A - The Michigan Daily - Sp.ortsWednesday - September 5, 2001 *Io Harrington leads the Ducks past Wisconsin EUGENE, Ore. (AP) - Oregon believed its own marquee billing and nearly blew it. Fortunately for the No. 7 Ducks, quarterback Joey Harrington believed in his uncanny ability to lead his team back. In a flawed but inspired perfor- mance, Harrington threw three touch- down passes and scored on.a 1-yard dive on fourth-and-inches with 4:03 left Saturday night to lift Oregon past No. 22 Wisconsin 31-28. Coming off a school-record 10 vic- tories last year, the Ducks (1-0) have legitimate national title aspirations. By falling behind three times in the second half, Oregon put itself in jeopardy of ruining those Rose Bowl dreams before they got out of neutral. Wisconsin will play Fresno St. at home on Saturday, with kickoff sched- uled for 12:10. No. 2 MIAMI 33, PENN STATE 7: All the emotion Penn State could gath- er was not even close to overcoming No. 2 Miami's talent. Ken Dorsey threw three first-half touchdown passes and the Hurricanes scored on six of their first seven pos- sessions in a dominating 33-7 victory over the Nittany Lions on Saturday night. On an uplifting night at Beaver Sta- dium, a record crowd of 109,313 stood and cheered as once-paralyzed Adam Taliaferro hopped and skipped onto the field before the game. Taliaferro, wear- ing his No. 43 jersey and blue sweat pants, was injured against Ohio State last season and it was feared he might never walk again. But when the season-opener for both teams began, the night belonged to the Hurricanes. In the first half alone, Dorsey hit 12 of 18 passes for 205 yards, including TD tosses of 27, 28 and 10 yards to three receivers. PURDUE 19, CINCINNATI 14: Pur- due won its opener by running the ball Wildcats primed for first game at UNLV EVANSTON (AP) - No matter what happens this season, Rashidi Wheeler will be with the Northwest- ern Wildcats. They have their own memories, and the patch on their uniforms will be another reminder of the senior safety. And as investigations into his Aug. 3 death continue and his moth- er's lawsuit play out, Wheeler's memory can't help but be a constant presence. "There will be distractions and we've done a good job initially of dealing with them," said Zak Kustok, the quarterback and co-captain of the No. 16 Wildcats. "Once we get into football season, it'll be easier to keep our mind week to week on the task at hand." Wheeler, a chronic asthmatic, col- lapsed during a preseason condition- ing drill involving a series of wind sprints and was pronounced dead a short time later. The cause of death was listed as bronchial asthma. But Wheeler's mother, Linda Will, has filed a lawsuit, accusing the uni- versity of being ill-prepared to deal with such an emergency. Represented by attorney Johnnie Cochran Jr., her lawsuit names Northwestern, coach Randy Walker and other athletic department personnel. The university is conducting its own investigation into the incident. "We have no choice," co-captain Napoleon Harris said when asked if the team is prepared to deal with questions about Wheeler as the sea- son goes on. "A lot of guys really don't want to talk about it anymore," he added. "It's more of a distraction right now." That's not meant to be insensitive and picking it off- a sign of things to come without Drew Brees running the offense. Brandon Hance scored on a 1-yard quarterback sneak, Joey Harris had a 16-yard touchdown run and Purdue's defense intercepted three passes Sun- day as the Boilermakers held on for a 19-14 victory over Cincinnati. The Boilermakers' top concerns are Hance and an offensive line that lost four starters. Hance was sacked twice on third-down blitzes and again on a 2- point conversion attempt. TOLEDO 38, MINNESOTA 7: "This is just the start of it," Amstutz said after Toledo rolled up 512 yards on offense to beat Minnesota 38-7 Thurs- day night, the Rockets' second straight season-opening victory over a Big Ten team. The Rockets scored the first four times they had the ball. With four receivers spreading out Minnesota's defense, Taylor had no trouble finding space to run. The Golden Gophers, with eight new starters on defense, had no answer for the spread offense. Minnesota was no better on offense, crossing midfield just once in the first half. The Rockets held all-Big Ten receiver