4B - The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - November 26, 2001 0 OHIO STATE 26, MICHIGAN 20 / \ A { A! 11TAT AT AI\ 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 OSu 11 50/137 118 68 255 38 11/18/1 11/37.5 1/0 9/66 33:51 MICH 18 35/117 206 82 323 51 21/47/4 7/41.1 2/1 6/30 26:09 Rookie coach takes Big House by storm O H IO S TAT E PASSING Player Krenzel Totals RUSHING Player Wells Ross Martin Team Krenzel Totals RECEIVING Player Sanders Martin Hartsock Jenkins Gamble Vance Ross Totals C-A 11-18 11-18 Yds TD 118 O 118 0 Att 25 16 6 1 2 50 No. 3 3 1 11 Yds 129 9 5 -2 -4 164 Yds 38 23 18 14 12 10 3 118 Avg 5.2 0.6 0.8 -2.0 -2.0 2.7 Avg 12.7 7.7 18.0 14.0 12.0 10.0 3.0 10.7 Lg 46 6 5 0 0 46 Lg 17 10 18 14 12 10 3 18 Int 1 TD 3 0 O 0 0 3 TD 0 0 0 0 O 0 0 0 By Jeff Phillips Daily Sports Editor On Jan. 18 at a home basketball game against Michigan, Ohio State coach Jim Tressel told the Buckeyes' fans that they would be proud of their football team when it faced Michigan in Ann Arbor. After the Buckeyes' 26- 20 victory over the Wolverines on Sat- urday, Ohio State fans are proud of their team as well as their Michigan- slaying coach Tressel. He called his shot and hit it out of the park. "He is no prophet, buthe backed up his words," said Don Bryant, father of Ohio State flanker Ricky Bryant. "That's been a long time coming for the fans at Ohio State, so you've got to love it." While Tressel's choice of words didn't guarantee a victory, the pressure was on him with four losses coming into the Michigan game. "We didn't promise any wins, we promised that you would be proud of us and I think that whether we won this game or not, you would have been proud of us," Tressel said after the game. In a one-game season, Ohio State shocked the second-largest crowd in Michigan history by flying out to a 23- 0 lead at halftime. They played with passion that would make any Buck- eyes' fan proud. Ohio State running back Jonathan Wells ran as if he had a chip on his shoulder. Wells and his offensive line put the Michigan defense into submis- sion by running for 122 yards and three touchdowns, all in the first half. Wells simply outran the Wolverines' defense on two breakaway runs, where he had been caught from behind in previous games. "I give credit in the offensive line and my confidence grew with every carry and I just wanted to go out there and help my team," Wells said. The Buckeyes' vigor was unmatched by the favorite Michigan. It had been 14 years since the last time Ohio State had defeated the Wolver- ines at home. The team's play was surprising to nearly everyone - except of course, Tressel. "We did the things we needed to do today to win and it just happened to be against Michigan," Tressel said. The business-like manner with which Tressel has handled the Michi- gan game made it unclear as to just how much the victory meant to Ohio State. But for anyone who stayed to watch the Buckeyes' post-game cele- bration, it was obvious. Chants of "Tressel! Tressel!" filled Michigan Stadium as players danced on the field took turns carrying the Ohio State flag. The Buckeyes attempted to jump into the stands a la the Green Bay Packers' "Lambeau Leap," but were pulled down by Michigan Stadium security. Some fans PUNTING Player Groom Team Totals KICKOFF RETURNS Player No. Hall 1 Childress 1 Total 2 PUNT RETURNS Player No. Vance 3 Totals 3 DEFENSE Player Cooper Anderson Ross Wilhelm Smith Grant Doss Bullard Cheatwood Fox Collins Nickey McNutt Jacobs Reynolds Peterson Allen No. Yds Avg Lg 10 413 41.3 66 1 0 0 0 11 413 37.5 66 Yds 27 3 30 Yds 8 8 Solo 8 8 7 6 5 4 2 2 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 Yds 71 4 0 O 0 0 75 Avg Lg 27.0 27 3.0 3 15.0 27 Avg Lg 2.7 4 2.7 4 Asst l 0 1 0 0 O 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 TD O 0 0 TD O O Tot 8 8 7 7 5 4 4 2 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 TD O ~ O O O ro 0. 