Flashback Friday: 1997 Penn State game

Submitted by WolverineHistorian on

I was looking through some memorabilia the other day and I came across George Cantor's book that recapped the 1997 championship season.  In light of the new allegations from Penn State and our misery over them probably never being kicked out of the conference, I thought the Judgment Day game would be fun to revisit.  This game was epic.  Please share your own memories from it.  Where did you watch it?  Who did you watch it with?  etc. 

(Since these are Cantor's words and not mine, I'm posting this recap here instead of in the diaries section.)

Joe Pa was now seventy years old.  He had been at Penn State since 1966, prowling the sidelines with his scowl, his dark glasses, his suit, and white socks.  His team had been the preseason number one pick and had beaten Ohio State in a strong come from behind win against a top defense.  The Lions had surprisingly struggled against Minnesota and Northwestern, however, but were still ranked second.  Moreover, for the first time ever, Paterno would not have a week off to prepare for the Michigan game.  That had been a sore point in Ann Arbor, and there was much grumbling over how a supposedly neutral computer could always spit out a schedule giving Paterno that extra week.  But not this time.

“We don’t have to prepare for them; they have to prepare for us,” shrugged Penn State fullback Anthony Cleary. 

The networks had a field day building it up, in the manner of a bad heavyweight fight.  They called it Judgment Day.  This Saturday was not only Michigan and Penn State playing for the Rose Bowl and a possible national title.  It was also third ranked Florida State playing similarly unbeaten North Carolina for the ACC title and national ranking. 

In the Michigan-Penn State game, the experts liked Penn State.  Home field.  Proven coach.  Very confident team.

Quarterback Mike McQueary said that Penn State had played tougher games in the fourth quarter than Michigan and that could mean the difference.  As for the self-acknowledged best player in the country, McQueary had no problem with Charles Woodson.

“We’re Penn State and we’re not the kind of team that shies away from any particular player,” said McQueary.  “We’ll go right at him.  You can’t go around him or hope to avoid him and cut off half the field on yourself.  We’ll be careful with the ball and know what he can do.  He’s a great athlete and a great corner, but certainly we’re going to challenge him.”

As it turned out, McQueary was not going to be in the position to challenge anybody.  Not on this Judgment Day. 

By the end of the first quarter you could walk down Church Street in Ann Arbor and hear the screaming coming from every house.  Any student who couldn’t make the trip to State College was in front of the television set.  And they couldn’t believe what they were seeing. 

Everybody knew the Michigan defense was good.  But no one could have dreamed it was this good.  It took an offense averaging 465 yards a game and blew it to smithereens.  Aside from an occasional burst by its great running back, Curtis Enis, the Nittany Lions were helpless.  Everything they tried was demolished. 

Michigan had taken the kickoff and moved close enough for a field goal.  Penn State then got the ball on its own 25.  Offensive Coordinator Fran Ganter tried to do what seemed logical: make Michigan’s defensive aggressiveness work against itself.

His first scripted play was a pass off a fake reverse.  Michigan, meanwhile, had shifted just before the snap into a five-man rush, a defensive alignment used with devastating success by the Chicago Bears during their Super Bowl season of 1985.  The offensive line, believing it had all rushers accounted for, found itself overwhelmed.  Before quarterback McQueary could turn from the fake reverse, Glen Steele was on top of him.  He yanked the quarterback to the ground for a 10-yard loss.

                  

All at once, it was very quiet at Happy Valley.  And on Church Street, the noise rolled in waves from every open window. 

After a running play, McQueary tried again.  This was a simple drop back pass, but this time Juaquin Feazell was on top of him at once.  Seven-yard loss.

Right there, it was finished.  McQueary never seemed able to recover psychologically from this initial onslaught.  He would pass for just 68 yards, convert no third downs.  He played tentatively, as if he fully expected to have Michigan players dropping on him from the sky every time he moved.

The Michigan offense seemed to feed off what it saw happening on the field.  Using the ball control game to perfection, Brian Griese took them down the field one time after another. 

First it was Anthony Thomas rushing in from the 12.

Then it was Woodson coming in to grab a 33-yard scoring pass.

                   

Then it was Griese finding his favorite target, Jerame Tuman, from the 8.

By halftime it was 24-0, the biggest lead ever run up against a Paterno team at home. 

