R. e N..,., . Saturday, October 12, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, October 12, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY rage ti ne ;,,, olverines challenge Duf s green marauders By FRED LaBOUR "Though a Wolverine team be so long, tall and' great, it don't mean a damn if they don't clobber State." -J. Pristine Yes yes yes. We all know it. It doesn't need to be said. None of it has to be repeated again. It's embedded in our brains and State's brains and the state of Michigan's brains. This is the one that counts. This is the one that you'll have to explain to your father if Michigan gets squelched. This is the one you'll gloat about when you see your creepy Spartan friends next summer. This is the one to get drunk after if we win, and to be tearfully nonchalant about if we lose. This: is the Michigan football- season. It doesn't matter a whole lot if you know .who's going to play out there this afternoon. You know by now if you're ever going to know.I You know enough to watch out for quick Bill Feraco directing the Spairtan offensive unit from his quarterback post. You know he's begun to come into his own this season as an option play fiend and that his passing isn't exactly bush.I The Lineups Offense Defense MICHIGAN Jim Mandich Bob Penska Dick Caldarazzo Dave Denzin Stan Broadnax Dan Dierdorf Jerry Imsland Dennis Brown John Gabler Ron Johnson Garvie Craw TE LT LG C RG RT SE QB F TB (48) (88) (76) (56) (52) (61) (72) (86) (22) (18) (40) FB MICHIGAN S Al Brenners Dave VanElt Don Baird Eddy McLoud Ron Saul Craig Wycinsky Frank Foreman Bill Feraco Charles Wedemeyer Tommy Love Dick Berlinsgi TATE SE LT LG C RG RT RE QB F TB FB (86) (74) (59) (75) (70) (77) (84) (14) (11) (26) (22) MICHIGAN Phil Seymour LE Tom Goss LT Tom Stincic LLB Henry Hill MG Ed Moore RLB Dan Parks RT Cecil Pryor RE Brian Healy LCB Tom Curtis LS Jerry Hartman RS George Hoey RCB (91) 165) (90) (39) (97) (74) (55) (24) (25) (26) (12) MICHIGAN Wilton Martin Richard Benedict Jack Zindel Charles Bailey Ken Little Rich Saul Don Law Jay Breslin Frank Waters Ken Heft Al Brenner STATE LE LT MG RT RE LB LB R LH RH S (97) (93) (65) (61) (85) (88) (95) (42) (43) (28) (86) And if you know Feraco, you half and a lot of other steady ball- surely are acquainted with Al players. Brenner at end, the fella who You aren't going to see a lot of usually grabs those Feraco passes. razzle-dazzle stuff this afternoon. Brenner's no easy touch either, Oh yeah, there's talk of Bump and he's already broken two rec- sockin' a little new stuff to the ords for pass receiving at State green kids from the north, but! In an earlier time, Michigan{ coach Tony Mason said "Theys wait for this one. They save it for Apisa, not for Navy. If those guys know they're going to have to throw a block that'll wreck their knees, they won't waste it on Cali- fornia. It'll be for State."I people, out on a narrow little strip of grass of no import. There will be no talking, and possibly no one listening. But they will play football. Michigan. Michigan State. Wolverines. Spartans. Maize and blue. Green and this year. If you've noticed at all, you've seen ]Rich Saul, the Spartan's lead- ing tackler, a huge, bruising coal miner who eats babies for break- fast. But we already decided that you know all that. Michigon holds no radical new- comers in the wings ready to en- ter at the last second and bail out the team. All they've got is Brown at quarterback aird Johnson at even if he does, you'll know the1 cast. But there'll be one thing about this game down in Michigan Sta- dium before 100,000 people that' you won't see every other game of the year. Hitting. This is the game the players save their gut reserve for, the one they care about the most. They're going to hit so hard this afternoon you'll probably freak out in the stands in amazement. But Apisa is gone now and in white. his place the Wolverines must Buhip. Duffy. contend with Tommy Love at tail- Day. Night. back, and Dick Berlinski at full. "Welcome back to Earth, ladies These guys aren't cream puffs and gentlemen. As