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November 07, 1970 - Image 8

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1970-11-07

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Eight

THEMICHIGAN DAILY

Saturday, November ?, 1970

Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, November 7, 1970

'It
}eA

COMETO
TOWN and COUNTRY
RESTAU RANT
Fine Food
Chops, Steaks, & Shrimp
Soul Food Home Cooked
Open Pit Barbeque
--Open-
6 a.m. till 9 p.m.-Mon.-Thurs.
6 a.m. till 3 a.m.-Fri.-Sat.
8 a.m. till 7:30 p.m.-Sunday
730 NORTH MAIN
Delivery and Catering
769-2330

nflV r 83

JOE
HICKERSON
FROM THE
LIBRARY of
CONGRESS
NEXT WEEK --
DAVID BROMBERG
TUESDAY -
TERRY TATE

For the student body:
Genuine
Authentic
Navy
PEA-$COATS
$25

By TIM OBOJSKI
Repeatedly stymied in the
first two periods by misplacing
the football, Michigan's fresh-
men untrammeled their potent
offense in the second half to
thoroughly dismember N o t r e
Dame yesterday, 20-0. The vic-
tory was the second in succes-
sion for the promising frosh,
gridders, who conclude their
three-game schedule next Fri-
day in East Lansing.
Displaying a balanced attack
and an unrelenting defense, the
Wolverines left no doubt as to
t h e i r superiority, dominating
control of the game with 19 first
downs to the Irish's 5. Coach
Tirell Burton had indicated a
greater congestion of the air-
ways, and his three quarterbacks
responded by completing 14 of
25 for 144 yards. Notre Dame's
heralded Cliff Brown could
manage only a feeble 7 comple-
tions in 27 attempts.
The Wolverines were unable
to capitalize 'early on the errant
foot of Irish punter Brian Do-
herty, who generously presented
them with good field position in
the mutuallyinept first quarter.
Before the quarter had ended,
though, the Irish had realized
their mistake and replaced him
with 6'-3", 228 lb. Dave Casper,
who finished the game with an
adequate, if not creditable, per-
formance.

passing

The temperature at kick-off
registered a brisk 41 degrees, and
was perhaps partially respon-
sible for the inordinate number
of turnovers. Both squads re-
linquished the ball four times,
all of Michigan's gifts coming
in the first half. Notre Dame's
hefty 6'-3", 238 lb. defensive
halfback Brian Townsend snar-
ed both interceptions for the
Irish.
After being held to a stale-
mate in the first half, the Wol-
verines began to move late in
the third quarter. With a third
and five on the Michigan 48,
speedster Harry Banks swept
left end to pick up 12 yards.
Following two illegal proced-
ure penalties, the likes of which
plagued the Wolverines all day,
tight end Paul Seal arched his
6'-6" frame to make a brilliant
grab between two stunned Irish
defenders on the Notre Dame 20.
Wingback Clint Haslerig ground
out the bulk of the remaining
yardage, with fullback Bob
Thornbladh going in from the
two at 14:31 of the third
quarter.
Thatrfirst sustained drive ig-
nited ,the slumbering Michigan
offense, and -the fourth quarter
was all Michigan. In-the first
series of the quarter, fullback
Ed Shuttlesworth r a m b 1"e d,
quarterback Tom Slade scram-
bled, and Seal made another fine
catch in a 'drive. to the Notre
Dame 35, where the Wolverines
were finally stopped on downs.
But Cliff Brown's first pass
was intercepted by defensive
end Dick Mussehl at the Notre
Dame 42, and eight plays, and a
19 yard Jaunt by Harry Banks
later, Shuttlesworth bulled his
way in~to the end zone to make
it 13-0.
Notre Dame took the ensuing
kickoff, and Brown promptly
fumbled on a third down play
at the 21 to give the Wolverines
another scoring opportunity. It

