SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1982 THE MICHIGAN DlAILY Vs A tl" C! e PAGE SEVEN N Sp arkman s Play Im-pressive (Continued fromPage 1) his way to the one. Raimey, com- ing in motion from the right, went over left tackle for the touchdown. Timberlake's conversion attempt was wide to the left. Iowa countered early in the sec- ond quarter. Iowa captain halfback Larry Ferguson and right half- back Bobby Grier combined on end-sweeps and line plunges to bring the ball into Wolverine ter- ritory. Ferguson scooted around right end for the touchdown. Roberts' kick put Michigan be- hind 7-6. The Maie and Blue fought right back, though. Mel Anthony, and With fourth and two on the Dave Raimey, and a personal foul penalty against Iowa brought the ball to the Iowa 26-yd. line. Iowa 26, Sparkman came in with the play that set up the second Michigan TD. Chandler threw be- hind Chapman, who reached over his head to nab the ball on the four. The play was similar to the picturesque grab of Harris' for the Hawkeyes. Two Yarders Chandler handed to Raimey twice after that, each play being good for two yards, the second was a touchdown. The extra point was the last successful thing accomplished by Michigan for the remainder of the game. Behind 14-12, Chandler pitched out to Timberlake in the right flat. However, four hulking Hawkeyes were there. Timberlake merely lowered his head, bulling for the necessary two points which tied the game. Iowa lost a golden opportunity to go ahead in the third quarter when they brought the ball down to the Wolverine seven. Great line play particularly by O'Donnell kept Iowa from scoring. Roberts' fourth-down field goal attempt from the 11 yd. line went wide. Closing Rally Iowa First Downs 17 By Rushing 13 By Passing 4 By Penalties 0 Rushing Yardage (Net) 278 Yards Gained Rushing 294 Yards Lost Rushing 16 Rushing Attempts 51 Passing Yardage (Net( 100 Passes Attempted 12 Passes Completed 7 Passes had Intercepted 1 Total Offensive Yardage 378 Punts 5 Punting Average 28.7 Yards Punts Returned 128 Kickoffs Returned 3 Yards Kickoffs Ret. 27 Number of Penalties 3 Total Yards Penalized 35 Fumbles 1 Fumbles Lost 1 Yards Interceptions Ret. 30 Chan Timb Raim Spark Evash Strob Rindf Dodd Antho: INDIIDUAL RUSHING Michigan Att. Gains Loss' diler 2 4 0 erlake 3 3 7 ey 11 41 1 man 13 57 0 evski 3 7 4 el 3 13 0 uss 3 14 0 3 5 0 any 5 21 0 Mich. 13 9 3 1 153 165 12 46 125 15 6 3 278 7 33.3 3 4 71 2 10 0 0 0 Yds. 4 -4 40 57 3 13 14 5 21 153 63 13 10 12 31 4 Yds. 82 34 9 LEADING RUSHER-Wayne (Cowboy) Sparkman, who led 'M' runners yesterday with a 4.4 yards per carry average and a net 57 yards, and Dave Raimey, who scored both 'M' TDs against Iowa, watch as teammate Bob Chandler sneaks over for a score against Minnesota. Szykowny Ferguson Grier Davis Sherutan Rogers Perkins Kramer Iowa 3 20 10 3 4 2 8 1 2 156 66 13 10 12 31 4 10 3 3 0 0 0 0' 0 PSYCHOLOGICAL BREA KS: It Was a Tough One To Lose'--Elliott INDIVIDUAL PASSING Michigan Att. Comp. Int. Chandler 10 3 2 Timberlake 2 2 0 Evashevski 3 1 1 By TOM WEBBER Sports Editor Special To The Daily IOWA CITY - A play which wasn't even supposed to happen proved to be the turning point in Michigan's defeat to the Iowa Hawkeyes. Both head coaches agreed after the game that it was the 82-yd. punt return by Michigan-born Paul Krause in the last 42 sec- onds of the first half which turned the game Iowa's way. At the time, Michigan held a 14-7 lead and seemed assured of taking it into the dressing room to think about at half-time. Held Edge in Half The Wolverines had held the edge in play for the entire first half, but the run gave the Hawk- eyes a psychological lift which helped them dominate play in the second stanza. Besides being a crusher at the time, it must have been particular- ly distressing to Bump Elliott to learn later that Iowa wasn't even set u for a run back. Worse yet, it even appeared that Michigan had the punt well covered. "Our punt returns have been poor this season, so we decided to change our plans and try to block the kick," Iowa Coach Jerry Burns said. "We were in block action on the punt. We jammed seven men up on the line and rushed them hard," he added. Big Rush Helps The big rush did help out be- cause, Joe O'Donnell's