Sunday, November 1, 1*97Q THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine Sunday, November 1, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY rratic gri ders dow n Badgers on this and that' Badgers down .. . but not out eric siegel.. MADISON Michigan throttled Wisconsin's upset hopes here yesterday by a score of 29-15, but no one in the Badger lockerroom was walking like a loser. "Sure, we're a little disappointed and discouraged," the Badgers' rookie coach John Jardine said after the game. "But Michigan's a great football team. You can't spot a team like that three touchdowns. "But I was proud of our team in the second half," he continued. "We came back and we kept fighting, but we just couldn't capitalize our breaks." Neil Graff, the Badgers' junior quarterback, was one of those who was disappointed, but he was hardly ready to give up on the rest of the season. "We really wanted this game," he said. "It really meant a lot to us." "But I think we proved we can play a top .team and do a good job against them," he added. "I don't think we'll have a letdown after this; if anything, I think it will give us a lift." Graff, who was the fourth leading passer in the Big Ten going into yesterday's game, was the man 'the Badgers had counted on to pull off their upset. Jardine had said before the game that he expected to have trouble running against Michigan, and he didn't try to hide the fact that he planned to go to the air. His prediction ran true to form, too, as the Badgers picked up only 79 yards on the ground, and only five years net rushing in the second half. And so it was left up to Graff, who gained 168 yards through the air on 11 of 23 completions, to give the Badgers their second major upset of the season and even their record at 3-3-1. It was Graff who led the Badgers to an upset 29-16 win over Penn State earlier in the year, passing for three long touchdown bombs Yesterday, though, the Wolverines cut off the bomb. Graff connected on a 17 yard touchdown pass to running back "A- Train" Thompson at the end of the. second quarter, and threw a 37 and a 27 yard pass, but most of his completions were out over the middle to his backs, and while they picked up yardage, they didn't score points. "Michigan was sending a linebacker out, and they had an end dropping off, and that made it hard to throw long," Graff said. Graff also ran fairly well yesterday. He gained 65 yards in 22 carries, but he was thrown for losses totaling 38 yards, and so he wound up with a 1.2 yards per carry average. What made the Badgers failure to put off the upset just a little more discouraging was the fact that they came so close to a victory. Michigan Coach Bo Schembechler said, "They had every combination a team could want for an upset and they couldn't do it." And the Wisconsin lockerroom voiced its affirmation of the sentiment. "I think we had the opportunities to win," Graff said, "But we just kept falling short." "We got fired up in the second half," Jardine said. "We got more than our share of the breaks, and in the third quarter I was very confident. But we just got stopped too many times." Both Graff and Jardine thought that a crucial series came at the end of the third quarter. The Badgers, down 21-12, had the ball on the Michigan 20 after halfback Billy Taylor fumbled but had to settle for a field goal. "It would have made a tre- mendous difference if we had scored," said Graff, who had two passes broken up by defensive back Tom Darden and a third knocked down by middle guard Henry Hill. As it was, the Badgers actually outscored the Wolverines 9-8 in the second half, and fell just a few yards short of scoring another touchdown at the end of the game. And while six of Wisconsin's points came on an 85-yard punt return, they still counted on the scoreboard, and showed that the Badgers had a threat besides Graff and the bomb. And the Badger defense proved it could contain a high-povered offense, too. The play of the Badgers this year, while somewhat erratic and seldom