4B - The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - October 6, 2003 IOWA 30, MICHIGAN 27 4 Offense relives last-minute drive, falls just short again GAME STATISTICS By Courtney Lewis Daily Sports Editor IOWA CITY - John Navarre has been there before. Just two weeks ago, against Oregon. And again last season at Notre Dame. Fourth quarter. Michigan's down by more than a touchdown on the road. The Wolver- ines have the ball. This time it was 30-20, Iowa, with 5:13 left. Navarre dropped into the shotgun to run the two-minute drill, and just like before, marched his team downfield. Touchdown. Michigan was within three. Just like before, Michigan got the ball back with time running out. Just like before, Michigan had a chance to win it. But two penalties and two incompletions later, it was 4th-and-12. Navarre heaved a pass down the left sideline, the ball dropped to the ground, and Michigan couldn't get it done. Just like before. "We had total confidence in our two- minute offense, and ... I had total confidence that we were going to be able to move the football," a devastated Navarre said after the 30-27 loss. "And we did that. We're never going to quit. And we did a good job of that, but we still have to pick it up." In what may have felt like a serious case of deja vu to players and fans alike, the Michi- gan offense couldn't pick up the team and carry it to victory at the end of the game. Navarre has not won a road game against a top-25 team in six tries. But Michigan coach Lloyd Carr advised against quickly blaming the quarterback for the loss. "It's a team game, and any time the plays don't go well for an offense, the first guy you want to criticize is the quarterback, and sometimes that's accurate and many times it isn't, so we'll just have to look at the film," Carr said. "There wasn't a guy on our foot- ball team that wasn't busting his tail and playing as hard as he could, and that's all you can ask of any man." Michigan couldn't ask much more of Navarre, who connected on 26 of 49 attempts for two touchdowns. The fifth-year senior threw for 389 yards, the highest single-game total in Michigan history, eclipsing Tom Brady's record of 375 against Ohio State in 1998. From the beginning, Michigan's offense looked much-improved from last weekend's sloppy performance against Indiana. It put up 20 points in the first half and, as in the Ore- gon game, had two receivers with more than 100 yards on the day (this time it was Bray- Ion Edwards and Jason Avant). But the Wolverines stalled after halftime. Iowa's defense held Michigan scoreless in the third quarter, and Navarre credited the Hawkeyes with not allowing him to make plays that were there in the first half. "I don't know if it was accuracy, but it was, you know, they took some things away," Navarre said. "We had to get in some differ- ent plays, and they stepped up their game in the second.half." And Michigan wasn't able to do the little things in the second half. Navarre threw some characteristic high passes, receivers dropped balls and the Wolverines committed costly penalties, including debilitating delay of game and holding penalties on the final drive. Navarre spoke of missed opportunities and an inability to execute. "This offense as a whole, we had some mishaps, and we have to correct those," Navarre said. "We played well ... (but) we have to take advantage of the situations we were in." Especially situations where the game is on the line and the ball is in Michigan's hands. Team Stats First Downs Rushes/Yards Passing Yards Offensive Plays Total Offense Return Yards Comp/Att/lnt Punts/Avg Fumbles/Lost Penalties/Yards Time of Poss MICH 18 33/74 389 82 463 117 26/49/1 9/35.3 1/0 6/59 29:04 Iowa 14 37/100 195 71 295 169 17/34/1 9/44.2 0/0 4/35 30:56 4 M I C H I G A N PASSING Player Navarre Totals RUSHING Player Perry Breaston Underwood Rivas Navarre Totals RECEIVING Player Avant Edwards Breaston Massaquol Perry Tabb Bell totals c-A 26-49 26-x9 Yds TD 389 2 389 2 Atn 24 2 5 33 No. 7 7 6 2 2 1 26 Yds 87 6 2 0 -21 74 Yds 175 114 50 13 11 15 11 389 Avg 3.6 3.0 2.0 0.0 -4.2 2.2 Avg 25.0 16.3 8.3 6.5 5.5 15.0 11.0 15.0 3 Lg 16 4 2 > O 2 2 18 3 Lg 0 71 41 50 i 13 7 15 D 11 D 71 Avg 42.6 35.0 0.0 35.3 Lg 25 14 1 25 Int 1 1 Td 0 0 0 0 1 4 PUNTING PlayerI Finley Rivas TEAM Totals KICKOFF RETURNS Player No. Breaston 3 Tabb 1 Totals 4 PUNT RETURNS Player No. Breaston N Totals a No. Yds 5 213 3 105 1 0 9 318 TD 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 2 Lg 46 38 0 46 TD 0 0 0 TD 0 0 SETH LOWER/Daily Chris Perry attempts to hurdle several Iowa defenders in the first half of Saturday's game. Perry finished with 87 yards and one touchdown on 24 carries. Avant