Johnny Sears (25) and Jamar Adams (22) leave the field after the 3rd-ranked Michigan football team's 32-t8 loss to 8th-ranked USC in the Rose Bowl. By STEPHANIE WRIGHT Daily Sports Editor PASADENA, Calif. - This year's Rose Bowl was billed as a consola- tion prize for two teams that came up just short of playing for the National Championship. Southern Cal won the prize. Michigan still needs consoling. Nearly a month after Bowl Cham- pionship Series voters selected Flor- ida to face No. 1 Ohio State in the BCS Championship game, thethird- ranked Wolverines had a chance to prove they deserved another shot at the undefeated Buckeyes. A chance to become just the sec- ond 12-win team in program his- tory. A chance to regain their position as the nation's No.2 team. Michigan blew its chance. On Monday, No. 8 Southern Cal embarrassed the Wolverines 32- 18 in a game that was considerably more lopsided than the final score indicated. Michigan couldn't move the ball against the Trojans' imposing defense - and couldn't stop their explosive offense, either. "(The Trojans are) a great team; they can score points, and the offense put the defense out there too many times," co-captain Jake Long said. "That type of offense, with that many chances, you know they're going to score points." For the Wolverines (7-1 Big Ten, 11-2 overall), it was a disappointing finish to an otherwise impressive season. After racking up 11 straight wins to start the year, Michigan ended its season with back-to-back losses for the third year in a row. The Wolverines have dropped their last four bowl games, includ- ing three Rose Bowls, and haven't won The Granddaddy of Them All since the 1997 season. In contrast to the loss to No. 1 Ohio State, inwhichonlyMichigan's vaunted defense struggled, the Wol- verines floundered on both sides of the ball against the Trojans. "(Michigan is) a traditional straight up offense," Southern Cal defensive end Lawrence Jackson said. "If they line up one way, if they're in certain formations, it doesn't take a rocket scientist to pick out what they were going to do. Our coaches have been around for a long time and were able to exploit that." In the days leading up to the game, the Wolverines fielded count- less questions about the Trojans' defense and said they were ready for Southern Cal's relentless pass rush and creative blitzing. The game said otherwise. Michigan's offensive line strug- gled to protect quarterback Chad Henne (26-of-41 for 309 yards) and gave up six sacks, which cost the Wolverines 44 yards. The Trojans' swarming defensive performance on Monday was remi- niscent of their standout day in the 2004 Rose Bowl, when they sacked Michigan quarterback John Navarre nine times in a 28-14 victory. "(Southern Cal) just has a great way of bringing pressure, you know, uncanny styles of pressure," Michigan right tackle Rueben Riley said. "You have unorthodox rush- ers such as (Brian) Cushing and Jackson ... just doing a good job at what they do." AndMichigancouldn'tstopthem, especially in the first half. The Wol- verines went into halftime with 76 yards of total offense, thanks in part to the Trojans' five first-half sacks. Michigan's sluggish running game didn't help. Including yards lost due to sacks, the Big Ten's top rushing offense amassed a meager 12 yards against Southern Cal. Tailback Mike Hart, the nation's seventh-leading rusher, finished with 47 yards on17 carries. "I thought Henne made some big plays in the first half on third and long ... to keep drives alive," Michi- gan coach Lloyd Carr said. "But it's just a matter of time when you can't run the football against ateampres- suringas well as (Southern Cal) that you end up (allowing) some sacks, and that's what happened to us." The Wolverines found a little offensive rhythm in the second half - especially through the air - and finished the game with 321 total yards. But that wasn't enough to keep pace with the Trojans' offensive fireworks. Southern Cal (7-2 Pac-10, 11-2 overall) played it safe in the first half but came out swinging in the second. Trojan quarterback John David Booty threw four second-half touchdowns and finished with 391 yards on 27-for-45 passing. Michigan's vaunted defense couldn't keep up. "We just have too many weapons on offense," Southern Cal receiver Dwayne Jarrett said. "We just have too many players that can get the ball, execute the plays (and) make the big plays when it's on the line. Michigan, I don't think they knew who to cover." After the Wolverines'top-ranked run defense held the Trojans to 20 rushing yards in the first half, Southern Cal wisely abandoned the run in the third quarter, rushing just twice in the frame. Excluding two quarterback