Tuesday, October 7, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine Tuesda -y, Octob leme r I~l1 7,111i 19 9 H M C IG N D A L P g N n Broken spirit hurts 7M' offense Don Moorhead really knows what he's talking about. After Michigan's 45-7 triumph over Washington last week the junior quarterback pointed out the significance of psychology in football. "Psychology was a great fac- tor in our game against Wash- ington. In the first half we were able to build up a momentum that carried over into the second half. The reverse happened to Washington. It hurt their team morale." Little did he know how the same psychology would influ- ence the Wolverine's perform- ance against Missouri Satur- day. Only working against them this time. After the first quarter, in which Michigan outplayed the Tigers, the men of Missouri came back in the second quarter BROADoSIDE by robin wright to completely break the Wol- verine's spirit in a way that damaged Michigan for the rest of the game. In the first period the Wol- verine offense managed to out rush the Tigers 72 yards to 20 yards and out pass them 28 to 9, piling up almost four times as much yardage. For their ef- fort Michigan earned seven first downs to Missouri's one, which was due to two consecu- tive offside penalties against Michigan. The Wolverines missed leav- ing the quarter with a 6-0 lead by an inch when Tim Killian's field goal attempt hit the goal post and bounced off. But the catastrophic second quarter killed any hopes of carrying on the momentum built up earlier. Not only couldn't the Michigan offense complete a pass, but they ran -Daily-Sara Krulwich The Wolverines open a hole for Glenn Doughty (22) THE METS?????? up a negative 16 yards and fumbled three times for Mis- souri take overs. As Coach Bo Schembechler so appropriately exclaimed, "that second quarter was a nightmare. I wouldn't have be- lieved it unless I was there. You .just can't turn the ball over that many times and expect to win." Schembechler explained how the continuous series of errors effected the team. "We started out real well. It was our game for the first quarter. "But Moorhead opened t h e second period with a fumble, Glen Doughty then fumbled the next time we got the ball, Mis- souri intercepted a pass a n d finally (Bill) Taylor fumbled at the end of the period. "It was one miseake a f t e r another. It seemed like every- thing backfired. We just gave too much away in the second quarter. "That field goal and one of the touchdowns were gifts. They also succeeded in break- ing our draw play, which was tough on us. "I thought we would be able to' come back and win it in the second half when we got our last two touchdowns, but we didn't. It's always tough when you're down 17 points and have only a little time left. If we had played a mistake-proof game it would have been snug." Schembechler's feelings about the offense's performance show- ed up in the selection of mem- bers for this week's Victor's Club. Against Vanderbilt there were 13 chosen, and just one less when the Wolverines beat Washington. But this week only UIf M two, tackle Jack Harpring and back John Gabler earned status in the club. Harpring also won the offensive championship award of the week. In contrast, Schembechler felt "the defensive unit should not be faulted at all. They made a real good performance. Des- pite giving up 40 points, it was the best defensive show they've made." Looking forward to Michi- gan's Big Ten opener against Purdue this week Schembechler commented, "the defense will face a greater test than they did against Missouri. Quarter- back Mike Phipps is a brilliant guy, and all the skilled posi- tions are well manned. The new coach will be look- ing for a revenge win against the Boilermakers for a g a m e they swiped from him when he was chief mentor of the Miami Redskins. After the defeat in 1965 he brought his team back to take six wins in a row and the Mid American Conference Championship. He'll be looking for a similar comeback Satur- day. "We're not going to change personnel or try anything new besides slight variations of our basic pattern," Schembechler commented about preparing for the match. "But I'm a strong believer that what a team does on Satur- day is the same as they've done all week, so if anyone drops the ball during practice this week they better run 'to the nearest portal of the stadium." He then summed it up, "prac- tices will definitely be more exuberant this week." SKI CLUB 1A O M T % r Mets, 10: NewYork gfoes wil as dream comes true NEW YORK R-The incredible New York Mets, baseball's rag tag clowns for seven long years, made it all the way to the top yesterday by winning the National League pennant with a third straight playoff victory 7-4 over the stunned Atlanta Braves. Wayne 'Red" Garrett, an Atlanta farmhand drafted by the Mets for $25,000 last December, delivered the killing blow, a two-run homer in the fifth inning that put the Mets ahead for keeps. Garrett had hit only one homer all year and batted but .218. Nolan Ryan, the fireballing 22-year-old right-hander who commuted between the Mets and a Texas army camp all summer, bailed out starter Gary Gentry with a brilliant' effort