Tuesday, October 6; 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine' I Tuesday, October 6, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine Bo says grid better' By MORT NOVECK "Maybe we're not as bad an undefeated football team as peo- ple think," Michigan football coach Bo Schembechler replied to the mushrooming doubts about his team's invincibility after the squad squeaked to its third narrow victory in as many weeks. "Maybe we're playing some good football teams." THOUGH THIS may smack of an excuse to some, Schem- bechler intends it as an explan- ation and has the evidence to back himself up. "People have underestimated our opponents. Last year the non-conference teams we played had a com- than it same the previous week and it's not any one guy." While he isn't sure yet what he will do to alleviate the situ- ation, Schembechler is consid- ering using Glenn Doughty as a receiver from the wingback po- sition more often. In addition he is contemplating greater use of tight end Jerry Schumacher. Schumacher caught the only pass thrown to him on Satur- day. QUARTERBACK Don Moor- head was blamed by the crowd in the stands for the poor aerial exhibition b u t Schembechler disagrees with their assessment of the situation. "Moorhead "Maybe we're not as bad an undefeated football team as people think, maybe we're playing some good football teams." 'r..{{r~tlh:-:. .Pv?"::{:{?}:j . . pi. a.. .p....r..... . . . squad looks well and was running hard," he noted. "He is not quite as strong as Garvie Craw was, but he's niftier. He's a pretty good full- back." SEYFERTH WAS the third back in a row to come out of semi-oblivion and lead the Michigan ground game, but un- fortunately Schembechler isn't hiding any aces up his sleeves that he's aware of. "I've played all my cards," he lamented. For the hero's of the squad, the defensive unit, the Texas A&M game was almost an in- stant replay of the two previous victories. The only difference was that the squads goal line was finally violated, but the penetration didn't upset the coach. "We practiced the goal line defense all week and had the play set up right, but the outside man failed to turn the play in, so they scored." IN RECOGNITION of their fine play, Schembechler named seven members of the defensive unit to the Victor's Club, in- cluding Ed Moore, Marty Huff, Mike Taylor, Henry Hill, Tom Beckman, Pete Newell, and Phil Seymour. Although none of the defensive backs were named, Schembechler commented favor- ably on their play, especially on the force of their tackles. Reflecting his growing satis- faction with the offensive line's play, Schembechler named Dan Dierdorf, Jack Harpring, Reggie McKenzie, Tom Coyle, Guy Murdock and Schumacher as o f f e n s i v e victors. J o i n i n g them were backs Seyferth and Doughty. Rounding out the honor roll were the player of the week se- lections. Both choices were to tackles, Newell on defense and Dierdorf on offense. Upsets highlight Big Ten bined record of three wins and six losses after the third game and all three wins were by Missouri, who defeated us. This year the record stands at six wins and four losses. The only * other team besides Michigan to beat any of them is Ohio State." This, however, is not to sug- gest that Schembechler is to- tally satisfied with the team's performance. While he feels that they are doing some things well, he acknowledges that "we've got to get the offense going." Neither the running nor the passing game went as well as hoped against Texas A&M, but the air attack, which netted only 35 yards as opposed to 177 on the ground, is the. area of greater concern. "We'd be in much better shape if we caught some passes," Sch- embechler admitted. "We had bad receiving and it was the played a fine game other than the big mistakes obvious to everyone. I never like to see a player get booed, but Moorhead is smart enough to know that the players and coaches don't feel that way. I'm not down on him and I hope he's not down on himself." MOORHEAD didn't e s c a p e with complete absolution, how- ever. The coach did admit that "Moorhead is hurrying his throws a little too much and he had a couple of bad options." On a brighter note, Schem- bechler saw some improvement in the ground game. "The of- fensive blocking has improved since the first game," he com- mented. "The offensive line blocking is good now." He was also, es expected, pleased with the work of fullback Fritz Sey- ferth. "Seyferth hit the holes PETE NEWELL (82) yesterday was named lineman