1iA-The Michigan Daily - Thursday, October 5, 2006 I Iowa vs. Purdue highlights wee end Last week Across the Big Ten warned John L. Smith, "Those who don't learn from his- tory are doomed to repeat it." We should've taken our own advice when picking the Mich- igan State-Illinois game. Two weeks ago, we picked the Spartans, and they lost. Last week, we picked the Spartans, and they lost. Maybe next time we'll be more cautious when pick- ing a Michigan State game. As for this week, the Big Ten slate is as exciting as listening to Ben Stein talk. These games may be stinkers to watch during a tailgate, but they're always a great excuse to hide your emerging alcohol- ism. And now, the picks: Penn State (1-1 Big Ten, 3-2 overall) at Minnesota (0-2, 2-3), Saturday, Octo- ber 7 - noon. Penn State can't look past this game toward next Saturday night's game against the Wol- verines. Last week was a convincing win for the Nittany Lions against a terrible North- western team. The defense allowed just one third-down conversion in 13 tries and held the Wildcats to 81 yards ACrOSS th on the ground.Penn State will with H. Jo need that run defense to be at Delgado shines n playoff debut Drew Tate and the Hawkeyes host Purdue Saturday afternoon. Eastern Michigan. The oddsmakers in Vegas have no faith in the Wildcats and neither does ATBT. Look out for Badger running back P.J. Hill to have a monster game. Wisconsin 45, Northwestern 10 Indiana (0-1, 2-3) at illi- * f nois (1-1, 2-3), Saturday, October 7 - noon. e Big Ten This matchup consists of. se Bosch the two Big Ten's black sheep of the Big Ten With the suc- its best against Minnesota's r Gopher running back Amir Pin 91 yards against a Michigan te allowed any other back to top 6 Gophers may be just what thec for depressed Twins fans by tI day rolls around, so this could ritory for JoePa. Look for Min advantage. Minnesota 17, Penn State 13 Northwestern (0-1, 2-3)e (1-1, 4-1), Saturday, Octobe Dub this one the Baby Bo youngest coaches in Division I at Camp Randell Stadium. Thi: pose no problem for Wiscons gers play in one of the most hi ments for visiting teams, and t a declawed Wildcats team. Th been a rough one for Northw their emotional season-openin Miami (GH), the Wildcats have only win coming in a weak, 14- - - -8 A 1. " l tl " ushing attack. cess of Ohio State, Michigan and even Iowa, nix rushed for the Big Ten likes to forget that it has teams am that hasn't like Indiana and Illinois to keep it balanced. 0. The Golden The Fighting Illini finally won their first Big doctor ordered Ten game in two years against Michigan he time Satur- State, and Ron Zook is looking to build on be hostile ter- the momentum from that win. Juice Williams nesota to take looked good for a freshman last week, throw- ing for 122 yards and a touchdown while run- ning for 103 yards. Add to that the threat of running back Pierre Thomas and the Hoo- siers may be in trouble - Indiana gave up at Wisconsin eight straight scores to Wisconsin last week. @r 7 - noon. The Fighting Illini may not be the Badgers, wl as the two but just about anyone can look good when in- -A square off ing up with the Hoosiers, including your IM s game should football team. sin. The Bad- ostile environ- Illinois 28, Indiana 14 hey're hosting its season has Purdue (1-0, 4-1) at No. 19 Iowa (1- vestern. Since 1,4-1), Saturday, October 7 - 12:03 g win against p.m., ESPNU. gone 1-3, their If this game starts three minutes later than 6 slapfest with everyone else, it must be important. Despite the tough loss to Notre Dame, Purdue is still scorching the statsheets to the tune of 36.8 points per game. And when you give teams like that an inch, they can take a mile. Iowa's offense, on the other hand, hasn't had a 100- yard runner or 100-yard receiver this season, a pretty unbelievable statistic when you con- sider the Hawkeyes have played cupcakes Montana and Illinois and a mediocre Syra- cuse. Last season, Tate and then-starting Pur- due quarterback Brandon Kirsch combined to throw for a whopping 710 yards. Fireworks are going to fly again this season, but desper- ation will work in favor of Iowa. And nothing is more comforting to a desperate team than home-field advantage. Purdue drops its sec- ond straight game against a ranked opponent on the road, but it'll be interesting. No. 19 Iowa 34, Purdue 27 Bowling Green (2-1, 3-2) at No. 1 Ohio State, October 7 - 3:30 p.m. What can you even say about this game? A Mid American Conference team travel into the