68- The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, September 25, 1995 FOOTBALL Purdue plays for a tie with Spartans Associated Press Purdue played for a tie and got it. Brad Bobich kicked for a victory, and missed. Corey Rogers ran for two fourth- quarter touchdowns, but coach Jim Colletto decided to go for a safe extra- point kick instead of a possible 2-point conversion, settling for a 35-35 tie with Michigan State when a 47-yard field goal attempt by Bobich failed as time ran out. Rogers' second touchdown, a 4-yard runwith 1:46 to go, pulled Purdue within 35-34, but the Boilermakers (1-1-1, 0- 0-1 Big Ten) did not want to take a chance on a 2-point conversion. "This was the first game in the league, and we were going to kick to tie the score," Colletto said. "The Big Ten standings have a bear- ingon what bowl you play in if you get that far, and one tie doesn't hurt you.... But I didn't want to start the Big Ten season 0-1. It's better to be 0-0-1 than 0-1,"he said. Thehopethattheywouldhave enough time for another possession paid off when Lee Brush intercepted a pass by backup quarterback Todd Schultz, who came into the game for the Spartans(1- 1.1, 0-0-1) after Tony Banks hurt his ankle with 1:18 to go. Purdue started the last drive at its 42 with 46 seconds left and went to the Michigan State 34 on a24-yardpass from Rick Trefzger to Kirk Olivadotti. Trefzger was sacked for a 6-yard loss, then Mike Alstott picked up 10 yards to the 30. With no timeouts left, Trefzger grounded the ball with four seconds remaining before Bobich's last- second field goal try went left by onlya few feet. "I felt real well. It wasn't the best I could kick it, but I kicked it pretty well,"Bobich said. "I didn't know how far it was. It was going right down the middle, and then it just sailed off to the left. "But I'll come back next week and work harder, and if I get the opportunity again, I'm going to make it," he said. The Spartans led 28-21 before Rogers' first touchdown, a 1-yard run that tied the game with 6:22 left. Full- back Scott Greene, who rushed for two touchdowns earlier in the game, ran 70 yards three plays later to put Michigan State back on top with 4:59 to go. Three passes to Olivadotti and a 34- yard run by Mike Alstott then set up Rogers' second score. "I feel down and so do the rest of the guys," said Greene, who finished with a career-high 161 yards. "Overall, we played hard. We were lackadaisical in the first half but we picked it up and played much better.... I was having a littletrouble reading the defense at first, but the line did a great job opening up holes." Sophomore Marc Renaud added 111 yards for the Spartans. "The game is disappointing for us," Spartans coach Nick Saban said. "We had poor blocking, our intensity wasn't the same as last week against Louisville and we gave up a lot of big plays. Alstott rushed for 136 yards and one touchdown and passed 69 yards to Brian Alford for another touchdown for the Boilermakers. Alford also had a 29- yard TD reception from John Reeves, who replaced Trefzger on Purdue's sec- ond possession and stayed in the game until Trefzger returned in the fourth quarter. Penn State 59, Rutgers 34. Bobby Engram caught three touch- downs passes and ran 58 yards with a fumble for another score as No. 6 Penn State won a 59-34 shootout with Rutgers at Giants Stadium Saturday night. The win, the 20th straight for the Nittany Lions (3-0), had an ugly ending with Rutgers coach Doug Graber yell- ing at Penn State's Joe Paterno at the end of the game, probably because of a late touchdown pass. The two won't have to see each other in the near future, because this is the last scheduled meeting between the schools, who have played every year since 1982. This last game raised questions about Paterno's defense. Rutgers (1-2) amassed 490 yards in offense behind backup quarterback Robert Higgins, and it wasn't knocked out of the game until the fourth quarter when Kim Herring scored on a 21-yard pass interception and Engram caught a 16-yard TD pass from Wally Richardson, who was 16-of-26 for 252 yards. Ohio State 54, Pittsburgh 14 Terry Glenn caught nine passes for a school-record 253 yards and four touch- downs Saturday as eighth-ranked Ohio State wore down outmanned Pittsburgh 54-14. Glenn, a starter for the first time this season after backing up current NFL players Joey Galloway and Chris Sand- ers in 1994, was open for most of the afternoon and scored on passes of 75, 61,36and 12yards from Bobby Hoying. Hoying completed 15-of-24 passes for 296 yards and five touchdowns in three quarters. Eddie George gained 121 yards on 24 carries in little over a half and now has 433 yards in the Buck- eyes' three wins. Pittsburgh, using five wide receivers at times, trailed only 20-14 at halftime but appeared to collapse early after the break. John Ryan, who threw two key late interceptions