in the last seven in- nings. ' daily A roaring standing room crowd of 53,193 at Shea Stadium chant- ed "We want more" in the Mets' in the ninth as Ryan closed NIGHT EDITOR: strong. ERIC SIEGEL When Garrett threw to Ed Kranepool to retire Tony Gonza- lez for the final clinching out, the frantic fans out of the dugout thousands of youngsters swarmed as torn paper spewed down from onto the field, fire crackers thun- the stands and a mini "Woodstock dered in the stands and the bases Pop Festival" set in on the infield. quickly disappeared. Instant ban- The club that never had finish- ners proclaiming "Mets' Champs" ed better than ninth and then only sprouted out of nowhere. reached that pinnacle twice in S e v e r a l hundred youngsters seven previous years, had won it clustered in front of the Met dug- all in the National League after out shouting "We're No. 1" anges- making up 9 games on the Chi- turing with their fists. in the air. cago Cubs to win the East Divi- A special corps of policemen kept sion and then routing the West- rioles go to series! Orioles smash Twins; climax playoff sweep MINNEAPOLIS-ST. PAUL (AP Paul Blair and Don Buford crack- ed nine hits between them and the rampaging Baltimore O r i o 1 e s' charged into the 1969 World Series yesterday, completing a three- game American League playoff sweep with an 11-2 romp over the Minnesota Twins. The Orioles will open the series, at home Saturday, facing the New York Mets, who also swept their National League playoff against the Atlanta Braves. Monday's clincher was a com-' plete opposite from the first hvo games of the series --both p~itcher's duels which stretched into extra innings. The Orioles rattled 18 hits around Metropolitan Stadium, eight of them for extra bases.! Blair, who had five hits, drove in five runs, two of them on a 407-foot home run in the eighth inning and Ellie Hendricks drove' in three runs with a pair of dou-! bles. Seven Minnesota pitchers took the pounding while Baltimore's Jim Palmer rode the heavy hit- ting to an easy victory. He scat- tered 10 hits-two of them run- scoring singles by Rich Reese, But after Reese drove in a Min- nesota run in the bottom of the first, the Orioles struck back in' the second. WELCOME STUDENTS! Let us style your hair to fit your personality . * 8 BARBERS, no waitinq * OPEN 6 DAYS The Dascola Barbers Arborand-Compus Maople Villaoe ! bWII1LEKLAND TIP~ MEETING INFORMATION ABOUT PASSPORTS, LUGGAGE, DEPARTURE PROCEDURE TUESDAY, OCT. 7th Room 35, Michigan Union, 7:00 P.M. SOME SPACES STILL AVAILABLE . -- - -- - -- - - - - Hailing the vici ern champion Braves in three straight. Manager Gil Hodges' amazing Mets now go on into the World Series starting Saturday afternoon in the home park of the American League champions. But even a World Series victory will have a hard time topping this celebration. Some thought it was' -Associated Press tor, Mets' style ANN ARBOR RESSTA NCE BAKE SALE Wed. and Thurs. HELP US OUT Bring Baked Goods to our table on the DIAG after 10 A.M. both days. -I - Gridde I There are twenty interesting one of them may be classed as a "m This game will take place Fr 50,000 screaming fans at historic Libels actually ranked number one uac muggers (mothers). According to former Libel co Boy would lose five pounds sweati Libels took over first place in the ra To start off the week, helping ions is Bob Schembechler. We ar Bo has done fairly well with a 4 case the real value of his choices. Gather your picks together a by noon Friday for a chance at a; 1. Purdue at MICHIGAN 2. Michigan State at 0I110 STATE 3. Minnesota at INDIANA 4. IOWA at Wisconsin 5. NORTHWESTERN at Illinois 6. COLORADO at Iowa State 7. GEORGIA at Mississippi 8. Kansas State at KANSAS 9. Clemson at AUBURN 10. AIR FORCE at North Caro- lina 11. Kentucky at VIRGINIA TECH even wilder than the night they clinched the East title on Sept. 24. P ig *Victory was sweet for the fans who were deprived of their two National League franchises when the Dodgers and Giants moved games on tap this week but only West to California in 1958. It took ajor" struggle, eight long years but the bubbling iday evening at 5 p.m. with some champagne was worth the effort. Wines field. The Michigan Daily The Mets, derided as Punch and on the AP poll will demolish the Judy hitters who had to get by on their fine pitching, wound up with ach Clarence "Biggy" Copi, "Fat a .327 club batting average and ng if he found out that the Daily scored 27 runs on 37 hits in the tings." three games. On the other hand you out in your important decis- their three starting pitchers, Tom e furnishing his selections below. Seaver, Jerry Koosnman and Gary 0-20 record, but only you should Gentry all were roughed up, while the Braves scored 15 runs. nd bring themn over to the DaTily r, , .S i '', l STA-PREST :LABE$ Cool and con- lucious Cottage Inn pizza. 12. Nebraska at MISSOURI 13. Navy at PITTSBURGH 14. North Carolina State at SOUTH CAROLINA 15. TEXAS vs. Oklahoma at Dallas 16. West Virginia at PENN STATE 17. Stanford at USC, night 18. Georgia Tech at TENNESSEEj 19. Texas A&M at TEXAS TECH 20. DAILY LIBELS vs. uac muggers. 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