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American college football season
The 2004 Michigan Wolverines football team represented the University of Michigan during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season . The team's head football coach was Lloyd Carr . The Wolverines played their home games at Michigan Stadium . The team finished the season with an overall record 9–3 and a mark of 7–1 in Big Ten Conference play, winning its second consecutive conference title. Michigan concluded to the season with a loss to Texas in the Rose Bowl .[ 1]
Schedule
Date Time Opponent Rank Site TV Result Attendance September 4 12:00 p.m. Miami (OH) * No. 8 ABC W 43–10110,815
September 11 3:30 p.m. at Notre Dame * No. 8 NBC L 20–2880,795
September 18 12:00 p.m. San Diego State * No. 17 Michigan Stadium Ann Arbor, MI ESPN W 24–21109,432
September 25 3:30 p.m. Iowa No. 19 Michigan Stadium Ann Arbor, MI ABC W 30–17111,428
October 2 3:30 p.m. at Indiana No. 19 ABC W 35–1435,001
October 9 12:00 p.m. No. 13 Minnesota No. 14 ESPN W 27–24111,518
October 16 12:00 p.m. at Illinois No. 14 ABC W 30–1955,725
October 23 3:30 p.m. at No. 12 Purdue No. 13 ABC W 16–1465,170
October 30 3:30 p.m. Michigan State No. 12 ABC W 45–37 3OT 111,609
November 13 12:10 p.m. Northwestern No. 9 Michigan Stadium Ann Arbor, MI ABC W 42–20111,347
November 20 1:00 p.m. at Ohio State No. 7 ABC L 21–37105,456
January 1, 2005 5:00 p.m. vs. No. 6 Texas * No. 13 ABC L 37–3893,468
*Non-conference game HomecomingRankings from AP Poll released prior to game All times are in Eastern time
Game summaries
Miami (OH)
Miami (OH) at #8/#7 Michigan
1
2 3 4 Total
Miami (OH)
0
0 3 7
10
• Michigan
0
10 14 19
43
Scoring summary 2 6:53 MICH Garrett Rivas 31-yard field goal MICH 3–0
2 4:48 MICH David Underwood 1-yard run (Garrett Rivas kick) MICH 10–0
3 12:25 MICH David Underwood 1-yard run (Garrett Rivas kick) MICH 17–0
3 6:47 MICH Braylon Edwards 20-yard pass from Chad Henne (Garrett Rivas kick) MICH 24–0
3 0:06 M-OH Jared Parseghian 36-yard field goal MICH 24–3
4 12:38 M-OH Mike Smith 1-yard run (Todd Soderquist kick) MICH 24–10
4 9:01 MICH Ernest Shazor 88-yard interception return (kick failed) MICH 30–10
4 7:22 MICH Braylon Edwards 13-yard pass from Chad Henne (kick failed) MICH 36–10
4 6:16 MICH Jerome Jackson 1-yard run (Garrett Rivas kick) MICH 43–10
Notre Dame
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(April 2015 )
San Diego State
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(April 2015 )
Iowa
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(April 2015 )
Indiana
#19/18 Michigan at Indiana
1
2 3 4 Total
• Michigan
7
7 21 0
35
Indiana
0
7 0 7
14
Scoring summary 1 5:52 Michigan Jermaine Gonzales 40-yard pass from Chad Henne (Garrett Rivas kick) Michigan 7–0
2 4:37 Michigan Leon Hall 76-yard punt return (Garrett Rivas kick)Michigan 14–0
2 :06 Indiana BenJarvus Green-Ellis 2-yard run (Bryan Robertson kick)Michigan 14–7
3 12:40 Michigan Mike Hart 1-yard run (Garrett Rivas kick)Michigan 21–7
3 6:28 Michigan Braylon Edwards 69-yard pass from Chad Henne (Garrett Rivas kick)Michigan 28–7
3 2:07 Michigan Braylon Edwards 38-yard pass from Chad Henne (Garrett Rivas kick) Michigan 35–7
4 12:17 Indiana Courtney Roby 6-yard pass from Matt LoVecchio (Bryan Robertson kick)Michigan 35–14
Minnesota
#13 Minnesota at #14 Michigan Little Brown Jug
1
2 3 4 Total
Minnesota
7
7 7 3
24
• Michigan
10
7 0 10
27
Scoring summary 1 9:39 MICH Mike Hart 8-yard run (Garrett Rivas kick) MICH 7–0
1 0:42 MICH Garrett Rivas 38-yard field goal MICH 10–0
1 0:30 MINN Laurence Maroney 80-yard run (Rhys Lloyd kick) MICH 10–7
