Sunday, September 19, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Sunday, September 19, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Wolverines smash Cavs In boring rout from tolstoy to tinkerbell Poor Bo... .. . too many quarterbacks jim kevra BO SCHEMBECHLER has a real problem. Fortunately, it's the kind of problem that most coaches really don't mind having. You see, Schembechler has three quarterbacks who are all sufficiently skilled in the art of quarter'backing to be Michigan's first string signacaller. And Bo's problem is that he can only start one of them. Yesterday's 56-0 massacre of Virginia didn't help Bo very much in finding a solution to his problem as all three quarterbacks, Kevin Casey, Tom Slae, and Larry Cipa, performed capably, and at times, superbly. On the basis of preseason practices, Schembechler started the year with Casey as his number one man. But, Casey had only a mediocre day last week against North- western and, although the Wolverines won the game 21-, Bo wasn't particularly happy with his number one signal- caller's performance. During this week's practice sessions, Schembechler divided his quarterbacks' practice time almost equally and refused to comment on who his starter would be. But when the Amazing Blue took the field yesterday, Casey was at the helm. And the difference between the Kevin Casey who played against Northwestern and the one who played yesterday was almost impossible to believe. Yesterday, Casey was almost everything he had failed to be the week before: poised, dy- namic, adept with his ball handling, and skillful with his at- tempts at running the option. Although he only played for twenty minutes, Casey led the Wolverines on three sustained drives, two of them for touchdowns. He consistently made key plays to keep the drives going. For example, the first time the Wolverines got the ball, they made three straight first downs all with their running game. Then, with third and four on the Virginia 42, and the drive in imminent danger of stalling, Casey rolled right and, under some pressure, coolly hit Glenn Doughty for 14 yards and a first down. From that point, it took only five more plays before Billy Taylor swept around right end, watched Doughty throw a crushing block on Cavalier linebacker Kevin Michaels, and trot into the end zone to do his touchdown dance. C'asey came close to scoring the next Michigan touchdown himself. After a Virginia fumble was recovered on the 33 yard line, he rolled right, cut back to the left sideline, and slipped down to the eight before being belted out of bounds, in all, a 29 yard run. Taylor carried for a touchdown on the next play, to bring the Wolverines into a 14-0 lead. After the game, Casey seemed happy with his perform- ance. "I was definitely mnore relaxed today," he said,, "than I was during the Northwestern game. I think it was just a matter of having more experience. Bo told me before the game that he wasn't going to play me very much and I understand why." When Schembechler pulled Casey - from the game after about 20 minutes, it seemed that Bo's quarterbacking problems might be over. Casey, his original choice for the starting job, wi had finally proven himself capable of handling it. Unfortunately, Slade came in to throw a monkey wrench into Schembechler's possible plans. All Slade did was get possession of the ball three times, and lead the team to three touchdowns on drives of 62, 68, and 46 yards. Slade relied almost entirely on the bruising run- ning of Taylor, Ed Shuttlesworth, and Harry Banks, throwing only two passes and completing one for 28 yards. In addition, his ball handling and faking were almost faultless. Slade admitted after the game that he thought Casey was still the number one quarterback. "I'd have to give him (Casey) the edge," Slade said. "That doesn't mean I think I'm any less of a football player but he's just fit into the system better than I have. But, I think I'm finally starting to get the hang of it." During yesterday's game, Slade was at least the match of Casey. As if Schembechler didn't have enough of a problem trying to choose which of those two quarterbacks was best, Cipa came in in the middle of the third period and sparked the team to two more touchdowns in three attempts. Cipa's performance is all the more amazing when one considers that he was team- ed up with the second and third string backfield and the second string line. after the game, "especially after the first quarter when we knew "We wanted all three to play a lot," Schembechler said we were going to win. I thought Slade did a real fine job. Casey did a good job and Cipa looked real good too. He only made that one mistake (a fumble deep in Virginia territory) ." When asked about how he ranked his quarterbacks, Bo said that his lineup would probably still be Casey, Slade, and Cipa but "I'd like to get a look at the game films. They're all pretty good." And so, it seems that Schembechler is right back to his original problem, three capable quarterbacks trying to fill one available spot. But after yesterday's game, he didn't seem to be worying too much. By MORT NOVECK What can you say about a foot-; ball game that was over with two minutes left in the first quarter? That it's not fair to charge ad- mission for something like that? That the teams should have quit SUAPR and gone drinking instead of fin- ' UNDAY srouts ishing the game? That the refs should have stopped it on a TKO? NIGHT EDITORS: JIM EPSTEIN and JOHN PAPANEK Actually there isn't much you can say about Michigan's 56-0 rout of the Virginia Cavaliers in yesterday's home opener. The Cav- ter recovered for the Wolverines. W h e n Schembechler decided aliers went down for the count Casey picked up 29 yards himself that they had had enough, Bob when Bill Taylor entered the end- and then gave the ball to Taylor Thornbladh, Cowboy Walker and zone for the second time at 12:48 who went in. Dave Zuccarelli came in to con- of the first quarter and everything Casey ran one more series and tinue the punishment. By the time that happened later was just for then it was time for Schembechler it ended 18 different people, in- the stats sheets. to unveil the awsome power of the cluding five quarterbacks, played Unfortunately for Virginia, the Michigan bench. Tom Slade came in the offensive backfield for bell didn't sound until the Wol- i tqatrakadpopl Michigan. ver i nes ad dn up495 yards on led the team to two more touch- It got to the point where players the ground, added 71 more in the downs. who had never practiced together air, scored eight touchdowns and Thof were running plays. They madd intercepted three passes. ThThe yhey picked up their fifth of mistakes but as Schembechler were out of the game, but accord- the game just as the half ended s, "The second team did a ing to the rules they had to act when Dave Elliott recovered a si,"h eodta i asgt theuyequaastheyhigant loose ball in the Virginia endzone pretty good job." The score would as the dummy squad as Michigan after Cavalier Gerald Mullins de- have been higher if the first string coach Bo Schembechler got a tided to watch it roll out of had stayed in longer, but Schem- chance to watch every member of cids t ad it roll ou of. bechler was more than satisfied. his squad perform. bounds instead of jumping on it. bclrwsmr hnstsid Thers sasutlkipthepre"The issue was never really in Schembechler said before the There was talk in the press box doubt, so I would have played a game that an awful lot would have that Mullins came down out of lot of guys even if it hadn't been to happen for Virginia to beat the hills and had never heard 35-0 at the half. the Wolverines, but neither coach about the rule involved, but Elliott T expected the ease with which never had any doubt. "I make my ThecMichigan player shuttle got Michigan rolled down the field. kids practice covering loose bals so hectic that they received a pen- The Wolverines took the open- until they despise it," Schembech- alty for illegal substitution. It ing k i c k o f f and proceeded to ler said later. Sche ubechle eplained, "I kept march up the field practically un- The Cavaliers probably thought substituting illegally. It was the molested in 14 plays. Fritz Sey- that they had seen it all by the only way I could get all the guys ferth had one run of 14 yards and time the half ended, but they got in the game." Glenn Doughty had a pass re- a rude surprise. The Wolverines ception for the same, but most of came out to beat them all over Unfortunately for the Cavaliers, the field was crossed in short again, this time using the second they didn't have the kind of bench bursts. It was Seyferth for four. string. Every Michigan player got that the Wolverines did. They Doughty for three, Taylor for two, into the gamle, including some could have used it to absorb the Kevin Casey for four, until with- that may never see action again. punishment. They also could have out deviating from straight, grind- The defensive reserves, w i t h used it to generate some offense. it-out, power football. Michigan help from halfback Bruce Elliott, Lawrence tried switching quarter- found itself inside the Virginia did the job, holding the battered backs in the second half, from ten. Taylor took it around end Cavalier safely out of Michigan Harrison Davis to Larry Albert, without being touched and the, territory. But it was the offensive but it didn't help. rout was on. bench that killed the Virginians. Virginia picked up only 78 yards Virginia kept the ball for three Virginia coach Don Lawrence com- on the ground all day. Their pass- plays and two yards before punt- mented later that "they have the ing attack netted a minus one ing. It looked like the Wolverines best six college running backs I yard for the day, so it wasn't much were ready to march back down have ever seen." of an offense. Only five different the field when they took the kick. Actually there were more, but people carried the ball for the but on ensuing plays Doughty was Lawrence was probably in shell- stopped for a loss and Taylor lost I shock by the time they came in. Cavs, and it really isn't fair to the ball for an instant, so they l Doughty, Seyferth and T a y 1 o r make so few people get tackled so blew their chance to end the game spent the second half watching much. in less than ten minutes and hadjfrom the sidelines, but Ed Shut- I to punt. . tlesworth, Harry Banks and Larry It wasn't really that bad though, The Cavaliers returned the favor Gustafson gave the Cavaliers no as Virginia only ran 48 plays from with a fumble that Butch Carpen- rest. scrimmage. The Wolverines ran 93, 83 of them on the ground. Michigan -quarterbacks combined for only three complete passes, two of them by Casey early in the game. Virginia completed only one, so the teams managed to play a game with 643 total yards and only four complete passes. Michigan's 93 plays is an im- pressive number, but not nearly as impressive as the performance : turned in by the Michigan cheer-r- leaders., The tumblers performed 252 flips off the endzone wall after Michigan touchdowns, almost one for every Boone's Farm bottle passed up in the stands. It's regrettable that Virginia didn't provide a better test for the Wolverines. The score was impres- sive, but it doesn't prove much. The team moved much more as- suredly than it did against North- w e s t e r n but it's hard to tell whether it will continue against better opposition. Casey looked like a different quarterback and Slade was also impressive, espec- ially with his running. The defense didn't get a chance to show much. Tom .Dar den proved that he is fearless by pick- ing up a rolling punt while sur- rounded by defenders but wasn't tested at his safety position. Frank Gusich, usually in the center of ery play, had an easy day. They only ran one play on my side." he commented. "I was just out_........ there picking lint off the Tartan -Daily-Sara Krulwich turf. There just isn't a whole lot to say about a game like this." Unstoppable Ed Shuttlesworth powers on Virgin-ia violated n FIRST DOWNS Rushing Passing Penalty TOTAL NUMBER OF RUSHES TOTAL PLAYS NET YARDS Rushing Passing FORWARD PASSES Attempted Completed Intercepted by Yards interceptions returned PUNTS, number Average distance4 Number returned' yards punts returned KICKOFFS, number returned Yards kickoffs returned FUMBLES Fumbles Lost PENALTIES Yards penalized Mich. 33 29 3 3. Va. I MICHIGAN 7 6 0 1 Rushing 83 35 93 48 566 77 495 78 71 -1 10 13 3 1 3 0 0 1 $ 43.0 34.4 8 1 27 0! 9 1 10 169 3 2 1 2 5 41 25 451 Player Tries Casey 2 Doughty 5 Seyferth 8 Taylor 15 Shuttlesworth 16 Slade , 15 Banks 6 Cipa 2 Walker 8 Thornbladh 8 Zuccarelli 1 Coleman 3 Haslerig 2 Sydlowski 1 McBride 1 TOTALS 83 Casey Slade Cipa McBride TOTALS Gains 36 16 37 89 111 37 48 14 43 41 2 19 11 4 0 508 Loss 0 2 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 4 13 Net 36 14 37 89 111 34 48 14 43 41 2 15 11 4 -4 495 T PASS RECEIVING Doughty Rather D Gustafson 0 TOTALS 0 PUNTING 0 No. I Dotzauer 1 VIRGINIA 1 Ru 0 Player 2 Dickerhoof 0 Merritt 0 Davis 1 Albert 0 Millard 0 TOTALS 01 Pa 0 A 0 Davis 9 Albert 4 TOTALS ~13 Yds 43 shing Tries4 Avg. 43 Long 43 No. Yds. 1 14 1 29 1 2$ 3 71 Gains Loss Net 14 48 9 40 9 29 2 2 1 0 35 119 assing Att. Comp. 1 1 0 0 40 0 1 41 48 40 -11 2 -1 78 Int. Yards 2 -1 1 0 3 -1 No. Yds. 1 -1 j 1 V 1raLa I 5 Passing Att. Comp. 5 2. 2 1 2 0 1 0 10 3 Int. 0 0 0 0 0 Yards 43 28 0 71 4 PASSRECEIVINC. Merritt PUNTING No.Y Maxwell 8 LINESCORE 1 MICHIGAN 1 Virginia Yds. 275 1 4, 0 2 21 0 Avg. 34.4 3 14 0 Long 44 4 F 7 56 0 0 Longhorn pass crushes 1 ruins; Indians' rampage halts Cadets By The Associated Press LOS ANGELES - Quarterback Eddie Phillips, Texas' ballhandling magician, completed only one pass in nine attempts but it went 36 yards for a tie-breaking touchdown and the Longhorns rolled over UCLA 28-10 yesterday. The 22-year-old option master, however, guided Texas to two other touchdowns in this inter-sectional, regionally telecast game before 36,504 in Memorial Coliseum. The score was 7-7 with 34 sec- onds remaining in the first half when Phillips lofted a pass to Jim Moore for what proved to, be the winning touchdown. * * *E Stanford stomps WEST POINT-Don Bunce, suc- cessor to Heisman Trophy winner Jim Plunkett, hurled three scoring passes late in the first half and led explosive Stanford to a 38-3 victory yesterday that ended Army's string of winning home openers at 15. The first two touchdowns came :h 31 seconds apart and the third, a e 75-yard bomb to Miles Moore, put r the Indians in front 21-3 with only e seven seconds left to the half and ensured their second triumph of the young season. depth Rockets squeeze by TOLEDO - Sophomore George Keim kicked a 20-yard field goal with 12 seconds left to play to give Toledo a 10-7 football victory over Villanova last night and enable the Rockets to maintain the na- tion's longest winning streak at 25 straight. Tiedg7-7, Toledo took the ball on its own 29-yard line with 29 seconds left to play. On the first play, quarterback Chuck Ealey hit Glyn Smith on a 57-yard pass play that put the Rockets on the Villanova 24. Two plays later, Keim booted the win- ning three points. Georgia goes ATHENS, Ga.-Georgia's offense sputtered for three quarters yes- terday before a 15-yard penalty gave it a new lease on life and sparked the Bulldogs to a 17-7 college football victory over Tu- lane. The personal foul penalty against Tulane came on a Georgia punting situation early in the fourth quar- ter with the score tied 7-7 and gave the Bulldogs an automatic first down on their 41. From there it took 11 plays to march the 59 yards for a 14-7 lead with 8:54 remaining in the game. Tigers edged AIR FORCE ACADEMY - Mis- souri's Greg Hill missed a 37-yard field goal attempt with five sec- ords to play yesterday as Air Force squeeked out a 7-6 college football victory over the Tigers. Hill, a junior defensive half- back, had earlier kicked field goals of 35 and 22 yards to give Missouri all of its points. The game's only touchlown came in the second period when Falcon quarterback Joel Carlson faked a handoff up the middle, then trot- ted untouched two yards around the left end. Craig Barry provided what turn- ed out to be the winning point with his conversion. Colorado coasts BOULDER-Sophomore quarter- backs Joe Duenas and Rich Bland directed Colorado's triple option running game like veterans yester- day, guiding the Buffs to a 56.13 victory over Wyoming at Folsom Stadium. Playing in place of injured Ken Johnson, another sophomore, the two moved the team to 405 yards rushing, with Duenas scoring three times and tossing one scoring pass. Razorbacks roll LITTLE ROCK - Joe Ferguson, Arkansas' passing whiz, surprised, everyone with a 35-yard touch- down run against Oklahoma State and sparked the sixth-ranked Razorbacks to a 31-10 victory over the Cowboys last night. -Daily-Tom Gottlieb MIKE TAYLOR (33), Michigan's stalwart middle linebacker, combines with wolfback Frank Gusic (14) to pry loose the football from Virginia quarterback Harrison Davis early in yesterday's gam against the Cavaliers. The pigskin bounded free and out of bounds before a Wolverine could recove it enabling the Cavaliers to retain possession and record their second of only seven first downs in th game. ........... "....... r.. : . " - ....::. ... :. v:.^::.... :? fri SCORES .. i Gridde Pickings Michigan 56, Virginia 0 Georgia Tech 10, Michigan State 0 Indiana 26. Kentucky 8 North Carolina 27, Illinois 0 . Oregon State 33, Iowa 19 Nebraska 35, Minnesota 7 Notre Dame 50, Northwestern 7 Syracuse 20, Wisconsin 20 Washington 38, Purdue 35 Toledo 10, Villanova 7 Texas 28, UCLA 10 California,20, West Virginia 10 GeorgiTa 17, Tulane 7 Louisiana State 37, Texas A&M 0 Houston at Arizona State, inc. Florida State 20, Miami 17 Colgate 27, Boston Univ 21 Air Force 7, Missouri 6 Colorado 56, Wyoming 13 Western Kentucky 33 Wittenberg 7 Other Scores: East Maryland State 20, Howard Univ 7 Massachusetts 13, Maine 0 St.Lawrence 47, Colby College 9 Vermont 20, Connecticut 7 Alfred 27, Brockport State 7 minmher 2R irran nTiva Auburn 60, Chattanooga 7 Davidson Col 27, Virginia Military 3 Florida State 20, Miami, Fla 17 Glenville State 7, Shepherd Col 7 Tennessee 48, Cal. U, S. Barbara 6 Kentucky State 21,dAlbany St. 2 Midwest' Drake Univ 34, Abilene 17 Franklin Col 35, Hope College 25 Mankato State 10, So. Dakota State 0 So. Dakota Tech 10, Black Hills St 3 Wartburg 38, Upper Iowa 20 Bethel. Minn. 28, Sioux Falls 14 West Michigan 9, Ball State 0 Denison Univ. 34, Centre College 0 Kansas 22, Baylor 0 East Michigan 28, Quantico Marine 20 Idaho St Univ 10, South Dakota 7 Iowa State 24, Idaho 7 Montana 27, North Dakota 14 North Carolina 27. Illinois 0 Oklahoma 30, South Methodist 0 Far West Tennessee 48, Cal U, S. Barbara 6 Arizona 39, Washington St. 28 kColorado 56, Wyoming 13 Nevada, Reno 44, Oregon Tech 7 Western St. Colo 10, Southern Col 7 Linfield Col 17. Central Wash St. 9 Romp By TERRI FOUCHEY Michigan head coach Bo Schembechli proved himself a master of understati] the obvious with his comment about yep terday's embarassment with Virginia. "V have too many good football players fc that team. We are a little bigger an stronger physically and we just outmanne them." The statistics showing how many ai who played for each team bear out th truth of Schembechler's words. The Wc verines used all healthy available pe7 formers including 18 different offensi backs. Virginia, suffering from a sligI lack of bodies due to the limitations of traveling squad, utilized 42 of 68 player That the Cavaliers were outmanned w obvious; but it was the performancesc revea/s M' when necessary option mold, are a num- ber of running backs who appear ready to take up where Billy Taylor and Glenn Doughty leave off. These backs, principally Ed Shuttlesworth, Harry Banks, Alan "Cowboy" Walker, and Bob Thornbladh, combined for a rushing total of 263 yards compared to the starting backs' 140. Also, Shuttlesworth and Banks accounted for three touchdowns, as many as the starters at their positions, Taylor and Fritz Sey- ferth, did. Based on these two details, the Wolverines lost no rushing power by sub- stituting. The major portion of the substitutes' total belongs in the 111 yards Shuttles- worth earned. Much speculation has arisen concerning Schembechler's quandary over who is his starting fullback. Shuttlesworth ra prnirnnlo u n-4nrna 1-, -.n a e + t an been forthcoming if Shuttlesworth had managed more than seven yards a carry. In several instances, one whole side of the Cavalier line would rise to the occassion to stop Shuttlesworth only to see him dis- solve their tackles and still gain five yards. Banks with fewer opportunities, rolled up an eight yard average in six carries. After looking at Banks' statistics Taylor may be feeling some heat, too. * Walker and Thornbladh each rushed eight times and each gained over 40 yards. Thornbladh may eventually give Shuttles- worth a run for his money at the alter- nate spot. He was nearly as devastating as Shuttlesworth and was rewarded with one touchdown for his efforts. The defensive substitutes' statistics read along the same lines, although they Arnt.... 4n n .nn4a n n. 4nmman-a inh Big Ten Standings Conference Games MICHIGAN Ohio State Minnesota Michigan State Wisconsin Purdue Indiana Northwestern Iowa Illinois MICHIGAN 56, W 1 1 Y 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 L 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 T 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 PF 21 52 28 10 0 0 0 6 21 0 PA 6 21 0 '0 0 0 28 21 52 10 W 2 1 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 All Games L T PF 0 0 77 0 0 52 1 0 35 1 0 10 0 1 51 1 0 35 1 0 26 2 0 13 2 0 40 2 0 0 PA 6 21 35 10 20 38 36 71 85 37 Yesterday's Games Virginia 0 i XT-U-1- 9M MS«« o.. ., ^I