Sunday, OctoEcr 20, 1968 Mic ga igi '" THE MICHIGAN DAILY wins fourth straight (Continued from page 1) "This wasn't one of our better games," stated offensive coordin- ator Tony Mason after the game.t A "Nevertheless, our defense was magnificent," he continued. "our boys just don't quit. We were down and we bounced right back in there." "It certainly was our defensive unit which kept us in there," chimed Head Coach Bump Elliott. "They won 'it for us. Hartman, Curtis, Goss, Hill, Killian, Parks- they all had a great game .. Killian's performance was espec- ially noteworthy, since he replac- ed Tom Stincic at middle line- backer early in the game when Stincic was ejected for "hitting an opponent." Killian, who had not played previously this season, made ten tackles. Stincic claimed after theI game that he had simply "grabbed" the Indiana played in a scuffle along the Michigan sidelines. The con- test. was highlighted by numerous : fights and flaring tamperson both sides.; The Wolverines took off .from the opening kickoff, determined' to wreck the Hoosier homecoming before a sellout crowd of 51,951. Led by captain Ron Johnson, Michigan found the holes in In- diana's defense to the tune of 93 yards in eight plays and a touch- down with only three minutes gone in the game. Johnson carried the ball five times for eighty-five yards on the drive, and scored the touch- down from 18 yards out. ,M Indiana mounted a tieing touch- down offensive late in the first quarter, going 80 yards in four, plays. Sophomore fullback Hank Pogue bulled over from the 18 for the score, but they key play was the 57. yard scamper by the speedy Parnell. From then on, neither team could push over a score until Hoosier Don Warner kicked a field goal five and one half minutes into the third period which set the pared to 174 in the first two quar- stage for Hartman's interception heroics. Other standouts for the Wolver- ines included safety Tom Curtis who 'led the team with 13 tackles and 2 interceptions; Johnson, who racked up 163 yards in 34' carries; and Brown who gained 74 yards rushing and threw the TD pass. Johnson# tired in the last two quarters, however, and gained only 15 yarhds in ten carries. The. en- tire Michigan rushing attack was bottled up in the second half, gaining only 91 yards as com- ters. 4 4 4 Elliott said, "Indiana is the best offensive club we've seen this season. It's really pleasing to win this one from them. "We haven't thought much be- yond the team coming up each week so far." He continued, "With the type of team we have, we have to. make progress each week." To most of the observersat yes- terday's homecoming contest in Bloomington, that's exactly what the 1968 Wolverines appeared to be doing. t t from the seat Bill Levis of, my pants.:. BLOOMINGTON-It's hard to believe but Michigan actually out- Hoosiered Indiana yesterday before the second largest crowd in IU history. The 51,951 spectators saw their cinderella team of last year succumb to the upstarts of 1968, the wondrous Wolverines, 27-22. Michigan has won four straight since its opening day loss to Cali- 'M' insa tie FIRST DOWNS Rushing Passing Penalty TOTAL NO. OF RUSHES! NET YARDS-Rushings Passing FORWARD PASSES Attempted Completed Intercepted by Yards, interceptions returned TOTAL PLAYS ( (Rushes and Passes) PUNTS, Number Average distance KICKOFFS, returned by YARDS KICKS RETURNED Punts Kicks: FUMBLES, Number Ball lost by P NALTIES, Number Yards pinalized' MICH. 24 13 9 2 66 265 162 141 3: 92 IND. 26 14 Imsland 9 Betts 3 Johnson 53 Gabler, 265 Mandich 162 Harris 34 14 2 Werner 58 87 Pass Receiving No. Yards 2 40 2 10 3 19 4 41 2 16, 1 ' 36 Totals 14 162 I tornia, but was picked by the experts to 1inish near the bottom oI the Ave. Big Ten this year. 20 s Playboy, which had forecasted the Wolverines' record correctly 6.3 two years in a row, predicted a 3-7 season for Bump Elliott's con- 8 tingent. Now the experts are wondering if Michigan has enough to get 36 itself into the Rose Bowl. 11.3 The last time the Wolverines were 4-1 was in 1964 when they beat Ave. Ohio State in Columbus th final game of the season to earn the trip 35 to Pasadena. It looks again like that game at Columbus will determine the Western Conference's representative in the New Year's Day classic. Punting , No. 10 96 35 4 1'72 31' 41 2 0 10 8 13 9 INDIANA Rushing 7 35 5 129 39 91 5 3 35 7-27 6-22 Tries *Gonso 11 Isenbarger 16 Fleming 2 Pernell 16 Pogue 8 Totals 53 Passing Att. Comp. Gonso 32 13 Pernell,.. 