Saturday, November 7, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine Saturday, November 7, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine Innocuous Illini: Wounded but dangerous on this and that The Illini's lame duck coach eric siegel THE ILLINOIS press guide, published before the start of the season, talks about head coach Jim Valek in laudatory terms. "In true Fighting Illini spirit," it says, "(he) refuses to let the disappointment and frustration of only one victory in the last 20 games dampen his enthusiasm or shake his confidence." The Illini Athletic Board apparently holds less stock in such intangibles. Two weeks ago, the board announced it was firing Valek, then had to eat crow of a sort when the Illinois players voted unanimously to go on strike if their coach was canned in mid-season. The board, realizing it couldn't afford to lose the rev- enue from its last four games, agreed to keep Valek for the rest of the season, but it has made it clear he won't be around next year. A search committee has been formed to choose his successor, and the latest Illinois press release says he has been "notified" he won't be rehired. Valek's sin was a fairly common one. Illinois, which has had just 12 winning seasons in the last 40 years, decided it wanted one this year, too. But all of a sudden, in the middle of the season, it was decided that Valek wasn't the man for the job. To be sure, Valek's record going into today's game is only 3-4. But Illinois teams have won three or less games 16 times in the last four decades, and Valek still has three games left to go. And, for the record, it should be noted that the Illinois' oponents this year have a more than respectable combined record of 27-23. The Illini lost to Indiana, 30-24, which they never should have done, but they beat Oregon and Purdue and shut out Syracuse, and they also gave Ohio State a helluva fight for three quarters, which no one expected them to do. Valek's record, respectable and improving though it is, is the main reason for the Athletic Board's and the alumni disenchantment with him, but it is not the only one. It is said that Valek does not "warm up" to the old Illini alumni the way former coach Pete Elliott used to, and this has re- portedly rankled a few people with connections in high 4 places. But Valek, when he took over as head coach from Elliott three years ago, had more to do than merely live up to a stand- ard of alumni backslapping. He also had to live down an athletic slush-fund scandal that led to Elliott's dismissal and nearly ruined intercollegiate athletics at Illinois. Valed's three year record is 5-25 (4-17 in Big Ten play), with four of those wins coming in his first season as head coach. But there were indications that the Illini football pro- gram was on its way up. Valek got a slow start recruiting his first season because of the scandal, but his first soph- omore class included 21 letter winners. He has a host of talented sophomores on this year's team, including eight starters, and no less an authority than Michigan Coach Be Schembechler calls the current Valek-recruited freshman team "one of the best aro'und." One of the most talented sophomores on this year's team is starting quarterback Mike Wells, who remembers being recruited by Valek two years ago. "Four days before I made my decision on where to attend school," Wells said yesterday, "Coach Valek came to my home to talk to me and my parents. He was one of the main reasons I decided to go to Illinois." Wells also remembers the day the athletic board announced it would fire Valek. "Our co-captains actually handled the situ- ation," he said ."We took a free vote, there was no coercion, but everyone voted to back Coach Valek." There are some people, notably those on the Illinois Athletic Board, who would say that Wells' and his team- mates' vote was a "radical" action. But Mike Wells isn't a "radical." He looks like the All-American boy, strong, broad- shouldered, with close-cropped blond hair, and when he talks, his talk is more of loyalty than power politics. "You want to win because of pride, and you want to win for the coach, too," he said. "But to a certain extent, there's more of a win for Valek feeling now. Everybody's been giving more second effort, and that's been a big factor in our turnabout." The turnabout has included a three-quarter super-effort against Ohio State, two weeks ago, and a 23-21 upset win over Purdue last Saturday. "We've played great ball," said Valek, who was voted the game ball after the Purdue win, "especially when you consider the tension of the coaching situation." And so today Jim