THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven . . ........ - _.. , -Daily-Richard Lee MICHIGAN QUARTERBACK DENNIS BROWN hesitates looking for an open receiver in yesterday's 31-10 win over Duke. The senior completed 13 passes in 23 attempts for 180 yards against the Blue Devils. Wolverine attiti By DOUG HELLER Associate Sports Editor The, score of yesterday's football game adequately re- flected Michigan's performance. They were that good or better. Schizophrenia, right? There is only one rational explanation for why the Wolver- ines were so much improved over last week. Michigan was repre- sented by a different team in each game. Of course, the roster was the salne But the team found it takes more than a bunch of talented individuals to play good football. Each member has to put in everything he has before anybody gets anything out of it at all. Before the season started, during f all practice, the squad looked sluggish. Nobody who saw any of the scrimmages could possibly have felt that the Wolverines would have a successful year. The California game reinforced this feeling one hundred per cent. No future performances will ever erase the FACT that Michigan played a horrible football game on Sept. 21, 1968. All that is possible now is to erase the MEMORY of that game. During practice this past week, the Wolverines made a start at erasing memories. Coach Bump Elliott, ostensibly concerned with the North Carolina /heat, ran his players into the ground. When the game started yesterday, -you better believe Michigan was ready, r The lines, of course, were the key to the whole game. They always are. Against Cal it seemed the Michigan de- fensive line was getting pushed back two yards on every play. But yesterday the Wolverines blasted the Blue Devil offensive line right out of the stadium and snared nearly every runner before he could do even a little 'bit of damage. The Michigan offensive line also did a complete turnabout. Last week, the Bear defense spent their whole day in the Wol- S'TATISTICS Michigan ste (Continued from Page z) ing kickoff, ran it back 25 yards, rest of the half, as punter Wes drove down to the Michigan 24 Chesson was very busy. -and stalled. Their field goal Following one of his ssveral also was good, cutting the mar- 40-yarders,'moreover, the Wol- gin to 17-10-but that was the verines scored again. Starting on last time they were even close their own 39, they took only to scoring. three plays to reach pay dirt, The combination of Craw the last a beautiful 53-yard run runs and Brown passes made up by Johnson. Killian's PAT put the next Wolverine drive, which Michigan ahead 14-7. And so started from the 20. When the half ended. Johnson plunged over from the The second half started o f f one and Killian converted to with the moves that surprised make the score 24-10 in the first all of ;Duke-dom: Craw was giv- minute of the fourth quarter, en a lot of running assignments. about a third of the student Brown, meanwhile, was pass- body present left. ing to both Jim Mandich and And when Duke tried shuf- Paul Staroba, as well as Ims- fling quarterbacks, and Wolver- land, for effective gains, giving ine linebacker Ralph Huff pick- the Wolverines a variety of of- ed off a lousy pass to thunder fensive possibilities. 43 yards for another touch- The -variety was enhanced, down, EVERYBODi- left. moreover, when Killian kicked a Killian, by the way, missed 25-yard field goal midway the PAT here, but Duke was through the quarter, giving the offside. After the ball was re- Wolverines a 17-7 lead. - positioned, he converted toE But this seemed to fire up the bring the score 'to 31-10. And Blue Devils. They took the ensu- that's how it ended., ide brings win verine backfield. Against the Blue Devils, however, Ron Johnson and Garvie Craw spent their day in the opposition's defensive backfield while Dennis Brown, when he tried to pass, had enough I time to count the whole crowd in the sparcely populated Wade Stadium. At ary rate, the holes that would have allowed two Mack trucks to speed through axle-to-axle untouched by human hands were no mirage. With the left side blocking of Bob Penksa, Bob Baumgartner (or Dick Callarazzo after Baumgartner was hurt), along with center Dave Denzin, your grandmother could have made a first down in tough situations. An' then there was Jim Mandich. Mandich, who has developed into the team's top clutch receiver from his tight end position, also had a fantastic day blocking. On defense, the coaches used six men up front, with Tom Stincie as the only real linebacker, and left the four mini-defensive backs to work all by themselves on passes. With their running game totally stopped, the Blue Devils had to go to the air, but the six men nade quarterback stew out of Duke's Leo Hart. And when Hart did get his throws away, his receivers were mostly well covered. Brian Healy, especially, stuck to his man "like a fly on 'flypaper" according to one press box observer. Only George Hoey's man, Marcel Courtillet, Duke's best receiver, managed to catch more than one pass (he caught four). The performance of this game right on top 'of the last one brings back the question,/how good is Michigan, anyway? Craw, Staroba, Johnson, Mandich, Imsland, Healy, Tom Curtis, Bob Wedge, p us sophomore defensive lineman Henry Hill and Pete Newell, all had the best or one of the best days in their careers. And you have to iiclude "old number 70," Ralph (Sam) Huff, the substitute linebacker who returned an interception for a touchdown in the waning moments. Add this to the fact that nobody had a really bad game The conclusion is obvious. Michigan can play a very fine game or a