4B - The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - November 1, 2004 MICHIGAN 45, MICHIGAN STATE 37 (3 OT) 4 Hart unstoppable as 'M' rallies yet again GAME STATISTICS Team Stats First Downs Rush/Yds Passing Yards Offensive Plays Total Offense Return Yards Comp/Att/Int Punts/Avg Fumbles/Lost Penalties/Yards Time of Poss. MSU MICH 25 27 57/368 44/261 167 273 83 79 535 496 56 66 18/26/0 24/35/0 6/37.5 8/39.3 0/0 1/0 14/123 7/74 32:36 27:24 4 By Chris Burke Daily Sports Editor Freshman Mike Hart found out Saturday what the Michigan-Michigan State rivalry is all about. And in the process, the run- ning back taught the Spartans a , little bit about himself. Hart absorbed several big 4, hits in the Michigan victory - including a vicious perrsonal foul face-mask penalty dur- ing the second of the Wolverines' three scoring drives the fourth quarter - and eventually had to leave in overtime with a thigh bruise. But prior to that, the emerging superstar car- ried the ball, 33 times for 225 yards and one touchdown and added five receptions for 19 yards. Hart's performance gave him the distinc- tion of being the first running back in Michigan history to rush for 200 yards in three consecu- tive games. "I thought Michael was outstanding," Michi- gan coach Lloyd Carr said. "I think in the first quarter, we ran the football as well as we could have ever hoped to run it." Despite Michigan's need to score quickly at the end of the game, Hart remained instrumental to the offense. An 11-yard reception on a screen pass that ended with the face-mask penalty set up Chad Henne's 38-yard touchdown pass to Braylon Edwards that cut Michigan State's lead to 27-20. Hart then set the table again on Michigan's game-tying drive, breaking a 26-yard run to the left side just a play before Edwards' second touchdown reception. When all was said and done, Hart - whose recent performances have made him a dark- horse Heisman candidate - had become the first Michigan freshman to top 1,000 yards in a season and had once again made the Wolverines' ground attack a very serious threat. "We were getting off to a good start run- ning the ball," Michigan quarterback Chad Henne said. "That was working. Why not run the ball?" Two-FOR-BLUE: The 17-point deficit that Michigan overcame matched the largest come- back the Wolverines have ever trade in Michi- gan Stadium. Ironically enough, that prior victory - when Michigan stunned Virginia 18-17 after trailing 17-0 in the fourth quarter in 1995 - came in Carr's first game as Michi- gan's head coach. "That game is out of my memory," Carr said. "I'm getting old - I don't have many of these left in me, I can tell you that." Carr's recent teams have made a habit out of coming from behind. Michigan has rallied back in its last four games, and the 2003 Wolverines completed the greatest comeback in team his- tory, overcoming a 21-point gap at Minnesota. But for Edwards, Saturday's win was the best. "(Michigan) State was a tremendous win last year," Edwards said. "Minnesota was a tremen- dous win this year and last year. There have been some other ones - Penn State my sophomore year - but it's never felt like this." KICK SAVE: Sophomore Garrett Rivas hasn't always been perfect since taking over as Michi- gan's kicker last year. But, if nothing else, he has been clutch. Rivas hit the game-winning field goal in Michigan's rally at Minnesota last year, then repeated the feat last week at Purdue. On Saturday, Rivas was a perfect three-for-three on field goals and four-for-four on extra points. The Florida native drilled a 34-yard field goal just before halftime to cut Michigan State's lead to 17-10 at the break. He then start- ed Michigan's fourth quarter comeback with a 24-yarder and stuck a clutch 34-yard field goal to start overtime. With winds gusting from 20 to 45 miles per hour during the game, Rivas's performance became as important as anyone's Saturday. "If Garrett Rivas doesn't make every single kick, we're not standing here talking about a win," said Carr, who