Page 8-Saturday, September 16, 1978-The Michigan Daily The Michigan I Daily-Saturday, Septe MARCHING BAND DIRECTOR George Cavender acknowledges applause for his 250 musicians during the 1978 Rose Bowl parade. Cavender will retire his positon at the end of this season. THE SPORTING VIEWS Going thru changes... ... watching Rose Bowl By PAUL CAMPBELL IT WAS HALFTIME-finally-and so I angrily turned off the television and got up to mix myself a stiff drink. Michigan, the team I'd been rooting for since my dad took me along to my first game in Ann Arbor 15 years ago, was getting stomped on in the Rose Bowl by Washington. Not mighty USC, nor even Stanford's aerial wizards, but Washington, a team so stocked with underclassmen it could probably get by collectively on two cans of shaving cream per semester. I sat there with my Coke in hand (the strongest thing father's liquor cabinet had to offer) feeling like I was the victim of a massive conspiracy. The oddsmakers, the pollsters, the coaches and the Big Ten image makers all had a part in it. They had convinced me that 1978 was the year that Michigan would finally break the spell that hovered over them in bowl games. I was sure that the Wolverines credentials as champions of the rugged Big Ten and conquerors of mighty Ohio State would be enough to overwhelm the Huskies. So I was understandably upset by what passed in the first thirty minutes of that game in Pasadena. Michigan hadn't just been outscored, they'd been embarrassed. I made a firm resolution never to fall victim again to the ignorant oddsmakers who looked at a school's name and no more. So, after fifteen years, this fan had finally seen the light and had become a cynic. Suddenly, everything seemed to fall into place to support my new outlook. How could one consider the Big Ten to be one of the country's premier football conferences after watching the bowl games. One co-champ was getting beat badly at halftime. The other (OSU) had been completely dismantled earlier in the day by Alabama. Even Maryland of the Atlantic Coast Conference, where people would much rather discuss jump shots than long bombs, had whipped Minnesota and the Gophers proud football tradition in the Hall of Fame Classic. Wayne Duke and his fraternity of running game evangelists notwithstanding, I realized at halftime that the Big Ten's approach to football, as shown by the Big Two, is antiquated. It is not just a lack of passing, it is a lack of diversity. A staunch refusal to give reign to the immense talents of a Jim Smith or the like. And then there are the self-styled experts who tell millions how to bet their money. Jimmy the Greek, et al, who studiously ignore the Big Ten teams' inability to deal with West Coast offenses. They are always about two or three years behind the times in their analysis, and there is nothing I'd like better than to sit down with a few of the prognosticators and ask them some tough questions. Perhaps one would be, "How can you justify your profession to your family and friends?" I really hadn't intended to watch the second half at all, but my brother came in right before with something to mix in the Coke. Steeled with my newfound convictions, I casually flicked on the tube and prepared to have all my cynicism justified. Things certainly seemed to be conforming to the new order of things early in the half, when Washington marched 90 yards to score after stopping Michigan on fourth down. It was a beautiful march which perfectly illustrated what a little offensive imagination could accomplish. But then something happened. It started with a bang, when Curt Stephenson took a routine pass over the middle and converted it into the longest pass play in Rose Bowl history. But I was prepared. A mistake, I thought, born out of desperation. But, desperate or not, Rick Leach kept doing it. He completed four straight passes and Russ Davis scored from the two. My avowed cynicism was starting to fray at the edges. A touchdown pass to Stanley Edwards further eroded my rationale. By the end, when that ball bounced crazily off Edwards' shoulder into the arms of a Washington defender, I was elated. Being a cynic is no fun after all. I was awed by what Michigan had shown me in one of the most impressive comebacks I'd ever seen. I know what you're thinking. That I'm too much of a fan to learn anything. You may be partly right. But when the pre-season polls came out, I was bitterly amused. Michigan has too many question marks to be ranked sixth. Notre Dame and Penn State also had problems, but they received their customary spots in the top five and have already proven their unworthiness.' I'll never pay much attention to the polls. As for Michigan, I'll have to see more of what that second half showed -me this year. Why waste the immense offensive talent of the 1978 squad. The cynicism is on the shelf gathering dust right now, but I know where to find it. Opponents (Continued from Page 16) Tim Brown is being groomed to fill the void. SEVEN STARTERS, most notably All-American Tom Cousineau, return from last year's defensive unit, but depth is a major problem here. Opponents can expect large doses of the 3-4 alignment from Ohio State, which will again stress aggressiveness and pursuit from its down linemen. Passing-oriented teams like Purdue may exploit the OSU secondary, where junior Mike Guess is the lone standout. The Buckeyes enter the upcoming campaign with more guarded optimism than usual, primarily because of its early-season schedule..-Penn State and Baylor invade 'Ohio Stadium this month, with a trip to Minnesota sandwiched in between. 12-Indiana "When I first came to Indiana I felt like I was in a long, dark tunnel with just a faint glimmer of light far off at the end. But the light has been getting brighter with each year." Those are the words of Indiana head coach Lee Corso and while the light he speaks of is still in the candle stage, there is enough potential and experience on his 1978 football team to indicate the light should indeed get brighter. COMING OFF respective third and fourth place finishes in the Big Ten the past two years, Corso will rely on his veteran defense and strong kicking duo of Larry Lovett and David Freud to give the Hoosiers their first winning season in ten years. Lovett, another Texas raised barefoot punter, is a junior college transfer who hammered out a 44.1 yard kicking average last-season to lead all junior colleges in the country. And all placekicker Freud did was lea& the team in scoring last year with 55 total points, hitting on all 25 of his extra point attempts. Indiana's defensive squad will have seven returning lettermen, including linebackers Joe Norman and Doug Sybert whom Corso feels are two of the Big Ten's best. Norman was an All-Big Ten selection by virtue of his 80 solo tackles and five fumble recoveries last year. ALTHOUGH THE offense also has seven players returning, the ones that did graduate will be sorely missed. Gone is Indiana's record-setting split end Keith Calvin and the Big Ten's second leading rusher, Ric Enis. Calvin holds the school record with 121 receptions while Enis wound up third on Indiana's all-time rushing list. But there are some offensive pluses. Senior quarterback Scott Arnett is coming off his best year to date. He led the team in Td's last year with six in addition to hitting 73 of 151 passes for 796 yards and five TD strikes. Another bonus is the return of sophomore tailback Mike Harkrader, who missed last season with a knee injury after gaining' 1,000 yards rushing his freshman year. With a good balance of talent and experience, the Hoosiers could force a few other Big Ten contenders to see the light this season. But Michigan will not be one of them as Indiana is not on the Wolverines' schedule. -BOB EMORY Wayne W. Hayes Dar 198-57-9 at OSU 231-68-9, overall 11 NOW-THE bEST IN REC JOIN THE DAILY SPORTS STAFF X23 Best of friend 514 E.WILLIAM _.I 1MACL6 or HAQ'' COMPANY Why go to the corner drug sore when you can come to our professional beauty salon and purchase pro- fessional products such as, " KMS Nucleoprotein " Jhirmack " Redken " Vidal Sassoon at an UNBELIEVABLE SAVING? 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