Tho KAirrhidan nnilu - gnnrtcMnnriav - Ortnhar ? '7t'M - AR - i rie ivii(migan udiiy - apurtsivionaay - uciooer z, tuw -- ats i L A ' : 10 ioward earns first picks of career; Foote to return Bad call 3y Stephanie Offen )aily Sports Editor Bill Howard comes to all his son's home games. And this Saturday he saw something from his son that Sas never seen before - a collegiate interception. \ctually two of them. Against Wisconsin, junior Todd, Howard had a game te calls one of his best and his father describes as "out- ;tanding" He racked his first interceptions of his career nd two of the team's three picks for the game. "I was very. excited he got two picks," Todd's father 3ill Howard said. "That was something that hampered tim last season with the broken hand. I know coming into this year his goal was to get some picks and to be p etitive. Hopefully this is a sign of what's to come" 0oward's first interception came on Wisconsin's first Irive of the quarter. Howard intercepted the ball in the ndzone as Wisconsin quarterback Brooks Bollinger Ittempted a ten yard pass to receiver Nick Davis. His second pick of the game came on the last play. Nith eight seconds left in the game, Howard solidified lhe 13-10 win for the Wolverines by picking off Bollinger on his last attempt to get Wisconsin the victo- r. Bollinger threw a 34-yard pass to receiver Chris hambers but Howard grabbed his second interception tnd the victorv instead. "Good things come in twos, so I got two on the day" ard said. BROKEN FOOTE?: They took up an entire bench on the idelines. Unfortunately junior Larry Foote took his place on the >ench next to his three fellow fallen linemen - Jake Frysinger, Eric Wilson and Norman Boebert. But fortunately for Foote he will probably be back 'ext week suffering only a twisted ankle. Foote twisted his ankle last week and had treatment :hroughout the week. His ankle bothered him early in .rday's first quarter so he was carted off the field in :he second. Carr said after a few days of practice, Foote will be fine and cleared to play next weeken(4 against Purdue. The victory over Wisconsin was the first collegiate game that Foote has missed.. "It hurts but when we win it feels. good, it replaces it, Foote said.t Frysinger and Boebert are still qestionable for next weekend. Frysinger is sitting out Ath a reinjured foot4 and Boebert missed the game with a high ankle sprain. Wilson said he is feeling better and thinks he will backs next weekend. "I'm feeling very good," Wilson :aid. "I've been run- ning the last two days and we'll taV'e it day by day this week and hopefully get in some 'practice. Hopefully you'll see me in the field down in West Lafayette." LOOK wHo's KICKING: Saturday,#a different foot was the center of attention at Michigan $tadium. Is looked like neither Wisconsin or Michigan could score a touchdown and the field go I become that much more important. B ut the field goal is w here the V Volverines have been u l g h e on f r S r a s m , l struggling this season. Before Salurday's game, field ~. y goal kicker Hayden Epstein was ore for five for three ' points ., So while Epstein was struggling, Carrchose to put Jeff Del Verne in his place. Del Verne completed two of three against Wisconsin. He missed his first attempt from 29 yards, but then completed his ne-,it two, both 33-yard completions. "I went out on the first one anri I don't know if my head is in it but I missed it," Del Verne said. "I told the- older guys that it wasn't going to hiappen again. Hayden and I have been struggling laey ut those guys bar' been working really hard and we arc trying to pull it out' for them." i Del Verne replaced Epstein foie extra points against Illinois and made all three attempti. Epstein has been struggling with his accuracy lately, AORiE MARSHALL/tuiy but Del Verne admits that his rane is not as long as his After having words with the Big Ten office last week, coach Lloyd Carr had to deal with teammate's. more questionable calls bythe referees. GAME PROGRESSION FIRST QUARTER: Wisconsin marched the opening kickoff 71 yards to the Michigan 10, but the Wolverines came up with the first big defensive play of the game. Todd Howard stepped in front of Lee Evans and made his first career interception, giving the Wolverines first down at the 20. On third down, Michigan quarter- back Drew Henson tried to escape trouble. He stepped up in the pocket and attempted to throw a screen, but was hit as he threw. The play was ruled a fum- ble and Wisconsin recovered. Television replays showed officials were in error. The Badgers were unable to pen- etrate