you are no either. doubt aware, the Day and Night did battle this morning." But we don't need to say any of "Excuse me, sir, but what hap- this do we. For obvious reasons. pened in the end?" Because the talk will stop this "Dawn," said the captain. afternoon at 1:30 before 100,000 Go Blue. -Daly-Andy Sacks THE SCENE: MICHIGAN STADIUM. The Game: State: The score 34-0. Jimmy Raye (16), former Spartan quarterback is shown above while Michigan defensive back Brian Healy (24) moves in for the tackle. Raye is gone, but Healy isn't. The Wolverines are after revenge this afternoon for last year's humiliating defeat. STANFORD FACES O.J. f1 l- 1 Un1o tate seeis revenge By The Associated Press Coach Woody Hayes plotting for due has rolled over Virginia, Notrer CHICAGO - Revenge! That's a year. Dame and Northwestern, whilev the cryin. Big Ten circles today A capacity crowd of 84,000 is Ohio has topped Southern Metho-f with top-ranked Purdue, unde- expected to watch the battle with dist and .Oregon. . the winner taking a-giant stride Hayes reportedly started pre- feated Michigan State and Indi- toward the Rose Bowl. paring for Purdue soon after hea ana the principle targets. THE KEY i suffered that 41-6 humiliation. d All three opened the conference Purdue, with All-American Leroy Most of his hopes are pinned onI race with triumphs last week and Keyes, rates a 13-point favorite Rex Kern, OSU's sensational soph-a all three will be on the road over the sophomore-laden Buck- omore quarterback, who has miss-C against foes thirsting to make eyes. ed contact work this week because amends for embarrassing defeats But Hayes' fourth-ranked Bucks of a face injury. inflicted last season. are anxious to atone for last year's ANOTHER HOPALONG Purdue, having rolled over 41-6 loss to the Boilermakers, the Kern, the most exciting player Northwestern 43-8, invades Ohio worst pasting in Hayes' 18-year the Buckeyes have had since How- State, 21-6 victor over Oregon in regime. ard Cassady in the mid-50s, is a: a game which has had Buckeye Both clubs are gnbeaten. Pur- dangerous rollout runner and adept passer. He has carried 26 f apoplexy times for 94 yards and has com- against Purdue, Bruins oppose Nittany Lions minute of play to snatch certain of goal line stands in the final victory from Iowa 21-17. The two minutes. Hawkeyes will not only remem- SUICIDE ber but fancy themselves in the Northwestern and Wisconsin, position of last year's Hoosiers both winless, will face nonconfer- and are hoping to take over In- ence foes. Northwestern continues diana's 1967 Cinderella role. its suicide schedule at Notre Illinois will be at Minnesota in Dame and Wisconsin takes on another conference test and the Utah State. The Big Ten now has Gophers prepared for it by defeat- an 11-12 record against noncon- ing Wake Forest 24-19 with a pair ference opponents. ings lose NHLop ener; BlackHawks:topBlues ' By DICK ZUCKERMAN the game between unbeaten third-ranked Penn State anc UCLA will highlight a schedule which sees nine of the top ter teams in action. The host Bruins are confronter with two problems in their of- fensive backfield. According ti Coach Tommy Prothro, his twir problems are possible action by hip injury-beset No. 1 quarterback Bill Holden, and left halfback Mickey Cureton. In other games, number 2 rank. ed Southern California is at home against tough Stanford, whil number 1 ranked Purdue faces fourth ranked Ohio State, and fifth ranked Notre Dame host Northwestern, Kansas takes to the road to meet Nebraska. Other top ten teams in action include Flor- ida entertaining Tulane and Hen- nessee at Georgia Tech. Sophomore Jim Nader of UCLA will definitely start at quarter- back. Whether ornot Holden, who was injured in the Pittsburgh2 game three weeks ago, gets int the game probably won't be decid- ed until after kickoff. Cureton, a sophomore, has a knee injury and his status is much NATIONAL OUTLOOK 1 d e daily sports. NIGHT EDITOR: ROBIN WRIGHT The Kansas and Nebraska game no0t only involvenk ng, 3-0 recods and national ranking, it is also a contrast