Page 12-Sunday, October 21, 1979-The Michigan Daily Michigan maintains Illinois hex with late surge (Continued from Page 1 WolveNines ground their way through the stingy Illini defense. Stanley Ed- wards punched out runs of five and eight yards before the Wolverines were faced with a critical third and six situation at the Illinois 19-yard line. An- thony Carter then executed the year's first successful double-reverse and scampered to the Illini nine. After Woolfolk powered his way to the three on two successive runs, quarter- back B. J. Dickey plunged just short of " the goal line on third down. On fourth down, Dickey, now firmly entrenched as, Michigan's number one quarter-. back, made a great fake to fullback Lawrence Reid and then pitched out to Woolfolk who dashed untouched into the Illini end zone. The Wolverine surge was not yet complete. On the next series of downs, senior Dale Keitz sacked McAvoy for a six-yard loss and Illinois punter Chris Sigourney was forced to kick into the. strong wind. He could only muster a 21- yarder, which put Michigan in great field position at the Illini 37. The Wolverines proceeded to follow the old dust maxim and smashed their way through the Illinois defense. Facing a third and five at the 20, cagy Schembechler startled everyone and especially his former assistant, Moeller, by calling a pass over the mid-. dle to Carter. On the play, Dickey, faked left and rolled right a few yards. At precisely the right time, he hurled the ball in the direction of a slanting Carter, and the freshman gathered the ball in and out- kicked his defender into the end zone. Michigan continued to pile up more dust, and nibble at more yards from the stiff Illinois defense. First, it was Woolfolk, who alternates with Edwards at tailback, then Roosevelt Smith and once more, Woolfolk. Finally, this drive stalled, or seemingly stalled, when Dickey missed a wide open Smith on the flat on third and four at the 30. This set the stage for fourth down and instead of calling on Bryan Virgil, who missed two first half field goals mainly due to the winds, running the team's total to two for 15, Schembechler went for the first down. On fourth down the Wolverines ran a power right where they just completely toppled every Illinois defender. Woolfolk was the ball carrier and he danced around a group of blockers before waltzing untouched into the end zone. The rout was on and the defense wasn't quite done yet with it's party. After McAvoy passed Illinois into Michigantterritory, Simpkins rocked the Illini quarterback for an eight-yard loss, then dropped fullback Mike Mur- phy four more yards behind the line before Wolverine lineman Chris God- frey got into the act, tacking on a 17- yard loss. Greer wanted some of the fun, too, so as Sigourney went to punt, Greer blew in and blocked it, handing Michigah the ball at the Fighting Illini 19. Reserve quarterback John Wangler replaced Dickey and connected with Woolfolk and substitute tight end Norm Betts for gains of seven and eight ards to bring the pigskin to the Illinois four. Then Bo called on his speedster from the east, Woolfolk, and again he dove over from the one for six more points. On the extra point, the high snap went through Dickey's hands and no kick was attempted. Against the Wolverines' second unit, McAvoy, playing as a result of injuries to Rich Weiss and Lawrence Mc- Cullough, led the Illini to a touchdown, finishing off with a ten-yard screen pass to Murphy. The big gainer was Mike Holmes' 30-yard run. Not much has been said about the fir- st half because there is not much to say. Michigan out-gained Illinois 122 to 88 and had several opportunities to score. But two Virgil field goals were missed and the offense just couldn't move the ball against Illinois. Thus, it became a punting contest. Bo is basically happy because, "Anytime you win on the road, even if it's 3-2, it's a great win," he said. A win it was, but not before many clouds of dust, and even more gusts