brilliant, has nevertheless been an improvement over the past three years, when the team went 3-26-1. When Jardine took over as coach from John Coatta in December, many people were disgruntled, saying Coatta, who was here only three years, never really got a fair chance. Now the critics have been silenced, attendance is up over 32 per cent from last year and no one around here, least of all the Badger players, are conceding anything to anyone. "I think we can get up and give Ohio State a helluva fight,"' Wisconsin's offensive guard Keith Nesbusch said. "If we put it all together, we're going to blow somebody off the field. I hope it's them." - -t- - - - - - --d- - - - - - - - - - By PHIL HERTZ Special To The Daily MADISON - Michigan's Mammoth Blue Wave yes- terday rolled over the Wis- consin Badger goal line for three first half touchdowns, but had to hold on for its very football life before a B a d g e r surge fell short, allowing the Wolverines to c a p t u r e their s e v e n t h straight victory, 29-15. The Maize and Blue appeared headed for an easy victory over the Badgers as they had com- plete control of the contest dur- ing the opening two periods. Michigan reeled off 15 first downs in the opening half and stifled Wisconsin for much of the first 30 minutes. The Wol- verines were running up yard- age either through the air or on the ground, but lingering over the play were errors that pre- vented, them from completely pushing Wisconsin out of Camp Randall stadium. The first scoring threat came early in the contest after Don Moorhead fumbled the ball on the Michigan 36, but the Badgers, like most of Mich- igan's opponents, were unable to do anything against the Michigan defensive unit, and punted the ball to the Michigan two, wheredthe Wolverines took over and drove to midfield be- fore stalling. Three plays after the Badgers gained possession, Henry Hill SUNDAY SPORTS NIGHT EDITORS: MORT NOVECK AND JERRY CLARKE -Associated Press IT TAKES FOUR HANDS to handle a henry, Hill, that is, as Jim Fedenia (51) and an unidentified mate combine to spring Wisconsin quarterback Neil Graff (12). Hill and his defensive cohorts har- assed Graff and blanketed his receivers most of the afternoon, and the Badger signal-caller spent a busy a day scrambling around Camp Randall Stadium pursued by Wolverines. jarred the ball loose from Wis- consin tailback Rufus "Road- runner" Ferguson and Jim Betts fell on the ball at the Wiscon- sin 32-yard line. Moorhead immediately hit Paul Staroba for a 20 yard gain and three plays later Moorhead hit Fritz Seyferth with a swing pass for an eight-yard touch- down, giving the Wolverines a 7-0 lead at the end of the first quarter. The Badgers came right back at the Wolverines and mounted a sustained drive, which proved futile when Marty Huff stop- ped Wisconsin quarterback Neil Graff for no gain on fourth and one at the Michigan 12. The action went right back the other way as the Wolverines went 88 yards in six plays to make the score 13-0. The big play in this drive was a 70-yard pass play from Moorhead to Staroba, which set up Seyferth for a three yard touchdown plunge. The catch by Staroba was one of six for 178 yards by the senior split end. Bo Schembech- ler later said, "Staroba played really well. It was perhaps his best g a m e." Moorhead also praised him: "Staroba made some great catches, especially the one on the 70-yard play." After this score the Main- month Blue Wave began to take on the appearance of a-jugger- naut. The defense again throt- tled the Badgers, and the of- fense, regaining possession after a punt, reeled 76\ yards in 11 plays for the third Michigan touchdown. Preston Henry took a pitch-out from Moorhead the last four yards and the score, making it 19-0. Moorhead fol- lowed the six-pointer by com- pleting a pass to Staroba for the two-point conversion. At this point, however, the tide seemed to turn. Perhaps it was the effect of the record- breaking homecoming crowd of 72,389. Perhaps it was simply as Schembechler