Page 12-Sunday, September 16, 1979-The Michigan Daily Irish kicker, boots Blue (Continued from Page i1), kicking game was located all afternoon. On the other side of the ledger, the Notre Dame kicking game was superb. Senior placekicker Chuck Male conver- ted field goals of 40, 44, 22 and 39 for the victorious Irish. Who can forget similar circumstances in 1974 when Tom Klaban kicked four field goals for Ohio State in their 12-10 triumph over Michigan? NOT ONLY WAS the Michigan kicking game down but so was the Wolverine offense in the second half. After piling up 212 yards and 12 first downs in the first 30 minutes, Michigan could only manage a mere 96 in the second half and 4 first downs. In the first half, though, Michigan came out like gangbusters. After a big Rusty Lisch to Tony Huber completion Male sets field goal record- in 1 2-10 win terception near the Wolverine goal line, staving off another Irish chance. HOWEVER, MICHIGAN became conservative on offense, running sim- ple running plays through the middle of the line. In the first half, Michigan had used Dickey's excellent speed to run the option and the junior from Ohio scooted past slower Irish defenders for big gains. After three short running plays, Michigan was forced to punt and Virgil shanked a 24 yard punt. The Wolverine defense held again, but Male deposited another field'goal through the calling. On third and two at the 13, Dickey's pass for Mitchell sailed over the receiver's head. Virgil trotted onto the field and fluttered a 30 yard field . goal through the uprights. The men from South Bend tied the game in a hurry. After the ensuing series, a Boushka punt was fumbled by the hero of the Northwestern game, An- thony Carter, and recovered by the Fighting Irish at the Michigan 35 yard line. Notre Dame's workhorse running back, Vagas Ferguson, who carried the ball 35 times for 118 yards, slipped and slithered his way for one first down. But the Wolverine defense stood up to the test once more and the Irish had to set- tle for a Male 40 yard booming field.. goal. Schembechler's Wolverines struck right back. First, it was Dickey running and throwing crisply, taking his charges down to the Notre Dame 35. He completed passes to Edwards and Mit- chell during that stretch. Then, Edwar- ds took control, lugging the pigskin down to the Notre Dame 11. AFTER DICKEY snuck through for four yards, there were two-more "bad communications" between the sideline and the field for Michigan. This produced two almost consecutive delay of game peanlties assessed against Michigan: Facing a third and 15 fromt he 17, Dickey avoided a swarming Irish pass rush, cut up the middle and snaked down to theone yard line, still inches short of a first down. On fourth down, tailback Edwards was not to be denied and carried tacklers with him intot he end zone. Virgil converted and the Wolverines led, 10-3. AFTER CANNAVINO and company stopped the Fighting Irish's one play, that is Ferguson through the middle, Notre Dame punted. But on the second play after receiving the punt, Dickey fumbled and the Irish's defensive stan- dout John Hankerd pounced on the loose ball at the Michigan 39. Curtis Greer and Ron Simpkins, Michigan's All-American standouts, stopped Ferguson on the next series, History of Michigan-Notre Dame Series M ND 1887 ............... 8 1888......... ....24 1888................. 10 1898...............23 1899 ................12 1900................7 0 6 4 0 0 0 1902.................. 1908........... ... 1909 .......... ...... 1942.............. 1943.............. 1978 .............. 1979 ............... 23 12 3 32 12 28 10 0 6 11 20 35 14 12 Chuck Male setting the stage for a fourth and one. On fourth down, Lisch threaded the needle to tight end Dean Masztak and an Irish first down. But the Notre Dame drive was halted after a holding penalty and a Simpkins sack. Male then calmly loaded a 44 yard field goal, brining the Irish within four at 10-6. The third quarter was all Notre Dame. With the Goodyear blimp hovering overhead, Ferguson demon- strated to a national television audience why he is a Heisman Trophy candidate. The speedster from Richmond, Ind., who is just 530 yards shy of the all-time Irish rushing mark, ripped off gains of 20, eight, five and ten, before Can- navino came to the rescue. A halfback option pas by Jim Stone was incomplete on third down at the five and ND settled for a Male 22 yard field goal. After the kickoff, the Irish's Dave Waymer intercepted a Dickey aerial and returned the ball to the Michigan 14. On the following play, linebacker Mel Ownes made a deft one-handed'in- uprights, this one of 39 yards for a 12-10 Notre Dame lead. A couple of big Edwards runs and one by Dickey for 27 yards brought the ball to the ND 38. Some passes failed, set- ting up a fourth and five at the Notre Dame 33. Here, Schembechler could not make up his mind and called a timeout, making what many observers believed was a debatable decision. He sent Ali, Haji-Sheikh, from Arlington, Texas, to unsuccessfully try a 50-yard field goal. In the final analysis, one thing is sure-a national teleivion audience probably enjoyed the game and the an- nouncers were left with much to on which to comment. A case of the (South) Bends MICHIGAN NOTRE DAME ... sets ND record for 31 yards, the Michigan defense stif- fened and regained possession of the ball, something they would do all after- noon. FOLLOWING A couple of runs, star- ting quarterback 43.J. Dickey connec- ted with Marsh for a 22 yard gain on a great fingertip catch. Dickey, Reid and Edwards made sizable rushing gains down to the 14. Here, the Michigan of- fense stalled after some surprising play Temporary By Billy Sohn Disappointment reigns... in Schembechier's voice ESTERDAY'S 12-10 loss to Notre Dame was perhaps Bo Schem- bechler's most disappointing loss of his career. It was by far one he will remember for a long time to come. It was sim- ply a defeat which Michigan's head coach cannot accept. The overwhelming disappointment stems from a game where Schem- bechler's pride, the defense, played a phenomenal game while his offense and kicking game reached depths that even he thought not possible. "That's a great defense you saw," said Schembechler after the game, "but when you have an offense that plays that poorly and a kicking game that's that bad, I don't care how good your defense is." The end result - defeat. There are no excuses for a game like this one. Victory was continually in reach for the Wolverines. But at the last moment they fizzled when Bryan Virgil's field goal attempt from the Notre Dame 32-yard line was blocked by Dave Waymar with seven seconds on the clock. The most disheartening and haunting fact of the confrontation was how well Michigan's defense played. They held the Fighting Irish in check throughout the game. They were really up for this one and wanted to win it badly. But in the end, the defense was powerless to physically put points on the scoreboard. That task, left to the offense and kicking game, remained undone. For those not at Schembechler's post-game press conference, it's hard to convey the emotion and disappointment that this man was experiencing. He was angry and had every right to be so. "We should have won that game," he said. "We are a pretty good damn defensive team. The offense and kicking game killed us," he continued. Schembechler is right. Michigan should not have lost that ballgame. Certainly, Notre Dame did not dominate the game in such a way to deserve victory. The statistics themselves fall heavily in Michigan's favor. For instance, Michigan notched 16 first downs to Notre Dame's seven. The Wolverines' total offensive yardage was 306 in comparison to 179 for the Irish.+In passing, ND was only able to muster 43 yards while Michigan passed for 134. Only one statistic points overwhelmingly to Notre Dame. The Irish at- tempted four field goals and converted all four. Certainly, their placekicker Chuck Male deserves a heck of a lot of praise. But for Michigan, only one of the three three-point kicks attempted resulted in a score. Dominating defense Significantly, not one Notre Dame football player in Michigan Stadium yesterday managed to get past the Wolverine defense. They couldn't. No team'in the nation, not even USC, would have been successful against thjs incredible unit. Yet the Wolverines came up on the short end of the stick. Herein lies the irony of the day. Michigan decisively led the game at the end of the first half. The Irish of- fense had trouble moving against the Wolverine defense. Meanwhile, the Irish couldn't stop the Wolverines' scoring drives. But in the second half, Notre Dame became accustomed to the Wolverines' ballgame and maneuvered to stop it. In essence, Michigan let Notre Dame take control as the offense became lapse. Offensively, "Michigan faded," according to Schembechler. Pinned in their own territory, the Wolverines were not able to move the ball. "When you're backed up in your own territory you've got to knock them out of there and move it (the ball)," demanded Schembechler. Stymied offense The lack of offense in the second half for the Wolverines was only too evident. Dickey, unlike the previous two quarters was not able to rally the of- fense at all. Schembechler however waited until the last offensive series of the gane to replacae Dickey with backup QB John Wangler. Immediately, Wangler made things click as the Wolverines passed six times completing three for 28 yards and setting up the last-ditch effort by Virgil. One can only wonder why Wangler was not in there any sooner. According to Schembechler, he wanted a fresh quarterback in the ballgame. Although the logic behind his change is reasonable, the timing is not. Why wait until the very last series of the game when your backs are up to the wall to make the change? Schembechler's timing gave Wangler little chance of getting into his groove. It would have been super-human if he pulled it off. As is, Wangler did one hdlluva job under that kind of pressure. Coming off the bench, Wangler decisively pinpointed Ralph Clayton's numbers on fourth and three for seven yards giving Michigan a first down and further chances to pull off a last second score. The rest is history. In addition to not being able to penetrate the Irish by air or run in the second half, the Wolverines wrote their own tombstone as their kicking game did not materialize. "You cannot constantly not move the ball in your own territory," claimed Schembechler, "and then when you go to kick it out, the damn thing goes 20 yards," he concluded. The Wolverine kicking game, or lack of it, was a surprise. Punting is basic to the ballgame. And for a coach who stresses basics over and over, it was shocking to see Michigan falter so. It's back to basic and fundamentals therefore for the Wolverine's kicking unit. In the meantime, Schembechler must swallow this bitter pill of - defeat. First downs............ 