Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, September 18, 1968 PoaeEiat Wenesay, eptmber18,196 I Arizona State leads WAC title race LACKS DEPTH: S need marks defensive line By DICK ZUCKERMAN The exciting windup to the Arizona State-Texas of El Paso match slast fall just may have been a preview to this season's Western Athletic Conference foot- ball title chase. The Sun Devils won that one, 33-32, on a 'touchdown off a brok- en pass play in the last second of play. However, Wyoming, unbeaten in three years at home and tasting defeat only twice, in their last 22, games, has plenty going for them and should also be figured in on the championship fight. They will be hardpressed to repeat their 10-0 regular season finish of a year ago, but it could be done. As in the Ipast two seasons, Coach Lloyd Eaton lacks an ex- perienced quarterback. He must also come up with a kicker this year. No longer can he depend on the 40-yard field goals and punts of Jerry Depoyster, whose toe de- feated three teams last year ex- pected to play key roles in 1968: Texas-El Paso 21-19, Colorado State 13-10, and Arizona State, 15-13. Eaton will have the experience of 28 returning lettermen. Cow- poke co-captains are two All-WAC choices, split end Gene Huey and linebacker Jim House. t iy 2 * t{ t Arizona State, 8-2 in '67, could rado State looks strong on de-) clinch the. WAC title early by fense, particularly in the second- knocking off Wyoming in an Oct. ary with returning Bill Kishman. 5 clash with the Cowboys. Arizona's Darrell Mudra pre- dicts a "new look" for the Wild- According to Coach Frank Kush' cats this year, and expects the ball the Sun Devil strength will be to be moved with more consistency "good all around experience in all I than in '67. Arizona's new look positions." He adds, "ASU is lack;- includes plenty of junior college ing in depth and the teams weinldspetofjircleg put on the field will be all we've transfers, offensive speed, and a got." d coaching crew that has had a year All-WAC linebacker Ron Pritch- . ard will lead ASU's defense while NATIONAL A11- nfarnc r t n G rrnrl a-Conierence c e n T e r ueorge Hummer, veterans quarterback Ed Roseborough, running backsLarry! Walton and Art Malone, and wingback J. W. Hill, will head up the offense. Coach Bobby Dobbs at Texas- El Paso lost only one offensive line starter, and will have 31 re- turning lettermen, including 14 starter,. Among them are leading Miner pass receiver, Volly Mur- phy, and alternate quarterback Brooks Daws from the Sun Bowl team that beat Mississippi 14-7 and lead the nation in scoring with 39.5 points per game average. With only 18 lettermen, Colo- rado State University Coach Mike Lude will battle inexperience. CSU, 4-5-1 last year, will play its first game as a WAC member in Al- buquerque a g a i n s t conference member New Mexico, 1-9. Colo- OUTLOOK to jell. "We should be one of the most improved teams in tpe league," remarked CoachMudra. If Arizona is to pull any sur- prises it will be up to quarterback Owen Lee, a 6-3, 196 pound senior, to get the Wildcats pro-style T- offense moving. Singled out as top, Arizona players were tackle Tom Nelson and linebackei Gary Klahr. Brigham Young lost four league games in 1967. But the teams they lost to had exceptional seasons- Wyoming went undefeated, UTEP, -Utah State, and Arizona State lost two apiece. Yet Tom Hudspeth's crew, which wound up 6-4, pulled one of the biggest upsets of the year, a 31-1.3 shocker over Oregon State. BYU's average of 396.2 total yards per game ranked sixth nationally in '67. Counterbalanc- ing, that, the Cougars were 12th in rushing defense, allowing op- ponents a stingy 87.4 yards per game- Brigham Young lacks depth in the interior lines. The Cougars have four offensive backfield starters from last year and a top- flight pass receiver in Casey Boyett. Hudspeth said his Cougars "have inexperience and lack of depth in both lines and we need some more speed in the second- ary . . ." BYU plans to throw "a lot." New Utah Coach Bill Meek, with 34 lettermen, also talks about a passing game. "We're hoping we can throw because we're not strong enoygh to run the ball down anybody's t hr o a t. Our strength is our defensive unit. The front four should compete with anybody in the league." Utah will have to rely on fast-- developing sophs and junior col- lege transfers, but the part the Redskins play in the WAC race will depend largely on who takes over for quarterback Jack Gehrke and halfback