Valek, the reason as well as the ob- ject of that tension, will take the field as a lame-duck coach, one who gained a reprieve, but no pardon, because he was the type of coach who inspired loyalty among his players. And the players will take the field as underdogs, trying to win the game partly for themselves, but, to a great degree, for their coach. With meat-grinder coaches like the University of De- troit's Jim Harding still around, it is profoundly depressing to think that a man like Jim Valek will almost certainly be dismissed from the Big Ten coaching ranks at the end of the season. But he will take with him the knowledge that he has the respect, loyalty and admiration of about 60 young men, which is something the members of the Illinois Athletic Board, no matter how many victories they eventually stick on their record sheet, cannot claim. By BILL ALTERMAN Last year Wolverine coach Bo Schembechler worried a great deal before the Illinois game. W i t h the final result 57-0. he shouldn't have. This year he can worry. Illinois is like a shower in the dorm. They pour forth both hot and cold, never both. The Illini have trounced Oregon, Syracuse, and last week closed fast to dump Purdue. The week before they gave then top-ranked Ohio State a run for its money. But in between their sterling performances have come some ra- ther mediocre ones against Tu- lane, Northwestern and Indiana. The question is, how will t h e y play today when they take on Michigan in a game at Michigan Stadium at 1:30 p.m.? Providing the recent impetus for Illinois was the firing and re- hiring of head'coach Jim Valek. The announcement was made im- mediately before the Ohio Statej game and the players took it outI on the Buckeyes. They battled OSU for three quarters, before succumbing 48-29. The following day the players voted to boycott the team if Valek was fired. The Illinois Athletic Board, being not so dumb as they sound, reinstated Valek for the re- mainder of the season. Neverthe- less, it has been announced that Valek will not be back next year. Last week the players went out and stomped Purdue but they know it will take more than that to retain their head coach. It will take a victory over a top-ranked team-like Michigan. But it takes more than will- power (Sports Illustrated n o t - withstanding) to win a game. It takes physical ability, and all the cards for today's game are in Michigan's corner. The Wolverines are rolling and are in top-flight physical condi- tion. The Illini, on the other hand, have had their defense decimated by injuries. Both starting defensive tackles are definitely out and several oth- ers, including defensive end Jim Rucks, are listed as doubtful. Against a running team like Mich- igan, this could spell disaster. Schembechler, of course, expects "a real tough game. There's no ballclub you can take lightly this year. We have to be leery of their running attack." Their running attack is spear- headed by junior halfback Darrell Robinson. In the past two weeks Robinson picked up 350 yards on 73 carries. Sophomore quarterback Mike Wells has come along this year and is considered the t e a m leader. He does, however, have a tendency to panic when in trouble. The undefeated Wolverines like- wise have been sporadic, but have always showed enough finesse to pull through in the close ones. "They (Wisconsin) had every combination of circumstances for an upset," Schembechler said after last week's game, "We did not play well. We turned the ball over to them and every call went in their favor. But we won and that's what counts." Michigan's erratic offense had some trouble running the ball but their passing game finally came into its own with split end Paul Staroba pulling down six passes for 178 yards. With Illinois' frontline decimat- ed, however, the Wolverines will doubtlessly do a good bit of run- ning today. Billy Taylor, Michigan's leading ground gainer, who was injured in first half action last week, is expected to be in top form today. SPORTS NIGHT EDITORS: JERRY CLARKE and JOEL GREER Mike Taylor, the Wolverines out- standing linebacker, has also re- covered from a knee injury and is slated to start. Having Taylor in good shape could be decisive today, as Illi- nois is basically a running team and stopping the run is his spec- ialty. In seven games the Illini have run 370 running plays while throwing only 125, with 49 com- pletions. When quarterback Wells does take to the air he invariably looks for tight end Doug Dieken who has hauled in 28 passes for 347 yards so far this year. Michigan quarterback Don Moorhead, meanwhile, is the Big Ten's leading passer. In f o u r