16 Rushing (att/yds) ... 45/172 Passing (att/com/int) . 24/12/1 Passing yds............ 134 Punts (no/yds) .. ..... 7/29.7 Fumbles (no/lost). 2/2 Penalties (no/yds)... 4/28 SCORING 7 4:3/114 12/5/2 65 7/37.7 31 3/45 Michigan ....................:3 7 0 Notre Dame .................. 3 3 6 SCORING PLAYS MICHIGAN MICH-virgil 30 yard field goal ND-Male 40 yard field goal MICH-Edwards 1 yard run (Virgil kick) ND-Male 44 yard field goal ND-Male 22 yard field goal ND-Male 39 yard field goal RUSHING MICHIGAN o - 10 0-12 att Edwards..... ................... 22 Dickey r......................... 14 Reid.........................7 Wangler ..................... t Carter ....................... t NOTRE DAME Ferguson ........................ 35 Lisch ............................ 5 Sweeney..................... t Barber............... ..... Koegel .......................... 1 PASSING MICHIGAN att comp Dickey .................... 18 9 Wangler .................. 6 3 NOTRE DAME Lisch .. .................. 10' 5 Stone .....................1t 0 Courey...................1I 0 RECEIVING MICHIGAN yds 72 68 28 7 :; 118 -8 3 .-2 int 1 0 1 0 yds 46 20 30 15 2:1 30 31 4 avg 4.9 4.0 7 ;30 3.4 -1.6 3.0 3.0 -2.0 yds 106 28 65 0 0 Ip 22 15 8 23 Daily Photo CYRENA CHANG M arsh .. .. ................... Edwards..................... Mitchell................... Clayton... .....:............ Carter ........................... NOTRE DAME M arsztak .......... ............ Hunter .................... Ferguson .............. ...... no 4. 3 2 2 3 131 4 MICHIGAN COACH Bo Schembechler gives defensive co-captain Ron Simpkins specific orders during the first half of yesterday's clash with Notre Dame. Simpkins and his defensive mates were solid throughout the game but the Blue offense was blanked after the intermission as the Irish prevailed, 12-10. PURDUE, MSU NEXT FOR IRISH Devine:'My biggest thrill By GEOFF LARCOM Notre Dame Coach Dan Devine walked slowly into the visitor's pressroom at Michigan following yesterday's game, wearing a smile that probably won't come off this weekend. He looked weary, but oh so happy after his team's ex- cruciating 12-10 victory over Michigan. Before dealing with the arsenal of questions he knew awaited him, the fifth-year Irish coach picked up a piece of chalk and wrote slowly on the blackboard. For Devine, his message said it all - "WE WON!!.!" he printed in big, clear letters. Indeed. Devine had just won a game few had given him a strong chance in, and his team had won it coming from behind and away from home. It had to be a sweet, moment for the well-travelled coach. "This was the greatest thrill of my life today," said the man who brought a national championship to South Bend in 1977 and who also coached the Green Bay Packers. "This was a team that wouldn't be beat today. We wouldn't be denied." It seems Devine hit it right on the head in saying that. The Irish lagged behind Michigan in nearly every statistical category, as Michigan made 16 first downs, and the Irish only seven. Also, the Wolverines doubled the Irish's passing out- put and out-rushed Notre Dame 172 to 114, while out-gaining then! in total yards, 306 to 179. But on the top line of the score sheet, Notre Dame held the key numbers edge - to the tune of 12-10. "There's a guy now with ABC who said it first, although minutes of the season finally behind them. "When we went in at halftime with it only 10-6, we felt real good about that," Devine said. "We felt we could shut them down." And did they ever. Like their blue counterparts across the field, the Irish defense time after time came up with the big play, snuffing out any peep the suddenly-dormant Michigan offense threatened to offer. When asked what he told his troops during the half, Devine said, "I told them to give just a little more, and that they had to dig a little deeper." Cliche, perhaps, but his players must have listened, for it was a Michigan grave they dug with their opportunistic play in the second half. Each time the Irish offense gave up the ball, and it looked like here, finally, was the time when Michigan would put some points on the board, Notre Dame would infiltrate the Blue backfield and nip the drive in the bud. Middle linebacker Bob Crable picked up three tackles for losses, while defensive tackle Don Kidd nailed two Wolverines for losses totaling sixteen yards. And it was Crable who also blocked Bryan Virgil's desperation field goal with six seconds left on the clock, after John Wangler h'd directed Michigan into field goal range with a.textbook rendition of a two-minute offense. "I'm glad that we blocked that kick, rather than him (Virgil) missing it," Devine said. "I'd rather we win the game than them lose it. That would be a tough burden for the W b -