also complimented punter Adam Finley in his first appearance as a holder this year, replacing injured quarterback Matt Gutierrez. Rivas was also responsible for the onside kick Michigan recovered after pulling within 27-13. Michigan lined up for the play with Rivas and fellow kicker Troy Nienberg both on the field. The two lined up next to each other on either side of the ball. But Rivas was tabbed for the kick, and fired a line drive that ricocheted off two Michigan State players before Michigan fullback Brian Thomp- son jumped on it. The Wolverines would score two plays later to pull within 27-20. "I think the onside kick was an extremely big play," Carr said. "If we don't get the onside kick, (a comeback was) going to be a lot harder - maybe impossible." Carr declined to comment on why the unex- pected two-kicker formation was used because he "might use it again." M I C H I G A N PASSING Player C-A Yds TD Henne 24-35 273 4 Totals 24-35 273 4 RUSHING Edwards Martin RECEIVING Edwards Avant Hart Gonzales Att 33 1 2 8 38 No. 11 5 5 2 1 24 Yds 224 22 4 -27 223 Yds 189 47 19 13 5 273 22.0 2.0 17.2 94 3.8 6.5 22 3 'nt 0 0 4 1 11 O 46 4 4 Junior Jason Avant hauls in his game-tying touchdown catch during the second overtime. PLAYING THROUGH PAIN: In spite of a dislocated finger, Michigan junior Jason Avant made his first touchdown catch of the year a huge one. On a third-and-goal in double overtime with Michigan down seven, Avant leapt in the back corner of the endzone and hauled in a pass from Chad Henne. tie then managed to get one foot inbounds as he was hit by a defender. "Jason made a great catch in a key situation of the game," wide receivers coach Erik Camp- bell said. NOTEs: Michigan is now 3-0 in overtime con- tests, having beaten Penn State in 2002 and Ala- bama in the 2000 Orange Bowl. Both of those games ended in the first overtime session ... The 82 combined points made Saturday's game the highest-scoring Michigan-Michigan State game since Michigan beat Michigan State (then Mich- igan Agricultural College) 119-0 in 1902 ... Michigan State running back DeAndra Cobb's 205 yards rushing were the second-most Michi- gan has ever allowed to a Michigan State back. Former Spartan T.J. Duckett rumbled for 211 yards in Michigan State's 2001 win. PUNTING Player No. Yds Avg Lg Finley 7 3099 40.9 68 TEAM 1 6 6.0 6 Totals 8 314 39.3 68 KICKOFF RETURNS Player No. Yds Avg Lg TD Breaston 3 44 14.7 23 O T*tals 3 44 14.7 23 O PUNT RETURNS Player No. Yds Avg Lg TD DEFENSE Player Solo Ast Tot Mcelntock 4 1 Woodley 7 4 11 Shazor 7 3 10 Reid 5 2 7 Mundy 4 3 7 Watson 3 2 5 Manning 4 O 4 Harson 3 0 0 3 MuIrry 0 0 3 Jackson 2 1 3 Massey O 3 3 M,,li 1 . 10 Burgess 1 1 2 Branch 1 001 EnleoAn1oR00 1 BIG TEN STANDINGS Team Big Ten Overall Michigan 6 0 8 1 Biscsin 50 8 0 iowar 4 1 e 1 MichAltneStae 3 1 4 1 Northwestern 3 2 4 4 Minnesota 3 3 6 3 Ohio State 2 3 5 3 Purdue 2 3 5 3 Indiana 1 4 3 5 Penn State 0 5 2 Illinois 0 6 2 7 THIS WEEKEND S RESULnS: MICHIGAN 45, Michigan State 37 (3on) NPRTHWEsTRNS 13, Purdue 10 Iowa 23, ILoS 13 I n As 30, Minnesota 21 OSi STATE 21, Penn State 10 NEXT WEEKEND'S GAMES: OHin Stale at Michigan State, Non NOrthweste at Penn State,12:10 p.m. Indiana at IinOis, 2:00 p.m. Minnesota at Wisconsin, 3:30 p.m. Purdue at Ilnowa, 3:30 p.m. 4 Spartans' offense exploits aggressive Blue defense By Sharad Mattu Michigan State. pass, and for the first half it showed. Daily Sports Editor But the Spartans' offense gave the Stanton completed 10-of-13 passes After holding Minnesota's rushing offense to just 24 yards in the second half three weeks ago, it seemed that Michigan's defense wouldn't have any problem with the rest of its con- ference opponents. For two weeks that was the case, and Michigan was ranked third in the country against the run entering Saturday's game against Wolverines more problems than any other team this season. For the game they totaled 535 yards, including 368 rushing yards. Michigan State primarily plays with a spread offense to give quarterback Drew