But it didn’t stop there.  Chris Howard burst open on a 29-yard dash.  Then another field goal by Kraig Baker.  Now it was 34-0.  The Michigan offensive line was ripping huge holes in the Lions’ defense.  Howard finished with 120 yards and even Griese, not the nimblest runner around, got 46.  When he passed, Griese was 14 of 22, picking the secondary apart with his quick, surgical strikes. 

Finally, with nothing left to dispute, Penn State scored.  It was the first touchdown Michigan had allowed  all year in the second half. 

“We didn’t like that,” said Marcus Ray.  “We really, really didn’t like that.  But honestly, this wasn’t easy.  It was a matter of preparation.  We came in here prepared to dominate.”

“It didn’t get any better than the Penn State game,” says Sam Sword.  “We gave them absolutely nothing to cheer about.  That was the culmination.  All year long, the coaches had been challenging us.  They kept talking about the fifty-year reunion of the 1948 Michigan Rose Bowl team.  ‘They’re all going to be there,’ Coach Carr kept saying.  ‘The question is… are you going to be there?’  At Penn State, it all came together, everything we’d been working for our entire careers.”

As the shocked Penn State crowd filed out, Dhani Jones found his parents in the middle of a few thousand Michigan fans who had made the trip.  To acknowledge their support, they were standing along the front row of the stadium, cheering and high fiving the players who had passed in front of them.

                    

“Emotionally, that was the peak for me,” Jones says.  “Where I grew up, not far from the Maryland campus, Penn State was always the natural rivalry.  We had a fury to win that day.  The personal motivation was higher than it’s ever been. 

“It was my dad’s fiftieth birthday and my parents came up with a busload of thirty-five people.  They were all chanting ‘Dee-fense, D-Jones.’  Unreal.”

Even before the final gun, supposedly blasé Ann Arbor had gone crazy.  The crowds were forming on South University Street, the commercial strip closest to most residential areas and a traditional gathering place for celebration.  Soon the students had blocked traffic and were on the move to the west.  A few blocks away, directly in their path, Lee Bollinger and his wife were watching the final minutes of the game on TV in the president’s house.

“I remember thinking to myself what an exciting moment this was,” Bollinger says.  “The team played so much better than anyone had expected.  The struggle had proven their fortitude and there was a sense of elation.

“Then the doorbell rang and my wife told me I had better come out and take a look.  There was a throng of a few thousand students out there, asking for me to come out and say a few words.  I had never anticipated anything like this.  It was clear to me that this was a very special moment.

“There had been a physics symposium on campus earlier in the day and from an academic standpoint that was certainly the more significant event.  And yet you have to realize that there are moments worthy of respect that really have nothing to do with the scholastic life on campus.  These students wanted to share one of those moments with me and I was deeply touched.  We had just redecorated the house upon moving in, but there was such a happiness in that group that I impulsively invited all of them to come in.

“I don’t think I’d do that again.  But at the time, it was unquestionably the right thing to do.”

Those who remained in front of their TVs saw an equally compelling drama taking place.  Nebraska had been played off its feet by unranked and deep underdog Missouri for most of the game and was desperately trying to rally.  With time running out, quarterback Scott Frost threw into the end zone, a pass that was about to fall incomplete.  But a Cornhusker receiver kicked the ball up just before it hit the ground and on the rebound, a teammate made the catch.  Nebraska had tied the score.  The kick seemed to have been deliberate and the Nebraska player admitted as much afterward.  The proper call should have been a penalty.  But the officials never made it and Nebraska won the game in overtime. 

Only one thing had marred the perfection of the day.  Early in the first quarter, junior defensive back Daydrion Taylor had come racing up field to stop a Penn State screen pass.  The hitting had been fierce up to that point.  But this collision was frightening.  Ball carrier and tackler met helmet to helmet and both players staggered back.  Then they fell to the ground, both of them knocked unconscious. 

“I have never seen anything close to that kind of hit,” says Sword.  “I thought I’d been in some tough football games, but this was unbelievable.  It sounded like a cannon shot to me.  I had this wild kind of feeling when I saw it, like I wanted to hit somebody myself. 

“But then I looked down at Daydrion and my heart just sank.”

“I hated seeing that,” says Carr.  “I had visited Daydrion’s family down in Texas when we were recruiting him and I thought about his mother when he was lying there.  It was a tremendous set of relief when we heard that he was OK.

“But he had always played the game totally without fear.  When I visited him in the hospital after the game, he was afraid.  That was hard to take, one of the scariest things I’ve seen.  Here we were at one of the greatest points in the season and this kid was fighting through the unknown.  Thank GOD, things turned out OK.  He won’t play football again but he will finish school. 

