Wednesday October 16, 2002 SECTION B - - - - - -------------------- III Iiiiii'llilli --- -- ill'i MICHIGAN 27, PENN STATE 24 f 1 ", . weet emotion Paterno's feelings betray him In the post-game press conference on Saturday, JoePa sat, smallish and wrinkly, like a character out of Tolkien, and mumbled inaudibly for two and a half min- utes. His face and his posture betrayedhis sense of defeat; JoePa,tyialfulo piss and vigor, was lifeless. Crit- ics have bellowed for years that the DAVE. jig is up for the HORN venerable 75-year- old. Penn State Tooting though, despite its my own 1-2 Big Ten record, very much deserves to be con- sidered among the top handful of teams in the conference. But to see Paterno -. who in my mind always paced the Penn State sideline with poise and dignity - fall apart emotionally the way he did on Saturday was a telling sign that perhaps old JoePa ain't got it no more. Say what you will about Penn State's record from year to year; nothing is more ominous than a crumbling rock. I lived for a time in central Pennsyl- vania, where "Paterno" is spoken with a reverence otherwise reserved for Jesus Christ. That's not hyperbole. I arrived in central Pennsylvania at age 14 - a believer in neither Joe nor Jesus. I left the area a Jewish believer in Joe. But after Saturday I am tempted to join the critics. Veteran Penn State beat writers say they haven't seen Joe behave the way he did after the game on Saturday in 20 years. Paterno refused to talk to reporters, and prohibited his players and assistant coaches from doing so either. State College's Centre Daily Times' columnist Walt Moody called out Pater- no for his behavior, accusing the coach of hypocrisy, and of setting a bad exam- ple for his players. A loss like the one they suffered on See HORN, Page 4B TONY DING/Daily Michigan captain Jed Ortmeyer tallied two assists in two games this weekend In Buffalo. The Wolverines shutout Niagara, 3-0, and lost to North Dakota, 5-4. M icers lose overtime thriller to North Dakota Michigan coach Lloyd Carr embraces senior wide receiver Ron Bellamy after Michigan's 27-24 overtime victory. Varsity outlasts snakebit Nittany Lions in historic Big House game By Courtney Lewis Daily Sports Writer BUFFALO, N.Y. - With less than two minutes left in overtime of Satur- day's Michigan-North Dakota matchup, North Dakota coach Dean Blais pulled out a pen and piece of NORTH DAKOTA 5 paper. After M trailing by MICHIGAN 4 two goals with five minutes left in the third peri- od, he was content to take the tie and finish the game with an unofficial shootout. But befareBlass could write down the names of his five shooters, junior David Lundbohm corralled a loose puck in Michigan's zone and backhand- ed it underneath Al Montoya's glove- hand to give the Fighting Sioux a 5-4 win and the Punch Imlach College Hockey Showcase championship. Michigan led for most of the third period and seemed to be on its way to extending its record to 2-0, which made the loss more disappointing for the Wolverines. "We have to be better than that," freshman Jeff Tambellini said. "To have a 4-2 lead with five minutes to go in the game, it's unacceptable to ever lose a lead like that. Especially in such a big game like this." Michigan beat Niagara 3-0 on Fri- day, but the loss to then-No. 13 North Dakota dropped Michigan three spots to No. 6 in the USCHO poll. After North Dakota's Nick Fuher opened the scoring halfway through the first period, Michigan sophomore Eric Nystrom sent a slapper past goalie Josh Siembida. The Wolverines didn't trail again until Lundbohm's overtime goal. Nystrom then helped give Michigan its first lead with just over 30 seconds left in the first period. On a three-on- two break with Charlie Henderson and David Moss, Nystrom took the puck on the right wing, pulled up as the defense went by, and sent a cross-ice pass to Moss, who wristed it in. With the score again tied late in the rsecond period, Mark Mink netted his second goal of the weekend thanks to a heads-up pass by Montoya to Michael Woodford atcenter ice. Woodford tquickly dished it to Mink, who beat Siembida stick side to put the Wolver- ines up 3-2. They held that lead until 15:02 of the third, when Tambellini banged one past Siembida. Nystrom assisted on the play, giving him three points in the game. But instead of deflating North Dako- ta, Michigan's two-goal lead seemed to give the Fighting Sioux life. Zack Parise scored his second of the game 13 seconds after Tambellini's tally, and Brandon Bochenski tied the game with 2:31 to go. Sloppy play in the defensive end hurt - See SIOUX, Page 3B By Jeff Phillips Daily Sports Editor In the first overtime game at Michigan Stadium, in what is quick- ly becoming a theme for the 2002 Michigan defense, the Wolverines again held strong when they needed to, limiting Penn State to a field goal in overtime and giving the offense a chance to win the game - which it did, 27-24 after a three- yard Chris Perry touchdown run. "When the defense held them to a field goal, we knew we had a good chance to win it," quarterback John Navarre said. "We knew what we needed." The win gives Michigan six con- secutive victories in the series and a 7-3 mark overall against Penn State. In overtime, the Wolverines won the toss and