after the turnover, but Vitaly Pisetsky connected on a 49-yard field goal. Wisconsin 3, Michigan O On the next possession, Henson simply dropped the ball while run- ning for the first down. The Badgers' John Favret recovered, his second of the day. Then Wisconsin began to get a little wacky. The Badgers ran the halfback pass, and Evans'rpass was a lame-duck for DeWayne Patmon to intercept at the 21. SECOND QUARTER: Michigan runs 13 plays on its ensuing drive to march down the field. The drive stalls out at the Wisconsin 12, but new starting kicker Jeff Del Verne can't recover from a high snap and misses the 29-yarder wide right. On the final drive of the second quarter, with 1:09 left. the Wolverines moved quickly down the field. Successful use of the out-of-bounds line allowed for a 33-yard field goal by Del Verne as the half expired. Michigan 3, Wisconsin 3 THIRD QUARTER: Following a Dave Petruziello fum- ble recovery for Michigan, the Wolverines began to gain momen- tum. They didn't face a third down until third and goal at the Wisconsin 7. But the Badgers stiffened again, and Michigan accepted another Del Verne 33- yarder as a consolation prize. Michigan 6 Wisconsin 3 Wisconsin ended the quarter by bouncing right back. Seven plays in under three minutes positioned the Badgers at the Michigan 20, prepared to strike, as the third quarter ended. FOURTH QUARTER: On third-and-goal at the 5, Bollinger found Chad Kuhns on the right side. The catch-and-run got Kuhns into the end zone and provided Wisconsin's only touch- down of the day. Wisconsin 10, Michigan 6 Facing a four-point deficit, the Wolverines took their turn and ate 5:28 of clock by methodically moving the ball. On second-and- eight from the Wisconsin 15, Henson rolled out of the pocket,' in trouble. He threw across his body, up for grabs, and David Terrell jumped above the pile for the touchdown. Michigan 13, Wisconsin 10 Wisconsin's last gasp fell short at a 42-yarder by Pisetsky was wide to the left. Helped by a Henson scramble on third down, the Wolverines were successful in killing the clock. Final: Michigan 13, Wisconsin 10 WHO'S NEXT: @PUR.DUE Purdue has proved to be a crazy team. It clicks about every other Saturday. This past Saturday was one of those bad days, as the Boilermakers failed to steal a raad win at Fnt State, Now they come back to Ross-Ade Stadium to host Michigan for the first time since 1996. Home expects to'be a friendly place for Purdue, and Michigan must he up to the task to steal a road win there. THE coNCERNs: Minor injuries to Norm Boebert, Larry Foote and Chris Perry; the intangibles associated wih playing a wounded animal like Purdue ... ...................... ................. ...... . ...... BIG TEN STANDINGS \'western crushes Michgan State;_Lions beat Purdue EAST LANSING - No fluke. No Yertime necessary. Northwestern beat a ranked team for e second straight week Saturday - 'me a 37-17 victory over Michigan 'ate. The victory follows a riveting 47- I overtime win at Wisconsin, then nked No. 7. No one was better Saturday than amien Anderson, who ran for two long uchdowns and 219 yards on 25 carries. m Long added three field goals for the 'ildcats. Northwestern (4-1, 2-0 Big Ten) used ead offense to keep Michigan State 0-1) off balance early. The Wildcats en shifted to a ground game in the see- id half to eat up time. "We have a long season to go. We ve to stay focused, "Williams said. Ve just have to rally the troops, reload, d remain within the system" Michigan State was unable to convert veral big plays into scores, and the >artans had two costly fumbles. The game was tied at 10 after the first rer, with Northwestern's Teddy on a 39-yard scoring strike from sk Kustok, and Michigan State's T.J. ackett countering with an Il-yard uchdown run. Long kicked two field goals in the cond quarter, and Andersen raced 32 rds for a touchdown. Northwestern ran for 201 yards in the If, to only 63 for Michigan State as th teams used their pass attacks to reg- ig gains and pose scoring threats. derson scored again in the third arter, breaking loose up the middle for Il-yard run. PENN STATE 22, No. 22 PURDUE 20 This one was for Adam Taliaferro. Penn State, off to its worst start in 36 ars, took advantage of three special ims errors by Purdue and beat the ilermakers 22-20 on Saturday. The Nittany Lions dedicated the game Taliaferro, a freshman cornerback seriously injured his spinal cord last week against Ohio State. "When you play with heart and emo- tion, this is what happens," senior Justin Kutpeikis said. "Adam had a hand in it somehow. We ca"t help him