that should be a deter- mining factor in deciding the Big Eight Champion. Kansas goes into the game with an offense that hashproduced 51 points a game. Nebraska's defense has allowed but eight points a contest, second best in the nation, I I doug heller Stream of UNconsctousness Here's the quote you'll never read in a Detroit paper: According to the Associated Press, Orlando Cepeda, speaking in the losers' locker room after the final out of the Series, said "Lolich--he's i guy who you have to credit, he has a lot of heart. He won the. Series-him, himself, nobody else. Lolich would win 30 games in this league. McLain would be lucky to start every four days," In case anybody was really mad because they couldn't make any' sense out of a bulletin in yesterday's paper-the one that said the Cardinals traded Bobby Tolan, Wayne Granger, and Johnny Edwards, but didn't say for who, here's the answer to the puzzle. Tolan and Granger went to Cincinnati for star outfielder Vada Pinson. Edwards was sent to Houston for pitcher Dave Giuati. It's stuff like this that make you say "we're only a student paper, and baby that's all." By the way, the rumor mills say that Chicago Black Hawk star Bobby Hull has only "retired" until the team meets his salary demands. The people who have installed Michigan as a six-point favrite in today's game are bookmakers in New York City, accord- ing to one usually reliable source. Wonder what they know that * nobody else does. After all, MSU is ranked twelfth in the nation. And by the way, here is what 80 years of Michigan football tradition is saying to the Wolverines right now: "HIT, HIT HIT HIT, HIT, HIT, HIT, HIT, HIT, HIT, HIT, HIT, HIT, HIT,.HIT, HIT, HIT, HIT, HIT, HIT, HIT etc-" The last real chance anybody will have to knock off top ranked Purdue, barring a big upset, occurs in Columbus today when un- defeated Ohio State, possessing- the nation's fourth best defense against rushing, tests the Boliremakers. The Los Angeles Rams play the Green Bay Packers Sunday. Ex-Wolverine basketball standout Oliver Darden has been sold to the New York Nets by the Indiana Pacers of the American Basketball :Association. TerrySawchuk is back at goalie for the Red Wings after being traded by Los Angeles for Jim Peters. Oh yes. Yea Tigers. pleted 19 of 33 passes for 252 yards and two touchdowns. Fullback Jim Otis tops Buckeye rushers with 165 yards in 35 trips while halfback Dave Brungard shows 137 yards in 32 tries. The Bucks' defensive unit, which has been impressive, will have to be at its best to stop the versatile Keyes, a solid candidate for the Heisman Award. Used as a flanker and halfback, and on defense when needed, Keyes has galloped 244"yards in 44 rushes for six touchdowns; has caught 15 passes for 173 yards, and has thrown five times, com- pleting three for 68 yards and two touchdowns. If Ohio double teams Keyes, it may have trouble containing jun- ior quarterbac] Mike Phipps, who has completed 40 of 54 passes for 493 yards and one score. Coach Jack Mollenkopf also counts on fullback Perry Williams, .who has 133 yards in 36 carries, and a rugged defensive line,han- chored by middle guard Chuck Kyle, a 225-pound senior. Michigan State and Michigan both warmed up for their biggest game of the year with easy vic- tories last week. The Spartans slammed Wisconsin 39-0 and Michigan dumped Navy 32-9. NOT MUCH It doesn't take much to *get either team up for this one Abut the Wolverines will have the ad- vantage of being reminded MSU walloped them 34-0 despite the Spartans' poor 3-7 record on the, year. Indiana opened defense of its share of the Big Ten crown with a 28-14 victory over Illinois while Iowa was taking a 51-28 drubbing at the hands of Notre Dame. + A year ago, Indiana came up with a touchdown in the final By The Associated Press BOSTON - Phil Esposito's sec- ond period goal on a perfect pass from Bobby, Orr proved decisive last night as the Boston Bruins edged the Detroit Red Wings 4-2 in a hard-hitting National Hockey League opener. Esposito connected on a short flip after Orr intercepted a pass and brought the puck slowly across the Detroit blue line to set up his high-scoring center. That goal boosted Boston's lead BULLETIN MIAMI, Fla.