6B - The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - September 21, 1998 Michigan 59 & Eastern 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 Michigan player of the game: Anthony Thomas With 69 yards on Michigan's first drive of the game, Thomas laid the groundwork for a huge offensive afternoon by the Wolverines. His score at the end of that opening drive was the first of his three touchdowns. Despite carrying the ball just 15 tirmes, he led all rush- ers in the game with 117 yards. 01 20 Stat line: Carries 15 Yards 117 Long 36 TDs 3 G-A 1419 1745 Yds TO 128 1 53 1 181 2 Player At Thomas 15 Fargs 7 R. Jackson 5 C. Wllims 5 Cross 7 Tereli 4 Knight 4 R. Jackson 2 Stets 2 Tuman _ 2 Bryapt 1 Walker 1 C. Wiliams 1 Ttas 17 PUMPN I vnsn Team C. Williams 1 Fargs ToW 2 PWW RETIRNS Paye No. Whitley 5 Terrill1 Totals 6 pEliSE Plye, 0. Jones Brackns Sword Jordan Petmon Hendricks Schanski Whitley Weathers Frys~ger Hall Krats !iates 1. Williams Howad Poote Renes Miller McCall Feael C. Singletary Jackson Brynt McCall PASS pEESE Peterson Jordan1 Weters 1 Patmon T tasas 4 Team Sats First Downs Rushes/Yards PasIvg Yards Offensive Plays Total Offense Retrn Yards Corp/Att/lnt Punts/Avg Fubles/ost Penalties/Yards Time of Poss PASSING Ruroh32 Barbera 0 Toals 324 RUSHING Player At Vannoy 13 Powell 13 Barbera 2 Church 5 Totals 33 RECmN Player fNo. Christian 10 Sheffield 5 Powell 5 vanoy 4 !bon 3 Steens 3 Campbell i Nykes 1 Tot*ls 32 PUN6N Playr Avondet Team KItOPWRETURNS Dupree 2 Douglas 1 Total 3 Yds 117 34 34 27 17 237 Yds 65 53 24 13 7 12 4 3 181 4 4 Avg 7:8 4.9 6.8 5.4 2.4 4 5.S 1 16.3 13.3 12.0 6.5 3.5 12.0 4.0 30 Ybs 169 169 L9 36 18 9 13 8 9 36 ig 32 34 17 7 5 12 4 3 34 ita 1 0 1 TD 3 1 0 0 0 0 4 ID 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 M' rediscovers runmug game Avg t9 42.3 50 42.3 50 Yds 31 3 24 24 55 27 Yds 67 13 13 13 80 1 Sle 6 7 7 5 5 1 4 3 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 Yds la 51 51 32 32 24 24 13 13 120 51 MICH 24 41/237 181 66 418 135 17/25/1 4/42.3 2/1 4/23 25:59 Avg 1.0 24.0 it 31 24 31 Avg igt L3.4 25 L3.0 13 3.2 25 Asst 4 1 0 2 0 4 0 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 1 0 L 0 TD 0 0 0 TD 0 0 0 Tot 10 8 7 7 5 5 4 4 3 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 I TO 1 0 0 1 2 By Jim Rose Daily Sports Editor It wasn't exactly pretty. But it sure wasn't as ugly as the first two weeks. It was head-down, chin-strap-buckled, cleats-digging, smash-mouth football for a while on Saturday, and that meant only one thing: Michigan was once again running the ball. Even if it was only against Eastern Michigan, the Wolverines were doing things - offensively, at least - the way coach Lloyd Carr likes them to be done. The defense's performance is another story (literally, it's another story, on Page 7B), but at least the Michigan offense was in old form on Saturday.. Anthony Thomas wasted no time, taking the first snap 36 yards, and three carries later, he punched into the end zone for a 7-0 Michigan lead that never got any smaller. It was the start of an afternoon that saw the Wolverines run up and down the field to the tune of 237 yards on the ground - almost double their season output to that point. And regardless of who the opposition was, Carr was happy to finally be able to pound an opponent into the ground - without taking the ball off of the ground. "We blocked up front much better than we have," Carr said. "As a result, we were able to run the ball with some suc- cess." Michigan's offensive line manhandled the overmatched Eagles, creating gaping holes that several Michigan runners took advantage of throughout the afternoon. Five different Wolverines carried the ball at least five times. Most notably, however, Anthony Thomas looked like the best back on the field. Thomas, who expended more energy running in from the sidelines than he did running from potential tacklers in Michigan's two losses, broke loose against Eastern. After a M/ART M MES/aily Michigan running back Anthony Thomas, last year's Big Ten freshman of the year, returned to form on Saturday, racking up 117 yards on 15 carries. Thomas set the tone for the game early, running for 69 yards and a score on Michigan's first pos- session against the Eagles. combined total of 46 yards against Notre Dame and Syracuse, he racked up more than that on the first play from scrimmage against Eastern, rambling 51 yards on the first snap of the game. All told, he racked up 117 yards