4B - September 15, 2008 Sportsanday The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 48 - September15, 2008 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom GAME STATISTICS . Tam Stats First DownsC Rush/Yds Offensive Plas Total ORfese CompR/AttInt Punts/Avg Fumbles/Lost PASSIN Play ThCr pet ShridanCR TotCCCal RUSING MICH 21 42/159 229 70 388 59 19/28/2 4/52.8 7/4 7/79 32:12 C-A Yds 16-23 17S 3-5 54 . 19-28 229 ND 34/115 147 55 260 70 10/21/2 6/43.8 3/0 3/38 27:48 TD 1 0 1 Att 2s 1 s 2 4 3 1 1 42 No. 6 4 4 3 2 19 Yds 131 13 8 S 4 1 0' -3 202 Avg 5.2 13 1.6 2.5 1.0 0.3 0.0 -3.0 3.8 Avg 9.3 11.8 11.5 11.7 22.5 12.1 Lg 29 13 21 3 7 9 0 0 29 Lg 33 40 16 20 45 45 Int 0 2 2 TD 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 TD 0 1 0 0 0 1 1- Yds 56 47 46 35 45 229 a No. Yds Avg Cg 4 211 52.8 58 .4 211 52.8 58 No. 2 2 5 Yds 28 30 57 Avg 14.0 15.0 11.4 Ls 18 16 18 TD 0 0 0 No Ys Avg g TD 2 -2 0.0 3 0 Senior Morgan Trent was.part of a Michigan secondary that allowed two deep pass plays in the Wolverines' loss to Notre Dame. Solo 4 3 3 3 2 0 2 0 1 t 0 i t t 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 23 Asst 4 4 4 6 2 4 2 2 0 0 0 0 t 1 1 1 t 1 1 46 Tot 9 8 7 7 6 6 4 4 3 2 2 t 1 1 t 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 69 Poor communication, predictable breaks burn Michigan secondary 6 I N 0 T R E D A M E PASSING Player C-A Yds TD Int Clausen 10-21 147 2 2 Totas 10-2 14 2 2 RUSHING Player Att Yds Avg Lg TO Hughes 19 79 4.2 18 2 Aldridge 9 28 3.1 8 0 PAlln 2 CC .C C 0 TEAM 2 -3 -1.5 0 0 Totals 34 113 3.3 18 2 RECEMVNG Player N. SACs Ag CC TO Floyd 2 10 5.0 9 0 Kamara 1 10 10.0 10 1 Grimes 1 3 3.0 3 0 Totals 10 147 14.7 60 2 PUNTING Player No. Yds Avg l Maust 6 263 43.8 52 Totals 6 263 43.8 52 KICKOFF RETURNS N. Ys Ag t D Noayrthwestern Av0 0 g3T0 Tate 3 58 19.3 27 0 Indina 1 00 0 2 0 0 llns04 58 14 27 0 PUNT RETURNS Player No. Yds Avg Lg TD Allen 1 9 90 9 0 Pe 1 3 0 0 1 31 Total 2 12 6.0 9 0 TACKLESH Player Solo Asst Tot Wruton 10 5 15 McCarthy 7 3 10 wrown 2 2 4 Tntz 3 0 3 Anello 2 1 3 McNeil 2 1 3 Larmbert 2 0 2 Blanton 2 0 2 BrownM 1 2 Srith 1 0 1 Totals 42 28 70 BIG TEN STANDINGS Team Bier Ten Overall Wisconsin 0 0 3 0 Iowa 0 0 3 0 Minnesota 0 0 3 0 Northwestern 0 0 3 0 Penn State 0 0 3 0 Indiana 0 0 2 0 Ohio State 0 0 2 1 Illinois 0 0 2 1 Michigan State 0 0 2 1 Purdue 0 0 1 1 Michigan 0 .0 1 2 THIS WEEKEND'S RESULTS NOTRE DAME 35, Michigan 17 MICHIGAN STATE 17, Florida Atlantic 0 SOUT HERN CA L 35, Ohio State 3 Wisconsin 13, F RESNO STATE 10 IOWA 17, Iowa State 5 ILLINOIS 20, Louisiana-Lafayette 17 Penn State 55, SYRACUSE 13 NORT HWESTERN 33, Southern Illinois 7 Oregon 32, PURDUE 26 MINNESOTA 35, Montana State 23 By IAN ROBINSON Daily Sports Editor SOUTH BEND - As he waited on the line of scrimmage before his 48-yard touchdown recep- tion, Notre Dame freshman wide receiver Golden Tate knew what would happen. "The coaches NOTEBOOK and I saw that if we can go in there and make it seem like we're running and freeze the safety, we'll be all right and we can get out past them," Tate said. "We did it." He used a double move to cre- ate confusion between senior cornerback Morgan Trent and junior safety Stevie Brown. Sec- onds later, he was behind both of them, celebrating in the end zone. At the time the play-action pass was Notre Dame quarter- back Jimmy Clausen's longest career completion. "I guess we were both pretty confident that guy was taken," senior Morgan Trent said. "I put that on myself as a senior." Michigan wasn't surprised about Notre Dame frequently taking its chances downfield. On Clausen's first opportunity to open up the field, he went deep on the first two plays. Later in the game, Clausen broke his own personal record with a 60-yard completion. "I know (Clausen) likes to take his chances," sophomore Dono- van Warren said. "It was kind of frustrating