When Gardner was down; Gardner and Gallon 10 hands raised him up electrify record crowd evin Gardnerwas on his back in his own end zone, looking up at the lights and a sea 'f maize. It was the fourth quarter of Michigan vs. Notre Dame, and Gardner had made the worst mistake of his football life. Could his legacy be tainted ZACH before it HELFAND even really began? The whole world was here it seemed, and now they were all looking at him on his back in the end zone and he was alone, all alone. What was he thinking as he lay there, arms sprawled out- ward, looking up at the sky, at the lights? He stared at Stephon Tuitt, who cradled the football in his arms in Michigan's end zone. What was he thinking? Gardner must have known that in the fourth quarter, he had given the Irish the biggest break of the game. The whole night had gone as planned until then, when 12:14 remained in the game. Michigan led 34-20. But then Gardner tried too hard to elude his rushers, and sud- denly he was in the end zone and running out of space and options. Austin Collinsworth hit him first. Then Prince Shembo. Gardner got his arm free and heaved the ball. Tuitt was there to catch it. Gardner stayed on his back and behind him, the Notre Dame cheerleaders went wild. He saw the band lose their mind. He watched Notre Dame players jump over each other. A foot beyond Gardner's head, the Notre Dame leprechaun jumped up and down, signaling a touch- down. The lights were on and the night had been flawless, but now the record-setting crowd went silent. It was falling apart, and fast. This was Gardner's night- mare. Gardner sat up and stayed See TEN HANDS, Page 3B Michigan wins last scheduled home game of rivalry By MATT SLOVIN ManagingEditor The airshow began about a half hour before kickoff and last- ed well into Michigan and Notre Dame's last scheduled meeting at Michigan Stadium. It didn't take long for the high-flying, Devin Gardner-led Wolverine offense to reclaim the Ann Arbor air space from the jets that circled the Big House during a lengthy pregame fly- over. Wearing the No. 98 jersey of Michigan legend Tom Har- mon, Gardner looked like a leg- end himself for the majority of the Wolverines' 41-30 win - as did his favorite target, fifth-year senior Jeremy Gallon. Gallon continued his emer- gence as the leader of a wide- receiving corps that had been one of Michigan's biggest ques- tion marks entering the season. He posted career highs of 184, receiving yards and three touch- downs. "He's like a little bulldog, man," Gardner said of his 5-foot- 8 receiver who plays far beyond that height. "Behind the doors, we work so hard. Now we finally got an opportunity to display it in front of the biggest crowd in college football." That crowd of 115,109 set a. new NCAA attendance record at the second night game in Michi- gan Stadium history. One year after then-Michigan quarterback Denard Robin- son's five-turnover performance against the Fighting Irish, it looked as if Gardner might avoid making any errors. And it wasn't until the fourth quarter, with the Wolverines already lead- ing by two touchdowns, that a mistake, like the pair of inter- ceptions Gardner threw in the opener against Central Michi- gan, popped up. Gardner scrambled into his See MICHIGAN, Page 3B . 5 THINGS WE LEARNED The offense is more dynamic than ever. Jeremy Gallon is more explosive than anyone realized, and other observations. Page 2B NEW RECORD Michigan re-broke its attendance record with 115,109 fans in attendance. That and more in this week's notebook. Page 3B