Sizes 34 to 46

eng ufs

Irish,

20-0

i

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was all for nought, however, as
Don Coleman repayed the favor
by losing the ball in the end
zone.
But Michigan regained control
on the Notre Dame 38 following
Notre Dame's punt,, and with
Kevin Casey at the helm, drove
in for the score. Halfback Craig
1Vutch scored the touchdown
with a spectacular leaping catch
of Casey's toss for Michigan's
final tally.
The Wolverine defense, which
held the Irish to but a single
first down in the second half,
needed an act of providence in
the second quarter to keep Notre
Dame from scoring. With third
and five on his own 27, Brown
lofted a perfect aerial to half-
back Greg Hill. Hill, who had
managed to elude the Michigan
secondary, meekly dropped the
ball on the Michigan 38.1
The effectiveness of the Wol-
verine defense can be seen when
one considers that Michigan's
leading rushers, Harry Banks
and Bob Thornbladh, combined
to outgain the entire Notre
Dame offense.
But perhaps the most satisfy-
ing aspect of the win was the
performance of Burton's quar-
terback trio of Koss, Casey, and
Slade. As the graduation of
varsity field-leader Don Moor-
head looms, it is pacifying to
think a successor is being mold-
ed. And the poise and aplomb
shown by the frosh quarter-
backs yesterday is a hopeful
sign.
Another bright spot wasthe
work of punter Barry Dotzaurer,
who doubles as the starting
safety. Dotzaurer had an out-
standing 43.1 average, and con-
tinually gave the Wolverines
favorable field position.
Booters end
fall season
Sporting a 5-1 record in Toledo
League play, Michigan's soccer
squad will complete its fall regular
season schedule Sunday. The Wol-
verines tackle the Bavarians Sport
Club at 3:30 p.m. on Wyllis Field
in Toledo.
Michigan is currently tied for
second in league competition
with the Arsenal which Michigan
beat 3-1 earlier in the season. The
booters trail only the Bavarian
Sports Club - the only team to
beat the Wolverines. The Bavar-
lans hold -a 5-0-1 mark to date,
and th'ey meet heads on Sun-
day to determine the regular
league leader.
If Michigan wins Sunday they
will secure at least a second place
finish enabling them to complete
in the post season tournament
which will pick out the league
champion from the top four
squads.
Miguel Taube, captain of Mich-
igan's squad, is out of the cast that
resulted from an injury incurred
two weeks ago against U n i t e d.
Taube may be able to play in the
contest Sunday or in the tourna-
ment.
A last minute cancellation af the
Wolverine's away contest against
Northern Illinois today has cut
short Michigan's collegiate sched-
ule. The reason for the cancella-
tion is the high cost of transporta-
tion to the away games. Michigan
is 0-3 in college competition

,1

Sun. Nov. 8
Lilith King's Men
7.30 p.m. 10:00 p.m.

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Bob Thornbladh (31) struggles for extra yatdage
IRISH HOST PANTHERS,
Tigers challenge revitalized Tide

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763-2147 or 769-5790

By SANDI GENIS
The word from the deep south
is that the Bear is on the prowl
again, stalking a tiger that has
brazenly invaded his once in-
violate kingdom, the Southeast-
ern conference. It seems he has
it cornered in Birmingham where
the two shall do battle this after-
noon, as LSU and Alabama clash
in an SEC grudge match.
Strengthened by the return
of his star hunter, quarterback
Scott Hunter, Bryant's Tide will
be trying to erase the memory
of a 20-15 last minute loss last
season to the rampaging Tigers,
'and establish themselves as SEC
contenders once more.
Leading the 'Bama 'attack for
the third successive season, Hun-
ter provides the Tide with one of
the most dazzling and, accomplish-
ed passing attacks in the nation.
He has a great corps of receivers,
including flashy flanker George
Ranager and single season receiv-
ing leader, David Bailey.
Providing an added wrinkle to
Alabama's potent attack is tail-
back Johnny Musso who s e e m s
well on his way to becoming t h e
first Tide back to rush for 1000
yards.
Musso, a driving runner with
good speed and moves, is parti-
cularly effective on the halfback
option, as he proved against Hous-
ton last week, passing for a touch-
down.
Defensively, the star for the.
Tide is safety Tommy Wade who
has made a fantastic recovery af-
ter missing last season with a
broken leg. Linebacker Jim Krapf
and tackle Terry Rowell beef up:
the large, but less than imperv-
ious, line.
The Tigers however, are not to
be outdone, either offensively or
defensively, especially since LSU
coach Charlie McClendon h a s
Tommy Casanova doubling at tail-
back. Casanova, one of the na-
tion's leading defensive backs last
season, leads a corps of talented
ground gainers, while quarterback
Buddy Lee and star receiver Andy
Hamilton provide the aerial dy-
namics.
But while the Tiger offense may
be potent, the defense is over-
powering. Though smaller than
most college defenses, the defen-
sive team was quick and tough

