4B - The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - November 14, 2005 Michigan 41, Indiana 14 Breaston thrills as Blue tops Hoosiers By Gabe Edelson Daily Sports Writer The numbers speak for themselves. After the first half of Saturday's game against Indiana, receiver Steve Breaston had accumu- lated 201 all-purpose yards on just eight touches - an average of over 25 yards per play. The entire Hoosiers team managed a paltry 167 in the same span. The slippery, elusive and fleet-footed return specialist embarrassed Indiana nearly every time he touched the pigskin in the game's opening 30 minutes. After the Hoosiers scored the game's first touchdown, Breaston took the ensuing kickoff back 47 yards into Indiana territory by cutting, faking and outrunning would-be tacklers. If it weren't for defensive back Eric McClurg's angle on Breaston near the sideline, the runback might have gone all the way for a score. It appeared Breaston gave away another excellent chance at a touchdown on the final play of the first quarter, when the redshirt junior pulled away from several Hoosiers, bounced to the right sideline, cut back toward the middle of the field and then steered him- self directly into Indiana defenders on the right side. The left side of the field was devoid of any opponents, but Breaston's 53-yard return still got the Wolverines down to the Hoosiers' 26-yard line. "I'm kind of upset if I don't make a big play," Breaston said. "It's all about playing your role. If the ball comes to me, I have to do something left shoulder and into his hands. It was just Breaston's second receiving touchdown of the season. Breaston also contributed to Michigan's run- ning game. In the second quarter, the receiver took a reverse from running back Jerome Jack- son and raced to the right sideline. Quarterback Chad Henne put a solid block on Troy Grosfield by taking out his legs. The hit freed Breaston for a 30-yard gain to set up Jackson's six-yard scoring run three plays later. "It was a good block," Henne said. "I felt good about myself. Coach Carr was busting my butt all week about, 'Are you ever going to block somebody?' I was like, 'I'll get my chance.''' Breaston involved himself in the passing game, too, when he attempted a pass in the sec- ond quarter. Breaston even managed to help his team without running for big yardage. When No. 15 took a hard hit from Hoosiers cornerback Tracy Porter before fielding the ball on an Indiana first-quarter punt, the subsequent kick-catch interference penalty put the Wol- verines at the Hoosiers' 47-yard line and set up Michigan's go-ahead touchdown pass from Henne to receiver Jason Avant. Breaston lay face-down on the turf for a moment after being shaken up on the play, but the collision didn't seem to have any aftereffects, with 154 of Breaston's all-purpose yards coming after Porter's blatant foul. "It's football," Breaston said. "It happens. It's a physical game, and I could have got hit like that during the play. So everybody has to get back up." Breaston wasn't involved in the Wolverines' second-half plans, spending most of the third and fourth quarters on the bench. But Michi- gan's return ace had already put his stamp on the game. "He's got an instinct," coach Lloyd Carr said. "I think it takes a fearlessness to take the ball when you know that there's 10 or 11 guys run- ning right at you. It takes a fearlessness to accel- erate. I think the human part of it is to try to pick your way, and Steve has the instinct that is born into great punt returners. He will hit the crease, he will accelerate, and certainly he did that today." 