Sunday, October '1 1, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY A Page Seven Sunday, October 11, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven i-iders power past Purdue on this and that Moorhead keeps cool . 0 s offense clicks *i eric siegel WEST LAFAYETTE LAST WEEK, Michigan quarterback Don Moorhead was a sol- emn man. He had completed only three of 16 passes, hadn't engineered the offense the way he wanted to, and although his team won 14-10, it was not a convincing win, and he was un- happy. * Yesterday, Moorhead wasn't exactly exuberant. He was, more on the order of being smugly confident - and with good reason. The Wolverines had just finished off a highly-rated Pur- due team 29-0, and for the first time in four victories this sea- son, it wasn't only the defense that had all the headlines. "Our offense got the momentum, and kept it going," Michi- 4 gan coach Bo Schembechler said after the game. From the other 4. dressing room, Boilermaker coach Bob DeMoss, who saw his team beat the third-ranked Stanford Indians last Saturday, had a simple explanation for the Wolverines' victory, "We just got beat by a better football team," he said. DeMoss had high praise for the Michigan defense, which recorded its first shutout of the year and has now allowed only a little more than five points a game, but he also said something about the Michigan offense. "Michigan just wore us down in the fourth quarter," he said. The Boilermakers came into that quarter trailing only 6-0, but by the time it was over, the Wolverines had scored three more touchdowns and a field goal. The Wolverines had a lot of offensive heroes in that quarter; the entire offensive line, split end Paul Staroba and tight end Paul Seymour, running backs Preston Henry, Billy Taylor, Fritz Seyferth and Lance Scheffler, and even back-up quarterback Jack McBride. But if you had to single out one player as the hero on offense yesterday, it would have to be Moorhead. Despite a sttong rush by Purdue's line, Moorhead stayed cool, com- pleting nine of 17 passes, including a pair of touchdown 4 tosses, for 92 yards. And he ran, too, - ten times for 39 yards, full strength up the middle or quick scampering around the ends and back inside. Moorhead kept two scoring drives alive in the second half on third and one situations by taking the ball himself. One of the drives led to a 32-yard field goal, the other to a touchdown. He did the same thing in the second quarter in a , third down situation on the Purdue nine yard line and the game was tied nothing-nothing. He needed one yard, and he gained three. "We finally put it together," Moorhead said. "We just kept punching at 'em. We split them out and took it right at 'em." Moorhead spoke softly, but it was a different kind of softness than he spoke with last week. iClearly, one of the more encouraging aspects of yesterday's win was the re-emergence of the Michigan passing attack. For the first time in four weeks, passes weren't dropped, and only a few were over-thrown Staroba, who dropped a slew of passes against Texas A&M last week, found the handle yesterday, and became a reliable third-down and long yardage receiver. "We have to be able to throw the ball," Schembechler said. "You have to have confidence in your split receiver in third down situations." Moorhead's performance was all the more impressive when one takes into account that he, along with tackle Jack Harpring and guard Werner Hall, had been suffering from the flu all week, and while he hadn't missed any practice, he hadn't been able to practice at full speed. And he still felt the remnants of the illness the morning of the game. At the end of the game, though, whatever bad feelings he may have had physically were dispelled by his psychological and emotional well-being. "This is going to give us a tremendous lift," he said. "Any Big Ten win is always better than a non-conference victory." Schembechler was equally happy over the win. The blocking, the passing and the running, and, as usual, the defense, all were subjects of his praise. "I said before the season Purdue was a key game for us, and I still feel that way," he said. "We have three more key games coming up in a row agaisnt MSU, Minnesota, and Wisconsin, and let me tell you, we have no tougher game on our schedule than Michigan State. Taylor, who scored the team's first touchdown and