- -,w The Michigan Daily-Saturday, Sepi Page 2-Saturday, September 16, 1978-The Michigan Daily The basis for success: Blue relying on But questionable defense exists E I E ITED BR Ei vet backfield THE APP LE By PAUL CAMPBELL The counselor you had at orientation probably told you how important it was to get those academic requirements out of the way early. Spend your first four months at Michigan buried in the questionable joys of freshman comp, foreign language, and inorganic chemistry. But after you've slept through your first class, after you've spent endless distracted hours trying to memorize verb forms, or after you've tried in vain to find a real seat in your Chem lecture, you may realize there are more impor- tant things to be learned. The intricacies of the triple option, for instance. Or the part the wingback plays in a fullback dive. Or Rick Leach's career stats. When you and 99,999 other curious fans show up in the big blue bowl on Saturday, Sept. 16 for the gme between Michigan and Illinois, an education in the basics of Wolverine football will be considerably more useful than the latest buzz on the Bard. Let's start with the triple option. It's an offensive system, one that puts a premium on running. The quarterback moves laterally from center, and can choose to hand the ball to his fullback, pitch it to his trailing tailback, or run forward himself. Quarterback Rick Leach, who has played 36 straight games for Michigan since he came here from Flint three years ago, knows the triple option bet- ter than any college player in the coun- try. He runs it with precision, guts, and intelligence. His coach thinks that's enough to make him a leading candi- date for the Heisman trophy, the high- est award available to a college football player. "In my mind, he's the best quarter- back in the country," is how head coach Bo Schembechler puts it. "He works hard all the time, he's a good all-around athlete, and he loves football." He must love football to resist the persuasive powers of the baseball scouts, who almost drool visibly when (Continued on Page 9) By CUB SCHWARTZ There is a popular misconception about Michigan football, which until recently was confined to frustrated U of M students and faculty, only to grow in recent years to include alumni, friends and Big Ten critics. As the story goes, Michigan grid teams are only capable of running the ball, running the ball and running the ball again. Defensively they can only stop the run, and no more. The misguided therefore deduce that when the Maize and Blue encounter a team which decides to pass, they cannot compete. The latest piece of evidence these folks push concerns the 1978 Rose Bowl. 'If a West Coast team won, they must have passed us to death,' goes the familiar lament. While Washington did put together an effective aerial effort, it was Michigan's inability to stop the RUN which produced the Rose Bowl blues. Four times the Huskies of Washington were faced with third and four situations, and four times the west novtn coast kids elected to run the ball. Each time they picked up the first down en route to a 27-20 upset. In fact the mid- west, 'four-yards-and-a-cloud-of-dust Wolverines' attempted more passes, completed more passes and gained more yardagethrough the air than did Washington. But the Rose Bowl disaster is ancient history and with a clean slate facing them, the Michigan coaches are now concerned with fielding a defense which will certainly prove instrumental in the current run for the roses. But don't look for any surprises. The maize and blue will again concentrate their efforts against the run. Last year the defense allowed an average of only 2.6 yards per rush. And of the three starting linemen from that squad, only middle guard Steve Graves is lost to graduation. His counterparts at the tackles, Dale Kietz and Curtis Greer are both retur- ning for their senior year. Greer was third on the team in tackles last season with 88 and Kietz was solid at the other tackle. The vacant middle guard position will probably be filled by sophomore Mike Trgovac who got the early nod for his strong spring football performance. "We expect to be much stronger up the middle," said Defensive Coor- dinator Bill McCartney. "We have good depth and experience at both the tackles and the inside linebackers." The linebackers he referred to, Ron Simpkins and Jerry Meter, are indeed the cornerstones of the defensive unit. This duo was one and two respectively in tackles, accounting for over 250 bet- ween them. While Rick Leach was rolling and Russel Davis was running, it was Ron Simpkins who was breaking virtually every individual defensive record in the school's books. The man was named ABC's Defensive Player of the Game for his performance against Texas A&M - an award to be proud of. He was credited with 113 solo tackles, almost twice as many as the next man on the list - an accomplishment to be heralded. But the truly amazing thing about Simpkins is that he did all this as a sophomore. What's more, he istthe first sophomore to break Into the starting HEADQUARTERS FOR STADIUM GEAR , _ . , ,.._ Fleece lined STADIUM COAT-$200.00 Other outerwear from $50.00 UMBRELLAS IN REGULAR AND FOLDING STYLES From $7.50 IRISH HATS-$22.50 Other domestic and Imported head wear from $14.00 I 1'I (Continued on Page 9) Many years ago Huron Valley National Bank began supplying the U-M marching band with all of the home football games. 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