i Robinson's redemption leads Blue By MICHAEL FLOREK Daily Sports Editor It wasn't a perfect spiral, but in a way, that made it a perfect pass. And it was the perfect way to complete Denard Robinson's redemption. Down by three with eight seconds left, Robinson, Michigan's junior quarterback, took the huddle for the final time in the drive that would give Michigan the 35-31 victory. Robinson was leading his sec- ond final drive. Coming back from a 17-point deficit entering the fourth quarter, he had gone 3-for-4 and taken the Wolverines 58 yards for Michigan's first lead of the game with 1:12 remaining. Now he had to do it again. Notre Dame (0-2) used just four plays to retake the lead with 30 seconds left. This time, Robinson deferred to redshirt junior wide receiver Roy Roundtree. "He told me in the huddle," Robin- son said," 'Denard, I got to getit. I got to getit."' The play call was a fade route. Roundtree beat Notre Dame corner- back Gary Gray. The spiral was a little loose. The ball floated. "I threw it up," Robinson said. "And I knew he was goingto get it." Roundtree had to readjust his body and open his back shoulder up. The ball glistened in the lights, which were the focal point of a pre- game focused on Michigan Stadium's first night game, but that didn't mat- ter. In terms of the game, nothing else mattered. It didn't matter that Roundtree hadn't made a catch the entire game, that Gray was holding Roundtree, or that the Fighting Irish had left just half a minute on the clock and 80 yards in front of the Wolverines. Roundtree jumped and caught the ball just above Gray's helmet. He planted his foot. Touchdown. "Once I saw the ball come off, it was high," Roundtree said. "Denard put it up high so I can adjust to it. Once I came back towards it, he was still up on me, so I just jumped up in the air and focused on it and when I came down, I made sure I my one foot was in." The officials reviewed it, but the 114,804 in attendance knew what they saw: the conclusion to a game that would seemingly never end. Robinson had already drove Mich- igan into Notre Dame territory and dumped off a screen pass to junior running back Vincent Smith for a touchdown. Then Rees came back and gave the Fighting Irish the lead with 30 sec- onds left and Robinson reverted back to his old self, over-throwingredshirt sophomore Jeremy Gallon. But the next play he didn't miss a wide-open Gallon running a wheel route, bring- ing the ball to the 16-yard line. While Robinson finished the day with 338 yards passing and five total See ROBINSON, Page 3B How it ended: The Last 5 Minutes 4:57 Robinson to Hemingway, jum p-ballfor 45 yards. 4: 2 Robinson throws inter- ception in the endzone. A Jake Ryan stops Cierre * Wood on third down forcing a punt. 1 2 Vincent Smith takes screen pass 21 yards for go-ahead touchdown. UM 28-24 1:05 J.T. Floyd called for pass interference on Michael Floyd. 036 Rees hits Theo Riddick for a 29-yard touchdown. ND 31-28 2 Robinson finds Gallon wide open on wheel route for 64 yards. 0: 8 Robinson hits Roundtree for a 16-yard touchdown. UM 35-31 Defense forces turnovers when needed most By KEVIN RAFTERY Daily Sports Editor At the end of the first quarter dur- ing the Michigan football team's thrilling 35-31 win over Notre Dame Saturday, the Michigan Stadium loudspeakers gave Wolverine fans virtually their only hope for victory. Journey's "Don't Stop Believin' " - a song almost always reserved for late-game desperation come- backs - boomed throughout the stadium, almost apologetically. In reality, Michigan fans had little rea- son to believe. The Fighting Irish were leading the Wolverines, 14-0, and had just intercepted another poorly thrown pass by Michigan junior quarterback Denard Robinson, who finished the quarter 1-for-4 for five yards. And if the offense was bad, the defense was worse. Notre Dame soph- omore quarterback Tommy Rees, who had started just four career games prior to Saturday, went a perfect 8-for-8 for 94 yards and two touch- downs on the Fighting Irish's first two drives. The Notre Dame running backs also piled up a quick 51 yards on nine rushes in the first quarter, bursting through holes the size of the Grand Canyon. With the exception of a couple critical mistakes, the Fight- ing Irish's offensive surge continued through the third quarter. And after Rees connected with junior Theo Rid- dick for a 15-yard touchdown to give Notre Dame a 24-7 edge with just over a quarter to play, it was over - at least for the few hundred fans that decided they'd seen enough and exit- ed the stadium. But it wasn't over for the Wolver- ines. "Whatever the situation, we're gonna keep playing as hard as we can," senior defensive tackle Mike Martin said after the game. "We never quit and we never gave up." And while it was Robinson and the Michigan offense that have received the most credit for the miraculous comeback, it never would have hap- pened without several key plays by the defense. The defensive turnaround started in the second quarter. With Notre See TURNOVERS, Page 3B