in last week's 38-27 loss at Texas, had three interceptions Saturday. Wisconsin 42, SMU 0 Darrell Bevell tied his school record by completing his first 14 passes and Carl McCullough rushed 26 times for 129 yards and a touchdown in Wisconsin's 42-0 rout of Southern MATFISON Continued from page 18B Wolverine certainly indicates that Horn and Zenkewicz have done this job well. Inexperienced lineman such as William Carr, Juaquin Feazell and Rasheed Simmons have all, at point or another this season, made huge impact plays. But what about the humble Mattison? Surely, he must want to take some of the credit of Michigan's defense? Well, he'll at least concede that his day-to-day operations, in coordina- tion with the rest of the Michigan coaching staff, is essential for Michigan to be prepared each week. But he stresses that his role as an individual pales in importance to the role he plays as a "team member." "We all believe in the same things," Mattison says. "And we all believe in what Lloyd Carr is doing." Mattison's week begins with studying film of the upcoming opponent. By Monday, he helps draw up a pool of defenses for the various offensive schemes the Wolverines expect to see on Saturday. He'll also~ guide practices and make sure that the defense is prepped for the type of formations he'll use on gameday. "The more ready they are, the better team you're going to have," Mattison says. On Saturday, Mattison identifies the offensive formations the Wolver- ines should expect to see on a given down situation, and helps pick a corresponding defensive scheme. He also makes sure that each individual is sticking to the roles prescribed by the schemes. But when it comes time for a Wolverine to make a tackle or pressure the quarterback, there obviously isn't anything Mattison can: do except watch. This is, understand- ably, where his modesty may come from - it's the players' job to execute, not his. So, maybe Mattison really isn't a magician. But, either way, he certainly has cast quite a spell on the Wolverines. 'Cane pain: Unranked Hokies blow by Miami Fullback Scott Greene had three touchdowns in Michigan State's tie with Purdue. Methodist on Saturday. Redshirt freshman Aaron Stecker added 112 yards and two touchdowns on 14 carries in his first start for the Badgers (1-1-i). Bevell, finally regaining his 1993 form, completed 18 of 20 passes for 223 yards, three touchdowns and no interceptions and Wisconsin exploited the Mustangs' injury-depleted defen- sive line for TDs on their first four possessions on the way to a 28-0 half- time lead. Injuries prevented SMU's best line- backers, Chris Bordano (back) and Craig Swann (thigh), from playing. Swann was averaging 18.7 tackles a game, but sat out after bruising his left thigh in practice Wednesday. SMU (1-3) also played without two of their best tackles, Jason Lindbloom (foot) and Jason Evans (knee). As a result, the Mustangs gave up 284 yards on the ground. In four games, they've surrendered 1,056 rushing yards, a whopping 264-yard average. Indiana 27, Southern Mississippi 26 Jason Kaylor blocked a 37-yard field goal attempt with 1:52 remaining Sat- urday and Eric Allen intercepted a pass on the game's final play to save Indiana's 27-26 victory over Southern Mississippi in an error-plagued game. Indiana (2-1) lost five fumbles, while Southern Mississippi (2-2) yielded the final touchdown to the Hoosiers after Fred Brock fumbled a kickoff at the 3. Jabar Robinson recovered the ball for Indiana and returned it into the end zone for the winning score. Bill Manolopoulos kicked field goals of23 and 29 yards and made all three of his extra point attempts for Indiana. Meanwhile, Southern Mississippi kicker Chris Pierce had one conversion kick blocked and another hit the left upright before his field goal attempt was blocked. Alex Smith ran for 209 yards as he topped 100 for a third consecutive game for Indiana, but lost the ball twice on fumbles. He had an 81-yard run after Indiana took over following the blocked field goal attempt late in the fourth quarter, but he fumbled the ball away when tackled from behind at the 3 by Rod Thomas. Syracuse 27, Minnesota 17 Marvin Harrison ran a punt back 94 yards for a touchdown and Syracuse capitalized on two turnovers to score a 27-17 victory over Minnesota on Satur- day. Harrison, the Big East leader with a- 22.8 yards per catch average, also scored on a 30-yard touchdown reception. He had season highs of eight catches and 184 yards. Syracuse (2-1) led 27-10 with 4:55 left in the third quarter following Harrison's touchdown catch. Syracuse, which blew a 21-point lead two weeks ago in a 27-24 loss to East Carolina, saw the Gophers (1-1) cut the lead to 27-17 on a 13-yard touchdown pass from Cory Sauter to Greg Nelson as the third quarter ended. Following a missed 29-yard field goal by Syracuse's Olindo Mare, Minnesota pushed the ball to