Page 8-Sunday, January 21, 1979-The Michigan Daily Super Sunday: Dallas' hopes for upset depend on putting squeeze on Bradshaw In the second part :ofe his, Super Bowl prerieu . Daily sporswriter Scott M. Lewis assesses the strengths and reaknesses of Dallas and Pittsburgh. the two opposing teams. By SCOTT M. LEWIS The oddsmgkers in Las Vegas pick Pittsburgh. Nparly all the NFL head coaches pick Pittsburgh. Who do I pick? Pittsburgh. Here's why: PITTSBURGH OFFENSIVE BACK- FIELD vs. DALLAS LINEBACKERS: Franco Harris, finishing his seventh year, has been the Steelers' bread-and- butter back all season and will be coun- ted upon heavily to approach his per- formance in Super Bowl IX, when he rambled for 158 yards against Min- nesota. Running mate Rocky Bleier is the perfect complement to Harris. A good blocker, Bleier's biggest job will be to pick up Thomas Henderson on the blitz. Henderson has amazing (9.6) speed for a linebacker and should be able to shake off Bleier's blocks. Pittsburgh may try running Harris to the right side behind Sam Davis and Jon Kolb. D.D. Lewis holds the weak side linebacking slot for Dallas and at age 33 has lost a few steps. SLIGHT EDGE - Pittsburgh. PITTSBURGH RECEIVERS vs. DALLAS SECONDARY:. Lynn Swann and Jon Stallworth riddled opposing secondaries for a combined 102 catches for 1,678 yards. Swann was MVP of Super Bowl X against Dallas and usually will be double-teamed by Ben- nie Barnes and one of the linebackers. Barnes, slowed this season by various injuries, and cornerman Aaron Kule are sometimes victimized by the bomb, and Bradshaw likes to throw long, especially to Swann. Safeties Charlie Waters and Harris will have to help out, leaving tight end Randy Grossman guarded by a linebacker. Grossman can beat most linebackers - unless that linebacker is as fast as Thomas Henderson. EDGE - Pittsburgh. DALLAS OFFENSIVE BACKFIELD vs. PITTSBURGH LINEBACKERS: Robert Newhouse, sidelined for much of the season with a broken bone in his leg, will play. That means more inside running from the Cowboys, who use the fireplug Newhouse and scrappy Scott Laidlaw on a rotating basis. Jack Lam- bert will be put to, task, but the bruising middle linebacker should respond in typical Lambert fashion - slamming the door. Tony Dorsett gives Dallas a distinct breakaway threat, but Jack Ham and Lambert pursue well and will close off the outside unless the Cowboy offensive line moves off the ball in a hurry. Look for a lot of quick openers to Dor- sett, especially early in the game to keep Pittsburgh honest. Screen passes are also a Landry favorite, but they will be used cautiously; Pittsburgh's agile linebackers cover them as well as' anyone. SLIGHT EDGE - Pittsburgh. DALLAS RECEIVERS vs. PIT- TSBURGH SECONDARY: Tony Hill, not Drew Pearson, will be the receiver to bear watching. He's up against Ron Johnson, the rookie cornerback from Eastern -Michigan who has improved steadily but still must be considered the most vulnerable member of Pit- tsburgh's secondary. The Steelers field an intimidating quartet of defensive backs. Mike Wagner and Donnie Shell, both ds per punt, is apt to run out of punt formation and scramble or pass for a first down. Gerela's future status with the Steelers is shaky. His distance on kickoffs is poor, and his field goal ac- curacy declines after 30 yards. EDGE - Dallas. QUARTERBACKS: Terry Bradshaw has silenced the critics, perhaps forever. Bestowed with the best receiving tandem in the game and a supportive offensive line, Bradshaw No, the picture at right is not a mutation. It's Super Bowl coaches Chuck Noll (left) and Tom Landry (right) contem- plating today's super game bet- ween Pittsburgh and Dallas. Only thing is, when the game gets un- der way today, the two coaches will be facing each other on op- posite sides of the field. In this case, two heads are probably bet- ter than one. Daily, he remarked that the Steeler quarterback is just now arriving at peak performance. "Terry has been the best quarterback all year," said Malavesi. "Roger,, though, runs hot and cold. Sometimes he's just brilliant, and other times he's very erratic." EDGE - Pit- tsburgh. DALLAS OFFENSIVE LINE vs. PITTSBURGH DEFENSIVE LINE: The Cowboys' interior' line has made great strides since Game 1, but it is susceptible to an aggressive, blitzing defense like Pittsburgh's. Despite Dallas' shotgun formation, Atlanta repeatedly poured its