I Page 8-Sunday, October 22, 1978-The Michigan Daily Leach back In form rolls -as (Continued from Page 1) ball 52 yards into the Pndzone. Willner also had punts of 38, 46 and 66 yards. When he had the wind to his back he belted the ball long and deep, and when the wind was in his face, Willner placed his kicks. As a result, Wisconsin was prievented from starting any drive past their own 20-yard line. Badger coach Dave McClain was obviously disappointed by the loss, his first since taking over as head coach in the spring. "When you get beaten like that, there is not much to say. Michigan 4ichigan is a good football team. They are a lot better than we are. That (Michigan's football success) is what we are trying to achieve." The Wolverines scored their second touchdown on a bit of razzle-dazzle, using a wingback reverse play that had rarely been used in recent seasons. On second down and seven from the Wisconsin 27, Rick Leach slipped the ball behind him into the waiting arms of Ralph Clayton. Clayton walked a tightrope down the sidelines all the way for the score. There was some momentary confusion on the play, as it appeared that one official marked Clayton out of bounds at the 18-yard-line. But three other officials signaled touchdown and the score stood at 14-0. "I'VE NEVER been beaten this badly," said McClain. "One time at Miami of Ohio, Purdue blew us out, 39- 0. That was when Bo was my head coach. You see, it even happens to him." . Many thought Wisconsin's only hope to upset the Wolverines would be by passing as MSU did. The Badger quarterback threw twenty times, but some thought it wasn't enough. "We tried to pass, but we kept on getting flushed out of the pocket. It must have happened seven or eight times," said McClain. Schembechler probably worked his troops hard on that aspect of the game after what the Spartans did to his team last week. Bo said practice this week was ". . . a. little more somber - 'determined' would be a good word, a very good word." IT MUST have been a worthwhile week of practice as the relentless defense pressured Kalasmiki and his subsequent replacement, freshman QB John Josten. After the game Kalasmiki dejectedly spoke about the rout. "It's not fun, it's embarrassing. You hope for the clock to run out." Actually, Kalasmiki performed well. He was able to move the ball a few times, but somehow there was yet another obstacle in the way which kept the Badgers from putting any points on the board. Kalasmiki's Michigan counterpart played just as well, but had the breaks going his way. Leach was 4 of 7 for 101 yards, one touchdown and no interceptions. The senior also ran for 82 yards and scored twice. But the largest statistical chunks came on two plays. On the second play of the third quarter, Leach kept the ball on an option, made three beautiful cuts and raced down the field for 44 yards. The run set up Michigan's fourth -TD of the day, with Leach taking it in himself from the six. THE WOLVERINES padded their lead to 35-0 when Leach tossed a bomb to a wide-open Clayton for 65 yards, the longest play from the line of scrimmage for Michigan ithis year. Ironically, the pair attempted the same play earlier, but Leach overthrew Clayton. The final score came early in the fourth quarter as Schembechler pulled his starters and received fine performances from quarterback B. J. Dickey and speedy freshman tailback Butch Woolfolk. Woolfolk responded in his first game with 32 yards in six carries. All of Schembechler's experiments paid off as he even started the game with a restructured defense. Bo shifted many of the players to different positions. The change of scenery apparently worked, as the Wolverines gained their third shutout in six games. Big Ten Campbell's Scoop by Paul Campbell The victory formula... . back to basics MADISON T HE TRIPLE offense and a rugged defense against the run - like it or not, these two things have been Michigan's bread and butter since Bo Scnembechler brought back winning football ten years ago. But last week, maybe for the first time in those years, Bo forgot about the basics. He tried to get fancy, which in his terms means passing too much. And worrying too much about being passed against. Well, the basics are back. They were stressed a'll week in practice and all day on the field yesterday. It's the only way Bo knows how to win. It's the system which he called on in the second half against Arizona. It's the system he revived a bit too late against State. It's the system the Michigan players know best. "We wanted to power our way up the middle," is how Rick Leach described his team's game plan. "We played heavy defense concentrating on