on 15 car- ries against the Eagles and looked, for the most part, like th4 Big Ten freshman of the year that he was not too long ago. Perhaps most impressive, at least according to Carr, was the manner in which Thomas accumulated his yards. On sev- eral occasions, he picked up extra yardage after absorbing initial contact - something few Michigan backs had done in the first two games. "I was very happy about that," Thomas said. "I'm a big guy, and I always want to make yards after contact. That's one of the things I've been working on in practice." With Thomas running hard, the Wolverines started the game off with the aforementioned 69-yard charge down th field that consisted of four plays. In no time at all (61 sec- onds, actually), Michigan had the lead. And upon getting the ball back, via an Andre Weathers interception, the Wolverines added to their lead - on the ground, of course. Six straight plays were rushes, the last one being another Thomas score. With a two-touchdown lead after less than six minutes, Michigan had even less reason to throw the ball. It was a fact not lost on quarterback Tom Brady. "We put some points on the board early," he said. "We kept playing hard, and we were able to put the nail in the cof- fin instead of letting them hang around." After averaging more than 40 pass attempts in their firs* two games - due largely to the fact that they had to play catch-up for much of each contest - the Wolverines attempt- ed just 25 passes against the Eagles. After Thomas, four backs -- Justin Fargas, Ray Jackson, Clarence Williams and Walter Cross - combined to run for 120 yards on 24 carries. U Perfect your "I-don't-care-i- we-do-lose-to-Michigan-State-or- ge 16 Ohio-State-because-I-am-a-hockey- * fan-anyway" excuses. ger first-down For the wealthy among us who actually could afford paying for owns, Michigan hockey season tickets, these excuses been having will be invaluable in about a week. unning patterns Of course, if the hockey team has first down. At been watching the football team and ght a good four taking notes on how to defend a st down. national championship - those ould have to be notes should be burned. sy to see. Perhaps By the way, opening night is Qct. - a bright neon 3 against Guelph. c blue words like U Begin taking orders for the !" or "Beginning of the Drew Henson vs" Era" T-shirts. low where you If you're an enterprising student looking to make quick bucks, this is t Justin Fargas the way to do it. It might be hard to sell initially, if the Wolverines start unning back has winning under Tom Brady for the season, he's tried next few games. n goal-line situa- But you would have no problem e Dame, he selling one to each member of the'} yards forward student section when the season gets I short of the end out of hand and it's time to give the reigns to Henson. ate in the fourth Well, try some of these if you're it over the top bored and considering leaving in the ked by Eastern fourth quarter. Instead of leaving, er Scott Russell. give some of these a shot and make ism, confidence your fourth-quarter Michigan . Hopefully, the Stadium experience an enjoyable 19 33/81 343 78 424 45 32/45/4 6/42.5 1/0 5/51 34:01 EAGLES Continued from Page 1B tently run the ball on offense. The 237 yards on the ground nearly doubled Michigan's season total after two games. Thomas, who had just 46 yards after the first two games, called Saturday's performance "a great confi- dence boost." Two of Michigan's four intercep- tions - by William Peterson, who wasn't expected to play, and Anthony Jordan - were returned for touch- downs. The other two interceptions were by Andre Weathers and DeWayne Patmon. The only other time Michigan returned two interceptions for touch- downs in the same game was in 1975. Although the four takeaways tilted the scales in Michigan's favor, the sec- ondary actually struggled quite a bit - for the third week in a row. Using short drops and his receivers' quick routes to his advantage, Church consistensly picked on the Wolverines' defensive backs. Eight different Eagles caught passes, led by Kenny Christian (10 catches for 60 yards) and Jermaine Sheffield (five catches for 111 yards). "We didn't cover very well when we played man-to-man," Carr said. "I think some that was the ability of their receivers. I also thought Church did a good job, and found his receivers well." RAJU Continued from Pag Construct larg markers. On long third d wide receivers have some difficulty