4B - The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - November 5, 2001 MICHIGAN STATE 26, MICHIGAN 24 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 Time of Poss MICH 14 30/121 195 57 316 36 14/27/2 7/37.4 2/0 7/76 23:03 MSU 24 53/169 183 90 352 101 15/37/0 6/39.5 1/1 2/25 36:57 Feeling Blue Michigan players and fans have suffered their fair share of heartbreaking losses in recent history. Here is a list of other games that ended in confusion, meltdown, pandemonium or controversy, like Saturday's loss in East Lansing. Michigan State 28, Michigan 27 (1990): Any Michigan fan will tell you the Wolverines now have two more wins over the Spartans than the record indi- cates. With Michigan State leading 28-21, Derrick Alexander caught a touch- down pass with six seconds remaining. There was no overtime and Gary Moeller was left with a decision: kick the extra point and tie or go for the win with a two point conversion. Moeller went for broke. Elvis Grbac threw a quick slant to Desmond Howard, who was tripped, but still managed to catch the ball. As he crashed into the end zone, the ball popped out and the referees ruled he didn't have possession. There were no flags on the field, only the green and white of Michigan State fans. 0 6 PASSING Player Navarre Totals RUSHING Player Askew Perry Bell Navarre Team Totals RECEIVING Player Walker Gonzales Bellamy Perry Bell Joppru Totals M I C H I G A N C-A Yds TD 14/27 195 3 14/27 195 3 Att 17 9 1 2 1 36 No. 9 14 Yds Avg Ig 84 5.0 16 30 3.3 12 21 21 21 -13 -6.5 0 -1 -1.0 0 63 1.8 14 Yds Avg Lg 150 16.7 38 20 20.0 20 12 12.0 12 9 9.0 9 4 4.0 4 O 0.0 O 195 14.0 38 No. Yds Avg 7 262 37.4 6 250 41.7 Yds Avg Lg 36 18.0 20 64 20.2 33 Int 2 2 TD O O 0 '0 0 1 TO 2 0 0 0 0 3 Colorado 27 Michigan 26 (1996): The game was over. No. 3 Michigan led No. 7 Col- orado 26-21 when the Buf- faloes took possession. They were 85 yards, 15 seconds and a miracle away from a win. After a couple of short passes, Colorado employed its Hail Mary play, "Rocket," from its own 36-yard line. PUNTING Player Epstein Totals KICKOFF RETURNS Player No. Jackson 2 Totals 3 PUNT RETURNS Player No. Walker 4 Totals 4 DEFENSE Player Diggs Drake Orr Hobson June Heuer Foote Jackson Bowman Shaw Manning LeSueur Howard Williams Brackins Rumishek Brackins Goodwin Thompson Nasif Lazarus Pearson Stevens 0 6 Yds 18 18 Solo 6 6 7 5 5 2 4 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 Yds 0 0 0 0 0 O O Avg Lg 4.5 7 4.5 7 Asst 6 6 1 6 0 3 0 2 2 0 0 1 1 1 0 O 0 0 1 Lg 46 50 TO 0 f 0 TD ' O ' O Tot 12 12 8 7 6 5 5 4 4 4 2 2 2 2 2 2 1T 1 1 ip TD 4 O 2 O 1 O 1 O Kordell Stewart rolled out and threw the ball 75 yards to the Michigan goal line. The ball was tipped and floated through the air longer than a Michigan State second. When the ball came down, it was in the hands of Michael West- FILE PHOTO . brook leaving 110,00 fans gasping for air. MARJORIE MARSHALL/Daily Michigan State tailback T.J. Duckett didn't care who was latched onto his body. On Saturday afternoon, he took any would-be defender for a ride, tallying 212 yards on just 27 carries. Duckett makes Michigan's No. 1 rnsn1g defense look sleve-liKe Colorado's Michael Westbrook Purdue 32 Michigan 31(2000): The Wolverines jumped out to a 28-10 half- time lead in West Lafayette behind three Drew Henson touchdown passes. Fans could smell the Roses already. Drew Brees and the Boilermakers cut the lead to 31-29 but it appeared the Wolverines would escape with a win after a- shanked 32-yard field goal by Travis Dorsch with only 2:11 left in the game. But Michigan's offense couldn't get a first down and was forced to punt. Brees led the Boilermakers to the same spot and Dorsch connected from 33 yards away with four seconds left. The loss resulted in another trip to the Cit- rus Bowl for Michigan while the Boilermakers went to the Rose Bowl for the first time since 1966. PASS DEFENSE Player Howard LeSueur Orr Foote Totals Int 0 0 0 0 0 Lg 0 O O 0 Brk-up 4 2 1 1 8 M I C H I G A N S T A T E PASSING Player Smoker Team Totals RUSHING Player Duckett Moss Smoker Totals RECEIVING Player Rogers Haygood Duckett Baker Totals C-A 15-35 O-2 15-37 Yds TO 183 2 0 O 183 2 Att 