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2004 Michigan Wolverines football team

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American college football season

2004Michigan Wolverines football
Big Ten co-champion
Rose Bowl,L 37–38 vs.Texas
ConferenceBig Ten Conference
Ranking
CoachesNo. 12
APNo. 14
Record9–3 (7–1 Big Ten)
Head coach
Offensive coordinatorTerry Malone (3rd season)
Offensive schemeMultiple
Defensive coordinatorJim Herrmann (8th season)
Base defenseMultiple
MVPBraylon Edwards
Captains
Home stadiumMichigan Stadium
Seasons
← 2003
2005 →
2004 Big Ten Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
Team W L  W L 
No. 14Michigan $+ 71  93 
No. 8Iowa + 71  102 
No. 17Wisconsin 62  93 
Northwestern 53  66 
No. 20Ohio State 44  84 
Purdue 44  75 
Michigan State 44  57 
Minnesota 35  75 
Penn State 26  47 
Illinois 17  38 
Indiana 17  38 
  • $ – BCS representative as conference champion
  • + – Conference co-champions
Rankings fromAP Poll

The2004 Michigan Wolverines football team was anAmerican football team that represented theUniversity of Michigan as a member of theBig Ten Conference during the2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. In their tenth season under head coachLloyd Carr, the Wolverines compiled a 9–3 record (7–1 in conference games), outscored opponents by a total of 370 to 279, and tied withIowa for the Big Ten championship. Having beaten Iowa during the regular season, the Wolverines received the Big Ten's berth in the2005 Rose Bowl where they lost to No. 6Texas by a 38–37 score.[1]

The Wolverines were ranked No. 8 in the preseasonAP poll, dropped to No. 19 after an early loss toNotre Dame and a narrow victory overSan Diego State, rose to No. 9 after winning eight straight games, and finished the season at No. 14 following losses toOhio State and Texas.

Wide receiverBraylon Edwards led the Big Ten with 1,330 receiving yards, won theBiletnikoff Award as the best receiver in college football, and received theChicago Tribune Silver Football as the most valuable player in the Big Ten. CenterDavid Baas won theRimington Trophy. Running backMike Hart led the Big Ten with 1,455 rushing yards and was named Big Ten Freshman of the Year. QuarterbackChad Henne tied a school record with 25 touchdown passes.

Four Michigan players received first-team honors on the2004 All-America team: Braylon Edwards; David Baas; cornerbackMarlin Jackson; and safetyErnest Shazor. Nine Michigan players received first-teamAll-Big Ten honors: Mike Hart; Braylon Edwards; David Baas; Marlin Jackson; Ernest Shazor; offensive guardMatt Lentz; offensive tackleAdam Stenavich; tight endTim Massaquoi; and defensive linemanGabe Watson.

Schedule

[edit]
DateTimeOpponentRankSiteTVResultAttendance
September 412:00 p.m.Miami (OH)*No. 8ABCW 43–10110,815
September 113:30 p.m.atNotre Dame*No. 8NBCL 20–2880,795
September 1812:00 p.m.San Diego State*No. 17
  • Michigan Stadium
  • Ann Arbor, MI
ESPNW 24–21109,432
September 253:30 p.m.IowaNo. 19
  • Michigan Stadium
  • Ann Arbor, MI
ABCW 30–17111,428
October 23:30 p.m.atIndianaNo. 19ABCW 35–1435,001
October 912:00 p.m.No. 13MinnesotadaggerNo. 14
ESPNW 27–24111,518
October 1612:00 p.m.atIllinoisNo. 14ABCW 30–1955,725
October 233:30 p.m.at No. 12PurdueNo. 13ABCW 16–1465,170
October 303:30 p.m.Michigan StateNo. 12
  • Michigan Stadium
  • Ann Arbor, MI (rivalry)
ABCW 45–373OT111,609
November 1312:10 p.m.NorthwesternNo. 9
  • Michigan Stadium
  • Ann Arbor, MI (rivalry)
ABCW 42–20111,347
November 201:00 p.m.atOhio StateNo. 7ABCL 21–37105,456
January 1, 20055:00 p.m.vs. No. 6Texas*No. 13ABCL 37–3893,468
  • *Non-conference game
  • daggerHomecoming
  • Rankings fromAP Poll released prior to the game
  • All times are inEastern time

Game summaries

[edit]

Miami (OH)

[edit]
Miami (OH) at #8/#7 Michigan
Team1234Total
Miami (OH)003710
Michigan010141943
Scoring summary
26:53MICHGarrett Rivas 31-yard field goalMICH 3–0
24:48MICHDavid Underwood 1-yard run (Garrett Rivas kick)MICH 10–0
312:25MICHDavid Underwood 1-yard run (Garrett Rivas kick)MICH 17–0
36:47MICHBraylon Edwards 20-yard pass from Chad Henne (Garrett Rivas kick)MICH 24–0
30:06M-OHJared Parseghian 36-yard field goalMICH 24–3
412:38M-OHMike Smith 1-yard run (Todd Soderquist kick)MICH 24–10
49:01MICHErnest Shazor 88-yard interception return (kick failed)MICH 30–10
47:22MICHBraylon Edwards 13-yard pass from Chad Henne (kick failed)MICH 36–10
46:16MICHJerome Jackson 1-yard run (Garrett Rivas kick)MICH 43–10

On September 4, Michigan opened its season with a 43–10 victory overMiami (OH) before a crowd of 110,815 atMichigan Stadium. After an injury to Matt Gutierrez,Chad Henne became the second true freshman quarterback (afterRick Leach in1975) to start a season opener for Michigan. Henne completed 14 of 24 passes for 142 yards, two touchdowns, and one interception.Braylon Edwards caught six of Henne's passes for 91 yards and two touchdowns and described Henne after the game as "a special kind of person, a guy you automatically have faith in."[2][3]

Michigan's defense created seven turnovers (five interceptions), including two interceptions byMarkus Curry and an 88-yard interception return for a touchdown byErnest Shazor. Aided by the turnovers, Michigan had five scoring drives of less than 20 yards.[4][5] It was the most turnovers forced by a Michigan defense since October 5, 1985.[6]

