Sunday,- September 27, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Sunday, September 27, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Defense holds off Husky assault, 17-3 By PHIL HERTZ Special To The Daily SEATTLE - Another super- lative effort by the Michigan defensive unit and the second half running of reserve half- back Preston Henry yesterday enabled the Michigan Wolver- ines to overcome a seemingly impotent offense and a 3-0 Washington Huskie halftime lead to road from behind for a 17-3 triumph. There were no real individ- ual 'heroes for the Wolverine defense that kept the Wol- verines in contention during an unbelievably incompetent _opening half and then pro- ceeded to complete throttle Washington's super sopho- more quarterback, Sonny Six- killer, during a Michigan dom-= inated closing thirty minutes. Throughout the first thirty minutes the Washington Huskies were knocking on the Michigan; end zone, but the defense w i t h Marty Huff, Tom Darden a n d Henry Hill turning in key plays, was able to limit the Huskies to three. points, enabling the Wolver- ines to gain control of the game in the second half when the Michigan offense finally began to1 find itself.{ SUNDAY, SPOUTS NIGHT EDITORS: JIM KEVRA AND ELLIOT LEGOW Perhaps the key difference be- tween the Michigan offense of the first and second halves w as Schembechler's decision to insert' Henry in the Michigan backfield in place of Glenn Doughty, who for the second straight Saturday turned in a rather unimpressive performance, gaining only 13I yards in seven carries during the first half. Henry responded to his chance by gaining 113 yards in 13 carries during the second half, and scoring both of Michi- gan's touchdowns on runs of eight and thirty yards. There was a touch of irony in the move, since i Lance Scheffler started the se- Schem cond half, but was removed in think favor of Henry after an injury. that , Another difference between crossi the offensive performance in the The two halves was Michigan quarter- Husky back Don Moorhead. He was able ing im to connect on only three of his Washi thirteen first half passes against sive h the tough Washington secondary, penalt but when the second half began it sion,a was evident that the Wolverine scorea signal caller had found the range, cond enabling the Wolverines to domi- yards, nate the second half action. second The first time Michigan touch- Mich ed the ball in' the second half it first h appeared they would erase the 3-0 sc Washington advantage quite worse, quickly; however, a Wolverine ines w drive that moved to the Husky 19 threef yard line died when Paul Staroba comin fumbled after pulling in one of other< Moorhead's passes. just b The defense then took over and half. stopped 'Washington cold in their Was tracks, setting up the offense at 35-yar midfield. On the first offensive bowsk: play after the Washington pune, play d Henry took a pitchout right for set up 22 yards, which set the Wolverines Sixkill up for Dana Coin's 39-yard field Krieg, goal which tied the score. the Hu With the defense still holding the ha the Washington offense to a stand Huskie still in the second half and giving points the Wolverines exceptionally good The -field position time after time, it fense was just a matter of time before the Wolverine offense would find the end zone. The play the sprang Michigan came just before the end First D, of the third quarter. Ru The Wolverines had taken over Pas Pn on the Washington 49. On the Numbe next play Bill Taqlor broke over Yards right tackle for 24 yards. Three YardsI plays later Moorhead hit Star- Net Ya oba for a fourteen yard gain, and Porwar the touchdown. t Att The Husky defense seemed to Com regain a bit of its talent in the Inte closing period, but by that time is Total N was becoming more and more ap- Averag parent that the Wolverine end Fumble zone would remain virgin terri- Pen Iti tory. Although Michigan Coach Bo Yards P nbechler later said, "I don't there are any other teams will keep Washington from ng the goal line this season." final crusher from the viewpoint came in the wan- ninutes of the game when ngton was called for defen- olding on fourth down. The y cost Washington posses- although 70 yards from a and- also set up Henry's se- touchdown run of thirty which came with only 29 ds left in the contest. :igan had escaped from the half at the short end of a ore, but it could have been much worse, The Wolver- were only able to manage first downs in the half, two g in the closing minutes, the on a pass interference call efore the end of the f i r s t hington's score came on a d field goal by Steve Wiez- i, climaxing a 38-yard, six- rive. The three pointer was by two completions f r o in er, one to flankerback Jim which completely throttled :uskies running game during Lif, stiffened and forced the es to settle for only three v .I play was the only thing which kept the Huskies from pulling away. Repeatedly the inability of the Wolverine offense to move the ball combined with several poor punts by Staroba managed to give Washington excellent f i e I d position whereupon Sixkiller would find an opening in the Michigan secondary, setting up the Huskies for what would appear an immi- Inent score. Each time, however, the Wolverines would come up with the turnover to stop the I drive. The first time Washington got the ball after their score, Sixkiller engineered a drive from the Washington 48 to the Michigan 24 before Darden's interception stopped the drive. Later in the half two more drives were stopped by Huff interceptions inside the Michigan 20. Another Washington scoring threat was lost when Jim Krieg caught one of Sixkiller's 13 com- pletions and roared down the side- line to the Michigan one: however he had stepped out of bounds near midfield. Michigan had only two scoring threats during the opening half. The first opportunity came at the beginning of the second quarter k when Tom Beckman fell on Wash- ington running back Bo Cornell's fumble at the Washington 22, but Michigan was only able to ad- vance the ball one yard, and Dana Coin's 38-yard field goal attempt was short and wide to the left. Late in the half, Moorhead en- gineered a drive which brought; the Wolverines close to a score. -Associated rress Jim Betts and Tom Darden defend PURDUE PUMMELED On the first play after one of Huff's interceptions had stopped one of Washington's many drives, . Moorhead sprinted right and ability of the Michigan de- found plenty of running room for to come up with the big a twenty-three yard gain. "When Sonny is Blue . . Wasl Downs w1s shing 1 ing 10 nalty 1 r Attempts Rushing 39 Rushing 74 Lost Rushing 54 ards - Rushing 2( sng 181 d Passes empted 33 mpleted 19 ercepted by 1 Plays 72 Net Yards 201 R Gain per Play 2.8 s-No. Lost 2-1 [enalized 501 ptions 1 Returned 0 10 e Distance 38.1 eturns - Nbr. Yds 6-46 Returns - Nbr. rds 4-71 h. Mich. 15 10 3 ~ 2 49 236 21 215 67 Sixkiller Cornell Wheeler Downey H. Brady Doughty Taylor Berutti Moorhead Scheffler Henry WASHINGTON Att. Gain 15 12 12 32 7 10 4 17 1 3 Totals 39 74 MICHIGAN 7 13 17 67 t 11 5 28 2 4 13 113 Totals 49 236 Loss 45 0 9 0 0 54 0 0 2 20 0 0 21 Net' -33 32 1' 17 3 20 13 67 10 113 215 Bucks By The Associated Press COLUMBUS-Ohio State tu ed four 'fumble recoveries and pass interception into touchdow and the top-ranked Buckeyes ro ed up 513 yards yesterday, mak their season's football debut rousing 56-13 triumph over you Texas A&M. F u llb a c k John Brocking scored twice for the defend Bgi Ten Conference co-champi and six other players accoun for touchdowns as the Bu handed the Aggies their first s back in three 1970 games. Ohio State's veteran defens unit forced three fumbles an pass inteiception by the Aggies the third quarter, The Bucke converted the breaks into f touchdowns in an eight-min span to make the game a rout irn- Sa' wns: 011- bomb Quarterback Rex on a six-yard run the Buckeye offense yards. * * * Kern scor and direct with 142 to' -Associated Press GLENN DOUGHTY looks for daylight in the Washington defense during yesterday's, game in Seattle. Doughty played most of the first half but was replaced in the second half by Preston Henry who eventually scored both of Michigan's touchdowns. 23 7 2 282 4.0 3-3 4 29 Passing WASHINGTON IUFF, DARDEN STAR: YardsF Punts Average Punt R Kickoff Yar 3 Att. Comp. Int. Yds. , 37 Sxkiller 32 19 ;3 181 7 Downey 1 9 0 0| 37.6 Totals 33 19 3 181 1-7 MICHIGAN 2-40 Moorhead 23 7 1 67 wall By ERIC SIEGEL Special To The Daily S E A T T L E - While Michigan spent the better part of yesterday afternoon here looking for its of-1 fense, the Wolverine defense again showed its mettle, coming up with the .ball time after time to keep the team in the game against! an inspired Washington football team. The defense, which allowed just 227 yards and no touchdowns in last week's 20-9 win over Arizona, got tough against Washington's hearlded quarterback Sonny Six- killer and his brawny offensive teammates, as the Wolverines came up with a 17-3 win. The defensive performance was as impressive statistically as that 4 of last week's too, as Sixkiller,! accounted for only 181 yards on 19 of 32 completions. And they allowed the Huskies six less points than they did the Wildcats. But the Wolverines got tough when they had to. In the first half alone, they came up with three y interceptions deep in their own territory' to stifle Washington drives and keep the Huskies' half- time margin to a manageable 3-0. They also added a fumble recovery, to their repertoire, as Tom Beck- man, subbing for the- injured Fred Grambau, gave the Wolverine of- 4 fense. the ball on the Washington 22. IN ALL, the Wolverine defense came up with the ball four times! on three interceptions and a re- covered fumble, stopped the Hus-1 kies with a stingy 11 first downsj e and 205 yards, and tackled Wash-' ington runners for a loss several times. The Wolverine defense, facing last week's back-of-the-week and a team that accounted for 598 yards and 42 points in the Hus- kies' thrashing of Michigan State, proved that a team's offensive! output bears at least some rela- tionship to its opponent's defense.' Once again, the defense did not allow a touchdown. The Wolver- 1 stifles Sixk'ller killer, who threw 22 times in the half and had great protection1 most of the time, went back to throw. But the Wolverines had the, blitz on, and Sixkiller hurried theI ball into the arms of Michigan's' Tom Darden at the seven yard line. Late in the second quarter, the minute left in the third quarter and the score tied, 3-3.3 Just as two defensive plays lastj week in the second half gave the' Wolverines scoring opportunities that turned into points, the defen- sive line set the team in good field position by ramming the ball back at Sixkiller. Five plays later, Huskies learned that linebackers Preston Henry went eight yards can intercept passes, too. It's a for a touchdown, giving the Wol- lesson they probably won't forget verines the lead for the first time for a long time, either, because in the game and giving the de- they, learned it from the master fense all the padding it needed to; of the art, Marty Huff. preserve another Michigan victory. Huff, who picked off a pass last week against the Wildcats' Brian MICHIGAN COACH Bo Schem-; Linstrom and stole three off Pur- bechler, coming off his second, due's Mike Phipps last year, came tough win in two weeks had high up-with two in the space of two praise for the play of his defen- minutes sive eleven. "You have to respect Both the interceptions were im- the flow of the defense-they're portant, too, as the Huskies were quick and they're tough," he said, knocking on Michigan's as yet un-' after the game. touched goal line. The first came "I'll bet there is no other team with 5:40 left in the half and the# that will keep Washington from Huskies sitting on the Michigan =going into the end zone," he 28 after taking over at the Wol- added. verines' 43. Michigan's offense is still a cause for. some concern, even H U F F RETURNED the pass though the Wolverines seemed to seven yards, but the defense had have finally found themselves in to come right back on the field the second half. But the concern again as Glenn Doughty fumbled shouldn't be too great. After all, on the first play from scrimmage.1 if the offense can keep on scoring The defense made everything look 17 or 20 points a game, it's going easy, though, as they allowed the to take an awful lot of field goals Huskies just one first down and to beat Michigan this year.3 five plays before Huff intercepted' again, this time bringing the ball six yards to the Michigan 15. Earlier in the first half, Dar-e den, who led the team in tackles i for the second straight week with 10, stopped a Husky drive by com- By LEE KIRK ing up from his halfback slot and Special To The Daily making a jarring tackle to stop a SEATTLE - Washington foo Husky bid for a first down in a are hoping that autumn won't c third and one situation with the yh ball on the Michigan 45 year. Instead, they have dreams{ In the second half, the defensive longed Indian Summer brought on was even more stringent, shutting Cherokee quarterback, Sonny Sixk the scoring gate on Washington i fortunately for Husky fans, theo completely as the Wolverine of- that looked like Indian Summeri fense found its way to the score-! yesterday was the weather, which board with 17 points. in Irish romp ung SOUTH BEND - Senior qua terback Joe Theismann thr ton three touchdowns passes to To ing Gatewood Saturday as sixth-ran ons ed Notre Dame slugged mistak ted ridden Purdue, 48-0, to end cks 1 three-game losing string in t et- ; series against the Boilermaker Purdue's offense, led first] ive: quarterback Chuck Piebes, ma d a ing his second start of the seaso s i and then by Gary Danielson, w yes ineffective against the Irish d our fensive unit. ute Notre Dame forced both sop t. omore quarterbacks into numero errors with great pressure putc them by the defensive line a blanket coverage by the defensi secondary. Bobcats bobbed MINNEAPOLIS - Minnesot devastating ground attacked t by Barry Mayer and Craig Cur shredded Ohio defenses for 4 yards and the Gophers overpo ered the Bobcats 49-7 yesterday the first football game on the n Memorial Stadium Tartan Tu Mayer a senior tailback, carri 12 times for 118 yards and Stepp off a 21 yard touchdown run Curry, junior quarterback, r an option play 19 yards for c touchdown and passed eight yar to Bart Buetow for another sco Curry also gained 85 yards rus ing, 68 in the first half when t Gophers shot into a 28-0 lead. Spartans supreme EAST LANSING - Michig State, badly beaten in its open by one team out from the Pacif 8, evened the score with the co league yesterday with a seco half burst of power for a 28 victory over Washington State. ;s Spartan junior quarterback M e Rasmussen, a left-handled slin s imported from Fresno, Ca started out spectacularly with 32-yard completion to Gor Bowdell for a touchdown int first three minutes. MSU showed more power Rasmussen drove the Spart 97 yards to score in the third p iod, with Henry Matthews div ,.- in for the last yard. . ed Hawkeyes humbled ed tal IOWA CITY - Seventh-ranked Southern California churned out 506 yards on the ground and raced by Iowa 48-0 in an intersec- tional football contest here yes- ar- terday. ew The victory gave USC 24 om straight regular-season g a m e s 1k- without a loss and put moved the ke- Trojans' season mark to 2-0-1. a Iowa is 0-2. he the Trojans, who tied eighth- s. rated Nebraska 21-21 last weep, by bounced back with a vengeance. Lk- They pounded out 660 yards total on, offense - 596 in the first three vas quarters - inbuilding their 48-0 e- winning margin. h- Bears growl lus on BERKELEY - California quar- nd terback Dave Penhall, fighting to ve win back his starting job, passed for two TD as the Golden Bears trounced Indiana 56-14 for their first victory of the season. The Cal defensive unit which a's was embarrassed a week earlier in led a 56-15 loss to Texas, set up three ry TD's by forcing three short punts 89 by Indiana. ini in Badgers tied irf. MADISON '- Texas Christian ed and Wisconsin battled to a 14-14 ed tie yesterday afternoon in an in- tersectional college football game . before a record opening day crowd an of 61,539 at Camp Randall Sta- ne dium. rds re. TC 'U' and Wisconsin fought h- evenly through the first two per- he iods. After the visiting Horned Frogs turned an early break into a touchdown, the Badgers tied it up on a one - yard quarterback sneak in the second period. an ier Illini swamped ic CHAMPAIGN -- Junior defen- ast sive back Joe Bullard, who stole -d three of sophomore Mike Wells passes, returned a punt through a maze of Illinois tacklers for 77 ike yards and a last quarter, touch- ger