later said, "We didn't play well, and Wisconsin has a good team." Perhaps there was a bit of a lapse after it had been so easy to build up the score. But in any case, the Badgers suddenly came alive. The major figure in the in- itial stages of the Wisconsin re- surgence was quaterback Graff. He scrambled for 29 yards and passed for another 59 as he drove the Badgers downfield for their first score, making the halftime score 21-6. The last 16 yards were eaten up with a pass from Graff to fullback Alan "A- Train" Thompson. The largest football crowd ever to watch a football game in the state of Wisconsin really, came alive in the second half when Dan Crooks returned one of Staroba's punts 87 yards down the sideline for the Badgers' second six-pointer. The attempt at the two point con- version failed, leaving Michigan ahead 21-12. The Badger momentum con- tinued to build when Glenn Doughty fumbled at the Mich- igan 43, but while the offense continued to make a plethora of mistakes, the defense continued to do their job and throttle the Badgers. Wisconsin failed to be daunt- ed by this particular failure; and were soon knocking on Michigan's doorstep again. This time the defense tightened and stopped the Badgers at the Michigan 30 when Roger Jae- ger's 47-yard field goal fell way short. Wisconsin was right back in scoring territory one play later when Bill Taylor fumbled on the Michigan 25, setting up an eventual 32-yard field goal by Jaeger, making the score 21-15. After the Badger field goal, the Michigan offense again took control of the game, driving into Badger territory three times, finally scoring with a little over four minutes remaining in the contest. The first Michigan drive faltered when Doughty and Taylor dropped consecutive passes from Moorhead, the next failed when Dana Coin missed a 33-yard field goal. But the final one succeeded when Moor- head found Staroba open in the end zone for a 21 yard touch- down pass. Bill Taylor followed the touchdown by crashing over for the two point conversion, completing the game's scoring. MISTAKES HURT Erro r, By PAT ATKINS Special To The Daily MADISON - When a football team runs away with a game, that team's mistakes on the field have flagrant in v grt . . 4. ..... ....... ........... .. Big Ten Standings Conference Games All Games a way of quietly slipping into the W L T background. MICHIGAN 4 0 0 But yesterday afternoon in Mad- Ohio State 4 0 0 ison, Michigan did not win until Northwestern 3 1 0 11:39 of the final quarter and the Michigan State 2 2 0 mistakes didn't disappear unob- Micntate 220 strusively into the woodwork as in innesota 1 2 1 some previous games. Iowa 1 2 1 "Lord knows." said Michigan Illinois 1 3 0 head coach Bo Schembechler, Purdue 1 3 0 "that wasn't our best game. Wis- Wisconsin 1 3 0 consin had every circumstance a Indiana 1 3 0 team could want for an upset and, they couldn't do it . . our mis- covering punts, and in not get- takes, officials, calls, we just play- ting down on kick-offs. ed bad." "It can happen to any team," It all really began for Michi- Schembechler said.+ PF 141 129 120 89 58 41 76 59 73 49 PA 48 47 52 70 81 89 147 93 89 109 W 7 6 3 3 2 1 3 3 2 1 L 0 0 4 4, 4 5 4 4 4 6 T 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 PF 182 219 161 133 129 65 128 100 123 82 PA 70 70 120 155 157 178 186 153 140 197 I gan just before the end of the half, whenWisconsin's quarter- back Neil Graff on a delayed full- back pass play, deposited the ball right into Alan "A Train" Thomp- son's outstretched arms. Ordin- arily, the Michigan defense con- verges quickly on the fullback and no real damage, other than short yardage is done. The Wolverine defense got to Thompson event- ually in this case too, but not before he had scampered into the end zone to make the score at halftime 21-6. "One of our difficulties," Schembechler explained, "was that sometimes we had an individ- ual defensive lapse. And other times we left the center area open and unprotected." There were plenty of other