M - A AML-- - - - - - -- - iAmi ft Ah Ah i 4F - The inhigan Daily - Football wday - November 20, 199! Last veek w 0 L 1 v .ow November 20, 1999 - Foo Two-Deeps Michigan 51, Penn State 77 A Penn Statement 'M' shushes critics, Lions' rushing game - , / By Rick Freeman Daily Sports Editor STATE COLLEGE - When it was all over, Todd Howard was too tired to properly celebrate. He took a cheer- leader's giant M' flag, waved it back and forth a few times, and had to give it back to go slap hands with the Michigan fans - most of whom had traveled more than 300 miles to see the biggest win of Michigan's once- again promising season. Among those who stood atop a rolled-up tarp along the east stands at Beaver Stadium were Howard, safety Cato June and several other defensive players, who deserved the loudest cheers for their efforts in Michigan's 31-27 victory on Saturday. "I didn't realize how heavy it was," said Howard, whose defensive team- mates held Penn State to its lowest rushing total - seven yards - in the 50 years Joe Paterno has coached at the school. As a team, they were stel- lar. but individually, they shone when needed. As Penn State tried to seal its 27-24 lead in the fourth quarter, the much- maligned James Whitley broke up a pass to Eddie Drummond, the same player who caught a 37-yard touch- down in the third quarter that floated maddeningly out of Whitley's reach. As Penn State tried to rally from its 31-27 deficit, Howard stuck to Chafie Fields tighter than he had all day. And with Penn State threatening from Michigan's 34-yard line, Ian Gold reached up and knocked the ball out of Penn State quarterback Kevin Thompson's hands. Linebacker Larry Foote recovered the ball, but his entire team recovered most of the dignity lost almost a month ago with back-to- back losses to Michigan State and Illinois. "I'm proud of the kid," Michigan defensive coordinator Jim Hermann said of Whitley. "Most kids would have jumped in the tank, but not him." The same could be said of Michigan's defense. The unit which may have knocked the Wolverines out of the national title chase helped them back into the hunt for a Bowl Championship Series bowl. For the fourth year in a row and seventh time this decade, it seems Michigan will play in a New Year's Day bowl game. Which one that is - and the options range from the Outback Bowl to the Fiesta or even the Orange - will depend the upcoming game against Ohio State and the way this bizarre Big Ten sea- son plays out. Citrus Bowl officials probably would rather not invite Michigan for the second year in a row, but that option, too, is still open. Regardless of Michigan's postsea- son disposition, Saturday's victory is one that will be remembered among Michigan's finest. Michigan is now the second team to ever beat a Paterno-coached Penn LOUIS BROWN/Daily Michigan's James Hall has reason to celebrate - the Wolverines' 31-27 victory gave their BCS hopes a shot In the arm going into their battle with Ohio State. Wzen will roller coaster ride end fo Michian ? STATE COLLEGE - From the outside, Penn State's Beaver Stadium has the feel of a roller coaster at an amusement park. The steel infrastructure holds up the 90,000-plus seat stadium, and the T.J. fans have to Berk weave their way Erka through maze- like aisles to get to their seats. So it was fit- ting that Saturday's gamer between the Nittany Lions t t and Michigan OF had a roller- coaster feel. Just when you thought that one team had the upper hand, that team's prospects fell while the other team's hopes rose. Michigan experienced all the highs and lows that go along with a thrilling ride. At times it looked like the Wolverines were going to repeat the beatings that they