keepers, the Tro- jans passed 27 straight times in the second half. Boasting a first-team All-Ameri- ca receiver in Jarrett, the Southern Cal offense exploited Michigan's secondary. Jarrett finished with 11 receptions for 205 yards en route to earning Offensive Player of the Game honors. Even cornerback Leon Hall, a fel- low All-America selection, couldn't stop Jarrett, who burned Hall for one ofhis two touchdowns. The score came at a particularly heartbreaking point for the Wol- verines. The momentum had shift- ed in Michigan's favor after Henne found junior Adrian Arrington in the end zone to pull the Wolver- ines within eight at the start of the fourth quarter. But Michigan's defense couldn't stop the Trojans aerial assault. Seven plays later, Booty found a streaking Jarrett to all but put the game away. When Michigan did manage to contain Jarrett, Southern Cal sim- ply turned to another member of its standout receiving corps. Senior Steve Smith grabbed seven catches for 108 yards and a touchdown. "If (the secondary is) a weak- ness, why wouldn't they focus on it?" linebacker Shawn Crable said. "I think once they realized they couldn't run on us, they really resorted to the pass game, and it took us awhile to realize they were passing on every down." Even the Wolverines' highly regarded front seven didn't bounce back completely from its breakdown against Ohio State. Booty had plenty of time to throw, especially in the second half, and Michigan notched just one sack all game (senior co- captain LaMarr Woodley). In a battle of two supposedly stout defenses, Southern Cal had the edge. "The media does a great job of building people up, but we knew we were a great front seven," Jack- son said. "We missed a couple sacks today, so it could have been a lot worse. Our defense showed up to play, and we did outplay their defense and we're happy about that. ... We weren't surprised at all about how this one turned out." The Wolverines couldn't say the same. This article originally ran on Jan.4 2007. 7E Burgess, defense help thrash Irish By SCOTT BELL slew of golden domes stood in DailySportsEditor between Burgess and his des- tination, and he ended up just SOUTH BEND - Warren G. yards short from navigating Harding High 24, Notre Dame his way to his second touch- 2. down. In a game where Notre Dame "The second one, there were Stadium officially became a a couple people I had to show part of Super Mario's world, my little skills I had to, but it was a long-time teammate they got me on the five-yard of Mario Manningham's who line," Burgess said. jumpstarted the Wolverines' Burgess wasn't the lone upset bid. Wolverine defender to find the Senior linebacker Prescott end zone. In the game's wan- Burgess, Manningham's team- ing minutes, Woodley jumped mate at Warren G. Harding on a fumble created after the High School in Ohio silenced ball slipped out of Quinn's a hostile crowd in the game's hand on a passing delivery. opening minute. When Quinn unsuccessfully On the game's second play, tried falling on the ball, Wood- Notre Dame tight end John ley picked it up and took it 54 Carlson couldn't corral a yards for the game's final score pass from quarterback Brady after pushing away Carlson on Quinn. His misfortune quickly his way to endzone. became Burgess's joy: The ball "I was just running, and I was tipped directly toward the saw one of the Notre Dame starting outside linebacker. guys jump on the ball and it It soon became evident that came out, so I scooped it up the gift-wrapped interception like we work on at practice and was going to turn into a gift- I just said, 'Let me get to this wrapped touchdown, as Bur- endzone.' " Woodley said. "I gess trotted 31 yards into the saw the guy from the corner of endzone, shocking the Irish my eye, so I just did what I've crowd and giving Michigan an seen Mike (Hart) do before early 7-0 lead. with the stiff arm." "It's nice to have the defense Defensive tackle Alan score," senior defensive end Branch, whose hit on Quinn LaMarr Woodley said. "Defi- caused the errant pass that led nitely at the beginning of the to Burgess's second intercep- game, with Prescott getting in tion, agreed that the key to there, it changed the momen- quieting the Fighting Irish's tum of the game. It takes the offense was the ability to pres- crowd out of it" sure Quinn without using too Burgess agreed and said many men. he was just glad his play "If you blitz every time, the could help get his teammates offense is going to be able to involved as well. make checks, and eventually, "Anytime a defender scores they'll hit a big one on you," on an interception or turnover, Branch said. "Really, it just it gets everyone going," Bur- shows