Sunday, November, 22, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Sunday, November 22, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven~ Somewhere their defense had to crack-but it didn't. -Michigan Coach Bo Schembechler I'm not the least bit disappointed with Michigan. -Schembechler SUNDAY SPORTS NIGHT EDITORS: BILL ALTERMAN and JIM KEVRA -Daily-Sara Krulwich -Daily-Mort Noveck OSU's Hayden (22) finds a hole Putting the crunch on Billy Taylor (42) The ago T that was Columbus on this and that Nine and one is no digrace eric siegel ., COLUMBUS THE MICHIGAN players walked slowly down the entranceway to the visiting locker room at Ohio Stadium here yesterday. unbuttoning their chin straps, removing their helmets, bearing the jeers and the catcalls that the Ohio State fans poured down on them. No one was crying over the 20-9 loss to the Buckeyes- not then, anyway-but it was obvious they were trying to hold back their tears. Later, in the Michigan locker room, there was some evidence that there might have been some tears. Coach Bo Schembechler, who had led him team to a 9-1 season and compiled a 17-4 rec- ord in two seasons as head coach of the Wolverines, was backed against some lockers, surrounded by a group of reporters, and his eyes were red and his voice was low. "I don't want anyone talking to the kids," Schembechler said, almost choking on the words. "You can ask me anything you want-but I don't want anyone talking to the kids." The 'kids were, of course, the Michigan players-Don Moorhead, Billy Taylor, Glenn Doughty, Fritz Seyferth, Henry Hill, Jim Betts, Tom Darden and on through the four dozen players who made the Michigan traveling roster, and who had just gotten beaten in a game that would have given ' them the Big Ten championship and a possible shot at a number one ranking in the wire service polls. They did not play all that poorly yesterday; their defense did almost everything one could expect of it. But they did commit three costly fumbles, two of which wound up in the hands of the Buckeyes; Moorhead threw an interception that led to a score; and they were penalized a costly 48 yards, yards that contributed to stalled drives on some occasions and caused a loss of good field position on another. It was not a perfect game and it was not, by Michigan standards, even a good game, but Schembechler would not find fault with his players. "I'm not the least bit disappointed in Michigan," he said, in his most forceful voice of his 10-minute press con- ference. "We were high but we weren't nervous, we played with good enthusiasm. You have to give credit to OSU." Indeed, credit does have to be given to OSU. They came off a poor game against Purdue which they won 10-7 in the last two minutes, and responded with an almost flawless (with the exception of one pass interception by Jim Betts) performance. They moved the ball where the Wolverines couldn't-on the ground-and they had good success in the air, too, as quarter- back Rex Kern hit eight of 12 attempts for 87 yards. Schembechler was given the opportunity to make excuses yesterday, but he didn't take them. "I wouldn't blame anything on the field," he told one reporter. "We've played on sod before." Schembechler was taking this, his most bitter defeat in his two year career as Michigan's head coach and probably in his entire football career as a coach and player, but he was taking it openly and directly and as well as he possibly could. "Can you talk a little louder?" a reporter near the back of the crowd asked. "I'm talking as loud as I can," Schembechler answered, per- haps a bit too harshly. There are, undoubtedly, certain members of the press who will criticize Bo for saying too little too softly, for making them wait too long before letting them in the locker room, and for not letting them talk with his players. Indeed, they were grumbling yesterday. In some ways, their criticism is justified. A player who can talk after a 42-0 victory should be able to talk after a bitter loss, even if it's just to say that his team lost and that's all there is. And yet one can see Bo's feelings about barring the press from talking to the players. They are, after all, entitled to some privacy, and the world will not be that much worse off for not knowing how Lance Scheffler felt about fumbling the opening kickoff and giving the Buckeyes three points early in the game or for not knowing how Don Moorhead felt throwing an interception deep in his own territory in the fourth quarter with his team down by four points. Or for not knowing how Billy Taylor felt gaining just 31 yards bM rushers thwarted; OSU defense immobile By PAT ATKINS Special To The Daily COLUMBUS - All year 1o n g Buckeye fans had