StatisticsMUUM
First downs1314
Plays–yards65–25068–274
Rushes–yards–3340–133
Passing yards217159
Passing:comp–att–int19–40–516–28–1
Time of possession27:5632:04
TeamCategoryPlayerStatistics
Miami (OH)PassingJosh Betts18/36 201 yds. 4 INT
RushingLuke Clemens13 carries, 32 yards
ReceivingMartin Nance5 receptions, 63 yards
MichiganPassingChad Henne14/24 142 yds., 2 TD, 1 INT
RushingDavid Underwood22 carries, 61 yards, 2 TD
ReceivingBraylon Edwards6 receptions, 91 yards, 2 TD

Notre Dame

[edit]
Michigan at Notre Dame
Team1234Total
Michigan633820
Notre Dame0072128
  • Date: September 11
  • Location:Notre Dame Stadium
  • Game start: 3:30 p.m.EST
  • Game attendance: 80,795
  • Television network: ABC
Scoring summary
18:29MICHGarrett Rivas 38-yard field goalMICH 3–0
10:11MICHRivas 33-yard field goalMICH 6–0
20:00MICHRivas 22-yard field goalMICH 9–0
311:02NDMatt Shelton 46-yard pass fromBrady Quinn (D.J. Fitzgerald kick)MICH 9–7
35:57MICHRivas 47-yard field goalMICH 12–7
413:48NDDarius Walker 6-yard run (Fitzpatrick kick)ND 14–12
411:23NDWalker 5-yard run (Fitzpatrick kick)ND 21–12
4NDRashon Powers-Neal 8-yard pass from Quinn (Fitpatrick kick)ND 28–12
42:32MICHSteve Breaston 25-yard pass fromChad Henne (Breaston pass from Henne for two-point conversion)ND 28–20

On September 11, No. 8 Michigan lost toTyrone Willingham'sNotre Dame Fighting Irish, 28–20, before a crowd of 80,795 atNotre Dame Stadium.

Michigan led, 9–0, at halftime, with three field goals byGarrett Rivas.Brady Quinn andDarius Walker led the Fighting Irish to 21 points in a fourth-quarter comeback. Quinn passed for 178 yards, two touchdowns, and three interceptions. Walker rushed for 115 yards and a touchdown.[7]

Braylon Edwards had 12 receptions for 126 yards, but Michigan's running game was stymied, and the Wolverines settled for four field goals. Starting running back David Underwood sustained a head injury on a block in the backfield on Michigan's second offensive play. Backups Jerome Jackson and Pierre Rembert were limited to 32 and 23 yards, respectively. After the game,Lloyd Carr told reporters: "We can't run the football, and, until you can run, you're going to have a hard time. You can't win on field goals."[8] (True freshman Mike Hart emerged as the team's lead back in the following game.)

StatisticsUMND
First downs1513
Plays–yards70–29661–313
Rushes–yards30–5640–135
Passing yards240178
Passing:comp–att–int25–40–110–21–3
Time of possession32:3827:22
TeamCategoryPlayerStatistics
MichiganPassingChad Henne25/40 240 yds., 1 TD, 1 INT
RushingJerome Jackson15 carries, 32 yards
ReceivingBraylon Edwards12 receptions, 129 yds.
IndianaPassingBrady Quinn10/20 178 yds., 2 TD, 3 INT
RushingDarius Jackson31 carries, 115 yds., 1 TD
ReceivingMaurice Stovall5 receptions, 82 yds.

San Diego State

[edit]
SDSU at Michigan
Team1234Total
San Diego State1470021
Michigan1707024
  • Date: September 18
  • Location:Michigan Stadium
  • Game start: 12:00 p.m.EST
  • Game attendance: 109,432
  • Television network: ESPN
Scoring summary
113:20MICHBraylon Edwards 54-yard pass fromChad Henne (kick)MICH 7–0
110:37SDSUMichael Franklin 1-yard run (Garrett Palmer kick)TIE 7–7
13:45MICHGarrett Rivas 39-yard field goalMICH 10–7
12:51MICHLawrence Reid fumble recovery and five-yard return (Rivas kick)MICH 17–7
11:21SDSUJeff Webb 12-yard pass from Michael Franklin (Palmer kick)MICH 17–14
27:57SDSUOrtiz 14-yard pass from Dlugolecki (Palmer kick)SDSU 21–17
310:35MICHEdwards 7-yard pass from Henne (Rivas kick)MICH 24–21

On September 18, Michigan defeatedTom Craft'sSan Diego State Aztecs, 24–21, before a crowd of 109,432 atMichigan Stadium. Michigan gave up 21 first-half points and trailed, 21–17, at halftime. The defense tightened and held the Aztecs to 68 yards of offense and zero points in the second half.

The game featured the debut of true freshman tailbackMike Hart as a major offensive weapon. In the first two games of the season, Hart had only eight carries, and Michigan averaged only 85.5 rushing yards per game and ranked 94th out of 117 Division I teams in rushing offense.[9] Hart got the start against San Diego State after David Underwood sustained a concussion against Notre Dame and gained 121 yards on 25 carries. After the game, Hart noted: "It's a dream come true. I have family from Detroit, and I've always been a Michigan fan since I was young."[10]

QuarterbackChad Henne threw three interceptions.Braylon Edwards became Michigan's career receptions leader with eight receptions and scored the game-winning touchdown on a seven-yard pass from Henne in the third quarter.[11]

StatisticsSDUM
First downs1520
Plays–yards66–31176–327
Rushes–yards23–2248–148
Passing yards289179
Passing:comp–att–int27–43–114–28–3
Time of possession27:5632:04
TeamCategoryPlayerStatistics
SDSUPassingMatt Dlugolecki26/42 277 yds. 1 TD, 1 INT
RushingMichael Franklin16 carries, 39 yards, 1 TD
ReceivingRobert Ortiz7 receptions, 125 yards, 1 TD
MichiganPassingChad Henne11/24 162 yds., 2 TD, 3 INT
RushingMike Hart25 carries, 121 yards
ReceivingBraylon Edwards8 receptions, 130 yards, 2 TD

Iowa

[edit]
Iowa at Michigan
Team1234Total
Iowa703717
Michigan0167730
Scoring summary
111:31IOWAEd Hinkel 2-yard pass fromDrew Tate (Kyle Schlicher kick)IOWA 7–0
213:59MICHGarrett Rivas 46-yard field goalIOWA 7–3
28:28MICHBraylon Edwards 58-yard pass fromChad Henne (Rivas kick)MICH 10–7
26:21MICHHenne 1-yard run (kick failed)MICH 16–7
27:32MINNMarion Barber III 19-yard run (Rhys Lloyd kick)MICH 16–7
39:56IOWASchlicher 25-yard field goalMICH 16–10
40:09MICHHart 7-yard run (Rivas kick)MICH 23–10
4MICHGrant Mason 25-yard interception returnMICH 30–10

On September 25, No. 19 Michigan defeatedKirk Ferentz'sIowa Hawkeyes, 30–17, before a crowd of 111,428 atMichigan Stadium.