Stanton room to make plays with his legs as well as his arm. The Wolverines had not yet played a quar- terback who looked to run as often as for 95 yards, and ran 12 times for 80 more yards. But Michigan also caught a break late in the first half. On a scramble to the right, Stanton was tackled by LaMarr Woodley, and landed hard on his shoulder, knocking him out of the game. "I just caught him across the field," Woodley said. "That's why you never give up on a play. I just came from behind and he got hurt on the play. You never hope to injure someone, but at the same time, sometimes it's a good thing." Stanton was replaced by Damon Dowdell, who was effective but not nearly the same threat. Dowdell fin- ished with 72 passing yards and 32 rushing yards. "Stanton is a great runner," Shazor said. "He came out of the pocket and made a lot of plays with his feet and also with his arm. "I think it gave us a bit of an edge when he went down. When he came out and Dowdell came in the game, he wasn't a runner like Stanton was. He ran for a few first downs, but we contained him." Michigan State running backs also gave Michigan headaches on Satur- day. DeAndra Cobb, who had run for just 267 yards in the Spartans' first seven games, ran .for 205 yards on just 22 carries, including touchdown runs of 72 and 64 yards. His second run gave the Spartans a commanding 27-10 lead with less than nine min- utes left in the fourth quarter. The Spartans' gameplan was to use the Michigan defense's strength - its fast linebackers and defen- sive backs - to their advantage. On numerous occasions, Michigan State ran counter and misdirection plays to surprise Michigan. "With a fast defense like Michi- gan's, we tried to get them to over- pursue," Cobb said. "Their speed just worked in our favor. They're a downhill defense. Anytime they see something, they rush to it, and we did a good job taking advantage of it." Said Michigan coach Lloyd Carr on Cobb's two long touchdown runs - both of which came on the same draw play out of the shotgun: "It's not like we didn't work on the play. That speaks to their execution." But, when it turned out that Mich- igan's offense would give the team a chance to win the game, the defense turned itself around. After Cobb's sec- ond touchdown, Michigan responded with a field goal and a touchdown after an onside kick to cut the deficit to 27-20. Michigan forced the Spar- tans into two punts and a missed field goal to end regulation. "They kind of changed up their offense in terms of their blocking scheme," Woodley said. "It gave us problems, but we were able to rebound and do a better job as the game went along." The defense's best play of the game came in overtime. In the first extra session, with Michigan up three, the Spartans had a third-and- one at Michigan's four-yard line. But Michigan's defensive line yielded no ground, and linebacker Roy Manning stopped Cobb for a two-yard loss. Then, in the third overtime, Mich- igan's defense had enough energy for one last stop to gain the win. "We finally came through for the offense," defensive end Pat Massey said. I TONY DING. Michigan State running back DeAndra Cobb bursts past Ernest Shazor en route to a 64-yard touchdown run. WEEKEND'S BEST HOW THE AP TOP 25 FARED Associated Press Poll for the week of Oct. 24-30 Games updated through Oct. 30 WHAT THE HEEL?: After surviving scare after scare this season, Miami fell to the most unlikely of oppo- nents. North Carolina kicker Connor Barth drilled a 42-yard field goal with no time left in regulation to give the Tar Heels a 31-28 win. It was the first time in school history that the Tar Heels had defeated an opponent ranked in the top five. After the game, Miami coach Larry Coker called the loss "mind-boggling." SUNSHINE STATE OF DESPAIR: Miami's stunning loss capped off a miserable day for the state of Florida. Earlier, No. 5 Florida State had been stunned by Maryland, and Florida lost at Georgia - marking the first time since 1978 that those three Florida schools had been beaten