the run," was defensive captain Jerry Meter's assessment from the other side of the line. "We wanted to get back to good, basic football, so we used a good, solid, running defense." The power game plan showed up in the statistics. Michigan ran the ball 65 times, passing only on eight occasions. The Wolverines traveled 360 yards on the ground, while gaining 117 yards on five complete passes. On defense, the Wolverines cut the effectiveness of the opponents' running game by almost half from last week, giving up only 133 yards. Wisconsin coach Dave McClain complimented the Michigan line on * pressuring his quarterback out of the pocket, where Ed Smith spent so much unmolested time a week ago. Finally, the defensive backs were close enough to the line to be involved in 22 tackles. If the numbers don't ring a bell, the trends they indicate do, because yesterday's stats are virtually interchangeable with figures from countless Bo-coached games at Michigan. In fact, the game itself was an indistinct blend of many of Schembechler's past triumphs. The most familiar sight was Leach taking the snap and turning parallel to the line, faking to his fullback, and either turning up field himself or pitching to his trailing back. He's been doing it for 42 games now, and there's no doubt he does it well. "Leach is a great leader and makes some great leads on the option," said McClain after the game. "He's great at stringing it out, and he's really heady." So, as long as Leach is calling the signals, the option offense is Michigan's best bet. The people who knock Bo for insufficient passing probably get the same empty feeling I do whenever Leach cocks his arm to throw. Still, the triple option and basic defense aren't cure alls for the problems that became obvious last week. Nor is the 42-0 victory over Wisconsin, who's coac-h readily admits that the Wolverines are simply a superior team. "We've got a long way to go," Schembechler said. "I don't think we were great today, but we needed this game. It was a good confidence-builder." The Badgers did almost as much as Michigan itself to boost that confidence. They made the same type of crucial early mistakes that doomed the Wolverines in last week's loss. Michigan only lost the ball once, and that came long after the issue was decided. But Wisconsin was moving the ball effectively before those two fumbles. Obviously, Michigan can't count on everyone to be so generous. Nor will they be able to simply rely on their strength to dominate talented teams like Purdue and Ohio State. "We made too many mental mistakes," admitted linebacker Ron Simpkins, who once again led the Wolverines in tackles. "Sure, it's rrice to have a shut-out, but we have to improve." Standings Conference W L T W Purdue.......... 3 0 0 5 MICHIGAN ..... 2 1 0 5 Ohio State ........2 1 0 3 Michigan State .. 2 1 0 3 Minnesota........2 1 0 3 Wisconsin........2 1 1 4 Indiana..........1 2 0 2 Iowa ............ 1 2 0 1 Illinois.........0 1 3 1 Northwestern ... 0 4 1 0 Next Saturday's Games Minnesota at MICHIGAN Wisconsin at Michigan State Northwestern at Ohio State Purdue at Iowa Illinois at Indiana All L' 1 1 2 3 3 1 4 5 4 6 T 0 0 1 0 I 0 1 0 0 2' I AP Photo MICHIGAN TAILBACK Roosevelt Smith takes a hard plunge onto the Camp Randall Stadium turf, but not before picking up one of 25 Wolverine first downs in the Wolverines' 42-0 rout of Wisconsin. Smith suffered a shoulder injury in the second half, however, and may miss Saturday's game with Minnesota. DAVIS, SMITH SIDELINED Bo battles injury nemesis By CUB SCHWARTZ I -J ---- v Special to the Daily MADISON-At this point, it is entirely unclear ho Bo Schembechler's adversary is next week. On >ne hand, the Minnesota Gophers will visit Michigan Stadium for a shot at removing the Wolverines from he run for the roses. But on the other hand, Schem- bechler is faced with an even stickier opponent- njuries. The addition of starting fullback Russell Davis and )ften-used reserve Roosevelt Smith and Ed Kasparek to the, ranks- of the hobbled brings the Zurrent casualty count to seven. The trio is joined in njury by Mel Owens, Bill Dufek, John Powers and stanley Edwards. With their backs pinned to the wall, the Wolverines annot even afforda tie. And now, with a pair of pre- eason All-Auiericans ailing, along with two starters m the offensive line and three highly-regarded bench hreats, Schembechler can only wonder about the uture. "In a lot of ways we are held together by band- 4ids," Schembechler said. "I don't know how much longer we can hold out. Davis and Smith were hurt today and we already lost Edwards." Davis left the game early in the first quarter, the -esult