Page.10-Saturday, November 18, 1978--The Michigan Daily Big Ten showdown: Victory over Purdue a must in big home finale k i THE LINEUPS MICHIGAN OFFENSE (88){ (75). (61) (50) (67), (68) (18) x22) (33): (25) ( 7); Gene Johnson Bubba Paris Greg Bartnick Steve Nauta John Powers Jon Giesler Rodney Feaster Ralph Clayton Russell Davis Harlan Huckleby Rick Leach (234).... TE ....(88) (284).... ST ....(74) (241).... RG ....(71) (229)......C:....(63) (256).... LG ....(66) (254).... QT ....(76) (188)... WR ...(87) (210)... WB ...(41) (235).... FB ....(37) (198).... TB ....(40) (194).... QB ....( 9) DEFENSE PURDUE Tim Eubank Steve McKenzie John Lefeber Pete Quinn Dale Schwan Henry Feil Bart Burrell Mike Harris John Macon Russell Pope Mark Herrmann (46) Jerry Meter (55) Dale Keitz (77) Mike Trgovac (95) Curtis Greer (91) Tom Seabron (40) Ron Simpkins (41) Andy Cannavino (42) Gene Bell (16) Mike Jolly (28) Mark Bramen ( 4) Michael Harden (241) (260) (235) (243) (228) (255) (180) (182) (205) (186) (194) (217) (234) (248) (260) (212) (230) (215) (192) (180) (192) (186) By ERNIE DUNBAR It's the run for the roses this after- noon at Michigan Stadium, as the Wolverines must defeat conference leading Purdue in order to keep their Rose Bowl chances alive. SEVENTH-RANKED Michigan must win its final two games of the season if the tean plans on making a third con- secutive appearance out in Pasadena'. The 16th-ranked Boilermakers, 5-0-1 following a 24-24 tie last weekend at. Wisconsin, can ill afford a loss either. Should Purdue lose, they would have to beat Indiana next weekend while Michigan, 5-1, would have to lose to Kickoff at 1:00 Instead of the usual 1:30 kick- off time, Michigan will battle the Purdue Boilermakers half an hour early, at 1:00. Make sure to arrive at the stadium extra early. Ohio State and Michigan State would have to lose at home to Iowa. And the odds on all that happening are mighty slim. So realistically, the loser of today's game is out of a Rose Bowl berth. THE GAME HOLDS a special meaning for the 22 seniors listed on Michigan's home roster. It includes the entire Wolverine backfield of quarter- back Rick Leach, tailback Harlan Huckleby and fullback Russell Davis. All three will be performing before their last home crowd in their college careers and would like nothing more than to go out with a flurry and roll up a big score against Purdue. According to Bo Schembecher, it doesn'trmatter how his team defeats the Boilermakers, just as long as they comeraway with a victory. "We'll do whatever it takes to win," said Schembechler. "We don't care how we do it. If we had won some of the games the past few weeks by only seven points people would have.been disap- pointed. But we'll just be happy to win this game by one point." What undoubtedly will be a key factor to the success of both teams is the effec- tiveness of Leach, and Purdue's highly- regarded quarterback, Mark Herr- mann. The 6-5, 194-pound Herrmann holds the upper edge on Leach entering the game, having completed 129 of 227 passes for 1584 yards. That's good enough for second in the Big Ten behind MSU's Ed Smith. In comparison, Leach has tossed 52 completions in 105 attem- pts for 926 yards. BUT THE MAJOR difference- bet- ween the two quarterbacks is that Herrmann is strictly a passer and is not Comparinga the QB's Rick Leach a threat to run, whereas Leach has ammassed 476 yards in 105 attempts through nine games. "Leach is a guy who can get yardage running the ball," said Schembechler. "Herrmann may scramble a little but there are no plays designed for him to run. At what Herrmann does, he's good. At what Leach does, he does a lot. Leach can do it all." As a result, the Wolverines will be keying on Herrmann's passing ability while not overlooking 6-1 205-pound fullback John Macon or 5-11, 186-pound tailback Russell Pope. Macon leadsnthe team in rushing with 781 yards and Pope has 653. Huckleby is Michigan's leading rusher with 670 yards. Schembechler has been saying all week that he doesn't want to fall into the trap the team did against Michigan State and key solely on the pass, allowing Purdue to establish its running game. THE MAIN concern Schembechler voiced this week was the strength of the Purdue defense. The Boilermakers rank