(1) Florida St. 77, North Carolina St. 17 (2) Nebraska 77, Arizona St. 28 (3) Texas A&M 52, Tulsa 9 (4) Florida 62, (8) Tennessee 37 LSU 12, (5) Auburn 6 (6) Southern Cal 45, Houston 10 (7) Penn St. 66, Temple 14 (9) Colorado 66, Northeast Louisiana 14 (10) Ohio St. 30, (18) Washington 20 (11) Michigan 23, Boston College 13 be £ttidaigu &i g (20) Oregon 3, p u2 A )C a Arkansas 20, (13) Alabama 19 (14) Oklahoma 24, SMU 10 (15) Texas 38, Pittsburgh 27 (16) Virginia 41, Georgia Tech 14 Illinois 9, (17) Arizona 7 Colorado State 27, (21) Air Force 20 (23) Georgia 40, New Mexico St. 13 (24) Notre Dame 41, Vanderbilt 0 Miami (Ohio) 30, (25) Northwestern 28 ANTOINE PITTS PFtts Stop Idesp.ite pirvgi'g trend mreuses to run up the score C HESTNUT HILL, Mass. - For weeks, even years now, the scores have rung in Michigan coach Lloyd Carr's head. The tone heard by Carr certainly is unpleasant to him. Every Saturday, you see teams running up scores as high as they can. The game may be long over, but teams try to see how high they can get. This weekend that trend continued in a big way. Half of the top-10 teams ran up their scores to at least 50 points. The top two teams, Florida State and Nebraska, went as high as 77. One team you won't see running up the score is Michigan. Twice this season Carr has chosen to down the ball and let time run out instead of trying for another sure score. Other teams simply try to put it in the end zone. "I'm sick of guys who run up the score," Carr said. Some may argue that the Wolver- ines should not be showing any kind of mercy toward the other team. Instead, this may simply be a display of true sportsmanship by Michigan. The NCAA has taken big steps this year to curb what it believes is unsportsmanlike conduct. You are in violation if you celebrate too much, if you remove your helmet before reaching the sideline, and until recently if you knelt in prayer following a score. Carr believes the nature of these weekly blowouts is the real unsports- manlike part of the college football game. "The American Football Coaches Association has gotten on (the) bandwagon about improving sportmanship," Carr said. "They won't let kids take their helmets off on the field, and if they show any kind of emotion we're penalizing them and yet we have coaches trying to defend running up the score. I think that's ludicrous." If the spirit of the game is sports- manship, how can these lopsided games continue? "I think it's an embarrassment to the coaching profession when they run the score up like some of these guys are," Carr said. "I think it's an - indictment of our profession. It's sickening." Carr has a valid point, except he forgets one thing. These blowouts will most certainly continue because of how the national championship is decided. Since a poll eventually decides who will take home the top prize, each team feels it must impress the voters as best as possible. Until that changes, you are likely to witness a lot more 77-17 scores. Not running up the score seems like a sensible, humane and sports- manlike thing to do. Try telling that to Joe Paterno. Penn State was the No. 1 team in the country last year until the Nittany Lions beat Indiana by only six points. Nebraska beat Colorado that weekend to pass Penn State. The Cornhuskers never relinquished the top spot. Had the Nittany Lions won by, say, 50 or 60, maybe it would have a different story. Instead, Indiana scored 22 fourth-quarter points against Penn State's second-string defense and the Nittany Lions kissed their national title hopes goodbye. Until there is a true national playoff, you really can't blame some of these coaches for trying to get as many points as they can. Somehow, even if there is a playoff, it is hard to belieye people would stop running up the score. Some of it has to do with pressure from the fans. They think there's something wrong with their team if it doesn't go out to win by a large score every time. Like Carr says, it boils down to a imnle isune of snortsmanhinv Do M soccer settles for tie at home By Marc Lightdale Daily Sports Writer The stubborn defense of Buffalo and an inability to convert scoring opportu- nities left the Michigan women's soc- cer team with a frustrating 1-1 tie. Yesterday, the Wolverines (1-5-1) must have wondered whether their newly-constructed stadium came equipped with a glass shield to block shot attempts. While Michigan controlled the tempo from the outset with solid passing, the story of the game was that Michigan's offense became stymied by an inability to put the ball into the net. "I felt like we definitely dominated the game. We played with a lot of heart. We just could not get shots off and score," Michigan forward Jessica Limauro said. About halfway through the first-half, a Debbie Flaherty penalty kick landed just inside the lefthand corner of the net, giving the Wolverines a 1-0 lead. Later in the first half, Buffalo's Annamaria Gasbarra knotted the score at 1- l when she booted a ball that hit Michigan goalkeeper Jessica