“I try to tell people that there are more important things than football.  This was one of them.”  

Larry Appleton

July 15th, 2016 at 10:51 AM ^

My favorite memories were Steele crushing the Ginger on their first play, and Griese scrambling for 45 yards (which seemed to take about five minutes).



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Ziff72

July 15th, 2016 at 10:57 AM ^

I had a not so close friend who was having a wedding I committed to. As the days grew closer I agonized over the decision to go as I really didn't want to. For one of the first times in my life I made a decision a few days before the wedding to say fuck it to obligation and just did what I wanted. Made up an excuse, mailed the gift and enjoyed a delicious pizza in my new house with one of the best games ever.

M go Bru

July 16th, 2016 at 11:39 AM ^

Had an infant son born 9/10. Used that as an excuse to leave early to watch more of the game.

That opening sack, the Daydiran Taylor hit, and Woodson 33 yard reception I recall vividly. Surprized I didn't remember the Griese run.

UMxWolverines

July 15th, 2016 at 11:00 AM ^

That's why I'm never a fan of our guys yapping before a game about a certain player or how theyre so confident in x. It reminds me of that Penn State team and guys like Terry Glenn and David Boston. It made them look stupid and probably provided motivaton.

Kwitch22

July 15th, 2016 at 11:06 AM ^

Didn't we take 4 knees from inside their 10 with a few minutes left. That bothered me for years, because Nebraska always ran up the score and we were better then them. At some point I have realized that it was probably more embarrassing for those child rapists that we weren't interested in scoring any more and they can have the football back with out us trying to score. 

 

Also Fuck Scott Frost, I will never forget him after the Orange Bowl proclaiming them the best team in the country, I can't wait to run that guy and his punchable face out of the big house this year. 

Bocheezu

July 15th, 2016 at 11:08 AM ^

In all of my fandom, the most satisfying game I have ever witnessed.  There were no moments of trepidation or concern because it was over so early.  It was so nice to experience a big game where the stress was relieved right away and the second half was just one big victory cigar.

Strangely, it didn't have the dorm comraderie of the hockey championship (everybody on the hall high-fived after that one) and most people had gone on to do other things by the second half.

jdon

July 15th, 2016 at 11:08 AM ^

One of the best days of my life.
Sophomore year.
My self and a bunch of friends were jamming at my dads, watching games (FSU vs uNC I think), and drinking heavily



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CRISPed in the DIAG

July 15th, 2016 at 11:12 AM ^

Penn State had beaten UM in 94, 95 and 96. In the days preceding, the Beano Cook's of the world loudly proclaimed this game to be the end of Michigan's season.  Aside from the domination and Daydrion Taylor's hit/injury, I remember Chuck's TD catch. IIRC, they tried to jam him off the line. OSU did the same thing to him on seemingly the same play from the same part of the field a few weeks later.

 

mikewein

July 15th, 2016 at 11:12 AM ^

My parents neighbors had season PSU tickets and could not go to that game.  It was my senior year, so my parents bought the tickets off them, and my girlriend and I came in and the 4 of us drove from Pittsburgh to State college to see the game.  We had our UM stuff on and got yelled at multiple times on the way to the game.  I was with my parents.  Seriously rude. 

We were sitting in the penn state alumni section and got gently teased before the game.  As soon as it started they got quiet real quick.  Then we just got glared at the rest of the game. 

I still rember that hit as the hardest I have ever seen.  The whole atmospere after just changed to, 'wow, they came to beat us, and beat us hard'

I met some friends from high school at halftime to catch up, and they aplogized for how badly they were playing.

The other thing I remember was the horrible fog on the drive back home.  We were going 25 at most and could see about 10 feet in front of us.


But it was an amazing game to go to in person. One of my Favorites. 

1VaBlue1

July 15th, 2016 at 11:18 AM ^

Your pre-game and game experience is different from mine.  I was wearing a Michigan ballcap, so everyone knew I was for UM.  I didn't have any problems, maybe because I was with a bunch of PSU fans, and we were all joking and laughing?  I had a great time.  Friday night before the game, at the Lions Den, Me and three guys from another table sang the Victors louder than the PSU guys could sing their fight song - because nobody knew it!  They eventually drowned us out with the "We Are..." chant.  The bar bought us a round afterwards, it was fun!

mikewein

July 15th, 2016 at 11:22 AM ^

Glad to hear you had a good time.  It was mostly as we were walking around before the game.  I understand the need to yell dumb stuff at people in opposing colors, but there is a limit to fun vs drunk mean.   I was probably more bothered than my parents.  And it did let me tease my cousin who went there about the horrible fans.