was the * game's leading rusher, didn't deny that the Wolverines had some tough games to play but he wasn't about to, let the thought of future games blunt his feelings about the Wolverine's victory yesterday. "I think the game is going to give us the lift we need to go all the way," Taylor said. "We want a second Big Ten chain- pionship" If the Wolverines continue to show the offensive strength they showed yesterday, and maintain their defensive status quo, they may get exactly what they want. BIG TEN FOOTBALL: By ERIC SIEGEL Special To The Daily WEST LAFAYETTE' - Michi- gan's offense wasn't dead in the first three games, it was only dor- mant. And it came out of hibernationSDP in the second half at Ross-Ade N Stadium here yesterday after- noon, scoring 23 points and pow- NIGHT EDITORS: JERRY CLARKE and JIM KEVRA ering the Wolverines to a 29-0 win over the Purdue Boilermakers in the Big Ten opener for both teams. including the Wolverines' lone marked the first time Purdue had The Wolverines, looking like first half touchdown. lost to a Big T e n opponent at 1 a s t year's Big Ten champions, home since Michigan State beat rolled up 313 yards, 221 of them "THE MOST pleasing thing them here in 1965. on the ground, and came up with about the game was the comeback While Michigan's offense was 18 first downs, almost half as of our offense," Michigan coach flexing its muscles, the defense many as they had in their first Bo Schembechler said after the once again turned in an outstand- three games. game. ing performance, holding the Quarterback D o n Moorhead, "We have been trying to ach- Boilermakers to a meager 11 first who completed just three of 16 ieve a balance between offense downs, four of them coming pt passes 1 a s t Saturday in Michi- and defense all season, and we the end of the first half when the gan's 14-10 win over Texas A&M,! did it today." Wolverines were in a prevent de- hit on nine of 17 passes yester- Michigan's victory gave the fense. day, including a pair of touch- team a 4-0 record, the first time down tosses to second-string full- since 1955 that t h e Wolverines T H E WOLVERINES allowed back Lance Scheffler and tight have won four straight ,games at Purdue a total of just 212 yards, end Paul Seymour. the beginning of the season. with only 36 of them coming on At the running end of the game, The victory ended Purdue's 13- the ground. The Boilermakers' Billy Taylor, starting at tailback consecutive home game victory. sophomore "sensation" Otis Arm- for the first time all season, rush- string, a string that had extended strong, who had been leading the ed for 89 yards in 22 attempts. back to 1967. Yesterday also conference in rushing p r i o r to y . y- C 44 v ( .'Ai. ".. I yesterday's game, managed to pick up a paltry 11 yards in 14 carries, with a long gain of four yards. The most potent Purdue runner was Stan Brown, who accumulat- ed 21 yards in six carries. Quar- terback Chuck Piebes, who com- pleted 15 of 26 passes f o r 176 yards, wound up with a negative 21 yards on the ground. "Our defense was just superb," Schembechler said. "I've never had a team on defense as quick asp this one is this early in the season." In addition to shutting off Pur- due's running game, the defense came up with three interceptions Linebacker Mike Taylor stopped a Purdue drive by picking off the ball at the Michigan goal line with 11 seconds left in the first half, and Marty Huff grabbed another one p a r t way into the fourth quarter with Michigan leading 16- o and Purdue knocking on the once-penetrated Wolverine goal line. Middle guard Henry Hill, who was second to Taylor in tackles with 10, said, "we were working on a shutout, and we finally got one. But it was a lot easier for us today. The offense kept the ball a lot and when you're fresh, you play better. In the first half, the Wolverines offense kept the ball long enough to roll up 94 yards on the ground and 47 more in the air, and work their way to a slim 6-0 lead. THE TOUCHDOWN came after' a scoreless first quarter, w h e n Taylor took a pitch from Moor- head on fourth and one to cap a 61-yar'd scoring drive. Seven plays earlier,' Taylor, wiho ran for 36 of those yards, put the ball deep in Purdue territory with a 27-yard run over l e f t tackle from the Boilermakers 45. The Wolverines lost a chance to pad their lead near the end of the half, when they took over 