<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
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<UID>
8702130403
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
870913
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Sunday, September 13, 1987
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
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<ILLUSTRATION>
Chart
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1987, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
BROWN FLUBS OPENING ACT
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
ANN ARBOR -- Must have been the pope.

  How else do you explain this thrashing, this 26-7 loss to Notre Dame, the
worst Michigan defeat in 20 years? In the opener? Whoa. Michigan doesn't lose
home openers under Bo Schembechler, does it? It hadn't in the last 18 seasons.

  And now it has. Badly.
  "Was there anything positive in that game?" someone asked Schembechler
after the turnover-plagued  defeat by  the Irish.
  "No . . . no . . . " the coach answered, biting his lip, "as a matter of
fact . . . no."
  So, in other words, no.
  Seven turnovers? Twenty-six points allowed? The defending Big 10 champions?
Now granted, opening games are funny; teams come out of summer practice having
played only against themselves and say, "We look good." But change uniforms,
and you change the equation.  And that is what happened Saturday:
specifically, with new U-M quarterback Demetrius Brown.
  "He's better than that," Schembechler declared. Better than 4-for-15, 54
yards, three interceptions? Hey.  You hope so. But the guy looked great in
practice, won the starting job, and then emerged center stage Saturday, in
front of 106,098 strange faces, and 11 gold helmets across the line, and,
uh-oh. .  . .
  Interception. Interception. Interception.
  The difference was the difference between rehearsals and opening night.
Between dry-land training and the first jump from the plane.
  The difference,  in the end, was that Brown simply couldn't read the Notre
Dame defense as well it could read him.
  Miserable," said Schembechler of his offense's start. That's being kind.
Six of Brown's first  seven passes were incomplete. One was caught. By the
wrong team. And when nerves and poor execution weren't tripping up Brown, fate
was:  In the third quarter he threw a pretty pass down the middle  to Greg
McMurty, a  nicely timed bullet, which would have put Michigan at the Irish
15.
  Except McMurty lost the ball coming down.
  And on the next play, Brown threw another interception.
  "Can  you give us any comment on the game?" Brown was asked as he left the
U-M locker room.
  "I don't want to talk to anybody," he said softly. "I don't mean to be
rude, but I don't want to talk."
  Well. That, along with many other things, he will learn to do in time. He
obviously has talent. But talent is like a tool chest; it's what you do with
it  that counts. As he walked through the post-game  crowd, his eyes were
focused  straight ahead. They flashed anger, disappointment. Unfortunately,
earlier they often flashed where the ball was going, too. "I watched the
quarterback  the whole time,"  said Notre Dame free safety Corny Southall, who
made two interceptions. "At times, I guess he was telegraphing his passes."
  And at times he put too little arc on them. And at times he just threw
some  that he shouldn't have. But in fairness to the kid -- who had the
uneviable task of replacing Jim Harbaugh -- he was handed a pretty full plate.
These weren't  little screen passes he was trying  to throw. He was going
upfield.
  "If you have any criticism of our game plan," Schembechler admitted, "it
might be the coaches for giving him a little too much to do this first time
out."
  By the  time they realized that, they were trailing by 17 points.
  So blame it on misleading excellence in practice. ("The kid looked great
in practice," Schembechler said of Brown. "He made the right reads,  he hit
everything. I couldn't predict this.") Blame it on two fumbles by tailback
Jamie Morris, who, despite his 128 yards, should know better. Blame it on the
fatigued defense. Blame it on whatever  you want. And then stop blaming.
  And start giving credit.
  This is an improved Notre Dame team. You would figure the pressure would be
on them, playing at Michigan Stadium. Instead, the Fighting  Irish made but
one meaningless mistake (an interception late in the first half) and took
advantage of almost all of Michigan's. Their new starting quarterback, Terry
Andrysiak, was the flip side of U-M's  Brown. Poised, patient and accurate, he
made Michigan fans shift in their seats, completing 11 of 15 passes, often
with enough pocket time to qualify as a billfold.
  "Were they that good a team?"  someone asked Schembechler afterward.
  "Let's put it this way," he said. "They're probably not as good as they
looked. And we're not as bad as we looked. . . . 
  "Although we looked pretty bad."
  He cleared his throat. Then quickly added: "I will tell you this. I believe
we will have a good football team. For all those people out there chuckling, I
say don't count this too quickly."
  No.  Count it only as one defeat to a team that had all sorts of
motivation.  Or had you forgotten last year's opener? Notre Dame tacked up 455
yards of offense, had a legal touchdown called back and still  lost, 24-23, to
Michigan  by a missed field goal in the final seconds.
  Mistakes brought down Notre Dame in that game. So maybe this was
retribution. Or maybe it was the absence of Harbaugh -- whom Michigan fans
seemed to be wishing back by the second half.
  Or maybe the arrival of the pope really did have something to do with it.
You never know with Notre Dame. Next weekend the pope comes to  the
Silverdome.
  Next weekend, Notre Dame plays Michigan State.
  Uh-oh.
Michigan debuts
Recent Michigan quarterbacks haven't produced impressive statistics in  their
first collegiate starts,  except for Jim Harbaugh against No. 1 Miami  (Fla.)
in 1984. Here is how five did in season openers:
YEAR  QUARTERBACK  ATT  CMP  INT  YDS  TD
1972  Dennis Franklin  9  4  0  60  1
1975  Rick Leach   10  2  3  34  1
1981  Steve Smith  18  3  3  39  0
1984  Jim Harbaugh  21  11  2  163  0
1987  Demetrius Brown  15  4  3  54  1
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<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
COLLEGE;U-M; STATISTIC;FOOTBALL
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