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 17 Gutierrez 6 Kasti Breaston Totals 23 RUSHING Player Att Grady 14 Bradley 9 Breaston 1 Jackson 8 Bass 4 Martin 5 Eldridge 1 Gutierrez 4 Kastl 1 Henne 2 Totals 49 RECEIVING Player No. Avant 5 Grady 4 Breaston 3 Manningham 3 Bass 3 Dutch 1 Massaquoi 1 Ecker 1 Massey. M. 1 Martin 1 Totals 23 IND 9 28/63 147 58 210 19 13/30/1 10/43.5 0/0 8/73 23:50 MICH 26 49/216 209 86 425 151 23/37/0 3/33 3/1 2/20 36:10 I C H I G A N C-A 7-24 -11 O-1 O-1 3-37 t t a a s s i i Yds 94 49 30 22 12 9 6 0 0 -6 216 Yds 66 20 46 30 25 16 6 ' -2 -3 209 No. 3 3 Yds 174 35 0 O 0 209 Avg 6.7 5.4 30 2.8 3.0 1.8 6.0 0 0 -3.0 4.4 Avg 13.4 5.0 12.5 10.5 9.5 16.0 6.0 5.0 -1.0 -1.5 9.1 Yds 99 99 TD 3 O 0 0 3 L9 32 16 30 6 9 4 6 11 0 2 32 L9 22 8 23 14 9 16 6 5 0 0 3 MIKE HULSEBUS/Daily Receiver and return specialist Steve Breaston picked up 201 all-purpose yards on Saturday - in the first half. with it." Even when Breaston dropped a punt in the second quarter, he scooped the ball up and squeezed a 25-yard return out of the play. The sequence moved Breaston into second place for all-time Big Ten career punt return yard- age. The electrifying athlete passed Anthony Carter to become the Wolverine with the most returns and return yards in school his- tory, as well. "It wouldn't be wise to (punt to Breaston)," linebacker David Harris said. "But if they press their luck, they get burned." Said tight end Tim Massaquoi: "(Breaston) is just a magnificent, dynamic player. You never know when he's going to do it, but we're always ready for him to (make big plays)." Breaston hauled in three catches for 46 yards, including a perfectly executed 11- yard touchdown catch on a corner route at the end of the second quarter. He cut to the left side of the end zone and distanced him- self from defensive backs Damien Jones and Chris Phillips before the ball floated over his Trick plays and new formations abound By Matt Venegoni Daily Sports Editor PUNTING Playert Ryan Totals KICKOFF RETURNS Player No. Breaston N1 Totals 1 PUNT RETURNS Player No. Breaston 3 Manningham 1 Dutch 2 Totals 6 DEFENSE Player Harris Hall Burgess Graham Englemon Wood's Watson Massey. P. Thompson Harrison Adams Campbell Stewart Myers Barringer Hood Branch Crable Trent Mason Van Astyne Jam ison Jackson Totals Yds Avg Lg 47 47.0 47 47 47.0 47 Boring. Conservative. Unimaginative. Those were just a few complaints heard during the Wol- verines' first nine games. But against Indiana - of all teams - Michigan delved deeper into the offensive playbook and showed some of the tricks up its sleeve. Although the Hoosiers had been giving up over 200 yards of rushing per game, the Wolverines didn't pound the ball as expected. The varied looks came right from the get-go on Michigan's first possession. On first-and-10 from the Indiana 34-yard line, Chad Henne took the snap and play-action faked to running back Kevin Grady. As Henne rolled to his left, he looked for Tyler Ecker, but the 6-foot-6 tight end was covered. He tucked the ball and ran for two yards. It wasn't a huge gain or even a new play, but Michigan showed that it was willing to do whatever was necessary to put Indiana away early. "We just came out and figured we could express our offense a little bit more," Henne said. "And the plays that we do have that are just kind of simplified, we complicated them and made them bigger plays and just added bigger attributes to the play." Saturday's game also showed what versatile freshman Antonio Bass means to the offense. Getting his most extensive playing time this season, the Jackson native lined up both in the backfield and as a receiver against the Hoosiers. In the backfield as a running back on Michigan's first offensive series, Bass went in motion. And in the same formation on the Wolverines' second series, Bass took a toss from Henne around the right side. The quick receiver slipped an Indiana defender, then spun forward for a nine-yard gain and a first down. "I think during the course of the season we've tried to find ways to get Antonio Bass more involved in the game ... the same with (freshman) Mario (Manningham) ... so we can spread the ball so that we're not just a team that relies on (wide receivers) Jason Avant or Steve Breaston," Michigan coach Lloyd Carr said. "So I think that really diversifies us more than we were at the beginning of the season." Tosses and new formations were just the tip of the iceberg for Carr and the rest