On offense, quarterbackChad Henne completed 16 of 26 passes for 236 yards, including a 58-yard touchdown pass toBraylon Edwards in the second quarter. Freshman tailbackMike Hart rushed for 99 yards and scored his first collegiate touchdown on a seven-yard run in the fourth quarter.[12]

Michigan's defense held Iowa to -15 rushing yards and came up with five turnovers, three fumble recoveries and two interceptions off Iowa quarterbackDrew Tate.Grant Mason registered one of the interceptions, returning it 25 yards for the Wolverines' final points of the game.[12]

StatisticsIOWAMICH
First downs1618
Plays–yards60–25565–329
Rushes–yards28–-1539–93
Passing yards270236
Passing:comp–att–int24–32–216–26–0
Time of possession27:4532:15
TeamCategoryPlayerStatistics
IowaPassingDrew Tate24/32 270 yds. 2 TD, 2 INT
RushingJermelle Lewis14 carries, 35 yards
ReceivingEd Hinkel7 receptions, 89 yards, 1 TD
MichiganPassingChad Henne16/26 236 yds., 1 TD
RushingMike Hart26 carries, 99 yards, 1 TD
ReceivingBraylon Edwards6 receptions, 150 yards, 1 TD

Indiana

[edit]
#19/18 Michigan at Indiana
Team1234Total
Michigan7721035
Indiana070714
Scoring summary
15:52MichiganJermaine Gonzales 40-yard pass fromChad Henne (Garrett Rivas kick)Michigan 7–0
24:37MichiganLeon Hall 76-yard punt return (Garrett Rivas kick)Michigan 14–0
2:06IndianaBenJarvus Green-Ellis 2-yard run (Bryan Robertson kick)Michigan 14–7
312:40MichiganMike Hart 1-yard run (Garrett Rivas kick)Michigan 21–7
36:28MichiganBraylon Edwards 69-yard pass from Chad Henne (Garrett Rivas kick)Michigan 28–7
32:07MichiganBraylon Edwards 38-yard pass from Chad Henne (Garrett Rivas kick)Michigan 35–7
412:17IndianaCourtney Roby 6-yard pass fromMatt LoVecchio (Bryan Robertson kick)Michigan 35–14

On October 2, Michigan defeatedIndiana, 35–14, atBloomington, Indiana.[13]

On the opening drive of the game, Indiana converted a fake punt for a long gain and drove to Michigan's 14-yard line. A high snap went through the hands of Indiana's quarterback for a 29-yard loss, ending the threat. On Michigan's first drive,Chad Henne threw a 40-yard touchdown pass to Jermaine Gonzales. Henne led Michigan's offense, completing 17 of 21 passes for 316 yards and three touchdowns, though he also fumbled twice.Braylon Edwards had eight catches for 165 yards, including touchdown receptions covering 69 and 38 yards. Freshman tailbackMike Hart started for the first time in his career, carrying the ball 20 times for 77 yards and a touchdown and also catching two passes for 36 yards. Edwards credited the success of the passing game to Indiana's defensive strategy: "They played eight in a box. They weren't doubling any of the receivers, so we knew if we could throw the ball up top it would be pretty much one-on-one and the receivers would have to make the play. And that's what we did"[14]

Michigan also had big plays on special teams.Leon Hall returned a punt for 76 yards and a touchdown, and Grant Mason returned the second-half kickoff 97 yards to set up a short touchdown run by Mike Hart.[14]

Michigan's defense limited Indiana to 214 yards of offense, including 64 rushing yards.[15]

The game included three delays for instant replay as the Big Ten conducted an experiment with the technology during the 2004 season. In one instance, the game was delayed for 14 minutes while officials reviewed and ultimately overturned a kick-catch interference penalty against Indiana.[15]

StatisticsUMIU
First downs2113
Plays–yards65–42475–214
Rushes–yards39–9340–133
Passing yards331153
Passing:comp–att–int19–26–014–22–0
Time of possession28:1731:43

[16]

TeamCategoryPlayerStatistics
MichiganPassingChad Henne17/21 316 yds. 3 TD
RushingMike Hart20 carries, 77 yards, 1 TD
ReceivingBraylon Edwards8 receptions, 165 yards, 2 TD
IndianaPassingMatt LoVecchio13/19 139 yds. 1 TD
RushingBenJarvus Green-Ellis14 carries, 38 yards, 1 TD
ReceivingCourtney Roby5 receptions, 70 yards, 1 TD

[16]

Minnesota

[edit]
#13 Minnesota at #14 Michigan
Little Brown Jug
Team1234Total
Minnesota777324
Michigan10701027
Scoring summary
19:39MICHMike Hart 8-yard run (Garrett Rivas kick)MICH 7–0
10:42MICHGarrett Rivas 38-yard field goalMICH 10–0
10:30MINNLaurence Maroney 80-yard run (Rhys Lloyd kick)MICH 10–7
210:34MICHBraylon Edwards 4-yard pass from Chad Henne (Garrett Rivas kick)MICH 17–7
27:32MINNMarion Barber III 19-yard run (Rhys Lloyd kick)MICH 17–14
38:33MINNJared Ellerson 26-yard pass fromBryan Cupito (Rhys Lloyd kick)MINN 21–17
413:14MINNRhys Lloyd 27-yard field goalMINN 24–17
49:36MICHGarrett Rivas 26-yard field goalMINN 24–20
41:57MICHTyler Ecker 31-yard pass from Chad Henne (Garrett Rivas kick)MICH 27–24

On October 9, No. 14 Michigan defeatedGlen Mason's No. 13Minnesota Golden Gophers, 27–24, in theLittle Brown Jug rivalry game before a crowd of 111,518 atMichigan Stadium.

