0 0 U U ~ 7U V V 6B - The Michigan Daily - FOOTBALL SATURDAY - September 27, 2003 The Michigan Daily - FOOTBALL KEY STATISTICS STAFF PICKS Predictions against the spread for 9/27/03 Indiana at No. 11 MicfUGAN (-34) Ball State at BOSTON COLLEGE (-22) Notre Dame at PURDUE (-10) Louisiana State (-14) at Miss. STATE North Carolina at NORTH CAROLINA STATE (--18) Washington State at OREGON (-4) Iowa (-7) at MICHIGAN STATE Stanford at WASHINGTON (-13.5) Southern Cal. (-13.5) at CALIFORNiA Wisconsin (-2.5) at ILLINOIS Florida (- 95) at KENTUCKY Florida State (-30) at DUKE Tennessee (-16) at SoUTH CAROUNA Missouri (-10) at KANSAS Cincinnati at MIAMI (OHIO) (-7) Minnesota (-2) at PENN STATE Northwestern at OIo STATE (NO LNE) Connecticut at VIRGINIA TECH (NO LINE) Best bet Total season record Courtney Lewis Michigan Boston College Purdue Mississippi State N.C. State Oregon Iowa Washington California Illinois Kentucky Duke Tennessee Missouri Miami (Ohio) Minnesota Ohio State Virginia Tech Iowa 28-26 (2-1) J. Brady McCollough Indiana Ball State Purdue Mississippi State North Carolina Oregon Iowa Stanford Southern Cal. Wisconsin Kentucky Florida State South Carolina Missouri Miami (Ohio) Penn State Ohio State Virginia Tech South Carolina 27-27 (1-2) Kyle O'Neill Michigan Ball State Purdue Louisiana State N.C. State Washington State Iowa Stanford Southern Cal. Wisconsin Florida Florida State South Carolina Missouri Miami (Ohio) Minnesota Northwestern Virginia Tech Florida 28-26 (3-0) Naweed Sikora Michigan Boston College Purdue Louisiana State North Carolina Oregon Iowa Washington California Wisconsin Kentucky Florida State South Carolina Kansas Miami (Ohio) Minnesota Ohio State Virginia Tech Miami (Ohio) 26-28 (1-2) Faz Hussain, owner of Hello Faz Pizza Michigan Ball State Notre Dame Louisiana State North Carolina Oregon Iowa Washington Southern Cal. Wisconsin Florida Florida State South Carolina Missouri Miami (Ohio) Minnesota Ohio State Virginia Tech Iowa 22-32 (1-2) IND 18.5 i 143.5 205.5 72.5 349 109.5 3 58/112/2 1.75/1.25 5 6.25/52.75 29:20 Season Averages First Downs Rushing Yards Passing Yards Offensive Plays Total Offense Return Yards Comp/Att/Int ! Fumbles/Lost Penalties/Yards 5 Time of Poss MICH 24.25 229.75 257 79 486.75 108.5 81/146/ 1.75/1 .25/44.7 31:28 M I C H I G A N A NEW SHOW AFTERA DISAPPOINTING LOSS TO OREGON, MICH NOW DOWN TO WHAT IT CAN ACCOMPLISH IN By Kyle O'Neill Daily Sports Editor PASSING Player Navarre RUSHING Player Perry Underwood Rembert J. Jackson RECEIVING Player Edwards Avant Perry Breaston PUNTING Player Finley Spencer C-A Yds TD int 74-139 381 7 3 Att 91 31 12 10 No. 26 12 12 10 Yds Avg 575 6.3 193 6.2 52 4.3 86 8.6 Yds Avg 326 12.5 177 14.8 81 6.8 181 18.1 No. Yds 15 577 1 45 Lg 63 35 18 41 Lg 48 31 17 36 TD 7 2 3 O TD 3 1 1 2 Avg Lg 38.5 50 45 45 I Hello fans! Pizza Most of you have probably seen the famous Faz around campus. In fact, he's probably said hello to most of you. But how much do you really know about the man who considers himself the luckiest per- son in the world? Faz was born in India inside a famous museum where his grand- father was the curator. There he lived for eight years, before his family moved. In 1966, at the age of 14, Faz moved with his parents to Ypsilanti, where he attended man tries his luck high school, college and began his pizza business. Hello Faz has been operating in Ann Arbor for the past nine years. Ever since he came to America and saw Robert Kennedy, Faz has made it a point to take pictures with everyone he meets. On his wall of fame, Faz has pic- tures of himself shaking hands with everyone from Richard Nixon to Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. Now, he has