of wind had blown. hI'vf., I-il a -~ t 991' lt~ :/l~r. "u" u T +m ra In-Sahn-ity_ } By Billy Sohn Nature plays havoc... ... Blue weathers storm CHAMPAIGN _, , TWO TO two and a half hour drive southeast of Chicago on the flat Illinois A plains lies Champaign, home of the Fighting Illini. But for all intensive purposes, yesterday's Big Ten matchup between Illinois and Michigan might just as well have been played on the Lake Michigan shore, the water- front of the Windy City. Heavy cloud cover, a temperature of 77 degrees F. and winds coming from the north gusting up to. 35 miles per hour, persisted throughout the 27-7 Wolverine victory. This combination of elements is hardly the type one would expect to encounter in late October. "It was definitely a wind game," commented a satisfied Michigan head coach Bo Schembechler after the game. "It was the toughest wind I've played in. It was a wind tunnel out there," concluded the Wolverine mentor in the victprs' locker room The wind factor was critical in the outcome of the game. It added an ex- .tra dimension that Michigan simply could not plan for in practice. Accor- dingly, Schembechler told his players at halftime with both teams scoreless, that Michigan, "was going to play this wind to the hilt." Although Illinois was the prime opponent, Michigan's victory over mother Nature meant the Wolvevines successfully challenged the unusual conditions.' "It was critical," Schembechler remarked. "I'm not so sure that having the wind behind you was any help. It was hard throwing with or against it," added the coach. Three times Michigan had great field position as Illini punter Chris Sigourney just could not meet the opposing force as the gusts blew in his face. In the first quarter on Illinois' second series, Sigourney half-punted from the Illinois 24-yard line to Michigan's speedster Anthony Carter. Carter called a fair catch on the 25-yard punt at the Illini 49-yard line. On his team's next series of possessions, Sigourney found himself in an even tougher position punting only 11 yards to Mike Jolly from the Illini 37-yard line to the Illini 48. Neither of those two field possessions resulted in points for the Wolverines as Michigan was contained by Illinois. But in the third quarter, the Illini punter's weak 24-yard boot downed on the Illinois 37-yard line resulted in Michigan's second score with quarterback B.J. Dickey connec- ting to Anthony Carter for a 20 yard touchdown slant-in pass. However, kicking was not the only part of the game hampered by the wind. Passing was a definite problem for both teams, no matter which way they were heading. p. "We didn't throw much because of the wind," said Dickey, "but when we' did we wanted to keep it short.' ' The wind consequently limited Michigan's passing game. The Wolverines only recorded a net passing yardage of 69 yards, completing six of 11 passes. Similarly, the Illini didn't fare much better. QB Tim McAvoy connected on 16 out of 26 passes for only 114 yards. But in rushing, Michigan ran the ball 61 times for 228 net yards compared to Illinois' 37 times for 58 net yards. In spite of Michigan's rushing dominance over the Illini, the Wolverines turned in a relatively weak performance in the offensive department, only 297 yards. Up until this game, Michian's offense had been averaging 428 yar- ds per ga me. Credit the Illini defense. They did a helluva job in bottling up the Wolverine attack early on. For instance, Michigan could only muster a pitiful halftime net yardage of 122., "The score doesn't indicate it, but there's no question that that was our best defensive effort," said dejected Illini head coach Gary Moeller after the 'game.. But as has happened very often this season for Michigan, it was the Wolverine defense that eme up with the clutch play creating the necessary momentum for victory.' The Wolverines forged ahead to put 27 points on the scoreboard in the second half after Jolly made a key interception in the opening moments of the