208 - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 9, 1999 QB platoons find increasing popularity with top programs By Chris Dufresne Los Angeles Tumes Somebody has to stop the two- quarterback madness that has spread to some of our nation's finest cam- puses. That somebody is going to be me. Florida'Coach Steve Spurrier start- ed this recent spate with his diaboli- cal play-to-play quarterback rotation, but he's Spurrier and you're not, so let's hope this is a passing fad. And even Spurrier stopped the in- and-out nonsense this season by sticking with Doug Johnson. -Seems like every time I pick up a paper, I'm reading about a two-quar- terback rotation," Michigan Coach Lloyd Carr said this week. Lloyd, cancel your subscriptions. The last watchable "platoon" was directed by Oliver Stone. Ohio State Coach John Cooper, who will ferry the tag team of Austin Moherman and Steve Bellisari against UCLA on Saturday, says all he's trying to do is win football games. The Buckeyes are 0-1. "For a while they thought you were crazy if you played two quarter- backs," Cooper said. "'Now, that might be the thing of the future." Cooper should know better. In 1996, he milked the Stanley Jackson-Joe Germaine combination to a 10-0 record, Germaine coming off the bench. For the all-important Michigan game, however, he started Germaine and lost. In the Rose Bowl, Jackson started, but Germaine was named the game's most valuable player. The next season, Jackson remained the starter, only this time Cooper stuck with Jackson as the starter against Michigan. And lost. Last year, with Jackson gone and Germaine the full-time starter, Ohio State finally beat Michigan. The last quarterback rotation that worked was Bob Waterfield and Norm Van Brocklin with the Los Angeles Rams. Anyone remember the San Francisco 49ers rotating Joe Montana and Steve Young during the playoffs on those consecutive Super Bowl+ runs in the late 1980s? Platoon theory has made me weary,+ so I'm stepping in to make the tough+ calls the big-time coaches won't. Michigan: Tom Brady or Drew 1 Henson. This is lunacy. Carr is throwing Henson a bone because the sophomore, the hottest recruit in1 Michigan history, has an out clausec in his scholarship: a lucrative base-t ball career with the New York Yankees. Carr has created unneces- sary controversy. Brady, a fifth-year senior, proved Saturday against Notre Dame he deserves to be the starter and the finisher. If Henson can't wait until he's a junior to take over, well, wait until he sees how impatient Mr. Steinbrenner can be. Penn State: Kevin Thompson or Rashard Casey. Joe Paterno plays a dangerous game here with a possible national title at stake. He likes Thompson as the starter; the rest of us make the case for Casey. Joe, give those glasses a wipe and see the light: Casey is the man. Nebraska: Bobby Newcombe or Eric Crouch. You call this cohesion? Crouch had to dispel reports he was quitting the team after Coach Frank Solich named Newcombe the starter for last .eek's opener against Iowa. Then Crouch had to bail Nebraska out after Newcombe's three first-half turnovers. A tough call, but that's why we get paid. Newcombe is the more dynam- ic player but is injury prone. Start Newcombe and play him until he drops. If he doesn't, the Cornhuskers might win the national title. If he does get injured, they still have Crouch. Arizona: Keith Smith or Ortege Jenkins. Dick Tomey made this work last year, but that was BPS (before Penn State). Sunday, Jenkins rescued Smith from a 25-7 hole against Texas Christian only to watch Smith take over for the game-winning drive. Inexplicable. Tomey is torn, because both are good, but he should play Jenkins. ® California: Sam Clemons or Kyle Boller. Tom Holmoe started the inexperienced Clemons last week against Rutgers, but this is a charade. The reason the hotshot Boller went to Cal instead of UCLA and others was because he could start as a freshman. Boller ended up rescuing the Bears against Rutgers, and Holmoe would be wise to start Boller's NFL clock ticking now. Ohio State: Moherman or Bellisari. Neither looked worthy against Miami. Moherman threw two interceptions and Bellisari fumbled a center