0 0 -S6 0 8B - The Michigan Daily - FOOTBALL SATURDAY - October 26, 2002 The Michigan Daily -FooTm Game will keep scoret By David Horn Daily Sports Editor You heard it here first: Points will be scored in Saturday's game between Michigan and Iowa. Tell all your friends. When quarterback Brad Banks and the Iowa offense - which is good enough to be the 1 th-ranked scoring offense in the nation, averaging 38 points per game - come to the Big House, the Michigan defense will have its hands absolutely full. They can beat you on the ground: Tailback Fred Russell has chalked up 897 yards already this season, and Banks' 206 yards (4.6 per carry) give him a McNabbian dimension. The Hawkeyes can beat you in the air: Banks has thrown for 1,575 yards, which while not impressive itself, is made extraordinarily impressive when you consider that he has thrown more touchdowns this season (15) than any other passer in the Big Ten, that he aver- ages more than nine yards per pass, and that his interception total (four) and ten- dency to avoid the rush (Banks has been sacked just four times) gives him the fourth-highest quarterback rating in the country. And the Hawkeyes can especially beat you in a close game: Iowa's kicker Nate Kaeding has been a perfect 15-of- 15 on field goals and leads the nation in scoring with 80 points. "You're definitely aware if you have mobile quarterback back there, particu- larly for the defensive ends making sure they don't widen the rush pass lane or rush lane, maybe contain them a little bit more," Michigan defensive lineman Shawn Lazarus said. The Michigan defense has been spot- )oard busy ty this season. Its success has come in its ability to shut down the run, but that trait has been missing when the Wolver- ines have faced mobile quarterbacks like Banks. Notre Dame's Carlyle Holi- day and Purdue's Brandon Kirsch both brought a dimension of versatility to the game that complicated Michigan's defensive schemes. Expect to see scoring on the other side of the football as well. Iowa's sec- ondary is undoubtedly the weakest link in the Hawkeye chain, and Michigan quarterback John Navarre has been pos- itively dangerous in the pocket. Iowa is allowing more than 320 yards per game in the air, and Navarre's ability to pick apart coverage seems to be getting bet- ter with each passing week. But Michi- gan will probably have little luck running the ball to keep the Iowa defense honest; the Hawkeyes rank sec- ond in the country in run defense, hold- ing opponents to less than 70 yards per game on the ground. "They have a dangerous offense," Navarre said. "Both teams are going to try to keep the other offense off the field. If we possess the ball and keep their offense off the field, we're going to have a chance. If we do get in a scor- ing battle, we have confidence that we will be able to give ourselves a chance and be there until the end." Both teams, then, will be firing out of their well-stocked arsenals on what is forecasted to be a sunny October Saturday. An offensive shootout favors neither team, but a close shootout - a close anything - favors Iowa and its reliable kicker. No matter what, expect to see some action on the scoreboard. PROCRASTINATION STATION IOWA MICHIGAN 28 14 AP PHOTO Iowa's Fred Russell has come out of nowhere to earn the starting running back position for the Hawkeyes this season and gain nearly 900 yards. U U 'Ubd dill, Bookstore Before every football game this season, two of the Daily football writers will take the weekend's matchup to the PlayStation 2. For this week's matchup, coach Jeff Phillips led the Hawkeyes and J. Brady McCollough took the helm for the Wolverines. Play of the game - With the Hawkeyes' leading 21-14, Michigan was driv- ing with less than two minutes to play. After a bruising run by RB No. 23, coach McCollough rolled the dice and called a deep route intended for WR No. 9. QB No. 16 greatly underthrew the fly pattern, and Iowa FS No. 25 picked the ball off to seal the deal for low a. Most unrealistic play of the game - With Michigan driving at the end of the first half down 14-7, the Hawkeyes' defense forced a field goal attempt for the Wolverines with just seconds left in the half. Michigan K No. 34 yanked the kick wide left into 30 mph winds. Player of the game - Iowa QB No. 7 - The option absolutely decimated the Michigan defense. QB No. 7 weaved in and out of the Wolverines all day long, and when they stacked the line, he hit them hard over the top. Michigan key stats Passing: QB No. 16 - 8-20, 188 yards, 