of the week by UPI. The Michigan tackle made 15 solo tackles in Saturday's victory over Texas A&M. 1 0 Wolverines stagger to, seventh in APpoll! PENN STATE, STANFORD OFFED By KEN COHN Despite the fact that the Big Ten grid teams barely improv- ed their showing against non- conference opponents, one word describes what distinguished last Saturday's play: upset. One team from the West fell from the ranks of the unbeaten, and another power from the East had its deflated championship hopes all but disintegrated. In Stanford, Calif., the story was Purdue's alert defensive secondary and ground game as the Boilermakers tarnished the Indians' perfect record, by the score of 26-14. Stanford's Jim Plunkett filled the air with 36 passes, completing 15 for 2 0 0 yards, but Purdue's defense picked off five tosses - corn- erbacks Randy Cooper and Arn- old Carter grabbing three and two passes respectively. OFFENSIVELY, PURDUE'S sophomore quarterback, Chuck Piebes, completed 15 out of 20 passes for 112 yards. It w as Purdue's rushing strength, though, that made the 'differ- ence; the Boilermakers outclass- ed the Indians on the ground, 244 yards to 61. Running back Otis Armstrong led the victors with 120 yards, while flanker Stan Brown carried the ball over for two TD's, The Boilermakers, now 2-1 for the season, broke out in front early, combining a TD on a Piebes keeper and a nine- yard score by Brown with a freak safety to lead after the first quarter, 16-0. . PURDUE'S UPSET was all the more surprising, because of their annihilation the previous week by Notre Dame, 48-0. One Pur- due player commented that "we realized we had nothing to lose by playing Stanford - it was the Indians who would be pres- sured by their unbeaten record." Commenting on Purdue's pass defense, freshman coach Bob DeMoss said, "We had no spec- ial defense for Plunkett. We just didn't show him too much of one thing. We tried to change up on him a lot. If you sit in one defense too long, he'll just pick you apart." Stanford's John Ralston refused to alibi h i s team's poor showing - "We got whipped in every way, shape and form. They were a better team. Let's just say we under- estimated their ability." daily sports NIGHT EDITOR: BILL ALTERMAN The Boilermaker victory takes on special interest to Michigan fans because of this Saturday's clash between the two teams in Lafayette. The Purdue rush de- fense has looked good in its=two wins, a cause for concern for the on again-off again Wolver- ine ground game. And of course, the display- put on by Purdue's front four and secondary threat- ens Michigan's sputtering pass- ing attack. ALSO LAST Saturday, at Mad- ison's Camp Randall Stadium,. the Wisconsin" Badgers, coming off a 14-14 tie with TCU the previous week, stunned the sinking Nittany Lions of Penn State, 29-16. It was the second, loss this season for the Staters, who were undefeated last year, and the first win for the Badg- ers to even their record at 1-1-1. Penn State clearly dominated the rushing game, holding the Badgers to negative yardage. But Wisconsin won the game on long aerial strikes by junior QB Neil Graff. He heaved 68-yard and 54-yard scoring bombs to tight end Larry Mialik, and add- ed a 27-yard TD toss to split end Terry Whittaker. Like Purdue, The Badg- ers capitalized on numerous Penn State turnovers, intercept- ing four passes and recovering a pair of fumbles. With the score tied, 16-16, in the final period, cornerback Danny Crooks snar- ed a Lion pass and set up the Badger's go-ahead TD. A Penn Statefumble then led to the last score. THERE WERE two other Big Ten victories last weekend: First-ranked Ohio State predict- ably rolled over Duke, 34-10, for its second victory of the season and Illinois whitewashed Syra- cuse, 27-0, to improve its re- cord to 2-1. The Bucks only led the Blue Devils by a scant three points at halftime, but a quick 81 yard, touchdown march in the third quarter and a Rex Kern touch- down pass to Larry Zelina wrap- ped the game up for Woody Hayes' protege's. Illini quarterback Mike Wells ran for one touchdown and set up two others on scrambling keeper plays to inflict the first o p e n i n g three-game losing streak in Ben Schwartzwalder's 22 year coaching career. ELSEWHERE IN the confer- ence, defeat was the rule. At East Lansing, the Michigan State Spartans, as expected, fell beneath the arm of Joe Theismann and the brawn of Notre Dame, 29-0. Nebraska out-muscled Min- nesota, 35-10, as Cornhusker quarterback Jerry Tagge scored one touchdown and threw for