the confidence Coach E. gess said. has in his D-line" The excitement resonated on Front four, middle three, the sideline, and Manningham back four - you name it, they was the beneficiary of it. His all got the job done. three receiving touchdowns For the game, Michigan over a 17-minute span gave the caused five turnovers against duo from Warren four touch- a team that hadn't committed downs in the first half - more one in 273 consecutive plays than Notre Dame's entire team entering the game. could muster for the entire The Wolverine defense had game. one, more turnover than the But Burgess had plans on Fighting Irish rushing attack making a repeat trip to the had total yards. endzone. And Quinn, arguably the With the score at 34-14 mid- Heisman frontrunner before way through the third quarter, the game, went from feeling Burgess had another ball come the pressure as a Heisman his way. Quinn couldn't cleanly favorite to feeling the pressure get a pass off after Michigan's sent by the Michigan defense. front four pressured him. The "I know he felt us today," always-opportune Burgess said Burgess after the game, stepped across the passing lane grinning. and caught the ball, and for the second time in the game, it was This article originally off to the races. This time, a ran Sept.18, 2006. Slim margin doesn't stop Blue By CHRIS MESZAROS Daily Sports Writer STATE COLLEGE - As the Michigan and Penn State women's gymnastics teams prepared for their final routines, 2,729 fans's hearts pounded in State College. And the lives of 14 gymnasts changed forever. A .375 point Michigan lead * seemed precarious at best, and the voracious Nittany Lion crowd ren- dered any advantage moot. The Wolverines held their own in the vault, but four amazing perfor- mances on the uneven bars by Penn State obscured the outcome. As the events concluded, both teams headed back to their locker rooms, clouded in mystery and ready to put an end to the agonizing wait. Nei- ther team knew who won, but both experienced a lifetime worth of jit- ters as the results were tallied. The announcer said that the top two teams were separated by a mere 10th of a point, hushing the crowd. The moment of truth finally came and the response couldn't have been more pronounced. The women donning the maize and blue shot into the air at the news of their Big Ten Championship, and the tears of joy flooded the stage, stamping an explanation point on a rollercoaster season for Michigan. "I'm just so overwhelmed at how proud I am of these kids," Michi- gan coach Bev Plocki said. "We had so many injuries and so many bad things happen. ... and they never gave up." The scoreboard read Michigan 196.575, Penn State 196.475. The Wolverines' surreal victory was assured. But it wasn't until the pho- tographers snapped team pictures and handed out championship T- shirts and hats that reality set in. Their pose was symbolic of their missionthis season. They embraced on a small platform, figurative of their team effort that won them the championship. As the teammates stood there, they weren't a group of bodies composingateambutateam that overcame so much to achieve a goal many thought unlikely. "This was the most emotional season and the season where we pulled together the most," junior Katie Lieberman said. "We worked together as a team and have been so close, we had some bumps in the road, but we overcame the adversity and came away with the win." Michigan came into the match as a slight underdog, which is unusual given it has won 13 of the past 15 titles. But the injury-plagued Wol- verines had to prove they could unite together and bring home a trophy without their full roster. Two-time All-American Lindsey Bruck and freshmen Jordan Sexton and Sarah Curtis were all lost for the season with injuries. "This team is an amazing group of young ladies," sophomore Huneth Lor said. "We've been working so hard to pick up from all the injuries that winning makes it all the better." The Wolverines followed the Nittany Lions in the rotation andj bested Penn State's performance in every event except the uneven bars. Michigan posted near season-high' scores on all events and pulled away with exceptional performances on the balance beam and floor exer- cise, which are generally two of their weaker routines. Michigan finished up the eve ning on vault, its most success- ful event. But a series of amazing routines reinvigorated the Nittany Lions and the home crowd. Two Nittany Lions stuck beautiful rou- tines, scoring 9.900 each, but fell just short of Michigan. The win is an exclamation point in Plocki's illustrious career and her most memorable championship. 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