Page 10-Friday, September 21, 1979-The Michigan Daily Gridde. P*icks, These are the voyages of the Starship Gridde Picks. Its lifelong mission: to pick the perfect card, to go 20-0 on picking college football game winners on any Saturday in the Fall. To get these picks down to 420 Maynard Street by midnight on Friday and then to wait, *wait and watch as the interplanetary- 'mellowed-out-galactic-gridiron-battles unfold and determine the fate of every ,gridde picker in the cosmos. Then, to boldly gravitate to Pizza Bob's and spgce out on a delicious one-item pizza, the prize for being the all-knowing. May tih1e Farce be with you. 1. Kansas at MICHIGAN (p 2. Miami at Michigan St. 3. Notre Dame at Purdue 4. Washington St. at Ohio St 5. Minnesota at Southern Ca 6. UCLA at Wisconsin 7. Nebraska at Iowa 8. Kentucky at Indiana 9. Illinois at Air Force 10. Syracuse at Northwester 11. San Jose St. at California 12. Texas A&M at Penn St. 13. Brown at Yale 14. East Carolina at Wake F 15. Texas Tech at Arizona 16. Oklahoma St. at Arkansa 17. Missouri at Mississippi 18. Shippensburg at Kutztow 19. Slippery Rock at Central 20. Hurricane Frederic at DAILY LIBELS ick score) al RUNNING ATTACK SLUGGISH Jayhawks crow about aerial game By MARK BOROWSKI This Saturday brings together .n another clash between two strong and mighty football conferences. It's the battle between the Big Eight and the Big Ten. Who will the Big Eight dare to orest send up against Bo's boys who don the Maize and Blue? s Well, it could be powerhouses Oklahoma or Nebraska ... or Kansas. n St. Kansas, who are they? Yes, they are Conn. the Big Eight representative who will invade Michigan Stadium for the first time ever. What are their qualifications as a football team? Well, picture North- western in the Big Ten and you've got it. The doormats, the pushovers, the team that the opposing coach takes his first string out after the first half and gives them a rest until the following week. ' But watch-out, Wolverine fans. We all remember the easy ones that past Michigan squads were supposed to win. Stanford and Baylor in '75 (19-19 and 14- 14 respectively), Purdue in '76 (a 16-14 upset loss), and Minnesota in '77 (16-0 upset lass). And believe it with the passing offense and depth on defense that Jayhawk coach Don Fambrough has built because they are capable of upsets, like last year's 28-24 edging of a devastating UCLA team. Rifle-armed sophomore Kevin Clin- ton will be Fambrough's man in com- mand at the quarterback position. Last week in Kansas' 24-0 season opening loss to Pittsburgh he started his first game ever as a Jayhawk and com- pleted 17 of 30 passes for 163 yards. establish a good running game. I was very pleased with our protection. They only got to me twice and Pitt has a very good defensive front." And when Clinton talks about needing a running game, he is very far from making an understatement. Against the I I 'The defense is still probably the most pleasing area we're running two units which we don't really. distinguish between. One's the 'Hawk' unit and one's the 'Hit' unit, and they're about equal in ability. " -Kansas coach Don Fam brough 11111 fl 195), are out of the lineup with pulled hamstring muslees. "We're real fortunate to have several good backups at wide receiver. At the same time, we need everyone healthy, for this one. Russ and David would give our passing attack an additional boost," explained Fambrough. Clinton's prime target against Michigan will probably be sophomore wide receiver Kevin Murphy. Last week Murphy grabbed five passes and scampered for 64 yards to lead his team. Senior wide receiver Jimmy Lit- tle, and senior tight end Lloyd Sobek will be two other targets Clinton will have his eye on when he sets up to pass. Little grabbed five passes for 52 yards last week and Sobek caught two for 44 yards. The Jayhawk defense is no group of patsies. They picked off four Panther passes and caused two fumbles in their first outing and Fambrough had no complaints. "The defense is still probably the most pleasing area. We feel it's one area where we've got some depth," he said. "In fact, we're running two units which we don't really distinguish between. We don't call them first team and second team. One's the 'Hawk' unit and one's the 'Hit' unit, and they're about equal in ability." So forget their 0-7 conference record last year, their 24-0 loss to Pitt last weekend, and remember how they upended the powerful UCLA Bruins. In this Big Eight-Big Ten match up anything can happen and the, Wolverines, might just have to add Kansas in '79 to their list of the games they should have won. . : . Don Fambrough Although Clinton was pleased with his passing attack, he saw other bright and dull spots in the offensive unit. "We can't pass every down. We must .,,. .U wie *..4 * Litres of Margaritas * Pitchers of beer * Not-Nachos 3-7 P.M. -and- Live Music:* STEVE NEWHOUSE and the Bad Taste Band 611 Church One block south of South U. Panthers last week Kansas attempted 22 running plays and they lost 17 more yards than they gained. "I was disap- pointed with our performance (against Pittsburgh) only because of the mistakes. Offensively, we have to play better as a unit," said the Kansas men- tor Fambrough. But when Clinton drops back in the' pocket to let the pigskin fly, he has plen- ty of talented receivers to choose as his target, regardless of the fact that his two number one wide receivers, David Verser (6-1, 195) and Russ Bastin (6-2, ydo 37V Maynara aT. ;,FA*A II I 1I I.* I I I I ~1 Economical LCD scientific calculator with Constant MemoryT feature. From Texas Instruments. For students and professionals on the move. 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