The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - October 25, 1999 - 58 I GAME RECAP Big plays fuel illinois' late run, torch Blue defense FIRST QUARTER: By UJ Berka )aily Sports Editor Coming into Saturday's game, Illinois was limp- ng noticeably during the Big Ten schedule. The Fighting Illini, after starting the season with three ion-conference wins, had dropped three games within the Big Ten and had the seemingly impos- ible task of beating No. 9 Michigan on the road. Illinois coach Ron Turner knew he had to jn re his troops, so he took things into his own I. The night before the game, Turner gathered us players together in the team hotel and sat them own. Turner popped in a video showing Illinois' big lays in their three losses and said, "If we play like his for 60 minutes, we can beat anybody." On Saturday, it turned out that 21 minutes worth f big plays were enough to conquer the Volverines. "We were just trying to put points on the board," lt is tailback Rocky Harvey said about the end f game - which saw the Illini come back rom a 27-7 deficit for the win. "The defense layed well to get the stops at the end." The Michigan defense had no answer for stop- ing Harvey in the fourth quarter, as the dininu- ve running back scored Illinois' last two touch- owns on a 59-yard pass and a 54-yard touchdown untb put the Illini ahead to stay. But Harvey wasn't the only Illinois player who an roughshod over the Michigan defense in the atter third of the game. Quarterback Kurt Kittner -1o completed 24 of 33 passes for 280 yards - rew a 31-yard touchdown pass to Walter 'oung and a three-yard scoring toss to Brian lodges to start the Illinois comeback. But Michigan had a chance to stop the comeback efore it started. With six minutes left in the third, linois faced a fourth-and-three situation at the lichigan 31. The Wolverines called an all-out blitz ut missed a coverage assignment, leaving Young ride open in the middle of the field. Young raced ito the end zone, and momentum had changed. "It was just a situation where somebody missed an assignment," linebacker Ian Gold said. "Those' things happen during the game, and that time we got burned on it." The Michigan defense proceeded to keep get- ting burned, as the Illini scored 28 points in the game's final 21 minutes. Combined with the 34 points that the Wolverines gave up against Michigan State, the Michigan defense has gone from a strength to a question mark. "We are anything but a good defensive team," Michigan coach Lloyd Carr said. "I have no idea how this team will respond to this." But as much as the Michigan defense played the part of a crumbling wall, the offense didn't exactly light the Illini on fire either. While Illinois was scoring four touchdowns in the last 21 min- utes of the game, the Michigan offense went scoreless. Only a safety - which came when safety Muhammad Abdullah recovered a fumble in the end zone after a Tony Francis interception with nine seconds left in the game - provided Michigan with a score during the last third of the game. "We are moving the ball well, but we are mak- ing mistakes," senior quarterback Tom Brady said. "This is a senior-led football team and the seniors aren't playing their best football." Senior offensive lineman Steve Frazier - who replaced an injured David Brandt at center - made the biggest Michigan miscue of the after- noon. Facing a second-and-five situation at the Illinois 28, Frazier snapped the ball over Brady's head. Brady ran back to the Michigan 47 before recovering the ball. The Wolverines never recovered, as Brady threw interceptions to Trayvon Waller and Francis to end Michigan's hopes of winning the game and possi- bly going to a BCS bowl in January. "I'm very disappointed," Brady said. "If we go out and play Michigan football, there is no way we Illinois tailback Rocky Harvi lose this game." defense. Harvey scored llini 4o idjguuFA~ LOUIS BROWN/Daily ey displays his breakaway speed as he runs away from the Michigan ois' final two touchdowns of the game, both from over 50 yards out. STAFF PICKS: After a Michigan punt gave the llini the ball on the 50-yard line, Illinois quarterback Kurt Kittner passed to wide receiver Brandon Lloyd for 33 yards down the the Michigan 2/. Four plays later, Kittner finds fullback Jameel Cook for a six-yard touchdown strike. Illinois 7, Michigan 0 After a 26-yard run by