40, yards from the goal line with 59 seconds left on the clock after Purdue punter Scott Lougheed elected to run for a first down on a fourth and 14 situation and was stopped six yards short by Tom Darden, who came up from the safety slot to make the play. But on the very first play from scrimmage, Paul Staroba, who caught five passes for 52 yards, many of them on third down sit- uations, was called for offensive interference in the Purdue end zone, and the Boilermakers had the ball on their own 20. PIEBES THEN moved Purdue 70 yards in five plays, including four straight first down passes, until Taylor shut off the drive by picking off the pass right in front of the Michigan goal line. The third quarter ;was scoreless, too, but the Wolverines kept get- ting the ball in good field posi- tion, and it seemed just a matter of time until they hit the score- board again. It didn't take long, either, as Killian kicked a 32 yard field goal on the first play of the fourth quarter to give Michigan a 940 lead. The Wolverines missed a scor- ing opportunity when they got the ball on the Boilermakers' 11, cour. tesy of a Prank Gushich recovered fumble, but Taylor fumbled the ball back t'wo plays later. Again, though, it was only a matter of time- until the Wolverines scored, as they put together a 36-yard TD drive the next time they had the ball with Scheffler gaining scoring honors at the receiving end of an eight yard fullback pass. Huff intercepted in Michigan territory, but by the time he got done running the ball was on the Purdue 21. Three plays later, Moorhead passed 10 yards to Sey- mour for the score. Schembechler, who saw his team struggle through three victories, summed up his feelings simply about the Wolverines 4-0 record. "Anytime you're four-and-oh" he said, "You have to be happy. You can't win more than that if you've only played four games." Bring on State!! FIRST DOWNS NET YARDS- Rushing Passing Returns FORWARDPASSES Attempted Completed Intercepted by PUNTS Number Average Distance FUMvBLES LOST YARDS PENALIZED * * * Mich. Purdue 15 111 221 92 116 17 9 3 5 402 20 36 176 27 27 16 1 9 39.4 1 138 Seymour Staroba Doughty Sheffler' Staroba Brown Armstrong Piebes DaniO7 con Bell Stingley North Lougheed Brown Pass Receiving No. Yds. 1 10 5 32- 1 14 2 16 Punting No. Ave. Long 5 40,2 44 T.D. 1 0 0 * Taylor Seyferth Moorhead Henry Moorhead MICHIGAN Rushing Att Net 22 89 14 47 10 39 10 40 Passing Att. Comp. 17 9 PURDUE Rushing Att. Net 6 21 14 11 Att. Comp. Passing 26 15 1 1 Pass Receiving No. 5 3 3 3 Punting T.D. 1 0 0 1 L.G. 27 8 9 .9 T.D. L.G. 4 4 Int. Yds. 3 164 0 1u Yds. 38 48 35 34 6 T.D. 0 0 0 0 Int. Yds.I 1 92 j Lougheed No. Ave. Long 9 39.4 55 PALMER WINS Birds' homers rock Reds; dsputei CINCINNATI ()-Veteran third baseman Brooks Robinson gave the Baltimore Orioles the run they needed with a homer and veteran umpire Ken Burkhart made a home-plate call they need- ed as the Orioles edged Cincin- nati 4-3 yesterday in the opening game of the World Series. Robinson went only 1-for-19 as the Orioles were upended by the New York Mets in the World call aids Orioles -Daily-Thomas R. Copi MARTY HUFF (70), Pete Newell (82), and Tom Darden (35) combine to bring down a Purdue ball carrier in yesterday's game at West Lafayette. The three defenders joined with their teammates in one of the most dominant defensive displays of the season, holding the Boilermakers to 36 yards on the grounds. The shutout, the first of the year for Michigan, came after Purdue had downed highly rated Stanford, and was the first loss forthe Boilermakers at home since 1967. Taylor switch sparks offense By PAT ATKINS Special To The Daily WEST LAFAYETTE - B ill y Taylor's back at tailback and Michigan's offense is back in the game. Maybe the relationship is only a passing coincidence, but Taylor would like to believe otherwise. "It's my first week back at tail- back since last season, and I like it a whole lot better than full- back," Taylor admitted. "At tail- back, if a guy doesn't make a perfect block, you can make cuts." Although an air of being else- where still lingered upon the Wolverine offense in the first quarter yesterday against Purdue it wastTaylor's second quarter score that started the Wolver- ines' to their 29-0 march over the 2 yards, and an unsportsmanlike Boilermakers. conduct penalty against Purdue moved the ball to the three yard