horrible game on a given day. How they do is up to them.4 DA ILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN amrollers Duk * * * * * State,,IBrenner Muir out' Baylor, 2810 By FRED LaBOUR Special to The Dailya EAST LANSING - Pity poor Pinkie Palmer. Poor Pinkie. For Pinkie Palmer is a halfback who plays for Baylor, the very same Baylor that was trounced by Michigan State 28-10 yesterday in sunny Spartan Stadium. (Pinkie Palmer is mentioned specifically for one reason only, the reason being that some fans seem to derive a peculiar satis- faction from hearing a mellow- voiced fellow announcing to 64,826 people that the ball carrier was one Pinkie Palmer. An analogy could present itself if, say, a Froggie LeGremlin were to join the NBA. Understand?) Yessir, Pinkie's ball club really took it in the ear, while Michigan State proved that it is a team to be reckoned with this season. It was the eighth straight loss for Pinkie and his hapless friends. The Spartans, on the other- hand, rode to their second straight victory on the sticky fingers of record-setting split end Al Bren- ner and the might of senior quar- 1 terback Bill Feraco.I Brenner is sticky-fingered be- cause he caught six passes for 153 yards, including a spectacular, 83-yard effort in the second quar- endzone. He nearly tripped as a before halfback Gene Rogers ter, and record setting because no- Baylor defender grabbed his heel I fumbled and MSU's Charles Bailey body in State's history ever made but he recovered and scored. recovered, exemplifying again the that much aerial yardage in one Things really quieted down then inability of Pinkie's team to come game before, and fans fell asleep like bloated up with anything resembling a Feraco is mighty because he flies all over the stadium. The ball clutch play. completed nine of 13 passes for changed hands seven times before Early in the fourth stanza, 197 yards and a touchdown, )Ian the halftime gun sounded, four on Feraco displayed his running for two TDs, and repeatedly bol- punts, two on fumbles, and one on prowess on an almost slow-motion stered his team's chances with the an interception. Neither team 22-yard touchdown run. He worm- big third down clutch play. looked like much more than a ed his way so incredibly carefully The first half of the game was pussy cat. and thoughtfully through would- pretty much of a big yawn, with But head MSU coach Duffy be tacklers that several reporters most of the excitement coming Daugherty pepped his charges up argued that he was a computer. when one of the stout men in at halftime, altered their offense, He's not, though, having gone, to yellow guarding the measuring and from then on they were not high school in Pennsylvania. chains fell down. Baylor's unex- to be denied. Lowly Baylor finally hit paydirt pectedly revised defense kept MSU After the game Daugherty re- oni fourth and goal when second in a hole throughouttmostof the ferred to the offensive' switches, string quarterback Steve Stuart first half and neither team mount- saying "They changed their de- snuck in from the one. ed much of a drive. fense a lot since last week (against State scored once again before The Bears were the first to Indiana) and we decided to go the fans broke up and went home score, however, with Terry Cozby right after them instead of around on a five-yard blast by Don High- booting a 32-yard field goal early them like we'd done in Athe first smith. 31-10 in the frst period after Baylor's only coherent, sustained drive of the game. Most of the rest of the quarter featured a punting duel, with Bay- lor's Ed Marsh denying the Spar-' tans anything that reeked of good field position. Then Brenner felt his oats, gath- ered in a Feraco pass on his own 45 and raced all the way to the half. It was rough, but it worked. The Spartans took the kickoff and drove 68 yards in 12 plays. with Feraco finally sneaking over from the ofne for the tally. Baylor soon after advanced] steadily to the Michigan State 171 Daugherty singled out Feraco, Brenner, and defensive back Ken Heft for their "outstanding" play. Duffy seemed especially tickled by the defensive team as a whole and he said that they almost "kept Baylor from a touchdown." Doo you 'like apple juice, along with your journalistic and photography talents?' Come to Ike PUBlications meeting! Monday, September 30, at 6:45 P.M. 3rd Floor League --- STUDENT GOVERNMENT TIELINE A Representative of SGC Will Discuss Incorporation. Listeners Are Inviited to Call In and 'Be on the Air. WCBN 650 761-3500 FIRST DOWNS NET YARDS-Rushing Passing FORWARD PASSES- Attempted Completed Intercepted by PUNTS, Number Average distance YDS. KICKS RETURNED FUMBLES, Number Ball lost by PENALTIES, Number Yds. Penalized MICH.' DUKE 25 20' 300 ' 68; 180 250 13 ,2 5 37.4 103' 2 0 4 48 Brown" Johnson Craw Scheffler Brown" Moorhead Imsland Mandich Sta-oba MICHIGAN RUSHING Tries; 8 31, 13 .3 37 15 1 5 42.4 132 1. 0 1 1 Ave. 1.8 6.7 5.5 3.3 Yards 180 i Hart Chesson Baglien Trice Carter Hart Trice, Courtillet Chesson pearth, Carter. Asack D)UKE RUSHING Tries 7 5 3 PASSING Att. C( 29 8 Net Ave, 21 1. 12 1.? 20 4.8 24 4.; 17 5.7 BILL FERACO (14), Spartan quarterback, eludes a pair of Baylor tacklers on one of six completed passes to Al Brenner. Brenner totaled 153 yards on the half-dozen receptions, eras- ing Gene Washington's single- game mark in MSU's 28-10 whipping of the Bears. WE LCOME STUDENTS . DISTINCTIVE COLLEGIATE HAIRSTYLING for Men- And Women- OPEN 6 DAYS THE bASCOLA BARBERS Near Michigan Theatre omp. 11 4. PASS RECEIVING No. Yards 8 .166 1 15 2 29 3 28 1 12 Yards 183 67 Ave. 20.8 15 14.5 9.3 12. 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