Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, November 21, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, November21, 1970 1~ b t S g a b . n t 6 p C C o f r HONEST JU LIUS says "Even if it hails . . we'll/beat their.. . GOOD LUCK BLUE! from PIZZA Uaes~$TREAT 1751 PLYMOUTH at North Campus ini.............mm...mm..n... 'mmmm..mm....m.m...---u m.......m 75 cents off : : 50 cents off ONA ON A SPORTSMAN OR PARTY TIME LARGE OR MEDIUM ' PIZZA PIE *;PIZZA PIE at LITTLE CAESARS at LITTLE'CAESARS ONE COUPON PER PIZZA COUPONS EXPIRE NOV. 28th CALL 665-8626 JUST 50 CENTS DELIVERY PER ORDER NOT PER PIZZA LSU, Irish battle fo By KENNETH COHN Strangely enough, s o m e foot- ball fans will not watch or listen o today's game in Columbus. Some of them think that other games are more worthy of their attention. Admittedly, they may be justified in this opinion, ig- norant though they are. Probably the most important of hese second-rate games will be layed in South Bend, where sec- nd-ranked Notre Dame plays eventh-ranked Louisiana State. The Irish, 8-0 so far, are coming off a close call against Georgia Tech, while t h e defense-minded Tigers primed themselves for to- day's battle with their biggest of- ensive showing of t h e season, olling over Mississippi State last Saturday, 38-7. No matter how h a r d a top- ranked team tries, it can't play them one at a time," and these two teams are no exceptions. Not- re Dame will try to forget last week's game, as it meets LSU to- day, but its main problem is mak- ing everyone else forget it. The poor showing of the Irish against Georgia Tech, in which a fourth - quarter touchdown en- abled them to pull out a 10-7 vic- tory, dropped them from 1st to 2nd in the polls. Their visitors after a victory today would un- doubtedly be Cotton and Orange Bowl suitors. And yet, the Irish can't ignore the spectre of arch- nemesis Southern Cal, who pre- sents a further threat in the sea- son finale to Irish hopes for a na- tional championship. By all measures of prediction, today's clash should be a defensive struggle. Notre Dame, despite its first-in-the-nation offense, has allowed only 7.4 points a game and ranks fifth in the country in total defense. The Theismann- Gatewood tandem on offense is counterbalanced by the Clarence Ellis-Ralph Stepaniak cornerback team and by a front line that has permitted less t h a n a hundred yards a game on the ground. Similarly, in a conference which may have invented the word "de- fense," LSU consistently led all others in stinginess. The Tigers are n o w first in the nation in rushing defense, allowing a mere 46 ground yards a contest and are tenth in overall defense. After managing to lose to Tex- as A&M in their season opener, the Bayou Bengals h a v e swept through their last seven contests, including among their victims Au- r bowls. burn and Alabama. They h a v e permitted only 7.8 points a game, and haven't yet given up a touch- down on the ground. SENIOR BUDDY LEE and soph Bert Jones have alternated as the Tigers' signal-caller; Lee will start today. Sharing t h e offensive chores with him will be running back Art Cantrelle and the team's t o p receiver, Andy Hamilton. Leading LSU's impenetrable de- fense are linemen John Sage and Ron Estay; backing them up will be linebacker Louis Cascio and cornerback Tom Casanova. T h e third - ranked Nebraska Cornhuskers, who have beat baclt all challengers so far, meet their last one today on the road to the Big Eight title. T h e Oklahoma Sooners, led by quarterback Jack Mildren, have lost only once in the conference and still have a chance at a share of the crown. polls But Orange Bowl-bound Ne- braska, with the exception of an early-season tie, have- not played a truly close game yet, and the Husker bulldozer hopes to plow right through to Miami. Arkansas will meet Texas Tech today in what should be the Pork- ers' final warm-up before the Armageddon at Austin. The 8-2 Red. Raiders still have an outside shot for a portion of the South- west Conference title and a Cot- ton Bowl trip, but the Razorbacks smell horsemeat, and are not like- ly to be put off the scent. In New England, they speak a different language from that of the Midwest - "The Game" to- day' is not between Michigan and Ohio State, but between two old rivals from Cambridge and New Haven. Harvard has lost twice in the Ivy League, but Yale holds faltering h o p e s of tying Dart- mouth for the championship. I COMING UP ROSES? MSU threatens Wildcats' hopes By JAMES EPSTEIN Aside from "the game," there is one other contest on the Big Ten schedule today that should prove interesting, t h e Northwestern- Michigan State affair. The Wild- cats, headed for their best finish since 1948, are trying tosprotect their chance for a Rose Bowl berth. Northwestern goes into today's game with a 5-1 conference record and a 5-4 record overall. A win for the Wildcats today, coupled with a Michigan victory over Ohio State, would put them in a tie with the Buckeyes for second place in the Big Ten. The conference athletic direc- tors would then vote on which team to send tohPasadena. If this occurs, and precedent is followed, Northwesternkcould get the nod over the Bucks in case of a tie in the vote since Ohio State was at the classic more recently. The Wildcats invade East Lan- sing at less than full strength. Starting linebacker Jack Derning, one of the team leaders in tackles, has been lost to Northwestern for the remainder of the season with a knee injury. The dynamic backfield duo of Mike Adamle and Al Robinson, however, is quite ready to take on the Spartans. Adamle, one of the nation's top rushers, has, amassed a total of 1118 yards on the ground so far this year. Robinson, who has been overshadowed by Adamle this season, has himself rushed for in over 500 yards. Junior quarterback M a u r i e Daigneau, while his completion ratio is not high (80 of 187) has picked up 1043 yards through the air. The favorite target for Daig- neau has been flanker Barry Pear- son, who has hauled in 27 passes for 401 yards and two touchdown. Daigneau also hits split end Jim Lash, Adamle and Robinson with the same degree of consistency. The most sparking aspect of the Wildcats' defense is the defen- sive backfield. The Northwestern pass defense is currently rated the second best in the country, allow- ing just over 30 per cent of enemy aerials to be completed. The Wildcats as a team have picked off 18 passes so far this year with the team leader, junior Eric Hutchinson, snatching six. The starting backfield alone has pulled in 11 of the errant tosses. The Spartan team that North- western will face is no pushover. Michigan State comes into the action today with a 3-3 overall record in conference play and three wins in its last four outings. The Spartans sport another of the best all around running backs in the conference, Eric Allen. The flashy Allen has zipped through the line for 703 yards this season, averaging 4.5 a try. The other Big Ten finales sched- uled for today are Illinois (1-5) at Iowa (2-3-1), Indiana (1-5) at A *1 Purdue (1-5) and Minnesota 3-1) at Wisconsin (2-4) (2- COME TO TOWN and COUNTRY RESTAURANT 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 ED GUYLAS (12), Notre Dame halfback, looks for running room in an Irish victory over Pitts- burgh earlier this season. The undefeated Irish meet once- beaten Louisiana State today in a battle of two of the nation's top ten teams. Both teams are looking forward to post-season bowl appearances. Big Ten Standings - r------ I CO ou SE L... 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