27 8 18 53 No. 6 4 3 2 15 Yds 211 22 -64 169 Yds 86 63 19 15 183 Avg 7.8, 2.8 -3.6 3.2 Avg 14.3 16.0 6.3 7.5 12.2 Lg 35 12 11 35 Lg 29 19 9 8 29 Int 0 0 TO TD 1 0 1 TO 1 0 1 0 O 2 By Jeff Phillips Daily Sports Editor EAST LANSING - When asked if Saturday's game against Michigan was the best game of his career at any level, Michigan State'running back T.J. Duckett did not hesitate with his answer. "Definitely, I think so. I think I can actually say that," Duckett said. The No. 1 rushing defense in the country faced its toughest challenge of the season last Saturday and failed. It was the first time all season that Michigan did not make a team one-dimensional. Michigan came into the game against Michigan State allowing an average of 54.4 yards per game in its first seven games, but allowed a total 170 yards rushing to the Spartans. The total is by far the most allowed by the season, but it is a bit deceiving since it includes a team- record 12 sacks for 83 yards lost. The Wolverines' defense allowed a 100-yard rusher for the first time this season. Duckett's 212 yards on the ground weren't just the most by one running back this season against Michigan, they were the most by a run- ning back in any Michigan-Michigan State game. "You have to give a lot of credit to the offensive line, the tight ends, our receivers and the way they played, the way they blocked in the running game and then the way T.J. ran," Michigan State coach Bobby Williams said. "He ran like a big-time back today- broke a lot of tackles, showed some speed and really made a lot of plays for us today." Duckett found his groove against Wisconsin a week ago, when he ran for 186 yards and two touchdowns. In addition to his exploits on the ground, Duckett also made three catches including the game-winning touch- down reception as time expired. Defensive tackle Jake Frysinger's absence hurt the Wolverines, but more importantly, the Spartans' offen- sive line forced Michigan's elite linebacker corps to make plays, something that it could not always do. The coaches "called great plays today," Duckett said. They "had us in the right position and the linemen made some great plays." Butkus Award semifinalist Larry Foote had just five tackles, two for a loss. Victor Hobson and Carl Diggs played well and had 19 tackles between them, but most were made five yards past the line of scrimmage. The Spartans could not run between the tackles, so they used the early success of the passing game to spread the field and make the Wolverines commit to the pass. This opened up the field for toss sweeps to Duck- ett, for whom Michigan had no answer. The offensive line "blocked the best that they have in a long, long time and the running lanes were there," Duckett said. The powerful, downhill running style of the 6-foot-1, 250-pound Duckett, who averaged 7.8 yards per carry, was too much for Michigan's linebackers and secondary to handle. He often carried multiple Wolverines for a few extra yards before coming down and rarely could just one defender make the play. Michigan's defensive commitment to the passing game limited the Spartans to just 172 yards through the air, the fewest passing yards allowed by the Wolverines all season. Linemen Shantee Orr and Grant Bowman harassed Michigan State's Jeff Smoker all game. But in the end, it didn't matter for the Wolverines. The defense that had built its reputation on stopping the run was embarrassed by the Spartans and its record-set- ting sack total was overshadowed. Northwestern 54 Michigan 51 (2000): It came down to this: Fourth-and-goal from the Michigan seven-yard line with under two minutes remaining. Zak Kustok threw to a wide open Damien Anderson at the goal line but Anderson dropped the ball. Michigan took over, a first down away from running out the clock. On second down, Anthony Thomas fumbled the ball as he crossed the first down marker. The Wildcats recovered. A couple of plays later, Kustok hit Sam Simmons for a touch- down. The Wolverines botched a last second 57-yard field goal, leaving the A-Train in FILE PHOTO tears and the team's Rose Bowl hopes dashed. A Northwestern's Damien Anderson PUNTING Player Jarrett