2 10:34 MICH Braylon Edwards 4-yard pass from Chad Henne (Garrett Rivas kick) MICH 17–7
2 7:32 MINN Marion Barber III 19-yard run (Rhys Lloyd kick) MICH 17–14
3 8:33 MINN Jared Ellerson 26-yard pass from Bryan Cupito (Rhys Lloyd kick) MINN 21–17
4 13:14 MINN Rhys Lloyd 27-yard field goal MINN 24–17
4 9:36 MICH Garrett Rivas 26-yard field goal MINN 24–20
4 1:57 MICH Tyler Ecker 31-yard pass from Chad Henne (Garrett Rivas kick) MICH 27–24
Illinois
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(April 2015 )
Purdue
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(April 2015 )
Michigan State
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(April 2015 )
Northwestern
1
2 3 4 Total
Northwestern
3
3 7 7
20
• Michigan
0
7 21 14
42
Scoring summary Q1 5:34 NW Howells 23 yard field goal NW 3–0
Q2 13:24 MICH Hart 34 yard run (Rivas kick)MICH 7–3
Q2 :22 NW Howells 32 yard field goal MICH 7–6
Q3 11:17 MICH Hart 4 yard run (Rivas kick) MICH 14–6
Q3 10:59 NW Herron 68 yard run (Howells kick)MICH 14–13
Q3 6:48 MICH Avant 14 yard pass from Henne (Rivas kick)MICH 21–13
Q3 4:13 MICH Hart 15 yard run (Rivas kick) MICH 28–13
Q4 9:49 MICH Breaston 10 yard pass from Henne (Rivas kick)MICH 35–13
Q4 9:14 MICH Breston 67 yard punt return (Rivas kick) MICH 42–13
Q4 4:48 NW Horn 9 yard pass from Basanez (Howells kick) MICH 42–20
[ 2]
Ohio State
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(April 2015 )
Rose Bowl
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(April 2015 )
Statistical achievements
Braylon Edwards surpassed Anthony Carter 's 22-year-old career conference record of 37 touchdown receptions by totaling 39, which continues to be the conference record.[ 3] He tied the NCAA record with three 1000-receiving yard seasons.[ 4]
Mike Hart was the Big Ten rushing individual statistical champion (151.8 yards per conference games and 121.2 yards per game).[ 5] Braylon Edwards was the Big Ten receiving statistical champion for all games with 8.1 receptions per contest, but Purdue's Taylor Stubblefield won the title for conference games. Edwards swept the yardage titles with 110.8 per game and 108.9 per conference game.[ 6]
Hart set the current school record for single-season 200-yard games (3), surpassing five predecessors with 2 each.[ 7] Braylon Edwards set numerous school records: single-season receptions (97), surpassing Marquise Walker 's 86 from 2001; single-season receiving yards (1330), surpassing Walker's 1143; career receptions (252), surpassing Walker's 176; career yards (3541) surpassing Anthony Carter 's 3076 set in 1982; career touchdown receptions (39), surpassing Carter's 37; consecutive games with a reception (38), surpassing Walker's 32; consecutive 100-yard reception games (4 tying his own record from the prior year), surpassing Desmond Howard , Carter and Marcus Knight who all had 3 in various seasons. Only consecutive 100-yard games has been surpassed (by Mario Manningham in 2007).[ 8] Chad Henne tied Elvis Grbac 's 1991 single-season record of 25 touchdown passes.[ 9]
Starting lineup offense
#20 Mike Hart , #7 Chad Henne , #15 Steve Breaston , #8 Jason Avant , #88 Tim Massaquoi
Wide receiver: Braylon Edwards
Left tackle: Adam Stenavich , Mike Kolodziej
Left guard: David Baas , Leo Henige , Rueben Riley
Center: Mark Bihl , David Baas
Right guard: Matt Lentz
Right tackle: Mike Kolodziej , Jake Long
Tight end: Tim Massaquoi , Tyler Ecker
Flanker: Jason Avant , Steve Breaston , Germaine Gonzalez
Quarterback: Chad Henne
Tailback: David Underwood , Jerome Jackson , Mike Hart
Fullback: Kevin Dudley
Braylon Edwards caught three touchdown receptions at the 2005 Rose Bowl .
