4B - The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - November 2, 1998 Michigan Minnesota 15 i 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 Michigan player of the game: Tai Streets Streets has become a valuable offensive threat, especially in recent weeks. His two touchdowns against Indiana were a big boost, and he proved himself again with 192 yards Saturday against Minnesota. 10 Stat line: Catches 6 Yards 192 Touchdowns 1 GAME STATISTICS MICHIGAN Vinson's hot streak stalled after fumbled punt PASSING Player Brady Totals RUSHING Player Thomas Fargas Shea Vinson Brady Totals RECEIVING Player Streets Knight Tuman Thomas Johnson Terrell Totals PUNTING Player Vinson Totals C-A 19-27 1927 Yds TD 282 1 282 1 Att 18 5 1 1 8 33 No. 6 5 4 2 1 1 18 KICKOFF RETURNS Player No. Fargas 3 Totals 3 PUNT RETURNS Player No. Knight 3 Totals 3 Yds 34 9 1 -25 -42 -23 Yds 192 25 15 18 27 5 282 No. 7 7 Yds 67 67 Yds 10 10 Solo 5 7 5 5 4 4 4 3 2 2 2 2 1 1 0 1 1 1 1 1 0 52 Yds 0 0 0 0 0 0 Avg 1.9 1.8 1.0 -25 -42 -.7 Avg 32 5 3.8 9 27 5 15.7 L9 6 7 1 0 2 7 Ls 76 14 7 20 27 5 76 Yds Avg g 286 40.9 50 286 40.9 50 int 0 0 TD 0 0 1 0 0 0 TD 1 0 0 0 0 0 I DEFENSE Player Sword Hendricks Renes Jones Hall .Gold Feazell Brooks ' Patmon Frysinger Epstein Weathers Whitley W. Peterson Wilson J. Williams CampbellI Fargas Jordan Shea Miller Totals (PASSDEFENSE Player Weathers ,Whitley -W. Peterson Patmon Frysinger Totals Team Stats First Downs Rushes/Yards Passing Yards .Offensive Plays Total Offense Return Yards Comp/Att/Int Punts/Avg Fumbles/YLost Penalties/Yards ,Time of Poss Avg Lg 22.3 26 22.3 26 Avg Lg 3.3 9 3.3 9 Asst 4 0 1 1 2 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 16 TD 0 0 TD 0 0 Tot 9 7 6 6 6 5 4 4 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 68 TD 0 0 0 By Mark Snyder Daily Sports Editor MINNEAPOLIS - Two weeks ago, everything was going right for Jason Vinson. The Michigan punter was the Big Ten special teams player of the week after dominating Northwestern. But in the first half on Saturday, the spot- light was his for a different reason. All season long, Vinson handled punts with the good hands of an Allstate agent. But when long snapper Jon Jansen let fly with :19 left, Vinson fumbled the snap and the ball caromed toward the wrong end zone. As the ball bounced into the end zone, Tommy Hendricks decided he was the punter and tried to kick the pigskin out the back. But his efforts were to no avail, as he missed the ball entirely, opening the way for Minnesota to fall on the ball for its only touchdown - and the 7-3 lead. Vinson wanted to crawl into a hole, but when he went to the sidelines, his team- mates had already forgiven the miscue. "When I came off, the team wasn't down on me," Vinson said. "They were very sup- portive." Vinson got his chance at redemption in the fourth quarter when the game was knot- ted at 10. His 43-yard punt to the Minnesota 10 yard line pinned the Gophers with little room to move. Four plays later, James Hall recorded Michigan's third safety of the season and Vinson was vindicated. "It helped me out a lot," he said. "Getting them pinned deep helped ease the pain." JESSE ... THE MAYOR?: Throughout the 1980s, Jesse Ventura spent his weekends yelling at all of America from inside the television set during WWF matches. His forum was usually the ever-entertain- ing "Piper's Pit," but now, Ventura is truly attempting to give back. The former "Jesse The Body" has reached the depths of society, truly scraping the bottom of the barrel. No, he's not returning to the squared cir- cle, but instead is running for governor of Minnesota. Yes, that's right, Ventura's platform has changed from questionable elbows to ques- tionable promises. So what does this icon of our youth have to do with the football game? Columnist Patrick Reusse of the Minneapolis Star-Tribune put it best, dis- cussing how Ventura will save the city. "Once the Body is sworn in," Reusse wrote, "if (Twins owner) Carl Pohlad or (Vikings owner) Red McCombs makes even one whimper about a new stadium, the Guy will kick down the office door and put the billionaire in a chest-crushing bear hug." Now that's a real politician. TIGHT DEFENSE: On of the hallmarks of last season's Michigan defense was its clos- ing ability. In the second half of games, the defense would tighten up and points were hard to come by for Michigan's opponents. This season, the trend is continuing. With just 61 points allowed in the second half - not to mention just 20 in the fourth quarter - the Wolverines are demonstrating that as the game wears on, they get stronger. Minnesota's ineptitude after the break - the Gophers didn't score after the first quar- ter - allowed Michigan to chip its way back into the lead after falling behind early. "They're smart and they listen on the sidelines and (during) halftime," Michigan defensive coordinator Jim Herrmann said of his defense. lot 1 1 1 0 0 3 Lg 0 0 0 0 0 0 Brk-up 0 1 0 1 1 3 WARREN ZINN/Daily David Terrell caught one pass for five yards in the Metrodome, but Tom