6B - The Michigan Daily SportsMonday -- September 13, 2000 __-'-- # b GAME STATISTICS Team Stats First Downs Rushes/Yards Passing Yards Offensive Plays Total Offense Return Yards Comp/Att/int Punts/Avg Fumbles/Lost Penalties/Yards Tme of Pass MICH 16 46/263 11 . 74 374 135 8/28' 9/44.4 1/1 2/25 31:28 UCLA 24 39/126 268 80 394 67 22/4;/C, 9/48 1 4/3 6133 28:32 Navarre succumbs to big-game pressure QBWATCH PASSING Player Navarre Totals RUSHING Player Thomas Perry Askew Terrel Fargas Navarre Totals RECEIVING Player Terreli Walker homas Joppru Askev Totals PUNTING Player Epsteirn Totals M I C H S GA N C-A Yds TO 8-28 " : 1 8-28 ti1 1 1 Att 24 11 4 4 2 46 No. 4 1 1 8 Yds 182 41 '2 8 263 Avg 7.6 3.7 3.8 2.U 2.0 25 5.7 Lg 68 14 7 ?2 37 11 9 2 37 Int TD 1 1 0 0 0 2 TO 0 0 0 0 1 Yds Avg 82 20.5 7 7.0 2 2.0 1 13.9 No. 9 Yds Avg Lg 400 44.5 60 400 44.4 60 KICKOFF RETURNS Player No. Fargas 1 3rossm Totals 2 PUNT RETURNS Player No. Bellamy 5 Totals 5 DEFENSE Player Patmon Foote Drake -eueur "Boebert Hobson Whitley Jordian Fargas Curry Brackins Howard Rose Rumishek B. W'illamns Diggs Lazarus Brar idt Orr Coleman Stevens Yds 36 21 57 Avg 36.0 21.0 28.5 Lg 36 21 36 Yds Avg Lg 78 15.6 35 78 15.6 35 Solo J 4 4 4 3 3 3 3 2 2 2 Yds O 0 Asst 0 0 a r. C> 0 (3 0 0 Ck 0 r. 0 0 C: 0 0 TD 0 0 0 TD O 0 Tot 5 5 4 4 4 4 4 3 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 p TO z 0 0 1 0 6 0 By Stephanie Offen Daily Sports Editor PASADENA, Calif. - In what may have been his last game before Drew Henson returns, John Navarre showed the more inexperienced side of himself. Instead of the confident, poised 6-foot- 6 team leader from the past two weekends, Navarre suddenly seemed like a young quarterback again. He hid his head as he walked onto the bus from the lockerroom after Michigan's 23-20 loss to UCLA on Saturday, trying to avoid the media: Navarre's second-half performance suggested that he was not ready to face that type of opponent this early in his career. The Bruins have one returning starter in their secondary, making the rest of them on par with Navarre for starting experi- ence. Yet Navarre completed just one of 10 passes in the second half - a 37- yarder to Terrell, who said that UCLA's coverage wasn't what shut the Wolverines down. And for his finale, he threw the first interception of his three-game career. Navarre threw a third-and-nine intercep- tion from the UCLA 25 with 1:28 left to play. The play forced Navarre to leave the' field without a chance to redeem himself. "You are going to make mistakes. That's what a young quarterback goes through," coach Lloyd Carr said. Carr spent last season rotating Henson into a two quarterback system with Tom Brady in order to prepare him for this year - his first as a starter. But Henson broke his right foot a week and a half before the season began. The injured quarterback was walking the sidelines during the loss to UCLA but wouldn't comment on whether he would be back for the Big Ten opener this Saturday at No. 19 Illinois. He started jog- ging last week and at the time of his surgery was projected to be this week. Carr said that UCLA didn't trick the Wolverines or surprise them with unusual plays. It was business as usual for the Bruins, but Navarre simply wasn't used to that kind of business. "They did the things we thought they would do," Carr said. "They mixed cover- ages. But until you can see those things in a game it's tough to be ready for them. It's part of the maturation process." The temperature read 110 degrees on the field; the largest Rose Bowl crowd ever for a nonconference game was screaming with excitement when he made a mistake; but more importantly the team that was staring Navarre in the face was a top 25 opponent - not Bowling Green, not Rice. Navarre began the game hesitant, tak- ing a hit behind the line of scrimmage, forcing an incomplete pass to Marquise Walker, throwing a tipped pass and final- ly a completion. The afternoon's only bright spot for Navarre came on a touchdown pass to Terrell in the second quarter. It came on the first play aftera recovered fumble. But even that throw didn't show