Michigan tallied 518 yards of offense in the game, led by the freshmenChad Henne (33 of 49 passing for 328 yards with two touchdowns and two interceptions) andMike Hart (35 carries for 160 yards).Braylon Edwards had 10 receptions for 98 yards.[17]

The defense gave up 345 yards, including an 80-yard touchdown run byLaurence Maroney at the end of the first quarter. Minnesota took a 21–17 lead in the third quarter on a 26-yard pass fromBryan Cupito to Jared Ellerson. Early in the fourth quarter,Leon Hall fumbled a punt, and Minnesota recovered the ball at Michigan's nine-yard line. The defense stiffened and allowed no gain on three plays, forcing the Golden Gophers to settle for a field goal and a 24–17 lead with 13:14 remaining in the game.

Henne led a comeback in the fourth quarter. Garrett Rivas kicked a 26-yard field goal with 9:36 remaining. On its next possession, Michigan drove to the Minnesota 39-yard line, but the drive stalled and Michigan punted with 5:05 remaining. The Wolverines got the ball back at their own 13-yard line with 3:04 remaining. Henne then led the team on a six-play, 87-yard, 67-second drive, including two passes toJason Avant (for 20 and 17 yards) and culminating with a game-winning 31-yard touchdown pass to Tyler Ecker with 1:57 remaining.[18][19]

StatisticsMINNMICH
First downs1329
Plays–yards61–34594–518
Rushes–yards39–18945–190
Passing yards156328
Passing:comp–att–int8–22–133–49–2
Time of possession27:5632:04

[17]

TeamCategoryPlayerStatistics
MinnesotaPassingBryan Cupito8/22 156 yds. 1 TD
RushingLaurence Maroney19 carries, 145 yards, 1 TD
ReceivingJared Ellerson6 receptions, 83 yards, 1 TD
MichiganPassingChad Henne33/49 328 yds., 2 TD, 2 INT
RushingMike Hart35 carries, 160 yards, 1 TD
ReceivingBraylon Edwards10 receptions, 98 yards, 1 TD

[17]

Illinois

[edit]
#14 Michigan at Illinois
Team1234Total
Michigan10012830
Illinois0170219
Scoring summary
113:30MICHGarrett Rivas 31-yard field goalMICH 3–0
16:45MICHMax Martin 1-yard run (Garrett Rivas kick)MICH 10–0
24:41ILLPierre Thomas 2-yard pass fromJon Beutjer (Jason Reda kick)MICH 10–7
23:54ILLThomas 1-yard run (Reda kick)ILL 14–10
20:05ILLReda 40-yard field goalILL 17–10
37:49MICHTyler Ecker 1-yard pass fromChad Henne (kick failed)ILL 17–16
30:54MICHHenne 2-yard run (kick failed))ILL MICH 22–17
48:54MICHMike Hart 4-yard run (Jason Avant pass from Henne for two-point conversion)MICH 30–17
40:03ILLTeam safetyMICH 30–19

On October 16, Michigan defeatedRon Turner'sIllinois Fighting Illini, 30–19, atChampaign, Illinois.

Michigan took a 10–0 lead in the first quarter.Chad Henne threw two interceptions in the second quarter, one of which was returned 62 yards by Justin Harrison. Illinois scored 17 unanswered points and led 17–10 at halftime. Early in the third quarter, Michigan linebacker Scott McClintock intercepted aJon Beutjer pass, giving Michigan the ball at the Illinois six-yard line. Michigan scored three touchdowns in the second half and had a 96-yard, 16-play, six-minute drive at the start of the fourth quarter.Mike Hart set a Michigan freshman rushing record with 40 carries for 234 yards.[20]

Defensively, the Wolverines held the Illini to 95 yards of total offense in the second half.[20]

StatisticsUMUI
First downs2319
Plays–yards88–40870–254
Rushes–yards61–29430–98
Passing yards114156
Passing:comp–att–int14–27–220–40–3
Time of possession36:3623:04
TeamCategoryPlayerStatistics
MichiganPassingChad Henne14/27 114 yds. 1 TD, 2 INT
RushingMike Hart40 carries, 234 yards, 1 TD
ReceivingJason Avant3 receptions, 48 yards
IndianaPassingJon Beutjer20/39 156 yds. 1 TD, 3 INT
RushingPierre Thomas20 carries, 68 yards, 1 TD
ReceivingJason Davis7 receptions, 69 yards

Purdue

[edit]
Team1234Total
• Michigan733316
Purdue707014
Scoring summary
Q110:23PURJerod Void, 1-yard run (Ben Jones kick)PUR 7–0
Q17:39MICHMike Hart 25-yard pass fromChad Henne (Garrett Rivas kick)TIE 7–7
Q28:56MICHRivas 30-yard field goalMICH 10–7
Q34:25PURBrandon Jones 63-yard pass fromKyle Orton (Jones kick)PUR 14–10
Q31:06MICHRivas 25-yard field goalPUR 14–13
Q43:36MICHRivas 35-yard field goalMICH 16–14

On October 23, No. 13 Michigan defeated No. 12Purdue, 16–14, before a crowd of 65,179 atRoss–Ade Stadium inWest Lafayette, Indiana.

The teams traded first-quarter touchdowns, Michigan scoring on a 25-yard pass fromChad Henne toMike Hart. Purdue took the lead in the third quarter on a 64-yard pass fromKyle Orton to Brandon Jones. Michigan pulled ahead with threeGarrett Rivas field-goals, the winning kick at 3:36 in the fourth quarter.[21] Purdue's final drive ended withErnest Shazor foorcing a fumble by Purdue receiver Dorien Bryant;Leon Hall recovered the loose ball with 2:03 remaining, and Michigan was able to run out the clock.[22]

Mike Hart had 206 rushing yards on 33 carries. Chad Henne completed 22 of 39 passes for 190 yards with one touchdown and one interception. Purdue's offense averaged 485.3 yards per game in prior games and was held to 263 yards by Michigan. Michigan's defense sacked Purdue quarterbackKyle Orton three times, intercepted a pass, and limited him to 14-of-30 passing for 213 yards. Purdue's leading receiverTaylor Stubblefield was limited to one catch for 10 yards.[22]

StatisticsUMPU
First downs2213
Plays–yards82–39463–263
Rushes–yards43–20433–50
Passing yards190213
Passing:comp–att–int22–39–114–30–1
Time of possession35:3424:26
TeamCategoryPlayerStatistics
MichiganPassingChad Henne22/39 190 yds. 1 TD, 1 INT
RushingMike Hart33 carries, 206 yards
ReceivingTim Massaquoi5 receptions, 60 yards
PurduePassingKyle Orton14/30 213 yds., 1 TD, 1 INT
RushingJerod Void20 carries, 48 yards, 1 TD
ReceivingBrandon Jones4 receptions, 62 yards