TAYLOR, avoiding a starting position yesterday, trotted onto' the field halfway through t h e second quarter in time to smother Preston Henry's fumble of a hand- off and keep Michigan's opening touchdown drive alive. Taylor figured convincingly in the touchdown series again three plays later, when he took a hand- off over left tackle, picked up his blockers, and rambled downfield for 27 yards. It looked like the Taylor of a season ago. His run put the ball on the Purdue 18 yard line. Fullback Seyferth carried over left tackle for a three yard gain. Taylor, continuing to taunt the Purdue defense with his smooth cuts, danced down the right side on the next play for a gain of 6 yards. At third and one on the nine yard line, the Wolverines lined up in a straight T for Moor- head's quarterback sneak. That play netted the Wolverines three line, SEYFERTH GOT first crack at Purdue's goal line defense, but was stopped dead. On the second down Taylor pushed two yards closer before Purdue's Jim Teal haulted the advance Again Tay- lor was halted as Michigan tried for the third and one yard to go. Schembechler opted for a touch- down attempt on fourth and one. It was Taylor who cut back left for the score. "I'm back in the saddle," Tay- lor said. I can read the defense, and I can make my cuts. I feel better." For the fourth week in a row, one of Schembechler's nonstart- ing running backs took the back- field honors as Taylor carried 22 times for 89 yards. In the opening game against Arizona the off-the- bench award went to Lance Schef- fler, then it was tailback Preston Henry out in Washington, and fullback Fritz Seyferth against Texas A&M. NOT ALL OF Taylor's perform- ance was as dazzling as the outfit of Purdue's Golden Girl, however. The Wolverines' other two fumb- les were Taylor's responsibility. And both came just when Mich- igan's offense had begun to de, serve the name. "I made a few mistakes," Tay- lor said, "but they were aggres- sive mistakes." He landed on his first miscue himself. -But it lost the Wolverines' eight yards late in the third quarter and crippled their second scoring drive, Several plays later Dana Coin made good on a 32-yard kick to put Michigan out in front 9-0. Deep in Boilermaker territory a few moments later as a result of Purdue quarterback Chuck Piebes fumbles, Taylor became equally as helpful as Piebes. But the Wolverine defense handled the situation as slickly as they did all afternoon and forced Purdue to punt. "I'm at tailback for good," Taylor said. Now if he j u s t doesn't have to start next week. Series last year. But he snapped a 3-3 tie in the seventh inning yesterday with a home run that put the finishing flourish on a three-homer Baltimore barrage. Robinson's homer came only a half inning after the Orioles had gotten the call they needed from Burkhart. That came after Bernie Carbo walked with two out and Tommy Helms followed with a single. Carbo raced around to third on the play and streaked home when pinch hitter Ty Cline tapped in front of the plate. As Carbo near- ed the plate, he upended Burk- hart while Hendricks lunged for the tag. Burkhart, prone, signaled for the out. A sequence of pictures made by AP photographer Harry Harris show that Oriole catcher Elrod Hendricks never tagged Cincin- nati's Bernie Carbo sliding into home; Carbo apparently never touched the plate, and Burkhart, the plate umpire, falling and off balance, was unable to see the play, anyhow., The Associated Press sequence of four pictures, depicting the play from start to finish, shows Hendricks definitely tagging with his gloved hand while holding the ball in his right. Burkhart; a former big league pitcher with the St. Louis Cardi- nals and Reds, insisted Carbo was tagged. "It was one of those tough calls," Burkhart said. "I had to call the ball fair or foul first." The weird play figured promi- nently in the outcome of the first game. If Carbo had scored, it would have sent the Reds ahead 4-3 and kept alive a rally. Reds Manager Sparky Ander- son, who vehemently protested the call, said Burkhart told the Cin- cinnati pilot that Hendricks tag- ged Carbo. "I didn't think he was touched," Anderson said. "Only one of us can umpire the game. I have;to go along with Burkhart's deci- sion." "The umpires didn't beat us," Anderson said. "Baltimore beat us. The three home runs over that wooden thing out there did it." Sparky