12F - The Michigan Daily - oba Saturday - October 23, 1999 "wo-Deeps 0- '+l...:. Or 0 Last week When Illinois has the ball... HB 38 Steve Havard FB (; 32 Elmer Hickman 23 Rocky Harvey 49 Chris Hoffman SE QB 1S Kurt Kittner 9 Kirk Johnson FL 1 Michael Dean RY RG C G LT YE 17 Greg Lewis 86 A Moorehead 6 B Lloyd 79 Tony Pashos 69 Ray Redziniak 71 Brian Scott 67 Jay Kulaga 59 Marques Sullivan 84 S mThompson 75 Chip Nicastro 64 David Diehl 76 Luke Butkus 60 Aaron Hodges 72 Dan Cutter 61 Bill Seymour -.. . .. .......................... . . . . . . . ...................................................................-.-.-.----. (jr :ILLINOIS FIGHTING ILLINI * er 23, 1999 u- FoAII Saturday - The Michifn Daily - 5F Lions top Buckeyes, " 'Cats squeak by, Iowa CB 5 James Whitley S Brandon Williams DE 91 Josh Williams 99 Jake Frysinger NT 58 Rob Renes 95 Pat Kratus DT 94 Eric Wilson 96 Dave Petruziello RLB 56 James Hall IL 92 Dan Rumishek CB 3 Todd Howard 1 David Terrell OLB 99 Grady Brooks 6VKor Ho bLB 20 Ian Gold 17 Larry Foote 1I S Dhani Jones 2B Anthony Jordan i 41 Tommy Hendricks 26 Julius curry FS SSDeWayne Patmon 2 CatoJune No. PLAYER 1 Michael Dean 1 Marc Jackson 2 Bobby Jackson 3 Eric McGoey 3 Woodson Griffin 5 Christian Morton 6 Brandon Loyd 7 Muhammad Abdullah 8 Trayvon Waller 9 KrkJ oh nson 10 Steve Fitts 11 Dustin Ward 12 Courtney Miller 13 Brent Peterson 14 Bobie Singleton 15 Kurt Kittrer 16 Roy Sessions 17 Greg Lewis 18 Walter Young 19 Dwayne Smith 20 Eric Garrett 20 Marc Frame 21 Lenny Willis 22 Thomas Robinson 22 Chad Ruskey 23 Rocky Harvey 24 Asim Pleas 25 Quincy Washington 26 Johnnie Harris 27 Ty Myers 28 Eugene Wilson 28 Mike Gilbert 29 Johnny Rogers 30 Robert Franklin 31 Antoineo Harris 32 Elmer Hickman 33 Tony Francis 33 Obadiah Harris 34 Jameel Cook 35 Carey Davis 36 Nolan Nawrocki 37 Carlos Lattimore 38 Steve havard 38 Jeff Collier 40 Ivery Lewis 40 Anthony Julian 41 Eric Guenther 42 Jerry Schumacher 43 Anthony Hurd 44 Aaron Nobles 45 Manuel Strong 45 Phil Macklim 46 Tim McGill 47 Mon Long 48 Danny Clark 49 Chris Hoffman 51 Nathan Hodel 52 Mike Young 53 Jim Ferguson 55 Brett Kautter 56 Shaheed Richardson 57 Marcus Hood 58 Jeff Ruffin 59 Marques Sullivan 60 Aaron Hodges 60 Mike Malczyk 62 Patrick Rouse 64 David Diehl 65 Kwenda Hodges 66 JimK loodworth 67 Jay Kulaga 68 James Brown 69 Ray Redziniak 70 Matt Carlton 71 Luke Butkus 72 Dan Cutter 73 Sean Bubin 74 Jerry Derillo 75 Chip Nicastro 76, Brian Scott 78 Chris Rcks 78 Joe Gal 79 Tony Pashos 80 Brian Hodges 81 Roy ardwell 82 Nick Piazza 83 Terrell Washington 84 B.J. Data 85 Mike McGee 85 Chris Allan 86 Aaron Moorehead 87 Josh Whitman 88 Mike Craciunou 89 Kenny Boyle 90 RobbLon 91 Seth Tsda l 92 Karleton Thomas 93 Mike O'Brien 94 Bruce Rucks 95 Rameel Connor 96 Brandon Moore 97 Jason Eberart 98 Neil ackers 99- Fred Wakefield Po. WR S S WR K QB CB CB CB GB P QB WR K' DR B WR WR GB WR LB K WR DB WR HB S CR CR LB CB S CB LB HB FB CB LB HB HR LB CB HB CB EB CB LB LB CB LB LB LB DE LB LB ER LS LB OL DT DE LB DT OL DL LS LS DL DL OL OL DL OL DL OL OL OL DL DL DL DL DL DL TE DT WR DL TE DT WR WR TE TE TE DE DT DT DE LS DE DL DL K H. 6-2 6-1 6-1 6-3 6-0 6-3 6-2 6-1 6-3 6-3 6-0 6-3 6-2 6-1 6-1 6-3 6-2 6-0 6-5 6-2 6-2 5-9 5-9 6-0 6-0 5-9 -O 6-0 5-1 1 6-4 6-0 6-2 5-9 6-2 6-1 6-1 6-2 6-2 6-0 6-0 5-1 1 6-1 5-10 5-1 5-10 5-9 6-2 6-3 5-10 6-2 6-4 6-1 6-3 6-2 6-2 6-2 6-7 6-2 6-4 63 6-3 6-2 6-4 6-5 6-5 5-1 1 6-0 6-5 6-4 6-5 6-5 6-4 6-3 6-6 6-4 6-7 6-7 6-5 6-6 6-1 6-6 6-3 6-6 6-4 6-4 6-1 6-4 63 6-3 6-1 6-3 6-4 6-3 65 6-3 6-3 6-5 66 6-0 63 6-3 63 60 6- WT. 170 185 210 182 210 170 170 200 185 195 190 180 175 180 200 205 205 175 217 175 235 195 180 175 180 175 180 205 180 200 165 190 175 235 220 225 203 227r 220 220 215 225 210 190 235 182 235 215 180 228 240 220 263 218 230 235 237 227 270 260 238 ?33 280 310 270 225 226 290 265 255 300 267 290 310 285 310 265 300 295 270 265 270 310 255 235 185 235 235 280 180 195 245 250 240 255 270 270 210 205 265 270 263 200 267 E. Sr. Fr. Jr. Fr. So. Fr. Fr So Jr. Sr. So. Fr. Fr. Fr. So So. Jr. Fr. Fr. Fr. Jr. Jr. Sr. Sn