The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - October 15, 2001- 5B "ANY TIME TO YOU FACE A TEAM THAT BEAT YOU LAST SEASON, THAT'S GOING BE ON YOUR MIND AND IT'S GOING TO BE MOTIVATION." -SENIOR DEFENSIVE LINEMAN JAKE FRYSINGER SAID WEEKEND'S BEST HOW THE AP TOP 25 FARED Associated Press Poll for week of October 9. Games updated through October 16. NEW AP TOP 25 SOMETHING's BRUIN IN L.A.: For the last few years, UCLA has had as much talent as anybody, but has failed to produce on the field. But the times, they are a-chang- ing. On Saturday, UCLA made a statement to the rest of the nation by pounding then-No. 9 Washington, 35-13. Senior tailback DeShaun Foster ran for 301 yards and four touch- downs, including a 92-yard jaunt in the fourth quarter, as UCLA improved to 5-0. PUT ON YOUR HELMET, BROCK: Florida sophomore quarterback Rex Grossman had been putting up video game-style numbers ... until Saturday's game at Auburn. Grossman threw for over 300 yards but tossed four intercep- tions as No. 2 Florida was stunned by the Tigers, 23-20. Auburn kick- er Damon Duval won the game when he nailed a 44-yard field goal with just 10 seconds left. DANTZING IN THE STREETS: Entering the season, many people were touting Clemson quarterback Woodrow Dantzler as a Heisman Trophy candidate. On Saturday, Dantzler demonstrated why he could be at the Downtown Athlet- ic Club in December. Dantzler passed for 333 yards and four touchdowns as the Tigers beat North Carolina State, 45-37 ... but that's not all. The senior standout also rushed for 184 yards and two more touch- downs, including a 55-yard scoring run in the first quarter. Team: 1. Florida 2. Miami (Fla.) 3. Oklahoma 4. Nebraska 5. Oregon 6. Virginia Tech 7. UCLA 8.. Fresno State 9. South Carolina 10. Washington 11. Texas 12. Michigan 13. Tennessee 14. Florida State 15. Georgia Tech 16. Clemson 17. Purdue 18. Brigham Young 19. Georgia 20. Colorado 21. Ohio State 22. Maryland 23. Stanford 24. Kansas State 25. Texas A&M Last week: lost to Auburn 23-20 beat No. 14 Florida State 49-271 beat Kansas 38-101 beat Baylor 48-7 beat California 48-7 beat Boston College 34-20 1 beat No. 10 Washington 35-131 beat Colorado State 25-22 lost to Arkansas 10-7 lost to No. 7 UCLA 35-13 beat Oklahoma State 45-17 beat No. 17 Purdue 24-10 lost to Georgia 26-24 lost to No. 1'Miami 49-27 lost to Maryland 20-17 beat North Carolina State 45-37 lost to No. 12 Michigan 24-10 beat New Mexico 24-20 beat Vanderbilt 30-14 beat No. 25 Texas A&M lost to Wisconsin 20-17 beat Virginia 41-21 Lost to Washington State 45-39 lost to Texas Tech 38-19 beat Baylor 16-10 This week: at No. 17 Georgia Bye Baylor Texas Tech Stanford Bye Bye Boise State Vanderbilt California No. 14 Colorado Bye - at Alabama at Virginia at North Carolina State North Carolina No. 22 Northwestern Air Force at Kansas State Duke San Diego State at No. 15 Georgia Tech at No.5 Oregon Texas A&M at No. 14 Colorado (first-place votes in parentheses) TEAM 1. Miami (Fla.) (48) 2. Oklahoma (21) 3. Nebraska (2) 4. UCLA (1) 5. Oregon 6. Virginia Tech 7. Florida 8. Fresno State 9. Texas 10. Michigan 11. Tennessee 12. Maryland 13. Clemson 14. Colorado 15. Washington 16. South Carolina 17. Georgia 18. Brigham Young 19. Washington State 20. Auburn 21. Florida State 22. Northwestern 23. Georgia Tech 24. Purdue 25. Toledo PTS 5-0 1,772 6-0 1,739 7-0 1,631 5-0 1,530 6-0 1,506 6-0 1,473 5-1 1,298 6-0 1,280 5-1 1,251 5-1 1,159 3-1 924 6-0 832 4-1 747 5-1 744 4-1 725 5-1 710 4-1 669 6-0 599 6-0 581 5-1 568 3-2 285 4-1 238 4-2 234 4-1 222 5-0 183 PVS 2 3 4 7 5 6 1 8 11 12 13 22 16 20 10 9 19 18 NR NR 14 NR 15 17 NR Dropped Out: No. 21 Ohio State, No. 22 Stanford, No. 24 Kansas State, No. 25 Texas A&M GAME PROGRESSION First Quarter: On the opening drive, Purdue quarterback