46 The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - November 15, 1999 .AME STATIST4 Team Stats First Downs Rushes/Yards Passing Yards Offensive Plays Total Offense Return Yards Comp/AttAnt Punts/Avg Fumbkes/Ist Penalties/Yards Time of Poss MIC" 24 50/129 282 87 411 161 18/37/3 7/37.9 1/0 11/85 38:50 PSU 14 2017 271 60 278 165 20/40 8/40. 3/3 21:1 M I C H I G A N PASSING Player C- Brady 1 7-3E Johnson 1- Totals 18-3 RUSHING A. Tomas 34 Shea 4 Cross. 1 Drake 4 Br 10 550 RECEMNG Pler No Knight 5 Thompson 2 A. Thomas 2 Henson 1 Walker 1 Shea 1 Totals 18 PUNTING PlayerN Epstesi Team Totals KICKOFF RETURNS Player NO. Cross 3 Drake 1 Totals 4 PUNT RETURNS Player No. Johnson 5 Totals 5 DEFENSE Player Gold; Howard Hendricks Hobson Jones Rene, Foote Whitley Hall Terreli Wlson Ziemanro Sechler Schanski Jordan Drake Bellamy Patmon A -1 7 Yds 127 9 2 1 -8 129 Yds 133 79 29 2 23 14 2 282 NO. 1 7 Yds 85 19 104 Yds 57 57 solo 8 5 5 4 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 ~1 Yds 259 23 282 A3 2.3 1.2 2.0 -0.8 2.6 15.8 14.5 1.0 23.0 14.0 2.0 15.7 Yds 244 21 265 19.0 260 TD 2 0 2 5 6 2 15 18 34 35 15 8 23 14 35 21.0 37.9 c . / // 1 a a 8 a 7 t nt VG .8 t a 0' 3 1 G 0 1 ' 2, TD a 0' 2 0 0 0. 0 I 2 a 21 TD a 0' TD a a c0 a 10 a 2 8 I II 21 a By Andy Latack Daily Sports Editor STATE COLLEGE - Just four min- utes into the first quarter of Saturday's crucial game against Penn State, Michigan fans were treated to an unwel- come sight. Quarterback Tom Brady, after taking a heavy hit, limped to the sideline favoring his ankle and backup quarterback Drew Henson rushed into the game. It appeared that Michigan's plan to get Henson significant game experience throughout the year was going to pay off if the sophomore was going to have to take over for the injured Brady in Michigan's biggest game of the season. But the Michigan fans were the only ones concerned about Brady. When the senior quarterback hobbled to the side- line, he merely stood next to coach Lloyd Carr. Rather than furiously attend- ing to the injured quarterback, the train- ers sat idle. But Penn State didn't have time to notice that something was fishy. Henson quickly snapped the ball and fired a pass behind the line of scrimmage to wide receiver DiAllo Johnson on the left side- line. As the Penn State defense pursued Johnson, he turned and lofted a pass back to Henson, who was streaking down the opposite sideline with block- ers in front of him. The trick play went for 23 yards and took the ball down to the Penn State 20. But more importantly, it put the Lions off balance and set up Michigan's first touchdown of the game. Identical to a play Michigan ran with Charles Woodson and Brian Griese against Wisconsin two years ago, the call showed that Carr isn't afraid to pull out the stops with the season on the line. "That was a play we worked on for several weeks," Carr said. "We wanted to run it early in the game and DiAllo did a good job getting the ball back." Carr also had to coach Brady on his acting ability, so the Penn State sideline would think the quarterback was legiti- mately hurt. So how would Carr grade Brady's performance? Let's just say the coach isn't giving out any Oscars yet. "I just worked with him on that Thursday, and I'm not particularly proud of the job I did," Carr joked. NEVER SAY DIE: Brady got out to an inauspicious start against the Lions, completing just four of 14 attempts in the first half and also throwing two of his three interceptions. But as he has made a habit of doing this season, Brady rallied the Wolverines when it was crunch time, leading them on two late scoring drives to complete Michigan's gut-wrenching comeback. For as bad as he was in the first half, Brady was downright unstoppable late in the game. After a DiAllo Johnson return set up Michigan at the Penn State 35, Brady sparked a five-play, 35-yard scor- ing drive that ended when he found Marcus Knight on a flag pattern in the end zone to put Michigan up for good with 1:46 left. This was just 100 seconds after Brady had scrambled for a 5-yard touchdown run to make it a one-possession