4"~ ~,. bJI'S i.' *. 4;FSETION Sports desk: 647-3336 sportsdesk@umich.edu SECTION B t t .., ,.: 9 2 Purdue 32, Michigan 31. Blue is not a perenni-i title contender ST LAFAYETE - Pre- pare for some harsh truths. The football program at the University of Michigan is not a perennial national championship contender. It is a top-15 team, but it is not a team that can be expected to finish in the top five each season. Michigan is a solid football program, a good program, on some days maybe even a great program. It is not a gauntlet. Michigan is a perennial power in college football, but not a superpower like Flori- da State and Nebraska. The supposed k spinoff from 1997 was a pro- gram that would compete for the national title every year. CHRIS This hasn't DUPREY happened. Michigan fans Dupe's must accept some incontro- vertible facts about this program. 1. 1997 was a special year, with a spe- cial team. It was not an indication of things to come. Michigan cannot com- pete on the national level every year because it can't take care of business in games like Saturday's. 2. Michigan, for whatever reason, is } incapable of employing a killer instinct that seizes control of games and doesn't let go. 3. Almost every year, there will be one "Michigan game" where the Wolverines blow a game of medium pro- portions, etching it in the memories of fans forever who can then say, "Is this Saturday's game another Illinois '99?" Recent past examples of these games, for your future conversational use, include Purdue '00, UCLA '00, North- western '96 (17-16 after leading 16-0), and Purdue '96 (a 9-3 debacle in Michi- gan's last visit to Ross-Ade Stadium before Saturday). Michigan's buffoonery in winnable games has become a legend that is dog- ging this program - and this campus. Saturday was a classic example. The Wolverines played impeccably on offense in the first half, scoring a touch- down on each possession. Purdue made adjustments at halftime and shut down Michigan in the second half. It became evident in the second half that Michigan made no adjustments at halftime - none that worked, anyway. Drew Brees continued to carve up Michigan's rag-tag defensive backs, moving down the field and scoring at will. Even Lloyd Carr admitted that the Boilermakers "had their way" - quite an admission from the Big Ten's stoic coach. See DUPREY, Page 4B No consolation: Icers tie twice No. 2'M' settles for third place By Joe Smith Daily Sports Writer Almost everyone got to see the matchup they wanted this past Saturday night in the Ice Breaker Tournament. Only it took place three hours earlier than expected. The top two teams in the nation went head to head when No. 1 North Dakota and No. 2 Michigan took the ice - but not many thought ICE BREAKER that it would be a battle for third RESULTS place in the consolation game. In their second overtime thriller in Friday night as many nights, the Wolverines (0-0- North Dakota 2 2) once again reached a stalemate New Hampshire 2 with a highly ranked foe, tying (UNH advances in defending national champion North shootout, 1-0) Dakota (0-0-2), 5-5. Michigan 2 While their tie against No. 16 Colgate 2 Colgate the night before had to be shootout, 2-0) decided in a shootout for the single purpose of advancing a team to the Satrdav night championship game, both teams felt Michigan S that "picking a loser" in another North Dakota 5 shootout was unnecessary and New Hampshire 7 unfair. Colgate 3 "It didn't make any sense," North Full ice Breaker Dakota coach Dean Blais said. "You coverage, Page 68 work hard enough for 65 minutes. It was frustrating enough the way the penalties were going, but let's just get this game over with and each take our tie." The highly-anticipated matchup was more indicative of each team's special teams than anything else, with eight of the 10 goals being on the power play - including all five of North Dakota's tallies. "With all of the penalties, you couldn't really get a good flow in the game," Fighting Sioux defenseman Travis Roche. "It was basically their snipers against our snipers." Each team's special teams units consumed a great amount of ice time, restricting the ability of coaches to use all of their lines in unison, which did not play into Michigan's strength of four bal- anced lines competing five on five. But it also gave the Wolverines a chance to improve on See TOURNEY, Page 6B DANA LINNANE/Daily The Drew that won - Brees - passed for 286 yards and completed 32-of-44 passes with one touchdown on Saturday. Goodwill lets Purdue back, - By Stephanie Offen Daily Sports Editor WEST LAFAYETTE - It seemed like a script. From Drew