another. He completed 12 of 21 passes for 148 yards before leav- ing the game midway in the fourth quarter. Southern Methodist edged out Northwestern on an eight yard run by Chuck Hixson; West Vir- ginia pushed by Indiana 16-10 as part time running back, split end, and flanker Jim Braxton scored twice for the Mountain- eers; and the Arizona Wildcats, opening game losers to the Wol- verines, outlasted Iowa 17-10. Michigan's football squad jump- ed two notches to seventh in this week's Associated Press Poll. The rise was due to the Wolverines' victory over Texas A&M coupled with upsets of Colorado and Stan- ford. Top-ranked Ohio State opened up its lead over runnerup Texas. The Buckeyes received 27 of the 38 first-place votes and a total of 713 points after trimming Duke 34-10. 28-14 VICTORY: Lions rally to overco DETROIT OP)-Detroit exploded for 21 points in the third quarter and got a fourth-quarter touch- down after a key interception as the Lions beat the Chicago Bears 28-14 last night to take sole pos- session of first place in the Central Division of the National Football Conference. Mel Farr scored two touch- downs for Detroit on runs of three and 20 yards, Altie Taylor scored on a seven-yard sprint and Bill. Munson passed 13 yards to Larry Walton for a touchdown account- ing for the Lions scoring. Pro Standings The fired-up Bears took a 7-0' halftime lead on a 20-yard touch- down pass from Jack Concannon to Dick Gordon in the first quar- ter before the Lion's third-quarter barrage. Concannon and Gordon teamed on a 61yard pass play on the first play of the fourth quarter to put the Bears close at 21-14. But the Lions cornerback Dick Lebeau intercepted a Concannon pass at the Detroit 25 midway in the final period and ran it back to the Bears' 31 to prepare the way for Farr's 20-yard insurance touchdown. With about eight minutes left, Lebeau intercepted another Con- cannon bomb on the Lions six.' It was Lebeau's 50th interception tying him with former Lion Yale Lary for the all-time team leader- ship.j A capacity crowd of 58,210 plus a national television audienceI Texas' 11th-hour 20-17 victory over UCLA on a 45-yard touch- down pass with 12 seconds left kept the Longhorns in the No. 2 spot with six first-place ballots j Di and 610 points. Last week they trailed Ohio State by 24 points and the week before that by a watched Detroit push its record to mere 13. 3-0 while Chicago fell to 2-1. Stanford's stunning 26-14 loss Gordon's first-quarter score was to Purdue dropped the Indians the first touchdown given up by from third to 12th and enabled the Lions in their last five reg- Notre Dame and Southern Cali- ular season National Football fora to move up one spot each League games dating back to last f season. It climaxed an eight-play, O1.Ohio State (27) 2-0 713 67-yard drive. Texas (6) 3-0 610 3. Notre Dame 3-0 576 Detroit took the second-half 4. So. California (3) 3-0-1 531 kickoff and drove from their 15 5. Mississippi (1) 3-0 459 to the Bears' three in nine plays 6. Nebraska 3-0-1 402 and two penalties to set up Farr's 7. Air Force 4-0 266 first score. 9. Auburn 3-0 218 A 17-yard Errol Mann field goal 1. Ark aVginia4-14 was good but Chicago got a rough- 12. Stanford 3-1 134 ing-the-holder penalty to give De- 13. Georgia Tech 4-0 131 troit a first down at the five. 14. Arizona state 3-0 106 15. UCLA 3-1 80 On Chicago's second play after 16. Missouri 3-1 61 the ensuing kickoff Concannon 17. Colorado 2-1 46 fumbled and middle linebacker 18.North Carolina 4-0 36 19. Louisiana State 2-1 24 Mike Lucci recovered for the 20. Tennessee 2-1 19 Lions at the Bears' 38. Others receiving votes, listed alpha- Five plays later Farr shed three betically: Houston, Iowa State, Kansas, tackes o sorehis eve-yad IKansas State, Mississippi State, Prince- tackles to score his seven- yard ton, Texas A&M, Toledo, Tulane, Wash- touchdown. ington. to third and fourth, respectively. The Irish blanked Michigan State 29-0 and the Trojans walloped Oregon State 45-13. Mississippi's nationally televised 48-23 rout of Alabama boosted the Rebels from seventh to fifth and Nebraska remained sixth by beat- ing Minnesota 35-10. Air Force was up from 10th to eighth after bouncing Colorado State 37-22. Rounding out the Top Ten were Auburn and Arkansas, which were 12th and 11th a week ago. Auburn whipped Kentucky 33-15 and Ar- kansas walloped Texas Christian 49-14. Colorado, eighth last week, lost to Kansas State 21-20 and dropped to 17th. 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