game. As has been the case all season, Brady's coolness under fire rubbed off on his teammates and Michigan put together yet another fourth-quarter run. "When it's time and all the chips are down, you've got to rise up and do what you got to do," Brady said. "As long as there's time on the clock, we keep bat- tling until the clock says 0:00." Carr, who has said all season that the senior's experience would be invaluable, sang Brady's praises after the win. "I think there's no finer leader in inter- collegiate athletics," Carr said. "If you're quarterback at a place like Michigan, you're a special guy." QB success stories:Johnson stars in first half; Brady in second 0 54 19 53 Av 11.4 24 Asst 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 3 2 2 2 2 z 3 1 PASS DEFENSE Player 1 Whide Hall Howard Terrell Totals PASSING Player Thompson Casey Totals RUSHING Player At McCoo Casey Cemele Johnson Thompson Totals 2 RECEIVING Player No Fields Drummond Gilmore McCoo Cerimele Jones Totals 2 PUNTING Plyer yer Senneca Int 0 0 0 0 0 PENT C-A 19-37 1 - 20.40 YdsL 00e 0 0 0 0 0 0 N STATE &rk-up S 1 I 1 8 S a 3 a' } a y a ! R a 1 1 I 1 f 0 I 0D' 0.i 0'1 O/ Os 1 / 0'i 0 R DI 0 I~ 0 / o a. O a I D a 0 a 1 a A I LOUIS BROWN/Daily Michigan quarterback Tom Brady capped a 81-yard drive by diving into the end zone, bringing Michigan within three points with 3:26 left in the game. Defense rescues me, season for WolVerines had scored on a 71-yard punt return by Bruce Branch, two Travis Forney Continued from Page 11 field goals, and the pass to range from the Outback Bowl to the Drummond. Fiesta or even the Orange - will Which meant that 14 points were depend the upcoming game against not the defense's responsibility - Ohio State and the way this bizarre . but making them up was still on the Big Ten season plays out. offense's shoulders. Citrus Bowl officials probably When Michigan took the kickoff, would rather not invite Michigan for Brady showed why Carr praised him the second year in a row, but that as he did. He led the Wolverines °on option, too, is still open. an ugly, penalty-spangled, time- Regardless of Michigan's postsea- wasting drive that put him exactly son disposition, Saturday's victory is where he wanted them to be. one that will be remembered among Brady, who had tried to scramble Michigan's finest. tentatively several times earlier in Michigan is now the second team the game with abysmal results, final- ever to beat a Paterno-coached Penn ly made it, thrusting his the ball State team in three consecutive across the goal line as he fell. games. Only Alabama, in 1979-81 On Michigan's next possession and 1987-89, has accomplished that. (which carre 17 seconds later, as the,. When Tom Brady threw his third defense held Penn State to three- interception of the day to cornerback and-out), Brady found Marcus Bhawoh Jue, the Crimson Tide Knight in the corner of the end zone looked as though it would retain sole for the score. claim to that distinction - which is It was a fitting way to win, since not to be taken lightly. Knight had given an impromptu pep Brady, who Michigan coach Lloyd talk to the defense after Brady's Carr called one of the best leaders in touchdown. intercollegeiate athletics, had his "He said to go get it back for us," pass returned 46 yards for touch- Michigan safety Tommy Hendricks down to give Penn State a 27-17 said. lead. The defense did just that, with the At that point, the Nittany Lions game and the season. lYds 263 271 tt 8 2 1 5 4 6 2 2 2 1 N KICKOFF RETURNS Player No. Watson 3 Total 5 PUNT RETURNS Player No. 1btals 4 DEFENSE Player Short Amngton Morrison Boyd Krekis Adams Brown Macklin Jue King fox fleischhauer Kennedy Scott Sturdifen Graham Forney Branch Stankewicz Benfatti Yds 18 0 0 -4 -7 7 Yds 96 106 35 14 12 8 271 No. 2 2 4 8 Yds 62 83 Yds 103 103 Solo 8 10 4 5 4 2 1 4 4 3 2 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 Yds 0 46 19 0 0 0 65 A A 1 1 Yd 7 18 32 s ID 3 1 8 0 2 1 0.3 1 0.0 -0.8 1 1.8 5 0.3 10 7.7 38 7.5 25 7.0 9 6.0 8 8.0 8 3.6 38 is /AY 2 36.0 0 35.0 4 46.0 6 40.8 20.7 25 16.6 21 2574 