Michigan State

[edit]
Team12342OT3OTTotal
Michigan State1430107034
• Michigan730177842
Scoring summary
Q111:25MSUDeAndra Cobb 72-yard run (Dave Rayner kick)MSU 7–0
Q17:50MICHMike Hart 7-yard run (Garrett Rivas kick)TIE 7–7
Q12:56MSUDrew Stanton 5-yard run (Rayner kick)MSU 14–7
Q29:10MSURayner 22-yard field goalMSU 17–7
Q20:49MICHRivass 34-yard field goalMSU 17–10
Q413:30MSURayner 19-yard field goalMSU 20–10
Q48:43MSUCobb 64-yard run (Rayner kick)MICH 27–10
Q46:27MICHRivas 24-yard field goalMSU 27–13
Q46:12MICHBraylon Edwards 34-yard pass fromChad Henne (Rivas kick)MSU 27–20
Q42:59MICHEdwards 21-yard pass from Henne (Rivas kick)TIE 27–27
OT1MICHRivas 34-yard field goalMICH 30–27
OT1MSURayner 23-yard field goalTIE 30–30
OT2MSUJason Teague 3-yard run (Rayner kick)MSU 37–30
OT2MICHJason Avant 5-yard pass from Henne (Rivas kick)TIE 37–37
OT3MICHEdwards 24-yard pass from Henne (Tim Massaquoi pass from Henne for two-point conversion)MICH 45–37

[23]

On October 30, Michigan defeatedJohn L. Smith'sMichigan State Spartans, 45–37, in triple overtime before a crowd of 111,609 atMichigan Stadium.

The Spartans led, 27–10, midway through the fourth quarter. Michigan scored 17 points, including two touchdown receptions byBraylon Edwards, in the final 6:27 to tie the score. Michigan won the game in the third overtime period on a third touchdown pass from Henne to Edwards.[24][25]

Edwards finished the game with 11 receptions for 189 yards and three touchdowns. Mike Hart carried 33 times for 224 yards to pass the 1,000-yard mark for the season. He became the first freshman in Michigan history to rush for 1,000 yards. Henne completed 24 of 35 passes for 273 yards and four touchdowns.[26]

StatisticsMSUMICH
First downs2527
Plays–yards83–53579–496
Rushes–yards57–36844–261
Passing yards167273
Passing:comp–att–int18–26–024–35–0
Time of possession32:3627:24
TeamCategoryPlayerStatistics
MSUPassingDrew Stanton10/13, 95 yds.
RushingDeAndra' Cobb22 carries, 205 yds., 2 TD
ReceivingJason Randall3 receptions, 42 yds.
MichiganPassingChad Henne24/35 273 yds., 4 TD
RushingMike Hart33 carries, 224 yards, 1 TD
ReceivingBraylon Edwards11 receptions, 189 yards, 3 TD

[17]

Northwestern

[edit]
Team1234Total
Northwestern337720
• Michigan07211442
Scoring summary
Q15:34NWHowells 23 yard field goalNW 3–0
Q213:24MICHHart 34 yard run (Rivas kick)MICH 7–3
Q2:22NWHowells 32 yard field goalMICH 7–6
Q311:17MICHHart 4 yard run (Rivas kick)MICH 14–6
Q310:59NWHerron 68 yard run (Howells kick)MICH 14–13
Q36:48MICHAvant 14 yard pass fromHenne (Rivas kick)MICH 21–13
Q34:13MICHHart 15 yard run (Rivas kick)MICH 28–13
Q49:49MICHBreaston 10 yard pass from Henne (Rivas kick)MICH 35–13
Q49:14MICHBreston 67 yard punt return (Rivas kick)MICH 42–13
Q44:48NWHorn 9 yard pass fromBasanez (Howells kick)MICH 42–20

[27]

On November 13, and following a bye week, Michigan defeatedRandy Walker'sNorthwestern Wildcats, 42–20, before a crowd of 111,347 in Ann Arbor. It was the last game atMichigan Stadium for 15 Michigan seniors, includingBraylon Edwards,Ernest Shazor, andMarlin Jackson.[28]

Michigan's offense tallied only seven points in the first half, but broke the game open with 35 points in the second half.Mike Hart carried the ball 23 times for 151 rushing yards and three touchdowns. Hart became the first Michigan player to register four consecutive games with over 150 rushing yards. After the game, Bob Wojnowski ofThe Detroit News called Hart "a freak" and "the most intriguing young player we've seen in years."[29] Henne completed 19 of 26 passes for 187 yards and two touchdowns, and Braylon Edwards passed the 1,000-yard mark to become the first receiver in Big Ten history to have three consecutive seasons with at least 1,000 receiving yards.[30]

During the off-season, sophomoreSteve Breaston had surgery to repair a stress fracture in his right foot. Hampered earlier in the season, Breaston had a breakout game against Northwestern with 272 all-purpose yards: five receptions for 49 yards and a touchdown; two rushing attempts for 32 yards; four punt returns for 112 yards (including a 69-yard return for a touchdown); and three kickoff returns for 79 yards.[31]

The combination of Michigan's victory and Wisconsin's loss to Michigan State guaranteed the Wolverines a share of the Big Ten championship.[32] It was Michigan's 15th consecutive victory at home and its 13th consecutive victory against Big Ten opponents.[32]

StatisticsNWUM
First downs2124
Plays–yards78–40568–421
Rushes–yards34–19039–231
Passing yards215190
Passing:comp–att–int24–44–020–29–0
Time of possession29:4230:18

[30]

TeamCategoryPlayerStatistics
NorthwesternPassingBrett Basanez23/43 211 yds. 1 TD
RushingNoah Herron23 carries, 156 yards, 1 TD
ReceivingKim Thompson4 receptions, 46 yards, 1 TD
MichiganPassingChad Henne19/26 187 yds., 2 TD
RushingMike Hart23 carries, 151 yards, 3 TD
ReceivingBraylon Edwards7 receptions, 54 yards

[30]