0 0 DANNY MOLOSHOK/Daily Ohio State coach Jim Tressel celebrates with one of his players following Saturday's 26-20 win over Michigan. even rushed onto the field. The excite- ment of the fans wasn't lost on Tressel. "I don't know how many tickets we had, but I think they did a tremendous job," Tressel said. With the win, Tressel did what even Ohio State coaching legend Woody Hayes couldn't do by defeating Michi- gan in his first attempt. It remains to be seen whether Tres- sel's legend will go the way of former head coach John Cooper or the way of Hayes and Earl Bruce, but the win is one that Ohio State fans will enjoy for the next 362 days and beyond. Michigan's second half still chock-full of errors PASS DEFENSE Player Doss Anderson Fox Ross Grant Cheatwood Totals Int 2 1 0 0 0 4 Lng 36 4 O 0 36 Brk-up 2 1 1 7 c c c c c c By Jon Schwartz Daily Sports Editor M I C H I G A N PASSING Player Navarre Totals aRUSHING Player Askew Perry Bell Navarre Gonzales Team Totals RECEIVING Player Walker Bell Bellamy Seymour Butler Askew Totals C-A 21/47 21/47 Att 6 17 2 8 1 1 35 No. 15 2 1 Yds 53 46 21 12 1 -16 117 Yds 160 17 19 5 5 0 206 No. 7 7 Yds 206 206 Avg 8.8 2.7 10.5 1.5 1.0 -16.0 3.3 Avg 10.7 8.5 19.0 5.0 5.0 0.0 9.8 Yds 288 288 TD 2 2 Lg 30 7 16 14 0 30 Lg 47 9 19 5 5 47 Int 4 4 TD 0 1 0 0 O O O 2 0 0 0 0 0 2 PUNTING Player Epstein Totals KICKOFF RETURNS Player No. Howard 2 Totals 2 PUNT RETURNS Player No. Walker 4. Jordan 1 Totals 5 DEFENSE Player Hobson Brackins Foote Drake June Heuer Howard Bowman Lazarus LeSueur Williams Shaw Spytek Orr Diggs Goodwin Rumishek Frysinger Askew Navarre Dubuc Combs Jordan Avg Lg 41.1 51 41.1 51 Don't call it a comeback. Because it didn't happen. The Wolverines were looking to make his- tory. They'd never come back from 23 down at halftime. Let alone against Ohio State. This week, many Michigan players and fans will look to the second half of Satur- day's game and claim that Michigan blew its chance for the win by FOOTBALL getting down 23. While Notebook that's true, there was still a lot to be desired from Michigan's sec- ond-half performance. Despite a final score of 26-20 (a 20-3 Michigan advantage in the second half,) the Wolverines had many problems executing when the game was still in reach. There was Marquise Walker's inexplicable drop in the endzone. Down 23-7 late in the third, quarterback John Navarre threw from the 10-yard line. The ball hit Walker in the chest but bounced off. On the next play, Hayden Epstein missed a 27-yard field goal. For the half, Michigan was just 3-5 from the red zone. Clawing back, that will rarely cut it. "We did a great job in the second half of executing, but we weren't perfect," said tail- back Chris Perry. "You're never going be perfect, but in that case, we needed to be perfect and we didn't do that." Much of Michigan's second-half advan- tage was due to a conservative style of play by Ohio State. The Buckeyes played the half not to lose, which was good enough, consid- ering the lead. The offense couldn't get any- thing going - due, in part, to an injury to running back Jonathan Wells - but the defense made the stops when it had to, inter- cepting two more Navarre passes. "In the second half," said receiver Ronald Bellamy, "we said we wanted to play togeth- er, to make some plays, to get back to the game because we knew we would get the ball back. In the second half, we fought hard, but give credit to O-State. They fought hard, too. "Execution. That's what it comes down to. Whoever executes the plays wins. They exe- cuted more plays than we did." "We came out here today and we played a great team like Michigan and you know that no matter what happened in the first half, we knew we had to come out here and play a good second half of football because it's always a game in the end," said Ohio State quarterback Craig Krenzel. OPPORTUNITY BLOCKED: Michigan has worked this year to dispel the notion that blocked punts are noteworthy occurrences. Seven times this season, the Michigan punt- rush team has gotten a hand in front of a punted ball, often resulting in a momentum surge for the Wolverines. So Saturday afternoon, when Michigan didn't block Ohio State's punt with 20 sec- onds left in the game, it was understandable to see many disappointed Michiganfans, people who have forgotten over the course of the season how