becoming third-down option DEFENSE Player Reid Shazor Jackson Woods Manning Diggs McClintock Bowman Massey Stevens Hauer Nienberg Pearson Woodley Tabb Mundy Hall Stewart Burgess Curry Totals Yds 61 14 75 Yds 42 42 Solo 4 3 4 3 2 5 3 2 1 1 1 1 36 Avg Lg 7.0 15 7.0 15 Asst 4 5 3 4 4 0 2 2 2 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 32 Tot 8 B 7 7 6 5 5 4 3 3 2 2 1 1 1 1s 4 Avg 20.3 14.0 18.8 By Kyle O'Neill Daily Sports Editor IOWA CITY - On a team with a lot of receiving talent, it's tough for just one player to ever stand out. Especially if they're not wearing No. 1 nor are they a speedy punt returner slated to be the next Anthony Carter. But Michigan wide receiver Jason Avant has established himself as the / $ O go-to guy in tough situations for quarter- back John Navare1 " "" "" - "i1 Especially on third down - when teams usually drop back into a zone defense - it is Avant who is able to find a hole for Navarre to throw to. On three first-half occasions on Satur- day, Avant took advantage of the zone defense being run and found openings for 20, 38 and 71 yards. On all three, he took a 10- to 15-yard route and turned it into something bigger. Avant also had an li-yard reception in the half Navarre even tried to give Avant much more than the 175 yards receiving that he finished with, but the duo couldn't con- nect on slant, flag and fade routes when Iowa went into man coverage - presum- ably a switch from the zone coverage that Michigan was able to abuse so much dur- ing the game. "They're coaches, that's their job," Navarre said of the Iowa coaching staff. "They're going to adjust to that. We have to be able to adjust to that, too. It's just a coaching battle back and forth. We have to be able to do the job there. They just did a good job of adjusting." PLAYING THE PYRAMID: Michigan' si mt0 team saw a new look, when it debuted a triangular-shaped seven offensive line- man, three protector and one punter set. 'Freshman kickertiarrett Rivas served as the punter in the three second-half situa- tions it was run. Rivas had pooch punted earlier in the second half. The design of the punt was in response to Iowa's Ramon Ochoa and his second- quarter 43-yard return. The punt team also lost two of its regular special team starters in Jeremy Van Alstyne and Larry Stevens to injuries. "That's part of that particular punting plan," Michigan coach Lloyd Carr said. "We wanted to roll him, and they brought pressure off the edge he was rolling to. He was to punt it. He had two very good punts. The strength of that protection is that you should get great coverage. Early in the game, we gave up a long punt return because we didn't get the coverage down there." The punting strategy paid off well the first two times Michigan did it, as it kept the ball away from Ochoa and l 'aced the Hawkeyes inside their own 30-yard line. But Rivas found problems on Michi- gan's first drive after Iowa tied the score "at 2I0late in the thd iuaiter Michig ' drove to its own 27 and then stalled out, bringing out Rivas. As Rivas rolled right, he might have delayed on kicking - Carr said he had to check game film on that - and Iowa's Chris Smith broke through the three pro- tectors for a block to set up what would be the game-deciding field goal. WHO'S NEXT: MINNESOTA The Golden Gophers, 42-17 winners at Northwestern Saturday, are now 2-0 in the Big Ten and 6-0 overall. Michigan, meanwhile, is reeling after dropping to 0.2 on the road with a loss to Iowa. - Minnesota will be trying to capture the Little Brown Jug fornthe first time since 1986. Michigan won at Minnesota last ,ear 41-24. BIG TEN STANDINGS TONY DING/Daily Jason Avant is becoming John Navarre's go-to guy on third down these days. Avant finished with 175 yards receiving on the day. Team Minnesota Wisconsin Michigan State Ohio State Purdue Michigan Iowa Northwestern Penn State Illinois Indiana Big Ten 2 0 2 0 2 0 1 0 1I0 1 1 1 1 0 2 0 2 0 2 0 2 Overall 6 0 5 1 5 1 5 0 4 1 42 5 1 2 4 2 4 1 5 1 5 HAWKEYES Continued from Page 1B the world could feel;' said Krenzel after his heroic effort against the Boilermak- ers, "with that kind of excitement, that natural high." Navarre, who fell to 0-6 against ranked opponents on the road, has tasted that high so many times, but has never been able to fully devour it. We played well," said Navarre, who had 389 yards and two touchdowns on 26-of-49. "It's just those little things, and we have to take advantage of the situa- tions we're in. Sometimes we weren't doing that. (If) we're a championship team, we have to do that all the time." The Miami defense made a play of its own to keep Miami's run for the title alive in 2001. Down 12-7 to the Hurricanes, Boston College