safetymen through the Cowboys' line and sacked Staubach and White a total of eight times. Key matchups include L. C. Green- wood against Rayfield Wright on the right side and Herbert Scott against Joe Greene in the middle. EDGE - Pit- tsburgh. PITTSBURGH OFFENSIVE LINE vs. DALLAS DEFENSIVE LINE: Dallas gave up fewer points (205) than all but one team - Pittsburgh. The Cowboys' upset hopes rest or their defensive line harassing Brad- shaw. Given adequate protection. Bradshaw can dismantle the Dallas secondary. The Cowboys know that their flex defense must put the heat or the Steelers' offensive unit, and they have the right people to do it. Steeler guards Kolb and Davis will bE hard-pressed to harness Randy Whit( and Jethro Pugh, while end Harvey Martin will square off against Larry Brown. SLIGHT EDGE-Dallas. The outcome of today's contest may boil down to one factor - whether the Steelers can contain Dallas' pass rush. If they can, Pittsburgh should deal the Cowboys another Super Bowl defeat. FINAL SCORE: Pittsburgh 17, Dallas 12. ferocious tacklers, are strongest again- st the run. Mel Blount will attempt to keep pace with the lithe Pearson, whose reception total dipped this season. Tight end Billy Joe Depree will be closely checked by Ham, so Dallas might use Jackie Smith in a double tight end formation. SLIGHT EDGE - Dallas. SPECIALISTS: Punter-quarterback Danny White is Dallas' biggest asset on the special teams, while placekicker Roy Gerela is a liability for the Steelers. White, who averaged 40.5 yar- has emerged this season as the NFL's most productive quarterback (25 regular season touchdown passes). Roger Staubach, on the other hand, hasn't played well since he bruised his hand December 10 against Philadelphia. Rams' coach Ray Malavesi, whose; team topped both Pittsburgh and Dallas in the regular season, thinks Bradshaw will be the difference tomorrow. In an interview with the DALLAS LINEBACKER Thomas "Hollywood" Henderson, who has created waves of amusement with his outlandish commentary this week, frolics in the Miami surf prior to today's Super Bowl game with Pittsburgh. The game will be televised locally on Channel 4 with kickoff at 4 p.m. Cottage INN' (good only with this coupon) I -I Carry-Out and FREE Delivery FREE-2 LARGE PEPSIS With any medium or large pizza I GOOD MON. THRU THURS. 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' Connelloni, Manicotti, Combination' '546 PACKARD at HILL-665-6005 I MONDAY-SATURDAY 4-2 am SUNDAY 4-1am It L.. --- -m ---..... --n um - -u - --m --- - -m -m --a -mam -u -n 1 THE RECORDS PITTSBURGH DALLAS 28 21 28 15 28 31 34 17 27 20 7 7 24 13 35 21 *33 *34 Buffalo Seattle Cincinnati Cleveland NY Jets Atlanta Cleveland Houston Kansas City New Orleans Los Angeles Cincinnati San Francisco Houston Baltimore Denver Denver Houston 17 10 3 9 17 7 9 24 24 14 10 6 7 3 13 17 10 5 38 34 14' 21 5 24 24 14 10. 16 42 27 37 17 31 30 *27 *28 Baltimore NY Giants Los Angeles St. Louis Washington NY Giants St. Louis Philadelphia Minnesota Miami Green-Bay New Orleans Washington New England Philadelphia NY Jets Atlanta Los Angeles 0 24 27 12 9 3 21 7 21 23 14 7 10 10 13 20 0 It's QB or nothing or Leach in NFL By United Press International BOSTON-Riclk Leach, who re-wrote the Michigan and Big Ten record books, said yesterday he will only play professional football if he can con- tinue as a quarterback. "I've been a quarterback allmy life. That's the only position I know and it's the only positon I'd play in the pros. There's no way I'd want to play defensive back," the 6-foot-1, 190 pounder said. Leach.was in Boston to receive the 33rd annual Swede Nelson Award for sportsmanship. Leach said he still hadn't decided whether he could play pro football or baseball., An outstanding center fielder on the Wolverines baseball team, Leach twice has been drafted by the Philadelphia Phillies. "I'll play anywhere they want me to in baseball," said Leach, who led the Big Ten in batting last year with a .473 mark. Leach said he had received questionnaires from all NFL teams and had been approached by the Montreal Alouettes of the Canadian Football League at the recent Hula Bowl game in Hawaii. "They were interested in me. But right now, I've got no preference. I'll wait until both drafts are finished. Hopefully I'll go high in both," he said. The pro football draft is in May and the baseball draft a month later. Leach, who holds 