third, in total defense behind Michigan and Ohio State and are second to Michigan in rushing defense. The Wolverines are second in passing defense while Purdue ranks sixth. - "That's where they've made their greatest improvement over a year ago,' said Schembechler. "Their down people are excellent, they have the quickest outside linebacker in the con- ference in Kenna Turner. Their linebacking is solid and so is their secondary. "It's been very hard for teams to run on them so we've got our work cut out for us. WOLVERINE TALES: Offensive tackle Bubba Paris will start his second straight game. The 6-7, 270 pound freshman played the entire game against Northwestern in place of Bill Dufek. Senior Jon Giesler is the other tackle. John, Powers will replace John Arbeznik at offensive guard and will team with Greg Bartnick . :. Russell Davis is within three yards of Ed Shut- tlesworth for sixth place on the all-time rushing listd... Michigan holds a 21-8-0 edge in the Purdue series. (210)... OLB ...(92) Ruben Floyd (233)..... T ....(94) Calvin Clark (227)... MG ...(72) Ken Loushin (236)..... T .....(77) Marcus Jackson (214)... OLB ...(85) Keena Turner (223)... ILB ...(58) Kevin Motts (217)... ILB ...(42) Mark Johanson (199)... Wolf ...(20) Rock Supan (181).. WHB ..(44) Wayne Smith (197)... SHB ...(27) Rick Moss (183).... FS ....(45) Willie Harris BIG TEN BLACKJACK Career Passing Statistics Year Att Comp Int Pct. Yds. 1975 100 32 12 .320 680 1976 105 50 8 .476 973 1977 174 90 9 .517 1348 1978* 105 52 4 .495 -926 OSU, MSU pursue title TD 3 13 15 .12 By LIZ MAC The cards are coming around, the bets are high, and the final hand is ap- proaching. Things are tight at the Big Ten table as the teams enter the second from the last week of conference play. At stake is the Big Ten championship, and Michigan, Purdue, Michigan State, and Ohio State are hoping for a share in the pot. Each will be watching how everyone else plays the remaining han- ds to decide the outcome. Michigan State (5-1) travels to Evan- ston to take on Northwestern (0-9-1). The Spartans, having won handily over Minnesota 33-9 last week, have the easiest schedule remaining of the con- tenders; they meet Iowa in the final game of the season. According to house rules, however, Michigan State cannot cash in its chips at the end, and thus coach Darryl Rogers says, "All they're talking about is the Rose Bowl. We're concerned about winning the Big Ten champion- ship. Quarterback Ed Smith needs only 42 yards to become the Big Ten's all-time passing leader. With Kirk Gibson, Eugene Byrd, and Mark Brammer on the receiving end, the Spartans should clean up in the Wildcats' season finale. Indiana could be in the spoiler's seat as they take on Ohio State and Purdue in their final games. The perennial Buckeye ground game, led by senior tailback Ron Springs and junior fullback Paul Campbell, has been sup- plemented by the passing of Art Big Ten Standings Schlichter. But even with the conference leading rushing of Mark Harkrader, Hoosier coach Lee Corso admits that a win "would require an outstanding game on our part." Ohio State coach Woody Hayes, along with Rogers, will be pulling for Michigan to top the Boilermakers this weekend, or for the Hoosiers to come up with an ace-in-the-hole the following week. That, coupled with a Buckeye victory over Michigan, would put his team in a tie for first place. Should the season end with a two or three way tie for the championship, the Rose Bowl participant would be decided according to how the teams in- volved did against each other (ex- cluding Michigan State). In the more penny-ante games today, Wisconsin travels to Iowa while Min- nesota hosts Illinois. Badger quarterback Mike Kalasmiki teamed with junior tighteend Ray Syd- nor in a surprising 24-24 deadlock with Purdue last week. Minnesota tailback Marion Barber will add to his 624 yards rushing as the Golden Gophers (3-3) take on faltering Illinois (0-5-2). The Illini endured a 45-7 pounding at the hands of Ohio State last week. Career Rushing Statistics Year Att Yds. Avg. TD Long 1975 113 552 4.9 5 44 1976 114 638 6.0 10 48 1977 115' 375 3.3 7 21 1978* 105 476 4.5 12 45 Mark Herrmann Career Passing Statistics Year Att Comp Int Pct. Yds. 1977 319 175 27 .549 2453 1978* 227 129 9 .568 1584 Career Rushing Statistics TD 18 10 Year 1977 1978* Att 35 24 Yds. -263 -88 Avg. -7.5 -3'f TD 0 0 Long 9 11 AP Photo RICH LEACH WILL make 'his final appearance in Michigan Stadium today when the Wolverines host Big Ten leading Purdue. Leach has had an outstanding foul{ year career as Michigan quarterback, setting numerous school, Big Ten, and NCAA records since first taking the starting QB job in 1975 against Wisconsin. *-through nine games 1. Purdue ....... 