of what Schembechler labeled "banged up nees." He had carried the ball only three times for a :otal of nine yards. The senior fullback did jog out to midfield for the eeting of the captains'at halftime, but he limped oticeably while walking on the sidelines during the second half. Smith, Harlan Huckleby's understudy at tailback, suffered a shoulder injury in the second half. Schem- bechler was unsure of the extent of either injury. "We will just have to wait until next week and see," he said. Stanley Edwards, however, will definitely remain out for a while longer. The sophomore taliback, who injured a hamstring prior to the season opener, at- tempted an early comeback at practice this week af- ter only four weeks rest. His hopes for an early return were short-lived, as he aggravated the injury. For more sports- SeePage 7 So now, Schembechler is faced with a problem that, appeared farthestirom his mind last August-that of fielding a potent backfield. Today he turned to Lawrence Reid in replacing the injured Davis and the junior fullback responded well, with 53 yards in 13 carries. Reid was impressive enough to deserve mention by Wisconsin coach Dave McClain, who characterized him as "a big, tough runner." But when he was told that Reid weighs only 215 punds as compared to Davis' 225 he remarked, "He sure runs a lot stronger than 215." Perhaps more surprising than Reid was the play of freshman tailback Harold (Butch) Woolfolk, who replaced Harlan Huckleby for much of the second half. Schembechler stated earlier this year that he planned to red-shirt this year's entire freshman class. But the injury situation forced Schembechler to turn to the promising runner. Woolfolk, who can run the 100-yard dash in 9.5 seconds, utilized his speed both inside and out, carrying the ball six times for 32 yards. His perfor- mance made the injuries a little easier for Schem- bechler to live with. "We hadn't planned on using Woolfolk, but we had to when both Russell Davis and Roosevelt Smith went out with injuries," Schembechler explained. "We just ran out of backs. Woolfolk is going to be a good one, no question about it. He is big, quick and a hard run- ner." Another freshman, defensive back Brian Carpen- ter, also saw considerable action. Although the Flint native is listed as the second string left cornerback behind junior Mike Jolly, his playing time has been limited this season. Schembechler viewed the oppor- tunity to give Carpenter some game experience more a necessity than a luxury. Thus, the problem of use is again with Michigan. Last week it was the players in green and white who cast a blow to the Maize and Blue title hopes. Next week it may be the green players in the Maize and Blue who determine just how serious a blow it was. Two-year total: Us 98, Them 0 MICHIGAN First downsI...........C24 Rushing (att/yd........65/360 Passing (att/comnt). 5/8/10 Passing yards......... 117 Total Offense.......... 477 Punts (no./av.........4/51.0 Fumbles (no./lost) .... 1-1 Penalties (no.yds) ..... 2-30 SCORING PLAYS WISCONSIN 15 39/133 10/21/0 94 227 9/31.0 2-2 4-40 1st M-Leach, 1 yd. run (Wlner kick) M-Clayton, 27 yrd. run (Winmer kick) 2ndM-Huckley,17yrd. run (Willner kick) 3rd M-Leach, 6 yd. run (Willner kick) M-Clayton, 65yd. pass from Leach (Willner kick) 4th M-Dickey.3yd. run (Wiliner kick) SCORING Michigan.................14 7 14 7-42 Wisconsin.................. 0 0 0 0- 0 RUSHING MICHIGAN ATT YDS AVG Huckleby ........................18 98 5.4 Leach ........................... 12 82 6.8 Reid ............................ 13 53 4.1 Dickey .......................... 5 33 6.6 Woolfolk ....................... 6 32 5.3 Clayton ......................... 1 27 27.0 R. Smith ........................ 7 26 3.7 R. Davis ......................... 3 9 3.0 WISCONSIN Matthews ...:.................. Stauss .......................... Kalasmiki.................... Mohapp...................... Souza...................... Richardson.................. Cohee..................... Cohee ....................... Josten.... ................ PASSING MICHIGAN ATT Leach ....................7T Dickey..................I WISCONSIN Kalasmiki.................17 Josten ..................... 3 Greene....................i1 RECEIVING MICHIGAN Clayton ...................... G. Johnson.................. Marsh ..:.................... Huckleby................... WISCONSIN Charles ......................... Sydnor .......................... Souza................... Braker.................... Stauss...................... 18 6 9 1 I 1 2 61 35 21 5 3 2.... 