Anthony Thomas set up the play, Michigan quarterback Tom Brady finds Marquise Walker on a fade route in the right corner of the end zone. Illinois 7, Michigan 7 SECOND QUARTER: After converting a fourth-and-one on a quarter- back sneak, Brady finds Marcus Knight on the next play for a 31-yard touchdown. Michigan 14, Illinois 7 After a 12-yard punt gave Michigan the ball at the Illinois 40, Anthony Thomas moved the Wolverines down the field, carrying the ball on all three plays before scoring on a 25-yard touchdown run. The extra point is blocked by defensive end Fred Wakefield. Michigan 20, Illinois 7 THIRD QUARTER: After engineering a 15-play, 88-yard drive that took over six minutes off the clock, Brady hands off to Thomas, who plunges one-yard for the Michigan score. Michigan 27, Illinois 7 In what appears to be blown coverage, Kittner finds tight end Walter Young wide open over the middle, and Young lumbers untouched for the 31-yard score. Michigan 27, Illinois 14 After recovering an Illinois fumled on the kick- off, Michigan is unable to gain positive yardgae, losing 12 yards before attemtping a 46-yard field goal that is blocked by defensive tackle Brandon Moore. FOURTH QUARTER: Kittner leads the Illini on a mammoth 17-play, 77-yard drive that consumed over, seven min- utes of clock. The drive ends when Kittner fired a strike to another backup tight end - Brian Hodges - for a 3-yard touchdown. Time to Michigan punts six plays later after gaining one first down, giving the ball back to the Illini with four minutes left in the game. Three plays after getting the ball back, Kittner finds running back Rocky Harvey , who cuts to the right sideline and scores untouched, giving the Illini their first lead since the first quarter. Illinois 28, Michigan 27 After Michigan moves to the Illinois 28, center Steve Frazier's shotgun snap sails over the head of Brady, who tracks the bouncing football down back at the Michigan 47. After throwing the ball away, Michigan is star- ing down a fourth-and-30. Brady's long bomb is picked of by Trayvon Waller at the goal line. Two plays later, Harvey gives the Wolverines one last chance by breaking free for a 46-yard touchdown run. Illinois 35, Michigan 27 Again, Brady gets the ball at the 20 and . breathes new life into the Wolverines. After completing a 22-yard pass to Knight, Brady hits Terrell and Johnson on a pair of quick strikes to move the ball to the Illinois 44. After Illinois jumped offside, Brady finds Johnson two plays later at the 28. On first-and-10 from the Illinois 1, Brady fires to Terrell, who is running a slant from the right slot position. The ball barely escapes errell's hands, falling incomplete. Brady is intercepted by cornerback Tony Francis two plays later at the two-yard-line. Upon being tackled, Francis fumbles into the endzone, where Muhammad Abdullah falls on it for the safety. Illinois 35, Michigan 29 Illinois kicks off from its own 20, and Kevin Bryant returns the ball to the Michigan 41. With six seconds remaining, Brady's long heave which was short of the end zone is batted down by the Illinois secondary. FINAL SCORE: Illinois 35, Michigan 29 Score by quarters 1 2 3 4 Final Illinois 7 0 7 21 35 Michigan 7 13 71 2 29 BIG TEN STANDINGS : ; All picks made against the spread. Home teams in CAPS. MICHIGAN (-24.5) vs. Illinois Penn State (-4) vs. PURDUE WISCONSIN (-2.5) vs. Michigan State MINNESOTA (-2.5) vs. Ohio State Indiana (-2) vs. IOWA Texas Christian (-1) vs. RICE Nebraska (-9.5) vs. TEXAS Tennessee (-3) vs. ALABAMA Florida State (-14) vs. CLEMSON Kansas State (-7.5) vs. OKLAHOMA ST. Texas A&M (-4) vs. OKLAHOMA MISSISSIPPI STATE (-13.5) vs. LSU GEORGIA (4) vs. Kentucky Miami, Fla. (-18) vs. BOSTON COLL. Best Bet T.J. Berka Illinois Penn State Wisconsin Minnesota Indiana Rice Texas Tennessee Florida State Kansas State Texas A&M Mississippi State Georgia Boston College Texas A&M 10-4 (0-1) 5441-3 (1-6) Rick Freeman Michigan Purdue Wisconsin Ohio State Indiana Rice Texas Alabama Florida State Kansas State Texas A&M Mississippi State Georgia Boston College Purdue 8-6 (0-1) 49-46-3(3-4) Josh Kleinbaum Andy Latack Michigan Michigan Penn State Purdue Michigan State Ohio State Indiana Rice Nebraska Tennessee Florida State Kansas State Texas A&M Louisiana State Georgia Miami Ohio State 8-6(1-0) 45-50-3 (2-5) Wisconsin Ohio State Indiana Texas Christian Nebraska