was talking about Boog Powell's two-run homer in the fourth, Hendrick's blast in the fifth and Brooks Robinson's solo shot in the seventh.a The Reds got off fast in this one, collecting three runs on a run-producing single by catcher Johnny Bench in the first inning and May's two-run homer in the third. But then Baltimore starter Jim Palmer settled down and the Orioles displayed their own power against Cincinnati's Gary Nolan. First baseman Boog Powell, the hulking blond bomber, got two runs back and Hendricks tied it with a homer in the fifth. That set the stage for the heroics by Robinson, who also made a sensational fielding play in the sixth inning as the Orioles took a 1-0 lead in the opener of this best-of-7 series. Robinson, who entered the sea- son considered by many too old after two lackluster seasons, flash- ed his fielding skill at the start of the sixth inning when he took a hit away from May, eventually saving a run that could have been driven in when Helms singled later in the inning. Then the disputed call by Burk- hart helped the Orioles keep alive a season-ending winning streak that now stretches to 15 victories. And so, when Robinson came to bat in the seventh it was still 3-3 and the Orioles, who had won their last 11 regular season games and three playoff games against Minnesota, needed a run. Robin- son got it on a 0-1 pitch, golfing a Nolan serve over the left field fence for his homer. Bucks smother Spartans Special To The Daily Maciejowski then began to mix EAST LANSING - Halfback his plays with great effectiveness, 'Hondo' Hayden ran around and and the Bucks methodically tihough stubborn Michigan State marched to a first down on the to lead Ohio State to t h r e e MSJ one. Three dives netted second half touchdowns as t h e nothing, but on fourth and one, Buckeyes overcame the Spartans, the Buckeye backup quarterback 29-0. Ron Maciejowski, who came in at quarterback in the third quar- ter after Rex Kern had failed to g% the Bucks untracked, engineer- ed all three marches as the na- tion's top ranked team took com- plete charge after leading only 9-0 at the half. Maciejowski came in on Ohio State's second possession of the t zrd quarter after a Spartan punt g e the Bucks the ball on their own 33. He immediately sent Hay- den scurrying around right end for 32 yards on a naked wide re- faked inside and skipped un- touched into the endzone. This gave the Bucks a 23-0 lead with. six minutes left, and the stands began to empty. * *' * Gophers growl MINNEAPOLIS () - J e f f Wright's two interceptions and fumblflrl Qr'nvlf) k*f drn Minna- Illini o f/fed EVANSTON (UP) - Quarterback Maurie Daigneau, an "invalid" all week, riddled Illinois with pin- point passing and led Northwest- ern to its first victory in f o u r starts with a 48-0 triumph in a Big Ten football opener yester- day. Daigneau, listed unlikely to play because of a sprained shoulder, not only started but hurled two touchdown passes and set up two short scoring plunges by Al Rob- inson with his unerring tosses. * I * SCORES GRIDDE PICKINGS MICHIGAN 29, Purdue 0 Northwestern 48, Illinois 0 Minnesota 23, Indiana 0 Ohio State 29, Michigan State 0 Iowa 24, Wisconsin 14 Stanford 24, So. California 14 Columbia 28, Harvard 21 Dartmouth 38, Princeton 0 Pitt 10, Navy 8 Tennessee 17, Georgia Tech 6 Florida 38, Florida State 27 Mississippi 31, George 21 So. Carolina 31, N. Carolina 21 Nebraska 21, Missouri 7 Texas Tech 21, Texas A&M 7 California 31, Washington 28 South Alabama 35, Vanderbilt 11 Houston Univ. 31, Mississippi St. 14 Morgan state 55, Maryland State 0 Citadel 16, William & Mary 7 Wake Forest 28, Virginia Tech 9 Louisville 14, Tulsa 8 Auburn 44, Clemson 0 Duke 21, West Virginia 13 LSU 34, Pacific 0 Midwest Illinois Wesley 57, Millikin Univ. 7 Kenyon College 39, Lake Forest 0 Ohio 17, Dayton 14 Wayne State 34, Bradley 17 Wittenberg 30, Denison Univ. 0 Notre Dame 51, Army 10 Kansas 21. Kansas St. Univ. 15 iu.,ecovery eyeau a vinne- a sota defense that smothered every gers ounced Indiana opportunity and shot the IOWA CITY () -- Junior tail- Gophers over the Hoosiers 23-0 back Levi Mitchell punched out in a Big Ten football opener yes- 146 yards and one touchdown Sa- terday. turday to help Iowa break away ". ':.;: is i'.: ;:"}: is ";:::r :,; .:::. r."..::ii'v: .: "::: r";;;i;+.. n " ": Y: ry}: ::v.+i $S' F,.F't,::iY ".4.ri"::":::":: is i.. I