snap. Moherman is the better passer, Bellisari the better athlete. Cooper faced the same quandary with Germaine and Jackson, and Germaine proved he reserved the nod then. We say go with Moherman. UCLA: Drew Bennett or Cory Paus. So, again, why did J.P. Losman transfer? Bennett's passes are better suited for skeet shooting at Whittier Narrows, while a local columnist is comparing Paus to a young Cade McNown. Well, then, by all means, start the story on Cory. ® Texas: This isn't a two-platoon system yet ... but sophomore Major Applewhite is the only quarterback in America who can throw for 353 yards in three quarters and still be looking over his shoulder. With Papa Phil glad-handing in the stands, freshman Chris Simms made his debut in mop-up duty against Stanford. Anyone think Simms is going to wait three years for Applewhite to graduate? Texas Coach Mack Brown needs to resist the pressure to play Simms and stick with the Major. There, what was so hard about that? Notre Dame Coach Bob Davie appears to have made a brilliant hire in Kevin Rogers, who succeeds 'Oh No!" Jim Colletto as Irish offensive coordinator. Rogers, who coached Donovan McNabb at Syracuse last year, has jump-started the Notre Dame offense and looks the perfect fit for Jarious Jackson's option skills. Despite the 26-22 defeat last week- end in Ann Arbor, Notre Dame totaled 396 yards against Michigan while Rogers' play-calling kept the Wolverines off balance all day. Rogers set the tone for the new era when, on third and goal at the Michigan four in the second quarter, he called a reverse to Joey Getherall, who scored easily. Not one Michigan defender or 111,523 home fans saw it coming. Michigan Coach Carr was more than happy to see Rogers go. "I'm sick and tired of him," Carr said. "I wish he'd get the hell out of here." Carr meant that as a compliment. Two-MINUTE DRILL Does anybody understand the taunting rule? Saturday, Notre Dame's Getherall waggles his finger all the way into the end zone on a reverse and is not cited, yet teammate Bobby Brown is penalized for a fairly innocuous Mickey Mouse hand gesture to the fans after his two-point conversation gave the Irish a 22-19 lead over Michigan. The 15-yard penalty was a killer, as it allowed Michigan to return a short kickoff to its own 42, where it mounted the winning drive. The field cops simply need to make distinctions: Ripping your hel- met off and doing the Funky Chicken in your opponent's face should be called, but not ticky-tack stuff. And you thought the BCS formula was complicated now. Consider the alternative: When the BCS decided to add five new computer rankings to the formula, bringing the total to eight, MIT math whiz and rankings master Jeff Sagarin suggested deduc- ing 'the geometric mean" of the eight rankings to get a point total. Thank goodness, BCS boss Roy Kramer opted for throwing out the 0 AP PHOTO Purdue's Drew Brees is part of a growing minority - quarterbacks who play all four quarters of a game. The two-quarterback system has become the rage in college football. worst ranking each week and divid- ing the total of the others by seven. KA-CHING DEPT.: Don't be sur- prised if all Division I-A teams are playing 12-game schedules by 2005. The NCAA is doing away with "extra" games such as the Kickoff Classic beginning in 2002 in favor of allowing schools to play 12 games in years when there is an extra Saturday on the fall schedule: Problem: There is an extra Saturday only four years between 2002 and 2020, which prob- ably will prompt administrators to open the 12-game revenue floodgates for all seasons. Notre Dame's defeat against Michigan was a blow to numerology freaks who saw significance in the fact' the Irish won national titles in 1966, 77 and 88. Just wondering. In the wake of South Carolina's shutout loss to North Carolina State, will Coach Lou Holtz fire his first-year offensive coordinator, son Skip, or merely ground him for a week? It's never too early to look for schools that might muck up this year's bowl championship series rankings formula. Our September pick: Virginia Tech. Last year, Kansas State could have finished unbeaten and been denied a place in the national championship game had