been asking when Woody would turn the offense loose. Yesterday afternoon, when the only moving room was in the air, they got their answer. With both Ohio State a n d Michigan defenses performing as expected against the ground attack, kicking and passing dominated the Big Ten champ- ionship. No longer a question mark, the under-pressure passing of Rex Kern - not the bulling of John Brockington - caught the Wol- verines from behind. Michigan, stopped cold on the ground with 37 net yards rush- ing, dropped passes, allowed an interception and missed an ex- tra point to stymie its chances for two repeat first places. "Our defense was good, but our offense could not move t h e ball. I believe you have to run the football. Somewhere their defense had to crack - but it critics -Daily-Denny Gainer Scheffler (45) fumbles opening kickoff didn't," Michigan Coach Bo Schembechler said. In the first half, Michigan managed only 18 yards on the ground, its longest run from scrimmage coming then on a six yard delayed jaunt by B i 11 y Taylor. Quarterback Don Moor- head and Kern dueled to an aer- ial stand-off, each throwing touchdown passes. But soon in the f o u r t h quarter Michigan's Armeggedon came, as Kern, using Brocking- ton and Leon Hayden, took the ball 46 yards on the ground in nine plays to the Michigan 27 yard line. A 16 yard completion to Jan White just about assur- ed the field goal by Fred Schram. It came at 4:11 of the third quarter and put O h i o State's lead to 13-9. Then, with Michigan pres- sured once again to take to the air from back on its own 20, Stan White picked off a Moor- head pass an ran it back 15 yards to the Michigan n i n e yard line. Three plays later it was 20-9. Kern, letter perfect in t h e first half, lofted the ball high six times for six completions. "Rex Kern did a great j o b today. We did not play Ron Maciejowski because of the way Rex was going - and you don't change horses in the middle of the stream," Buckeye Coach Woody Hayes explained when all was over. If the Wolverines' passing looked effective, it was o n 1 y in comparison to their rushing efforts. Schembechler noted, *We didn't move on the ground and that hurt." Taylor, leading Wolverine rusher with 898 yards going into yesterday's game, pushed f o r only 31 yards in 15 tries. No other Wolverine even broke into double figures on rushing yard- age. Taylor was more success- ful as a receiver, catchingrfive Moorhead aerials for 53 yards. .. In the meantime Ohio State, led by Hayden with 117 n e t yards, rushed for 107 net yards in the first half and 135 in the second. The ineffectiveness of the Wolverine rushing game began noticeably sapping the strength of Michigan's drives after Moor- head had just brought his team- mates to within one, 10-9, on a 13 yard toss to Paul Staroba halfway through the third quarter. The 'M' defense dug in, forcing the Bucks to turn over the ball without a first down. Two hand- offs for a gain of one to Taylor and a rushed pass incompletion were all that the Wolverines could garner. Once again, the ,Michigan de- fense kept the Buckeyesfrom a first down, and a short 30- yard punt by Gary Lago s e t Michigan up just inside its own territory. With Michigan gaining mo- mentum and in menacing field position, the record crowd of 87,331 began to chant the let- ters apprehensively, "O-H-I-O." As usual in Ohio Stadium, they needn't have worried. Taylor went over right tackle to gain his two yards per car- ry average, then Moorhead pass- ed complete to Doughty. But a Wolverine offside penalty nulli- fied the pass completion. Penalized into a second down and 13 situation, Moorhead hit Seymour on the right side and saw the ball go off the tight end's fingertips. As Moorhead again tried to pass, Buckeye middle guard Jim Stillwagon rushed in to paste the quarter- back on a seven yard loss. The Buckeyes, on their next series of downs, scored the field goal, then picked off M o ofr head'spass and moved the ball into the enemy end zone for their 20-9 margin of victory. "We helped them make points with our mistakes," Schembech- ler said. Hayes' Buckeyes were equally adept at makingpenal- ties, throwing interceptions, and fumbling. But there was, as Schembech- ler observed, that one all-im- portant difference. c"-I By PAT ATKINS Special To The Daily COLUMBUS -A not so subtle chant of "we want Mace," mean- ing Ron Maciejowski, has been quietly murmured here in Ohio Stadium during much of the Buckeye season . The speakers of those traitor- ous statements ate their words yesterday afternoon, as the Rex Kern of old returned to O h i o Stadium. Kern, playing the entire game because Ohio State coach Woody Hayes chose not to change good "horses in midstream," provid- ed