4B - The Michigan Daily - SportsWednesday - October 19, 2005 Michigan 27, Penn State 25 First Start? No problem for safetles By Matt Venegoni Daily Sports Editor Starting two players making their first career starts at the safety positions sounds like a recipe for disaster. But luckily for Michigan on Saturday, two youngsters were able to hold their own against Penn State in the Wolverines' 27-25 win. With free safety Willis Barringer not dressed because of a leg injury and strong safety Brandent Englemon dressed but also out, freshman Brandon Harrison and sophomore Jamar Adams stepped in to help the Wolverines in a must-win situ- ation. The duo made mistakes, but filled in capably for the injured regulars. "I think that was one of the real positive things that we took out of this game," Michigan coach Lloyd Carr said. "But hopefully we will get Englemon back and at some point (Barringer) back and I think that, as a team, it's going to be a position of strength when they come back, because these two guys have proven they can do some things under the stress of a big game." Although the defense may have been limited with its calls, Harrison and Adams made their share of plays in holding the Nittany Lions' offense to 239 yards passing. On a crucial third-and-goal from the Michigan seven-yard line, Penn State quarterback Michael Robinson looked for tight end Isaac Smoklo in the back of the end zone. As the pass flew toward the open Smoklo, Adams streaked in from behind to tip the toss away. The Nittany Lions had to settle for a field goal. "My coaches gave me an opportunity to go out there and play, and (defensive backs coach Ron) English teaches us to go out there and play at a certain level," Adams said. "So we have to go out there and perform. Before the game, coach English told me, 'You practiced well, go out there and play well. Be confident. Whatever you do, be confident. If you have a bad play, come out there and make the next one.' And that was all I did." Adams finished with eight solo tackles and one pass break- up. Although this was Adams' first start, he gained valuable experience last week in the 23-20 loss to Minnesota. "When we recruited Jamar, we were fully expecting him to be an outstanding football player," Carr said. "I thought 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 M PASSING Player Henne 21 Totals 21 RUSHING Player Att Hart 23 Bass 2 Grady 5 Tabb 1 Breaston 2 Henne 6 Totals 39 RECEIVING Player No. Avant 8 Hart 4 Manningham 3 Ecker 3 Breaston 1 Massaquoi 1 Tabb 1 Totals 21 PSU 20 38/181 239 72 420 48 19/34/1 4/47 2/1 6/35 30:49 MICH 21 39/163 212 75 375 164 21/36/0 6/40.7 1/1 5/49 29:11 I C H IG A N C-A -36 1-36 t Yds 3 108 26 25 1 3 -2 13 63 Yds TD 212 2 212 2 3 3 3 3 1 1 t Yds 75 40 49 29 10 2 4 212 Avg 4.7 13.0 5.0 3.0 1.5 -0.3 4.2 Avg 9.4 10.0 16.3 9.7 10.0 5.0 4.0 10.1 Yds 15 229 244 Avg 32.0 8.0 27.2 Lg 17 23 14 3 4 7 23 Lg 21 16 33 20 10 5 4 33 Avg 15.0 45.8 40.7 Lg 41 8 41 PUNTING Player Rivas Ryan Totals No. 1 5 6 Int O 0 TD 0 0 O 0 0 0 1 TD 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 2 Lg 15 64 64 ITD 0 0 0 ITD 0 t 0 Tot 10 10 8 8 8 7 3 3 3 2 1 1 1 1 0 67 JASON COOPER/Daily Safety Jamar Adams had eight tackles and one pass breakup in his first career start on Saturday. Adams and Brandon Harrison replaced regular safeties Willis Barringer and Brandent Englemon in the lineup against Penn State because of injuries. he made great strides late last week. In the second half of the Minnesota game, they came back with some things that they had done to him in the first half, and a smart player is a guy that doesn't repeat mistakes." Harrison - who moved from cornerback to free safety mid- way through preseason practices - also showed he could be counted on to play. Late in the second quarter, Penn State looked like it was putting together a drive right before halftime. On second- and-nine from the Michigan 49-yard line, Robinson scram- bled to his left and found a seam. But linebacker David Harris caught up to the speedy signal-caller and stripped the ball from behind. Harrison