Brandon Hance leads the Boilers 80 yards for a touch- down. On 3rd and 17, Hance completes a 22-yard pass to wide receiver Taylor Stubblefield. Hance capped the drive with a four-yard touchdown run. Travis Dorsch kicks the exta point. Purdue 7, Michigan O Second Quarter: Michigan starts at the Purdue 28- yard line after a 42-yard punt return by wide receiver Marquise Walker. Three plays later, fullback B.J. Askew runs three yards for a touchdown. Hayden Epstein makes the point after touchdown. Michigan 7, Purdue 7 On their next possession, the Wolverines take only 1:55 to score again on a 5-play, 64-yard drive. Walker scores from 43 yards away on a pass from quar- terback John Navarre. Epstein kicks the extra point. Michigan 14, Purdue 7 Purdue takes over the ball at the Michigan 14-yard line after a Ronald Bellamy fumble. In four plays, Purdue loses 14 yards after a holding penalty and a sack by safety Cato June. Dorsch kicks a 45-yard field goal with 3:55 left in the half. Michigan 14, Purdue 10 Third Quarter: Michigan grinds out a 15-play, 71- yard drive. Chris Perry runs 26 yards for an apparent touchdown but it is called back after an illegal formation penalty. Eight plays later, B.J. Askew scores from a yard out. Epstein converts the extra point. Michigan 21, Purdue 10 Fourth Quarter: Michigan drives from its own 29- deep into Purdue territory. On 3rd and four, running back Chris Perry runs to the five-yard line - one short of a first down. After an false start, Epstein kicks a 26-yard field goal with 5:44 remaining. Michigan 24,Purdue 10 Auburn takes bite out of Gators AUBURN, Ala. (AP) - Damon Duval kicked a 44-yard field goal with 10 seconds left and Auburn intercepted four of Rex Grossman's passes to shock No. 1 Florida 23-20 Saturday night. The Tigers (4-0 SEC, 5-1 overall) entered the game as a 21-point under- dog against a Florida team that looked invincible in winning its first five games by an average of 40 points Auburn fans stormed the field and wrestled down one of the goal posts, while Florida players headed to the lockerroom with their national champi- onship hopes in serious doubt. It was Duval's third straight game- winning field goal, following a 48- yarder with 18 seconds left to beat Mississippi State and a 49-yarder in the final minutes against Vanderbilt. With the stumble, Florida (5-1, 3-1) opened the door for No. 2 Miami to recapture the top spot in the rankings after dominating Florida State 49-27. Backup quarterback Daniel Cobb played most of the game for Auburn, rebounding from a 4-of-I5 start to throw for 152 yards. Cobb finished 11-of-23 and didn't throw an interception after entering the game 5-of-8 on the season. Grossman, who had only been inter- cepted three times' all season, looked out of synch most of the night against the nation's fourth-rated pass defense. The Gators had rolled up 500-plus yards in each of their previous five games, but managed only one big play. Despite holding Auburn to 1 yard on its first 12 plays, Florida found itself in unfamiliar territory at halftime: trailing 10-6. It was the first time the Gators had- n't scored a touchdown in a first half since a 37-17 loss to Georgia in 1997. MIAMI (FLA.) 49, FLORIDA STATE 27: The streaks are over for Florida State, and so is another run at the national championship. Ken Dorsey threw three touchdown passes and No. 2 Miami pulled away with a 28-point third quarter in a domi- nating 49-27 victory over the Semi- noles on Saturday. The loss ended No. 14 Florida State's 54-game home unbeaten streak as well as its 37-game winning streak at Doak Campbell Stadium dating to 1991, when the Hurricanes beat them 17-16. Florida State (3-2), which played in the national title game the past three seasons, also makes its earliest exit from