Charles Smith. Meek said there is a complete new unit of offense and "we don't look at all good at quarterback and don't even know who he will be." He said the best Ute players are defensive ends Gary Kerl and Norm McBride, and fullback Steve Molnar. Also in his first coaching sea- son, New Mexico's Rudy Feldman hopes to rebuild the Lobos after, three straight losing seasons. A team of less than 50 players and building a defensive secondary ap- BiIboard' Team entries for the Gradu- ate Division Intramural Tennis Tournament are due on Wednes- day, Sept. 18 at the IM build- ing. Single and doubles entries for the All-Campus Open Ten- nis Tournament also close on Wednesday, Sept. 18 at the Il building. pear to be major obstacles for Feldman. "We don't have a lot of offense By PAT ATKINS or a lot of defense," he said, "but Nowadays there's just no way to what we do have we want proper- save money. ly executed." You can't even use last year's' Quarterback Terry Stone, en- scorecard for the football team tering his senior campaign, rifled because too many of those first 160 completions a year ago for 1,946 yards and nine touchdowns, and was intercepted 19 times. Stone will alternate at quarter- back with Rich Beitler. Top de- fenders are tackle Woody Jones and end Dave Harris. New Mexico will score, but the defense is ques- tionable. Eight teams rolled up 40 or more points on the Lobos last year. year Wolverine pigskin proteges abound. Coach Dennis Fitzgerald, men-j tor of the defensive line, calls it "a pleasant blend of experience and potential." Experience equals three returnee lettermen. Poten- tial includes a host of sophomores and a smattering of juniors. Reflecting this analysis, t h e probable starters for the interior defensive line against California will be senior lettermen Tom Goss and Jerry Miklos, and sophomore Dan Parks. "All three are ahead of last year's comparative point." Fitzgerald notes. "They have more quickness." Newcomer Parks was a stand- out in Spring practice. A fullback in high school, he was moved to tackle last spring. "Because of his good athletic ability, he adjusted to the right tackle position with- out difficulty," says Fitzgerald. "He has great size - 6'5", 240 pounds. At the other tackle spot, Goss brings the experience that Parks lacks. "Experience and quick- ness have made him much im- proved," Fitzgerald says. Fellow jsenior Miklos, a tackle last fall,has been moved to middle guard. "He has good speed for TOM GOSS as strong as he is," explains Fitz- gerald. "He's probably the strong- set, at least in part, by lack of est defensive lineman we have. He depth and inexperience. It will be will be of considerable help to the especially true for the first few linebackers." games. BACKUP During the week before the Cal- From a list of six others, the ifornia game, basic drills are min- best three or four will be picked imized, and "experience" drills are to backup Goss, Miklos, and emphasized. "We work on recogni- Parks. Letterman Jim Wilhite, a tion of opponents and go into the senior, and junior Ed Woolley are problems we had last year with the only ones with Wolverine ex- California," Fitzgerald adds. perience. "Naturally we hope the game is Boilermakers top AP poll; South shows grid strength By The Associated Press Houston and Georgia cracked' into the rankings as a weekend of only limited warfare produced a thorough shakeup in The As- sociated Press' major college foot- ball pool. The top three-Purdue, South- ern California and Notre Dame- were about the only teams to escape the madcap shuffle from the preseason rankings. Purdue attracted 14 of the 30 first-place votes and 584 points, while Southern Cal had eight and 536 and Notre Dame two and 488. Houston, unmentioned in the preseason poll, leaped all the way to 11th after humiliating Tulane 54-7, and Georgia took over the No. 18 spot after a 17-17 with Tennessee/ that dropped the Vols from ninth to 12th. Nebraska, only other ranked team in action over the weekend, remained 14th after a 13-10 last- minute victory over Wyoming. Texas moved up a spot to fourth, trading places with Okla- homa, while FlQrida climbed a notch to sixth and Alabama mov- ed from tenth to seventh. - Oregon State dropped f r o m sixth to eighth, Ohio State moved j WHAT CAN I DO?! from 11th to ninth and P e n n State fell two spots to tenth to round out the top 10. Texas A&M slipped from 12th to 13th, Indiana from 13th to 15th, Minnesota from 15th into a tie with UCLA