1VaBlue1

July 15th, 2016 at 11:12 AM ^

I was at the game with about 10 PSU fans/alumni.  We had a GREAT time!  Well, I did, anyway.  On Steele's sack, you could see the life drop out of them (the guys I was with) - they knew it was going to be a long day right then.  The crushing hit that knocked out both players along the sideline was the real turning point, though.  PSU had just started moving the ball, after a couple of decent plays, and the crowd was getting started again.  Then BAM.  Both players out.  The place went dead silent for a long time, then UM dominated on defense again.  That was it.  Penn St fans knew they were watching a blowout from that point on.

Despite the type of loss, the PSU fans/students I encountered after the loss, which included dropping in on a couple of house parties afterward, were complimentary - each of them giving Michigan full credit.  And every single one of them, even the drunken fucktards, were straight up PISSED that Nebraska won its game.  They knew it was going to hurt UM in the polls, and they all wanted UM ahead based on what they had just witnessed.  I'll give credit to them as a classy crowd.

What a great game it was, and the atmosphere, with the PSU crowd, ESPN Gameday, and even Friday night downtown before the game, was first rate.  I had a great time and would go back again if I had the chance.

dragonchild

July 15th, 2016 at 11:14 AM ^

Michigan had been a second half team up to that point.  I was in the MMB at the time and none of my friends were intimidated by Penn State, but we expected we'd have to wear them down like we'd done to everyone else.  Many expected to win, but nobody expected a blowout by halftime.

Turns out that Penn State team was overrated; Florida dominated them as well.  It actually kind of sucked that none of Michigan's conference opponents won their bowl games that season; the coaches were gonna give Osbourne his gold watch but it didn't help to give them excuses.

LSAClassOf2000

July 15th, 2016 at 12:09 PM ^

I remember Chris Balas did a nice write-up on Daydrion Taylor and where he is at now - back at home in Texas and coaching football - and how the hit altered the careers of both him and Bob Stephenson, who playing days also ended with that hit. Indeed, as I recall, Stephenson fell unconscious onto Taylor in the aftermath - it was a scary moment indeed for both players.

Goggles Paisano

July 16th, 2016 at 6:36 AM ^

That hit is what I remember most from that game. That really summed up the mentality that Michigan came to play with that day. That is still the hardest and most violent hit I have ever seen in a football game. That hit involuntarily launched me off the couch. 

Aero01

July 15th, 2016 at 11:21 AM ^

I was a freshmen and that was the first away game I'd ever been to. indescribable. I remember weird things like every rest area we stopped at on the way home being filled with delirious Michigan fans. Also listening to the description of Nebraska's late fluke touchdown that shouldn't have been allowed.

bluenectarine

July 15th, 2016 at 11:22 AM ^

the weather sucked but we still tailgated for about 7-8 hours....Then we walked up to our seats in the Michigan section....the row behind us were 4 smoking hot chicks holding up a sign that said "OUR BEAVER IS BETTER THAN YOURS!"....I swear to God.....I found out they went to every game that year and knew football inside and out.....Unfortunately, I was married at the time and didn't close the deal.....in terms of the game, i remember several times looking at our defense and it seemed like waterboy stuff....Charles had 1/2 of the field "covered" and the other 10 guys had the other half covered.....Very happy day to say the least!

DarkWolverine

July 15th, 2016 at 11:28 AM ^

Sat in PSU alum section. A cold and rainy day, but we dressed for the weather. Drove over from NJ and remember the mud in the parking lot after the game. The tailgate we were supposed to go to was cancelled due to the weather--Chem Eng department. Laughed very hard when PSU scored late, in the midst of the blowout, and then JoePa goes for 2? WTF? A very satisfying win--listende to the crying on the PSU radio broadcast all the way home to NJ.

gustave ferbert

July 15th, 2016 at 11:33 AM ^

Didn't CW shut out Jurevicious that game too? 

 

I was lucky enough to be there in person.  Watching the fans file out at half time was priceless.  

 

it was also the day of that bullshit Nebraska/Missouri game, where Nebraska should have lost. 

MMBbones

July 15th, 2016 at 11:38 AM ^

This game was the closest thing I've ever had to a Fantasy experience.  A friend of mine was best friends with Fred Jackson, and Fred got us seats with the coach's families, right around the twenty.