2 -1 3.4 5.8 2.3 7.0 5.0 3.0 2.0 -0.5 COM INT YDS 4 -0 101 1 0 16 10 0 0 NO. 2 I 1 4" 3 1' i1 1 0 0 0 YDS 82 16 10 9 94 0 0 LP 65 16 10 9 36 38 10 9 1 LERG S GOAL BEATS BGSU: Icers gain OT win OKLAHOMA ROLLS ON Texas upsets third-ranked Hogs By DAN PERRIN Special to the Daily BOWLING GREEN-It was just like last night. The Bowling Green Falcons out-skated, out-checked, out-shot and out-played the Michigan hockey team, yet the Wolverines once again came up with the game-winner, 4- 3, in overtime. This time, junior center Dan Lerg was the hero for the dekers, scoring his first goal of the year 4:07 into the OT period. Wolverine goalie Bob Sutton was named the game's first star, deservedly so as he came up an amazing 51 saves, many of them from point blank range. Michigan penalties marred the first period, giving Bowling Green a one-man advantage much of the time. With the Blue icers constantly on the defensive the Falcons had little trouble keeping the puck in the Wolverine zone. TIME AND TIME again the BG stakers stormed the Michigan net only to have the sophomore Sutton knock the puck away in his Wolverine debut. After a slew of rapid-fire shots, junior left wing Steve Dawe finally notched a score for the Ohioans at 5:59. Michigan turned things around in the second period, generating an nffens that was not nresent in the initial action. The Falcons controlled the puck much of the time and tied the score when right winger John Markle, BG's leading scorer last season, drilled a shot past Sutton at 3:29 of the period. Even while playing like anything but a top-notch college hockey team, Michigan managed to take the lead again when right winger Mike Coffman buried the puck in the Bowling Green net 16:08 into the period. It looked like Coffman's goal would hold up for the Blue icers until the Falcons' Mark Wells scored the tieing goal with just 23 seconds left, forcing the game into overtime. It was left up to Lerg to send Michigan home a winner, as he beat Charko one-on-one. The undefeated icers will put their 2-0 record on the line against Minnesota-Duluth in a home series next weekend that opens WCHA play for both teams. The Ieers' edge First Period SCORING-1. BG-Dawe (Cotter, Pelland) 5:59. Penalties-BG-Markell (cross checking) 1:50, M-Coffman (roughing) 2:39, M-Waymann (trip- ping) 3:10, M-Waymann.(delay of game) 7:40, M-Brennan (holding) 11:35. SSe nd PrIni AUSTIN, Texas (AP) - Senior quar- terback Randy McEachern fired three touchdown passes, including two scoring shots to Olympian Johnny "Lam" Jones yesterday, lifting eighth- ranked Texas to a 28-21 upset victory over third-ranked Arkansas in a South- west Conference football game. McEachern flipped a four-yard scoring pass to the swift Jones with 6:15 to play, and Texas safety Johnnie John- son thwarted Arkansas' comeback at- tempt, giving the Longhorns the vic- tory. Johnson intercepted a pass with 4:16 left, then batted away a desperation fourth-down pass in the Longhorns' end zone with 2:05 to go, preserving the triumph before 78,000 fans in Memorial Stadium and a regional television audience. Texas now is 5-1 and 3-0 in SWC play. The Razorbacks, preseason SWC favorites, are 4-1 and 1-1. Kenny King added one on a 15-yard run. Uwe von Schamann kicked field goals of 25 and 26 yards and kept his NCAA extra point record alive by booting four conversions to make it 103 straight. Alabama 30, Tenn. 17 KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - Tight end Tim Travis took wide pitches in for two touchdowns yesterday to lead four- th-ranked Alabama over fumble- troubled Tennessee 30-17 in a Southeastern Conference football game. Alabama's Crimson Tide used a pair of Volunteer fumbles and an intercep- tion to score three touchdowns and give Coach Bear Bryant his eighth straight victory over Tennessee. The Tide now is 3-0 in conference and 5-1 overall. Nebraska 52, Col. 14 BOULDER, Colo. (AP) - Fifth- ranked Nebraska battered Colorado's Big Eight-leading defense for 49 straight points, including two touch- downs by I-back Rick Berns, to crush the Buffaloes 52-14 yesterday. The Cornhuskers rallied from a 14-3 first-quarter deficit to pull even at half- time, then surged into the lead on Ber- ns' 10-yard scoring run early in the third quarter. Later in the period, Billy Todd kicked his third field goal of the game and quarterback Tom Sorley lof- ted a 42-yard TD pass to tight end Junior Miller for a 31-14 advantage. Nebraska boosted its season record to 6-1 and Big Eight mark to 3-0. Colorado is now 1-2 and 5-2 overall. SCORES MICHIGAN 42, Wisconsin 0 Purdue 13, Illinois 0 Michigan State 42, Indiana 14 Ohio State 31. Iowa 7 Navy 9, William & Mary 0 Maryland 39, Wake Forest 0 Notre Dame 38, Air Force 15 S Ca.oli.... ssiashini . i i I