By TIM MARTIN, Associated Press Writer
September 18, 2004
EAST LANSING, Mich. (AP) -- Notre Dame used an opportunistic defense to beat
Michigan State.
Tom Zbikowski returned a fumble 75 yards for a touchdown, set up another
score with an interception and the Fighting Irish forced six turnovers in their
31-24 victory over the Spartans on Saturday night.
The Irish (2-1) got three interceptions and recovered three fumbles in their
second straight victory, bouncing back from a season-opening loss to Brigham
Young.
Freshman Darius Walker, the hero last week in a 28-20 win over Michigan, had
98 yards on 26 carries.
Zbikowski's two big plays in the first quarter got Notre Dame rolling
against the Spartans (1-2).
His interception of Stephen Reaves' pass led to a 13-yard scoring drive,
capped by a fourth-down, 1-yard bootleg by quarterback Brady Quinn to tie the
game at 7.
Zbikowski said he noticed on film that Reaves tended to lock in on his
receivers.
``I just read the quarterback and made a play on it,'' Zbikowski said of the
interception.
Zbikowski struck again on the next possession. He read an option play and
stripped running back Jason Teague of the ball, then rambled down the sideline
for a 14-7 lead.
It fulfilled a prophecy by Notre Dame secondary coach Steven Wilks.
``(He) had been talking all week I was going to get a strip and do something
with it,'' Zbikowski said. ``I kind of made him proud on that play. I just felt
I could get it, went after it hard, and took off.''
Notre Dame coach Tyrone Willingham, a 1977 Michigan State graduate, is 2-1
against his alma mater as Notre Dame's. He is 3-1 overall against the Spartans,
including a win while at Stanford.
He said turnovers were the difference.
``It is something we talk about and work on every week,'' Willingham said.
``It's just modern-day, defensive football. You have to create turnovers.''
Michigan State had dominated the recent series against the Irish, winning
six of the previous seven games -- including all five when Notre Dame was
coached by Bob Davie.
Michigan State scored early in the first quarter on a blocked punt by
Marshall Campbell. The punt was recovered in the end zone by Jerramy Scott to
give Michigan State a 7-0 lead.
But the Spartans couldn't keep the momentum, committing four first-half
turnovers. Reaves, a freshman, was benched at halftime after throwing three
interceptions. He was 7-for-20 for 66 yards.
Michigan State lost out on a scoring opportunity late in the fourth quarter
when running back Jehuu Caulcrick -- his team trailing 28-17 -- fumbled going
over the goal line. It was recovered in the end zone by Notre Dame safety
Quentin Burrell for a touchback.
``When we come into the team meeting and look at the film, we're going to be
very ill,'' Michigan State coach John L. Smith said. ``We're going to be sick
when we look at it. The opportunities were there.''
Reaves' replacement, sophomore Drew Stanton, led the Spartans to their only
offensive touchdown with 9 seconds left in the game. Stanton ran in from 4
yards out.
Stanton finished 8-of-12 passing for 110 yards. He also rushed for 49 yards
on eight carries.
Caulcrick was Michigan State's leading rusher with 85 yards on 15 carries.
The Irish had enough on offense to secure the victory, running for 173
yards. Ryan Grant had 66 yards on 11 carries, including a 6-yard touchdown.
Quinn was 11-of-24, passing for 215 yards, including a 35-yard TD pass to Matt
Shelton.
DeAndra Cobb scored on an 89-yard kickoff return for the Spartans in the
third quarter.
Updated on Saturday, Sep 18, 2004 11:53 pm, EDT
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