Henson's perfectly execut- ed first drive to Travis Dorsch's second- chance field goal, Saturday's 32-31 loss to Purdue is one for the history books. Dorsch, an inconsistent field goal kicker at best, was handed a second chance to save the game for Purdue by the Michigan offense. With only two minutes left in the game and his team down by two points, Dorsch - six for nine this season, and three missed field goals in Purdue's Out- back Bowl loss last season - missed again. After Purdue quarterback Drew Brees brought the Boilermakers within two after being down by 18 at the half, he led the Boilermakers to field-goal posi- tion on Michigan's 15-yard line. The game rested on Dorsch. But the kicker missed the uprights wide left and handed the opportunity back to the Wolverines on their own 20-yard line. Henson tried to waste the clock with two ineffective running plays, only to lose a yard on the two attempts. And Henson had a third-and-11 staring him in the face. "I had to throw on third-and-I I " Hen- son said. "If we make that play, we win the game." No play was made. Instead, theI1 I-yard pass to Marquise Walker sailed over his head and only 30 seconds had been taken off the clock. Michigan was forced to punt. The Boilermakers, who missed only one third down conversion all day, had no problem driving down the field once again. Brees led his team 44 yards in a minute and a half, putting Dorsch right back where he was before - with the ball on the 15-yard line. But this time there were only four sec- onds left on the clock, no time for more chances. As 68,340 very skeptical eyes looked down on the inconsistent kicker, Dorsch See LOSS, Page 4B Indiana demolishes 'M' soccer NCAA's biggest power teaches Blue hard lesson NORMAN NG/Daily Marie Spaccarotella (6) and the Michigan women's soccer team dropped a tight match to Michigan State yesterday. Spartans coolof women's soccer By Sam Duwe Daily Sports Writer EAST LANSING - Yesterday's women's soccer game was as close as most of the fans were to the second stages of hypothermia. But thanks to a lucky goal in the second half, Michigan State defeated Michigan in a cold andtblustery afternoon,1s-0. Michigan was plagued with the same problem it has experi- enced all year - the inability to put the ball into the net. "We had a lot of chances," sophomore forward Abby Crump- ton said. "We knew this game was MICHIGAN STATE 1 going to be rough, some of us came out to play, but not all of us, not the MICHIGAN 0 whole team." With more than double the shots on goal than Michigan State, Michigan's shots were over the net, wide, blocked or stolen. But they didn't go in. "We're good in the cold, we're good on the road," senior cap- tain Kacy Beitel said. "We just weren't good today." It's the same story with all of Michigan's losses this year. With a solid defense, it's the offense that is sporadic, producing either mass amounts of goals or none at all. So as the sun tried to peek out behind the dark cloud cover, the first half ticked by, scoreless. It wasn't until 17 minutes left in the second half before the potential overtime threat was lifted. Michi- gan State scored on a header in front of the net, causing an erup- David Moss ily Sports Writer BLOOMINGTON - The Michigan men's soccer team was dealt a dose of reality yesterday INDIANA 7 MICHIGAN 0 after - noon in the form of a 7-0 a Ctirn with high hopes. Those hopes quickly faded as the Hoosiers jumped all over Michigan from the start. Five min- utes into the game, Indiana for- ward Tyler Hawley split two Wolverines and was taken down inside the box. Senior Matt Fun- denberger converted the penalty for a 1-0 lead. "It's an intimidating environ- ment to come into," Michigan coach Steve Burns said. "They have a tremendous homefield advantage and they use it by going for the jugular right away." Midway through the first half, Fundenberger struck again after And from that point, the rout was on. Minutes later midfielder Michael Bock added another, flicking a ball past Geldres' out- stretched arms for the Hoosiers third goal. Still in the first half, Funden- berger completed his hat-trick with a powerful header off a great cross from Josh Rife. But Indiana saved their best for last. With just minutes remaining in the first half, sophomore mid- fielder Pat Noonan embarked on a spectacular run, leaving Michigan defenders Kevin Taylor and J.J. Kern in the dust, and fed forward the hands of the Hoosiers. It might have been too much to ask for the young Wolverines, in their inaugural varsity season, to compete with the two-time defend- ing national champions in their backyard. I I I: