Page. Two-Sports THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, September 10, 1971 Page Two-Sports YHE MICHIGAN DALY Friday, September 10, 1971 il dcats By JIM EPSTEIN Questing after their first Big Ten championship since 1936, the Wildcats of Northwestern are determined to show the foot- ball world that their 1970 per- formance was not a fluke. If their impossible dream' is to come true, two gaps left by grad- uation must be filled. The most apparent hole in the Northwestern attack is in the offensive line. The front five was credited with much of the suc- cess (6-1 league, 6-4 overall) that the Wildcats enjoyed last ,season, but to a man the hearties have departed shady Evanston. The five, tackles John Rod- man and Jon Hittman, guards Mike Sikich and John Hoerster and center Joe Zigulich, all log- ged in excess{ of 285 playing minutes during the 1970 season, which left little time for their replacements to get playing ex- perience. Three of the Wildcat linemen, Rodman, Sikich and Zigulich, received All-Big Ten recognition, which increases the pressure which has been brought to bear upon their replace- ments. Manning the line this season will be seniors Paul Gary and Tom McCreight, juniors Dave Dybas and Dave Glantz and sophomore Donnie Haynes, of whom only McCreight and Gary have seen any playing time to speak of, and in McCreight's case, the experience was ex- clusively at tight end. The Wildcats have also lost the services of All-America full- back Mike Adamle, who anni- hilated all of the Northwestern rushing records in his three year career. In 1970 Adamle netted 1255 yards in just over 300 at- tempts for an average of 4.1 yards per carry, and crossed the goal line 10 times to lead the purple and white in scoring. Stepping in for the Kansas City Chief rookie will be senior Randy Anderson who saw about 75 min-, utes of playing time last fall. Anderson carried the ball only five times, and was used pri- marily as another blocker in short yardage situations. )Oift Back at the halfback spot is senior Al Robinson, Adamle's running mate in the backfield last year. Robinson gained 556 yards in the last campaign, but managed a meager 3.1 per carry. There are widespread doubts concerning Robinson's effective- ness this season when he will be forced to operate behind a line that will treat him far less deli- cately than he became accustom- ed to last season. Anchoring the offense for the Wildcats will be senior quarter- back Maurie Daigneau, who will be counted on as much for his leadership as his passing and ball handling skills. He will have to provide the steady hand of control for this inexperienced crew. While Daigneau hit on only 88 of 204 passes over the 1970 season, he showed flashes of brilliance in certain key situa- tions. Daigneau will get some ror Bl0 -I help in the passing department from a trio of sticky fingered receivers headed by flanker Barry Pearson. Daigneau connected with Pear- son for a conference leading 28 receptions in the seven Big Ten games, which Pearson made good for 508 yards. Pearson also carried an 8.4 average on punt returns, placing him among the conference leaders. Returning to the split end post will be junior Jim Lash who prdduced an 18.1 average gain from 16 catches. Filling the tight end position is Steve Craig, who retains sophomore status after being injured in the season's opener against Notre Dame in 1970. Craig's pre-season showing was the motivating force in switch- ing McCreight from the tight end spot he held last year to right guard. The defensvie outlook is much more pleasing to coach Alex Agase, last year's Coach of the Year. The Wildcats return eight starters to what was statistically the best defense in the Big Ten for 1970. The three vacancies in the de- fense are distributed equally with one new man starting in each defensive layer. The front four will consist of holdovers Wil Hemby, Pat Kershaw and Jim Anderson and senior letterman George Keporos, filling in for the graduated Jerry Combs. Two outstanding linebackers, John Voorhees and Jack Derning join sophomore Mike Varty as the second layer of the North- western defensive squad. Varty is starting tomorrow in place of senior Mike Morkin, an experienced veteran who is side- lined with a shoulder separa- tion, and the right side lineback- ing spot may prove to be the weak spot of the Northwestern defense. 'rown The deep backs are free safety and co-captain Eric Hutchinson (six interceptions in 1970), strong safety Mike Coughlin, corner- backs Jack Dustin (four inter- ceptions last year) and Jerry Brown. Brown, a senior recently con- verted from split end, is the only new member of the secondary, which allowed only 31.9 per cent of the attempted passes to be completed against them. The Wildcat secondary was easily Lhe best in the Big Ten and should prove as vexing this year. As all Northwestern teams are doomed to be, this squad lacks depth, and while they seem to be well manned on the first team, an injury at any position can prove crippling to their title hopes. The offense appears to be the most vulnerable in this respect and Agase can just hope that tape will be enough to hold the Wildcats together this fall. Jim Young Chuck Stobart MIAMIANS OF OLD: Coaching staff returns intact ~gucaPeTER OWR 500 KINDS ' :# _, '';2:_} _. 4 >:. ??:'t; LOW PRKIS ON~ EAR.h "I4 9TA1Tr 2"o ~3R9 MS NUS*F#~@w .W~.~C ~, ..~ C..S.- ... S k r ------- ------ 17Y5 tk D0 fl ' nM C ~ E~~ fArm ~~Am-AM By SANDI GENIS Winning has become some- thing of a habit for the Wol- verines since Bo Schembechler and his Miami mob migrated to Michigan two seasons ago. With the union of Michigan and Miami brainpower behind their brawn, the Wolverine gridders have rolled to a 17-4-0 mark in two' years under the new Mich- igan mentors. Mastermind of the two very successful seasons, head coach Schembechler left the "cradle of coaches" for Michigan sporting most impressive credentials. In six years as the Miami of Ohio head coach the personable Sch- embechler, who has n e v e r coached a team to a losing sea- son, led his team to two MAC championships and an outsand- ing 40-17-3 overall mark, before making the trip to Ann Arbor. A former Miami tackle under George Blackburn and Woody Hayes, Bo did a bit of traveling around before settling at Miami. After a stint in the Army he served as line coach at Presby- terian College, Bowling Green, Northwestern, where he assisted Ara Parsegian, another former Miami mentor, and finally Ohio State under Woody Hayes for five years before returning to Miami as head coach. In making the switch to Mich- igan in 1969 Bo was not alone, however. Indeed, it must have seemed to him that he had never left home, for Bo brought along six of his Miami assistants to fill out his coaching staff. Defensive coordinator Jim Young leads the Miami contin- gent. Young joined the Schem- bechler ranks in 1964 after serving as football and wrestl- ing coach at both Findlay Col- lege and Bowling Green Univer- sity and head football coach at T~ia Caxinop-iahS rhnnl Miami in 1967. Anothe Bowling Green graduate, Smithf attended West Point before transferring to play two-way end at BGSU and co-captain the 1961 team. Originally he came to Michigan with Bo to serve as freshman coordinator. Defensive backfield c o a c h Dick Hunter was Miami's star quarterback in the mid 1950's, gaining all-conference honors and setting a school punting record. A former halfback at Miami and a teammate of Hunter un- der Ara Parsegian, offensive line coach Jerry Hanlon returned to Miami in 1966. Following graduation Hanlon coached at five schools before joining Bo, coaching at Taylor High, Canton Catholic, serving also as basketball coach there, Youngstown Ursuline, Cleve- land St. Edwards and finally at the University of Dayton. S t ill another Schembechler recruit to his coaching ranks, is offensive backfield coach Chuck Stobart. A former quarterback at Ohio University for three years, he joined the collegiate ranks, after several years coach- ing high school, first at Mar- shall University and then Cin- cinnati before moving to Miami and then Michigan. The final member of the Schembechler caravan, defensive end coach Gary Moeller, like Schembechler has never been affiliated with a losing grid team. An Ohio S t a t e graduate, where he played center and line- backer on Woody Hayes' Big Ten championship team in 1961 and captained the squad in the following year, Moeller played professional football with the Grand Rapids Blazers upon graduation while teaching at Union High. He joined Bo in 1967 after only one other coach- ing job at Bellefontaine High School. The only other two members of Bo's coaching squad, Frank Maloney and George Mans are both former Michigan players and coaches of long standing. Maloney, who handles the de- fensive lines, played for "Bump" Elliott as a guard and lineback- er in the early 60's, earning the Fielding Yost Award for scholar- ship and athletics his senior year. He returned to work un- der Elliott in 1968 after coach- ing Chicago's Mount Carmel High School to numerous titles, earning two area coach of the year awards. Mans, the offensive end coach, in his sixth season with the Wolverines, was team captain on the same team with Maloney in 1961, where he played both offensive and defensive end. A former coach at both Michigan Tech and Eastern Michigan University, he returned to Mich- igan to rejoin Elliot in 1966. Even with the freshman the Miami influence is exerted as Baby Blue coach Tirrel Burton is yet another former Miami mentor. A former teammate of both Hamlon and Hunter, Bur- ton averaged 8.8 yards as a run- ning back during his career at Miami, earning all-conference honors. Also a track man, the freshman coach reached the 120 hurdle' finals in the 1955 NCAAs. I THE ALLEY 330 Maynard PRESENTS Luther Allison Fri., Sat., Sun 10,11,12 2 shows Fri., Sat. 7:30, 10:00- $2.00 1 show Sun. All shows 8:30 Ml/aurie Daigneau Daily Classifieds Bring Results Measuring The Mammoth Blue Wave COME FOLK DANCE ! Every Friday 8-1] p.m. Barbour Gym (corner of N. University and E. University) " E i I o a xe 2 1 ,G a m Z r t s " Ct ,e Sti.Y~ie ' Wk~'Yi'i 9o/ f 4fk i For the student body: FLARES by Levi Farah Wright SLee SMale FIRST DOWNS Rushing Passing Penalty TOTAL OFFENSIVE PLAYS Rushing Attempts Passing Attempts Completions TOTAL OFFENSIVE YARDS Rushing Yards Passing Yards TOTAL NUMBER OF PUNTS Total Yards Average per Punt TOTAL RETURNS/ YARDS Punt Returns/Yards Kickoff Returns/Yards Interceptions/Yards TOTAL FUMBLES/ NUMBER LOST PENALTIES/YARDS RUSING, Att Taylor, B. 197 tMoorhead 97 Seyferth 86 Henry 70 Doughty 67 Scheffler 48 Berutti 10 Logan 6 Zacarelli 4 Harrison 6 McBride 6 PASSING Mich 203 131 60 12 795 597 198 90 Opp 130 57 66 7 663 416 247 121 I 4 Rather Darden Elliott KICKOFF Darden Schumacher Seymour, Paul Zacarelli PUNT RETURNS No. 1 18 12 RETURNS No. 3730 2478 2508 1051 1222 1427 54 73 2240 2828 *41.5 39.0 75/897 87/1364 31/254 32/311 24/397 49/1013 20/246 6/40 26Y15 29/14 45/484 48/441 CHECKMATE 1 1 Lima ShawneenHgn benooi. Beginners Welcome Interior line coach Larry Smith has the distinction of leaching 8-9 succeeding Y o u n g at Lima Shawnee High School before joining both Bo and Young at WE ARE GETTING TOGETHER A FREE WOMEN'S UNIVERSITY THIS FALL! a place where we as women can teach and learn about ourselves, our bodies, our history and culture as well as discover what talents and skills we, all possess. All of us are qualified to teach something. If you are interested in convening a class, return this coupon before October 1 to your WOMAN'S ADVOCATE OFFICE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNION ROOM 332 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN 48104 - 'Name. I N eAddressI I Phone Course Interest - : - :- : : :- : - :- :: -:- -:::::::: - Net 911 368 333 314 2;58 215 36 27 21 21 4 Ave 4.6 3.8 3.9 4.5 3.8 4.5 3.6 4.5 5.2 3.5 0.7 Yds 44 153 57 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 LP 41 39 19 30 53 12 11 11 7 5 10 LP 70 41 _ - State Street at Libert Moorhead McBride RECEIVING Staroba Doughty Seymour, Paul Taylor, B. Scheffler Schumacher Seyferth Henry Berutti Narris PUNTING Att Con 190 8 No 35 22 13 6 4 3 1 1 np 87 3 Int Yds TD 6 1167 8 0 55 0 Taylor. B. Seyferth Rather Henry Doughty Scheffler Harpring INTERCEPTIONS Huff Darden Betts Elliott Moore Kee Gusich Rather Taylor, M, FUMBLES RECOVERED 2 Betts 2 Darden 2 Gusich 1 Beckman 1 Coin 1 Henry 1 Kee 1 Newell 1 McKenzie 1 Seymour, Paul 1 Spearman TACKLES Solo, Huff 57 Taylor, M. 49 Hill 50 Newell 51 Betts 45 Keller 38 Seymour, Phil 36 harden 40 Beckman 32 Gusich 29 Moore 22 Elliott 14 Kee 13 Rather 15 Coin 7 Dutcher 7 Spearman 6 McKenzie 5 Carpenter 4 Harpring 3 Doughty 2 McCoy 3 3 6 7 3 1 No. 5 3 2 1 1 1 1 10 5 4 4 4 3 3 2 1 1 1 1 Yds TDI 85 0 46 0 78 0 21 0 9 0 7 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 PASSES BROKEN UP Darden Betts Taylor, M. Huff Gusich Newell Beckman Moore Rather Elliott Hill Keller McCoy 2 Rather I punt partially blocked 2 LP BLOCKEDI 51 Opponents1 19 ,tempt 45 SCORES 12 9 7 Michigan 0 Arizona 0 0 ,Michigan Washington Michigan Texas A & Michigan Purdue Michigan Michigan State Michigan Minnesota Michigan Wisconsin Yds 45 244 62 104 116 26 0 Ave 44.0 8.5 4.8 Ave 22.5 22.0 20.7 17.3 16.6 8.7 0.0 6 Berutti 6 Murdock 6 Oldham 6 Eaton Taylor, B. LP Ellis 44 Henry 21 Dierdorf 10 Seymour, Paul Smith, I. LP Coyle 23 Huiskens 23 ,Moran 38 Seyferth 20 Schumacher 20 Staroba 12 TEAM 0 BLOCKED PUN, 4 4 . 4 4 3 3 3 3 0 2 1 1 I 1 1 6 PAT blocked 1 placement at- ITS 6 12 0 7 7 14 0 6 7 0 14 6 39 13 IF- are Available will have them 1st 2nd 3rd 4th Final 10 0 0 10 20 3 3 0 3 9 0 0 10 7 17 3 0 0 0 3 0 7 0 7 14 7 3 0 0 10 0 6 0 23 29 0 0 0 0 0 7 6 14 7 34 10 3 0 7 20 Number Staroba 54 *necw Wolverinie seas4 SCORING fI M 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 . Yds TD LP 519 70 298 0 41 194 1 41 82 1 29F 39 1 20I 33 1 161 16 2 8 14 0 9 17 0 17 10 0 10 Yards Ave LP 2240 '41.5 64 on record K PR FG PTSj 0 111 0 68 0 0 0 48 15,17 0 5/13 30 0 0 0 30, 0 0 0 24 0 0 0 24 14/19 0 0 14 0 1/1 0 14 0 0/2 0 12 Asst TOTAL TL Yds Michigan 32 89 1 1 Illinois 34 83 4 10 li 32 82. 12 44 Michigan 23 74 12 49 Iowa 26 71 1 2 31 69 5 32 Ohio State 24 60 14 91 Michigan 17 57 4 6 22 54 5 11 MICHIGAN 24 53 10 22 Opponent 20 42 0 0 7 0 21 14 7 13 0 0 0 0 3 7 0 10 0 3 6 0 58 82 58 96 26 29 9 26 55 0 20 9 288 90 0 8 29 9 0 15 14 7 42 0 0 0 14 0 X., X. X. :; Mich 550 ~itieOn for A Taylor, B. Seyferth Coin Scheffler Doughty Henry Killian Staroba Moorhead TllD 11 8 0 5 4 4 0 .a . 5 5 3 3 3 3 .2 3 1 26 18 17 12 10 9 8 7 5 4 0 2 0 1 0 3 2 0 0 0 0 0 0i 4 0 25 6 0 0 0 NEW MICHIGAN RECORDS SET DURING 1970 Don Moorhead (all career records) Total Plays 708 (old record 652) Total Yards 3641 (3487) Pass Attempts 425 (389) Pass Completions 200 (194) Passing Yards 2540 (2518) Paul Staroba (new season record) Punting Average 41.5 (39.1) ----------- -a G k 1 GETTING A DEGREE? What's To Do About GETTING A JOB? The people at Career Planning have some ideas: 1. HOW ABOUT SOME 3. GR4 ALTERNATIVE CAREERS- a r see Vocations for Social Chonae & Placement AD 11- nationwide computerized "job eker" system that matches you a Lm I I