Michigan beats W Michigan 34-10 in shortened game

Michigan beats W Michigan 34-10 in shortened game

Published Sep. 3, 2011 10:50 p.m. ET

Western Michigan quarterback Alex Carder went into the opener against Michigan on the heels of a lot of hype.

For a while, he lived up to it.

Carder led the Broncos on a touchdown on the opening drive, but he and his teammates got rattled and routed in a 34-10 loss Saturday against the Wolverines in a game stopped late in the third quarter because of lightning-filled storms.

Carder was 22 of 31 for 183 yards with one interception and two fumbles, both of which came in the third quarter.

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He said missed protection led to the interception, adding that it wasn't an excuse, but blamed himself for one of his two fumbles that came on a blitz.

''I saw it coming,'' Carder said. ''That was inexcusable. Totally my fault.''

Carder got off to a strong start, leading a 15-play, 74-yard possession capped by Antoin Scriven's 1-yard run on fourth down to cap the first drive in the opener for both teams.

Michigan answered with Toussaint scoring on a 1-yard run on the ensuing drive.

Western Michigan had chances to score on each of its next two possessions, but missed a field goal and had a pass tipped by linebacker Jake Ryan that Herron returned for 94 yards in the longest interception return for a go-ahead score.

''That was a 14-point swing,'' Broncos coach Bill Cubit said.

Both schools agreed to cancel the game with 1:27 left in the third during a second weather delay, which included evacuating Michigan Stadium that had 110,056 fans in it before the inclement weather moved into the area.

''Your first concern is always about safety,'' Cubit said.

Fitzgerald Toussaint had 11 carries for 80 yards and ran for two TDs for the Wolverines, whose new offense was a mix of spread-like plays run by former coach Rich Rodriguez and old-school runs up the middle.

Michigan linebacker Brandon Herron returned an interception 94 yards for a touchdown, the longest such return in school history, and scoring again on a fumble return, becoming the first player on defense to score twice in a game in school history.

''It's always fun to score on defense,'' Hoke said. ''But there are 100 different things in that tape that we'll address.''

As lopsided as the score was, the game started off shaky for the traditional Big Ten powerhouse against the solid Mid-American Conference team.

''In the first half, we gave them a seven and threw away 10 points for our side,'' Cubit said.

Standout receiver Jordan White did his part, making 12 receptions for 119 yards.

Denard Robinson was 9 of 13 for 98 yards and ran eight times for 46 yards. He was the team's third-leading rusher in the game, a year after he did it all and became the NCAA's first player to run and throw for 1,500 yards in a season.

Toussaint's second TD was followed by Brendan Gibbons' extra point that was blocked, putting the Wolverines ahead 20-10 late in the first half.

The game was delayed for the first of two times early in the third quarter.

Following a 30-plus minute delay, Michigan safety Jordan Kovacs blitzed to force Carder to fumble and Herron scooped it up for a 29-yard return to make it 27-10.

Michael Shaw's 44-yard TD that was set up by Toussaint's 43-yard run proved to be the final score.

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