conference games the Wolverine co-captain has completed 39 of 76 tosses for 575 yards and five touchdowns. B. Taylor has picked up 486 ~yards on the ground in Big Ten play and 626 yards overall. Along with backs Fritz Seyferth a n d Glenn Doughty, the Michigan of- fense is definitely first rate. And yet it is the defense t h a t really shines. Several statistics point this out. Of the tackles for losses leaders, three of the top four, Frank Gu- sich, Pete Newell and Henry Hill, are Wolverines. In seven games, Michigan h a s allowed less than 100 yards per game on the ground. And in seven games they have given up only 70 points, a num- ber of which have been set up by the offense. So the 70,000 fans in Michigan Stadium today expect the Mam- mouth Blue Wave to roll on un- defeated toward its showdown with Ohio State. While the Illini will be out to save Valek's job. The Lineups Offense (30) (71) (65) (53) (60) (72) (85) (27) (42) (32) (22) MICHIGAN Paul Staroba (200) Jack Harpring (229) Reggie McKenzie (220) Guy Murdock (215) Toy Coyle (228) Dan Dierdorf (250) Paul Seymour (235) Don Moorhead (200) Bill Taylor (200) Fritz Seyferth (202) Glenn Doughty (195) SE LT LG C RG RT TE QB TB FB WB (85) (70) (61) (50) (74) (54) (82) (12) (44) (37) (16) ILLINOIS John Kaiser (200) Tom Scott (255) Rich Brennan (225) Julian Vyborny (225) Kirk McMillan (220) Larry McCarren (225) Doug Dieken (240) Mike Wells (215) Darrell Robinson (205) Mike Navarro (220) Bob Burns (175) -Daily-Sara Krulwich Dot Moorhead (27) sweeps end K.> STILL SEEK ROSES: wildcats Defense host Gophers By MICHAEL OLIN The Gophers, who were ranked The Battle of the Beatens in the high in pre-season Big Ten stand- Big Ten continues this week with ings, have failed to get untracked Northwestern, the only team with in their first four conference more than a slim chance of over- games, having won only the con- taking Ohio State in the run for ference opener against Indiana, the roses, hosting the tough Goph- and tying weak Iowa last Satur- ers from Minnesota. day. Nevertheless, the Gophers are The only loss the Wildcats have laden with talenttand should pose incurred ip conference was in last! an ample threat to the cinderella week's game with Ohio State. In Wildcats. that game, Northwestern led 10-3 Standing in the forefront of the at halftime, but the Buckeyes Minnesota attack is quarterback came out for the second half and .................. proceeded to score three touch- . downs while holding the Wildcats The Michigan - Illinois game scoreless. begins at 1:30 and will be car- The Wildcats are led by fullback ried over radio stations WWJ, Mike Adamle and quarterback 950 AM; WPAG, 1050 AM; Maurie Daigneua. With 764 yards WAAM, 1600 AM; WUOM, 91.7 in seven games, Adamle has al- FM; and WCBN, 650 AM. ready broken the season rushing mark of 668 yards that has held for 20 years. In last Saturday's Craig Curry, who blends theI game with Ohio State, Adamle Gopher passing and running picked up 102 yards in the first games almost equally. half alone, outgaining the entire Rather than have Curry throw: Buckeye squad.b m from the pocket, Coach Murray Daigneau has been more than Warmath takes full advantage of effective at quarterback having Curry's ability to run by utilizing completed 67 of 156 passes for the play action pass. In this type , over 800 yards. The bulk of these of situation, Curry wil roll out, tosses land in the arms of flanker and throw if it appears to be the Barry Pearson, who has latched better option. However, he can also onto 19. choose to run, and he has, un- hesitatingly, and with good ef- fect, all year. Northwestern coach Alex Agase says of Curry, "He's a great scrambler and a great power run-! ner. To win this game we'll have to contain him and take away the power offense." In the passing department, the game will pit Northwestern's con- ference leading secondary against Curry's conference leading passing game. Northwestern has allowed only 26 per cent of its opponents passes to be completed, while Cur- ry has thrown more passes (33.3 per game) and completed more passes (15.5 per game) than any other passer in the Big Ten. In Madison, John Jardine's Wis- consin Badgers take on the hard hitting Ohio State squad. This will be the second week in a "ow that the Badgers have played host to a nationally ranked, undefeated, conference leading team, having lost to Michigan, 29-15, last week. The Badgers, a twenty point underdog, have not been able to defeat the Bucks since a 12-3 vic- tory in 1959. Their chances of breaking that stringrtoday remain small, as the Buckeyes ride the crest of a 4-0 conference mark while