Sunday, September 12, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine Michigan 0in out win at Evanston 1t out to lunch mort noveck 1 i I i . C f E 's t F - The sugns . ... look good EVANSTON B Schembechler knows the rules. It's not how you play the game, it's who wins.' Michigan beat Northwestern yesterday in the Big Ten opener, but it was not a polished performance. Michigan will play better football in other games: They'll haye to in order to keep winning, but it is Northwestern, not Michigan, that is sad- dled with an opening day loss. And that's what it's all about. Bo put it best when he commented later, "It was no master- piece, but it was effective." The Wolverines made mistakes. They were penalized for 87 yards and penalties are caused by mistakes. Quarterback Kevin Casey was dumped twice, and getting tackled for a loss isn't in any play book in the country. Sophomore Punter Barry Dotzaur's first two punts were short, and left the Wildcats in good field position. But Michigan didn't let the mistakes spoil it's debut. When the offense fell short, the defense stood tall. As Schembechler said in the locker room after the game, "I can't say enough about the defense. They had their backs in there and did a super job." Junior Tom Kee led the way with 16 tackles with Mike Taylor close behind at 14. But more important, the defense caused Northwestern mistakes. They picked off three passes, broke up four more and recovered two fumbles. It was nothing unusual, though. The Wolverines are used to having their defense take up the slack. The offense has been slow starting in the past so the defense is used to holding the opposition in neutral until the Wolverine offense gets in gear. Last year it took four games until the attackers got rolling. It should be sooner this time around. The Wildcats got more total yards than the Wolverines, but it was mostly the Wildcat's first half margin that held up. The offense improved dramatically in the second half. It hasn't returned to Mammoth Blue Wave form yet, but the progress could be seen. Casey looked more assured after the break in the locker room. In the first half he got dumped when he got chased. In the second he scrambled better and managed to get rid of the ball to Glenn Doughty while under strong pursuit. That play was called back, but it showed that Casey was learning. Halfback Bill Taylor also improved in the second half. Schembechler couldn't explain it other than to say that the whole offense had better control in the second half. Bo rather scored his first touchdown before halftime, but in the second half he and Paul Seymour added a little pass receiving to the Wolverine repertoire. There were other improvements visible in yesterday's game, but there are even more to come. Neither coach felt that his team was ready yesterday and with more work both should improve. Schembechler couldn't specify any areas that needed practice, saying that "We just have a lot of work to do this week." He thought that both squads on the field yesterday were "damn good teams," but added that it was impossible to get a team ready to play top flight competition in three weeks. Alex Agase of Northwestern agreed. "Both teams were a little ragged." He commented, but we just made more crucial 4 mistakes." Time and effort should cure the ills for Michigan. Penalties will be eliminated. Casey and the other sophomores will gain experience and the offense will improve. Plays and situations will be practiced that had to be omitted from previous drills and with practice will come greater expertise. When the timing. starts clicking better the ball will move with greater ease. Schembechler expects to team to improve and yesterdayy's sec- ond half gave evidence that they will. Bo should know. He's been there before. Everywhere. Michi- gan picked up a touchdown in the second half when North- western defensive back Jack Dustin batted down a short field goal attempt and Bo Rather fell on it in the end zone for a Wolverine touchdown. A freak