for 16th, Miami jumped from 20th to 19th and Louisiana State, dropped f r o m 18th to 20th. Arizona State, 17th in the pre- sealson poll, and Syracuse, 19th, vanished from the ratings al- though neither has played a game. The top 20 undoubtedly w ill undergo another shakeup next week, since three games this weekend match rated teams. Oklahoma opens at Notre Dame, while Minnesota is at Southern California and Houston tests Texas. Purdue has drawn a soft'touch in its opener, Virginia, but the following weekend the Boilermak- ' ers face Notre Dame. The top 20, withfirst-place votes, re- cords and total points awarded for first 15 picks on basis of 20-18-16-14-12-10-9- 8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1: 1. Purdue 14 0-0 584 2. Southern California 8 0-0 536 3. Notre Dame 2 0-0 488 4. Texas 2 0-0 388 5. Oklahoma 0-0 280 6. Florida 0-0 266 7. Alabama 2 0--0 244 8. Oregon State 0-0 212 9. Ohio State 0--0 162 10. Penn State 0-0 148 11. Houston 2 1-0 136 12. Tennessee 0-0-4 118 13. Texas A & M 0-0 116, 14. Nebraska 1-0 106 15. Indiana 0-0 100 16. tie UCLA 0-0 Minnesota 0-0 68 18. Georgia 0-0-1 62 19. Miami, Fla. 0-0 42 20. Louisiana State 0-0 32 Others receiving votes, listed alpha- betically: Arizona State, Arkansas, Clemson, Florida State, Georgia Tech, Kansas, North Carolina State, Syracuse, Toledo, Wyoming. Sophomores Henry Hill, Giulio Catallo, and Dick McCoy, plus junior transfer Morris Abrahams, complete the group. After the starting defensive line positions are filled, potential be- comes a more common adjectWe. than proven ability. Although the defensive line is quick, the asset inherent in this speed will be off- such that we can get vroei but we -don't expect that type of game. It's gong to be a very diffi- cult struggle. California is as strong a team as we could face in the first part of the year." Enjoy Yourself, Join The Daily Staff ALI PROSPECTIVE RUSHEES are invited to meet THE BROTHERS OF TA] TDELA PHI Rushing This fal [trom DELTA PHI EPSILON SORORITY The University of, Michigan tutor- ial project is seeking volunteer tutors in the areas of speech, Eng- fish, writing, and remedial reading for a program at Washtenaw Com- munity College. Tutors will meet once a, week with students, at W.C.C. who have not had an even educational break. Call and ar- range for an interview; from 12-5 at 663-8607 or from 5-7 at 769- 4758. Act now. You are needed. ai Gri dde Pickings Grid picks is what The Daily has for its football fans every fall. And this fall, much to the disappointment of The Daily staff, we have lost a writer, but gained another fan. Our esteemed Associate Sports Editor of last year has hung up his old typing gloves, and put away the helmet that protected him from the flying bricks that frequently came crashing thru the windows near the old sports desk. He has taken a job with the Athletic Dept. writing sports releases. Now he is a fan, not a staffer. So for you Grayle Howlett, we 'offer this grid picks. And what pickins there are. Just feast your eyes on the list of twenty terrific games; leading off with California at Michigan, and climaxing with Millsaps at Sewanee. Some of these grid iron battles will be difficult to psych out, but there is just reward for anyone who labors successfully in prognos- ticative' football fields. So for you Grayle Howlett, and all you would-be Grayle Howletts, The Michigan Daily is offering these prizes: One large pizza pie from Cottage Inn (your choice of trimmings) complete with custom mnade box. And for any girl that cones even close to winning, The Daily has arranged a special evening'"op the town" for you with either of our rock and roll experts, Little Suzy or Little Sherri Funny Suzy has expressed preference;for anyone without red hair and freckles, and Sherri, who has been on the rocks lately, expresses no lb. 1811 Washtenaw I _- r STUDENTS R IN SIT-IN I 1 I i k F preference whatsoever. Good Luck! Entries must be 1. California at MICHIGAN (pick score) 2. Northwestern at Miami, Fla. (Fri. night) 3. Kansas at Illinois 4. Baylor at Indiana 5. Oregon State at Iowa 6. Syracuse at Michigan State 7. Southern Cal at Minnesota 8. Wisconsin at Arizona State 9. Virginia at Purdue 10.t 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16., 17. 18. 19. 20. Oklahoma at Notre Dame Duke at South Carolina Pittsburgh at UCLA Oklahoma State at Arkansas SMU at Auburn TCU at Georgia Teph Mississippi at Memphis State N.C. 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