both the physical and mental leadership that Hayes and his assistants have looked for all season. The Buckeye quarterback pass- ed complete in 8 of 12 attempts for 87 yards, and fed the ball act quiets tints for rMace' die cleanly 55 times to fullback John Brockington and halfback Leo Hayden. With the game over and the smell of roses wafting across a berserk Ohio State crowd in the process of removing goal posts, Woody could even find pleasure in talking of his squabbles with his quarterback. "Here I am trying to close the generation gap by listening to Rex," Hayes joked afterwards, "and it backfires. That's the last time for a while that I'll listen to the youth of America. The Kern-Hayes squabble sit- uation had been generated by a Bill Taylor fumble on a Don Moorhead aerial. Taking over on the Michigan 48, Kern promptly tossed a 19 yarder to halfback Tom Campana down on the 27. Hayden pushed for four more yards, Hayes calling time with only 22 seconds left in the half. Woody Hayes figured with time dwindling and the ball on the 23 that no better spot could come for a field goal. So Kern was waved off, and kicked Fred Schram sent in. When Kern disagreed with the strategy, Hayes was prevailed upon to reverse his edict. In trot- ted Kern to pass quicklyto Brockington for four more yards. But the obviously con- fused Buckeyes muddled out the rest of the clock to leave the halftime score at Ohio State 10, Michigan 3. Other than that one miscue, though, Hayes could find no fault in his quarterback. K e r n fumbled once, three plays after the Buckeyes had pounced on the Wolverines' game opening fumble. But he quicklylanded on top, no real damage having been done. Hayes had been careful to point out before the game that Kern's slow start was due to a shoulder injury acquired by Kern in last year's Illinois game. But he had also pointed out that the injury in no way ham- pered Kern's "ball handling or his sense of rhythm and tim- ing." To those watching on na- tional television and those in attendance, Woody's statement held true in yesterday's game as well. Hayden carrying the ball," Hayes noted. The play, depend- ent on Kern's timing, was bor- rowed from Michigan. "It is in our book and they must have borrowed and refined it," Hayes recalled. "So we bor- rowed it back." If the Buckeyes had lost, it would not have been so relaxed and amusing - not the recount- ing of the Kern-Hayes sideline exchange nor the joking about borrowed plays. But Kern had come back and the Buckeyes had the Big Ten championship. And the world looked very rosy indeed. Ohio State methodically ruins Wolverines' unblemished record -ood b e, Columbus FINAL STATISTICS FIRST DOWNS Rushing Passing Penalty TOTAL NUMBER OF' RUSHES NET YARDS Rushing Passing FORWARD PASSES ATTEMPTED Completed Intercepted by Yards interception returned TOTAL PLAYS Rushes and passes PUNTS, Number Averag distanc icfh. Ohio 10 18 6 5 1 01 30 65 118 87 Passing Att. Comp. 26 12 Receiving Moorhead. Staroba 'Taylor D~ought y Int. Yds. 1 118 No. Yds. 6 56 5 53 1 9 Total 12 119 Punting No. Yds. Ave. 7 290 41.4 .IContinued from Page 1) day, but it was not the only one. The Wolverines handed the Bucks a quick three points when Lance Scheffler fumbled the op.. ening kickoff and OSU's Harry Howard pounced on the ball at Michigan's 25. Kern, who com- pleted 8 of 12 passes for 87 yards and directed the Bucks' 329-yard offensive performance, moved the ball down to the 10 yard line with a 14 yard pass to Bruce Jankow- ski. But the Bucks moved the ball iust four vards in the next three period, got a bad break when a beautiful, 73-yard Staroba punt from the Michigan 24 was called back because of a personal foul. Staroba, punting from his own 11, then booted the ball down to the Buckeyes' 45, and Anderson re- turned it eight yards to the Wol- verine 47. With Brockington, who picked up 77 yards on 27 carries for the afternoon, doing the brunt of the running, the Bucks drove to the Michigan 26 in 11 p 1 a y s. The Bucks, faced with a third and ten c;-+-- rn.++r fan air . n a their own midway through t h e fourth quarter, when Anderson touched a Staroba punt at mid- field and Reggie McKenzie,pounc- ed on the ball, giving Michigan a first and ten at the 50. The Wolverines, still plagued by ineffective running game, made 19 yards in the air on passes to Billy Taylor and Staroba. But the drive stalled a couple of p la y s later when Glenn Doughty dropped Moorhead's fourth and eight pass around the ten, and Ohio State ate up the last several minutes on the ground. 26 12 12 ,,taroba Kern imay den Brockington G albos 25 15 OHIO STATE Rushing Tries Ga 6 13 28 11 27 7 4 4 56 7 41.4 77 6 281 ins 13 8 9 3 Loss Net 8 5 1 '117 2 77 0 43 I L