Jone's outstretched hand, bounced into the top of the goal, and proceeded to creep into the net. The game remained tied at that score through regulation and two fifteen- minute overtime periods. Some of the Wolverines believe that their scoring woes stem from a lack of intensity. "We did not get our intensity level up until later in the game. We needed to come out with more intensity right away," goalkeeper Jessica Jones said. In addition, other players pointed to the team's nervous play near the goal. "We were just panicking when we got near the box," Limauro said. We were a little bit frustrated or nervous in the box because we wanted to make it perfect." In order for the team to win, the Wolverines believe that they have to assert themselves offensively and take advantage of the scoring opportunities. "We don't have anyone stepping up and saying we're going to score. There is no one who has that killer instinct on this team," Michigan midfielder Kim Phillips said. "We had every scoring opportunity that we possibly could have had, and we could not finish any of them." Although the team struggled putting the ball in the net, the team members took some solace in their other im- provements. "I think our outside midfielders made great runs up the sidelines which opened up the field," Limauro said. Earlier this weekend, the Michigan women's soccer team traveled to Ohio State, where it was shutout, 2-0. "Against Ohio State, we did not have very many shots at all. We are defi- nitely an offensive threat, but we have to take it one step further," Phillips said. FILE PHOTO/Daily The Michigan women's soccer team tied Buffalo yesterday. .an 23, Boston College 13 The Woverines' defense stifles Boston College By Ryan White Daily Sports Editor CHESTNUT HILL, Mass - It's not even October, but the Michigan football team has already eliminated a team from the Big Ten race. "Let me just say this: we aren't going to the Rose Bowl," Boston College coach Dan Henning said after his team lost 23- 13 to the Wolverines in front of 44,500 fans Saturday night at Alumni Field. There was, however, some good news for the Eagles - they're in the Big East and can't go to the Rose Bowl anyway. The loss to Michigan (4-0) was Boston College's second loss this season to a Big Ten school. Ohio State beatthe Eagles, 38-6, Aug. 27. Laterthis month, Boston College (1-2) will play Michigan State, its third Big Ten opponent. Forthe second straight week, it was the Wolverines' defense which keyed their attack. The Michigan defenders shut the Eagles down, holding them to 188 yards of total offense while sacking Boston College quarterback Mark Hartsell five times. The defensive effort was necessary, since the Wolverines' offense started slower than a '72 Pinto on a cold January morning. Michigan was forced to punt the ball on its first five possessions of the game, putting the defense in the position of having to make big plays early. The Wolverines went backwards 12 yards on their opening drive, and after a 12-yard punt by Nate DeLong, the Eagles had the ball at the Michigan 23. Boston College picked up a first down at the 13-yard line, but on the next play Hartsell's pass was tipped by the Wolver- ines' Glen Steele and intercepted by safety Steve King. King returned the ball 98 yards for a touchdown, but the play was nullified by a block in the back by the Wolverines. The game remained scoreless until Boston College put together a five-play, 56-yard drive that ended on a four-yard touchdown run by Omari Walker. The Eagles missed the point-after attempt because of a high snap. Kicker Dan McGuire tried to throw into the end zone, but his pass was broken up by Clarence Thompson. Boston College led 6-0, but that was the most offense the Eagles would see until the fourth quarter. "We know that if we hang tough on defense, the offense is going to come around," said tackle Jason Horn, who had three sacks for Michigan. "We know we have talent (on offense) and all it's going to take is one play." That one play didn't come quickly, though. On the Wolver- ines' first drive after the Eagles' touchdown, quarterback Scott Dreisbach rolled left, and his pass was picked off by Boston College corner Keirnan Speight. The play again gave the Eagles prime field position, this time at the Michigan 36. "We knew that we were going to be able to do things (on offense), but was frustrating," Michigan captain Joe Marinaro said. "We just didn't complete passes in the beginning and we didn't really run the ball that well." With 7:41 left in the second quarter, the Wolverines finally began to move the ball. After two Tshimanga Biakabutuka rushes and an Ed Davis See EAGLES, Page 48 JONATHAN LURIE/Daily Michigan linebacker Mike Elston sacks Boston College quarterback Mark Hartsell during the Wolverines' 23-13 win. Hartsell, who had a field day against the Michigan defense last season, had a much tougher time Saturday. Hartsell threw for 74 yards against the Wolverines after amassing 33 yards passing in last year's game.