third quarter. The 6-3 -, 185 senior picked off a McAvoy pass intended for Illini tightend Lee Boeke. Oddly enough, Jolly attributed the interception to, the wind. "I was out there covering my man," Jolly said. "McAvoy threw it right t on the money, but the wind took it outside a little bit, Our defense needed to get some turnovers and it's fortuante that came our way," he concluded. Strange how your toughest opponent can sometimes be your path suc- cess when you least expect it. In the Wolverines' case, the wind that so stymied their aerial attack eventually led to victory. NCAA ROUNDUP: Boilermakers seal Spartan fate EAST LANSING - Cornerback Wayne Smith picked off an interception for a 42-yard touchdown dash and reserve tailback Jimmy Smith dived over for a second score yesterday as Purdue defeated Michigan State, 14-7, in a Big Ten football struggle. Neither team showed much spark in the tedious battle, which generated boos from a capacity homecoming crowd by halftime. Michigan State averted its first shutout since 1975 only when tailback Steve Smith plunged over from the one with 34 seconds left in the game.: IN FACT, the game's highlight was Purdue quarterback Mark Herrmann setting a career Big Ten pass com- pletion record. His 419th completion broke the record set by Michigan State's Eddie Smith last year. The victory kept Purdue just a game off the Big Ten lead and in the running for a post-season bowl bid. The Boiler- makers are 3-1 in the conference and 5- 2 overall, winning their first on the road this year. It was the fourth straight loss fore Michigan State, after it started the season with three victories. The Spar- tans are now 1-3 in the Big Ten. (Ohio Stoic 59, WiSeOrlSIID 0 COLUMBUS - Art Schlichter figured in four touchdowns yesterday to lead undefeated and sixth-ranked Ohio State to a 59-0 romp over Wisconsin, the SCORES NCAA Michigan 27. Illinois 7 Purdue 14. Michigan State 7 Ohio State S9, Wisconsin 0 Minnesota 24. Iowa 7 Indiana 30. Northwestern 0 Southern Cala2,. Notre Dame 23 Arkansas 17. Texas 14 "Missouri3:3, 'olorado 7 :astern Michigan It, Kent State 1(i Auburn :3.Georgia Tech 34 Dartmouth 10. Harvard 7 Wake Forest 25, Maryland 7 N. (a rolina 35, N. Carolina St. 2t Alabama 27, Tennessee 37 Pittsburgh 26. Washington 14 (ra mbling 25. Jackson .jt.1:3 Oklahoma 38. Kansas St.6 Brigham Young 57. Wyoming 14 Navy !4.Virginia 10 Texas Tech 30, Rice 7 Nebrasks 36. Oklahoma St. 0 Central Michigan :t.BalSt. 30 Georgia it,. Vanderbilt I0 S. 'arolina 2l. Mississippi ti Clemson 2R. Duke iO W. Virginia 27. Tulane 17 Penn St. 35, Syracuse7 Baylor 5S. Army ii0 Toledo 23, Ohio V.13i Philadelphia 7. Detroit 3 New York (1)6. Itarttord I Boston 5,. Los Angeles 4 Pittsburgh 5, Washington 1 N BA Washington 117. Detroit 106 Philadelphia 136, New York lil Badgers' worst defeat ever, in a Big Ten Conference college football game. The worst setbacks previously for Wisconsin were 56-0 defeats by Ohio State in 1975 and Michigan two years ago. TIlE VICTORY was the Buckeyes' seventh overall and fourth in the con- ference, as they beat the Badgers for the 20th straight time. Wisconsin, 2-5 overall and 1-3 in the league, never has won in 57-year-old Ohio Stadium. The margin of victory was Ohio State's largest in 72 games, dating back to a 60-0 whipping of Northwestern in mid-1973. Ohio State opened with a pair of 14- point quarters and had settled the out- come by halftime. The Buckeyes ran their margin to 38-0 in the third quarter before substitutes took over. Schlichter, the Big Ten's total offense leader, played less than three quarters and totaled 162 yards. The sophomore quarterback completed 11 of 17 passes for 150 yards. tijflfCOt (I 24. ,li 7! IOWA CITY - Quarterback Mark Carlson connected with Elmer Bailey on 60- and 57-yard passes to pace Min- nesota to a 24-7 victory over Iowa in Big Ten football Saturday. . Tailback Marion Barber got the Gophers' other TD on a one-yard run with 5:56 left in the first quarter as Minnesota