down that sealed a 23-9 victory lif., for Tulane yesterday. ia Wells booted a 33-yard field don goal to close a 56-yard drive in the the first period and scored on a one-yard sneak in the second, as as the Illini took a 9-0 margin. His ans touchdown capped a 57-yard et- thrust in 10 plays and featured ing the 12, 7 and 24-yard runs of Darrell Robinson -Ao - r OHIO STATE'S JOHN BROCKINGTON crashes through the Texas A&M defensive line on rout to a sizeable gain in yesterday's 56-13 rout by the Bucks. Brockington rambled for- two touchdown as OSU ground out 415 yards rushing, paj tball fans ome t h i s of a pro- m by their killer. Un- only thing in Seattle h was su- rks 'wolverine surge turned the game around. Preston H e n r y replaced Glenn Doughty, who still may be hampered by earlier injuries, at tailback, and Henry responded by running over, around and through the Husky defense for 113 yards in only 13 carries. Schembechler also used a few misdirected plays to loosen up an aroused Husky de- fense that had given up but one run of over three yards in the first half. The difference was apparent in the Wol- verines initial drive of the third quarter, as Henry started bearing the brunt of the outside load and Bill Berutti cracked inside. on a couple of wingback reverses to move the ball deep into Washington territory. This drive was stopped by a fumble, but 'old reliable, the Michigan defense, forced the Huskies to punt, and after Henry swept fn 99 Va cMirioanfi a a imp ,nn how long the Michigan offense can con tinue to live off the fat of the land, an you can bet that Bo Schembechler wou just as soon not know the answer. As lon as no one crosses your goal line, you wi probably win, but life becomes more pleas ant when the offense can give the defen ers a little breathing room. The sweeps, deep hand-offs and quic hitters that made the Wolverine groun game go last year have been stopped co so far this season. The passing game ha been similarly afflicted. On too many 04 casions, Don Moorhead has missed the ope man or else the open man has dropped th ball. In a word ,the Wolverine attack has bee lethargic, and until Henry took charge, ti end was not in sight. Schembechler after w.d.,,a+',p tn + nmmit imfil+'nn +h.ail Id ld tg ill d- k- id ld as c- en he n ie !r- H_. ..C ........4r«" College Scores THE SECOND-HALF defensiveI ines were tough against the pass, play was less dramatic; there were! and especially tough against the no interceptions and no recovered run, giving up only 20 yards to fumbles. The Wolverines simply the Huskies' backs. put on a display of raw power. But the defense was toughest in Sixkiller, who netter 117 yards the clutch. In the first half, with in the air in the first half, wound the pressure put on by a combina- up with a total of only 181 yards tion of Sixkiller's nassing skill and ; for the game. perb. All was not sunshine for the Wolverines, either, as for the second Saturday in a row, their offense sputtered and s t a 11Ie d more often than not before uncranking enough to put 17 points on the board in the second half after being blanked and spanked in the first. After the Wolverines offensive showing GRIDDE PICKINGS MICHIGAN 17, Washington 3 UCLA 12, Northwestern 7 Notre Dame 48, Purdue 0 Ohio State 56, Texas A&M 13 Mich. State 28, Wash. State 14 USC 48, Iowa 0 Wisconsin 14, TCU 14 Minnesota 49, Ohio U 7 Tulane 23, Illinois 9 California 56, Indiana 14 Colorado 41, Penn State 13 Air Force 37, Missouri 14 Oregon State 23, Oklahoma 14 Yale 10, Connecticut 0 Alabama,46, Florida 15 Auburn 36, Tennessee 23 SMU 34, New Mexico State 21 Kansas 31, Syracuse 14 Harvard 28, Northeastern 7 Boston College 28, Navy 14 Delaware 53, New Hampshire 12 Midwest Hiram College 49, Oberlin College 14 Kent State 27, Buffalo 21 Miami, Ohio 23, W~est Michigan 12 Franklin Col. 21, Hanover Col. 14 Moorhead State 36, Winona State 14 North Dakota 35, Mankato State 19 No. Dakota St. 24, South Dakota 21 Ripon College 14, Carleton Col. 7 St. Cloud St. 14, Minnesota-Morris 0 St. ,John's Minn. 29, Hamline U 8 Bowling Green 14, Dayton 14 South Georgia Tech 31, Miami 21 Mississippi 20, Kentucky 17 North Carolina 53, Maryland 20 N_ Calna St+. 7. So.aoln a