10 Michigan and three Big Ten offensive records, said he was saddened by the recent events resulting in the dismissal of Ohio State coach Woody Hayes. Hayes was fired last month after punching a player in the Gator Bowl game. "The whole thing is kind of a shame. Woody meant a lot to college foot- ball. It's too bad because people will remember that one incident and forget about all the good things he's done. It was probably just the result of a buildup of everything around him," he said. The Nelson Sportsmanship Award is presented to a college football senior by the Gridiron Club of Boston. It is named after former Harvard player and coach Nils V. "Swede" Nelson. Previous winners include Doak Walker of SMU, Floyd Little of Syracuse, Brian Dowling of Yale, Steve Smear of Penn State, and Otis Ar- mstrong of Purdue. rush janQ 21 0 5 *denotes playoff game FIGHTING SIOUX SCALP BLUE, 5-1: Losing streak continues for icers - - 161 7 washtenaw By BRIAN MILLER Special to The Daily GRAND FORKS, N.D. - If nothing else, the Michigan Wolverines are a consistent hockey team this year. The icers have been hurt by injuries, inex- perience and an inability to score all season long. Those problems cropped up once again as North Dakota skated to a 5-1 victory over Michigan here Friday night. A sellout crowd of 5,850 watched the Wolverines completely dominate the first period and a half as Michigan out- skated, outhit and outhustled the Sioux all the way. However, North Dakota did score first when sophomore left winger Doug Smail banked a shot into the Michigan net off of Blue defenseman Brian Lundberg's skate seven minutes into the game. But after that, Michigan shut off the Sioux attack with Wolverine goalie Bob Sutton playing his finest hockey of the year. Sutton made incredible saves again and again, at times even bringing the North Dakota fans to their feet. Michigan finally tied the game at 15:13 of the opening period when defen- seman Tim Manning slid a screen shot past Sioux goalie Mel Donnelly during a Wolverine power play. The first period ended 1-1 in goals but 10-8 in favor of North Dakota in penalties. In fact, the Sioux were given 109 minutes in penalties to serve com- pared with Michigan's 100 minutes. Most of the penalty time came from game disqualifications handed out to Michigan's Mike Coffman and Dave Richter and North Dakota's Brad Cox a month for 2 or 3 hours a week of your spare time. donate plasma You may save a life! It's easy and relaxing. Be a twice-a-week regular. and Howard Walker. All four players were ejected for fighting. The Wolverines continued to play well at the start of the second period, but halfway through it, the bottom fell out for the Blue. First, Michigan lost its leading scorer Murray Eaves to a knee injury, making him the fourth key.Wolverine player to be sidelined this year (Terry Cullen, Dan Lerg and Dave Richter being the others. Cullen is the only player currently out of action.) Next, the Wolverines were forced to kill off penalties the whole second period. Frequently a man short, and minus the ejected players, the young Wolverines soon ran out of gas. North Dakota, sensing the kill, took advantage of the situation by scoring the tie-breaking goal midway through the period and another just two minutes later. After that, the Sioux were never headed. The final score of 5-1 was not an in- dication of how closely the game was played. "We played a great first period'," said Michigan Coach Dan Farrell, "and a brilliant second period, despite the penalties. We just couldn't keep killing them off like we did in the first period." And despite his team's improved play throughout the game, Farrell couldn't help but speculate what might have happened if he had a healthy and com- plete team to work with. "Those game disqualifications forced us to break up our lines," said Farrell. "Our players were very tired. Take Lerg, for instan- ce, he was stopped on two breakaways (he just couldn't skate). "If Donnelly doesn't make the saves," he said, "we're up 3-1 instead of tied 1-1. We're the lowest scoring team in the league, and when we didn't get those goals, well, that was the ballgame." BULLETIN Michigan's hockey team trailed North Dakota, 5-3, at the end of one period last night. For the full story, see Tuesday's Daily. Important U Of M Ski Club Meeting Wednesday, Jan. 24-7:30 Michigan Union Assembly Hall 7skiT EIKIDO DEMONSTRATION