I 4B - The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - October 20, 2003 MICHIGAN 56, ILLINOIS 14 Bracken gets a0 0__behind Peny Backup Gutierrez performs well in fourth quarter chance By Naweed Sikora Daily Sports Writer Chris Perry may be Michigan's thoroughbred in the backfield, but the Wolverines have several horses battling for that second position on the starting gate. After this weekend, it appearsr Tim Bracken has come around the bend ahead of the bunch. The senior from White Castle, La., had just 22 yards on five carries this season going into the Illinois game. But he more than doubled that out- put in one game, going for 57 yards on eight car- ries, including a 27-yard touchdown in the third quarter to put the Wolverines up 42-7. Carr says that Bracken, who was hurt earlier this season, finally started playing up to caliber a few weeks ago. "He's been playing very well lately," said Carr of Bracken. "A week ago, he had three blocks on two kickoff returns. He made some really good shallow cuts, and he has an innate ability to make a guy miss. "He did not report to training camp in very good shape, but he's made some really good strides since then." David Underwood is the second-string back according to Michigan's depth chart. But after rushing for 108 yards against Houston, the junior hasn't seen much action. He has just nine carries for 32 yards since playing Notre Dame. Meanwhile, Bracken, Jerome Jackson and Pierre Rembert have been splitting the load sub- bing in for Perry. Jackson also had eight carries against Illinois, rushing for 54 yards and one touchdown. Carr has said that the competition behind Perry has heated up lately with the improved play of Bracken and the two younger backs, and no one back is gaining a clear advantage over the others. But this weekend, it was Bracken's turn to shine. "Tim has been amazing in practice," Perry said. "He has been hitting all his assignments, and he got the role that he deserves." GAME STATISTICS Team Stats First Downs Rushes/Yards Passing Yards Offensive Plays Total Offense Return Yards Comp/Att/Int Punts/Avg Fumbles/Lost Penalties/Yards Time of Poss MICH 30 49/275 244 83 519 136 22/34/0 5/39 2/0 8/71 33:04 ILLINOIS 13 29/89 163 57 252 141 16/28/1 7/46 1/1 5/49 26:56 4 M I C H IG A N PASSING Player Navarre Gutierrez Totals RUSHING Player Perry Jackson Bracken Underwood Rembert Navarre Totals RECEIVING Player Avant Thompson Massaquoi Edwards Bell Mignery Perry Dudley Bracken Breaston Tabb Rembert Totals C-A 18-27 4-7 17-24 Yds TO 203 1 41 1 244 2 Int 0 0 0 4 Att 24 8 4 2 3 48 No. 4 4 3 3 1 1 22 Yds 140 54 52 17 15 -3 275 Yds 71 '37 37 25 43 9 6 6 5 4 3 -2 244 No. 5 5 Avg 5.8 6.8 6.5 4.3 7.5 -1.0 6.6 Avg 17.8 9.3 12.3 8.3 43.0 9.0 6.0 6.0 5.0 4.0 3.0 -2.0 11.1 Lg 25 12 27 7 10 8 27 Lg 21 19 21 14 43 9 6 6 5 4 3 0 43 TO 3 1 1 0 0 0 5 TD O 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 PUNTING PlayerI Finley Totals KICKOFF RETURNS Player No. Bracken 2 Tabb 1 Totals 3 PUNT RETURNS Player No. Breaston 4 Totals 4 Yds Avg Lg 195 39.0 46.0 195 39.0 46.0 Yds Avg Lg 51 25.5 26 13 13.0 13 64 21.3 26 Yds Avg Lg 72 18.0 74 72 18.0 74 TD 0 0 O TD 1 1 DANNY MOL Tim Bracken made the most of his rushing opportunities Saturday, going for 57 yards and a touchdown - his first of the season - on eight carries. BOCCHER MISSES LAST TWO GAMES: Michigan special teams coach Jim Boccher has not been at Michigan's past two games. Prior to the Minneso- ta game, Carr issued a statement saying that Boc- cher did not travel with the team to Minneapolis because of personal reasons. Boccher was still not on the sidelines this past weekend. 