Tennessee Florida State Kansas State Texas A&M Louisiana State Georgia Miami Kansas State 7-7(1-0) 49,46-3 (34) LOUIS BROWN/Daily espite the best efforts of Jake Frysinger and the rest of the Michigan defense, inois quarterback Kurt Kittner threw for four touchdowns This week Overall Top 25 Juskers fall, Seminoles scrape by in wacky week AUSTIN, Tex. (AP) - Nebraska was eking revenge against Texas. Instead, e nghorns handed the Cornhuskers a g loss in the Big 12 for the third nsecutive time. Major Applewhite threw for two see- nd-half touchdowns as No. 18 Texas ral- :d to beat No. 3 Nebraska for the third might time, 24-20 Saturday. The Cornhuskers (3-1 Big 12, 6-1 verall) talked all week about avenging st year's 20-16 loss to Texas, which iapped Nebraska's 47-game home win- ng streak. But they couldn't stop Texas -I -2) from becoming the only team Nebraska three times in the '90s. "We knew it was important to do our lking on the field," Applewhite said. We knew it wouldn't do any good to do ty talking before the game." Applewhite was 9-of-21 for 47 yards the first half as Nebraska built a 13-3 ad. He was 8-of-9 in the second half for 56 yards, including a 13-yard strike to wame Cavil in the third quarter that ivjxas its first lead at 17-13. WI FLORIDA ST. 17, CLEMSON 14: His son put a mighty scare into his top nked team, but Bobby Bowden eaked away with career win No. 300. orida State rallied for a victory over emson in major college football's first ther vs. son coaching matchup. No. 5 TENNESSEE 21, No. 10 ALABAMA 7: It was hardly the welcome back party Alabama had planned on throwing for Tee Martin. Martin, originally from Alabama, ran for two touchdowns and passed for a third to lead Tennessee to a 21-7 victory over Alabama. Trying to run time off the clock while protecting a 14-7 lead, Martin marched the Vols 84 yards in 11 plays. He broke the game open with a 21-yard touchdown run that put Tennessee up 21-7 with 8:26 left. No.7 KANSAS ST. 44, OKLAHOMA ST. 21: Big passing plays by Jonathon Beasley and a badgering defense lifted No. 7 Kansas State from a 21-point deficit to a decisive victory over Oklahoma State. For the third time this year, Kansas State found themselves down early against a Big 12 opponent before storm- ing back, defending their unbeaten status. They stand alone atop the Big 12 North Division. OKLAHOMA 51, No.13 TEXASA&M 6: Josh Heupel accounted for six touch- downs as Oklahoma (2-1 Big 12, 4-2 overall) handed Texas A&M (2-2, 5-2) the third-worst loss in Aggies' history. Heupel ran for three scores, all of them sneaks, and threw one of his three touch- Mississippi State 46 yard line. No. 14 GEORGIA 49, KENTUCKY 34: Quincy Carter finally put up some of the stats that were expected of him at sea- son's beginning, passing for 304 yards and two touchdowns and rushing for 87 yards as Georgia (4-1 SEC, 6-1 overall) beat Kentucky (3-2 5-3). Carter connected with Terrence Edwards on a 20-yard scoring play in the second quarter and opened the third quar- ter with an 80-yarder to Brett Millican. No. 15 MARSHALL 59, BUFFALO 3: In a meeting between two teams on very different streaks, Marshall handily beat Buffalo. Chad Pennington was 20-of-25 for 339 yards and threw five touchdowns in less than three quarters as Marshall (4-0 Mid-American, 7-0 overall) routed Buffalo (0-6, 0-7). No.19 BRIGHAM YOUNG 29, UNLV 0: Owen Pochman set a school record and tied another with five field goals as Brigham Young shut out the Nevada-Las Vegas 29-0 in a Mountain West Conference game Saturday night. Pochman kicked field goals of 47, 26, 28, 31 and 30 yards for Brigham Young's (Mountain West, 6-1 overall). He set a record for his 17 points and tied a school record for field goals in a game. No.20 E. CAROLINA 52, TULANE 7: Team Penn State Wisconsin Michigan State Indiana Michigan Minnesota Ohio State Purdue Illinois Northwestern Iowa Big Ten 4 0 4 1 3 2 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 1 2 1 3 1 3 0 4 Overall 8 0 6 2 6 2 4 4 5 2 5 2 5 3 4 2 4 3 3 4 1 6 THIS WEEKEND'S RESULTS Illinois 34, Michigan 29 Penn State 31, Purdue 25 Wisconsin 40, Michigan State 10 Ohio State 20, Minnesota 17 Indiana 38, Iowa 31 NEXT WEEKEND'S GAMES Michigan at Indiana, 3:30 Penn State at Illinois Purdue at Minnesota Wisconsin at Northwestern Iowa at Ohio State SCHEDULE Y y:. . . sX'. -_" i i j'~5 5 . .3 ' t. ~o aa y ..:.... ..,i