Hawai'i finished the season with no wins and currently owns the nation's longest NCAA Division I losing streak at 18 games. The Wolverines, on the other hand, await judgment on a bowl game. Currently, the Citrus Bowl in Orlando, Fla,. on Jan. 1 looks like the odds-on favorite. But hey, why worry about that just yet? After all, it's Hawai'i. "It's very fun out here," Streets said. "Just look- ing around, it's so beautiful out here. I have to come back and visit more often." The schedule Date Team Sept. 5 at Notre Dame (36-20, ND) Sept. 12 Syracuse (38-28, Syr.) Sept. 19 Eastem Michigan (59-20, M) Sept. 26 Michigan State (29-17, M) Oct. 3 at lowa (12-9, M) Oct. 17 at Northwestem(12-6, M) Oct. 24 Indiana (21-10, M) Oct. 31 at Minnesota (15-10, M) Nov. 7 Penn State (27-0,rM) Nov. 14 Wisconsin (27-10, M) Nov. 21 at Ohio State (31-16, OSU) Nov. 28 at Hawaii (48-17, M) Aaron Shea and the rest of the Wolverines' offense were able to keep the Rainbow Warriors off of their backs Saturday night. i