dif- ficulties, and Schembechlerpoint- ed them out in the manner of an old school-master taking a delin- quent student to task. The problem was carelessness in dropped passes, in fumbles, in not --- - s: :4 :, In the space of the opening three minutes of the second half, Michigan watched an uncontrolled nightmare unfold as Danny Crooks took a punt return 37 yards deep in Wisconsin territory and s 1 i p p e d, virtually unmolested, downfield for the second Badger touchdown. That moved the score to 21-12, making it time for the Mammoth Blue Wave to begin rolling again. Fortunately for the Wolverines, the Don Moorhead - Paul Staroba combination began clicking again as it had on Michigan's first three touchdown drives. And this time Staroba even got some glory to score one of them, instead of just carrying the burden of the drive. On the Wolverine's fourth touchdown drive of 90 yards, Star- oba went behind Nate Butler in the end zone to catch Moorhead's 21-yard toss. That brought h i s total yardage for the day to 178 on six catches. 7ic tory "Staroba is a fine receiver. He made a great catch (on the 70 yard play to set up Michigan's second touchdown). Butler had him all the way, but he just went up in the air and caught it. Of course, Moorhead put it right in there." Staroba picked off a 19 yard pass from Moorhead on Michigan's first touchdown drive to put the ball on the 12 yard line and set up Fritz Seyferth's score. Again on the third touchdown march, his over the shoulder grab of Moorhead's bomb was what brought him the praise of Jar- dine. His heroics weren't over by any means, as he came through again on the 74-yard third touch- down drive. He took a quick pass from Moorhead and stepped down the left sideline for a 17-yard gain. "Staroba is really difficult to defend," Schembechler said of his split end, "it was perhaps his best game of the year." Billy Taylor summed up the Wol- verines' performance in a phrase. "We made a lot of mistakes and we were fortunate to win, but sometimes you just have to get a 'bad game out of your system." rs WISCONSIN Rushing Tries Gains Loss Net Graff 22 65 38 27 SThompson14 55 1 54 >Ferguson 7 6 8 --2 Totals 43 126 47 79 Passing Att. Comp. Int. Yds. IGraff 23 11 1 168 Pass Receiving No. Yds. Mialik 5 83 Thompson 2 32 Moon 1 27 Klosek 1 12 Marks 1 8 Ferguson 1 6 Totals .11 168 Punting No. Yds. lAvg. Buss 6 247 41.2 LINESCORE .V.V........... .- * . v.A s 4k11n": v... Burping the Badger FIRST DOWNS Rushing Passing Penalty TOTAL NUMBER OF RUSHES NET YARDS- Rushing Passing FORWARD PASSES Attempted Completed Intercepted by TOTAL PLAYS (Rushesand passes) PUNTS, Number Average distance KICKOFFS, returned by YARDS KICKS RETURNED Punts Kickoffs FUMBLES, Number Ball lost by Mich. 24 15 9 0 Wisc. 17 6 9 2 61 43 227 79 223 168 PENALTIES, Number 5 ! Yards Penalized 65 MICHIGAN Rushing Tries Gains W. Taylor 18 82 Seyferth 16 51 Moorhead 11 39 Doughty 7 ;33 Henry 9 25 Totals 61 230 Passing Att. Comp.1 Moorhead 22 11 Pass Receiving Staroba Doughty Seyferth, Paul Seymour Totals 2 83 4 42.8 3 66 16 50 4 3 23 11 0 66 6 41.2 5 S 4 20 Loss Net 0 82 0 51 3 36 0 33 0 25 3 227 Int. Yds. 0 223 No. Yds. 6 178 3 30 1 8 1 7 11 223 GRIDDE PICKINGS MICHIGAN 29, Wisconsin 15 Iowa 14, Minnesota 14, tie Ohio State 24, Northwestern 1 Illinois 23, Purdue 21 Michigan State 32, Indiana 7 Cornell 31, Columbia 20 Penn State 42, West Virginia Georgia Tech 24, Duke 16' Auburn 63, Florida 14 Georgia 52, South Carolina 34 Kentucky 27, No. Carolina St. Tulane 10, Vanderbilt 7 Nebraska 29, Colorado 13 Kansas State 17, Missouri 13 TCU 24, Baylor 14 Air Force 23, Arizona 20 California 13, USC 10 Stanford 48, Oregon St. 10 Da.tmouth 10, Yale 0 Daily Libels over uac Muggers East Boston Univ. 34, Connecticut Clarion 28, Shippensburg 0 Harvard 28, Pennsylvania 23 Maine 24, Northeastern 17 New Hampshire 59, Rhode Ish Boston College 21, Army 13 Syracuse 43, Pittsburgh 13 Villanova 42, Xavier 14 Buffalo 16,5Holy Cross 0 Delaware 15, Temple 13 Fordham 21, St. Johns 21,/tie South Arkansas 