enough to rank as the best in
the nation for its first six games.
Especially strong against the run,
the team is anchored by outstand-
ing linebackers Mike Anderson,
Louis Cascia and safety Jim
Early.
While the battle for the south-
east title rages, unbeaten N o t r e
Dame continues it's campaign for
national championship, hosting a
tough Pitt squad that boasts a 5-2
record thus far before a sellout
crowd of some 60,000.
Coming off a 43-13 {upset by a
surprising Syracuse squad, t h e
Panthers sport a strong offensive
team led by versatile quarterback
Dave Havern who directs his mul-
tiple attack from some 30 dif-
ferent offensive sets. The back-
field is particularly potent w it h
fullback Tony Esposito, termed by
Irish scout John Murphy "as fine
a fullback as any in the country",
heading the attack.
Defensively speaking, the veter-
an Pitt secondary, which has per-
formed admirably so Tar, will have
it's work cut out for it trying to
stop Notre Dame's fantastic pass-
catch combination of Joe Theis-
man and Tom Gatewood.
The Notre Dame attack features
a potent running game that aver-
ages 330 yards per game, while
Theismann and company supply
another 216 yards through the
air, to lead the nation in total
offense.
Defelnsivefy, the Irish have al-
lowed only 6.3 points per contest
and rank fifth currently in total
defense behind the aggressive per-

formances of staunch defensemen
Larry DiNardo and Gary Kos.
In another major conference
battle, Missouri challenges Okla-
homa as both squads attempt to
get back into the Big Eight -title
race.
Oklahoma coach Chuck Fair-
banks will field his experimental
Steve Owens-less triple option
with versatile and shifty J a c k
Mildren at the controls, providing
the team with a strong running
and passing threat. Behind Mild-
ren, running backs Roy Bell. and
Everett Marshall, though no
Owens, provide an adequate
ground attack.
On the west coast today, the
scene is set for the battle between
two of the nation's most prolific
passers as Jim Plunkett leads his
Stanford Indians against the Hus-
kies of Washington, led by Sonny
Sixkiller in the team's 47th con-
frontation.
Plunkett, the leading Heisman
Trophy candidate, will provide
most of the offensive power for
the Indians as they try to clinch
the Pacific Eight title and the
Rose Bowl bid.
On offense, Plunkett gets plenty
of help from his running backs,
Jackie Brown and Hillary Shock-
ley. He is also aided by a corps of
strong receivers headed by Randy
Vataha.
On the other side of the field,
Cherokee sensation Sonny Six-
killer, could put a scare into In-
dian fans if he has a good day
passing.

4

4

1--..

U

Join The Daily

t1

IAN

Sports Staff

Use'd Equipment Sale

Wrinkled ruggers set to
avenge Badger beating

1. RECEIVERS and AMPS
1 EICO FM only $100
1 Roberts $75
1 Altec 711A $150
1 Dyna 120 $125 factory wired
plus others

2.

SPEAKERS
1 Lahti U2 $20
1 Altec Bolero $80.

1 Marantz-IMP ll $130 each
plus others
3. TAPE RECORDERS & DECKS
1 Ampex 761$225
1 Ampex 1200 Wal.& portable
case $175
1 Ampex 1100 Automatic-
Reverse Deck $225
1 Ampex 900 Automatic-Reverse
portable $190

I Concord MK III Demo $199
1Viking 77 portable $70
1 Sony TC-104 $80
plus many more
4. TURNTABLES & CHANGERS
1 Empire Troubadour without
arm $90
l Marantz SLl-t2
New $299.00 - $150.00
2 Garrard SLX-2's Demo $59.50
1 Garrard SL55B Demo $49.50
1 Garrard X-11 Demo $27.95
1 Garrard 40 BDemo $37.50
1 Garrard AT6 $30
1 Garrard 30 $30
1 Garrard 50 $30
plus a fewmore
5. PORTABLE STEREOS
1 KLH-11 $150
etc

& uop-rata owii awn f t wt k W1A it o~ one.
4

Pr

The Michigan Rugby team,
coming off a 19-6 loss to Wiscon-
son in which captain Hank Lukas-
ki was injured, take on both Il-
linois squads this morning in
games at 9:00 and 11:30 at Pal-
mer Field.
According to acting captain
Terry Larrimer, the Wisconsin
team is "the best coached team
I've ever seen in this country." In
the scrum dominated game, Lu-
kaski had a scrum collapse on

4

him, tearing the muscles in his
neck. He will be out for the re-
mainder of the season.
The ruggers are out to avenge,
last week's loss today, but, ac-
cording to Larrimer, the team is
down in morale after their drub-
bing.
The, Illini should provide the
ruggers an opportunity to break
into the win column again. The
Illinois squad "usually has not
been too good," asserted Larrimer.
The Blue hope to be able to
feed their backs more against the w
Illini than they did against The
Badgers. The Michigan team is in
an unusual position this year:
they have not incurred any in-
juries in the backfield, so they are
experienced in playing together.
Larrimer feels if the team can get
the ball to the backs, they should'o
have little trouble with Illinois.

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IIII l N Wi~ITHTIS CUrPN A1 }

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