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<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8602110159
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
860914
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Sunday, September 14, 1986
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1986, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
NO DOUBT, THESE IRISH ARE NOT DONE MAKING NOISE
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
SOUTH BEND, Ind. -- It was like holding back the ocean. Only seconds were
left, but Notre Dame kept coming, and quarterback Steve Beuerlein was throwing
straight down the throat of the Michigan defense.

  Completion, Alvin Miller, 33-yard gain.

  Completion, Milt Jackson, 16-yard gain.
  Completion, Pernell Taylor, six-yard gain.
  The fans at sold-out Notre Dame Stadium were  delirious on their  feet,
screaming as  they haven't screamed in five years.
  "WE ARE (CLAP, CLAP) N! D! (CLAP, CLAP)"
  What does that stand for? Notre Dame? New Deal? Well, both today. For these
were not the fallen  angels of Gerry Faust. This was a new regime, Lou Holtz's
regime, and it was spinning Michigan around and streaking downfield, and now,
trailing 24-23 with 17 seconds left, it was sending out its field  goal
kicker, John Carney, for a 45-yarder that would win it.
  Win it? What was going on? Wasn't Michigan a national champion contender?
Wasn't Notre Dame merely rebuilding? Win it?
  Well, strange  things happen when programs change hands -- especially on
opening Saturday. And what a Saturday! Was there ever a better season
appetizer? Michigan, determined to survive. Notre Dame, better than anyone
expected.
  One point separated them when Carney came out for that field goal. One
point -- after a fourth quarter that included  a Michigan interception in the
end zone, a Michigan fumble on a crucial  drive, and a Notre Dame
out-of-bounds touchdown pass that half of South Bend swears was a completion.
  The teams lined up. One point. . . . 
Just a feeling
  "What were you thinking on the sidelines?"  someone asked U-M quarterback
Jim Harbaugh.
  "I just had this feeling he was going to make it," Harbaugh said. "But I
turned to my teammate Mike Reinhold and he said, 'Get that idea out of you
right now. He's not gonna make it.' "
  The ball was snapped. Carney kicked it . . .
  By rights it would have stopped in midair. No one deserved to lose this
game. Not after the gutsy performances of  Beuerlein, a quarterback everybody
doubted, and Harbaugh, who actually exceeded his billing. Not after the
mixed-salad of an offense Holtz put together in this, his first game as Irish
head coach. Not  after the dive-bombing of Michigan's Doug Mallory, who
recovered two loose balls in crucial  moments to keep the Notre Dame tornado
from blowing his team away.
  "WE ARE (CLAP, CLAP) N! D! (CLAP, CLAP),"  the crowd bellowed.
  What did that stand for?
 Nothing doing, Notre Dame. The kick flew wide, the crowd moaned, and the
whole Michigan sideline went crazy. 
  Wolverines win, 24-23.
  "Were you  relieved?" someone asked Michigan coach Bo Schembechler.
  "Of course," he said, grinning. "Everything pointed to an upset."
  Indeed, many people here will go on believing the game was actually  won by
the Irish -- on that controversial fourth- quarter catch by Joel Williams, who
snagged a pass in the back of the end zone and landed with one foot either in
or out of bounds, depending on whom  you believe.
  "He was in," Beuerlein said afterward. "When I heard the call, I was
shocked. My heart nearly went through my mouth."
No luck for the Irish
  But such are the twists of magnificent  games, and this was surely one. It
belongs to the Wolverines, but they should put it next to their rabbit's foot,
their four-leaf clovers, their horseshoes.
  Remember, Notre Dame -- not an equal of  Michigan in pure talent -- had
ample opportunity to win this. Its  offense racked up 23 points, more than the
first five opponents Michigan faced last season combined.
  This time, the Wolverines' offense  was their best defense. Credit Harbaugh
(15-for-23, 239 yards) with maybe the brightest game of his college career.
Fans will forever remember that third-and-six play deep in Michigan territory
in the  waning minutes of the fourth quarter; instead of playing it safe and
throwing short, he went for a 38-yard sideline bomb to John Kolesar that quite
likely saved the game for Michigan.
  So there it  is. A big opening win. Yet it seems unfair that Notre Dame
goes 0-1. To be honest, in many ways, the Irish deserved this game. They rose
like a phoenix from the ashes of their immediate past, enough  to make Holtz,
who has coached six different teams in his career, say, "I've never been
prouder of any group of players."
  And everybody here knew it. So when the Irish walked off the field in
defeat  this time, there was no sighing, no head shaking. Instead the crowd
rose to its  feet and joined in a cheer, a standing ovation for the losers.
  "WE ARE (CLAP, CLAP) N! D! (CLAP, CLAP)"  Michigan  wins, but Nicely Done,
Notre Dame.
  No Disappointment.
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