Monday September 23, 2002 dir l t~jigau &iiI SPOTS"'DA Vol. CXII, No. 15 SECTION B - - - - - - - --------------------------- - i S ;: i i! A i;: i i ;; 1 MICHIGAN 10, A 7 nnecessari roug Blue unimpressive N in marginal victory By Joe Smith Daily Sports Editor Utah coach Ron McBride usually fumes at such a pathetic offensive performance. On Saturday, his offense sput- tered, crashed and burned.as it compiled nine three-and-outs and just 13 yards on the ground. McBride could have been extreme- ly disappointed that his one-dimen- sional Utes didn't crack the 100-yard total offense mark in the first half, or that they didn't cross midfield until midway through the fourth quarter. But on Saturday, such a dismal performance by the Utes was nearly enough to beat No. 14 Michigan at the Big House, as the Wolverines squeaked past Utah, 10-7. After the game, Michigan players said they felt a huge sigh of relief and were "glad it was over," while the Utes said they wondered why everyone makes a huge fuss over the Wolverines. "We didn't come here to play them close, or to gain respect," McBride said. "We came to win, and anything other than that is not acceptable. Period." Said Utah running back J.R. Per- oulis: "You know what, they're a great team, but out on the field I don't think there as good as people said they were. All you hear is Michigan this, and Michigan that, but we played them tight. They have better athletes, but as a whole I don't think they lived up to the hype." Utah's lone drive past midfield resulted in its only touchdown - a 29-yard reception by Travis LaTan- dresse. The Utes had a chance to win when they got the ball back with under two minutes left. But they self-destructed, getting called for two holding penalties before quarterback Lance Rice threw a fourth-down interception near mid- field to end any hopes of an upset. After the game, Utah defensive end Jason Kaufusi - an All-Amer- ica candidate who reminds team- mates of former Ute and current Detroit Lion Luther Elliss - deliv- ered an emotional and biting speech to his teammates in the lockerroom, mostly about Utah's offense leaving its defense on the field for more than 70 plays and giving them just seven points to show for it. "We can't keep doing this to our- selves," Kaufusi yelled. "I'm get- ting sick and tired of it." Peroulis agreed: "He's right. We have to complement our offense. You can't ask for more from our defense than giving up just 10 points to Michigan, and we didn't do our job." But according to Michigan coach Lloyd Carr, the Wolverines' "new" offense also didn't do its job. Despite rushing for 175 yards against the third best rushing defense in the nation, Michigan had a horrendous, 5-of-19 conversion rate on 3rd down and the Wolver- ines couldn't cash in when they- were in the red zone. Michigan's average starting field position was at its own 39, but on 10 different occasions the Wolverines found themselves watching drives past midfield stall from either penalties, poor throws by John Navarre, botched catches from receivers or a costly Chris Perry fumble. "When you get the ball 1 st and goal at the 2-yard line, that's got to be a touchdown," Carr said. Safety Julius Curry started the drive in question with one of his two interceptions on the day and ran it back to the Utah 15-yard line. After the drive sputtered, kiclker Phil Brabbs lined up for an appar- ent chip shot. But instead, Brabbs took a handoff from Navarre and See UTES, Page 4B ~. U DANNY MOLOSHOK/Daily Michigan strong safety Julius Curry (26) interceptsa pass from Lance Rice on the Utes' final drive of the game. Curry finished the game with two interceptions, leading a strong performance by the Michigan defense. Sloppy win a big loss for M reputation Saturday night, a friend of mine unknowingly summarized the Michigan-Utah game: "John Navarre lost the game for us ... Oh, wait, we didn't lose." It was a telling statement. Michigan players talked after the game about how they were just glad to put another r} game in the win column. They were happy to dismiss their sloppy performance K - against an inferior team with a predictable "a win is a win" J. BRADY attitude. . MCCOLLOUGH But Saturday's 10-7 nail- biting "win" over Utah All about should not be considered the cause anything but a loss. This game was supposed to be Michigan's chance to prove that its loss to Notre Dame last week, characterized by undisciplined mistakes, was an aberration. "I think that we have a point to prove because that team you saw (against Notre Dame) was not us," said captain Bennie Joppru last Monday. "We are not a mistake-prone team." But the only thing the Wolverines showed against Utah was that they might even be more mistake-prone than they were against the Irish. Michigan drove into Utah territory 10 times and came away with just two scores because of things such as penalties, two missed field goals and an inexplicable fumble on the goalline by running back Chris Perry.; Apparently, mistakes have become a vital part of the equation for this 3-1 Michigan team. "You're going to have mistakes in a game, it's just sometimes they're costly and sometimes they're not," running back Tim Bracken said. Has Michigan become so conditioned by its recent mediocrity that it no longer strives for perfection and just hopes its inevitable mistakes won't lose the game? Offensive coordinator Terry Malone tabbed the problem "a lack of execution." He's right. There was no execution on offense. But he left out the lack of discipline that has become a recurring theme for Michigan over the past few years. Let's take a look at a few choice selections from Michigan's losses from the last two seasons - of course, I'm going to include Utah. Nov. 3, 2001 at Michigan State, with Michigan rolling through the Big Ten with a 4-0 record and No. 4 ranking in the Bowl Championship Series, is an obvious place to start. With the Wolverines leading 24-20 with less than a minute to play, Michigan cor- nerback Jeremy LeSueur grabbed receiver Charles Rogers by his facemask and threw him out of bounds away from the play - a fourth-and-16 incomplete pass that should have ended the game. LeSueur went out of his way to draw a penalty, putting his own per- sonal battle with Rogers above the team. Against Washington in Seattle on Sept. 8 of last season, Michigan was ahead 12-6 in the fourth quar- ter, until Washington's Omare Lowe blocked a 33- yard field goal attempt that would have put Michigan ahead by two scores. The Wolverines lost their momentum and the game, 23-18. And what about last week's holding penalty in the end zone by offensive tackle Courtney Morgan that gave the Irish the two points they needed to beat See McCOLLOUGH, Page 4B TOM FELDKAMP/Daily Michigan kicker Phillip Brabbs missed two of his three field goals Saturday. Wolverines foiled by late Penn State goal Extra frame friendly to stickers at Ocker By Gennaro Filice Daily Sports Writer Playing on the Varsity Soccer Field for the first time this year, the men's soccer team fought through an overcast sky, winds and frigid temperature, but couldn't weather the storm of Penn State (0-1 Big Ten, 5-3 overall). T h e Wolverines PENN STATE 1 (2-3-1, 0-1) opened up M MICHIGAN 0 the Big Ten season yesterday with a contest against the Nittany Lions, but the out- come was a heartbreaking 1-0 loss. Trn the '73rd minite of the ame. gan by surprise. "We weren't expecting (the shot)," sophomore forward Mychal Turpin said. "That shot is some- thing you sometimes give them because you don't want them to be inside your box." Treschuk's score came at a time when the Wolverines felt they were in command of the match. "The whole game was back and forth,"-Turpin said. "We started to control the game a little bit in the sec- ond half, but they got a lucky bounce at the top of the box, and the guy hit a nice shot to the low corner." Although the game featured just one goal, there was no lack of excitement. There were many stir- By Brian Steere Daily Sports Writer Whether it's blowouts or nail- biters, the No. 3 Michigan field hockey team keeps finding different and improbable ways to win. After routing Temple 8-0 on Sat- urday, Michigan (7-1) needed over- time yesterday to rally and defeat No. 12 Northeast- NORTHEASTERN 1 ern (5-1, 2- 1) under A MICHIGAN 2 wet and windy conditions at Ocker Field. Jessica Blake tied the game in the final minute of regulation and Stephanie Johnson scored the Michigan coach Marcia Pankratz said. "They overcame a ton of adversity in many directions. I was really proud that they stayed poised and focused and always felt like they were still in it." Despite 10 penalty corners throughout the game, Michigan was unable to convert on any of them until Johnson came through in the clutch. Benefiting from a perfect set by Lori Hillman, the junior co-captain broke right with the ball and sent a blistering shot past Huskies' goalkeeper Emily Roy. "I think we were just sick of playing by that point," Johnson said with a laugh. "I think our timing - ~ A I