the title chase since 1990. Now in jeopardy is Florida State's record run of 14 consecutive 10-win seasons and AP PHOTO Ohio State's Jonathan Wells ran for 179 yards Saturday against the Northwestern defense. The Heisman pretenders Before every season begins, the so-called experts claim that they know who will be the next Andre Ware, Ty Detmer or Gino Torretta. Most Heisman predictions, though, look like second- rate guesses after the first few weeks are over. Here's a list of those who had high expectations, but bottomed out. Damien Anderson RB, Northwestern Why he's no longer a top contender: After begin- ning the season with 302 yards and four touch- downs in his first two games, Anderson has been shut down in his past three games. Averaging less than four yards a carry in those games, he's only reached the endzone twice. Why he's got a shot: Ron Dayne had a 19-yard game in his Heisman year, but he also broke the NCAA rushing record and reached the Rose Bowl. T.J. Duckett RB, Michigan State Why he's no longer a top contender: Michigan State has adopted a pass-happy offense with new star Charles Rogers, meaning Duckett is no longer the focus in their scheme. He also shares the tailback role with two others in Little Johns Flowers and Tyrell Dortch. His numbers are not bad, but being number eight in the Big Ten isn'tx going to impress the voters. Why he's got a shot: He can always win in 2002. Antwaan Randle El QB/RB/WR, Indiana Why he's no longer a top contender: He's been moved from position to position so much that none of his statistics are very dominant. Plus, the Hoosiers aren't good (1-4) and they don't get much national exposure. Without a bowl game, voters won't give anything to the most exciting player in college football. Why he's got a shot: He could become the first player to play all 22 positions on the field. Chris Simms QB, Texas Why he's no longer a top contender: He's only a junior, much of the media believes senior Apple- white should be the starter and his game against Oklahoma was only turning heads away. Why he's got a shot: With a little help, Simms and the Longhorns are not out of the Big 12 title game or BCS picture yet. Getting to both and more games like last Saturday may influence many vot- ers, but don't expect him in New York until 2002. Ken Simonton RB, Oregon State Why he's no longer a top contender: Oregon State has three losses, in which Simonton has only mus- tered a total of 87 yards. Enough said. Why he's got a shot: He has no shot, the Beavers' boosters should be happy they didn't put Simon- ton on a wall. Hecaught the Sports Illustrated curse with its prediction of Oregon State being national champions and Simonton as the Heisman front-runner. Jason Thomas QB, UNLV Why he's no longer a top contender: The only good small-market quarterback is in the West. Unfortu- nately for Thomas, his name is David Carr and he plays for Fresno State. UNLV is 2-4 with no prime- time media exposure only hurt the one-time presea- son sleeper and his current 135.3 passing yards per game will keep him from reaching New York. Why he's got a shot: Are you kidding?k Top 5 finishes in the final AP media poll. The Seminoles still have games against four Top 25 teams, including Florida. By extending their winning streak to 15, the Hurricanes (5-0) made their claim to regain the top spot they lost last week to the Gators. But the players will be more satisfied they were the team that knocked the Seminoles out of title picture. Last season, Florida State made it to the title game even though Miami beat the 'Noles and both teams finished with one loss. Holding a 21-13 lead entering the second half, Miami struck early and late in the third period, with two TDs in 65 seconds early and two more TDs within 54 seconds late