play right? Not to Bo. Back when Bo was at Miami of Ohio and Ara Par- seghian was coaching Northwestern a Miami defender reached up and tipped a punt before it fell into the end zone. The Wildcats covered it for a touchdown. The play happened in the same stadium and at the very side of the field as yesterday's blooper. It was on a field goal this time, but the same rule covers all loose balls in the end zone. Schembechler was sure from the start that Rather's re- covery meant a touchdown for Michigan. The officials took a while to decide and Alex Agase remains unconvinced but Bo was certain. Just as he was certain that Rather would know what to do when it happened. The Wolverines know what to do. They did it, some of the time, yesterday. They were having trouble doing it all the time, but they did it enough. And they will do it more, and with more polish, as they gain experience and confidence. ggggds~:"'"s3;:,LSfay3i:%Y'>i:T::"..".,....f....}; ::F:::....::.. ...nn:::v:.:::i.. . {v. .::".: ..y College Scores East South Carolina 24, Georgia Tech 7 By RICK CORNFELD Special To The Daily EVANSTON - The Wolver- ines ground out yard after crunching yard in the season football opener against con- ference r i v a 1 Northwestern and defeated the Wildcats, 21-6, yesterday putting them- selves in the driver's seat for the Big Ten championship. Michigan isn't claiming any- thing yet in a race which broke tradition by pitting con- ference teams against each other in the first week, but the Wol- verines' position looks good after defeating Northwestern, a pre- season favorite to contend for the title. Michigan's defense, in recent years the bulwark of the Wolver- ine g a me, held Northwestern scoreless until late in the contest and kept a jittery offense in the game until its own brute force and a freak touchdown were added to ice the victory. The start of the game saw the Wildcats knock on the door three times before the Wolverines stop- ped the drives flat. Meanwhile, the offense took nearly two quarters to get going. "It's tough to get ready for a game like this in just three weeks," SPORTS NIGHT EDITORS: ELLIOT LEGOW and RANDY PHILLIPS Michigan Coach Bo Schembechler "Rather was very effective to- said after the game, refering to day," Schembechler understated. the early season start caused by Then praising Shuttlesworth, the the move to an 11-game schedule. hulking sophomore he inserted' in When the offense finally started the lineup in the second quarter, moving, however, it did so with Schembechler added, "He punched punishing effectiveness. Michigan out a few first downs against a ran and ran and ran against an sturdy defense." experienced Wildcat defensive The Wolverine defense played line, racking up 213 yards. the way it has done in the past. Sophomore quarterback Kevin It allowed Northwestern to move Casey, playing his first varsity the ball around the field - the game, went to the air only11 Wildcats gained 276 total yards times for four completions and against 247 for Michigan - so one interception out of a total of long as they didn't penetrate the 70 plays from scrimmage. The rest end zone. of the time saw him giving the ball to Bill Taylor, Ed Shuttles- Northwestern coach Alex Agase worth, and Fritz Seyferth, who pointed to the strong Wolverine drove through the Wildcat line defense deep in its territory as with brutal ferocity, one of the factors contributing to Michigan's most effective offen- the Michigan win. "Michigan's sive play, however, was an end good defensively," Agase said, "but around by split end Bo Rather, a also it was our first quarter of play used three times for a total the season. Scoring when inside of 49 yards and one touchdown. the 20 comes with more game ex- perience." Rather good show FIRST DOWNS Rushing Passing Penalty TOTAL NO. OF FUSHES NET YARDS- Rushing Passing FORWARD PASSES ATTEMPTED Completed Intercepted by Yds. Intercept. Ret'd TOTAL PLAYS (Rushes and Passes) KICKOFFS RET'D. BY YARDS KICKS RETURNED Punts Kickoffs FUMBLES, No. Ball