boosted its mark to 4-3 overall and 3-2 in the Big Ten. Iowa fell to 3-4 and 2-2 in the league. PAUL ROGIND kicked a 24-yard field goal on Minnesota's first possession to complete the Gopher scoring and spoil the Hawkeyes' homecoming. Tailback Dennis Mosley, the Big Ten's leading rusher, scored Iowa's only touchdown on a 19-yard run in the second quarter. Minnesota rolled up 348 yards total offense, including 230 in the air. Iowa totaled 334, but suffered with four fum- bles and an interception. The Gophers converted the fumble into a field goal and the interception into a touchdown. hId(1 1r(1 30, ii'esl'rn 0 BLOOMINGTON - Junior Mike Harkrader rushed for 146 yards and scored twice yesterday as Indiana defeated Northwestern 30-0 in Big Ten college football. Junior quarterback Tim Clifford completed 16 of 25 passes for 181' yards as the Hoosiers moved to 5-2 overall and 3-1 in conference play. NORTHWESTERN, 1-6 and 0-5, spent most of the afternoon in its own territory as Indianas defense stopped the visitors' running game. The Wildcats' only serious scoring threat ended at the Indiana five early in the fourth quarter'as a fourth-down pass fell incomplete in the end zone. The Hoosiers marched 79 yards in 13 plays to s ore on the first play of the second quarter with Harkrader running in'from the four. Kevin Kellogg, who had missed an extra point attempt earlier, booted a 46- yard field goal on the final play of the half, giving Indiana a 9-0 halftime ad- vantage. USC 42, Not re Dame 23 SOUTH BEND-Al-Ameican Char- les White rushed for a career-high 261 yards yesterday and decided one of college football's greatest individual ground-gaining duals with four short second-half touchdown runs that sparked fourth-ranked Southern California to a wild 42-23 victory over Notre Dame and record-setting Vagas Ferguson. White surged past Terry Miller of Oklahoma State, Ted Brown of North Carolina State and Ed Marinaro of Cor- nell into third place on the all-time rushing charts with 4,796 yards. THE 185-POUND senior tailback, who trails second-place Archie Griffin of Ohio State by 381 yards, scored two touchdowns in the second quarter and put the Trojans out of reach on a pair of 1-yard plunges in the final period. White's third touchdown capped a furious 7/-minute stretch, in which the Trojans outscored Notre Dame 21-3, as the two long-time intersectional powers combined for more than a combined 1,000 offensive yards. White's heroics overshadowed a 185- yard performance by Ferguson, who became Notre Dame's career rushing leader with a total of 2,847 yards. Ferguson gained all his yardage in the first three periods and scored Notre Dame's first touchdownson runs of 1 yard and 21 yards. Alabam 27, Tetiauese (>)1 7 BIRMINGHAM, Ala.-Major Ogilvie raced for two third-period touchdowns as top-ranked Alabama, stymied early by four lost fumbles, overcame a 17-0 deficit and defeated No. 18 Tennessee 27-17 yesterday in a Southeastern Con- ference football game. Ogilvie's first touchdown, a 1-yard plunge with 9:40 left in the third quar- ter, came after Ricky Tucker intercep- ted a Jimmy Streater pass at the Ten- nessee 30. Ogilvie had raced 16 yards on the play before his touchdown that cut Tennessee's lead to 17-14. THE CRIMSON TIDE came right back with a 70-yard drive that required 14 plays and 7'/ minutes to take the lead with only five seconds left in the quarter on a 6-yard run by Ogilvie, who rushed for more than 100 yards on the hot, muggy afternoon. The Tide put the game on ice with an 80-yard march early in the fourth quar- ter, which ended on Don Jacobs' 13- yard keeper with just over six minutes to play. Ar roto TOM GIBBONS (34) of Notre Dame lowers the boom on USC's Charles White. White ran all over Notre Dame for a career high of 261 yards as he led the Trojans to a 42-23 victory yesterday in South Bend. I SWEEPS BGU Michigan destroys Falcons, Big Ten Standings Conference All 7-2 By MARK BOROWSKI Bruno Baseotto dismissed any in- ferences