the Orangemen's 7 before Rod Gadson came up with an interception in the end zone with 4:51 left to play. Northwestern 30, Air Force 6 Darnell Autry rushed for 190 yards -53 more than Air Force, the nation's No. 3 rushing team entering the game - as Northwestern rebounded from a devastating loss to beat the Falcons 30- 6 Saturday. Last week, Northwestern (2-1) blew a 21-point, fourth-quarter lead in losing to Miami (Ohio) and falling out of the national rankings. But the Wildcats looked even better against Air Force (2- 2) than they had in a season-opening upset at Notre Dame. After Northwestern wrapped up its first victory at Dyche Stadium in 11 games over two years, fans rushed onto the field and tried - but failed - to tear down a set of goalposts. It was the second straight loss for Air Force, which, like Northwestern, was ranked before losing last week. Illinois 7, East Carolina 0 Robert Holcombe's one-yard touch- down was all Illinois needed to defeat East Carolina 7-0 Saturday in a rematch of last year's Liberty Bowl. East Carolina (2-2), which came to Memorial Stadium averaging431 yards per game, got half that amount against a defense that also forced four turn- overs. The Pirates' best scoring chance was foiled by Illinois' Duane Lyle, who intercepted his third pass at the five- yard-line with 26 seconds remaining. Thevictoryraisedthe Fighting Illini's record to 2-2 but failed to extinguish doubts about their struggling offense. The lone score came in the second quarter after Illinois recovered a fumble at the Pirate 38-yard-line. Holcombe rushed the ball eight times during the 10-play drive. Associated Press Dwayne Thomas ran for 165 yards and a touchdown to lead Virginia Tech to a 13-7 victory over No. 17 Miami, marking the first time the Hurricanes have lost to an unranked team in 11 years. Miami drove from its 25 to the Vir- ginia Tech 25 in the final two minutes, but substitute quarterback Ryan Clement's fourth-down pass to Yatil Green with 23 seconds left was broken up at the goal line. A mass of fans in the sold-out sta- dium stormed the field to celebrate the first victory by Virginia Tech (1-2, 1-1 Big East) over Miami (1-2, 0-1) in 13 meetings. Virginia Tech, which had some costly turnovers in its first two losses, played conservatively on offense and missed four field goals, but used an aggressive, blitzing defense to stifle Miami. The Hokies had six tackles behind the line of scrimmage and six sacks for 70 yards. Virginia Tech was ahead 10-7 at half- time, but could have been up 23-7. The Hokies missedtwo field goals and Bryan Still let a touchdown pass slip through his hands early in the second quarter. On an abnormally chilly afternoon, Miami startedout cold, committing five offensive penalties on the first 12 plays and rushing for just 2 yards in the first quarter. Virginia Tech drove to the Miami 4 on its first possession, but came away with nothing when Atle Larsen's low field goal attempt was blocked. The next time Tech got the ball, Jim Druckenmiller completed a47-yard pass to Still, whose diving catch at the 1 was followed by Dwayne Thomas' dive into the end zone. Washington State 24, UCLA 15 Jay Dumas returned a punt 72 yards for a touchdown as Washington State built a 24-0 lead over No. 16 UCLA, then hung on 24-15 Saturday. Washington State (2-1, 1-0 Pacific- 10) manhandled the Bruins in the first half, holding UCLA to 38 yards while running up 239. For the second consecutive week, UCLA (2-2, 0-2 Pac-10) was unable to complete a second-half comeback, de- spite an animated sideline pep talk by coach Terry Donahue during a timeout early in the third period. Cougars quarterback Chad Davis completed 16 of 25 for 151 yards and a touchdown, while running backs Frank Madu and Derek Sparks combined for 171 yards rushing. Washington State scored two quick touchdowns late in the first quarter and never trailed. Dumas caught Chris Sailer's punt at the Washington State 28 and picked his way through tacklers up the middle of the field. On the next series, Washing- ton State's Derek Henderson recovered Karim Abdul-Jabbar's fumble on the UCLA 34. Three plays later, Davis hit tight end Eric Moore on a 20-yard scor- ing pass for a 14-0 lead. Sparks put the Cougars up 21-0 with a 7-yard scoring run in the second quar- ter, capping a 77-yard drive. Tony Tru- ant made a 41-yard field goal in the final seconds of the second quarter for a 24-0 halftime lead. ATTN: Ch. E's, M.E.'s: Petr ch~emrical Company *L YONDELL IS A FOR TUNE 200 COMPANY LOCATED IN HOUSTON, TEXAS AND SURROUNDING AREAS -LYONDELL IS A WORLD SCALE MANUFACTURER OF OLEFINS Virginia Tech's William Yarborough snags Miami quarterback Ryan Collins In the second quarter of the Hoses' 13-7 win. Collins was injured on the play and forced to leave the ,game. The loss was Miami's first to an unranked team In 11. years. i I m ~ .r~ I 1 T. MLA. . . i...