drove the length of the field to the Miami 9-yard line in the final minute. Eagles quarterback Brian St. Pierre dropped back to pass and his throw bounced off the back of Miami defensive back Mike Rumph's knee and ended up in the hands of Miami defensive lineman Matt Walters. After Walters trudged for 10 yards, Miami safety Ed Reed took the ball from his teammate and galloped for an 80-yard touchdown. Miami held on for an 18-7 win. The Michigan defense gave up just 295 yards to the Hawkeyes. But thanks to Michigan's lackluster punt and kickoff coverage, Iowa began drives with the ball past its own 40-yard line six times. In the second half, the Hawkeyes got the ball at Michigan's 28- and 15-yard line on back- to-back possessions after a Navarre inter- ception and a punt block, respectively. But even with the field position against them, the Wolverines - led by lineback- ers Scott McClintock and Lawrence Reid - held the Hawkeyes to two Nate Kaed- ing field goals to stay within striking dis- tance at 23-20. "We can't take anything (positive) from the game," Diggs said. "We lost. Any time you lose, you're always down. "We came out and didn't give up any touchdowns, but we still lost the game." After all the clutch stops the defense made in the third quarter, it couldn't keep Iowa from scoring what ended up being the winning touchdown in the fourth. Iowa quarterback Nathan Chandler hit Ramon Ochoa for a 31-yard touchdown to give the Hawkeyes a 30-20 lead. "We weren't tired, we just didn't make the plays to win the game," Diggs said. "You have to give Iowa credit. They made the play at the end to win the game. I don't think anyone was tired. We were pumped and ready to go; we just have to make the plays. The play they made, we can't let happen WEEKEND'S BEST ROCKY FLOP: Looks like Auburn's finally gotten its act together. The Tigers bounced No. 7 Ten- nessee from the top 10, domi- nating the Volunteers on the ground for a 28-21 win. Running back Carnell Williams churned out 185 yards, and quarterback Jason Campbell tossed two touchdown passes. Auburn is now 5-2 in its last seven games against teams ranked in the top 10. Bia MAC: The surprise team of the year in college football just keeps on winning. No. 17 Northern Illinois scored a game-tying touchdown with 1:42 left, setting up a dramatic 30-23 overtime win over Ohio. The Huskies were led by wide receiver P.J. Fleck, who caught 14 balls for a school-record 234 yards. HOW THE AP TOP 25 FARED Associated Press Poll for week of Sept. 29. Games updated through Oct.4. Team: 1. Oklahoma 2. Miami (Fla.) 3. Ohio State 4. Virginia Teach 5. Florida State 6. Louisiana State 7. Tennessee 8. Arkansas 9. Michigan 10. Southern cal. 11. Georgia 12. Nebraska 13. Texas 14. Washington State 15. Pittsburgh 16. Kansas State 17. Northern Illinois 18. Washington 19. Oregon 20. Texas christian 21. Minnesota 22. Purdue 23. Iowa 24. Florida 25. Michigan State Last week: beat Iowa State 53-7 beat West Virginia 22-20 Idle beat Rutgers 48-22 Idle Idle lost to Auburn 28-21 Idle lost to Iowa 30-27 beat Arizona State 37-17 beat Alabama 37-23 beat Troy State 30-0 beat Kansas State 24-20 beat Arizona.30-7 beat Texas A&M 37-26 lost to Texas 24-20 beat Ohio 30-23 (ot) lost to UCLA 46-16 lost to Utah 17-13 beat Army 27-0 beat Northwestern 42-1i beat Illinois 43-10 beat Michigan 30-27 lost to Mississippi 20-17 beat Indiana 31-3 This week: at Texas at Florida State at Wisconsin Syracuse Miami Florida Georgia Auburn at Minnesota (Fri.) Stanford at Tennessee at Missouri Oklahoma Idle Notre Dame at Oklahoma State at Central Michigan Nevada at Arizona State at South Florida Michigan (Fri.) Penn State Idle at Louisiana State at Illinois THIS WEEKEND'S RESULTS IowA 30, Michigan 27 Wisconsin 30, PENN STATE 23 MICHIGAN STATE 31, Indiana 3 Minnesota 42, NORTHWESTERN 17 PURDUE 43, Illinois 10 M' SCHEDULE Date O DOnent Time/Result Aug. 30 Central Michigan W, 45-7 Sept. 6 Houston W, 50-3 Sept. 13 Notre Dame W, 38 Sept. 20 at Oregon L, 31-27 Sept.'27 Indiana W, 31-17 Oct. 4 at Iowa L, 30-27 Oct. 10 at Minnesota 7 p.m. E I Oct. 18 Illinois Noon Oct. 25 Purdue TBA Nov. 1 at Michigan State TBA Nov. 15 at Northwestern TBA Nov. 22 Ohio State Noon ...................................................................... NEW AP TOP 25 (first-place votes in parentheses) ., ., BECOME ONE OF AMERICAS HEALTH CARE HEROES Would you like to start a fraternity? We have got a great opportunity for you! Local/national scholarship programs Immediate leadershippositions 145 years on campus 500+ alumni No hazing TEAM 1. Oklahoma (59) 2. Miami (1) 3. Ohio State (5) 4. Virginia Tech 5. Florida State 6. 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