SPORTS. I:.Y November 3, 003 SECTION -- -- - - - - i 1: i: li: % ommmonomm i lis I ill Huffs so good MICHIGAN 27, ?S \ll Playingfor Mom, Perry puts Blue on his shoulders Key play belongs to Wolverines in victory By Kyle O'Neill Daily Sports Editor NAWEED SIKORA Blowin' smoke AST LANSING - I used to think there was a limit to how much pun- ishment one player could handle in a football game before having to wave the white flag. But Saturday afternoon, Chris Perry's performance went beyond anything I ever thought possible from a college foot- ball player - especially considering what Michigan's senior running back is going through off the field. Irene Perry, Chris's mother, has been diagnosed with cancer. To keep his mother fresh in his mind while playing, Perry has been wearing a band around his shoulder since the Iowa game with the word "MOM" written on it. Chris knows there is only so much he can control, so all he can do is pray for his mother and keep fighting for more yards. "(Chris) Perry has the heart of a champi- on," Lloyd ar said. "I love that kid and the wayh played andathe career he& had at Mic .g He took "leaving it all out on the field" to a new level - seriously, if you look closely, you'll probably find parts of him still lying out there. Statistically, it went down in history as one of the greatest rushing performances in Michigan history. He went for 219 yards on a school-record 51 carries, and scored a touchdown. He also had two receptions, giving him 53 touches on the day. But Perry's performance transcends the meaning of statistics. Honestly, how many people will actually be able to recall the exact number of carries he had in a few years? I probably won't. But people do remember images, such as the hopeless look on Perry's face after last season's loss to Ohio State in Columbus. Perry's perseverance left me with several intense, vivid images that stick out above the touchdown catches or the lockdown Michigan defense. When I look back on this game, it will be those images that I remember the most. I will always remember watching Perry late in the fourth quarter (well into the 40s in carries), battling extreme fatigue just to get up out of the pile after a run. I will remember how he would lay there a few extra seconds each time to somehow catch his breath and get back to the huddle, only to hear he would be carrying the ball again. I will always remember how dirty his jersey was late in the game. It got to the point where it was so brown from the mud, it looked like he was wearing a different uniform than his teammates. I will remember him leaning on the ref- eree to support himself, even though he'll tell you that he was just jokingly asking him to take some time off the clock. And I will remember how amazed I was that, even though he was about to drop dead from the beating he was taking, he was able to maintain his concentration and still run for positive yardage without fumbling the football. And I will never forget Perry's post- game press conference. He was a beacon of emotion, full of life; a warrior ready to go back out for more. He said the only thing he wished was that he had gained more yards. "He's always asking for 40 carries, and this is when he needed to carry 40 times," running backs coach Fred Jackson said. "I did not think he would carry 50 times, but since we had the bye week coming up I b thouaht it would be OK." EAST LANSING - Rivalry games always have a way of coming down to one play. Two years ago, it was Jeremy LeSueur committing a facemask penalty that kept the Spartans' winning drive alive. Saturday, it was Michigan State defen- sive tackle Matthias Askew who ripped off Michigan center Dave Pearson's helmet on a 2nd-and-8 sweep to the right with 2:39 remaining in the game. Had the penalty not happened, Michigan would have been fac- ing third-and-long and could have given the ball back to the Spartans with two min- utes left. Instead, Michigan took an extra minute off the clock with a new set of downs and left Michigan State with 80 yards to drive if it was going to tie the game at 27. The Spartans managed to get just 29 yards from their own 20-yard line and then failed on a 51-yard "Hail Mary" attempt from Jeff Smoker to wide receiver Aaron Alexander. "Two or three things went through my mind," said Michigan running backs coach Fred Jackson of the final play. "Colorado went through my mind twice. I was just hoping we could end up with the ball. Did we knock it down or intercept it?" Jackson was obviously too caught up in his flashbacks of the Kordell Stewart-to- Michael Westbrook Hail Mary that beat Michigan in 1994 to realize th'at 245- pound linebacker Scott McClintock had jumped over the 6-foot-5 Alexander to intercept the pass and preserve the Wolver- ines' 27-20 win. Even having a chance to tie the game had to have been a surprise for Michigan State, which was dominated statistically by Michigan throughout. The Wolverines controlled the clock (39:19 to 19:47), converted more first downs (29 to 13), had nearly seven times the rushing yards (216 to 36) and had a much better third-down completion rate (13-of-18 to 3-of-13). After a scoreless first quarter, the Wolverines got on the board first, using two completions to Jason Avant for 29 yards and six of Chris Perry's 51 carries for 24 yards to drive the field. Perry punched the ball in from a yard out to give Michigan a 7-0 lead. The Spartans answered with a 20-yard field goal by Dave Rayner on the next drive. Late in the second quarter, Michigan quarterback John Navarre hit Braylon Edwards - who had Michigan State cor- nerback Roderick Maples beat by two steps - on a 40-yard streak down the middle. The Spartans stalled out in the final drive of the half, and Rayner missed a 57- yard field goal wide left. Michigan - taking advantage of the Spartans' inability to move the ball -used its second drive of the third quarter and scored on a 26-yard touchdown pass from Navarre to tight end Andy Mignery. The Wolverines - which had been running Perry ragged all day en route to his 219 yards - play-actioned left, bringing up the Michigan State safeties and linebackers. Navarre bootlegged right to find the uncovered Mignery for the touchdown. With a 20-3 lead, all seemed to be going well for the Wolverines. On the very next offensive play, though, the Wolverines mixed up their coverage in the secondary, allowing Michigan State wide receiver Agim Shabaj to get free for a 73-yard touchdown on a post pattern. Jim Hermann told The Detroit News that he was to blame for the mix-up in the sec- ondary. 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