gave Penn State the past two years, as the defense massa- cred Kevin Thompson and the offense sliced through the Penn State defense with surgeon-like precision. But at other times, it was Michigan getting massacred. LaVar Arrington and Co. beat Tom Brady excessively while the Penn State passing attack repeatedly burned the Michigan sec- ondary. Of course, this was nothing new to the Michigan football fans. All year, they have seen the Wolverines take the role of two teams - the unbeatable juggernaut and the resistable force. All this roller-coaster action leaves a huge question: What team is the true Michigan team? The swaggering pow- erhouse or the gun-shy pretender? Judging by what I've seen the past 10 games, I would say that Michigan is a little of both. Michigan's defense will enter games riding a tidal wave of emotion. It showed that against the Nittany Lions, swarming to the ball and forcing two fumbles in the initial two drives. The Wolverines also showed the abil- ity to make the opposition pay for its mistakes. Michigan took advantage of the two turnovers to build a 10-0 lead in the first seven minutes of the game. That tendency is something Michigan has shown often this year. See BERKA, Page 14F S No 1 2 2 3 4 4 5 6 6 7 8 8 9 10 12 12 13 13 14 14 15 15 16 16 17 18 18 19 19 20 21 22 23 23 24 25 25 26 28 28 29 29 30 31 32 33 34 34 35 35 36 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 45 46 49 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 59 60 61 62 62 63 63 64 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 99 PLAYER David Terrell Cato June Brandon Kornblue Todd Howard Marquise Walker Victor Hobson Jonathan West Drew Henson Walter Cross Ryan Parini DiAllo Johnson Tom Brady Brandon Williams Mike Kaselitz Jason Kapsner Brian Smalls Andy Mignery Dan Williams DeWay ne Patmon Travis DeMeester John Navarre Rudy Smith Larry Foote TV rece Butler Mlark Berin. Ronald Be Ilamy Tad Van Pelt Ian Gold Jeremy LeSueur Kei rant Greg Brooks Cory Sargent Charles Drake Hayden Epstein Michael Manning Julius Curry Anthony Jordan Scott Panique Aaron Richards Ryan Beard Jon Shaw John Spytek Anthony Thomas Brent Cummings Justin Fargas Phil Brabbs B.J. Askew Blake Nasif Aaron Shea Bob Fraumann Kurt Anderson Dwight Mosley Evan Coleman Eric Rosel Tommy Hendricks Tate Schanski Carl Diggs Dave Armstrong Jeff Del Verne Phillip Brackins Andy Sechler Mat t Johnson Kirk Moundros Jeff Smokevitch Eric Brackins Chris Ziemann Shantee Orr Maurice Williams Dhani Jones James Hall Dave Pearson Rob Renes Grady Brooks Joseph Sgroi Grant Bowman Cyle Young Courtney Morgan Brodie Killian Eric Warner PJ. Cwayna Steve Frazier Stephen Baker Andy Brown Kyle Froelich David Brandt John Wood Todd Mossa Jeremy Miller Ben Mast Joe Denay Demeterious Solomon Adam Adkins Steve Hutchinson Tony Pape Jonathan Goodwin Jeff Backus Tommy Huff Bill Seymour Joe Ghannam Bennie Joppru Shawn Thompson Marcus Knight Gary Rose Deitan Dubuc Norman Boebert Josh Williams Dan Rumishek Jason Ptak Eric Wilson Patrick Kratus Dave Petruziello Shawn Lazarus Jake Frysinger Pos. WR DB PK CB WR WR CB I LB DB QB RB FS WR QB DB QB QB DB QB CB FS QB QB WR ILB WR QB WR. DB ILB DB WR DB P RB PPK DB 55 LB FB WR RB RB LB RB RB RB PK RB WR FB LB DT LB FB OLB 55 FS LB DE PK DB OLB 55 FB I LB ILB OL LB OL ILB RLB DL NT OLB LB DL NT OL OLB OL I LB OL LB OL OL OL DL OL OL OL OL OL OL OL OL OL P TE P TE TE WR DT TE DL DT RLB OL NT DE DE DE DE Nt. 6-3 6-1 5-10 5-10 6-3 5-8 5-11 6-1 5-11 6-4 5-11 6-2 6-3 6-5 5-11 6-4 6-6 5-9 6-4 6-0 6-0 6-3 6-6 6-3 6-1 6-5 6-2 6-1 5-10 6-1 6-1 6-0 5-11 6-3 6-1 6-2 6-2 6-0 6-0 6-0 5-8 5-10 6-0 6-4 6-2 5-11 6-1 6-2 6-3 6-0 6-5 6-3 6-4 6.1 6-0 6-3 6-2 5-11 6-2 6-3 5-11 6-3 6-1 5-10 