1 1 Isenbirger 1 0 Totals 34 14 Pass Receiving Net 96 47 5 93 64 265 Int. 3 0 0 3 MICHIGAN INDIANA 7 0 0 7 Johnson Brown Craw Scheffler MICHIGAN' Rushing Tries 34 18 t32 Totals 66 Passing Net 163 74 30 2 Ave. A4.8 4.1 2.5 4.0 Ave. 5.0 2.9 2.5 5.8 8.0 5.0 Yards 146 16 162= { Ave. 13.6 9.6 11.6 9.5 16 10 12 11.3 Ave. 35 Butcher Gage Isenbarger Pernell Gonso Highbaugh Stolberg Isenbarger No. 3 3 3 2 , 1 .1 1 Totals 14 Yards{ 41 29 35 19 16 10 7 12 162 No. 7 Brown Totals At. 1Comp. 30 14 30 I14 . Int. Yards 2 162 2 ,1162 MSUndrops' homecoming game to M'Vinnesota's Gophers, 14-13- By THOMAS R. COPI Special To The Daily EAST LANSING - A dropsy pidemic cost Michigan State its, homecoming game yesterday, as the Spartans lost to Minnesota 14-13. Alert Minnesota defenders stop- ped two MSU touchdown drives by pouncing on bobbles inside the six yard line.. The Spartans lost a total .of four fumbles as six dif-r ferent players mishandled the elu- sive pigskin. The Golden Gophers, who are now 2-0 In Big Ten play, had to play catch-up football, as they trailed at the half, 7-0. But the Maroon and Gold punched over, ,two quick touchdowns in the third quarter--one on a 58 yard punt1 return by Doug Roalstad-to put the pressure on the Spartans. State, whose offense was visibly deflated by the loss of key fumbles in the game, could manage to push over only one more score, on a 17-yard pass from quarterbackl Bill Triplett to Frank Foreman late in the 'game. And the Spar- tans, who chose to go for the win; were foiled in their try for a two- point conversion., The Gophers, ;who invade Mich- igan Stadium next Saturday, showed a balanced if uninspired offense, sparked by the running of George Kemp and the passing of Phil Hagen. Kemp, who ran for 62 yards in 15 attempts (as well as passing for an additional 24), found the holes and followed his blockers well. While not a ter- rifically strong or fast runner, Kemp remains Minnesota's most potent offensive threat. Hagen, who. completed 10 of 22 for 155 yards, had excellent pro- tection from his offensive line. Sometimes rolling out to pass, he more often dropped straight back. But even with the kind of protec- tion Dennis Brown dreams about, two of his aerials were picked off by alert Spartan backs. One of the State interceptions, coming in the waning moments of the first half, led to the type of play that makes coaches' hair stand on end, or at least keeps them awake nights. Spartan safety Al Brenner grabbed off a Hagen pass on the State one-yard line and streaked down the east side- lines, headed toward paydirt. But with only one man Abetwpen him and the promised land beyond the goal line, Brenner wildly lateraled the ball back to lineman Bill Dawson, who had been trailing the play. Dawson, who has probably never handled the ball in a game before, didn't seem to know what to do with it, but he fell right in line with the rest of his teammates .and dropped it. He kicked it around for what must have seerhed an eternity to Spartan mentor Hugh "Duffy" Daugherty, before finally covering it on the Minne- sota 15. Three plays later, the green and white pushed over their first score. As for the highly-touted Minner sota defense, the always-danger-. ous Spartans managed to dent it for a total of 406 yards, including 215 on the ground. Triplett took advantage of a weakness on the right side of the Minnesota line by repeatedly'running an option play around end which was good for over 150 yards for the afternoon. The Spartan yardage was piled up without the help of Don High- smith, who, you will recall, chew- ed: up the turf for over 100 yards against Michigan last week. High- smith, who saw little action, was good for only seven yards in four carries against the Gophers. I After the Wolverines' homecoming encounter with Minnesota Saturday, Michigan faces Illinois, Northwestern and Wisconsin; who sport a combined 0-15 4ecord this year, on consecutive weekends. It's then to Ohio State for the clash which is shaping up as the Big Ten title maker. Michigan didn't play one of its better games against Indiana yesterday, but it was the kind of ball game that demonstrated the depth and determination of this year's Wolverines, two things lacking in recent seasons.' When all-Big Ten linebacker Tom Stincic was kicked out of the game near the end of the first half, sophomore Tim Killian came in to help stymie several Hoosier