25.8 79 Asst 5 2 5 2 2 4 4 0 0 1 2 3 3 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 319 37 51 51 TD 0 0 ITD Tot 13 12 9 7 6 6 5 4 4 4 4 3 3 2 1 1 LOUIS BROV Michigan wide receiver Marcus Knight had the first two-touchdown game of his career against the Lions. Knight caught scoring passes of 35 and 11 yards, including the game-winner with 1:46 left. to T T Bi TEN Dayne breaks recor PASS DEFENSE Player G Boyd Jue Fox Macklin King Kennedy Totals int 1 1 1 0 0 0 3 r i Lng 46 19 0 0 0 46 Brk-up 0 1 0 1 1 1 4 TD 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 MADISON (AP) - Ron Dayne's four-year run at history is over, and his reward is another bouquet of roses. On the biggest day in Wisconsin football history, Dayne broke the major-college career rushing record as the No. 9 Badgers claimed the outright Big Ten title and earned a return trip to the Rose Bowl with a 41-3 rout of Iowa (0-7 Big Ten, 1-9 overall) on Saturday. Tlayne broke Ricky Williams' record with 4:32 left in the second quarter on a 31-yard run toward the Wisconsin side- line. He finished the game with 216 yards rushing and a touchdown on 27 carries, giving him 6,397 yards for his career, or 118 more than the 6,279 Williams gained at Texas. "The record was broken because we looked at it as a team goal," Wisconsin coach Barry Alvarez said. "A lot of people had to do their job for him to have a chance to achieve that." The Badgers (7-1, 9-2) finished their regular season by winning seven straight games and clinching a return trip to the Rose Bowl on Jan. 1. Wisconsin, which beat UCLA 38-31 in Pasadena last year, will be playing in consecutive Rose Bowls for the first time in school history. Williams broke Tony Dorsett's 22-year-old record last season. ?V 11 T uy-I.- X14Zr-- 1A defense was committed to getting it,' safety Aric Morris said. "It feels real good. It's a goal we wanted to accom- plish." The victory gives Michigan State eight wins in the regular season for the first time since 1987, and plenty of Spartans fans were on hand to cele- brate. More than half of Northwestern's sta- dium was green-and-white on an unsea- sonably warm day. It also was Michigan State's first vic- tory at Northwestern (1-6, 3-7) since 1992 - they won in Evanston in 1994, but the victory was later forfeited as part of self-imposed sanctions. Northwestern was shut out for the first time since 1993, when it lost 24-0 to Indiana. "I'm the only coach in the history of Michigan State to not have a winning record against Northwestern," said Michigan State coach Nick Saban, who came .into the game 1-1 against the Wildcats. "I asked the players if they could please do something for yours truly." No.20 MINNESOTA 44, INDIANA 20 Glen Mason held up the game pro- gram, featuring Minnesota's 18 seniors, and declared it a fitting cover. The seniors who Mason inherited xxhp - inin ti no i m Wcehr 1, Buckeyes' Thomas Hamner (34 rushes for 174 yards) and Billy Cockerham (I 11 yards rushing and two TDs to compensate for a shaky passing day) were joined by cornerback Jimmy Wyrick and Luke Braaten as the senior saviors. The Gophers, who commanded their highest ranking since 1985 after a 24- 23 upset at then-No. 2 Penn State last week, were clinging to a 27-20 lead with 10 minutes 'left when Wyrick, picked on all day by Antwaan Randle El, returned an interception 61 yards for a touchdown. ILLINOIs 46, OHIo STATE 20 Illinois qualified for its first bowl in five years by bowling over Ohio State. Kurt Kittner sliced up the 25th- ranked Buckeyes with four touchdown passes as the Fighting Illini locked up a winning season with a 46-20 victory Saturday. It was the most points surrendered by Ohio State in Ohio Stadium since Michigan hung a 58-6 loss on the Buckeyes in 1946. In 87 previous meet- ings, the only time Illinois had scored more points against Ohio State was in 1904,46-0. The loss prevented the Buckeyes (3- 4, 6-5) from locking up a winning record. Ohio State must win at Michigan next week for a winning sea- son I meet the minimum requirement tailspin continues PLAYER OF hGAE .5 IAN ¢:.: GOL .., . :