about being a freshman fluke last night as he figured in three of seven Blue goals as the Michigan hockey team shot down the Bowling Green TFalcoms 7-2. This was the eleventh con- 'secutive win for the Wolverines in as many tries against the Falcons. -_ The night before in Bowling Green, 'Baseotto scored the first hat trick of the season for Michigan Coach Dan Farrell ard also picked up three assists. And last night he continued on his scoring rampage, scoring what turned out to be the winning goal. It was not a par- ticuiarly difficult score, but one he finessed over the Falcons' sprawling 'goaltender Wally Charko. The winner took place a little more than three minutes into the second period while Michigan had a one-man players from in front of Fricker. The Blue dekers wasted no time in putting their firepower to work. Freshman left wing Joe Milburn picked up a loose puck at center ice only 24 seconds into the game, and dashed in all alone on Charko. He then rifled a low slapshot from the top of the face-off cir- cle which cleanly beat the Falcon net- minder onhis glove side. A little under four minutes later, sophomore Murray Eaves put his can- non to work and slammed a nifty Baseotto pass home to put the Wolverines up 2-0. Fricker consistently turned away the Falcon attempts to put one in the net until the 11:53 mark of the first period. Bowling Green senior Yves Pelland knocked in a rebound that bounced out in front of the net off the pads of Fricker. BASEOTTO THEN put the Blue ahead with his goal, but the Falcons were not to be grounded this early. While Don McLaughlin sat in the penalty box for interfernce his team- mate Andy'Crowther flew in on an un- protected Fricker and Slapped it by the netminder before he could flex a muscle. That brought them withon one goal of Michigan. The third period rolled around and that's when the roofed caved in on the michigan opponents. Freshman Brad Tippett, senior alternate captain Dan Lerg, junior Roger Bourne and senior Dave Brennan each slammed home goals to give Fricker the insurance which he didn't really need. , These four, goals were not all the doing of Michigan though as coach Jerry York's Falcons accumulated eight two minute penalties and prac- tically played the entire third period short-handed. At the other end of the arena Charko tried desperately to keep the little blck disc out of the net. At times he was sen- sational and other times he floundered still managing to stop 31 of 38 Michigan shots. His defense was constantly trying to Ohio State MICHIIGAN Indiana Purdue Minnesota Iowa Michigan St. Wisconsin Illinois Northwestern W L 4 0 4 0 3 1 3 1 3 2 2 2 1 3 1 3 0 4 0 5 T 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 W 7 6 5 5 4 3 3 2 1 i L 0 1 2 2 3 4 4 5 6 6 T 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0, First downs ............... Rush (att/yds) .......... Passing comp/att/int) Passsing yds........... Fumbles (no/lost)..:..... Penalties no/xds)........ Punts (no/avg)......... Blue' MICH ILL 0 is 6t/228 3:1/5 6/11/0 16/26/i 69 114 0/0 1/0 2/10 4/39j 9/32.3 3/41.7 'em away Murphy .... ................ McAvoy .....................: PASSING MICHIGAN a tt C c0 comp 2 -44 nt Sweeping start SCOI 1NG Il.LINOIS............. 0 0, 0 7- MICHIGAN ..............0 0 14 13-2 SCORING PLAYS MICRI-Woolfolk 1 ,yd run ( Virgil kick ) MICI.Carter20yd pass from Dickey (Virgil kick) MI'l-Woolfolk 30 yd run (Virgil run) MICII-Woolfolkt yd run (run failed) ILL-Murphy 10 ydpassfrom McAvoy (Bostrum kick) RUSHING 7 7 Hickey.........:.........9 4 0 Wangler ................. 2 2 0 ILLINOIS att comp int McAvoy ................26 16 1 RECEIVING MICHIGAN no yds Woolfolk ....................... 2 14 Carter.......................t 20 Clayton... ................ t .5 Marsh..... .....................1! 12 Betts-.........................I 8 S M 2.0 .4.4 yds 5.1 !5 vds 114 td 0 0 0 0 FIRST PERIOD Scoring: M-Milburn (unassisted) 0:24: M- McLaughlin (elbowing) 12:07: M-Todd (inter- ference)14:04.