Ohio State

[edit]
Team1234Total
Michigan1400721
• Ohio State71314337
  • Date: November 20
  • Location:Ohio Stadium
  • Game start: 1:00 p.m.EST
  • Game attendance: 105,456
Scoring summary
Q113:47OHIOAnthony Gonzalez 68-yard pass fromTroy Smith (Mike Nugent kick)OHIO 7–0
Q110:25MICHJason Avant 4-yard pass fromChad Henne (Garrett Rivas kick)TIE 7–7
Q16:03MICHMike Hart 1-yard run (Rivas kick)MICH 14–7
Q213:16OHIOSmith 1-yard run (Nugent kick)TIE 14–14
Q22:16OHIONugent 21-yard field goalOHIO 17–14
Q20:00OHIONugent 42-yard field goalOHIO 20–14
Q39:56OHIOTed Ginn 82-yard punt return (Nugent kick)OHIO 27–14
Q31:53OHIOSantonio Holmes 12-yard pass fromm Smith (Nugent kick)OHIO 34–14
Q410:56MICHBraylon Edwards 38-yard pass from Henne ((Rivas kick)OHIO 34–21
Q47:15OHIONugent 48-yard field goalOHIO 37–21
[33]

On November 20, No. 7 Michigan lost toJim Tressel's unrankedOhio State Buckeyes, 37–21, before a crowd of 105,456 atOhio Stadium inColumbus, Ohio.

Michigan scored touchdowns on its first two drives to take a 14–7 lead in the first quarter. Ohio State then scored 27 unanswered points.[34] After the first quarter, Ohio State stacked the line to stop Michigan's running game. Mike Hart was averaging 131 yard per game but was limited to 61 yards on 18 carries (27 yards on 12 carries after the first quarter).[35]

Prior to the game, Ohio State ranked No. 108 in offense. Against Michigan, the Buckeyes scored a season-high 37 points and had drives of 99 and 97 yards. Sophomore quarterbackTroy Smith accounted for 386 of Ohio State's 446 yards (241 passing yards, 145 rushing yards) and three touchdowns (two passing and one rushing).Ted Ginn Jr. also starred with five receptions for 87 yards and an 82-yard punt return for touchdown in the third quarter.[36]

Despite the loss, Michigan tied with Iowa for the Big Ten championship and received the conference's Rose Bowl berth, having defeated the Hawkeyes earlier in the season.[34]

StatisticsUMOSU
First downs2018
Plays–yards76–39970–446
Rushes–yards22–7147–205
Passing yards328241
Passing:comp–att–int27–54–213–23–0
Time of possession25:4434:16
TeamCategoryPlayerStatistics
MichiganPassingChad Henne27/54 328 yds. 2 TD, 2 INT
RushingMike Hart18 carries, 61 yards, 1 TD
ReceivingBraylon Edwards11 receptions, 172 yards 1 TD
Ohio St.PassingTroy Smith13/23 241 yds., 2 TD
RushingTroy Smith18 carries 145 yds, 1 TD
ReceivingTed Ginn Jr.5 receptions, 87 yds

Rose Bowl

[edit]
Main article:2005 Rose Bowl
Texas vs. Michigan
Team1234Total
Texas7771738
Michigan01417637
Scoring summary
11:41TEXVince Young, 20-yard run (Dusty Mangum kick)TEX 7–0
212:08MICHBraylon Edwards 39-yard pass fromChad Henne (Garrett Rivas kick)TIE 7–7
24:16TEXDavid Thomas 11-yard pass from Vince Young (Dusty Mangum kick)TEX 14–7
20:20MICHBraylon Edwards 8-yard pass from Chad Henne (Garrett Rivas kick)TIE 14–14
312:53TEXVince Young, 60-yard run (Dusty Mangum kick)TEX 21–14
312:23MICHSteve Breaston 50-yard pass from Chad Henne (Garrett Rivas kick)TIE 21–21
34:21MICHBraylon Edwards, 9-yard pass from Chad Henne (Garrett Rivas kick)MICH 28–21
32:35MICHRivas 44-yard field goalMICH 31–21
49:51TEXYoung 10-yard run (Mangum kick)MICH 31–28
46:09MICHRivas 32-yard field goalMICH 34–28
44:56TEXYoung, 23-yard run (Mangum kick)TEX 35–34
43:04MICHRivas 42-yard field goalMICH 37–35
40:00TEXMangum 37-yard field goal;TEX 38–37

On January 1, 2005, Michigan lost to No. 6 Texas, 38–37, in the2005 Rose Bowl game before a crowd of 93,468 inPasadena, California.

Roster

[edit]
2004 Michigan Wolverines football team roster
PlayersCoaches
Offense
Pos.#NameClass
WR1Braylon EdwardsSr
RB5Dave UnderwoodSr
QB7Spencer BrintonSr
QB7Chad HenneFr
WR8Jason AvantJr
QB8Matt WildeJr
QB10Clayton RichardSo
WR12Landon SmithSo
QB12Matt GutierrezJr
QB13Jeff KastlSr
WR14Morgan TrentFr
WR15Steve BreastonSo
WR15Braylon EdwardsSr
WR16Adrian ArringtonFr
WR17Carl TabbJr
WR18Germaine GonzalesSr
RB20Mike HartFr
RB23Max MartinFr
RB24Jerome JacksonSo
RB27Pierre RembertJr
FB32Kevin DudleySr
RB33Scott HamelJr
FB35Brian ThompsonJr
FB40Obianna OluigboJr
RB41Tim BrackenSr
FB43Roger AllisonFr
RB44Jason EldridgeJr
WR45Brad CischkeJr
OL54Mark BihlJr
OL57Adam KrausSo
OL61Turner BoothJr
OL62Jon SaighFr
OL63Derek BellSr
OL64Grant DeBeneictisFr
OL65Leo HenigeSr
OL67Matt LentzSr
OL72Rueben RileyJr
OL75David BaasSr
OL76Mike KolodziejJr
OL77Jake LongSo
OL79Adam StenavichSr
TE88Tim MassaquoiSr
TE89Tyler EckerJr
Defense
Pos.#NameClass
OLB2Shawn CrableSo
CB3Marlin JacksonSr
CB4Darnell HoodJr
ILB6Prescott BurgessSo
S9Anton CampbellSo
CB13Grant MasonSr
ILB15Chip CartwrightJr
S19Willis BarringerJr
S22Jamar AdamsFr
CB22Kyle PlummerSo
S25Ernest ShazorSr
S26Mike CarlJr
S26Ryan MundySo
S28Jacob StewartJr
CB29Leon HallSo
CB39Markus CurrySr
S31Brandent EnglemonSo
ILB34Joe LeoniJr
LB36Scott McClintockJr
ILB37Chris GrahamFr
S38B.J. Opong-OwusuJr
ILB42Lawrence ReidSr
ILB45David HarrisJr
DE50Jeremy Van AlstyneJr
OLB56LaMarr WoodleySo
OLB58Roy ManningSr
DL78Gabe WatsonJr
OLB90Tim JamisonFr
DE91Rondell BiggsJr
DT93Alex OfiliSr
DE94Pat MasseySr
DE96Larry HarrisonJr
OLB99Pierre WoodsSr
Special teams
Pos.#NameClass
P2Mark SpencerJr
P3Ross RyanSo
PK10Troy NienbergSr
PK31Craig MooreJr
K34Jason GingellFr
PK38Garrett RivasFr
P39Adam FinleySr
Head coach
Coordinators/assistant coaches