was right there to fall on the rolling ball. Not everything went perfectly for the inexperienced safe- ties. On the Nittany Lions' first touchdown drive, Harrison took a poor angle to running back Tony Hunt, allowing him to go through the Michigan secondary and sprint up the right sideline. But despite the mistake, Carr and the coaching staff came away impressed with what they saw. "If you had told me that we would play as well defensively as we did with a true freshman at safety and Jamar Adams getting his first start, I never would have believed it," Carr said. KICKOFF RETURNS Player No. Breaston 4 Thompson 1 Totals 6 PUNT RETURNS Player No. Breaston 2 Totals 2 DEFENSE Player Harris Mason Adams Burgess Woodley Hell Trent Watson Branch Massey, P. Thompson Tabb Harrison Massey, M. Van Astyne Graham Totals Yds 128 B 136 Yds Avg Lg 28 14.0 23 28 14.0 23 Solo 7 7 B 7 6 6 3 2 1 2 1 1 1 1 0 0 53 Asst 3 3 0 2 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 14 Front seven saved by zesty offensive play By Stephanie Wright Daily Sports Editor While Michigan's offense marched down the field in the game's final min- ute, defensive end Alan Branch stood by himself, away from his teammates near the student section. With the Wolverines up by three late in the fourth quarter and Penn State driving into Michigan territory, Branch had a chance to stop Nittany Lions quarterback Michael Robinson on what turned out to be a three-yard touchdown draw. "I was the first person who touched him," Branch said. "I reached my arm out, but I didn't have enough body to get him down. I was right there." That play gave Penn State a 25-21 lead with 58 seconds left. Branch placed the blame squarely on his own shoulders. So Branch stood alone, disap- pointed that he had let Robinson run right by him. That is, until Mario Manningham caught Chad Henne's pass on the game's final play. Then Branch's melancholy turned into jubi- lation. Not knowing what to do, the sophomore "ran back and forth three or four times" before grabbing his helmet and joining his teammates to celebrate on the field. The victory certainly took the sting off his missed tackle. "It's a lot easier when you win the game," Branch said. "I'm going to look at the film in a completely dif- ferent way now." Aside from Robinson's scramble, Branch played well on Saturday in just his second start at defensive end. He recorded three tackles - includ- ing a stop on Penn State tailback Tony Hunt that forced the Nittany Lions to attempt a field goal on their opening all 73 yards that Penn State gained on its final scoring drive. "It was tough," linebacker David Harris said of defending Robinson. "He's a heck of an athlete. He can run better than most tailbacks. He can also throw the deep ball very well, so we just had to ... try to contain him." Said rush linebacker LaMarr Woodley: "We just gave up big plays. And those big plays - they cost." Although Michigan's propensity for giving up big plays is troubling - especially when it has to face Iowa quarterback Drew Tate this weekend - the defense did make a number of big stops of its own on Saturday. After the Wolverines tied the score at 18, Michigan's defense prevented the Nit- tany Lions from crossing midfield on their ensuing series. Woodley sacked Robinson for a loss of eight yards to stop the drive at Penn State's own 27- yard line. Woodley's four tackles for loss were the most in the game and as many as the Nittany Lions recorded as a team. The junior leads the Big Ten and ranks 16th in the nation with 14 tackles for loss this season. But Woodley wouldn't have forgiv- en himself or the rest of the defense if Michigan had lost the game. "Instead of stopping Penn State, we ended up letting them score," Wood- ley said. "We put our offense in that situation. The whole time they were down there, I wastblaming the defense for getting bit in that situation." Manningham's catch allowed the defense to forget about those mistakes - at least until they sit down to watch film. "I'm not going to think about that right now," Harris said with a smile