Wisconsin's only league vic- tory was a 30-12 clouting of In- diana. Cross state rival Michigan State has been tabbed only a one touch- downfavorite over Purdue al- though the Spartans belted Iowa 37-0 and Indiana 32-7 the last two weeks while Purdue lost to North- western and Illinois. The Spartans, after losing in consecutive weeks to Notre Dame, Ohio State, and Michigan, have come back to be surprisingly tough. Led by tailback Eric Allen and quarterback Mike Rasmussen, the State offense has finally jelled. In last week's game against the Hoosiers, the Spartans picked up 48 yards in total offense with 277 yards in the air. Allen scored once, and Rasmussen tied a Spartan record by throwing four touch- down passes, two each to Gordy Bowdell and Billy Dupree. (91) (99) (39) (82) (90) (33) (70) (14) (21) (35) (23) Phill Seymour (215) Tom Beckman (245) Henry Hill (220) Pete Newell (225) Mike Keller (210) Mike Taylor (217) Marty Huff (230) Frank Gusich (190) Bruce Elliott (176) Tom Darden (190) Jim Betts (185) LE LT MG RT RE WLB MLB WOLF DHB DHB 8 (45) (92) (75) (84) (90) (31) Tom Jones (175) Glenn Collier (205) Tab Bennett (240) Bob Bucklin (235) Jim Welsh (215) Jim Rucks (205) 62) Moe Kelley (215) (32) Dan Darlington (190) (21) Gary Windy (180) (46) John Graham (180) (25) Tom Baumgart (185) -Daily-Sara Krulwlch Glenn Doughty (22)_hits Minnesota line i3 Y.-:"i?:"}:4:4:^}iv:4i:4:^ii:i }:i{"f.';:oa.S:?}J:; ": ::rr ^; ::v:::::::::::: r:.v I-- Big Ten Standings Conference Games W L T PF PA All Games MICHIGAN Ohio State Northwestern Michigan State Minnesota Iowa Illinois Purdue Wisconsin Indiana 0 0 I 2 2 2 3 3 3 3 141 129 120 89 58 41 76 59 73 49 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 f I i i i f a 1 L i , t SGC I ECTIO Today's Games Illinois at MICHIGAN Indiana at Iowa Purdue at Michigan State Minnesota at Northwestern Ohio State at Wisconsin Perry captures AL Cy Young Student Government Council (SCG) is the student government for the entire campus. SGC's voting membership includes the president, executive vice-president, and eleven at-large members. Six full-year and one half-year terms are being elected this (fall) term. SGC elections this term are NOVEMBER 11, 18, 19 (Tues., Wed., and Thurs.) WHO MAY VOTE? All students (graduate students and undergraduates) may vote. WHO MAY RUN? Any regularly enrolled student on the Ann Arbor campus of the U of M. This includes graduate and undergraduate students from all schools and colleges. HOW DOES ONE BECOME A CANDIDATE? Candidates must file a statement of candidacy by November 9 (Monday). Candidates must also submit a platform, 2 wallet-size photographs, and a $5.00 returnable filing fee. (The required dates for these are determined by the Election Director.) CAMPAIGNING is governed by the Election Rules. A candidate may spend up to, but not over, $60.00 PROSPECTIVE CANDIDATES can obtain further information and copies of the Statement of Candidacy, Election Rules, and the SGC Constitution at the SGC Of- fices, 1546 Student Activities Building and at some school and college student government offices and at some residence halls. NEW YORK OP)-Jim Perry of1 the Minnesota Twins, succeeding where his brother failed, was! named the American League win-1 ner of the Cy Young Award yes-: terday in one of the most com-f petitive balloting in the 15-year! history of the honor. The right-handed pitcher, who compiled a 24-12 record for his second consecutive 20-victory sea-,t son, won out in a four-way racet with Baltimore's Dave McNally and Mike Cuellar and Sam Mc- Dowell of Cleveland. Perry picked up six first place votes and a total of 55 points lord of the San Francisco Giants failed to do in the National League. Gaylord finished a dis- tant second to Bob Gibson of the St. Louis Cardinals in the voting for the NL Cy Young Award ear- lier in the week. "I was just hoping," Jim said. "I had my fingers crossed. "I'm really nervous now. A thing like this shakes you up. I'm usually calm and collected in a game. "It's quite an honor--some play- ers work so hard and don't get such an honor in a lifetime. I can't express it in words." viously, the writers voted for only one man.- Perry, who turned 34 Oct. 30, pitched 279 innings last season with a 3.03 earned run average as he helped pitch the Twins to the Western Division title before they lost to eventual World Series champion Baltimore in the play- offs. Perry, a crafty 6-foot-4, 195 pound veteran who only reached stardom in 1969, his 11th season in the majors, gained some meas-j ure of revenge after losing out to Cuellar and McLain last season despite a 20-6 record. It was by .. . i'