decided to take on the Daily football writers. Hoosiers what the doctor ordered KICKOFF RETURNS Player No. Yds LeSueur 5 143 PUNT RETURNS Player No. Yds Breaston 13 239 Curry 4 36 Avg Lg TD 3 28.6 45 0 By Courtney Lewis Daily Sports Editor Indiana's visit to the Big House could be the perfect therapy for Michigan. The young Hoosiers have managed just one win this season and haven't won a road game since 2001. Indiana has been in this position before, and it wasn't pretty. In 2000, the Hoosiers came to town the weekend after the Wolverines suffered a disap- pointing one-point loss at Purdue. Michigan took out all of its anger on Indiana, trouncing the Hoosiers 58-0. Tomorrow, upset-minded Indiana will hope that it finds a Michigan team still reeling from a defeat in Oregon and that it can give Michigan an even more shocking loss. But the game is more likely to be a repeat of 2000. MICHIGAN PASSING OFFENSE VS. INDIANA PASSING DEFENSE: Michigan quarterback John Navarre took control of the Wolverines' offense last week and threw for a solid 360 yards and three touchdowns. But it's the over- thrown passes and the failed final drive that will probably stick in his memory. Redshirt freshman Steve Breaston showed last week that, when he's healthy, he can be a major receiving threat as well as a return specialist. Combine Breaston's skill with that of Braylon Edwards and Jason Avant, and the Wolverines' passing attack should spell trouble for Indiana's damaged sec- ondary. The Hoosiers lost safety Will Lumpkin for the year when he injured his knee against Washington, and safety Joe Gonzalez, one of Indiana's eight seniors, has missed three games. Fresh- man Will Meyers has been an excellent fill-in, making 29 tackles and forcing four fumbles in his last three games. But Meyers won't be able to handle the w lverines by himself Advantage: Michigan Advantage: Michigan INDIANA RUSHING OFFENSE VS. MICHIGAN RUN OFFENSE VS. INDI- MICHIGAN RUSHING DEFENSE: The ANA RUN DEFENSE: Michigan rushed for an embarrassing minus-three yards last weekend, and the Wolverines should have a chip on their shoulders. Running back Chris Perry took respon- sibility for last week's dismal running game and will need to bounce back in.a big way to keep himself in the running for the Heisman Trophy. Michigan's much-talked-about offensive line will also have something to prove. Indiana's defense has had better luck on the ground than in the air, holding its first four opponents to 200 yards or less. But those weren't exactly offensive juggernauts that the Hoosiers were stopping. The Hoosiers will have to hold Michigan early and hope it can keep Perry and the line frustrated. Advantage: Michigan INDIANA PASSING OFFENSE VS. MICHIGAN PASSING DEFENSE: Quarter- back Matt LoVecchio is one of the few Hoosiers with considerable experience. The junior took Notre Dame to the 2001 Fiesta Bowl, but he didn't bring much luck of the Irish with him to Bloomington. LoVecchio has thrown as many interceptions as touchdowns this season - two. Cortney Roby leads the Hoosiers in receiving with 190 yards, but has yet to catch a touchdown pass. Michigan's secondary looked soft against Oregon, especially in the first half, but it shouldn't have as much trou- ble with the Hoosiers. And the Wolver- ines' defensive line is always a threat. Hoosiers' offense has shown a little more life on the ground than in the air, particularly in the last two games. Freshman BenJarvus Green-Ellis ran for 107 yards against Indiana State, and Brian Lewis put up 116 yards against Kentucky. Chris Taylor completes the trio of backs that the Hoosiers use regu- larly. Six of Indiana's eight touchdowns have come on the run this