999 AND COUNTING: Perry ran for 140 yards on 24 carries Saturday, but as it turned out, he left the game just one-yard short of 1,000 for the sea- son. "I didn't want him to get a big head," Carr joked after the game. After being held under the 100-yard mark the past two games, Perry finally broke through that barrier. It was the fifth time this season he has rushed for over 100. GUTZ GETTING HIS REPS: After playing a couple nail-biters away from home, Michigan's blowout over Illinois allowed backup quarterback Matt Gutierrez to get back out on the field. The red- shirt freshman played the entire fourth quarter, throwing for 41 yards, including a 21-yard play- action bootleg pass to tight end Tim Massaquoi - a play that hasn't been run regularly at Michi- gan since the days of Brian Griese. FIRST TIME FOR EVERYTHING: If you wait long enough, good things will happen. Senior tight end Andy Mignery caught the first touchdown pass of his career in the second quarter to make it a 28-0 Michigan lead. It was a nine-yard touch- down play from Navarre, but Mignery actually caught the ball around the 4-yard line, and dragged a defender into the endzone. INJURY UPDATE: Michigan kicker Troy Nienberg has never been afraid to use his head. But this time, it cost him. Nienberg suffered an apparent concussion while trying to make a tackle on a kickoff return by Illinois. Safety Marlin Jackson missed the game because of a leg injury suffered against Minneso- ta. Carr is hopeful that Jackson will be back for Purdue. Willis Barringer started in place of him. Jacob Stewart injured his left leg in the third quarter on a kickoff, and was forced to leave the field on stretcher. Carr did not have information on his injury. DEFENSE Player Burgess Diggs Reid LeSueur McClintock Barringer Curry Harrison Woodley Young Curry Stewart Mundy Shazor Bowman Hood Massey Woods Thompson Biggs Heuer Sarantos Manning Mann Shaw Kashama Totals Solo 5 5 4 4 2 2 3 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 0 1 1 1 1 1 47 Asst 0 0 3 3 0 3 0 0 0 0 O 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 U 4 Blue secondary gets ready for Purdue's spread offense By Courtney Lewis Daily Sports Editor Michigan shut down Illinois' offense Saturday with a little different look in the secondary. Injuries and preparation for next week had the Wolverines playing with a shuffled lineup. Fifth-year cornerback Jeremy LeSueur returned from a left shoulder injury and made his presence felt. LeSueur rushed in and drilled Illinois receiver Carey Davis after a catch in the first quarter, and then tipped away a pass on the Fighting Illini's next drive. LeSueur did not return any kickoffs, but he tied for the team lead with five tackles - four of them solo efforts. LeSueur, who was injured during the Iowa game and dressed but didn't play against Min- nesota last week, said he was "a little worried" about the shoulder and how it would hold up. But he was able to contribute while Michigan held the Fighting Illini to 89 yards on the ground and 163 through the air. "I was excited," LeSueur said. "I wanted to play last week, and I couldn't, so it was just exciting to be back out there." LeSueur brings speed and pure athleticism to the Michigan defensive backfield, and fellow cornerback Markus Curry said LeSueur also has a certain swagger. "When we're out on the field, we're just try- ing to hold our part down on the field and play together, and we're trying to have some fun out there doing it," Curry said. While the secondary welcomed back LeSueur, it was still missing playmaker Marlin Jackson and, for part of the game, safety Jacob Stewart. Stewart, who had a pivotal defensive touchdown last week, made two tackles Satur- day before being carted off the field in the sec- ond half. Jackson, a safety who has 38 tackles and two interceptions on the year, got banged up against Minnesota and was not able to return. Carr is hopeful that Jackson will be able to play next week. Those injuries, and the fact that the game was a blowout, gave some younger safeties a chance to get some quality playing time. Sophomore Willis Barringer took down Illinois players five times - he had four tackles all season before Saturday - but he also committed a pass inter- ference penalty. "I wasn't happy with his penalty, but I will have to look at the film. I think Willis is a guy