Legend
  • (C) Team captain
  • (S) Suspended
  • (I) Ineligible
  • Injured Injured
  • Redshirt Redshirt

Roster
Last update: November 12, 2023

Awards and achievements

[edit]

Braylon Edwards

[edit]
Braylon Edwards caught threetouchdownreceptions at the2005 Rose Bowl.

Wide receiverBraylon Edwards set Michigan single-season records with 97receptions and 1,303 receiving yards.[37] He led the Big Ten with 8.1 receptions per game and 110.8 receiving yards per game (all games).[38] His career total of 39 receiving touchdowns brokeAnthony Carter's conference record.[39] Edwards also became the first Big Ten player to register three consecutive seasons with over 1,000 receiving yards.[40]

At the end of the season, Edwards received multiple honors, including the following:

Edwards also finished tenth in the voting for theHeisman Trophy.

David Baas

[edit]

Fifth-year seniorDavid Baas started 30 straight games at left guard for Michigan. Against Iowa in the Big Ten opener, he moved to center. At the time of the shift, Baas said the move was a surprise but added: "Whatever the team needs that's what I'm going to do. If they want to continue to play me at center, I'm going to do that."[44] In his first year playing the center position, Baas won multiple post-season honors, including the following:

  • Rimington Trophy - Baas received the Rimington Trophy as the best center in college football. He was the first Michigan player to receive the award. (David Molk andOlusegun Oluwatimi later won the award.)
  • All-America team - Baas received first team All-America honors from the AP, FWAA, WCFF, and CBS.
  • All-Big Ten team - Baas was selected as a first-team All-Big Ten player by the conference coaches. (Greg Eslinger of Minnesota won the honor from the media.)
  • Big Ten Offensive Lineman of the Year - Baas also won the award as the Big Ten offensive lineman of the year.
  • Hugh Rader Jr. Award - Baas also won Michigan's Hugh Rader Jr. Award.

Mike Hart

[edit]

Despite starting the season as a backup, freshman tailbackMike Hart led the Big Ten with 1,455 rushing yards and was named Big Ten Freshman of the Year.[45] He also set a school record with three 200-yard games in a season, surpassing five predecessors with two each.[46] At the end of the season, Hart won the award as the Big Ten Freshman of the Year. He also won first-team honors from both the coaches and media on the2004 All-Big Ten Conference football team.

Others

[edit]

Freshman quarterbackChad Henne tallied 2,743 passing yards and tiedElvis Grbac's 1991 single-season record of 25 touchdown passes.[47]

Michigan players to receive All-American and all-conference honors were:

Team awards

[edit]

[43]

Statistics

[edit]

Passing

[edit]
PlayerAttCompIntComp %YdsYds/CompTD
Chad Henne3992401260.227436.925
Clayton Richard158053.3523.50

[49]

Rushing

[edit]
PlayerAttNet YardsYds/AttTD
Mike Hart28214555.29
Max Martin321324.11
David Underwood291294l42
Jerome Jackson32902.81
Steve Breaston10767.60
Braylon Edwards66110.20
Pierre Rembert8465.80

[49]

Receiving

[edit]
PlayerRecpYdsYds/RecpTD
Braylon Edwards97133013.715
Jason Avant3844711.83
Steve Breaston342918.63
Mike Hart262379.11
Tim Massaquoi1818410.20
Tyler Ecker171579.22
Germaine Gonzales79413.41

[49]

Scoring

[edit]
PlayerPoints
Garrett Rivas94 (37 extra points, 19 field goals)
Braylon Edwards90 (15 TD)
Mike Hart60 (10 TD)
Steve Breaston24 (4 TD)
Chad Henne18 (3 TD)
Jason Avant18 (3 TD)

