Michigan Mauls Irish - Notre Dame Now 0-3

ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) _ Michigan took care of Mike Hart's guarantee with ease. Hart ran for 187 yards on 35 carries and scored two touchdowns, and Ryan Mallett threw for three scores, leading the Wolverines

Saturday, September 15th 2007, 8:11 pm

By: News On 6


ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) _ Michigan took care of Mike Hart's guarantee with ease. Hart ran for 187 yards on 35 carries and scored two touchdowns, and Ryan Mallett threw for three scores, leading the Wolverines to a 38-0 win over Notre Dame on Saturday.

``You couldn't write it any better than that,'' Hart said.

Michigan handed the Fighting Irish their worst loss since beating them by the same score in 2003. The Wolverines (1-2) also avoided their first 0-3 start in seven decades.

Notre Dame (0-3) is winless after three games for just the second time in school history, putting coach Charlie Weis in unwanted company with Bob Davie. The Fighting Irish have lost five straight for the first time since the 1985-86 seasons, Gerry Faust's last year and Lou Holtz's first.

``My confidence isn't shaken,'' Weis said. ``But as an organization, we haven't done a very good job.''

In an unprecedented matchup of the two winningest programs in major college football, Michigan looked like it might not be that bad while the Fighting Irish appeared to be even worse than expected after losing to Penn State and Georgia Tech by a combined 51 points.

``We're starting training camp tomorrow,'' Weis said. ``Obviously, after three games, this team is headed in the wrong direction. The only way I know how to fix that is to go back to the start of training camp and start swinging.''

Hart, who after last week's loss 39-7 to Oregon guaranteed the Wolverines would beat Notre Dame, had a sensational performance, even against a defense stacked to stop him.

``I did it to fire myself up, and my team up,'' Hart said of the guarantee. ``It worked out, I guess.''

Michigan's defense suddenly was swarming to the football after giving up 73 points in losses to Appalachian State and Oregon.

Irish freshman Jimmy Clausen was 11-of-17 for just 74 yards and an interception. Clausen was sacked seven times, leading to Notre Dame's rushing total of minus-6.

``I wouldn't want to be in his shoes,'' Mallett said. ``But he's a great player.''

Notre Dame prevented Clausen from taking further abuse in the fourth quarter, but had to use Evan Sharpley because backup quarterback Demetrius Jones stunned the team by not showing up for a team meal or the bus trip to Ann Arbor on Friday.

``What happened came as a surprise,'' Weis said. ``I didn't find out until 2:15. The buses were going to pull out at 2:30. But I'm not going to use it as an excuse and say our team was distracted.''

Fittingly, Sharpley threw an interception just as it seemed that Notre Dame might avoid a shutout and possibly score a TD on offense for the first time this season.

The Fighting Irish did move the ball enough on the ground on their final drive, however, to avoid breaking their school record of minus-12 yards rushing.

Starting because of an injury to Chad Henne, Mallett was asked to throw just 15 times in his first career start. The freshman had seven completions for 90 yards and TDs to receivers Mario Manningham, Adrian Arrington and Greg Matthews.

``It was everything I dreamed of _ a win,'' Mallett said.

Henne, who had started each of his 39 games at Michigan, is out with what appears to be a knee injury. Michigan coach Lloyd Carr has refused to give details, but Henne watched the game with a brace that seemed to be protecting his right knee. Carr said Henne is day-to-day.

It was ugly right from the start for Notre Dame.

The first snap sailed over running back Armando Allen's head, and the Fighting Irish lost 27 yards on their first two drives.

``Obviously, we thought we could do some things if we could get on top of them, but we started in the wrong direction,'' Weis said.

Notre Dame fumbled five times in the first half, losing two of them, and Clausen threw an interception, helping Michigan take a 31-0 lead.

The Wolverines just coasted in the second half, probably ending their stay in the national spotlight.

For the first time since The Associated Press started ranking teams in 1936, Michigan and Notre Dame were both unranked. They also entered the game winless for the first time, not counting openers.

Hart made his guarantee after the Wolverines' worst loss since 1968, and a week after they were upset by Appalachian State.

Michigan can't celebrate for long because it hosts No. 12 Penn State (3-0) on Saturday.

``You don't get much chance to enjoy the victory,'' Carr said. ``But it's a lot better than suffering in defeat, I can tell you that.''

Now, Notre Dame is college football's laughingstock, and the Irish might have trouble getting untracked next week against undefeated Michigan State at home _ where the Spartans have won five straight.

``We're not worried about Michigan and we're not worried about Michigan State,'' Weis said. ``We're 0-3 with three lopsided losses, so it doesn't really matter who we are playing until we get good at something.''
logo

Get The Daily Update!

Be among the first to get breaking news, weather, and general news updates from News on 6 delivered right to your inbox!

More Like This

September 15th, 2007

April 15th, 2024

April 12th, 2024

March 14th, 2024

Top Headlines

April 24th, 2024

April 24th, 2024

April 24th, 2024

April 24th, 2024