great form - he threw into double coverage forcing Terrell to leap over both of the corner- backs. Terrell defended Navarre, saying that his struggles were a direct result of the team's struggles. "The heat wasn't a factor, their cover- age wasn't a factor," Terrell said. "We did- n't make the plays. The defense played their hearts out and that's that. When the offense doesn't score and puts the defense in situations like that, what can you do?" The simple answer is that teams like Rice and Bowling Green can't possibly piepare a quarterback for what he will iace against a top program. And it's to be c\pected that his first snaps in front of an upper-echelon team will not be his best nor his last. "I don't know any redshirt freshman quarterback that doesn't have growing pains, Carr said. "He's going to make mistakes. But whether or not Henson returns this weekend or the weekend after, Navarre has that one big test behind him. He was introduced to big-conference football 0 Saturday and he made mistakes. Another test may await him this week against the Fighting Illini, who have only allowed three touchdowns in their 3-0 start. And if he starts again, that test will be if he can rebound from his first loss. "The mark of a true championship team is how they prepare for the next team they face," senior cornerback James Whitley said. "We have to go to Champaign and face another tot crowd on the road. We have to prepare well and we have to win" AP PHOTO Navarre's numbers for the first three game: vs. Bowling Green: 15-of-19, 265 yards, 4 TD vs. Rice: 10-of-15, 129 yards, 3 TD vs. UCLA: 8-of-28, 111 yards, 1 TD, 1 I NTl PASS DEFENSE Player1 Curry Foote LeSueur Whitley Totals Int 0 0 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 0 0 Brk-up 2 - JOLA PASSING Player McCanr. POli-Dixoit Totals C-A 21-40 1-1 22.41 RUSHING Player At Foster 24 Lewis 7 erema-Stansbury 7 Bennet, 1 MnCann 3 Totals 3 RECEIVING Player No. Mitchell 10 Poli-Dixon 4 leremia-Stansbury Oubravac 1 SFletche, 1 Seidma,; 1 Crecion 1 Foster 1 Totals 22 PUNTING Player Fikse Totals KICKOF RETURNS Player No. Perry 2 Totai 2 PUNT RETURNS Player No. Manning 4 Totals 4 DEFENSE Player And:rso White Thomas Maning Nece Zdenek Leisle Fikse Williams Short Morgan Coleman. Kocher Bell Reese Seidma- B. Fletcher Stephens Attar S Yos 0 236 1 268 Yds Avg 95 4.0 34 4,9 . 3.0 :0 126 3.2 TV 2 C) 2 Lg 23 14 3 3 29 L~g 23 20 32 22 1? 7 3 32 Int 0 0 TD 0 C: C 1 TO C 1 c 0 0 0 C, 2 LOUIS BROWN/Daily Michigan redshirt freshman quarterback John Navarre went 1-for-10 in the second half of Saturday's contest at UCLA. M' doomed itse l " JUSTIN inz second ka {fIThe so Thesol FRANCESCUTTI faretde Continued from Page 18 fared e an extra point and two field goals (that's misses from 20. 24 onlspe and 46). On the other, he sees Navarre, the redshirt freshman who entered the game as the nation's best passe:, but now had Fargas only eight completions in 27 tries. havoc Nowhere to pass, nowhere to kick -- Michigan went forcing nowhere. that ev Oh they ran a couple reverses, tried to run the ball up the to a Da middle, the Wolverines' lone promising stat (272 yards rush- touchd ing). But when the game is on the line, and the seconds are made a ticking off the clock, you need a passer and a kicker. hits on Credit UCLA all you want, but their mistakes in this game coveraj will come to haunt them-later. It seems only Michigan didn't want to capitalize on them. Remember for the future. Michigan lost a game that was handed to them. They're 0-1 on the season --- national champi- onship dreams all but gone. Wake up Wolverines - these wins don't just come to you. BR No matter how hard you cr,,. LOUIS BRO -- Mark Fa ncescutli can be reached at in -acesktuflich.CdU. FARGAS: phomore ed to his California and xtremely well cial teams. wreaked on UCLA, a fumble entually led avid Terrell own. He also a couple of punt ge. Yds 137 44 12 32 22 268 Avg 13.7 40 32.0 7 3.0 12.2 CALIFORNIA HOMECOMINGS & SHORTCOMINGS HAYDEN EPSTEIN: Epstein had a horrendous outing which directly impacted the out- come. Epstein missed two field goals, 46 and 24 yards, the latter of which cost Michigan a chance to tie late in the fourth quarter. Epstein's missed extra point in the first quarter got things off to a bad start. The last kick, the 24-yarder, was doomed from the start. Michigan foolishly rushed to get the play off before the play clock expired - the five yards wouldn't have affected the kick, and in fact would have made it a better angle for Epstein - the snap was fumbled and the kick was pull- hooked. Coming home was not exactly a coronation for Epstein. 