[49]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Big Ten Conference Football Full Media Guide".CBS Interactive/Big Ten Conference. January 5, 2010. p. 69. Archived fromthe original on July 3, 2010. RetrievedJuly 8, 2010.
  2. ^John Niyo (September 5, 2004)."U-M rolls over Miami; QB Henne shines in 1st start".The Detroit News. pp. 1C, 8C – viaNewspapers.com.
  3. ^Gennaro Filice (September 7, 2004)."Freshman Orientation: 19 year old leads Blue past Miami".The Michigan Daily. p. 13 – viaBentley Historical Library.
  4. ^Tom Markowski (September 5, 2004)."U-M creates opportunities".The Detroit News. p. 9C – viaNewspapers.com.
  5. ^Sharad Mattu (September 7, 2004)."Practice makes perfect for opportunistic defense".The Michigan Daily. p. 18.
  6. ^Jim Spadafore (September 5, 2004)."In-state players help Michigan roll to victory".The Detroit News. p. 9C – viaNewspapers.com.
  7. ^Sharad Mattu (September 13, 2004)."Notre Shame".The Michigan Daily. p. 1B.
  8. ^"Blue's tailback carousel yields no answers".The Michigan Daily. September 13, 2004. p. 4B – viaNewspapers.com.
  9. ^Angelique S. Chengelis (September 19, 2004)."U-M offensive line asserts itself".The Detroit News. p. 10D – viaNewspapers.com.
  10. ^Jim Spadafore (September 10, 2004)."Freshman carries load at tailback".The Detroit News. p. 10D – viaNewspapers.com.
  11. ^Angelique S. Chengelis (September 19, 2004)."Michigan struggles but still wins: Defense shows energy in strong second half to shut down Aztecs".The Detroit News. p. 1C – viaNewspapers.com.
  12. ^abAngelique S. Chengels (September 26, 2004)."U-M's defense lowers boom: Wolverines force 5 turnovers to win Big Ten opener".The Detroit News. pp. 1D, 12D – viaNewspapers.com.
  13. ^Shard Mattu (October 4, 2004)."Easy does it: Edwards shows y he's No. 1".The Michigan Daily. pp. 1B, 5B – viaBentley Historical Library.
  14. ^abAngelique Chengelis (October 3, 2004)."U-M sizzles; Henne torches Indiana for 3 TDs".The Detroit News. pp. 1D, 10D – viaNewspapers.com.
  15. ^abAngelique Chengelis (October 3, 2004)."Replays cause long delays".The Detroit News. p. 10D – viaNewspapers.com.
  16. ^ab"Summary".The Detroit News. October 3, 2004. p. 10D – viaNewspapers.com.
  17. ^abcd"Summary".The Detroit News. October 10, 2004. p. 13D – viaNewspapers.com.
  18. ^Angelique S. Chengelis (October 10, 2004)."Freshmen lead U-M: Henne directs comeback; Hart runs for 160 yards".The Detroit News. pp. 1D, 13D – viaNewspapers.com.
  19. ^Gennaro Filice (October 11, 2004)."Instant classic: Henne's poise lends offense to big victory".The Michigan Daily. p. 1B – viaBentley Historical Library.
  20. ^abAngelique S. Chengelis (October 17, 2004)."Hart carries Michigan: Freshman runs over Illinois for record".The Detroit News. pp. 1D, 13D – viaNewspapers.com.
  21. ^Bob Wojnowski (October 24, 2004)."U-M takes steam out of Purdue: Wolverines' last-minute play secures victory; they need 3 more for share of Big Ten title".The Detroit News. pp. 1A, 13A – viaNewspapers.com.
  22. ^abAngelique S. Chengelis (October 24, 2004)."U-M defense foils Purdue: Forced fumble seals win".The Detroit News. pp. 1D, 8D – viaNewspapers.com.
  23. ^"Summary".The Detroit News. October 31, 2004. p. 8C – viaNewspapers.com.
  24. ^Angelique S. Chengelis (October 31, 2004)."Michigan wins in three OTs: Edwards leads U-M from 17 points down in fourth, scores winning touchdown".The Detroit News. pp. 1C, 9C – viaNewspapers.com.
  25. ^Bob Hunt (November 1, 2004)."Braylon's Late Show".The Michigan Daily. p. 1B.
  26. ^"Highlights and scoring".Lansing State Journal. October 31, 2023. p. 2C – viaNewspapers.com.
  27. ^Michigan Official Athletic Site – Football. Retrieved 2015-Apr-27.
  28. ^Angelique S. Chengelis (November 14, 2004)."Michigan seniors win their last at Big House".The Detroit News. p. 14C – viaNewspapers.com.
  29. ^Bob Wojnowski (November 14, 2004)."Freshman Hart is key for U-M's resurgence, ride to the top of Big Ten".Detroit Free Press. p. 1C – viaNewspapers.com.
  30. ^abc"Scoring summary".The Detroit News. November 14, 2004. p. 14C – viaNewspapers.com.
  31. ^John Niyo (November 14, 2004)."Breaston returns to old form: Receiver says he finally feels healthy, has 272 all-purpose yards, 2 touchdowns".The Detroit News. p. 14C – viaNewspapers.com.
  32. ^abAngelique Chengelis (November 14, 2004)."U-M earns title share: Wolverines pummel Northwestern; have chance to take second straight Rose Bowl bid".The Detroit News. pp. 1C, 14C – viaNewspapers.com.
  33. ^"Summary".The Detroit News. November 21, 2004. p. 13D – viaNewspapers.com.
  34. ^abChris Burke (November 22, 2004)."Rose Charade: Debacle shouldn't erase Blue's accomplishments".The Michigan Daily. pp. 1A, 5A – viaBentley Historical Library.
  35. ^Angelique S. Chengelis (November 21, 2004)."OSU's defensive changes work: Buckeyes blitz Henne and key on Hart to slow down Michigan's offense".The Detroit News. p. 13D – viaNewspapers.com.
  36. ^Angelique S. Chengelis (November 21, 2004)."U-M's reward is a thorny Rose: Wolverines no match for OSU, but they still get a trip to Pasadena because Iowa obliges by beating Wisconsin".The Detroit News. pp. 1D, 13D – viaNewspapers.com.
  37. ^"Record Book"(PDF).CBS Interactive. January 5, 2010. pp. 124–125. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on August 7, 2010. RetrievedJuly 8, 2010.
  38. ^"Big Ten Conference Football Full Media Guide".CBS Interactive/Big Ten Conference. January 5, 2010. p. 53. Archived fromthe original on July 3, 2010. RetrievedJuly 8, 2010.
  39. ^"Big Ten Conference Football Full Media Guide".CBS Interactive/Big Ten Conference. January 5, 2010. p. 39. Archived fromthe original on July 3, 2010. RetrievedJuly 8, 2010.
  40. ^"2009 Division I Football Records Book: Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) Records"(PDF).National Collegiate Athletic Association. p. 18. RetrievedJuly 9, 2010.
  41. ^John Eligon (December 10, 2004)."Edwards captures award: Michigan senior named top receiver".Detroit Free Press. pp. 1E, 7E – viaNewspapers.com.
  42. ^Teddy Greenstein (December 10, 2004)."Tribune Silver Football: Edwards eats up Wolverine marks".Chicago Tribune. pp. IV-1, IV-4 – viaNewspapers.com.
  43. ^ab"2004 Football Team". The Regents of the University of Michigan. RetrievedJuly 8, 2010.
  44. ^Angelique S. Chengelis (September 26, 2004)."Baas takes center stage".The Detroit News. p. 12D – viaNewspapers.com.
  45. ^"Big Ten Conference Football Full Media Guide".CBS Interactive/Big Ten Conference. January 5, 2010. pp. 51–2. Archived fromthe original on July 3, 2010. RetrievedJuly 8, 2010.
  46. ^"Record Book"(PDF).CBS Interactive. January 5, 2010. p. 115. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on August 7, 2010. RetrievedJuly 8, 2010.
  47. ^"Record Book"(PDF).CBS Interactive. January 5, 2010. pp. 120–123. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on August 7, 2010. RetrievedJuly 8, 2010.
  48. ^"Michigan's Academic All-Americans".CBS Interactive. Archived fromthe original on July 18, 2010. RetrievedJuly 8, 2010.
  49. ^abcd"2004 Michigan Wolverines Stats".SR/College Football. Sports Reference LLC. RetrievedNovember 14, 2023.

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