before a crowd of 83,836 - the second largest crowd at Doak Campbell. WISCONSIN 20, OHIo STATE 17: Recreating the same comeback from two years ago, Wisconsin spotted No. 21 Ohio State a 17-0 lead and then roared back for a 20-17 upset victory Saturday. Mark Neuser's 33-yard field goal with 2:13 remaining capped the revival that came a week after the Badgers' humiliating 63-32 loss at home to win- less Indiana. Ohio State (3-2, 2-1 Big Ten), which routed then-No. 13 Northwestern 38- 20 last Saturday behind a bruising run- ning game, rushed for minus-4 yards in the second half. The last time Wisconsin (2-1 Big Ten, 4-3 overall) made the trip to Ohio Stadium, Ohio State built a 17-0 lead only to watch the Badgers reel off the next 42 in a 42-17 victory. This time, Ohio State again dominat- ed the first half but Wisconsin bounced back behind the running of Anthony Davis and the running and passing of quarterback Brooks Bollinger. It was Bollinger who also engineered the upset of the 12th-ranked Buckeyes by the unranked Badgers in 1999. Davis, who missed the Indiana loss with turf toe, gained 103 yards on 26 carries. Bollinger completed 12 of 22 passes for 202 yards with one intercep- tion. A pair of Davis runs on the Badgers' final drive gave the Badgers a first down at the 20, from where they ran on the next three plays. Neuser then con- verted the 33-yard kick. Ohio State's last chance started at its 38. Bellisari, who struggled with his passing all day, ran for a 1-yard gain and overthrew three passes before the Badgers ran out the clock. AP PHOTO Iowa's Ladell Betts (46). WHO'S NEXT: IOWA Even with a bye week to prepare, the Wolverines will have plenty to deal with when they visit Kinnick Stadium on Octo- ber 27. Iowa, which has yet to lose at home, is coming offtwo-straight losses to confer- ence opponents Purdue and Michigan State. Its 1-2 record in the Big Ten (3-2 overall) is deceiving as both losses could have gone either way. Even with the losses, senior quarterback Kyle McCann and the rest of the Hawkeyes' offense has produced a Big Ten best 32.2 ppg. McCann also leads the Big Ten in passing efficiency and knows how to spread the ballto two of the conference's best in Kahlil Hill and De'Von Clark, each with over 300 yards receivingand at least 20 catches. The Hawkeyes have one homne game next week against Antwaan Randle El and the rest of the Indiana Hoosiers before wel- coming Michigan. BIG TEN STANDINGS I Yipes! Lookin' ugly again So we fooled you all by look- ing decent last week. In fact, we have so little clue of what we're doing, that Schwartz actually picked Washington as his best bet! And he was the only one undefeated to that point! We're a joke. We sat in our building yesterday and con- gratulated Phillips for winning this week. And he was 7-8! That's like the Lions winning STAFF PICKS WEEK 5 SELECTIONS ALL PICKS MADE AGAINST THE SPREAD. HOME TEAMS IN CAPS. liCiGAN1(-~ ) vs. Purdue Illinois (-4) at INNIANA M#C$IGAN STA T E (-5) vs. Iowa NORTHWESTERN (-12.5) vs. Minnesota O8tO STATE (40) vs, Wisoonsin UCLA (Home) (-11.5) vs. Washington ri# am f a I- A3 at nPnWA S TF Team Michigan Illinois Northwestern Purdue Ohio State Wisconsin Michigan State Iowa Indiana Minnesota Penn State Big Ten 3 0 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 1 1 1 2 1 2 0 3 0 3 Overall 5 1 5 1 4 1 4 1 3 2 4 3 3 1 3 2 1 4 1 4 0 4 Raphael Arun Jeff Jon Goodstein Gopal Phillips Schwartz Illinois llinois llinois Illinois Northwestern Northwestern Northwestern Northwestern Wisconsin Qhio Stat icoshOioSae Washington UCLA Washington Washington Floridla Sit lrd tt Mi mi *4>a F4rd Sa THIS WEEKEND'S RESULTS Michigan 24, Purdue 10 MICHIGAN STATE 31, Iowa 28 ILLINOIS 35, INDIANA 14 NORTHWESTERN 23, MINNESOTA 17 WisCONSIN 20, Ohio State 17 i I