Horseshoe to play the No. I team in the nation. Is there even a reason to do an analysis of this game? Ohio State is a 35 - 35-point - favorite in this one. That means there is a better chance of Paris Hilton making guest picks for ATBT than the Falcons winning this game. And another thing; Ohio State has won 22 straight games against in-state opponents. Fortunately, there is another game going on at 4:30 p.m. on Saturday that'll keep you occu- pied from watching this public sacrifice. No. I Ohio State 53, Bowling Green 10 NEW YORK (AP) - Minus two top starters, the New York Mets got dynamic postseason debuts from Carlos Delgado and David Wright to jump ahead of the Dodgers. Back in the playoffs for the first time since losing the 2000 Subway Series, the Mets capitalized on a wild baserunning blunder by Los Angeles and a perfectly respect- able performance from emergency starter John Maine in a 6-5 victory yesterday. Billy Wagner closed it for his first postseason save, fanning Nomar Garciaparra with a runner on second for the final out. "This is one of the games that's really the way we play," New York manager Willie Randolph said. Playing in the first playoff game of his 14-year career, Delgado had four hits, a mammoth homer and the go-ahead RBI in the seventh inning. Wright drove in three runs, help- ing the Mets take a 1-0 lead in the best-of-five series. "I was very excited," Delgado said. "I had butterflies in my stomach the first couple innings. I was saying, 'Whoa, what is going on here?' But I was able to kind of control my emotions and just go out and play." "We haven't quit all season long, especially these last couple months" Dodgers manager Grady Little said. "We'll keep coming at you." The Mets started a rookie in the opener after Orlando Hernandez tore a muscle in his right calf while jogging in the outfield Tuesday. He is expected to miss the entire post- season. Already without injured ace Pedro Martinez, New York scram- bled Tuesday night to find a healthy, rested starter and picked Maine, an afterthought in the offseason trade that sent Kris Benson to Baltimore for reliever Jorge Julio. The 25-year-old Maine went 6-5 with a 3.60 ERA for the NL East champions, who tied the crosstown Yankees for the best record in base- ball at 97-65. Yet he probably would have been left out of the playoff rota- tion altogether if Martinez hadn't gone down. "My nerves I think were worse in the second inning than they were in the first, Maine said. "It wasn't too bad" Lifted with a 2-1 lead in the fifth after throwing 80 pitches, Maine got a break on a bizarre play when the Dodgers had two runners cut down at home plate in the second. With two on and none out, rookie Russell Martin hit an opposite-field drive off the base of the right-field wall. But Jeff Kent hesitated at sec- ond base, apparently thinking the ball might be caught, and got an extremely late jump. That left J.D. Drew, who was on first, practically running up Kent's back as coach Rich Donnelly waved one - or both - around third. A quick, accurate relay from right fielder Shawn Green to second base- manJose Valentin tocatcherPaul Lo Duca nailed Kent, who attempted a headfirst dive into the plate. "If I hold him, we've got two guys at third base' Donnelly said. "I was hoping they'd throw the ball away. I didn't really want to send Jeff. J.D. was right behind him, and I thought, one's going to be out and one's going to be safe" Drew was left in no-man's land, trapped about halfway between third and home. But Lo Duca, who got spun around on the play at the plate, didn't realize that at first as he struggled to his feet. With Lo Duca unaware for a moment, Drew tried to sneak his way in. Maine pointed at Lo Duca, trying to alert him that another run- ner was coming. The catcher turned his head, suddenly noticed Drew bearing down on him and applied a second tag as Drew also tried a headfirst dive. "We needed this game, as far as momentum goes," Wright said. "We have a team full of igniters. When a couple of these guys get going, it rubs off." Delgado had played the most games of any active player without reaching the postseason. He also was No. 1 on the active home run list without a playoff appearance. "It's nice to see him finally get an opportunity on this stage and come through," Randolph said. 4 I Can't wait until then? Apply online. Go to Quickenloanscareers.com for more info. 4 4 I -ckRock Loans financial A QUICtE NLAS COMtANY FORTUNE* 100 BEST COMPANIES TO WORK FORĀ°