Nov. 18, 2000
Box Score
By RICK GANO
AP Sports Writer
EVANSTON, Ill. -- They danced and celebrated on the field, donned their
Big Ten champion shirts and hats and then headed for the TVs to see if Pasadena
would be on their itinerary for the holidays.
Northwestern's Wildcats did all they could to win a trip back to the Rose
Bowl, routing Illinois 61-23 on Saturday to claim a share of the conference
championship.
Buoyed by Michigan's 38-26 win over Ohio State, the Wildcats needed one more
variable for a trip to California - an Indiana win over Purdue.
"We know we're going to a bowl game. We've achieved one of our goals of
winning the Big Ten. It's great to be part of history," Damien Anderson said
after running for four touchdowns and becoming the school's single-season
rushing leader.
The No. 23 Wildcats (8-3, 6-2) also are contenders for the Citrus, Outback
and Alamo bowls, who are expected to make their selections next week.
"I'd be tickled to death with going anywhere. There are some things you can
control, some you can't," said second-year coach Randy Walker, whose team
rebounded from a crushing loss at Iowa last week.
"It doesn't matter when we play or where," quarterback Zak Kustok said.
"The big goal for me was to win the Big Ten. We wanted to get that first,
then take care of the bowl. We're going to go somewhere warmer than Chicago is.
"If it ends up that Purdue goes to the Rose Bowl, they deserve it. They
came in here and beat us head-to-head."
When the Michigan-Ohio State score was announced periodically throughout the
game with Michigan leading, loud roars erupted from the frozen crowd at Ryan
Field.
Anderson and Kustok ran for two touchdowns apiece as the Wildcats surged to
a 28-2 halftime lead on a frigid day when the game-time wind chill factor was
14 degrees. They led 40-2 after three quarters.
The 61 points were Northwestern's most since beating DePauw 62-0 in 1944.
And the Big Ten title is the academic-oriented school's third in five years.
They won the championship in 1995 before losing to Southern Cal in the Rose
Bowl and shared the title in 1996 before losing to Tennessee in the Citrus
Bowl.
Kustok's 2-yard carry with 35 seconds remaining capped the first-half
scoring and came after Dwayne Missouri blocked a punt by Illinois' Steve Fitts,
whose poor kicks of 14 and 35 yards into a strong wind also set up the
Wildcats' first two TDS in the opening quarter.
Anderson, who had scoring runs of 21 and 10 yards in the opening half and a
pair of 1-yarders in the second half, rushed for 179 yards on 39 carries. He
finished with 1,914 yards on 293 carries and passed Darnell Autry for the
school record single-season rushing record (1,785 yards set in Northwestern's
Rose Bowl season of 1995). He also passed Autry's single-season mark of 18
total touchdowns and has 22 this season.
"Due to the implications of the game, it weights a little more than
others," Anderson said. "But my focus has not been that I want to break this
record or I want to break this one."
Illinois (5-6, 2-6) completed a frustrating season of close losses and had
any bowl chances dashed. The Illinois lost to Ohio State, Michigan and Michigan
State by a combined 11 points this season. They struggled Saturday with Dustin
Ward at quarterback in place of starter Kurt Kitten, who was out with a
concussion.
"I felt OK. I saw the defenese all right. It just didn't work out," Ward
said after completing 20-of-37 passes for 246 yards.
"I felt I was getting more into the game as it went on."
Northwestern took the second half kickoff and went 88 yards, scoring on a
fourth-and-1 pass from Kustoc to Eric Worley. It was Kustoc's 18th TD pass of
the season, another single-season school record that allowed him to poises
Steve Schnur. He also eclipsed Schnur's single-season total offense record of
2,600 yards set in 1996.