Tennessee and-UCLA also finished undefeated. The BCS avoid- ed the nightmare when UCLA and Kansas State lost Dec. 5, setting up the Tennessee-Florida State final. This year, Virginia Tech may be the BCS party crasher. Assuming the Hokies can survie the injury to freshman quarterback Michael Vick, they have a good slot of going 11-0 yet not finishing eitler first or second in the BCS standin;s. Why? Virginia Tech is in the fig East, the weakest of the BCS bovi- guaranteed conferences, and play a tepid nonconference slate of Janes Madison, Alabama Birmingham tnd Clemson. The only "juice" game on the board are at Virginia on Oc. 2 and a Nov. 13 home showd~wn against Miami. Given the strength-of-schelule component in the BCS rankiigs, Virginia Tech could finish unbeten and easily get squeezed out by ane- loss Florida or Penn State. Wouldn't it be great? . S t Moss notices problems and sounds alarm in Vikings' camp TO CELEBRATE OUR 30TH ANNIVERSARY FOR ALL 30 DAYS OF SEPTEMBER EDEN PRAIRIE, Minn. (AP) - Randy Moss sounded the alarm. The star receiver says the Minnesota Vikings don't have that special feel- ing they did last year. He sees evidence everywhere - from the mood in the locker room to the play on the field. Things just aren't the same for this new cast of Vikings. "I think it's probably something we probably could recapture," Moss said Wednesday. "But last year, it was something special. It was some- thing inside that knew the '98 Minnesota Vikings were something special. "And this year, we lost a lot of guys on defense. We have our whole offense back (but) we lost our offen- sive coordinator. ... So, there's a lot of things that we have to get used to." Moss' worries stem from a lack- luster exhibition season in which the Vikings looked nothing-like the team that went 15-1 last season. They lost eight free agents in the offseason and failed on draft day to shore up the holes left by the depar- tures of defensive stars Jerry Ball, Derrick Alexander and Corey Fuller. Despite returning all 11 starters, the offense, under new coordinator Ray Sherman, has yet to get untracked. Moss, who set a rookie:record with 17 TD catches last season, alternate- ly proclaimed his team ready to put its troubles behind and bemoaned its many inadequacies. "It's going to be hard. It's going to be a struggle this year," he said. "You know there's a lot of high expectations this year for us to go out here and try to duplicate last sea- son and I don't think there's any way possible - well, I wouldn't say any way possible that we can do that again -- but it's going to be very hard to do." Moss said he was shocked by the shoddy preseason play of the veteran offensive line that was so integral to last season's success. After the Vikings lost to the New York Jets last week, coach Dennis Green assailed the pass protection and said he counted three nuntal mistakes from the first-team offen- sive line. "It kind of shocked me, to be hon- est with you, to see as far as the vet. eran group of guys we got playing the offensive line," Moss said. "Yoi know, they made some mistakes dui. ing the preseason. And we all male mistakes. I made some during tie preseason. You know, I think ever coach Green made some during tie preseason. So, it's just not the guys on the field. The coaches make ms- takes. So, everybody's entitled toa mistake." Offensive line coach Mike The said he is hardly depressed over ds unit's play. He said the game filns show easily correctable lapses. Ind Moss added that nobody can stopthe Vikings if Todd Steussie, Randall McDaniel, Jeff Christy, David Dion and Korey Stringer keep Rariall Cunningham upright. "We're going to put 60 point up on that board, 50, 60 points," floss said. "We're capable of that if e'ery- body's on." Upon reflection, Moss ackuowl- edged he didn't get that speciafeel- ing about last year's squad until Week 5, when the Vikings beat Green Bay 37-24 at LambeauField. He said the feeling grew stonger after the Vikings won the rematch with the Packers at the Metrodome, then flew to Dallas and roued the Cowboys on Thanksgiving. "And this year it's like we'e going 0t 0° SI I A ATA IS REDUCING ITS REGULAR FIXED-ROUTE FARES TO: w Wqqmpw