of the Michigan coaching staff. Lead- ing 20-7 in the second quarter, the Wolverines came out in a typical formation. At the snap, Henne looked to his left and threw a pass in the flat to Breaston. But because the pass was a lateral, Breaston could throw the pigskin back across the field to a wide open Henne. Unfortunately, Breaston - a for- mer quarterback in high school - couldn't make the throw. If completed, Henne had a caravan of blockers to lead him down the field. "I just didn't step into it. I threw it flat-footed," Breaston said. "(The Buckeyes aren't) worried about my arm." With Michigan chugging away in the second quarter, Carr Yds 78 17 9 104 Solo 4 4 1 3 2 2 2 2 2 0 1 1 1 1 Avg 26.0 17.0 4.5 17.3 Avg Lg 33.0 36 33.0 36 Asst 1 3 O 0 1 0 O 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 14 14 Tot 5 4 4 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 44 TD 0 TO TD 0 0 0 0 Lg 53 17 8 BIG TEN STANDINGS Team BlTen Overall 4-wuw -1b vu v wy"*i Penn State Ohio State Michigan Wisconsin Minnesota Northwestern Iowa Michigan State Purdue Indiana Illinois 6 6 5 5 4 4 4 2 2 1 0 1 1 2 3 3 3 3 5 5 6 7 9 8 7 8 7 6 6 5 4 4 2 1 2 3 3 3 4 4 5 6 6 8 THIS WEEKEND'S RESULTS MICHIGAN 41, Indiana 14 MINNESOTA 41, Michigan State 18 OHIO STATE 48, Northwestern 7 Iowa 20, WISCoNSIN 10 PURDUE 37, Illinois 3 'M' SCHEDULE MIKE HULSEBUS/Daily Freshman receiver Antonio Bass saw time out wide and in the backfield during Michigan's 41-14 win over Indiana on Saturday. kept the trick plays coming. Leading 27-7, Michigan ran a in motion to line up in the Wolverines' diamond formation reverse to Breaston. The receiver gained 30 yards on the and Michigan used Bass as a decoy several times on fake end play. The Wolverines had complete control of the game in arounds. Whether the coaching meant to or not, the Buckeyes the first half, but still showed a couple new formations that will have to worry about the new plays since Michigan had Ohio State will have to prepare for. Mario Manningham went success on most of them. Date Sept. 3 Sept. 10 Sept. 17 Sept. 24 Oct. ± Oct. 8 Oct. 15 Oct. 22 Oct. 29 Nov. 12 Nov. 19 Opponent 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 W, 23-20 at Northwestern W, 33-17 Indiana W, 41-14 Ohio State 1 P.M. WEEKEND'S BEST SO MUCH FOR THAT: In past weeks, many fans and media personalities have worried about the possibility of more than two teams being undefeated. The main culprit was Alabama - it had reeled off nine straight wins. But those victories came despite not having scored an offensive touchdown for over 14 quar- ters. The Crimson Tide had been relying on defense and special teams, but this week Louisiana State had just enough offense to beat Rose Bowl-hopeful Ala- bama. Tigers quarterback JaMarcus Rus- sell threw an overtime touchdown pass to cap the victory for Louisiana State. MORE SEC EXCITEMENT: The Ala- k -w , I ..:i-: - Qtmt -f -m - a .e iu HOW THE AP TOP 25 FARED Associated Press Poll for the week of Nov. 6 Games updated through Nov. 12 NEW AP TOP 25 (first-place votes in parentheses) Team: 1. Southern Cal 2. Texas 3. Miami 4. Alabama 5. Louisiana State 6. Penn State 7. Notre Dame 8. Virginia Tech 9. Georgia 10. Ohio State 11. Oregon 12. Florida .n - . . _ T- . . Last week: beat California 35-10 beat Kansas 66-14 beat Wake Forest 47-17 lost to LSU 16-13 beat Alabama 16-13 Idle beat Navy 42-21 Idle lost to Auburn 31-30 beat Northwestern 48-7 beat Washington 34-31 lost to South Carolina 30-22 This week: Fresno State Idle Georgia Tech at Auburn at Mississippi at Michigan State Syracuse at Virginia Kentucky at Michigan Oregon State Idle TEAM 1. Southern Cal (56) 2. Texas (9) 3. Miami 4. Louisiana State 5. Penn State 6. Notre Dame 7. Virginia Tech 8. Alabama 9. Ohio State 10. Oregon 11. Auburn 12. UCLA 13. West Virginia 14. Georgia 15. TCU 16. Fresno State REC 10-0 10-0 8-1 8-1 9-1 7-2 8-1 9-1 8-2 9-1 8-2 9-1 7-2 10-1 8-1 PTS 1,616 1,569 1,483 1,418 1,334 1,246 1,214 1,176 1,163 1,022 963 876 837 780 719 632 Pys 1 2 3 5 6 7 8 4 10 11 15 14 16 9 18 20 :; i F I