on the same day. Florida State even turned to demoted quarterback Chris Rix to try and stem the tide. The former Heisman candidate managed to rally the Seminoles to within 20-17, but that would wind up being the final. Florida, meanwhile, was play- ing in its first game since it was announced that coach Ron Zook would be fired at the end of the year. UTE GOTTA BELIEVE: The BCS committee continues to face the possibility of a West Virginia-Utah matchup in the Fiesta Bowl. The Utes passed a significant road test on Saturday, demolishing injury- riddled San Diego State 51-28. Utah quarterback Alex Smith continued to fuel his Heisman Trophy candi- dacy by throwing five touchdowns on 22-for-33 passing against the Aztecs. He was also Utah's leading rusher, carrying 15 times for 45 yards. There are just three games left between Utah and a berth in the BCS: home games with Colorado State and BYU and a trip to Wyo- ming between the two. Team: 1. Southern Cal. 2. Oklahoma 3. Auburn 4. Miami 5. Florida State 6. Wisconsin 7. California 8. Texas 9. Utah 10. Georgia 11. Tennessee 12. Michigan 13. Virginia 14. Louisville 15. West Virginia 16. Texas A&M 17. Purdue 18. Boise State 19. LSU 20. Arizona State 20. Oklahoma State 22. Virginia Tech 23. Iowa 24. Minnesota 25. Southern Miss. This week: beat Washington State 42-12 beat Oklahoma State 38-35 beat Mississippi 35-14 lost to North Carolina 31-28 lost to Maryland 20-17 Idle beat Arizona State 27-0 beat Colorado 31-7 beat San Diego State 51-28 beat Florida 31-24 beat South Carolina 43-29 beat Michigan State 45-37(38t) Idle Idle beat Rutgers 35-30 lost to Baylor 35-34 (ot) lost to Northwestern 13-10 beat Hawaii 69-3 beat Vanderbilt 24-7 lost to California 27-0 lost to Oklahoma 38-35 beat Georgia Tech 34-20 beat Illinois 23-13 lost to Indiana 30-21 beat East Carolina 51-10 Next week: at Oregon State at Texas A&M Idle Clemson Duke Minnesota Oregon Oklahoma State Colorado State at Kentucky Notre Dame Idle Maryland at Memphis (Thurs.) Temple Oklahoma at Iowa Idle Idle Stanford at Texas at North Carolina Purdue at Wisconsin Cincinnati NEW AP TOP 25 (first-place votes in parentheses) TEAM - REC PTS PVS 1. Southern Cal. (56) 8-0 1,616 1 2. Oklahoma (8) 8-0 1,556 2 3. Auburn (1) 9-0 1,507 3 4. California 6-1 1,362 7 5. Wisconsin 8-0 1,3596 8. Texas 7-1 1,230 8 7. Utah 8-0 1,212 9 8. Georgia 7-1 1,162 10 9. Tennessee 7-1 1,132 11 10. Michigan 81 1,062 12 11. Miami 6-1 1,035 4 12. Virginiata -1 815 13 13. Florida Stale 6-2 803 5 14. Louisville 5-1 793 14 15. West Virginia 7-1 754 15 18. Boise State 8-0 685 18 17. 150 8-2 557 19 18. Virginia Tech 6-2 515 22 19. Oklahoma State 6-2 469 20 20. Iowa 6-2 416 23 21. Southern Miss. 5-1 209 25 22. Texas A&M 6-2 206 16 23. Arizona State 6-2 189 20 24. Boston College 5-2 111 NR 25. UTEP 6-2 69 NR Others receivingvotes: Northern lllinois 52, Pitts- burgh 42, TexasfTech 35, Purdue 34, Alabama 26, UCLA 22, Navy 20, Michigan State 11, Toledo 11, Oregon 11, South Carolina 8, Ohio State 7 UP NEXT: NORTHWESTERN The more games it plays, the tougher North- western looks. On Saturday, the Wildcats stunned a reeling Purdue team, winning 13-10 - lust weeko after they upset Ohio State. At 3-2 in the Big Ten and 4-4 oserall, the Wildcats are definitely still thinking about being bowl eligible. They head to Penn State this week. Meanwhile, the Wolverines have had to rally in the second half of their last four games for victories, and Michigan coach Lloyd Carr said there isn't a team that ever needed a bye week so badly. Still, the Wolverines will have to guard against being rusty against North- western if they hope to be 7-0 in the Big Ten headingto Columbus. Date Sept. 4 Sept. 11 Sept. 18 Sept. 25 Oot. 2 Oct. 9 Oct. 16 Oct. 23 oct. 30 too. 13 too. 20 'M' SCHEDULE Opponent Time/Result Miami (Ohio) W, 43-10 at Notre Dame , 20-28 San Diego State W, 24-21 Iowa W, 30-17 at Indiana W, 35-14 Minnesota w, 27-24 at Illinois w, 30-19 at Purdue w, 16-14 Michigan State w, 45-37 (3 ot) Northwestern TBA at Ohio State 1 P.M. ocA & - I