back. But we can make his road easier." Taliaferro remains in a Philadelphia hospital after successful spinal fusion surgery Monday in Ohio. The Nittany Lions wore No. 43 on the back of their helmets to honor their fallen teammate. "As a coach, it was my toughest week," said Joe Paterno, who moved within five victories of breaking Bear Bryant's Division I-A record of 323 wins. "It was a struggle not knowing how to handle the squad." Travis Dorsch missed a 46-yard field goal that would have given Purdue the lead with 2:32 left, allowing Penn State to beat a higher-ranked opponent for the first time since 1996. Earlier, two botched punts by Dorsch led to two short Penn State touchdown drives. "Special teams have to think about it for us to have a better chance of win- ning,' Purdue quarterback Drew Brees said. "Special teams have to clean it up. Guys need to start taking pride." Brees tied the Big Ten record with his 74th touchdown pass and also caught a touchdown, but failed to beat Penn State for the third time. His desperation pass fell as time expired. Purdue (3-2, 1-1 Big Ten) hasn't beaten Penn State since 1951. MINNESOTA 44, No. 24 ILLINOIS 10 - Minnesota's Tellis Redmon was a backup one week ago, bounced from the starting lineup by a fumble and the promise shown by the redshirt freshman who replaced him. Redmon made quite a case for his per- manent return to the starting job by accumulating nearly 300 yards in the Gophers' 44-10 victory over Illinois on Saturday. He rani for 183 yards on 31 carries, gaining 11 of them in the first half, and caught three passes for 116 yards. Minnesota coach Glen Meson had set- tled a quafterback controversy this week by replaging Asad Abdul-Khaliq with Travis C tle, who passed for 170 yards and ran fIor 82 in three quarters against the Illini' Mason wasn't ready to choose between 'Redmon, who was removed from the; field after fumbling at Baylor, or Thonuss Tapeh, who rushed for 183 yards ip that game but was limited Saturdas by a foot injury. The e ophers (3-2, 1-1 Big Ten) over- whelmcI the Illini (3-2, 0-2) much as they did in a 37-7 victory last season, by runing between the tackles. They gained X64 yards rushing, just 3 fewer than in that game last season. Mist sstrpt Sr. 47, No.3 FLORIA 35 - Stee Spurrier couldn't understand all the fus about Mississippi State beating his thitid-ranked Florida Gators. "Mississippi State ought to be embar- rassed tearing down the goal posts after beatini this team," the Florida coach said. But down they went, both of them, after Mississippi State beat the defense- less Grtors 47-35 on Saturday. Florida scored on the game's last play but cotldn't even attempt a conversion. Sptkrier openly questioned his defenae's effort after last week's poor performance against Kentucky, and saw no improvement against the Bulldogs. Dicenzo Miller ran for 172 yards and Dontag Walker had 156 for Mississippi State.. Mississippi State gained 517 yards, 351 'n the ground. Miller and Walker each bad a touchdown run, and Wayne Madn ran for two scores and threw for one. It 'was the most yards rushing and pointis allowed by Florida since a 62-24 loss to in the 1996 Fiesta Bowl. The The Spartans were the second-straight victim of Northwestern's surprise Big Ten start. The Wildcats easily defeated Michigan State, 37-17. Gators (4-1, 2-1) had minus-78 vards rushing, the lowest ever under Spurrier. Defensive coordinator Jon IHoke was left to explain the second straight game filled with missed tackles. "I can't tackle for them" Hoke said. "But the commuicatiot ott how to tack- le is not getting taught."- LoutISANA Sr. 38, No. I1 TENNESSEE 31 - For a night, Rosan Davey and the Louisiana St. Tigers met every chal- lenge. Davev threw a 25-yard touchdown pass -- his fourth of the game - to Robert Royal on the first play of over- time to give Louisiana St. a 338-31 victo- ry over No. I I Tennessee on Saturday night. It was the first overtime game in Tiger Stadium history, and sent the victory- starved Louisiana St. fans swarming onto the field, where they quickly top- pled both goal posts. After Louisiana St. scored, Tennessee drove to the 3, but third- and fourth- down passes to the end zone were bro- ken up by cornerback Damien James. "They weren't doing anything unex- pected," said Tennessee defensive back Teddy Gaines. "We came out kind of flat and it took us a while to realize we had a ball game on our hands.'" Tennessee did not score a touchdown until the third quarter, then scored 25 second-half points. The Vols, who over- came an 18-point deficit, tied it at 31 with 1:30 left in regulation