45, Texas A&M 6 Houston 21, Tulsa 9 Texas 42, SMU 15 Alabama 35, Mississippi St. 6 Davidson 55, VMI 21 N. Carolina 30, Virginia 15 SCORES Richmond 51, Citadel 14 Tennessee 41, Wake Forest 7 Clemson 24, Maryland 11 0 Virginia Tech 35, William & Mary 14 East Carolina 7,'Furman 0 Florida A&M 7, Tuskeegee 0 Morgan State 15, N. Carolina A&T 9 8 Middle Tennessee St. 14, Ball St;7 West Kentucky 24, Morehead St. 14 ?Midwest Notre Dame 56, Navy 7 2 Indiana St. 28, Illinois St. 7 Kansas St. 17; Missouri 13 Oklahoma 29, Iowa St. 28 Washington, Mo. 23, Carnegie-Mellon 14 Abilene 33, Drake 13 Bowling Green 26, Marshall 24 Cincinnati 35, Wichita State 5 Toledo 14, Miami, Ohio 13 , inc. Wayne St. 24, Illinois, Chicago 8 West Michigan 52, Ohio U. 23 9 Wittenberg 36, Ohio Wesleyan 0 West Brigham Young 23, Wyoming 3 Colorado St. 20, Utah St. 13 and 7 Idaho 27, Montant St. 24 Montana 31, Portland St. 25 NBA New York 107, Detroit 89 Milwaukee 121, Cincinnati 100 Boston 133, Philadelphia 102 Baltimore 106, Phoenix 103 San Diego 121, Atlanta 117 ABA Floridians 116, Indiana 104 Virginia 113, Pittsburgh 110 NHL Boston 6, New York 0 Minnesota 3, Toronto 1 234 101 133 1 Punting g 1 Staroba No. Yds. Ave. MICHIGAN 4 171 42.8 Wisconsin 6 15 0 8-29 0 6 9 0-15 Baby Blue ground game routs MSU By ELLIOT LEGOW Led by a tremendous rushing attack and a hard-tackling defense, Michigan's freshman football team overwhelmed Michigan State 41-22 yesterday, and showed Michigan fans that football suc- cess is here to stay for quite a few more years. Coach Tirell Burton utilized half a dozen running backs and three quarter- backs and received creditable perform- ances from all of them. Leading the of- fensive explosion was 5-10 tailback, Harry Banks who rushed for 191 yards including two long jaunts of 59 and 67 yards. Burton was very impressed with Banks' performance and also praised the work of fullbacks Ed Shuttlesworth and Bob Thornbladh. Both made good vardage on returned it to the MSU 20. However, Michigan's offense stalled and the Spar- tans took over on their own 10. On the first play of the series wolfback Jeff Steger broke through the MSU line to drop Niesen inside his own one. A third down quick kick reached the State 20 and the Blue were able to move from there for the score in four plays. Thornbladh blasted in from the seven for the touch- down. Neither team could mount a sustained drive until early in the second period when Michigan, led by quarterback Tom Slade marched from its own 48 to the Spartan 17 where the drive faltered. A field goal attempt by Dave Brandon, was wide. On their next series of downs with speedster Mike Holt exploded through the line, broke a tackle at the 50, and raced down the right sideline for the MSU score. A two point conversion tightened the count to 14-8. But Casey moved the Wolverines back down the field, covering 64 yards in only three minutes. The second string back- field of Don Coleman, Shuttlesworth, and Larry Gustafson picked up good yardage against Michigan State's outclassed de- fense. Michigan State found the going easier in the opening series of the second half, as the Spartans who managed only three first downs in the first half picked up five as they drove 80 yards from their own 20 to pull again to within six, 21-15. The snr erme n a 49 vyrd hnmh frnm the goal line and pulled down at the State nine. The final Michigan TD came on a seven yard pas from Slade to Clint Has- lerig with only one second remaining in the game, and gave the Baby Blue a 41-22, victory. Slade, Casey, and Greg Koss split the Michigan quarterbacking almost evenly, but Burton felt that none really had enough opportunity to play. "The quar- terbacks all ran the team well,"'Burton asserted, but he admitted "the passing was not as good as we expected it to be. Most of the fault for the poor passing, Burton feels, was the poor blocking of the offensive line. "They blocked well till they got tired. The tackles had to play ., ... ., :-_, r 5 any 5 n7 ........ . :.; .. .i.; ' mo ..x.- mo