Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, September 14, 1974 Badgers face killer line-up By ROGER ROSSITER John Jardine thinks his Wis- consin Badgers "will be a good football team." Jardine may be right, but with the murderous schedule the Badgers face no one may ever know. Starting September 21, the Badgers have a string of five consecutive games that could- n't be any rougher if they were scheduled by the devil himself. Wisconsin opens its season at Purdue, a piece of cake cam- pared to the next five Satur- days. After the lid lifter, the Badgers host Nebraska, visit Badger baiters S. 14 at Purdue S. 21 Nebraska S. 28 at Colorado 0. 5 Missouri 0. 12 at Ohio State 0. 19 MICHIGAN 0. 26 at Indiana N. 2 Michigan State N. 9 at Iowa N. 16 at Northwestern N. 23 Minnesota Colorado, host Missouri, visit Ohio State and finally host Michigan. If Wisconsin survives that ordeal, the home stretch should be a breeze. OFFENSIVELY, the Badgers possess a lot of proven per- formers. Junior tailback Bill Marek rushed for 1207 yards in 241 carries - which converts to five yards a crack -- sec- ond in the Big Ten to Archie Griffin. Quarterback Gregg B o h lig completed 78 aerials in 172 at- tempts for 1211 yards and eight touchdowns last year. Bohlig's top target, Jeff Mack, returns for his third year as the Bad- gers' flanker. Mack led Wiscon- sin in receptions his sophomore and junior seasons and will battle Purdue's Larry Burton for all-Big Ten honors this sea- son. JUNIOR Dennis Lick anchors the Badger offensive line from his tackle position. He and sen- ior tight end Jack Novack give the Badgers two of the top line- men in the conference. Lick should get a lot of attention in All-America balloting, if not this year than certainly in his senior season. Split end Art Sanger, tackle Bob Johnson, guards Rick Ko- eck, and Terry Stieve, and cen- ter Joe Norwick round out a seasoned Badger offensive line. Reserves are not plentiful, and injuries could create serious problems throughout the line. Combining with the one-two punch of Bohlig and Marek in the Wisconsin backfield is full- back Ken Starch. The 5-11, 207 junior averaged 5.4 yards per carry last year and is a devas- tating blocker in front of Ma- rek. As prolific as Wisconsin's of- fense proved to be last year, it's defense was equally porous. The Badgers rolled up 3849 yards offensively, but yielded 3944 yards to the opposition. W I S C 0 N S I N' S defen- sive strength lies in the ends. Seniors Mark Zakula and Mike Vesperman head a list of ten defensive starters returning from '73. Only the middle guard posi- tion will be in non-veteran hands, but considering the inef- fectiveness the Badgers suf- fered through defensively, Wis- consin fans will have to be re- served optimists. Ken Simmons, the Big Ten's leading punter a year ago, with a 40.8 average, will again han- dle the chore of booting the Badgers out of trouble. Sim- mons is also an experienced re- serve cornerback behind start- ers Alvin Peabody and Greg Lewis. R E A L I S T I C A L L Y, the Badgers have little chance of overhauling Michigan and Ohio State in the race for the WISCONSIN QUARTERBACK Gregg Bohlig sets up to pass last season against Purdue. Bohlig, second top thrower in the conference in 1973, will be the major threat when the Wolverines take on the Badgers this year. Irs HARD TO GET FREE CIDER I FOR THE 15TH YEAR Bill Marek roses. Wisconsin did, however, play an extremely strong first half against the Buckeyes last year, trailing only 7-0 at inter- mission. Ohio State finally wore Wisconsin down in the second half on its way to a hard fought 24-0 victory, but the Badgers' performance proved their capa- bility as a spoiler to the Big Ten's heavies. Wisconsin's season finale in Madison against the Minnesota Gophers could be its most cru- cial game of the season. Both the Badgers and Gophers are prime candidates for the num- ber three spot in the confer- ence, and that season ending showdown could be the decider. Football '74 and That Means the Barrel Is Out Again, With FREE CIDER at TICE'S MEN'S SHOP on Home Game Saturday Mornings. It Also Means Levi Cords, Jeans, and Flannel Shirt Season and Tice's Has the Biggest Selection in Ann Arbor. TI CE'SMEN'S SHUP r Texas Instruments INCORPORATED CALCULATORS IN STOCK TI-1500 .. $ 59.95 SR-10 .... $ 69.95 TI-2500 .. $ 44.95 SR-11 .... $ 79.95 TI-2550 . . $ 69.95 SR-20 .... $139.95 TI-2510 .. $ 39.95 TI-3500 .. $ 79.95 TI-4000 .. $119.95 BANKAMERICAR W C COMPANY P.O.,S . ULRICH'S Bookstore 549 East Univ. Ave. Ann Arbor, Mich. 662-3201 1111 S. UNIVERSITY r