with a lot of potential right now," Michigan coach Lloyd Carr said. Freshman Ryan Mundy is another young safe- ty the Wolverines used, and freshman corner- back Leon Hall, who filled in as a starter while LeSueur was out last week, also saw action. Carr said the experience those young players got will be important for Michigan's next two games against Purdue and Michigan State. "We wanted to play some younger guys in the secondary because of the teams we're going to be facing the next couple weeks," Carr said. "Mundy is a safety, but he is going to need to be able to cover a guy when we see the five-wide spread." Michigan's secondary wasn't hurt by the absence of Jackson and Stewart on Saturday in part because Illinois, which had its backup quarterback directing the offense, is not exactly a point-scoring machine. But Purdue is a different story. The Boilermakers, who are undefeated in Big Ten play, will bring a powerful aerial attack to the Big House next week. Coach Joe Tiller's spread offense averages 235.4 passing yards per game, and six different receivers have caught touchdowns. Saturday, Purdue quarterback Kyle Orton threw the ball 55 times and racked up 411 yards to lead his team over Wisconsin. WHO'S NEX: PURDUE This matchup has certainly shaped up to be much more than what it seemed like it was going to be prior to the season. After getting tripped up by Bowling Green to open the season, the Boilermakers regrouped and now sit undefeated in the Big Ten with a chance to end Michigan's Rose Bowl hopes. The Wolverines control their own destiny, but must find a way to slow down Purdue's spread offense before they start thinking about roses. BIG TEN STANDINGS Tam Michigan State Purdue Wisconsin Michigan Ohio State Minnesota Iowa Northwestern Penn State Indiana Illinois Big Ten 4 0 3 0 3 1 3 1 2 1 2 2 1 2 1 2 0 3 0 3 0 4 Overall 7 1 6 1 6 2 6 2 6 1 6 2 5 2 3 4 2 5 1 6 1 7 4 THIS WEEKEND'S RESULTS MICHIGAN 56, Illinois 14 Michigan State 44, MINNESOTA 38 Purdue 26, WISCONSIN 23 OHIO STATE 19, Iowa 10 'M' SCHEDULE DANNY MOLOSHOK/Daily Safety Jacob Stewart left the game after suffering an injury to his left leg in the third quarter. With Purdue coming to the Big House next week, the Michigan secondary will need to get healthy fast. Date Aug. 30 Sept. 6 Sept. 13 Sept. 20 Sept. 27 Oct. 4 Oct. 11 Oct. 18 Oct. 25 Nov. 1 Nov. 15 Nov. 22 Ononent Time/Result central Michigan W, 45-7 Houston W, 50-3 Notre Dame W, 38-0 at Oregon L, 27-31 Indiana W, 31-17 at Iowa L, 27-30 at Minnesota W,38-35 Illinois W, 56-14 Purdue 3:30 P.M. at Michigan State TBA at Northwestern TBA Ohio State Noon WEEKEND'S BEST BoILING OVER: Purdue stayed undefeated in the Big Ten after knocking off Wiscon- sin 26-23 in a game that went down to the wire. Purdue's Ben Jones kicked an 18-yard field goal with three seconds left to win. The Boilermakers' Kyle orton went 38-for-55 for 411 yards and one touch- down. HOW THE AP TOP 25 FARED NEW AP TOP 25 (first-place votes in parentheses) Associated Press Poll for the week of October 14. Games updated through October 19. Team: 1. Oklahoma 2. Miami (Fla.) 3. Virginia Tech 4. Georgia 5. Southern Cal. 6. Washington State 7. Florida State 8. Ohio State 9. Iowa 10. Louisiana State 11 A........... Last week: beat Missouri 34-13 beat Temple 52-14 Idle beat Vanderbilt 27-8 beat Notre Dame 45-14 beat Stanford 24-14 beat Virginia 19-14 beat Iowa 19-10 loss to Ohio State 19-10 beat South Carolina 33-7 This week: at Colorado Idle at West Virginia Alabama Birmingham at Washington Oregon State Wake Forest at Indiana Penn State Auburn TEAM 1. Oklahoma (62) 2. Miami (3) 3. Virginia Tech 4. Georgia 5. Southern Cal. 6. Washington State 7. Florida State 8. Ohio State 9. Louisiana State 10. Purdue 11. Michigan State 12. Northern Illinois 13. Michigan REC 7-0 7-0 6-0 6-1 6-1 6-1 6-1 6-1 6-1 6-1 7-1 7-0 6-2 PTS 1,622 1,558 1,498 1,394 1,378 1,213 1,213 1,161 1,087 957 918 885 744 PVS 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 10 13 15 12 17 7.t