Fr. So. Sr. Fr. Jr. Fr. Fr. Fr Sr. Jr. Sr. Sr. Fr. Sr. Fr. Sr. Fr. Src Jr. Sr Jr. Sr. Fr So. Fr. Sr Fr. Fr. Jr. Sc Sr. Jr. Jr. Fr. Fr. Fr. Jr. Fr. Jr. Fr So, So. Fr Fr. fr. So. Fr. Jr. Sr. So So. Fr. Fr. Sr. Sc Fr. Fr. Fr. So. Sr. So, Jr. Jr. Sr. So. Fr. Jr. Jr. Fr. So. Sr. Jr Fr. So Sr. So. Jr. Sr Jr By Rick Freeman Daily Sports Editor WEST LAFAYETTE - The only time Plaxico Burress got a step on Michael Hawthorne, the Purdue corner- back paused, leapt up and batted away a sure touchdown pass as easily as the 20th-ranked Boilermakers shooed off the Spartans' talk of a national title and an undefeated season with a 52-28 victo- ry last Saturdav. Purdue's secondarv - often over- shadowed on the offense-first Boilermakers -- wanted to silence another kind of talk, too. "The Michigan State Spartans are a team that does a lot of trash talking;'said junior quarterback Drew Brees, who threw for five touchdowns and 509 yards. Actually, Brees completed eight pass- es that went for touchdowns. One, a bomb to Vinny Sutherland, was called back on a chop-block penalty. Three plays later, Brees was hit by safety Richard newsome as he threw, and the ball ended up in the hands of linebacker T.J. Turner. No Boilermaker was any- where near him (a negligible drawback of the spread defense). Some time later, Turner scored, and freshman T.J. Duckett, scored the two-point conversion to make the score 28-14. The Spartans looked unstoppable on their first drive - a 10-play, 91-yard masterpiece, capped by an 19-yard touchdown pass to Burress. Michigan State quarterback was 21-of-33, and threvw four interceptions. The Spanians were penalized for more yards (101) than they gained on the ground 1441. 'It was a definite lack of concentra- tion and focus on our part," said Burke, who threw four interceptions. After the first play of that drive - Burke's only touchdown Burress left the game hurt. replays showed a Purdue player scraping his cleat down the sophomore wide receiver's side. Hawthorne, who expressed disdain for Burress' talk after the game, said he was unaware of what happened. "I don't know. I turned my back and he ended up hurt," Hawthorne said. The Boilermakers answered with four scoring drives of their own - two of which were the result of turnovers in the Spartans' territory. Chris Daniels, who may have had the worst game of his career two weeks ago at Michigan Stadium, had his best one Saturday. He caught 21 passes for 301 yards and three touchdowns, including a 51-yarder where he beat Spartans' sixth- year senior cornerback Amp Campbell, who came up limping after the play. "Yeah, and all I'll probably remember will be that one drop," a beaming Daniels said afterward. The 301 yards was a new Purdue record, as was the 21 catch mark, which came two receptions short of the NCAA record. The Spartans lost to Purdue for the third straight time, but this game meant the most to Michigan State by far. Eager before the game to prove these were not a old, inconsistent Spartans, Nick Saban lamented the possibility that his players may have gotten big heads after the game. "People started talking about the Heisman Trophy,and about an undefeat- ed season and the Big Ten champi- onship,' said the Spartans' fifth-year coach, who has yet to coach in a Jansary bowl game. "We'll see how they respond to this, and that will say a lot about their maturity." Hawthorne already has plenty to say on that subject. Specifically about Burress. "Every time he gets up after a big play, he slaps his chest like no one else has any heart, like he's the greatest thing to ever happen to football." Hawthorne, too, noticed that the Spartans were bubbling with "chitter- chatter," Fine by him. "I love it. If you don't talk trash, I don't like you," he said. "I'm like, 'can we get a new receiver here?"' He'll get his wish next week, when Penn State, the only remaining undefeat- ed team in the Big Ten comes to Ross- Ade Stadium, where the Boilermakers are 15-1 since Joe Tiller became their coach. Wideout Chris Daniels had 21' catches for 301 yards to show up v Michigan State's Plaxico Burress and lift Purdue to a 52-28 victory. APPeOe State jailb reakhaltedbyBoilers STATE COLLEGE (AP) - Eric McCoo slipped enough tackles to gain a career-best 211 yards and set up 10 points in leading No. 2 Penn State to a 23-10 victory over No. 18 Ohio State last Saturday. The Nittany Lions (3-0 Big Ten, 7-0 overall) had two field goals blocked, fumbled in the end zone for a Buckeyes TD and had trouble scoring from inside the Ohio State 5-yard line. Ohio State (1-2, 4-3) was outplayed as the Lions held the Buckeyes to just 143 yards while piling up 422 them- selves. Ohio State quarterback Steve Bellisari was sacked eight times and completed just seven of 21 passes for 78 yards with an interception. Penn State linebacker Lavar Arrington had 2 1/2 sacks against Bellisari. Bellisari missed a play near the end of the game after taking a vicious hit to the upper chest from Arrington with 2:23 left. McCoo carried nine times for 121 yards in the first half as the Nittany Lions took a 13-10 lead at intermission. He finished with 22 carries for 211 yards, and also caught four passes for 47 yards. No. 17 WiscoNsiN 59, INDIANA 0: Ron Dayne ran for 167 of Wisconsin's school-record 705 yards of total offense as No. 17 Wisconsin steamrolled Indiana. Dayne, who had just 17 carries and sat out the entire second half, became the fourth player in Division I history to record four 1,000-yard rushing seasons. He ran for two touchdowns, includ- ing a 57-yard rumble late in the second quarter that put Wisconsin (3-1, 5-2) up 38-0 at halftime in its homecoming game. The Hoosiers (2-2, 3-4) lost star defensive end Adewale Ogunleye for the season last week with a knee injury. MINNEsor 37, IruNOIs 7: Thomas Hamner rushed for 184 yards and a touchdown and quarterback Billy Cockerham added another 100 yards rushing. Illinois (0-3, 3-3) lost its third game in a row and its sixth straight home- coming game before a crowd that start- ed to leave in the third quarter after the weather became rainy and the game appeared decided. Minnesota (2-1, 5-1) scored on three straight possessions within eight min- utes in the first half - separated only by three Illinois three-and-outs - to go up 17-0 early in the second quarter. The Gopher defense, ranked fourth in the nation entering the game, kept the llini from closing the gap by break- ing up passes, stopping the run, grab- bing an interception to halt a lengthy Illinois drive in the second quarter and sacking quarterback Kurt Kittner three times at crucial junctures. NORTHwESTERN 23, IOwA 21: Zak Kustok scored on a keeper on fourth- and-2 with four seconds left. It was the first Big Ten victory for Northwestern (1-3, 3-4) since Nov. 15, 1997, when they beat Iowa (0-3, 1-5). But it wasn't a pretty win, as the Wildcats blew a 16-0 halftime lead and barely moved the ball in the second half. The win also was marred by the loss of receiver Sam Simmons, who broke his collarbone in the first half and will miss the rest of the season. !(OW/ $ ;)1 ! !tsi~~p~itir Th ii !l~ j ip~ isNw1ii f heWr 1 f 00 1 ~ eiievejpi~ A ri i ! 1I I Good Food, Good Drinks, J f v Good Prices... Good Time Charley's After 11 P.M. Every night from 11 p.m. until close,Charley's features... Pitchers . . .. . .. .. .. . .. . ... .... 3:00 Bud Light, Molson, Killian's, or Honey Brown Margaritas ......................1.95 Regular or Strawberry Margaritas Beer----------------------1.88 22 oz. Bud Light, Molson, Killian's, or Honey Brown Iced Teas.-......-............. 2.95 All of our Iced Tea varieties, 22 oz. Also featured after 11 p.m. is a limited menu of appetizers, x burgers, and sandwiches at special midnight hour prices. Good Time Chorley's -- 1 1405South University at Chume- 668-84 11 da EXPRESSIONS PERSONALIZED PRODUCTS OFFERING UNIQUE PERSONALIZED GIFTS TO CELEBRATE Y2K (IN MAIZE & BLUE), IRISH HERITAGE, GOLF HOLE IN ONE, ANGLING A WHOPPER. AND YOUR PRIVACY. QUALITY AT AFFORDABLE PRICES. VISIT US ON THE INTERNET AT Ww.daexpressions.Com __ * . m