0: N' Yds Avg Lg 9 433 48.1 74 9 433 48. 74 Yds Avg Lg 47 235 25 47 21.5 25 Yds 20 20 Solo 6 6 5 6 -7 3 .3 1 0 C 0 Yds 28 .3 0 0 Avg Lg 50 8 5.0 8 Asst T 2 2 0 0 1 U TD O 0 TD 0 Tot 8 7 7 6 4 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 TD 0 20 1 {" C J 1 6'ih'f E 2D QUINN. 'W N1 Dady ...., Wolverines let victory slip away in Pasadena, 23-20 BRUINS Continued from Page18 oreak. Michigan coach Lloyd Carr said Navarre's inexperience against ranked opponents may have been a factor, acknowledging that more difficult coverage patterns and pass rushes may have flustered-Navarre, who has not had "the opportunity to see those things live," Carr said. Having such an opportunity is "part of the mat- uration process," he said. Meanwhile, McCann's third career start was a successful campaign .The sophomore passed for 236 yards, two touchdowns, and had the pleasure of kneeling three times the clock. to dispose of As the seconds blurred away in the 110- degree heat, seasoned Wolverines stared help- lessly. Some had trouble believing it was reality. "We've done it so many times before," senior Steve Hutchinson said. "I really thought we were going to come back and win. It was kind of sad." Puffy eves and red faces boarding the Michigan bus said that just as easily - espe- cially those of seniors, whose national title aspirations this season seem defeated. With the exception of a hard-luck fumble, senior Anthony Thomas delivered a strong per- formance. His breakaway in the first quarter netted Michigan 68 yards and the game's first touchdown. Michigan might have been on the board ear- lier, but senior James Whitley dropped a sure interception inside the UCLA 10 in the first quarter. That gaffe was not anamolous in Michigan's defensive secondary, which gave up 160 yards in the second half. Things turned sour for the Wolverines after cornerback Jeremy LeSueur misjudged a wob- bly, third-down desperation lob from McCann. LeSueur overran the pickoff attempt, and PASS DEFENSE Player Stephens Zdenek Anderson Bell Totals Int 1 0 Lng 28 0 C: 0 Brk-up I I- PLAYERU or- HE GAJIE- STAFF PICKS WEEK 2 SEECT1ONS ALL PICKS MADE AGAINST THE SPREAD. HOME TEAMS IN CAPS. Michigan (-4.5) vs UCLA Virginia Tech (-34) vs. Rutgers Illinois (-15) vs. California Iowa State (-2.5) vs. Iowa OHIO STATE (-23) vs. Miami (OH) MINNESOTA 1-8.5) vs. Baylor PurduI -5;i vs NOTRE DAME David Den Herder Chris Duprey UCLA Rutgers California Iowa State Ohio State Minnesota Purdue Mark Francescutti Michigan Virginia Tech Illinois Iowa State Miami Minnesota Purdue I Freddie Mitchell caught it to keep the drive alive. UCLA tailback DeShaun Foster made Michigan pay, sweeping in for the touchdown and igniting the Bruins' unlikely rally. McCann took the reins from there, marcil* the Bruins 80 yards, then 85 yards in two touchdown drives Michigan was hapless to resist. "I told Ryan this was his game to win," UCLA coach Bob Toledo said. And if anything could seem completely real in Saturday's exhausting haze, it was only the obvious. This was Michigan's game to lose. MAKE YOUR PICK9t Want to have a shot at becoming a guest selector for Daily Sports.i Send in your predictions for the Big Ten and you could pick the games for our special bowl sec- ; tion in December. Michigan Big Ten Finish I I Big Ten Champion 2nd place 1 I I S I 3rd place 4th place * Stephanie Offen UCLA 23-20 virginia Tech 49-0 Illinois 19-17 Iowa State 24-14 Ohio state 27-16 Minnesota 34-9 Notre Dame 23-21 Michigan Virginia Tech Illinois Iowa State Ohio State Baylor Purdue Michigan Rutgers California Iowa State Ohio State Minnesota Purdue ",: iI