in r that will produce a times, balls are cau yards short of a fir An ideal sign w big. An eyesore. Ea - oh, I don't know yellow with giganti "Hail to the Victors "Conquering Heroe And I think I kn can find one ... Find out wha eats for breakfast. The freshman ru got guts. Twice this to go over the top i tions. Against Notr jumped nearly four and upward, but fel zone. Last Saturday, l quarter, Fargas wen again and got clock Michigan lineback That takes athletici and a little insanity Wolverines will uti back more and getI yardage. yA 42 43 45 W343 2 0 0 343 2 YS 42 27 15 -3 61 Yds 60 111 45 17 20 1 71 18 343 No. 6 6 Ya 25 10 35 Avg 3.2 2.1 7.5 0.6 2.5 Avg 6.0 222 9.0 4.3 6.7 0.33 71.0 18.0 10.7 7 8 10 2 10 it 24 37 18 5 10 3 71 18 71 lot 4 TD 1 0 0 0 1 TD 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 MARGARET MYERS/DaWy Michigan cornerback William Peterson breaks away down the sideline on his 51- yard interception return for a touchdown in the second quarter of Saturday's game. lize the speedy him some YS Avg t 255 42.5 65 255 42.5 65 one. - Sharat Raju can be reached af sraju@umich.d Florida State bounces back; Kansas State cruises Avg L4 12.5 15 10.0 10 11.6 15 TD 0 0 0 DEFENSE Playr Johnson McCall Hughes Russell Willingham Dupree Short Driscoll Taylor Simmons Campbell Smith Ruofing Turner Howard Oan4 . Chorak Robinson Carroll Phipot Vtatoe Travis PASS DEENSE Player Dupree Russell Solo 6 4 4 3 5 4 4 4 4 3 3 1 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 it YS 1 0 Asst 1 2 2 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 Tot 7 6 6 6 5 4 4 4 4 3 3 3 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 I 1 Lg 0 Bk4i TD 0 0 TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) - Chris Weinke's short memory may be a good thing. "We wanted to come out and put what happened last week behind us and I think we did that," the Florida State quarterback said Saturday night after throwing three touchdown passes without an inter- ception as the 11 th-ranked Seminoles routed Duke 62-13. Weinke, who was intercepted six times in last week's loss at North Carolina State, completed 1 I of 19 passes for 241 yards in just three quar- ters. Florida State (1-1 Atlantic Coast Conference, 2-1 overall) is now 48-2 in its first 50 conference games, losing 24-7 to North Carolina State last week, and at Virginia three years ago. Laveranues Coles scored on a 97-yard kickoff return while Jeff Chaney, Travis Minor, and Peter Warrick all scored a pair of touchdowns for the Seminoles, who had scored just 30 points in their first two games of the season. No. 4 Kansas State 48, Texas 7 Is Kansas State really this good? And is Texas really this bad? Subject to more games down the road in what the Wildcats are hoping will be a memorable sea- son, the answers appear to be "yes" and "probably not." Nevertheless, in belting the slow-footed, poor- tackling Longhorns (1-2, 0-1 Big 12) on Saturday, the Wildcats played so well that it's difficult to zero in on any single phase of an extraordinary effort. marking the third straight game he's turned that trick. And that was without a field goal from Martin Gramatica, who had a Big 12 record 65-yarder the week before. No. 5 UCLA 42, Houston 24 UCLA seems willing to go anywhere to play a team from Texas. The Bruins played in tiny Robertson Stadium on the Houston campus Saturday and overcame Texas humidity and Houston's aggressive defense for a 42-24 victory over the Cougars that extend- ed the Bruins' school-record winning streak to 12. It also gave the Bruins five straight victories over Texas teams over the past two seasons, including a 29-23 victory over Texas A&M in the Cotton Bowl. They've also beaten Houston and Texas the past two seasons. Jermaine Lewis scored four touchdowns but UCLA, favored by 27 1/2 points, had to work hard for this one. No. 10 Virginia 20, Clemson 18 George Welsh was exhausted. Aaron Brooks was grateful to the officials. And Anthony Poindexter was rather relieved. But after Virginia's last-minute, 20-18 victory against Clemson on Saturday - a game in which the No. 11 Cavaliers first looked like one of the nation's best teams and later like the Cavaliers of old - the victory was the thing. After Todd Braverman's first field goal with 36 seconds left in the opening quarter, Virginia (3-0) di little right and a whole lot wrons. Two 0 0 0 1 0 11:11. 1 ,,w.,,,. '+ ',,';r 4 .v{ . $N'' fR'v '4 ........ .. '. . 0. .y. ..... n. .. i i${ '.' C i iC! k