tough it is to get a block. Anthony Jordan did get one block for the Wolverines in the fourth quarter, which led to a touchdown. But he knew that his efforts weren't good enough. "I'm really disappointed that we couldn't get the last one," Jordan said. "The first one was good but one of the last ones could have really helped dig us out of the whole." While Walker has been one of the Wolverines' stars on the punt rush, he spent the entire game returning the kicks. "I'm not surprised because Marquise is a guy that can do a lot of things once he gets the ball," Jordan said. "Since we were rush- ing 10 people, we needed someone back there who could try to get at least some pos- itive yards back there. "We did talk about bringing him up and rushing 11, we just felt it was best because we have a lot of other guys who have blocked punts this year. We feel that we have a good punt rush team, with him back there also." CENTRAL FLORIDA, HERE THEY COME: With the loss, Illinois clinched the Big Ten cham- pionship outright, and will receive the con- ference's BCS berth. By beating Ohio State, Michigan would have tied for the title and gone to either the Sugar, Fiesta or Orange Bowl. The Wolverines will probably head to either the Outback or Citrus bowl, both of which are on Jan. 1, 2002. While Michigan is the Big Ten's No. 2 team, which should send it to Orlando for the Citrus Bowl, the Wolverines were there last year, and twice in the last three years. Therefore, they might head to Tampa for the Outback Bowl. "We're still going to go to a bowl game, we still have to practice, we still have to play," said offensive lineman Tony Pape. "It's a tough loss, but you've just got to move on." Yds Avg Lg 34 17.0 17 34 17.0 17 TD TO O O 0 0 Yds 5 12 17 Solo 9 6 7 7 6 4 3 3 2 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 Yds 0 0 Avg 1.3 12.0 3.4 Lg 5 12 12 Asst 1 4 0 O 1 0 0 0 O 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Tot 10 10 8 7 7 4 3 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 d dsRgsRsIEd MsRSTALL/Daily Brandon Lloyd couldn't get past Michigan's defense, but he helped lead Illinois to a Big Ten championship. PASS DEFENSE Player Howard June Int 1 0 Lg O 0 Brk-up 2 1 TD O 0 GOPAL Continued from Page 11B Fighting Illini, 45-20, on Sept. 29 in the Big Ten opener for both teams. As if on cue, Michigan proceeded to lose to. Michigan State and Ohio State, while Illinois managed to win the rest of its games. So Illinois gets to go to the BCS and Michigan gets to go to a meaningless bowl game in Florida against some mediocre team from the SEC. Seeing a Michigan victim backdoor its way to a Big Ten title three years ago had to be bad enough for Michigan fans. But to have this happen three times in four years is probably more than the average Michigan fan can (or should) take. To top things off, last year, Michigan thoroughly dominated Pur- due before collapsing in the second half - the Boilermakers escaped with a 32-31 victory and ended up going to the Rose Bowl. It's one thing to lose out to a clearly superior team (the 1998 loss to Ohio State is a great example). In that situation, you can't really have any regrets - the better team won, and there's nothing more to say about it. On the flip side, having to watch a team that you have already defeated reap the benefits of your misfortune has to be one of the most aggravating scenarios in sports, but it's something that Michigan will have to deal with again this season. While the Fighting Illini play against a high-profile opponent in either the Orange, Sugar or Fiesta Bowl, Michi- Let's do the time warp Before Saturday, Ohio State hadn't come to Ann Arbor and beaten Michigan since 1987. Here's what's changed since then: Then Now PLAYERS OF THE GAME: unso~M : i me Bush is V.P. New Coke M. Jackson: "Bad" Beverly Hills Cop II Joe Montana "Livin' on a Prayer" B. Knight: national cha Miami (Fla.) is No. 1 McGwire: Top rookie Metal Gear Bush is President Code Red M. Jackson: "Invincible" Scary Movie 2 Jeff Garcia "Livin' it Up" imp B. Knight: Texan Miami (Fla.) is No. 1 McGwire: Retired Metal Gear Solid 2 tl > 1? ~ ~~L~W ~1.0