1 TD, 2 INT Rushing: RB No. 23 - 13 carries, 87 yards; RB No. 41- 1 carry, 6 yards, 1 TD Receiving: TE No. 83 - 2 receptions, 69 yards; WR No. 9 - 2 receptions, 75 yards; RB No. 23 -1 reception, 17 yards, 1 TD Defense: LB No. 37 - 7 tackles, 1 sack, 3 tackles for loss Iowa key stats Passing: QB No. 7 - 6-10, 140 yards, 2 TD Rushing: RB No. 34 - 15 carries, 77 yards, 1 TD; QB No. 7 - 21 carries, 141 yards, 1 TD Receiving: TE No. 44 - 4 receptions, 96 yards, 2 TDs; WR No. 9 - 2 recep- tions, 44 yards Defense: DT No. 94 - 3 tackles, 1 tackles for loss, 1 sack; FS NO. 25 -1 interception; CB No. 36 - 1 interception PRESS CONFERENC E QUOTES: Michigan head coach J. Brady McCollough: I'm tired of these neutral sites for crying out loud. Coach Smith, my usual opponent, needs to set hisass in gear and buy me a PlayStation2 since he took that spot outside Schem- bechler Hall for the second straight season. On a football note, Iowa QB No. 7 made my defense his !@#$%. The guy was absolutely unstoppable, except for when he came in contact with LB No. 37, who played his best game since he's been at Michigan. QB No. 7 is a Heisman Trophy candidate, at least with coach Phillips in control. Speaking of coach Phillips, he called a good game. He forced me to go to a goal line defense to shut down his option, and like any coach with some sense, he hit my defense over the top time and time again. Phillips also avoided my wrath in our rematch by kneeling the ball with a few seconds left and a chance to really embarrass me in front of the home crowd. I shouldn't want his pity, but I definitely begged for it. That's just the kind of day it was. RB No. 23 played a tremendous game for us. He played his best game since he has been at Michigan. Every one played their best game since they'ye been at Michigan except for QB No. 16, who really let us down in the final two minutes.-hat's allI have to say about that. Iowa head coach Jeff Phillips: This was David vs. Goliath - except this time, Goliath won! Coach McCollough called me out and I responded as expected, by winning. The transition to the PlayStation2 was tricky at first, with QB No. 7 running down the sideline then inexplicably gunning the ball into the Michigan bench. RB No. 34 tried pitching the ball back to QB No. 7 and refused to juke right. In the end, playing on a PlayStation2 was like riding a big wheel in a bike with training wheels world. I was warned by Coach McCollough not to punch it in, because if I did, the next time we played "could et ugly." To that I say, "Meh." If I wanted to fake spike it for the fans, I would ye. I knew if I just let Michigan QB No. 16 keep passing, it would pay off. My sec- ondary was toying with him all day. A 50-yard pass here, a 10-yard run there - it doesn't matter when you throw two picks with the game on the line. Is there a more unstoppable force in the history of forces than QB No. 7? The answer is yes. But he moved the ball with ease and could run the option when there were 10 guys in the box. He didn't fumble despite Coach McCollough's pleading.rI was a bit worried when QB No. 7 injured himself during aupregame scrimmage, but he came back with a vengeance during the game and showed no ill-effects. D-LINE Continued from Page 36 the Wolverines had a rough time con- taining Notre Dame quarterback Car- lyle Holiday as well as Purdue's Brandon Kirsch - who rushed 15 times for 81 yards last Saturday. But the Wolverines will have two of their main cogs on the defensive line back to help chase down the pesky Hawkeyes. Both Orr, who returned to action last week after missing two games with an undisclosed knee injury, and defensive tackle Norman Heuer are expected to play together for the first time since Sept. 2 1. The presence of both lineman should give the Wolverines' defensive line more confi- dence, and help them put more pres- sure on Banks and Co. Just 13 of Michigan's 27 sacks this year have come from its front four, as the Wolverines have relied on several stunts and safety blitzes. "You know those guys are going to do their thing and know you won't have to make all the plays," said Rumishek. "Because the past couple of games you almost had to play cautious and feel like you couldn't screw up or you'd put a lot of stress on the rest of the defense." Overall record (Best bets) 52-51-2 (2-5) 55-48-2 (3-4) 55-4 Varsity to prevail in a Close one By Jeff Phillips Daily Sports Editor A Michigan Tradition Since 1934 The Big Ten title could be decided this week. The winner of the Michi- gan-Iowa game