4B - The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - October 25, 1999 ,., I . . r ni i w iii i nw wrr rr w i n o w s rr I GAME STATISTICS ...................................... ... ..................... PASSING Player Brady Henson Totals C-A 23-38 2-3 25-41 Y 3 3 RUSHING Player Att A. Thomas 21 Askew 4 Drake 4 Coleman 1 Henson 1 Brady 7 Totals 42 RECEIVING Player No. Knight 7 Terrell 4 Walker 3 Shea 3 Johnson 3 Seymour 1 Joppru 1 Askew 1 Totals 25 PUNTING Player t Sargent Totals KICKOFF RETURNS Player No. Bryant 2 Totals 2 PUNT RETURNS Player No. Knight1 Totals 1 DEFENSE Player Jones Whin~ey Hendricks Gold Williams Hall : Renes Patmon Brooks Williams Hobsoni Frysinger Wilson Howard June Totals PASS DEFENSE Player It Patmon 0 Totals 0 Team Stats First Downs Rushes/Yards Passing Yards Offensive Plays Total Offense Return Yards Comp/AttAnt Punts/Avg Fumbles/Lost Penalties/Yards Time of Poss I L PASSING PlayerC- Kittner 24-3 Totals 24-3 RUSHING Player A Harvey 17t Kittner 6 Havard 9 Cook 1 Totals 33 Yds 128 14 10 0 -11 -)l 5 110 Yds 134 64 33 26 22 13 9 -1 315 No. 4 4 Yds 20 20 Yds 4 4 Solo 8 6 6 5 4 4 4 3 2 2 1 1 1 . 0 48 Yds 307 8 315 Avg 6.1 3.5 2.5 0 -11 -2.1 2.6 Avg 19.1 16.0 11.0 8.6 ' 7.3 13 9.0 -1.0 12.6 TD 2 0 2 7 9 0 0 9 26 19 17 11 13 9 0 32 int 2 0 2 TD 2 0 0 0 0 0 2 TD 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 Disastrous loss hurts M' in more ways than one Yds Avg Lg 132 33.0 39 132 33.0 39 By Andy Latack Daily Sports Editor It doesn't matter who you ask. This one hurt. After suffering its first loss to an unranked team since being stunned by Purdue in 1996, Michigan had a tough time hiding its disappointment after the game. But for wide receiver David Terrell and running back Anthony Thomas, the 35-29 loss to the Illini stung for a different reason. Both players fin- ished the game injured, with Terrell nursing a separated shoulder and Thomas favoring a probable broken finger. Terrell, who left Michigan Stadium with his left arm in a sling, separated his left shoulder in the first half. The sophomore couldn't say exactly when the injury occurred. "In the second quarter, I fell down and it separated," Terrell said after the game. Terrell remained in the game, though, with the 110,188 fans under the impression that he was at full strength. He finished with four catches for 64 yards, catching two balls in the fourth quarter despite his injured shoulder. But it will be one of the balls that Terrell didn't catch that will stick with him the longest. With Illinois up by an improbable 35-27 margin with 37 seconds remaining in the game, Michigan quarterback Tom Brady was leading the Wolverines on a fren- zied comeback attempt. After taking over at the Michigan 20-yard line, Brady moved the team 64 yards in 22 seconds behind a string of well-executed sideline pat- terns, two of which went to Terrell. With a first-and-10 at the Illinois 16- yard line, Michigan was threatening to score and set up the game-tying two-point conversion attempt. On the next play, Brady dropped back and fired the ball at Terrell, who was running a slant pattern after lin- ing up in the right slot. Terrell dove and had the ball on his fingertips, but was unable to complete what would have been a remarkable catch. "I just came around, looked and (the ball) was there," Terrell said. "I thought I had it, but I just dropped it." Two plays later, Brady was inter- cepted by Illinois cornerback Tony Francis, ending the drive. Francis fumbled into the end zone, resulting in a safety, but Michigan was unable to put the ball into the end zone. Thomas' injury forced him to watch Illinois' comeback from the sideline after breaking the little fin- ger on his left hand. Thomas carried the ball 12 times for 88 yards in the first half, and continued to carry the burden early in the second half. He carried nine times for 40 yards on Michigan's opening drive of the third quarter before sustaining the injury. Thomas was removed from the game and wouldn't return, leaving the rushing duties to sophomore Walter Cross and freshmen B.J. Askew and Charles Drake. "He has a possible broken finger on his left hand," Michigan coach Lloyd Carr said of Thomas. "Anthony was playing very well up to that point. We had established a really effective running game." Despite sitting out almost the entire second half, Thomas finished the game with 128 yards on 21 car- ries. It was his third 100-yard game of the season and the ninth of Thomas' career. Avg !g 10.0 14 10.0 14 TD 0 0 TD 0 0 