I 4 1 * k w 4 ' ' z ° l Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, September 13, 1970. Sunday, September 13, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Film looms large as scouting technique INTERVIEWING ANSON MOUNT By JERRY CLARKE "Know your enemy" has long been a byword in military circles, w h e r e tacticians study an enemy's nmoves, trying to discern the pattern of action. The ex- pression also hag taken on an increased meaning in- college football, where it is necessary for a coaching. staff to have access to vast amounts of information on upcoming opponents. As the game of football has evolved, scouting tech- niques have also improved. Today, the primary tool is the film, which Michigan assistant coach Larry Smith credits with "really changing football in the last ten years." Films, according to Smith, make it -possible for a staff to discover tendencies in an opponent's offense or defense. Aside from the obvious tendencies for a team to run a certain play on a certain down with a certain distance to go, the coaches can also learn formation patterns. The coaches are also able to determine whether an opponent tends to run its plays toward the sidelines or to the middle of the field, and what type of defense they employ. With the repetitious viewing of the film, they can pick-out many details they overlooked prev- iously. The players themselves watch films at least once a day, trying to learn all they can about the player-they must play opposite of. Teams will trade films with an pponent in large numbers. For last year's Rose Bowl game, Michigan and Southern California traded all ten films of the season. Emphasis is placed on more recent films, and Sat- urday films are expected at the next opponent's school by Sunday. If a film of the next opponent does not reach Michigan by early Monday, Smith says things get "pretty tense." But film is not the only scouting method available. In the Big Ten, teams are allowed to send either one person to each of two games of an upcoming opponent, or two people to one game. Wolverine head coach Bo Schembechler likes having people at the games because they can pick up things that cannot be seen in the films. An example is how a team reacts as the tempo of the game changes. Does the crowd have an effect? Do ix they fold under pressure? These things cannot be de- termined without having someone at the game. Another advantage of sending a scout is the loose information he can pick up. Listening to reporters in the press box and at press parties can give the- scout information on injuries that are healing slowly, trouble spots on a team, and attitudes which can play an im- portant role in a game. One of the most difficult jobs in scouting is find- ing out about a new opponent at the start of the sea- son. Michigan finds itself in that position this fall, as it faces Arizona in the opening game. To obtain the needed data, the coaching staff contacted all of the Wildcats' opponents of last year,. and Schembechler and another member of the staff attended their spring game. Texas A&M, the Wolverines' third opponent, is also a new face, but by the time the Aggies come to Ann Ar- bor, they will have played three times, including games against Louisiana State and Ohio State, both on the road. An idea of their capabilities should be obtained by then. Tender is the- teleph a AN ENJOYABLE ':199 FOOTBALL WEEKEND TAKES MORE THAN By BILL ALTERMAN Gently I caressed the sleek black handle. Temptingly I in- serted my finger .into the evenly spaced holes. Smoothly I spun the dial till I had reached my objective. "Hello," 'a firm voice answered. Ab. I had found the pleasure that exceeds all other physical ecstasies in life. I was in voice communication with A n s o n Mount, Playboy's ,own impas- sioned football forecaster. Actually, those weren't exact- ly the thoughts I had when I called him in his Chicago head- quarters. It is however some- thing one of Hugh Hefner's fiction writers might come up with. Mount himself begins this year's prognostication with the admission that "College foot- ball, like nany other verities of our times, is changing." Mount has changed too. Four- teen yearshago when Hefner was just starting the magazine which would lead him to fame (and money), his staff number- ed a mere fourteen. Mount's only credentials for the job of prognosticator was a love of the game, but that was enough and despite the magazine's growth in employment, Mount still sits down each May to prepare his predictions for the upcoming college season. EACH APRIL, however, he sends out a questionaire to the Sports Information directors of the various top grid colleges. As spring practices come to an end, the questionaires find their way back to Mount's office where he carefully scrutinizes up to 250,000 words in h i s search for the grid truths be- fore his June 1 deadline. When he's not interviewing a coach and worrying about foot- ball, he might very well be put- ting together a piece on a theol- ogian. He edited the last story Martin Luther King wrote for the magazine and once inter- viewed the late Bishop James. Pike. Still, it is his predictions that have made him famous. And no wonder, for according to one survey, four -times in the last eight years he was the No .1 pre-season forecaster. This year Mount picked' Southern California to be first with Michigan close behind in fourth. He admits, however, that in May he can only ac- cumulate 60 per cent of the factors that will eventually lead to a team's success. "I RATE A TEAM on ex- perience, depth, quality of depth, expertise, strength, arrangement of schedule, and the balance be- tween the offense and defense. The other 40 per cent, however, is not predictable. This includes weather,game breaks, injuries, and, more- than anything else, attitudinal factors. "Football isn't logical." This year's predictions allot one loss to each of the five top teams. "It's been years since I predicted a team to go unde- feated. Last time was Oklahoma when the Big Eight was full of 'Old Ladies.' Today, the teams are much better balanced. The Big Eight is now the best con- ference around. Then comes the Southeast Conference and the Pacific Eight." Oddly enough, he invented the name "Pacific Eight." "When the league reformed several years back I thought the name they used (Athletic Asso- ciation of Western Universities), was absurd so I just called it the Pacific Eight." MOUNT PUTS the Big Ten the fourth best conference and lays this to the conference's own strict rules, specifically their ban on the practice of red-shirt- ing. (Red-shirting is the prac- tice whereby a player, usually a sophomore, is considered ineli- gible to play. Thus a player who stays in school for five years can play his last three years, the limit to which he is allow- ed. The name comes from the red shirts they used to wear during practice.) "Sone schools," Mount claims, "with 40-50 players, may have only one genuine sophomore. This enables a team to have one-third more players on scholarships. cator does not pity the Michigan football team for their lack of cheerleaders from the opposite sex. "I would prefer female cheerleaders but it doesn't make that much difference. It's purely an esthetic attraction but- I'm all for it - now watch me get in trouble with the Women's Lib organization." He also doesn't see ally cor- relation between the presence of coeds on campus and t h e number of touchdowns rung up but did admit it might be a re- cruiting factor. "Is a guy going . . 5 .........................::: i^i '}1::":" :' i i i a r r r :: "Is a guy going to prefer Notre Dame and the bland Indiana countryside or USC, which probably has more girls per square yard than any other place in the country?" A SEA T ON THE 50!. bb "t bb th rt th I' r fa la: 1 B th tc co pr n m in -u tr G g tr < << "At some schools you can't even be sure how many schol- arships they allow. And at some places you'll find rich oil mil- lionaires who develop friend- ships with the fathers of top athletic prospects. These dads end up somewhere in the cor- porations of wealthy alumni while their sons don't have to be on scholarships." Big Ten academic standards also bar some top notch pros- pects. "A prominent player," Mount asserts, "who will go very high in the draft has thirty credit hours for 'Shoe Repair'." The team Mount picked for first, USC, has only 20-23 foot- ball scholarships. "But they get who they want," he says. "After all, how many people want to trudge in the snow in East Lan- sing when they can be in Los Angeles." DESPITE PLAYBOY'S' u n - usual interest in the area of females, their pigskin prognosti- Face it, guys want to be where they can socialize with- the op- posite sex." In addition to making sure their charges are sexually con- tent, universities are now faced with the prospect of players with a social conscience, Mount says. Last year several teams had some dissension involving to prefer Notre Dame and the bland Indiana countryside or USC, which probably has more girls per square yard than any other place in the country? i REG. U. S. PAT OFF AFTERWARDS SETTLE BACK AT A HOLIDAY INN There are TWO conveniently located near campus. 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