Ron Johnson to seven catches and 72 yards. Minnesota will attempt to recover this Saturday when they go on the'road against the University of Louisiana, Lafayette, at 2:30. IOWA 51, KENT STATE 0: Aaron Greving tied an NCAA record by scor- ing touchdowns on all three of his car- ries and Nate Kaeding kicked three field goals to tie a school record for accuracy as Iowa beat Kent State 51-0 Saturday. Iowa dominated in the season open- er for both teams, rolling up its highest point total since a 62-0 victory over Indiana on Oct. 25, 1997. As~AP TOP 25 Sep. 3, 2001 first-place votes in parentheses Team Record Pts Pv 1. Miami (37) 1-0 1,737 2 2. Florida (19) 1-0 1,721 1 3. Oklahoma (10) 2-0 1,633 3 4. Texas (4) 1-0 1,482 5 5. Nebraska (2) 2-0 1,474 4 6. Florida State 1-0 1,458 6 7. Oregon 1-0 1,357 711 8. Tennessee 1-0 1,355 8 9. Virginia Tech 1-0 1,200 9 10. Georgia Tech 2-0 988 11 11. Michigan 1-0 963 -12 12. Kansas State 0-0 943 13 13. Louisiana State 1-0 861 1 14. UCLA 1-0 809 17 15. Washington 0-0 728 15' 16. Northwestern 0-0 674 16 17. Notre Dame 0-0 604 18 18. Mississippi State 0-0 571 20, 19. Fresno State 2-0 554 s20. Clemson 1-0 524 1'9- 21. South Carolina 1-0 422 21 22. Oregon State 0-1 293 10 23. Wisconsin 1-1 208 22 24 Ohio State 0-0 189 23" 25: Georgia 1-0 129 The defense also came throu twice stopping early Kent State scori opportunities by forcing turnovers. It came after a distracting preseason that climaxed with the departure, of quarterback Jon Beutjer, who was attacked by teammate Sam Aiello at their apartment in July and quit the team earlier in the week.,x Iowa is at home against Miami of Ohio 12:10 Saturday. ILLINOIS 44, CALIFORNIA 1 T. Antonio Harris rushed for three touch- downs, and Brandon Lloyd caught eight passes for 178 yards and twQ touchdowns as Illinois scored .38 points in the first half of a 44-17 romp over Cal on Saturday. , Illinois' solid, methodical team effort on offense was spiced up by a spectacular return for Lloyd, who missed all of last season with a brok' leg. Kurt Kittner completed 18 of 34 passes for 297 yards, while Lloyd prac- tically dominated the game on the-out- side while Cal used eight-man fronts,tp stop Illinois' rushing attack. Illinpis scored 24 points on its first four drives, three of which ended in short scoring runs by Harris. "WQ Northwestern's tragic summer comes to an end Friday when the Wildcats trai,.$ Las Vegas to tangle with John Robinson's explosive UNLV Runnin' Rebels. or disrespectful to Wheeler and his family. It's just that Wheeler's team- mates - many of whom were on the field and watched him die - are ready to move on. They've done their grieving and questioned the fairness of a 22-year-old dying. They want life to return to normal, and for them, that's football. Nothing will make them feel better than taking the field Friday night at UNLV for their first game. "I can't wait, and I know that's the feeling of the rest of the team," Kus- tok said. "There was lots of distrac- tions and things going on that most of us didn't know how to handle. "This is the opportunity for us to go out and do what we know how to do, and that's play football." And the Wildcats aren't planfiliig on forgetting Wheeler. His numer was retired - the first in schooljhis- tory to be retired - and Nort1ngt- ern will wear the patches in his bax0r. At Walker's weekly news co1- ence Monday, the first personie mentioned was Wheeler. "We just want to thank everyone in the extended Northwestern family,for their support. It's been very meargg- ful, very significant," Walker: sad. "As we embark on the season-we have vowed and have maintainedgthat we are always going to have,aprt and piece of Rashidi with us. "We're going to continue to-m rialize him and lift his family friends up in our thoughts and prayers as we go through this season." Washington awards Neuheisel _ incentive-packed extension SEATTLE (AP) - Washington football coach Rick university. If that rate is 90 percent or more, he wo) ld Neuheisel has been given a 35 percent pay raise, bring- receive an additional $40,000. ing his annual salary and other compensation to $1.2 If Washington - ranked No. 15 heading into its sea- million. son-opener at home against No. 11 Michigan on 'atjur- The 40-year-old Neuheisel could make up to $1.4 mil- day - plays in a Bowl Championship Series game,hie >;'vK oi '6,