Avg 4.0 Lg 4 4 Asst 1 2 2 1 2 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 12 Tot 9 8 8 6 6 5 4 4 2 2 2 60 Tailback Anthony Thomas gained 128 yards on the ground, but was forced to watch Illinois' late-game comeback from the bench after breaking his finger. Thomas said that the injury would immediate word on whether Terrelli' not force him to miss any time in next separated shoulder would keep hits week's game at Indiana. There was no out for any length of time. Lions survive scare from Boilers Yds 0 0 MICHIGAN 27 42/110 315 83 425 24 25/41/2 4/33.0 8/6 31:24 L I N OI s Brk-up 1 1 TD 0 0 IWNOIS 21 33/157 280 66 437 17 24/33/0 5/28.8 0/0 5/48 28:36 A 3 3 Yds 106 31 20 0 157 RECEIVING Player No. Cook 6 Lloyd S Harvey 2 Young 2 Hodges 2 Whitman 2 Moorehead 2 Dean 1 Hoffman 1 Hickman 1 Totals 24 PUNTING PlayerN Fitts Rackers Totals KICKOFF RETURNS Player No. Havard 1 Total 1 PUNT RETURNS Totals 0 DEFENSE Player! Clark Pleas Abdullah Guenther Francis Young FranklIin Moore Connor Ebherhart Rogers Tesdall Harris Waller Wakefield Schumacher Yds 32 54 61 37 30 27 19 10 6 4 280 No. 4 5 Yds 17 17 Yds 280 280 Avg 5.2 2.2 0.0 4.8 Avg 5.3 10.8 30.5 18.5 15.0 13.5 9.5. 10.0 6.0 4.0 11.6 Yds 125 19 144 TD 4 4 L9 54 11 9 0 54 L9 11 33 59 31 27 17 13 10 6 4 59 190 28.8 Int 0 0 TD 0 0 0 2 TD 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 4 19 47 TO 0 0 WEST LAFAYETTE (AP)-- Purdue coach Joe Tiller does- n't care about statistics, especially when the final score doesn't go his way. No. 16 Purdue held second-ranked Penn State to only I I first downs and outgained the Nittany Lions by over 100 yards. But three Purdue turnovers were turned into 21 points and a 31-25 victory by the undefeated Lions on Saturday. "There were a lot of mistakes made by both sides. It was a sloppy game. A lot of that was the intensity. Our kids were very emotional early in the game," said Penn State coach Joe Paterno, who moved into third on the major-college career vic- tory list with his 315th. Purdue had 28 first downs and outgained the Lions 444-318, but Penn State got two touchdowns from its defense. "There is a lot of positive things. The negative thing was the way the thing ended. We had a horrible throw on the last play of the game," Tiller said. "We expect a perfect game from our quarterback and we expect no sacks from the 0-line. We did- n't get that done today. Part of it was us, and a lot of it was Penn State." Drew Brees passed for two touchdowns and 379 yards -- the most yielded by Penn State all season. But he had a pass intercepted and returned 25 vards for a touchdown by defen- sive end Courtney Brown. The Lions got another score when LaVar Arrington sacked Brees and caused a fumble, which he returned two yards for a touchdown. Penn State (4-0 Big Ten, 8-0 overall) forced Brees into four incomplete passes in the final minute after he had moved the Boilermakers (2-3, 5-3) 58 yards to a first down at the 12 with 31seconds remaining. Brees, who was 31-of-48, had his first-down pass tipped at the line of scrimmage by cornerback Anthony King on a blitz. A pass to Randall Lane went incomplete on the next play and on third down he threw the ball out of the end zone to avoid a sack. Brees then threw past the outstretched arms of Chris Daniels, and Purdue was out of downs. "It was just fades on both sides and Vinny was running a 5* yard out. The guy (defender) was playing outside leverage, so he had no chance," Brees said. "I was thinking Randall because it was a shorter throw, but right at the snap of the ball the DB jumped outside and it didn't look like he would be able to fade outside. "So I turned around and threw it to Daniels as quick as I could. There really wasn't much room to work with." The victory was the 315th for Paterno, moving him past Amos Alonzo Stagg into third place among major-college coaches and 'within eight of Bear Bryant's record total. It was the 10th consecutive victory for Penn State, the second-longest winning streak among majors. Another mistake by Purdue produced a 14-14 halftime tie. Antoine Neal was attempting to return a punt when he mis- handled the ball and Mac Morrison recovered for Penn State at the Purdue 41. Two plays later, cornerback James Dunnigan was beaten by Eddie Drummond, who caught a 39-yard TD pass from Kevin Thompson. "Courtney is a great player. If he doesn't get the Lombardi award there's something wrong with somebody," Paterno said "He plays every play. If coach Lombardi was alive, that's the kind of kid he'd want to have the award in his name. He's a super kid." Brown said he had seen Purdue run its bubble-screen on film. "I had no idea that was what they were running on that par- ticular play. I just put my hands up, hit the ball- and it cane down and I went running," he said. "I think I was the most sur- prised." Thompson and Chafie Fields hooked up for a 78-yard TD pass behind Dunnigan to put Penn State ahead for good 21-14 on the first play of the second half Brown's interception with 10:19 left in the third quarter made it 28-14. Avg L 17.0 17 17.0 17 AP PHOTO Penn State fullback Mike Cerimele and the rest of the Nittany Lions held off a late Purdue rally to remain undefeated in the Big Ten. 0 0.0 0 0 Salo 10 9 7 5 4 4 4 5 3 2 2 1 0 0 Yds 2 23 25 Asst 2 2 3 2 2 2 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 Tot 12 11 10 6 6 6 6 5 4 3 3 1 1 1 1 BIG TEN Spartans continue tailspin; Ohi State holds off pesky Gophers me PASS DEFENSE Player Int Francis 1 Waller 1 Totals 2 Ln9 23 23 Brk-up 0 1 TO 0 0 0 MADISON, Wis. (AP) - As Michigan State learned on Saturday, Ron Dayne at his best is better than just about anybody. No. 17 Wisconsin's overpowering tail- back gave another stellar performance, rushing for 214 yards and two touch- downs as Wisconsin shredded the nation's best run defense and routed the Spartans 40-10 on Saturday. No. Il Michigan State allowed 279 rushing yards, the fewest in the country, in its first seven games. The Badgers racked up 301, including touchdowns runs of51 and 15 yards by Dayne, who had just one of his 34 carries in the fourth quarter. "We knew that they were No. 1, and that was one of our main goals, to go out and run .on them," Dayne said. "My offensive line, the fullbacks and tight ends all had great games." After a string of mediocre perfor- mances that put his season goals in jeop- ardy, Dayne was in top form during Wisconsin's last two home victories, during which the Badgers outscored their opponents 99-10. The Spartans' front seven was thought to be one of the best in the country, but Michigan State had almost no success in containing Davne who Dayne passed Charles White for third place on the major-college career rush- ing list, and moved within 483 yards of Ricky Williams' record. Dayne must average 161 yards in Wisconsin's final three games against Northwestern, Purdue and Iowa to set the mark. Cornerback Jamar Fletcher intercept- ed two passes for the Badgers (4-1 Big Ten, 6-2 overall), who got their fourth straight conference victory with a sec- ond straight overwhelming perfor- mance. Wisconsin beat Indiana 59-0 last week and led the Spartans 33-3 early in the fourth quarter. Just two weeks ago, the trash-talking, high-fiving Spartans (3-2, 6-2) were undefeated and talking about a national championship run. But consecutive humbling losses to Purdue and Wisconsin have knocked Michigan State all but out of the national and con- ference title hunts. Dayne broke free for a 51-yard touch- down run on the Badgers' opening pos- session of the game and, after two field goals by Vitaly Pisetsky, Bobby Myers intercepted Bill Burke's pass deep in Michigan State territory. That set up Dayne's second touch- down run early in the second quarter. With 66 career touchdowns. Davne The Buckeyes seriously helped their bowl cause when Dan Stultz kicked a 40-yard field goal with 1:15 left and Matt Wilhelm recovered Tyrone Carter's fumble on the ensuing kickoff. The Buckeyes avoided their first 1-3 confer- ence start since 1988 and extended their dominance over the Gophers to 16 straight games. Jerry Westbrooks caused the fumble that secured Ohio State's victory over the' Gophers, who dominated the game statistically until failing to gain a first down in three fourth-quarter posses- sions. INDIANA 38, Iow A 31: Antwaan Randle El threw four touchdown passes and Indiana stopped lowa on the four- yard line as time expired to beat the Hawkeyes. Iowa quarterback Scott Mullen, making his first start of the season for injured Randy Reiners, tied a school record with 60 pass attempts. He com- pleted 36 of them for 426 yards but was intercepted twice. Mullen also ran 14 times for 47 yards and two touch- downs. Mullen took the Hawkeyes (0-4, 1-6) on a 75-yard drive with 2:10 remaining and the Hoosiers up, 38-31. With the ball on the Indiana 10 and 15 PLAYER OF THE GAME: ...................................................................... MARCUS KNIGHT The Michigan wide receiv- er made seven catches for 134 yards against the ff Iraq W, ==