-Miami's Hur- ricanes battered eight-ranked Louisiana State out of foot- ball's unbeaten ranks 30-0 lastj night with pinpoint passing by David Olivo, a perfect kick- ing performance by Jim Huffl and a brawling defense that never let the Tigers get away.- The roof fell in on favored LSU as the Hurricanes scored 17 points in the third period to t break a Tiger winning streak i for the second time in two sea-i sons.Y to 3-1. The'Bruins then hung on the rest of the way, fighting off repeated Detroit challenges in the i closing minutes. Detroit closed to within 3-2 when Frank Mahovlich convertedC a rebound of a Gordie Howe shotI at 17:02 of the final period. The Bruins added an insurancec goal with 11 seconds remaininge as Dallas Smith fired a 60 footera into an open net after the Redc Wings had pulled goalie Rogert Crozier. | The Bruins jumped off to a 1-0 1 lead as Fred Stanfield interceptedt a pass and scored unassisted at 6:53 of the first period. Howe, the NHL's all-time scoring king, tied the count with the 689th goal of his career on a power play at 1:20. Eddie West- fall put the Bruins ahead to stay less than four minutes later. RefereeVern Buffet suffered a torn hamstring in his right leg and was forced to retire in the opening minutes. Linesman Pat Shetler took over as referee, and NHL referee-in-chief Scotty Mor- rison came out of the stands and served as a linesman. It was Mor- rison's first appearance in a game in five years. CHICAGO-The Chicago Black Hawks, playing without the great Bobby Hull, downed the St. Louis Blues 4-3 last night in a National Hockey League opener. Two goals by Jim Pappin paced the Hawks. Hull, involved in an apparent salary dispute, announced Thurs- day he was retiring. Stan Mikita, who also was not expected to play, pulled off one of his 11th hour signings and joined his mates. Pit Martin put Chicago ahead at 11:12 of the first period but St. Louis pulled even 21 seconds later on a shot by Gary Sabourin. Pappin gave the Hawks the lead at 14:54 only to have St. Louis climb back into a lead on a goal by Craig Cameron. St. Louis went ahead in the sec- ond period on a goal by Red Ber- enson but Pappin followed with a tying score and Ken Wharram connected with what proved to be the winner at 9:13 of the second period. Wharram was assisted by Mikita, who came to terms less than an hour before the game. the same as Holden's. He may or may not play. Prothro has yet at least two more deep concerns, Penn has one of the best defensive teams in the country, and what Prothro calls the finest tight end he's ever seen. The Nittany Lions have allowed opponents only 100 yards rushing in 3 games, a defensive average of 33.3 yards. And UCLA gained only 56 in its 20-7 loss last week to Syracuse. But Penn State's main threat is tight end Ted Kwalick, a 6-foot-4, 235-pounder who runs the hun- dred in ten flat, has hands so big he can't find gloves to match them, and has made his mark this year as a runner. According to Prothro, "he's far superior at his position than any other player at any other position I've ever seen." Films of previous games s h o w Kwalick catching almost anything thrown at him, and on -plays in which he is only being used as a decoy, he blocks with ferocity. The Bruins counter with a e backfield of Greg Jones at half- e back, Rick Purdy at fullback, and S George Farmer at flanker. The Stanford Indians must con- s front stopping O. J. Simpson, And if they success in stopping Simp- son, they most probably will stop Southern Cal. But no one has -succeeded yet. "He's only human and can be stopped," predicted Stanford line- backer Don Parrish. I Simpson has run for almost 200 1 yards in each of the Trojan's first three games and has scored nine touchdowns. Stanford has a fair offensive weapon of its own with sophomore quarterback Jim Plunkett who ranks ninth in the nation in total offense. 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