We drove up the night before in a torrential rain, found a hotel room, then went to the hotel where the team was staying.  We met Fred in the hotel bar and had a few drinks together.  He kept saying, "We're gonna kill these guys."  He was supremely confident, and almost giddy about it -- giddy even for Fred.  He knew they had a special team that year.  He was also talking about who was going to go to the NFL.  "Charles is gone," he said.  He was right about that, of course.  "Brian doesn't have the arm for the NFL."  He was wrong about that one, or at least Griese managed to overcome the lack of arm strength. 

Bo and Jerry Hanlon were also in the bar, but I was trying to not look like a geeky fan, since we were there as Fred's guests, so I didn't approach them.

Then of course the game the next day was incredible.  We did get a couple eggs tossed at us by Penn State fans before the game, but we spent a couple hours just milling about around the stadium before the game, and that was the only incident.  We also met Jim Brandstatter on his way to the booth.  He was walking up a grassy hill hauling a big case, puffing like a steam engine.  We offered to give him a hand, and he knew my friend personally, but he insisted it wasn't a problem. 

I was in the MMB for five years, but that weekend topped it all.

Great memories.

Cali Wolverine

July 15th, 2016 at 11:40 AM ^

be a battle...boy was I wrong. That was one of the biggest curb stomps against a highly ranked team, on the road, that I had ever seen. I mean it was a road game win and people ran out of the bars on South U like we had won the NC (which would come soon enough). And my god...that was the hardest hit I have ever seen.

kvnryn

July 15th, 2016 at 12:10 PM ^

I happened to be at the 2013 FSU @ Clemson game, and I honestly have to say that was at least equally as dominating a performance from a road team against a highly ranked home team halfway+ into a season. Death Valley was half empty midway through the third quarter. At least most of the PSU fans stayed.

Blukon Cornelius

July 15th, 2016 at 11:43 AM ^

This was my senior year at UofM.  I rushed out to South U. after the game and joined the crowd at the President's House.  He said something to the effect of "I'm the new President here, and this is my house, but it's also your house!"  Then he stepped aside and said "come on in!"  If you were to believe everybody who later said they stole a beer from Bollinger's fridge and drank in his living room, he would have had to have had about 100 cases on hand.  Great memory of an awesome season.

Zarniwoop

July 15th, 2016 at 11:44 AM ^

I still watch this entire game sometimes.

The hardest hit that ever happened in a football game at any level occurred in this game when Stephenson was hit by Taylor and both players careers ended right there on the field.

Taylor was just a HUGE hitter - had been all year.

Its probably the best 4 quarters of football a modern Michigan team has ever played.

Heptarch

July 15th, 2016 at 11:53 AM ^

Obligatory Fuck PedState.

Now that that's out of the way...

Sincerely one of the finest Michigan football games I've ever seen (last year's Citrus Bowl runs a relatively close second, though).

I was in California meeting my girlfriend's parents for the first time.  They were not particular fans of college football, but they knew I was so they decided we'd all watch the game together.

Without getting into too long a story... I broke up with my girlfriend shortly thereafter when it became clear that she'd thought my behavior (which was actually fairly tame, as I was in someone else's house watching a game they didn't care about) was embarrassing and rude.  I told her essentially that I knew it wouldn't work between us, then, because Michigan football was an inextricable part of me and my family.

Also, I'll weigh in on the side discussion about their fans.  I have never seen a UM-PSU game in Happy Valley, but I've seen probably five or six in the Big House.  PSU fans have been unfailingly polite and complimentary in my experience (with the obvious exception of the drunk ones, which every team has).

Heptarch

July 19th, 2016 at 1:34 PM ^

I might have forgotten to use my inside voice once or twice.  I was pretty good about the language, actually, since there wasn't much to bitch about with that game...  But apparently I embarrassed my girlfriend and her family thought I was rude.

So I moved on.

My fiancee doesn't care a lick about football in general or Michigan football in particular, but she is completely cool with how passionate I am about it and just laughs a little, secret laugh at how much of a "guy" I am when I sit down to watch the game.

Points for her, though... Even not caring about football she agreed to attend the home opener for Harbaugh because she knew how much it meant to be to be in the stands for that one.  And she actually enjoyed herself.

Blue2000

July 15th, 2016 at 11:58 AM ^

I was a sophmore and made the trip to State College.  Without a doubt, the most fun I've had at a Michigan football game.  My god we were dominant that day.