punt was a line drive to Krause on the Iowa 20. With the extra time, the Flint junior cut back enough to get around four Michigan tacklers on the short side and start down the sideline. With Iowa fans yelling for him to step out of bounds and save the clock, Krause suddenly found open space at midfield. At the Michigan 35, he cut to his left to allow some blockers to get between Wolverine safety- men O'Donnell and Bob Chandler. "It was a great personal effort by Paul," Burns said. "He did it all on his own." Ferguson Great Somewhat hidden by Krause's run, was a great invididual per- formance by Larry Ferguson, Iowa captain and a 1960 all-America choice. Playing his last game be- fore the home crowd, Ferguson liv- ed up to his laurels by gaining 153 yards in 20 carries. "It was Ferguson's best game of the season. He got the game ball," Burns added. In the Hawkeyes' first touch- down drive, Ferguson carried on four of the five plays for 54 yds. Coaches Deserving The Iowa coaching staff de- serves some of the credit for Fer- guson's hitting over his own right tackle. Against Michigan's 6-2-3 de- fense, Iowa put Krause, the float- ing back, out to the left to get the Wolverines' deep backs to swing over to cover him. "We wanted them to rotate to our floater while we were still strong right," Burns said. When Michi- gan was caught shooting its two linebackers, Ferguson was able to shake loose. Iowa, generally regarded as a passing team, had quarterback Matt Szqkowny throw only 11 passes,sbut three of his six com- pletions won the game. All three came in the last three minutes, culminating in a 47-yd. scoring heave to Sammie Harris. Expected Long Pass "With Harris in the game we expected they might go for the long pass," Elliott said. "Bob Tim- berlake had it well covered, but it was just a perfectly executed play., Elliott again showed a willing- ness to take big gambles, and one of them almost paid off. Iowa had controlled the ball for the entire third period holding Michigan to only one first down. In the fourth period Elliott gambled with a fourth and one o nthe Michigan 24 and won. It was a daring play with a whole period left to go, but it went to waste when Michigan fail- ed to move the ball in the next three plays. "We had been in our own end too long. We wanted to get something going," Elliott said. Michigan escaped the game with no serious injuries although there were numerous bumps and bruises in a hard fought game which erupted briefly in the fourth per- iod when tempers flared. * * * The big pass play to Harris pull- ed the game out of fire for Jerry Burn's Hawkeyes. The Wolverines appeared fired up and ready to score in the fourth quarter prior to the Iowa TD. Both Elliott and Burns admitted that the two Iowa breaks dras- tically altered the complexion of the contest. Elliott summed up the mourn- ful atmosphere in the locker room after the game when he said: "It sure was a tough one to lose." Szykowny Wallace Iowa 11 1 6 1 96 1 0 4 INDIVIDUAL PASS RECEIVING Michigan Catches Yards TD Chapman 3 55 0 Timberlake 1 50 0 Farabee 1 11 0 Lambert 1 9 0 Iowa Krause Sherman Webb Dougherty Harris Turki 1 1 1 2 1 1 11 12 6 20 42 4 PUNTING Michigan 0 0 0 0 E1 s Avg. 33.3 35.0 35.0 0-14 14-28 O'Donnell Iowa Rogers SGykowny Score by quarters: MICHIGAN IOWA Punt 7 4 680 0 14 0: AssIgllhhbellf: fill iio' l ~e ae hai works harder Ike dirllrif gels College Scores GRID PICKS Iowa 28, Michigan 14 Wisconsin 35, Illinois 6 Minnesota 7, Purdue 6 Michigan State 31, Northwestern 7 Ohio State 26, Oregon 7 Pittsburgh 7, Army 6 Princeton 14, Yale 10 Columbia 21, Penn 7 Florida 20, Florida State 7 Georgia Tech 7, Alabama 6 Clemson 17, Maryland 14 No. Carolina State 24, Virginia 12 Vanderbilt 20, Tulane 0 Oklahoma 13, Missouri 0 Texas 14, Texas Christian 0 Baylor 10, Air Force 3 Utah State 19, Utah 6 Washington 30, UCLA 0 Ouachita 20; Millsaps 7 Rice 23, Texas A & M 3 OTHER GAMES Penn State 48, Holy Cross 20 New Mexico 41, Montana 12 Washington State 22, Idaho 14 Oregon State 25, Colorado State 14 Iowa State 28, Kansas State 14 Syracuse 35, George Washington 0 Notre Dame 21, North Carolina 7 Duke$0, Wake Forest 0 LSU 27, Mississippi State 0 .1 ..*..*.S. .. 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