Page 6-Saturday, September 16, 1978-The Michigan DailyTy The Michigan Daily--Soturdoy, Septem Opponents (Continued from Page 3) Coleman. A pleasant surprise for the Illini is Rich Weiss, at quarterback, who sat out last season with an injured back. Now a sophomore, Weiss showed great promise in spring drills and starts for Illinois. Backing him up is junior Lawrence McCullough. MOELLER, THE defensive co- ordinator for four years at Michigan, feels that the real weakness of his team lies with the defense. "In order for us to improve our record of a year ago, we have to improve our defense. There's no questions about it," commented Moeller. Leading the way for the defensive unit are linebacker John Sullivan and middle guard Stanley Ralph, both post- season honor candidates. However, the Fighting Illini will have to be prepared to fight a lot harder than they did against the Wildcats against Michigan here today. -ELISA FRYE 2-Notre Dame Vagas Ferguson, Jerome Heavens, and Joe Montana. Their names sound more like that of a rock trio than a football backfield, but it's usually the opposing coaches who end up doing the singing when talking about national champion Notre Dame's returning offensive stars. THE IRISH, like the Wolverines, return their entire backfield, which set school records last year for points (420) and yards (5,239). However, their club has been decimated by graduation elsewhere, including the entire right side of the offensive line and six starters on defense. The personnel depletion has dropped Notre Dame from the Number One spot on just about everybody's chart. But the talented backfield threesome may .. .w ' .\. . . amas . : m .m m sa+,.t?'. ,+: ; ;-+;: -: l. a + .:." S l THE HEKZ3HT G1 ' { '' :< .x ., ' /. J y i 1 '; 0 O '4 " ,... mo w."'""-. _ ...h::' :°"^':" s % a* i? c pv '4'. t' i I . .._. "t Get your pew wardrobe off the ground, with shoes you can really live in. Bass 100's are com- #' rtv .t IV be able to change the pollsters tune. Montana, a 6-2, 191 lb. senior, sat out the 1976 season with a shoulder injury and was listed as no better than third string at the top of last season. But two lackluster offensive performances induced coach Dan Devine to promote Montana to lead guitar. Montana responded with a come-from-behind victory over Purdue and proceded to rip off 10 consecutive victories, culminating in the 38-10 stomping of Texas in the Cotton Bowl. Montana hummed 12 paydirt passes in accumulating 1,715 yards last season. FERGUSON AND Heavens danced for 100 and 101 yards repectively in the Cotton Bowl and are counted on to grind out the yardage again this year. Heavens is a senior fullback who last season just missed out on becoming only the second Notre Dame back in historyl to pile up 1,000 yards. In fact, he accomplished the milestone at one point, but on his last carry was thrown for a six-yard loss to drop his season total to 994. Ferguson was hobbled with a sprained ankle last season, but recovered to win the MVP award in the Cotton Bowl with three TD's. The Irish have a tough schedule as usual, and have already dropped a home game, 3-0, to Missouri. With Michigan, USC, Michigan State, et. al. on the board it is doubtful the Irish can put together back-to-back national championships. But with the combined talents of the coaching staff and the offensive backfield, don't be surprised if Ferguson, Heavens and Montana celebrate a bowl game victory with a rousing rendition of "When Irish eyes are smiling ... -GARY KICINSKI 3-Duke In 1977, sub-par performances against Duke and Navy nearly tripped up Michigan almost before its football season had begun. Navy has departed this year's schedule, but the Blue Devils remain, positioned right after the Notre Dame game, confident they can improve on last season's 21-9 defeat in Ann Arbor. THE BLUE Devils, 5-6 in '77, have their best two defensive players returning along with an All-American candidate in quarterback Mike Dunn. The senior from Hampton, Va. accounted for 1815 total yards in 1977, 1239 passing and 576 rushing. Dunn's quickness and quick hands befuddled the Wolverines last season in much the same way that Ohio State's Rod Gerald did. - By the time Dunn graduates, he should possess 10 different Duke and ACC records. Mediocre without him, the Blue Devil offense can be troublesome with their multi-talented signal-caller. On defense, Duke relies on its two outstanding linebackers, Bill King