will be a favorite to represent the conference in Pasade- na. A loss for either team will be demoralizing and the winner will be catapulted into the ranks of the nation's elite. The teams are evenly matched, and the game will come down to the wire. With both teams possessing potent passing attacks and ineffective passing defenses, there will be plenty of points scored. MICHIGAN RUSHING OFFENSE VS. IOWA RUSHING DEFENSE: Chris Perry is not 100 percent and B.J. Askew was ineffective against Purdue. That isn't good news for Michigan as it is facing an Iowa defense that allows just 68 yards per game on the ground and just 2.2 yards per rush. If Michigan has any chance at moving the ball on the ground, it will need the offensive line to play its best game of the season thus far. Which isn't to say that the offensive hasn't played well, but this is the most formidable line it has faced or likely will face this season. Edge: Iowa Since Michigan has potent weapons in Braylon Edwards and company and a constantly improving quarterback in John Navarre, you can bet that the Wolverines are lick- ing their chops for Saturday's game. Edge: Michigan STAFF PICKS WEEK 6 SEECIONS ALL PICKS MADE AGAINST THE SPREAD. HOME TEAMS IN SMALL CAPS. David Horn IOWA RUSHING OFFENSE VS. MICHI- GAN RUSHING DEFENSE: While not quite as good as Iowa's rushing defense, Michigan has a strong unit of its own. The Hawkeyes have quite the little running game with the minute Fred Russell handling the duties, but the Wolverines have the best defensive line that Iowa has seen this season and it will show on Saturday. The Wolverines expect Norman Heuer to rejoin the team, providing the line with even more depth. In short, Iowa is talented, but so is Michigan's line. Edge: Michigan .:.. MicuaAN(-3.) v. loa lwa owa ILLINoIS (-9) vs. Indiana Illinois Indiana 0HK0 STATE (-4.5) v& Perm State Ohio $tate 'Oho State 11 FLORIDA STATE (-9.5) vs. Notre Dame Florida State Notre Dame Not M.iam (a.) (4.5) .t.West.Virgini .M:am (Fla:) Miami (;.).W Louisiana State (-3.5) at AUBURN Louisiana State Louisiana State OLO:A:. (&) VS. Texas I... C61.. ado C.i:r:d. C TEXAS A&M (-5) vs. Nebraska Texas A&M Nebraska Te> Soiuthern CaL (4) atORGQO Sotthem CeI. Oren. ( TEXAs (-13) vs. IowA STATE Iowa State Iowa State lov GeorgI ' (-n) at KENTU K Georga Georg.< K' OREGON STATE (-5.5) vs. California California California C TENrs~sEE (-2) vs. Aabam Thnnessee AMabama Tel ARIZONA STATE (-3.5) vs. Washington Washington Arizona State Arizi Washington State (-11) atARIZA Wasingtn~ State Washirngton State 'Washi Best bet Georgia California C Record last week (Best bets) 8-7 (0-1) 8-7 (0-1) 7- J. Brady Jeff McCollough Philli SPECIAL TEAMS: Iowa's Nate Kaed- ing has made 15-of-15 field goal attempts this season. Michigan, as a team, has attempted 14 field goals, just one fewer than Kaeding. So real- ly on paper, this matchup is even. Both teams have potential game- breaking punt- and kick-returning threats. But the Hawkeyes get the edge in this matchup with one more field goal attempt. Edge: Iowa Michigan's John Navarre will likely stay Michigan here - the Wolverines will just have to limit how badly Banks hurts them. Edge: Iowa . pie" +ยง ls pe(( r, 418 Football Season is here. Stock up on your Maize & Blue!! Click and Shop @ www.ulrichs.com or for a Free Catalog (800) 288-5497 INTANGIBLES: The Big House has been good to Michigan this season. Not just good -very good. The Wolverines have found a way to win every close game at home this sea- son and there is no reason to doubt them now. Edge: Michigan i " OO OS NONO 0 p00 ,,_ , ;$: ' t Q MICHIGAN PASSING OFFENSE VS. IOWA PASSING DEFENSE: For as good as Iowa's rushing defense is, its passing defense is bad. Not just bad - it is bad to the XXXtreme (That's right - three X's). The Hawkeyes' are ranked second to last in the nation, just above the WAC's worst in Idaho and just below every other team in Division I-A. IOWA PASSING OFFENSE VS. MICHI- GAN PASSING DEFENSE: Michigan struggles against mobile quarter- backs, especially good mobile quar- terbacks. Banks is a mobile quarterback. He's a good mobile quarterback - one of the most effi- cient in the nation. Got that? Michi- gan will need to contain the explosive Banks in order to avoid another Donovan McNabb-like dis- aster in Michigan Stadium. Banks will get the better of There is little doubt the game will be close and high scoring, but Michigan will prevail with its defense doing just enough to win. Michigan 35, Iowa 34 ::.: , .YC 1119 S. hours: mon-