after the game. "We won; that's all that matters." BIG TEN STANDINGS Team BaTen Overall v.6 vlw v Wvoml Penn State Wisconsin Iowa Ohio State Northwestern Minnesota Michigan Indiana Michigan State Illinois Purdue 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 Z 2 0 0 1 1 2 1 2 2 2 2 3 3 6 6 5 4 4 5 4 4 4 2 2 1 2 2 2 2 2 3 2 2 4 4 0 THIS WEEKEND'S RESULTS MtCHGAN 27, Penn State 25 Wisconsin 38, MINNEsoTA 34 IOWA 38, Indiana 21 OHIO STATE 35, Michigan State 24 Northwestern 34, PURDUE 29 Date Sept. 3 Sept. 10 Sept. 17 Sept. 24 Oct. 1 Oct. 8 Oct. 15 Oct. 22 Oct. 29 Nov. 12 Nov. 29 'M' SCHEDULE Oooonent Time/Result Northern Illinois W, 33-17 Notre Dame, L, 10-17 Eastern Michigan W, 55-0 at Wisconsin L, 20-23 at Michigan State W, 34.31 Minnesota L, 20-23 Penn State W, 27-25 at Iowa 1 p.m. at Northwestern 7 p.m. Indiana TBA Ohio State noon Defensive lineman Alan Branch (80) and the rest of Michigan's front seven did a good job containing Penn State quarterback Michael Robinson for most of the game. When the Nittany Lions moved the ball in the fourth quarter, the Wolverines' offense responded. drive - but lost containment on Rob- inson twice. It was that type of day across the front seven. Michigan contained Rob- inson and the rest of Penn State's playmakers for most of the game. But as they've done all season, the Wolverines gave up big plays in the registered just one sack. But the Wol- contest's critical moments. verines' defense prevented the fifth- Michigan let Robinson exceed year senior from turning those yards his season averages through the air into points until the fourth quar- and on the ground - throwing for ter. Then, in addition to a four-yard 239 yards on 19-of-34 passing while touchdown run three minutes into rushing for an additional 67 - and that frame, Robinson accounted for WHO's NEXT: IOWA Coming into the season, the Hawkeyes were receiving a lot of media attention. After losing games to Iowa State and Ohio State, the hype disappeared. But Iowa has quietly won three games in a row. Quarter- back Drew Tate had the honor of being the Big Ten preseason Player of the Year, but a concussion knocked him out of two games this year. He has come back, and with the help of running back Albert Young and receiver Clinton Solomon, put the Hawk- eyes back on track. WEEKEND'S BEST NO LUCK OF THE IRISH: No. 1 South- ern Cal escaped South Bend with a dramatic win on a Matt Leinhart quarter- back sneak from the one-yard line with three seconds left. No. 9 Notre Dame appeared as if it had won when time expired with the Trojans driving close to the goal line, but Pete Carroll convinced the refs to put seven seconds left on the clock. It was tight throughout, and Notre Dame appeared set for the win when Brady Quinn scored on a five-yard keeper with 2:02 left. Reggie Bush led the Tro- jans with 160 rushing yards and three touchdowns, while Notre Dame's stand- out Jeff Samardzija had six receptions for HOW THE AP TOP 25 FARED NEW AP TOP 25 Associated Press Poll for the week of Oct. 9 Games updated through Oct. 15 Team: 1. Southern Cal 2. Texas 3. Virginia Tech 4. Florida State 5. Georgia 6. Alabama 7. Miami 8. Penn State 9. Notre Dame 10. Louisiana State 11. Florida 12. UCLA Last week: beat Notre Dame 34-31 beat Colorado 42-17 DN P lost to Virginia 26-21 beat Vanderbilt 34-17 beat Mississippi 13-10 beat Temple 34-3 lost to Michigan 27-25 lost to Southern Cal 34-31 beat Florida 21-17 lost to Louisiana State 21-17 beat Washington State 44-41 This week: at Washington Texas Tech at Maryland at Virginia Arkansas Tennessee Georgia Tech at Illinois BYU Auburn DNP Oregon State TEAM 1. Soul 2. Tex 3. Virg 4. Geo 5. Alab 6. Miar 7. Loui 8. UCL 9. Notr 10. Tex 11. Flo 12. Pe 13. Bo 14. Oh 15. Or (first-place votes in parentheses) REC PTS PVS thern Cal (57) 6-0 1,617 1 as (8) 6-0 1,566 2 inia Tech 6-0 1,495 3 rgia 6-0 1,426 5 ama 6-0 1,306 6 mi 5-1 1,278 7 siana State 4-1 1,201 10 A 6-0 1,085 12 e Dame 4-2 1,020 9 xas Tech 6-0 1,007 13 rida State 5-1 1,003 4 nn State 6-1 854 8 ston College 6-1 809 14 io State 4-2 798 15 egon 6-1 665 20 I