and All-ACC defender Carl McGee. While teammate McGee was hampered somewhat with a lingering hamstring injury last season, King established himself, accounting for 100 tackles, seven for losses, and two interceptions. McGee is healthy again, which is bad news for Duke opponents. Though not 100 per cent last year, the 6-3 senior led the Blue Devils in tackles, 134, and tackles for loss, nine. "WE FEEL we have the league's best pair (of linebackers)," said eight-year head coach Mike McGee. "Both of these men should be candidates for post- -season honors." Obviously, there are weaknesses in a 5-6 team, and Duke is no exception. Five of last year's starting offensive See OPPONENTS, Page 10 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. *8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14.1 15. 16.1 18. 19. 20. AP Poll Alabama (51) 1-0-0 Arkansas (11) 0-0-0 Oklahoma 1-0-0 MICHIGAN 0-0-0 Penn State (1) 2-0-0 Ohio State 0-0-0 Texas 0-0-0 Southern Cal 1-0-0 UCLA 1-0-0 Texas A&M 1-0-0 Missouri 1-0-0 Nebraska 1-1-0 Louisiana State 0-0-0 Pittsburgh 0-0-0 Notre Dame 0-1-0 Florida State 1-0-0 Kentucky 0-0-0 Washington 0-1-0 Iowa State 1-0-0 Maryland 1-0-0 QUARTERBACK RICK LEACH calls signals over center Walt Downing, now playing for the San Francisco 49'ers in the NFL. There are two other pro players in this picture from last year's 23-6 win over Iowa-they are ... go on guess ... okay, they are 78 Mike Kenn, now on Atlanta and 60 Mark Donahue, now with Cincinnati. V 1,247 1,128 1,044 933 922 891 833 780 777 544 516 469 460 394 379 353 299 235 142 132 Even more stats awrwm,.«.a..wSrr~ 1. 2. 3. 1. 5. 6. 7. --.: 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 11%, '4, 9.. Alabama f Oklahoma Arkansas MICHIGA Southern ( Ohio State Texas Penn State UCLA Missouri Texas A& Pittsburgi LSU Nebraska Florida St Notre Dar Maryland Kentucky Washingto Colorado fortable. And put together to last. Bass 100's. Just what you need to get up in the world. t i '4 4..t'' f .l..- TOTAL FIRST DOWNS ........ Rushing................ Passing................. Penalty .................. TOTAL OFFENSIVE PLAYS.. TOTAL OFFENSIVE YARDS.. Avg yds per play........... Avg yds per game........ RUSHING PLAYS........... RUSHING YARDS......... Avg yds per rush........... Avg yds per game......... PASSING YARDSU.......... PA/PC ...................... Avg yds per completion.. Avg yds per game......... TOTAL NUMBER OF PUNTS. total Yards ............... Avg per punt ............... TOTAL KICK RET/YARDS .... Punt Ret/Yds............. Kickoff Ret/Yds.......... Misc. Kick Ret/Yds....... (Block FG Attempt) INTERCEPTIONS/YARDS.... FUMBLES/LOST........... PENALTIES/YARDS ......... Date Md 9/IS 37 at Illinois 9/17 21 Duke 9/24 14 Navy 10/1 41 Texas A&M 10/8 24 at Mich. State 10/15 56 Wisconsin 10/22 0 at Minnesota 10/29 23 Iowa 11/5 63 Northwestern 11/12 40 at Purdue 11/19 14 Ohio State 1/2 20 Washington Mich. Opp. 226 170 161 94 60 69 5 7 843 780 4364 3012 5.2 3.9 363.7 251.0 664 536 2986 1451 4.5 2.7 ?48.8 120.9 1378 1561 179/92 245/134 15.0 11.6 114.8 130.1 56 79 2269 2916 40.5 36.9 65/859 80/1106 38/288 25/162 27/571 55/944 1/19 15/212 10/88 28/20 31/19 50/443 36/341 Opp Attendance 9 60,477 9 104,072 7 10180 3 104,802 14 78.183 0 104,892 16 44,165 6 104,617 20 103,211 7 68,003 6 106,024 27 105,312 Total Avg. 353 29.4 124 10.3 s Avg TD LP 8.5 0 49 6 6.1 0 19 K 9.3 0 11 s Avg TD LP 9 19.9 0 29 22.5 0 38 20.0 0 23 16.3 0 20 643.0 0 62 7 13.5 0 14 . a f- Stormy $40.00 BIk. Suede Tan Suede For a warm and loving winter-the Revelati proof boot. Just one of a wonderful cc won't leak when you walk in snow, sleet a wide variety of sizes and widths and v Carpet@* inner comfort factor, too. ke dry-with Revelations. "The most comfortable boots in the wo web66WOa2 210 S. WiffdSt. 662-5102 TWO FOR ONE- 1 2 DOWNTOWN 217 S. Main St. Open Mon, and Fri. Nites 'til 8:30 Masts TWO STORES CAMPS,' 619 E. Libe Open Frida 'til 7:00 MICH. ........ 30 10 Opp........... 40 2 PUNT RETURNS Hicks-........... Harden ........... Jolly.............. KICKOFF RETURNS Clayton ............. Huckleby.......... R. Smith......... Harden............ Edwards......... Hicks ........... 8 0 N No 3 4 121 94 26 38 o. Yds 20 170 14 86 3 28 o. Yds 2 234 4 90 4 80 3 49 2 86 2 27 4teS DAILY .s}},. ., f,....,,txsssz .x, .::tc,.:.... ..d.. .,' .tsrr. ..., .." t..S,:x-....;....:.Rtr........ . .a.-." x.... ..'r...rAsrs... . ,.:...v,.. .."... 215 N. MAIN * ANN ARBOR