ge 12-Friday, September 22, 1978--The Michigan Daily just another ootball legend: 65 yearl By GEOFF LARCOM In a familiar film scene, Butch assidy and his friend Sundance are 'antically fleeing their ;dogged pur-. .iers through arid Southwestern land. espite the pair's skilled efforts, they re unable to shake the posse deter- tinedly following them. Exasperated, undance asks Butch, "Who are those ys anyway?" Should Michigan football coach Bo chembechler find himself in a 'orrisome situation this weekend at outh Bend, Ind., it's doubtfulhe'll need >ask that question. Bo knows only too well what he's up gainst, who is capable of inflicting ridiron damage upon his 1-0 Wolverine sam. Yet Notre Dame's Fighting Irish of )78 are more than a strong football lam. They are a continuation of one of ie country's richest college football aditions, one characterized by suc- ass, innovation, and rivalry. Flash back to the fledgling football ear 1913, a contest between the Irish rid Army. A skinny 145-pound quarter- ack named Gus Dorais went wild that ay, passing for an unprecedented 243 ards in leading Notre Dame to a 35-13 pset over the feared Cadets. Dorais' chief target was a friend from r .. y ofNotr his summer job. Together they'd spent exhaustive hours at the Cedar Point Beach on Lake Erie working on pass patterns in the sand. Coach Jesse Har- per realized in the fall the value of the well-coordinated pair and inserted them into the lineup, The other lad's name, Knute Rockne. That Army upset was special also in that the Irish had employed a previously unexploited weapon-the forward pass. Thus began the Rockne era and the beginning of the Notre Dame football dynasty. After serving as an assistant for four years, Rockne took over as head coach in 1918. Among his power-laden teams of the 1920s was the 1924 group which included the legendary Four Hor- seman, the backfield famed sports columnist Grantland Rice referred to as Famine, Pestilence, Destruction and Death. Their real names are Miller, Crowley, Stuhldreher and Layden. Averaging only 160 pounds, these hor- seman executed Rockne's newly- installed box formation superbly, moving a split second before the snap into the box, giving the defense no time to analyze the play. Rockne's barnyard backfield led the Irish through an undefeated season, e Dame highlighted by the Irish's only Rose Bowl appearance ever. In it they pasted Stanford, a powerful team led by fullback Ernie Nevers, 27-10. That was to be the last of post-season play for the Irish for 45 years, as Notre Dame authorities imposed a ban on bowl play. Not until 1970 did the Irish return, then losing to Texas in the Cot- ton Bowl 21-17. - Still a young man at 43, Rockne died in a 1931 plane crash. He left behind a For more sports- see page 11l career record of 105 wins, 12 losses, and five ties, along with a winning streak of 20 games. Most successful of Rockne's uils was Frank Leahy, who guided the Irish in 1941-43 and again from 1946-53. In ac- cumulating an 107-13-9 record, Leahy had the pleasure of coaching three Heisman Trophy winners-Angelo Ber- telli, Johnny Lujack and Leon Hart. Bertelli and Lujack directed Leahy's pro-style offense, while Hart played three years at split end. Notre Dame football experienced a letdown following Leahy's retirement in 1953, culminating in a dismal 2-7 season in 1963. The solution to the problem came in the personage of Ara Parseghian, who took over the coaching reins in 1964 and promptly instituted a two-platoon system. history For the fans, it was just like the olden days, as Heisman winning quarterback John Huarte and end Jack Snow paced Notre Dame to a 9-1 season, marred only by a 20-17 heartbreaker with Southern Cal. Perhaps Parseghian's most notable (and most frustrating) game occurred against Michigan State in 1966. Billed as the "game of the decade," it pitted the unbeaten likes of Bubba Smith, George Webster, and Clint Jones again- st the also undefeated Irish. The 10-10 tie satisfied nobody, par- ticularly those who felt that Parseghian had played for a tie in the waning moments of the garpe. Notre Dame bounced back quickly however, smoking USC the next week 51-0 and finishing up the year 9-0-1. Present coach Dan Devine took on the unenviable task of preserving Par- seghian's excellence three years ago. Following a so-so first year, Devine's system began to click, with the final result being last year's 38-10 crushing of Texas in the Cotton Bowl as well as a national title. BILILBOA RD Those persons desiring lockers for the current school year should plan to appear early tomorrow morning at either the CCRB or the NCRB. Long lines are expected for the locker