lost by PENALTIES, No. Yards penalized Mich. 16 I? 59 Nv. 18 6i 9 3a Casey Rather Seymlouir Totzals I)otzaur PASSING Att. Comp.I 11 4 PASS RECEIVING N PUNTING 213 '76 34 199 11 3 31 17 1 0 -2 79 66 , 2 70 31 39 8 87 37 a 32 4 23 NORTHWESTERN Rushing Att. Gain L Robinson 17 27 Cooks 9 34 Daigneau ) P'earson 1 5 Anderson 7 26 Totals 35 92 PASSING Att. Comp.I Daignean 3 17 PASS RECEIVING No. Y Lash 7 Anderson 3 Craig2 Pearson 4 Cooks 1 CTotals 17 PUNTING Northwestern The closest the Wildcats came to scoring in the first half was Int. Yds. with a fourth down and two yards 1 34 to go on Michigan's 10. Agase de- o. Yds. cided to go for the first down and 3 26 Tom Beckman stopped r u n n e r 1 48Johnny Cooks on the 11. "We 1 3 thoughtthey signaled one yard to No. Avg. go. Otherwise, we'd have gone for 8 37 a field goal." W h i l e Northwestern had 80 Loss Net yards of the field to move around 3 24 in, Michigan was unable to man- 0 34 age even a first down until mid- 3 way in the second quarter. Short- 0 26 ly afterwards, the Wolverines be- 16 76 gan their first touchdown drive. Int. Yds. It took the Wolverines only sev- 3' 199 en plays, five of them on the ground, to go 53 yards for the ds. TD score. Shuttlesworth carried the 24z ball four times, pushing through 36 the line for 16 yards. l { 1 t MICHIGAN Taylor Casey Seyferth Rather Shuttlesworth Doughty Totals Rushing Tries GainsJ 28 109 8 17 8 28 Loss 4 26 0 Net 105 -9 28 46 199 No. 4 McGann 3 49 0 49 SCORE BY PERIODS: 10 33 0 33 MICHIGAN 0 7 14 2 7 0 7 Northwestern 0 0 0 59 243 30 213 ATTENDANCE: 42,472 Avg 3: 0-2 6- 1 The score came on Rather's sec- 1 ond end around from 18 yards out. "We have a man who's supposed to contain that play," Agase said, 3' "but Rather is so quick he beat us on sheer speed." 6 That made the half-time score 7-0. -Daily-Sarart1wich NORTHWESTERN'S JIM LASH is surrounded by a trio of Wolverine defenders after snaring a pass in yesterday's loss to Michigan. Tom Darden (35) has Lash by the knees while Tom Kee (37) and Bruce Elliott (21) move in for the kill. S o o n after the second half had hoped to stay close in the and one for pass interference by started came one of the strangest third quarter and then come back Tom Darden. touchdowns in college football his- in the fourth when we had the "The only success they had wea tory. A Wolverine drive had stalled wind at our backs," Agase said. on the pass interference: when we at the 34 and Dana Coin was Actually by the start of the had them stopped," Schembechle brought in for a 52-yard field goal fourth quarter the Wildcats were said. "And unless the films prov0 attempt.three touchdowns back. Toward me wrong I think Darden made, a. The kick was just short, but the end of the third period Frank great play." JackDusinback for a possible runback, leaped and tipped the Gusich intercepted a Maurie Daig- Northwestern's tally came on=a ball forward. Few besides the alert neau pass, giving Michigan the two yard pass to Cooks from Daig- Wolverines were aware of it at the ball at Northwestern's 39. Six run- neau, who in all completed, 17 oi time, but Dustin had made it a ning plays' including a 11-yard 31 for 199 yards. Seven comple- free ball. Anybody's for the claim- Rather end around and an extra tions were to Jim Lash. ing. point and Michigan was three Agase, whose mother died four Rather rushed in and pounced touchdowns ahead. days ago, hardly participated in on the ball for Michigan's second The score came on a five-yard practice toward the end of the score. "I have never seen that run by Bill Taylor, who wound up week, and felt the play of both happen before in all my years in the day with 105 yards on 28 car- teams was sloppy:. "It's a shame football," Agase said. ries. two football teams had to open "All of us knew the ball was The shutout could not be pre- like that because mistakes were alive, but it was covered before served, however. In the final quar- made. We were both a little rag- we could even yell at our players, ter Northwestern