season. Michigan's defense gave up big num- bers against the rush in its season opener versus Central Michigan, but the Wolverines have tightened up since then. Advantage: Michigan SPECIAL TEAMS: This was Michigan's downfall last weekend. The Wolverines still have kicking issues -Adam Finley missed an extra point and had one blocked against Oregon. Breaston was electric on punt returns in the first three games, but was quieted last week. Indiana's Bryan Robertson has nailed 13 of his last 16 field goal attempts, dating back to 2002, and all three miss- es were at least 45 yards. He has not missed an extra point this season. Red- shirt freshman Tyson Beatie handles punting for the Hoosiers, and last week Kentucky started at its own 3-yard line three times. Advantage: Indiana DEFENSE Player Curry Reid Jackson Woods Diggs Solo 16 14 16 14 9 Yds 27 0 0 Avg Lg 18.4 55 9 17 Asst 2 4 3 8 TDO 5 O Tot 18 18 17 17 17 TD O 0 0 SEPT. 27: "THE RUNDOWN" Record/ranking: 1-3/NR The plot: With 20 less scholarship players than other teams in the NCAA, Indianaican ho e to match Michigan's depth. For that matter, the Hoosiers can't match the W-lverines' starters. But junior quar- terback Matt LoVecchio, a transfer from Notre Dame, looks to at least provide some challenge to the supposed frontrunners for the Big Ten crown. Three Indiana running backs have more than 10yards thus far (two over 200), but the Hoosiers have faced the likes of Indiana State and Connecticut to boost those stats. On defense, the Hoosiers return fifth-year safety and cap- tain Joe Gonzales, who is making his first Big Ten appearance since 2001 after a hernia kept him sidelined last season. Gon- zales made his return last week against Kentucky and had four tackles. OCT. 4: "THE EVENT" Record/ranking: 4-0/No. 13 The plot: Brad Banks who? And for that matter, .Dallas Clark who? Iowa, supposed to be decimat- ed by the loss of its startin quarterback and ti ht end from last season, has flourishe on offense four games inqo the season. Running back Fred Russell - quietly putting together a Heisman-like senior season - has 494 yards rushing this season behind a nearly brand new offensive line. Iowa's sophomore linebackers, Chad Greenway and Abdul Hodge, each average more than 10 tackles a game and are partly responsible for the Big Ten's best scoring defense, which allows just 8.2 points a game. Iowa also boasts the best turnover ratio in the conference at plus-six and is great at special teams with more than 30 yards per kickoff return and two punt returns for touchdowns. Kicker Nate Keading is also perfect on the season (4-for-4). OCT. 11: "THE BEST TWO YEARS" Record/ranking: 4-0/No. 24 The plot: Michigan, welcome back to Minnesota! Despite the fact that the Wolverines played at the Metrodome last year, Michigan will be heading back to the land of 10,000 lakes for a second straight season. Because the Minnesota Twins are likely to make the American League Championship Series, the Twins are taking over the Metrodome on Saturday. The Wolverines will square off withthe Gophers Friday night, and Michigan will be going against the Big Ten's best offense and third-best defense. Minnesota has been playing nothing but cupcakes like Troy State, but scoring points is still scoring points. One thing that ma go in Michi- gan's favor has been the Golden Gophers' inability to effectively stop the run against lesser teams - they're giving up 122.8 yards a game. OCT. 18: "RUNAWAY JURY" Record/ranking: 1-3/NR The lot: Illinois quarterback Jon Beutjer came into Phis season with a new running back and an entirely new receiving crew (one career reception between them all). Apparently none of that mattered, as