on A.J. Suggs' 16-yard scoring pass to Cedrick Wilson, and Suggso' pass to Eric Parker on the 2-point conversion. "This is one of the most hostile envi- ronments we 've been in, " Suggs said. "I thought we played well considering that." Team Michigan Northwestern Ohio State Indiana Minnesota Purdue Penn State Michigan State Illinois Wisconsin Iowa Ble Ten 2 0 2 0 1 0 1 0 1 1 1 1 11 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 Overall 4 1 4 1 4 0 2 2 3 2 3 2 2 4 3 1 3 2 3 2 05 I 111 WEEKEND'S BEST NORTHWESTERN CONTINUES ROLL: Northwestern has now victimized Wisconsin and Michigan State. And it has conquered both on the road. Suffice it to say that, as of now, the Wildcats are the ones who are truly leading the Big Ten. Fur of its remaining six confer- We games are at home. Some might have fretted when Gavin Hoffman left the Northwestern program, but Zak Kustok has stepped in admirably over the past two seasons. His growth as a quarterback, com- bined with the underrated skill of running back Damien Anderson, make Northwestern a team to watch. How far can this team go, now that it believes in itself? higan has a chance to let the Wildcats cool their jets. The Wolverines don't play Northwestern until Nov. 4 at Ryan Field. By then, the Wildcats' place in the Big Ten pileup will be made much clearer. One thing's for sure: Gary Barnett and his 0-5 record are in hell now. HOW THE AP TOP 25 FARED Associated Press Poll for week of October 6th Games updated through September 31st. NEW AP TOP 25 (first-place votes in parentheses) TEAM PTS PVS SABAN RIDES AGAIN: While his Spartans were falling to Northwestern up in East Lansing, Michigan State exile Nick Saban was down in Baton Rouge, knocking off No. 11 Tennessee. Saban's Tigers almost blew it - after seizing a 24-6 lead, Louisiana State let Tennessee send the game into overtime at 31-31 by missing a field goal in the final seconds of regulation. When Tennessee's fourth-down pass from inside the five-yard line was batted away, the crowdstormed the field in cele- bration of the upset. 1. Nebraska 2. Florida State 3. Florida 4. Virginia Tech 5. Kansas State 16. Washington 7. Clemson 8. Southern Cal 9. Michigan 10. Miami 11. Tennessee 12. Ohio State 13. Texas 14. Oklahoma 15. UCLA 16. Texas Christian 17. Wisconsin 18. Michigan State 19. Auburn 20. Oregon 21. Southern Mississippi 22. Purdue 23. South Carolina 24. Illinois 25. Georgia beat Missouri 42-24 beat Maryland 59-7 lost Mississippi State 47-35 beat Boston College 48-34 beat Colorado 44-21 lost at Oregon 2316 beat Duke 52-22 lost at Oregon State 3121 beat Wisconsin 13-10 beat Rutgers 646 lost at Louisiana State 38-31 idle beat Oklahoma State 42-7 beat Kansas 34-16 beat Arizona State 38-31 beat Navy 24-0 lost at Michigan 13-10 lost to Northwestern 37-17 beat Vanderbilt 33-0 beat washington 2316 beat Memphis 243 lost to Penn State 22-20 lost to Alabama 27-17 lost to Minnesota 44.10 beat Arkansas 387 at Iowa State at Miami (F.) Louisiana State Temple at Kansas Oregon State North Carolina State Arizona at Purdue Florida State at Georgia at Wisconsin Oklahoma (Dallas) Texas (Dallas) idle Hawaii Ohio State at lowa at Mississippi State idle South Florida Michigan at Kentucky idle Tennessee 1. Florida State (42) 5-0 2. Nebraska (28) 4-0 3. Virginia Tech 4-0 4. Kansas State (1) 5-0 5. Clemson 5-0 6. Michigan 4-1 7. Miami Fla 3-1 8. Ohio St 4-0 9. Oregon 4-1 10. Oklahoma 4-0 11. Texas 3-1 12. Florida 4-1 13. Washington 3-1 14. Texas Christian 4-0 15. Auburn 5-0 16. UCLA 4-1 17. S. Mississippi 3-1 18. Southern Cal 3-1 19. Georgia 3-1 20. Mississippi St 3-1 21. Tennessee 22 22. Northwestern 4-1 23. Oregon State 4-0 24. Wisconsin 3-2 25. Notre Dame 2-2 1,745 1,731 1,576 1,574 1,451 1,353 1,274 1,218 1,031. 1,017 999 940 920 875 869 831 608 514 455 406 364 312 279 210 118 2 1 4 5 7 9 10 12 20 14 13 3 6 16 19 15 21 8 25 NR 11 NR NR 17 NR THIS WEEKEND'S RESULTS MIcHIGAN 13, WIsconsin 10 Northwestern 37, MicHIsN STuTE 17 PENN STATE 22, Purdue 20 INDIANA 45, Iowa 33 MINNEsoTA 44, Illinois 10 SATURDAY'S GAMES Michigan at Purdue Indiana at Northwestern Michigan State at owa Penn State at Minnesota Ohio State at Wisconsin 'M' SCHEDULE Date Sept. 2 Sept. 9 Sept. 16 Sept. 23 Sept. 30 Oct. 7 Oct. 14 Oct. 21 Nov. 4 Nov. 11 Non. 18 Qoonent Time-TV/Result BoWuNG GREEN W. 42-7 RICe W,38-7 at UCLA L 23-20 at Illinois W, 35-31 WISCOsNI w, 13-10 at Purdue Noon, ABC INDIANA 3:30, ABC M Nu S Sort T3:30, ABC at Northwestern TBA PENN STATE TBA at Ohio State Noon, ABC Dropped Out: No. 18 Michigan State, No. 22 Purdue, No. 23 South Carolina, No. 24 Ilinois I I"I LeI II I' i