Totals KICKOFF RETURNS Player No. Haygood 2 Maples 1 Total 3 PUNT RETURNS Player No. Rogers 2 Totals 2 No. Yds Avg Lg 6 237 39.5 53 6 237 39.5 53 DEFENSE Player Thornhill Rasmussen Myers Nelson Wright Flagg Taplin Labinjo Maples Team Askew Bryan Stanley Guess Shaw Baker Moss Fortson Vickerson James Yds 75 * 26 101 Yds 5 5 Solo 4 3 2 3 3 3 2 1 2 0 0 0 0 1 1 Avg Lg 37.5 49 26 26 33.7 49 Avg Lg 2.5 5 2.5 5 Asst l 8 2 3 1 2 3 1 2 2 0 1 0 TO O TD 0 S O Tot 12 5 5 4 4 4 4 4 3 2 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 TD 0 3 SPARTANS Continued from Page 1B Duckett accounting for 29 yards on four carries. Against the nation's top- ranked rushing defense, Duckett rum- bled for 211 yards on 27 carries, and he put Michigan State back in front with a two-yard touchdown run. "Our coaches executed the game plan well, and our offensive line blocked outstanding, the best they've blocked in a long, long time," Duckett said when asked about his success. "The running lanes were there." A 32-yard scoring pass from Navarre to Walker allowed Michigan to take a 17-14 advantage into halftime. Michi- gan State's Dave Raynor kicked a pair of field goals - one in the third quar- ter, one in the fourth - to give the Spartans 20-1.7 lead. That's when the real fun started. With its offense sputtering, Michigan needed a turnover to gain some momentum. As if on cue, the Wolver- ines got a huge break when Smoker fumbled a snap at his own 38-yard line with six minutes to play. Defensive tackle Grant Bowman recovered the fumble, and Michigan went to work. A 21-yard reverse by Calvin Bell put the Wolverines at Michigan State's 17- yard line. Then, on third-and-13, Navarre hit backup quarterback Jer- maine Gonzales - who had entered the game as a fifth wide receiver - with a 20-yard touchdown pass to give Michigan a 24-20 lead with 4:44 to play. The score silenced the crowd at Spar- to PASS DEFENSE Player Bryan Nelson Totals Marquise Walker was the best player on the field in the first half, but disappeared late in the game, dropping key passes that could have preserved a Michigan win. Int 2 0 2 Yds Lng 33 16.5 0 0 33 16.5 Brk-up 0 3 6 .. . . . . . .. . ................... .......--..-- -- - . --. ----.. -----.. PLAYERS OF THE GAME: ...w-waa- m m MARJORIE MARSHALL/Daily The Michigan secondary struggled to contain Michigan State's Charles Rogers who seemed unstoppable at times during the game. SCHWARTZ Continued from Page 1B recognized defense made him look like Eric Dickerson. He was unstop- pable. Throughout the afternoon, Michigan refused to put the game out of reach. The Spartans' secondary was decimat- ed by injuries. In the first half, Michi- gan exploited this, getting the ball to stud receiver Marquise Walker on first and second downs. Where was that in the second half? Michigan seemed locked in a battle against the clock long before that last second. took two seconds to expire. they lost that game? How could they set a new Michigan record with 12 sacks and still give Smoker one last chance? Every Michigan player willing to talk after the game ended pointed out that the team was leaving with its head high. That's admirable. Michigan still leads the Big Ten, and to dwell on this loss would be one of the worst things that the team can do. And maybe Michigan did deserve better - I think it did. I think that with the way things have gone this season, there was no reason to expect this game to go down the way it did. In the first half, Michigan executed beautiful- ly. Who could have thought that the field, thanks to two of Michigan's school-record 12 sacks. Smoker threw" incomplete, but Michigan State caught the first of three enormous breaks when the officials assessed Michigan corner- back Jeremy LeSueur a personal foul for grabbing Rogers' face mask. Given new life, the Spartans advanced inside the red zone, thanks in timeouts. The Spartans frantically ran to the line of scrimmage in an attempt to spike the ball and stop the clock. The clock ticked down to one second and appeared to hold there, which allowed Smoker to spike the ball and gave Michigan State the chance to run one more play. "I don't run the clock - there was ~IE,