elected to defend first. In stopping the potent Nittany Lions' offense, the Michigan defense made two key pass break- ups, one by safety Cato June and the other by cornerback Marlin Jackson. Penn State quarterback Zack Mills forced a pass into the endzone and June nearly ended the Nittany Lions' possession with an intercep- tion. On the next play, Mills attacked Jackson -- who suffered perhaps his worst game at Michigan by giv- ing up 138 yards and a touchdown to Penn State's Bryant Johnson - but this time Jackson made a play to knock the ball out of Johnson's hands in the endzone. Penn State's Robbie Gould, who struggled all day with his kicking, missed a 23-yard chipshot, but was See NITTANY LIONS Page 4B Heuer and Orr back? By Joe Smith Daily Sports Editor Two of Michigan's top defen- sive lineman, Shantee Orr and Norman Heuer, participated in workouts this past week and are expected to play Saturday against Purdue, senior linebacker Emmanuel Casseus told The Michigan Daily. "They're looking really good," Casseus said. "They'll be back this week." Michigan coach Lloyd Carr, per his style, wouldn't confirm the sta- tus of the linemen, but said the two are "very, very close" to returning. Both Heuer and Orr haven't played since getting hurt in Michi- gan's win over Utah on Sept. 21. Orr, a defensive end, hurt his right knee in the first half against the Utes and was helped off the field. Carr admitted a few days after Heuer missed the Illinois' game that the defensive tackle suf- fered an undisclosed injury against Utah as well. The return of both lineman should help the Wolverines com- bat a Purdue offense that has amassed more than 500 yards in its past two games - and raise Michigan's confidence. "You know those guys will do their thing so you won't have to make all the plays," said Michigan defensive end Dan Rumiskek. Punched out Michigan's 5-4 loss to North Dakota in the title game of the Punch Imlach Col- lege Hockey Showcase was not the first time that the Wolverines fell short of winning an early-season championship. - At the 1999 College Hockey Showcase, the Wolverines managed to upset No. 3 Wisconsin, but lost to unranked Minnesota. - In 2000's IceBreaker Cup, Michigan could manage just two ties for third place. - Last year, Michigan defeated No. 6 Providence, but lost to unranked Minneso- ta-Duluth in the title game of the Maverick Stampede. Men's soccer can't seem to fix the Spartans' jinx AP PHOTO Penn State wide receiver Bryant Johnson (right) abused Michigan cornerback Marlin Jackson (left) all afternoon, but not on this play in overtime. Long nights at law firm prepare Adebiyi for grind By Gennaro Filice Daily Sports Writer The match between Michigan and Michigan State included all of the trends which have became staples of the rival-_ ry. There MICHIGAN STATE 2 was an enormous MICHIGAN 1 fan base, as the Wolverines drew their largest home crowd of the year (1,506). The two teams played a very physi- cal game.combining for 40 fouls and four cards. The game was decided in its final minutes. And for the third straight year, Michigan State came out victorious. With a 2-1 victory, Michigan State (2-2 Big Ten, 8-4 overall) remains undefeated against Michi- gan (0-3, 4-6-1) in the three-year turned for Michigan State. For the first goal of the match, Michigan State's Brett Konley snuck behind the Michigan defense and received a wind-guided pass from Jordan Gruber. Konley quick- ly settled the ball and sent a chip shot over the charging Michigan keeper, Joe Zawacki, and into the goal. This goal, at 66:36, surprised the Wolverines, who thought they had control of the game. "After the first goal we were really kind of shocked," sophomore forward Knox Cameron said. "I thought we were dominating them somewhat for most of the game and when they scored that goal, it put us back. I think they just caught us at a point when we were really vulnerable." The first goal bewildered Michi- gan, but the Spartans truly stunned the0 'Unrlv ,rinac . lcethan *lhron ,mm- By Chris Burke Daily Sports Writer There might not be a single player on the Michigan basketball roster as prepared for the strain of a six-month season as Rotolu Adebiyi. That's because the senior tri-captain spent his summer away from the Wolverines, busting his back working for the prestigious law firm of Williams and Connelly in Washington D.C. "I was there from May 20 through August 27, That attitude's something that Michigan coach Tommy Amaker loves to see. But no matter how hard Amaker pushes the Wolverines this year, there's a good chance that Adebiyi will be able to handle it, after filling his months off' from school with a workload more befitting a John Grisham novel than a colle- giate athlete.' "Yeah, I read (The Firm) at the firm. I had to get document production out for one of the attorneys and I wanted to get it done as soon as possible. I got there at 9 a.m. the one day, spent the night there working on this document and left the next day at 7 p.m. I think that week I clocked over 100 hours." While Adebiyi enjoyed his time at the law firm - famous for representing Bill Clinton and Oliver North - the Ann Arbor native is not expecting to finish his final year as a Wolverine and jump right into high-profile attorney work. i