Brady's game was on track - he com- pleted 19 of his 27 passes for 282 yards. i 0 0 0 Micigian ' real MICH 10 33/-23 282 60 259 77 19/27/0 7/40.9 4/2 7/58 28:09 MINN 14 50/136 83 70 219 108 6/20/3 6/38.3 1/0 11/106 31:51 season starts 0 MINNESOTA PASSING Player C Cockerham 6-2 Totals 6.2 RUSHING Player Att Hamner 23 Cockerham 19 Evans 8 Totals 50 RECEIVING Player No. A. Henderson 2 Johnson 2 Leverson 2 Totals 8 PUNTING 'Player Rindels Totals KICKOFF RETURNS Player No. Carter 3 Totals 3 DEFENSE Player carter Hoffman P. Williams M iddlebrooks Mezera Scruggs Schlecht Dimmy Richard Hutton Russ Harden Cisei Graham Poole Michals Braaten R. Smith Totals C-A Yds 20 83 40 83 Yds 87 50 .1 136 Yds 36 32 15 83 Avg 3.8 2.6 -.1 2.7 Avg 18 16 7.5 8.5 TD 0 0 L9 16 12 7 16 L9 27 27 8 27 int 3 3 TO 0 0 0 0 TD 0 0 0 0 next weekend. M INNEAPOLIS - Well, the preseason is over Bring on the real football season. We're all waiting for it in nervous anticipation. The preseason has gone pretty well. Oh sure, there were some stumbling blocks early on in the campaign. # You know, the usual: penalties, mistakes, fumbles, Syracuse. That's all in the past, right? No more fumbled long snaps that turn into touch- downs for the opponents - that was taken care of against Minnesota on Saturday. No more option offenses will run wild over the Michigan defense. Syracuse, Notre Dame and Indiana helped the Wolverines work out the kinks. No more games in the slop - Iowa and Northwestern were enough. No. 6 6 Yds Avg Lg 230 38.3 46 230 38.3 46 Yds 94 94 Solo 8 5 4 6 4 1 2 1 1 1 .1 1 0 0 0 0 0 37 Avg Ig 31.3 35 31.3 35 Asst 2 4 5 1 0 3 1 2 2 0 1 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 26 TO 0 0 Tot 10 9 9 7 4 4 3 3 3 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 63 There will be no more fumbled, punts. That was taken care of dur- ing ... well, most of this preseason. There will not be any more blown coverages, missed tackles, false starts, holding calls, etc. None. But that's why you have a presea- son, to tie up those loose ends and prepare the team for the real sea- SHARAT RAJU Want to voice your opinion about Michianfootball or the Daily's coverage. E-mail the football writers atdaily.footbaU@umich.edu. MARGARET MYERS/Daily The Michigan defense was able to get to Minnesota quarterback Billy Cockerham just enough to seal a 15-10 victory. Cockerham just e atest in e 1ne of opposing running quarterbacks SharatsrkIt helps everyone - the players, in the Dark the coaches and the fans - get ready for what really counts, for games that really have an impact on the season. And that's what the next three games are - the real season. Penn State. Wisconsin. Ohio State. Those games are all that matters against the top three contenders for the conference title, along with the Wolverines. That is the way a season should unfold. Michigan coach Lloyd Carr and whoever else puts the schedule together should be commended for arranging this sce- nario. A few tough combatants earlyon, but a nice, light, middle portion to help out a team struggling for an identity. In retrospect, it would have been reasonable to pre- dict that coming out of the preseason Michigan would have as many as three and as few as zero losses. So two defeats isn't too bad, and Michigan is now in a position for at least a respectable bowl game, if not something even better. And who really cares that the Fighting Irish and the * Orangemen made the Wolverines look like a bunch of high schools players? Who is concerned that the Wolverines were in a posi- tion to lose to the Gophers, the Hawkeyes, the Hoosiers and Northwestern in the same year? Who is worried that Michigan ran backwards for 23 yards on Saturday? Big Ten Standings Team conf. Overall Ohio State 5-0 8-0 Wisconsin 5-0 8.0 Michigan 5.0 6-2 Penn State 3-1 6-1 Purdue 3-2 54 Michigan State 2-2 4-4 Iowa 2-4 3.6 Minnesota 1-4 4-4 Indiana 1-4 3-5 Illinois 1-5 2-7 Northwestern 0-6 2-7 Last Week (HOME TEAM IN CAPS) By Mark Snyder Daily Sports Editor MINNEAPOLIS - The option never dis- appears. While this week it wasn't an option offense in the traditional sense, Minnesota's quarterback moved wherever and whenever he wanted in the first half, drawing compar- isons to earlier foes who have eaten Michigan alive. He just opted to run. As if to give his legs a rest, Cockerham decided to diversify the offense. Instead of running between the tackles, outside and inside, he decided to let tailback Thomas Hamner do the same. Though the Gophers settled for just a field goal, the message was clear: We've found your weakness and are determined to exploit it. "Cockerham made some outstanding plays in the game," Lloyd Carr said. "Particularly quarter. As with all the other teams Michigan has had trouble with, the running game was the largest problem. Cockerham ended with 66 yards rushing and Hamner tallied 98 in the Gophers' defeat. In the end, the Gophers' passing attack was exposed for what it-is, ineffective and ineffi- cient. Though there were times Cockerham found open receivers, they were few and far I