Beutjer is currently leading the Big Ten in assing yards. But even with the 1,137 yards he has thrown for this season, Beutjer has managed just eight touchdowns to five interceptions. Finding the endzone has been a problem for the young Illini, who are fourth-worst in the Big Ten in scoring offense. But Illinois will provide a challenge for Michigan's offensive line, having record- ed 12 sacks thus Tar. The Illini are also very discipline, with just 40 yards of penalties called against them a game - good or second-best in the conference. Should this game come down to the trenches, though, it is the Illini that willbe at a big dis- advantage, being second from the bottom in both offensive and defensive red-zone situations. OCT. 25: "SCARY MOVIE 3" Record/ranking: 2-1/No. 22 The plot: Yeah, Purdue lost to Bowling Green, but who hasn't lost to a Mid-American Conference team this season? Besides, with the wide receiver combo of Taylor Stubblefield (26 receptions, 230 yards) and John Standeford (14 receptions, 260 yards), Michigan would be nuts to not think of this team as a serious threat to its Su ar/Rose Bowl run. An overlooked portion of coach Joe Tiler's offense is the Boilermaker rushin attack. With 4.8 yards a carry and 167.7 yards per game, the rushing attack is partly resposible for why Purdue has the fourth-best third-down conversion rate in the conference. After a game in which Oregon won the time of possession battle pretty easily against the Wolverines, expect Purdue to do the same as it averages just under 33 minutes of ball control a game. The Boilermakers haveallowed just one sack - a tribute to the offensive line and mobile quarterback Kyle Orton. Record/rankin The plot: After will be known w or if Notre Dam ning 22-16 win people are beginning to believ artists are starting to come to tions. Coach John L. Smith do has rebuilt once-troubled Jeff back in the conference in tern Dave Rayner is also averaging this team knows how to put p spread offense. But Michigan points on the board, because in the foot (see Louisiana Tec ized the most in the Big Ten, they must overcome. ARb ELs I Record/rankin The plot: Well, are still the cha wins resemble a Buckeyes arethe villain that r defunct offense (last in the coi yards less than Michigan), Oh itself on the play of its defensi front four. Defensive linemen been responsible for the leagu just 24 yards a game on 0.9 y< up the pass defense for lineba interceptions. Y :.. NON Record/ rankin The plot: North, All-Big Ten runr. well, i has that Wright, who is averaging 118.: the Vildcats are young and snr where they must turn to play McGarigle (10.3 tackles a gam ence status along with Wright kind to Northwestern, either, goal attempts, is averagin 2., averaging net punts of us 33 man, quarterback Brett Basar - generally keeps his team in son's 1 1-point loss to Ohio Sta PASS DEFENSE Player LeSueur Curry Shaw Shazor Stewart Int 1 1 0 Lg 27 0 0 Brk-up 3 3 1 NOV. 1: "St I n d iana PASSING Player LoVecchio RUSHING Player Taylor Green-Ellis Lewis LoVecchio RECEIVING Player Roby Johnson Halterman Haney C-A Yds TD Int 58-110 822 2 2 Att Yds Avg Lg TD 53 220 4.2 39 2 44 154 3.5 22 2 39 180 4.6 38 1 36 24 0.7 25 1 No. Yds Avg Lg TD 16 190 11.9 24 O 12 154 12.8 30 1 8 6 94 153 11.8 25.5 27 44 0 0 PUNTING PlayerI Beattie KICKOFF RETURNS Player No. Roby 10 Bennett 3 PUNT RETURNS Player No. Johnson 7 DEFENSE Player Killion Moore Meyers Jones No. Yds Avg Lg 22 825 37.5 50 Yds Avg Lg 193 19.3 24 110 36.7 70 TD 0 0 Yds 37 Solo 18 20 22 20 Yds 12 11 0 Avg Lg TD 5.3 14 0 Asst 18 16 14 12 Brk-up 0 3 2 Tot 36 36 36 32 PASS DEFENSE Player Moore Killion Jones Meyers Int 0 0 TD TO 0 0g Prediction: Michigan 42, Indiana 6