because we know what they are doing." Notre Dame executed its gameplan as expected, but the Michigan secondary couldn't get on the same page. On the deep throws, safeties didn't provide support when they needed to. On other plays, the safeties bit on play-action fakes that opened up. chances over the top. "It's just communication, and having each others' backs," War- ren said. INJURY REPORT: After receiving a Gatorade shower to celebrate his team's win over Michigan, Notre Dame coach Charlie Weis was carried off the field - in the front seat of a golf cart. While covering a second- quarter punt, defensive end Brandon Graham blocked Notre Dame linebacker John Ryan onto the sideline. Ryan crashed into the back of Weis's leg. The Notre Dame coach fell backwards over Ryan, awkwardly bending his knee as he went down. The Notre Dame medical staff stabilized the knee on the sideline with a brace, and Weis coached the rest of the game. He was diagnosed with a torn ACL and MCL. "I feel like an athlete - first time in my life," Weis said. The Michigan coaching staff didn't suffer any injuries. Wide receiver Greg Mathews had to be helped off the field at the end of the third quarter and was limping on his way to the team bus. Mathews hurt his foot in the season opener against Utah and missed last week's game against Miami (Ohio). He caught four passes for 46 yards before leav- ing. Redshirt quarterback Ste- ven Threet missed two fourth- quarter drives with cramps but returned for the final drive. He was limping as he left Notre Dame Stadium. NOT SACKED: Michigan entered Saturday's game as the n'ational leader in sacks with nine. The defensive line had been a bright spot in two games. Last year, Notre Dame allowed 58 sacks - and most of that offen- sive line returned. To say the least, the Wolver- ines' line was expected to win the battle in the trenches But Michigan failed to get to Clausen behind the line of scrim- mage Saturday. - "I just told the offensive line- men in the locker room, I said, 'Pick a place where you guys want to go to dinner, 'cause we're going to dinner this week,'" said Clausen, who called his line's play the difference in the game. The Fighting Irish employed a combination of play-action fakes and max-protect schemes to limit the effect of Michigan's blitz combinations. TRICKY: Michigan coach Rich Rodriguez came to Michigan with a reputation as a gutsy play caller. Part of that stems from the fake punt he called in the fourth quarter of West Virginia's 2006 Sugar Bowl win over Georgia, going for it on fourth-and-eight with 1.26 remaining. Facing a 14-0 deficit and fourth and two on its own 46 yardline in the first quarter Sat- urday, Michigan punter Zoltan Mesko scampered left out of the punt formation for 13 yards and a first down. EJECTED: Junior tight end Carson Butler was kicked out of Saturday's game with less than two minutes remaining. After a Sam McGuffie two-yard run, Butler appeared to throw a punch at the head of Notre Dame sophomore Emeka Nwankwo. Butler was escorted off the field by a member of the strength and conditioning staff and a police . officer. When approached by a reporter after the game, Butler pushed past the reporter. THREET From Page 1B great vision and kept his feet moving on his runs, allowing him to break tackles and find the open field. He finished with 178 all-purpose yards - 131 yards on 25 runs and 47 yards on four catches. By halftime, Threet had 128 passing yards. That's more than any Michigan quarter- back had in an entire game this year (the previous high was redshirt sophomore Nick Sheridan's 98 against Utah). Rodriguez said he planned to rotate the quarterbacks as he did last week, when the former walk-on subbed for Threetlateinthe firsthalf.But Sheridan didn't play Saturday until Threet was cramping up in the fourth quarter. "He's been playing