drives. Two other sophs, who have spent most of the year warming the bench, also aided the defense in stopping Indiana at crucial moments in the second half. Pete Newell and, Marty Huff, both who intercepted passes late in the Duke victory, helped close the door against the Hoosiers when John Pont's crew began its. patented fourth quarter drives. Still, it was an aching senior and a formerly butterfingered junior who won the game for the Maize and Blue. Safety Jerry Hartman and split end Bill Harris sparked the victory.. ,Hartman, playing all season on two gimpy ankles, got the, Wolverines rolling in the third quarter. It was the senior's 62 yard touchdown run after intercepting a Harry Gonso pass that brought the seemingly dead Michigan offense out of hibernation. The Wol- verines never relinguished the lead after that score. "We 'were in {a zone, in pretty. tight; coverage, when I got the pass," a weary Hartmani said after the game. "It sure seemed like a long run." Hartman, who took the pass intended for Hoosier end Al Gage, said he again hurt his ankles but emphasized he'll be ready for Minnesota. The other key player had to be Bill "Butterfingers" Harris who couldn't find the handle against California four weeks.ago. Michigan was ahead 20-16 with about five minutes left in the game when Harris stepped into the picture. Dennis Brown had been overthrowing his deep receivers all day but with third and 12 he had to try one more time. A four point lead seems to be never enough against Indiana. The Hoosiers, who have scored 56 points in the fourth quarter so far this year,\seem to score on the wierdest 'plays with hardly any time re- maining on the board. So Brownie rolled to his right and hit "Butterfingers" ,n the right corner of the end zorie where Harris held on to it for what proved to be the winning score. "I just went straight out and as fast as I could,"'a jubilant Harris stated. Still, it was the defense that saved the game for the Wolverines. Offensive coordinator. Tony Mason had much praise for the unit which held the high scoring Indiana offense to only three touch- downs. "They played magnificently," he asserted. Mason was not so kind' about his own offense. "We stopped ourselves mo6re than Indiana did," he moaned. Whatever the difference was yesterday, the big difference be- tween this season and 1967 could be the number of fumbles. "We've had only five so far this year compared with 14 last season," Mason stressed. ''The big thing }is that we haven't lost one this season." Each time the Wolverines; fumble, the ball comes right back to them. ,Michigan also has been fortunate as far as injuries are concerned. Ron Johnson, who rushed for 163 yards in 34 carries, hurt his left elbow in the contest but he said, "I just got it bumped. It's a recurring injury and I'll be okay." Aside from that, Michigan appeared: to have come out of the gampe healthy. The old Wolverine nemisis, the knee injury, hasn't visited Michigan since the Duke game. After three straight seasons of heartaches, the:breaks are finally falling in the right places for the Wolverines., As Hartman said, "everybody is working together. It's a team effoit." Right now the team is looking ahead to Minnesota. Elliott knows the only way to win ball games is to take them one at a time.1 MICHIGAN'S DENNIS BROWN (22) seems to be trying out for the Olympic gymnastic team, but actually he has just been upended by Indiana tackler Benny Norman (21). Wolver- ine fullback Garvie Craw (48),' who had been blocking for Brown, is an interested observor in the quarterback's flying antics Although he was stopped this time, Brown spent most of the. day avoiding would be Hoosier tacklers while rolling up 74, yards rushing. When he wasn't in the air himself, the Michigan quarterback kept the football there as he connected on four- teen passes, two -of them good for touchdowns, including the" crucial toss that clinched a 27- 22 victory for the Wolverines. SENTRY. INSURANCE The Hardware Mutuals Organization Morried Male Age 21-25r . I~m s # . DE BATE A ND QUESTIONS Paying for the Other Guy's Accidents ? Save on your Auto Insurance For those who qualify-- $25,000 B.. and P.D. $1,000 Medical Expens and Uninsured Motorists Protection NL Single Mole Age 21-251..,....$125per yeor $70 per year MARVIN ESCH BERT GARSKOF CAN DIDATES FOR CONGR ESS WESTON VIVIAN MON., OCT.28 8:00 PM. 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