sale, which begins at 8:30 a.m. Lockers are $9 per term and $18 for the academic year. The races roll on American League East Yanks 7, Blue Jays 1-Red Sox 5, Tigers 1 TORONTO (AP)-Catfish Hunter and Rich Gossage combined on a five-hitter, and the New York Yankees scored three runs in the fifth inning, two on Reggie Jackson's opposite field double, and four more in the seventh to crush the Toronto Blue Jays 7-1 last night. BUCKY DENT started the fifth inning rally with a one-out walk, took third on Mikey Rivers' double and, after a walk to Willie Randolph, scored New York's first run on Thurman Munson's sacrifice fly. Jackson then cleared the bases with his game-winning hit, lashing a one- strike pitch from loser Bailor Moore, 6-8, into the left field corner. Randolph's triple scored Rivers with the first Yankees run in the seven- th. Munson followed with a single and Lou Piniella and Chris Chambliss then connected for run-scoring doubles. HUNTER, 11-5, scattered four hits before giving way to Gossage at the start of the seventh. Hunter gave up a leadoff home run to Rick Bosetti, his fifth, in the first and then retired 13 in a row-five on strikeouts-before Otto Velez' fifth-inning single. Gossage picked up his 24th save, tops in the league. And at Tiger Stadium, the Red Sox kept pace with the Yanks by topping the Detroiters, 5-1. For the game details, see the story on the next page. At a glance W L Pct. GB GL New York ...................... 93 60 .608 - 9 Boston ......................... 91 62 .595 2 9 BOSTON-HOME 6: Detroit 3, Sept. 26, 27, 28: Toronto 3, Sept. 29, 30, Oct. 1. AWAY 3: Toronto 3, Sept. 22, 23, 24. NEW YORK-Home 6: Toronto, 3, Sept. 26, 27, 28; Cleveland 3, Sept. 29, 30, Oct. 1. AWAY 3: Cleveland 3, Sept. 22, 23, 24. National League East Pirates 3, Cubs 2-Phillis/Expos ppd., rain CHICAGO (AP) - "Just a typical Pirate battle," said a visibly weary, but smiling Manager'Chuck Tanner after Pittsburgh stole a wild 3-2 victory in 14 innings over the Chicago Cubs Thursday. "We've been inspired all year and hanging in there all year like this," Tanner said. "There's no more inspiration from this than from any other win." THE VICTORY in the four-hour, 40-minute marathon pushed the Pirates to within 11/2 games of first-place Philadelphia in the National League East. The Phillies were rained out at Montreal Thursday night. Pinch-runner Matt Alexander scored the winning run when he stole second and continued home on a pair of wild throws on the same play. "It's a gamble," said Alexander, who was released by Oakland three days before the season and joined the Pirates Sept. 1. "I MADE IT safe and we won the ball game. I figured the first pitch would be a pitchout. On the second pitch, I took off. I like to get to second before two outs." Meanwhile, the rain in Montreal temporarily halted the other team involved in the first place chase. The Phillies game scheduled with the Expos last night has been re-scheduled for Philadelphia next4Monday night. At aglance W L Pct. GB GL Philadelphia .................... 83 68 .550 - 11 Pittsburgh ................... 82 70 .539 11/2 10 PHILADELPHIA-HOME 4: Montreal 4, Sept. 25, 26 (2), 27. AWAY 7: New York 3, Sept. 22, 23, 24; Pittsburgh 4, Sept. 29 (2), Sept. 30, Oct. 1. PITTSBURGH-HOME 7: Chicago 3, Sept. 25, 26, 27; Philadelphia 4, Sept. 29 (2), Sept. 30, Oct. 1. AWAY x-3: Chicago 1, Sept. 21; Montreal 2, Sept. 23, 24. x-Pittsburgh at Cincinnati rained out Aug. 30; the game will be made up after the regular season, if it affects pennant race. ! C l NOTRE DAME VS. MICHIGAN SATURDAY 2:15 P.M. PLAY by PLAY WITH THE CBOB UFER "TEVOICE OF MICHIGAN FOOTBALL FOR 34 YEARS" WPAG 1050 There will be a WOMEN'S INNERTUBE WATER. POLO CLINIC Monday, September 25, 7:15 pm at the IM Sports Building Pool Bring your suits and give this fun sport a tryl For more Information call Ellen Gold, 763-3563 Anyone interested in being an Innertube Waterpolo Official should attend the Innertube Waterpolo Officials Clinic on Mon- day, Sept. 25, 6:00 pm at the IM Sports Building Pool. For more info call Jan Wells, 763-1313 NOW. .SAVE UP TO $11.50 ON RACE WEEKEND TICKETS! A prix-packaged offer from your Toyota dealer. Save up to $11.50. The Toyota Grand Prix of the U. S. is coming to Watkins Glen, N.Y., Sept. 29-Oct. 1, and participating Toyota dealers have a limited 1i U Join The Dailya TOYOTA supply of race weekend discount ticket packages that can save you up to $11.50 per person on general admission tickets, reserved grandstand seating and more. No vehicle purchase necessary. DETROIT PISTONS CLEVELAND CAVALIERS CRISLER i ARENA Sunday Night6 8 P.M. 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