better than Nick," Rodriguez said. "I thought he played pretty well today, at times." Threet finished 16-of-23 for 175 yards, a touchdown and no interceptions. He routinely hit the downfield passes he struggled with last week. Sheridan's performance also helped squelch the talk of using two quarterbacks. He was 3-for-5 for 54 yards, but both drives he led ended with interceptions on poorly thrown passes. Rodriguez has maintained that McGuffie and four other backs - freshman Michael Shaw, juniors Brandon Minor and Carlos Brown and red- shirt junior Kevin Grady - were all on equal footing when healthy. But the other four had just 10 carries for a combined 10 yards. Threet's lone touchdown pass came on a 40-yard screen pass to McGuffie. McGuffie leaked from the backfield to the right and took the screen. About 15 yards later, he cut toward midfield when he ran into redshirt sophomore left tackle Perry Dorrestein. McGuffie spun off the only contact he faced on the play for his only score. "Sam did well today," Threet said. "He ran the ball well. He ran the ball hard. You're always going to get good effort out of him." If Rodriguez sees similar effort from his running back and quarterback in coming weeks, his rides home will probably be more cheerful. Sloppy play in sloppy wea her spells doom for Wolverines IRISH From Page 1B Dame cornerback Mike Anello. With the ball back, the Fighting Irish needed just three plays for their second touchdown in the game's first four minutes. "Well, obviously, sometimes I feel like we're the Bad News Bears," Michigan quarterbacks coach Rod Smith said. "We got a guy open, we drop the ball. There's always something." After the Fighting Irish scored again to make it 21-0, the Wolver- ines' offense showed life for the first time midway through the first quarter on a 40-yard touch- down reception by freshman Sam McGuffie. And they continued to chip away at the three-touchdown def- icit with 10 points in the second quarter. But their 23-yard field goal and seven-yard touchdown run sandwiched another Notre Dame scoring drive, highlighted by a 60-yard pass - the longest completion of Notre Dame quar- terback Jimmy Clausen's career - that torched the Michigan defense as a steady rain began to fall. "The conditions weren'ttough," safety Brandon Harrison said. "It's just hard to get after somebody after so many turnovers." The turnovers continued in the fourth quarter, when Notre Dame's two picks off of Sheridan effec- tively ended any remaining chance for a comeback. Instead, the Wol- verines' flash of glory in the clos- ing minutes happened when senior cornerback Morgan Trent picked off a Clausen pass in the end zone to prevent the Fighting Irish from gaining a25-point lead. When the clock finally ran out, I i NOW SERVING: THE TABLE THE DAILY'S NEW FOOD BLOG RECIPES, RESTAURANTS, FESTIVALS, COOKING TIPS theta ble.blogs.michigandaily.com ZACHARY MEISNER/Daily Redshirt junior running back Kevin Grady fumbled the ball on a 2nd-and-goal late in the third quarter, addingto the Wolverines' turnover woes. They finished with seven fumbles (four lost) and two interceptions. a red-faced Rodriguez hastily dan said, despite his stats, the herded his players into the visitors Wolverines continue to get better locker room. Weis gave his fans a every week. smug shrug as he was driven off And junior safety Stevie Brown the field in a golf cart, his entire thought,.despite the score, Michi- left leg immobilized in a blue-and- gan's " turnover-filled afternoon white brace after one of his own showed little of the team's true players bowled him over in the talent. I second quarter. "I mean, they did beat us today, A few of the Wolverines said, as it happens," Brown said. "But in despite the loss, Michigan is "still our hearts, we know that we're the undefeated in the Big Ten." Sheri- better team." A