The Morning Call (Sunday)

Pennix, Hoosiers partying like it’s 1987

After 33 years, Indiana finally gets win over Wolverines

- By Michael Marot

BLOOMINGTO­N, Ind. — After the postgame party was over, after Indiana fans chanted “We want Bama!” and coach Tom Allen went crowdsurfi­ng in the Hoosiers’ locker room once again, Michael Penix Jr. started looking ahead.

Penix and company want more — much more. Penix passed for 342 yards and a career-high three touchdowns, and No. 13 Indiana beat No. 23 Michigan 38-21 on Saturday for its first victory against the Wolverines in 33 years.

“When we play a great team like that, we have to make sure we play great football. We did that,” he said. “But it’s just the beginning because we still have some more games to follow up on.”

With a chunk play here, a free play there and a few dinks and dunks thrown in to keep drives alive, Penix helped Indiana snap a 24-game losing streak in the series — tied for the longest active skid in the Football Bowl Subdivisio­n. It was the Hoosiers’ first win against the Wolverines since Oct. 24, 1987, just their second in 41 games and only the second in the 21 games played at Memorial Stadium.

“I was a senior in high school the last time we beat Michigan and I’m 50 years old, so that’s not something that happened yesterday,” a hoarse Allen said. “I remember sitting here a few years ago when we lost in overtime to Michigan and that one hurt. I was just determined we were going to get this

done.”

The Hoosiers (3-0) earned their fourth consecutiv­e Big Ten win. If they match the school record next week at Michigan State, it could set up a showdown between the East Division’s only unbeaten teams Nov. 21 at No. 3 Ohio State.

Joe Milton threw for 344 yards and three touchdowns, but Michigan (1-2) dropped its second straight game — turning up the pressure on coach Jim Harbaugh in his sixth season at the school. The Wolverines don’t have a top-15 road win since beating Notre Dame in 2006.

Indiana’s Stevie Scott III ran for 97 yards and two second-half scores. Ty Fryfogle caught seven passes for a career-best 142 yards — all in the first half — and Whop Philyor finished with 11 receptions for 79 yards. The defense allowed only 13 yards rushing while forcing two turnovers, and Charles Campbell kicked a career-long 52-yard field goal.

Allen challenged his players with a physical practice Wednesday and they responded on game day. Penix was 30 of 50, helping Indiana convert nine of 16 third downs.

 ?? DOUG MCSCHOOLER/AP ?? Indiana’s Michael Penix Jr., right, and Sampson James react after a victory over Michigan.
DOUG MCSCHOOLER/AP Indiana’s Michael Penix Jr., right, and Sampson James react after a victory over Michigan.

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