Awards and honors
The individuals in the sections below earned recognition for meritorious performances.[ 10] [ 11]
National
Conference
Team
Coaching staff
Head coach: Lloyd Carr
Assistant coaches: Erik Campbell (assistant head coach), Mike DeBord , Ron English , Jim Herrmann , Fred Jackson , Scot Loeffler , Terry Malone , Andy Moeller, Bill Sheridan
Trainer: Paul Schmidt
Managers: Brandon Greer (senior manager), Jeff Clancy (senior manager), Joe Ament, Kule Bassman Bob Belke Tom Bellen, Adam Borson, Cody Cedja, Noah Goodman Moe Maczko, Darin Ottaviani, Alex Rust, Brad Rosenwasser, Mark Stasik
References
^ "Big Ten Conference Football Full Media Guide" . CBS Interactive /Big Ten Conference . January 5, 2010. p. 69. Archived from the original on July 3, 2010. Retrieved July 8, 2010 .
^ Michigan Official Athletic Site – Football . Retrieved 2015-Apr-27.
^ "Big Ten Conference Football Full Media Guide" . CBS Interactive /Big Ten Conference . January 5, 2010. p. 39. Archived from the original on July 3, 2010. Retrieved July 8, 2010 .
^ "2009 Division I Football Records Book: Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) Records" (PDF) . National Collegiate Athletic Association . p. 18. Retrieved July 9, 2010 .
^ "Big Ten Conference Football Full Media Guide" . CBS Interactive /Big Ten Conference . January 5, 2010. pp. 51–2. Archived from the original on July 3, 2010. Retrieved July 8, 2010 .
^ "Big Ten Conference Football Full Media Guide" . CBS Interactive /Big Ten Conference . January 5, 2010. p. 53. Archived from the original on July 3, 2010. Retrieved July 8, 2010 .
^ "Record Book" (PDF) . CBS Interactive . January 5, 2010. p. 115. Retrieved July 8, 2010 .
^ "Record Book" (PDF) . CBS Interactive . January 5, 2010. pp. 124–125. Retrieved July 8, 2010 .
^ "Record Book" (PDF) . CBS Interactive . January 5, 2010. pp. 120–123. Retrieved July 8, 2010 .
^ "2004 Football Team" . The Regents of the University of Michigan. April 9, 2007. Retrieved July 8, 2010 .
^ "Big Ten Conference Football Full Media Guide" . CBS Interactive /Big Ten Conference . January 5, 2010. pp. 70–82. Archived from the original on July 3, 2010. Retrieved July 8, 2010 .
^ "Michigan's Academic All-Americans" . CBS Interactive . Archived from the original on July 18, 2010. Retrieved July 8, 2010 .
External links
Venues Bowls & rivalries Culture & lore People Seasons National championship seasons in bold
Western Conference Big Ten Big Nine Big Ten National championships in bold