6-2 6-0 6-2 6-7 6-1 6-5 6-2 6-3 6-3 6-1 6-2 5-10 6-3 6-0 6-2 6-3 6-5 5-11 6-4 6-1 6-3 6-4 6-4 6-4 6-3 6-0 6-4 6-7 6-7 6-3 6-5 6-7 6-4 6-6 6-2 6-3 5-11 6-4 6-4 6-1 6-4 6-4 6-4 6-3 6-3 6-2 6-4 6-3 6-4 6-3 6-4 198 201 180 178 189 177 190 229 192 221 196 172 189 213 180 195 223 170 225 185 181 200 220 210 211 200 196 175 179 213 177 183 175 187 185 194 204 180 215 250 170 203 190 217 221 180 185 170 210 185 251 220 272 219 258 225 215 190 220 260 210 190 234 186 210 225 229 288 220 283 225 257 240 288 250 200 258 264 318 226 275 216 288 230 285 299 293 242 291 234 284 293 260 280 296 290 290 288 190 248 175 251 243 181 263 224 251 279 251 292 279 265 267 227 272 EuG. So. Fr. Sr. So. So. Jr. Jr. Fr. So. So. So. Jr. Sr. Sr. Fr. Fr. Jr. Fr. Fr. Jr. Jr. So. Fr. So. So. Fr. Sr. Fr. So. Sr. Fr. Sr. Fr. Jr. Fr. So. So. Fr. So. So. Jr. Fr. Fr. Fr. Jr. Fr. So Jr Fr. Fr. Sr. So. So. Fr. So. So. Sr. Sr. Fr. Fr Jr. Fr. Jr. Sr. Fr. Sr. So. Sr. Fr. Jr. Sr. Sr. Fr. Sr. Jr. Fr. Fr. So. Fr. So. Jr. So. Sr. Fr. Fr. Fr. Jr. Fr. So. So. So. Fr. Fr. So. Jr. Fr. Jr. Jr. Fr. So. Fr. Fr. So. Sr. So. Fr. Fr. Sr. Fr, Jr. Jr. Sr. Fr. Fr. Jr. MICHIGAN WOLVERINES SE 1 David Terrell RT 9 DiAllo Johnson 72 Ben Mast QB 10 Tom Brad: 7 Drew Hen: RG C LG When Michigan has 32 Anthony Thomas 8 Walter Cross 52 Chris Ziemann 67 David Brandt 76 S. Hutchinson 2 54 M Williams 78 J. Goodwin 64 Steve Frazier 69 Todd Mossa 7 ... ..- . ... .-- .-.. ..+-.-..-.--. .---.-. . .. ....""...".. :: > .-. ._ l - CB 20 Nate Clements 3 David Mitchell DE 52 James Cotton 48 Matt LaVrar BLB 32 Na'll Diggs 49 Tim Cheatwood DT DT 79 Ryan Pickett 98 Mike Collins 99 Heath Queen 73 Joe BrCwn MLB 30 Jason Ott 10 Joe Cooper SS 25 Donnie Nickey 2 Michael Doss FB fl I State team in three consecutive games. Only Alabama, in 1979-81 and 1987-89, has accomplished that. When Tom Brady threw his third interception of the day to cornerback Bhawoh Jue, the Crimson Tide looked as though it would retain sole claim to that distinction - which is not to be taken lightly. Brady, who Michigan coach Lloyd Carr called one of the best leaders in intercollegiate athlet- ics, had his pass returned 46 yards for touchdown to give Penn State a 27-17 lead. At that point, the Nittany Lions had scored on a 71-yard punt return by Bruce Branch, two Travis Forney field goals, and the pass to Drummond. Which meant that 14 points were not the defense's respon- sibility - but making them up was still on the offense's shoulders. When Michigan took the kickoff, Brady showed why Carr praised him as he did. He led the Wolverines on an ugly, penalty-spangled, time-wasting drive that put him exactly where he wanted them to be. Brady, who had tried to scramble tentatively several times earlier in the game with abysmal results, finally made it, thrusting the ball across the goal line as he fell. On Michigan's next possession (which came 17 seconds later, as the defense held Penn State to three-and- out), Brady found Marcus Knight in the corner of the end zone for the score - a fitting way to win, since Knight had given an impromptu pep talk to the defense after Brady's touchdown. "He said to go get it back for us," Michigan safety Tommy Hendricks said. The defense did just that, with the game and the season. 1-800- 58E Senior Portraits will begin on Septen in the Michigan Union. Call today t pointment. If you have any questior sian Yearbook at 764-9425. Call 764-9425 to order your 2 Yearbook today!u{ 3 m UNITED AAUTO AND FLEET REPAIR 2321 Jackson Ave. Ann Arbor 48103 (734) 665-7130 STUDENT SPECIALS COMPLETE AUTO CARE *Oil Changes $17.95 *Winterizations $39.95 *General Maintenance' Inspection $22.50 *Foreign and Domestics Serviced 3 Save $10.00 off year e