drove 88 yards ged, but we were more ragged than "Schembechler said. "Our players in 11 plays for the touchdown, they were, I guess. are taught to cover any ball - I then failed on a two point con- Then, just before leaving for his don't give a damn what it is." version attempt. Twice the Wild- mnether's wake, he muttered, "We That touchdown changed the cats were aided by Michigan pen. finally came close to having a entire Northwestern strategy. "We alties, one for roughing the passer decent footballteam.. ." LSU UPENDED: Nebraska offense rolls By The Associated Press r : LINCOLN, Neb. - Mighty Ne- Sbraska completely dominated Ore- gon as the defending national champion Cornhuskers methodical- ly rolled to a 34-7 victory yester- day in an ,intersectional football *.. opener for both teams. : ;: "It was the 20th consecutive game without a loss for Nebraska, ranked No. 2 in the pre-season Associated Press poll. Gary Dixon, formerly a junior ".}:college halfback, scored three times on short runs while the vet- eran Cornhusker defense complete- ly throttled the potent Duck of- fense. feNebraska's first three scores came after sustained marches as the Huskers drove 67 yards in the first period, 47 yards in the second period and 99 yards in the third BILL TAYLOR (42), Michigan tailback, eludes the grasp of Northwestern's Eric Hutchinson (31), quarter. as his teammate Ed Shuttelsworth attempts to help out with a block. Taylor's running was a major Jeff Kinney scored from one factor in the Wolverines' 21-6 victory, gaining 105 yards in 28 carries. yard out in the first quarter. Dixon c eylie1s de-molish Io wa ran in from two yards out in the second period, and from two yards out again in the third period. He then swept right end for a six-yard touchdown on the first play of the final quarter. Colorado shocks Tigers BATON ROUGE-Colorado soph- omore. Charlie Davis, who left the Texas plains for football in the Rocky Mountains, sped through Louisiana State's vanuted defense for 175 yards and two :cuchdowns last night asftherBuffaloes upset the heavily favored Tigers 31-21 in the season's opener for both teams. The 198-pound Davis, who hails from West Columbia, Texas, scoot- ed 47 yards for a Colorado touch- down in the fourth period and went three yards for a Buffalo score inrthe third period. The sophomore - laden Colorado squad, underdogs by two touch- downs to an LSU team rated ninth in preseason rankings, ripped an LSU defense that led the nation against the rushing game last season. * * * Pitt stops UCLA LOS ANGELES - Reserve Dave Havern threw a 10-yard touch- down-strike to Leslie Block in the fourth quarter as the Pittsburgh Panthers came from behind to upset UCLA 29-25 last night in a wild intersectional game. Grambl ing coasts NEW YORK-Charles Smith, a junior split end, caught seven pass- es for 187 yards, scoring once and setting up two other touchdowns and a field goal .as. Grambling de- feated Morgan State 31-13 last night. Smith, a 6-foot, 190-pounder from Monroe, La.; put Grambling's famed Tigers in front 14-7 on the final scrimmage play of the first period, when he turned a screen pass from Matthew. Reed into a 48-yard touchdown. Huskies howl SEATTLE - Washington's Hus- kies, stung by an early touch- down, capitalized on an alert de- fense, to crush the University of California at S a n t a Barbara Gauchos 65-7 in the 1971 football opener for both squads yesterday. Washington took the opening kickoff but lost the ball on the Santa Barbara 44 when sophomore fullback Jerry Ingalls' fumble was recovered by Bill Hinds. Gaucho quarterback Randy Pa- lomino then drove his team 57 yards in 11 plays and capped the drive with an eight-yard pass to Mike Anton. Ingalls atoned for his mis- handle by diving over right tackle three minutes later to put the huskies on the scoreboard. Lehigh 28, Hofstra Univ 0 Fairmont 20, Waynesburg 0 Coast Guard 21, Maine Maritime 6 Central Conn St 21, Springfield 0 Indiana U, Pa. 26, St. Norbert 7 Mideast Michigan 21, Northwestern 6 Michigan State 10, Illinois 0 Minnesota 28, Indiana 0 Oklahoma State 26, Mississippi St 7 Kansas 34, Washington St. 4 Luther College 31, Valley City 0 Nebraska 34, Oregon 7 Nebraska Wesley 26, Dane College 6 Utah State 10, KansasSt. Univ 7 Wisconsin 31, Northern Illinois 0 Albion 0, Taylor 0 Ball State 9, Cent Michigan 6 North Mich 14, Wise, Whitewater 0 St. Joseph's Ind. 44 Ind. Centrall 7 Stout State 14, Lakeand Col 6 Valparaiso 27, Wabash 6 West Mich 35, Illinois St. Univ 7 Georgetown Col 7, Bluffton 0 Kentucky State 34, Langston 7 Georgia 56, Oregon State 25 Villanova 28, Maryland 13 Mississippi Val 8, Alabama A&M 7 Murray State 32, West Carolina 7 Northwood Mich 20, Glenviille St 19 Carson-Newman 17, East Tenn St 10 Ellon College 7, Woffoord 6 Florida State 24. South Mississippi 9 Tolledo 45, East Carolina 0 Tulane 20, Texas Tech 9 Vanderbilt 20, Chattanooga 19 Wake Forest 27, Davidson Col 7 Bluefield State 28, Concord Col 12 Colorado 31, Louisiana State 21 Memphis State 30, West Texas State 0 Florence State 24, Middle Tenn St. 14 Mississippi 29, Long Beach St 13 Shepherd Col 14, West Va Wesley 0 West Va State 28, West Va Tech 7 William & Mary 35, Citadel 28 Southwest Hlarding Col 32. Austin College 7 i I } i($ i t 1 3 G E I E+f 11 I By The Associated Press COLUMBUS -- Quarterback Don Lam- ka, a defensive reserve for the last two seasons, scored four touchdowns and piled up 211 total yards yesterday, leading de- fending champion Ohio State to a 52-21 victory over Iowa in a Big Ten opener. Lamka, a Cleveland senior who filled in for all-America cornerback Jack Tatum in 1970,dashed 21, 19, 6 and 1 yards for his 24 points, making a flashy debut in the rain. John Bledsoe, another in a long line of powerful Ohio State fullbacks, smashed through the small Iowa defense for 151 yards and a pair of touchdowns. He ran 3 and 11 yards for his scores. The victory, the 18th in a row at home for the Buckeyes, ruined Frank Lauterbur's coaching debut. Lauterbur guided Toledo to the Mid-American title last year. Rain hampered both sides. Iowa furn- could only eke out a 10-0 victory over Illinois in the Big Ten football opener for both teams yesterday. A 48-yard field goal by Boroys Shlapak in the second period was the first MSU counter. Eric "The Flea' Allen carried in from the six in the fourth quarter after Ron Curl recovered an Illinois fumble on the Illini 25 to start the drive. When starting quarterback Mike Ras- mussen couldnt get the team rolling, back- up quarterback George Mihaiu was sent in for the Spartans in the second period. Mihaiu was supposed to be a runner rather than a passer but he was hitting his receivers and taking the team down field. But a penalty set State back and a second field goal by Shlapak, the soccer style kicker, was short. * * * Hoosiers humbled Kingsriter, 13 to Kevin Hamm and 11 to Cook - all three set up by spectacular defensive plays. The closest Indiana came to scoring was in the second period when Chris Gart- ners 39-yard field goal attempt was wide by inches. Perfetti unloaded a 59-yard punt on the first play of the second period. Hoosier Dan Lintner bobbled the ball as Bart Bue- tow hit him, and Todd Randall recovered on the Indiana 12 to set up the second score. * * * Badgers breeze MADISON - Stumpy Rufus Ferguson ran four and 42 yards for touchdowns and Greg Johnson streaked 85 yards with a% punt return yesterday to lead slow-start- ing Wisconsin to ,a 31-0 college football victory over outmanned Northern Illinois. Reserve quarterback Rudy Steiner added .x:5.: n; "...,... :'. '"... ..,;".. . . :.... ... . .:.";. .{ . v:':' . ...... ... ... ..4':. . ;. .....YC::V.:.::."::1'. V~. V"::;^"":'f":.:.t.1.... ..t. -.":AJ. a{}4S:" ""p Big Ten Standings Bg Ten Standings Conference Games W L T PF PA s MICHIGAN' Michigan. State Minnesota Ohio State Wisconsin Purdue Iowa 1 0 1 0 S0 1.0o 00 0 21 6 0 10 0 0 28 0 0 52 21 0 0 0 S0 0 0 21 52 W 1 1 1 1 1 0 All Games L T PFI 0 0 21 0 0 10 0 0 28 0 0 52 Z 0 0 31 0' 0 31 1 1 0 215 PA 6 0 0 21 0 0 52