TusaOtoeA2n 99 TeM ignDiy-13 The after . A ecities All business for Spartans EAST LANSING, Mich. (AP) - If you expected any jubilation from Nick Saban on yesterday after defeating Michigan, you should have looked somewhere else. He was preparing to keep climbing that mountain. Huh? To simplify things: Saban gives his Michigan State charges 24 hours to celebrate a win. After that, it's on to the next game and the goals the Michigan State players jave set themselves. I"We have a goal board in there, and it doesn't have Michigan at the top," Saban said at his weekly news con- ference. "So we're climbing the mountain, and we cer- taiinly haven't reached the top yet." The Spartans made a big jump Saturday with its 31 victory over Michigan, which elevated it to No. 5 in the rankings. And while Saban acknowledged savoring the contest "for a few hours after the game," he quickly turned to preparing for the Purdue game on Saturday. "We should look at this as another thing we have to do 4 climbing this mountain that is the challenge of our 'ason," he said. "Once you've reached the top, and you quit feeling like you're trying to be relentless, trying to be danger- ous, trying to prove something, you go back the other way and start being afraid to lose," he said. Before the season began, Saban said, his team came to him with three goals. First, he said, was to finish in the top 25 teams in the country. Two and three were to play in a New Year's Day bowl game and to win the Big Ten championship. "Those are the three goals they chose, and those are e goals we're working toward," Saban said. "There is a ertain kind of competitive attitude, chemistry, maturity, that you have to have to be able to get there." And, he said, now is no time to gloat about the Michigan win or other achievements. "I think the time to talk about what you've accom- plished is when you're sitting in a nursing home someday talking to your grandkids, not after you've played six games in a season," Saban said. "We have a lot of foot- ball left to play." The next step is at Purdue on Saturday. And Saban has *spect for the Boilermakers, their wide-open offense and their 4-2 record. "Purdue is another very challenging opponent for us; they're a top 20 team," he said. "They've come off two very difficult road losses against very good football teams (Michigan and Ohio State). "When you think about Purdue, you think about their offense, their quarterback (Drew Brees), the skill players they have ... They're not going to be one-dimensional, that's for sure." And Saban acknowledged he gets more enjoyment out preparing for the next game than the latest victory. " enjoy it for a few hours after the game. When I get up on Sunday morning and start the next week, I don't enjoy it," he said. "I enjoy getting ready for the next game." !M'ATE'S UPCOMING SCHEDULE 10/16 at Purdue $0/23 at Wisconsin 10/30 off week 1/06 vs Ohio State ii/13 at Northwestern 41/20 vs Penn State J9 LOUISBROWNaM-g. archrival Michigan and remained Michigan State quarterback Bill Burke raises his arms in triumph as the Spartans held on in a thrilling victory over, undefeated, at 6-0. Burke's record-setting performance catapulted Michigan State to No. 5 in the country. ;: Too little too late at crunch time From staf and wire reports Ilad Tom Brady's 21-point fourth quarter been enough for Michigan to win on Saturday and had Spartans fullback Dawan Moss not scored on his only carry of the game the comeback would have been the biggest in Michigan history. Technically, it would have tied Scott Dreisbach's comeback, also from 17 points down, against Virginia in 1995. But the comeback' against Michigan State would have been bigger. lie engineered three touchdown drives - - in one quarter - and it would have been against Michigan State. Instead, Moss scored on a 14-yard rumble to distance the Spartans past the Wolverines. And now, fairly or not, Lloyd Carr has been drawing fire for sticking to his two-quarterback system. After Saturday's loss - Carr's second in three tries at Spartan Stadium - Carr was asked if the effectiveness o f the Wolverines' four-wideout passing game in the fourth quarter would change his thinking about the Wolverines' offensive system. "I'm not going to change what we've been doing," Carr said. "That wasn't what cost us the game." But the Wolverines' six total rush- ing yards didn't help. Before this game, they had been averaging 128 yards a game. Now, they're averaging 108 per game - 94th out of 114 Division I- A teams. The Wolverines' passing game is 22nd in the nation, fourth best among teams ranked in the top 10 of the Associated Press poll. MORE RusIIING WOES: Michigan's total of six rushing yards - even though the Wolverines are 94th in Division I in rushing yards - was by far the lowest total of the season for the Wolverines. But Michigan has done worse in the past. In a 15-10 victory over Minnesota last October in the Metrodome, the Wolverines didn't even gain positive yards o . the ground. The Golden Gophers held Michigan to -23 yards on the after- noon. - Daily Sports Editors Rick Freeman and TJ. Berka conPribted to this report. Spirited Michigan State fans hang enemy quarterback Tom Brady in effigy after their beloved Spartans showed up the 1-96 rivals. ,:v