2. MICHIGAN.. Ohio State .. Michigan St.... 5. Indiana ...... Minnesota ..... 7. Wisconsin .... 8. Iowa....... 9. Illinois...... 10. Northwestern Big Ten Overall W L T W L T 5 0 1 7 1 1 5 1 0 8 1 0 5 1 0 6 2 1 5 1 0 6 :3 0 3 3 0 4 5 0 3 3 0 4 5 0 2 3 2 4 3 2 1 5 0 1 8 0 0 5 2 1 7 2 0 7 1 0 9 1 PENN STA TE IN BEST POSITION: Bowl lineups rest on key games People come from miles around for a BELL'S GREEK PIZZA PHILADELPHIA (AP)-No. 1 ranked Penn State is going to either the Orange, Cotton or Sugar Bowls, depending on the results of today's game involving potential opponents. Despite earlier reports from unnamed sources that the Nittany Lions were considering skipping the Orange Bowl, Penn State will opt to play No. 2 Nebraska in Miami if the Cornhuskers beat Missouri today. THE BIG QUESTION, yet officially unanswered, is what do the Lions do if Nebraska loses? One thing is certain. Penn State has no intention of going to the Orange Bowl to meet a team with two defeats. Nebraska, which would still be the'Orange host, lost to Alabama in the season opener. Now, Coach Joe Paterno has to take a look at the result of the Georgia-Auburn game. If eighth-ranked Georgia wins, it makes the Bulldogs at least co-champions of the Southeastern Conference with Alabama and the automatic host in the Sugar Bowl. OKLAHOMA, NOW the country's fourth-ranked team af- ter losing to Nebraska last week, faces a stiff challenge from Oklahoma State today. The Sooners could wind up in one of the four major bowls with a triumph over their tough Big Eight rivals. Alabama could tie for the conference title a week later by also beating Auburn, but can't go to the Sugar Bowl because it was last year's host. And since it's a tie, Georgia gets the bowl nod. That is assuming Alabama defeats Auburn in its final game Nov. 25 or Auburn doesn't rise up and upset both Georgia and Alabama, which then would place Auburn in the Sugar Bowl. IN THE EVENT of a Nebraska loss and a Georgia victory, Penn State will accept a Cotton Bowl invitation to meet the apparent Southwest Conference champion, Houston, which has Rice and Texas Tech remaining to complete a possible 10-1 season. Houston is ranked sixth. Then there is another direction Penn State is prepared to go. Should Nebraska and Georgia lose, the Nittany Lionswill head for New Orleans and a New Year's day game with Coach Paul "Bear" Bryant's Alabama team, which would be the sole champion of the Southeastern Conference and get a pass to a second straight Sugar Bowl. THIS ALL ADDS to three major bowls-the Rpse features the Pac 10 and Big 10 champions-being alive for getting the nation's No. 1 team. Notre Dame, Georgia Tech, Arkansas and Louisiana State are four other teams with high bowl aspirations and could get them with victories today. Tenth-ranked Notre Dame plays No. 20 Georgia Tech in a game involving teams with seven-game winning streaks. Arkansas, ranked No. 13 in the country, hosts Southwest Con- ference colleague Texas A&M and No. 17 LSU plays Mississippi State in a Southeastern Conference game. Wa1Ia bee~ Son of Wallabee. Looking for comfort? Slip into a Wallabee. Because-of its incredibly comfortable fit, Clarks" Wallabee has be- come one of the most popu- lar shoes ever. And now for dressier occasions there's the Wallabee I. With the same pliant uppers, built-in arch support and naturally aged plantation soles as the origi- nal. So for comfort and dura- bility, remember, like father like son. . wr---- w"ft Cane Bell's House Special, please! tir -. ---. A Yl ! 1 Cr Packard and State Ann Arbor 995-0232 Fast, FREE Delivery from 4:30 p. m. 4 f"M E IT AA DQE . Union Programming presents a: PROHI BITION PARTY Sat., Nov. 18 9 pm $1.00 Union Ballroom -with Live Band Old-Time Movies Speakeasy (with beer!) rj