Tuesday, October 1, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY heads or tales~ MarcFeldman No off tackle Plays ... . . .at Bo's luncheon THE MONDAY LUNCHEON with The Coach is an established ritual at many colleges throughout the country. Michigan is no exception. Every Monday during the season, Bo Schembech- ler breaks bread with about a dozen Ann Arbor, Detroit and To- ledo writers to rehash the previous Saturday's rout and preview the next one. Most schools don't finish in the Top Ten year after year and average two All-Americans per annum, so the conver- s.tion at such places may deal with a) the complexity of the off-tackle play b) the third - string left guard's nagging ham- string pull or c) why our defense is pretty good even though we gave up 48 points last week. No such trivialities at the Michigan luncheon. The conversation yesterday was about national champion- ships and Heisman Trophies-not off-tackle plays. The Wolverines have an unenviable tradition of never rising in the polls unless a team ahead of them loses. Like a broken record, if the Wolverines have one loss, the next team in the poll will have two losses. BCS, C A RDr I By The A ssociated Press r HOUSTON - Larry Dirkser and Ken Forsch combined to stop Los Angeles on six hits last night, pitching the H.uston aAstros to a 4-1 victory and pre- venting the D od ge r s rm clinching the National League West Division championsnio. The loss cut Los A g2 s ° lead over the idle Cincinnati Reds tBo two games, with each club having two games remain- ing in the regular season. Cin- cinnati plays its final two games against Atlanta and the D)dgers have two more games with the Astros. The Astros took a 1-0 lead in the fourth inning on a run- scoring single by DierKer, then made it 3-0 and chased Dailv Photo by STEVE KAGAN Dodger starter Doug Rau, 13- echler reviews the plays during the Colorado game with his 11 in the fifth on Lee May's ranklin. Although Schembechler claims that this year the Wol- run-scoring single and Milt ort for each game, he is upset with the press for not giving May's sacrifice fly. They got their final run ia the BIG WEEK FOR G IANT-KILLERS Paoe Nine S T lU MP H: e/ sixth inning when pinch Inner l st night. John Edwarsd doubled down the The triumph kept the Cardi- right field line and pin:h run- nais tied for first place with the ner Dave Campbell scored from Pittsburgh Pirates in the Na- second on a passed ball y Los tional League East. Pittsburgh Angeles cataher Joe Ferguson. edged the Chicago Cubs 2-1 last 1 night. Simmons' first-inning blast I wrates prevail was his 20th home run of the PITTSBURGH - Pinch hitter year and came off losing Richie Zisk belted a tie-break- pitcher Steve Rogers, 15-22. ing triale in the seventh inning Rogers got into trouble after and Bruce Kison pitched a retiring leadoff man Lou Brock three-hitter to give the Pitts- on an infield grounder. Ted burgh Pirates a 2-1 victory over Sizemore bounced a single to the Chicago Cubs last night. left, then Smith coaxed a walk Zisk, who batted for shortstop before Simmons lined a 2-2 Fran Taveras, clouted the deci- pitch just over the short fence sive triple to center field, scor- in right field. ing Manny Sanguillen, who had, - si -led and taken second on a ld itch. Birds feast The run, which snapped a 1-1 tie, came off Chicago DETROIT-Bobby Grich -nd starter Bill Bonham, who had and Earl Williams drove in allowed just two hits going three runs each to power Balti- into the Pirates' seventh. It more to its seventh straight was B o n h a m' s 22nd loss victory, a 12-6 triumph over De- a'ainst 11 victories. troit, and give the Orioles a The last-place Cubs, who had ole-game lead in the American won nme of the 15 previous games with Pittsburgh this sea- The second-place New York s:n, }umped to a 1-0 lead in the Yankees were idle. Two games first inning when Kison yielded remain for both Baltimore and a bases-loaded walk to Peter New York. La Co:k. Baltimore pounded out 16 hits, Pittsburgh scored its first run in-luding a two-run homer by in the third with the help of a Williams and a solo shot by throwing error by LaCock. Grich. Tommy Davis opened the Orioles' second with a single. SimmOnS socks Don Baylor doubled, then MONTREAL - Rookie 1ob Brooks Robinson singled both Forsch pitched no-hit hall for runners home. Williams fol- 62S nnigsfinihin wih alowed with his 14th homer of 6?3 innings, finishing with a the season. three-hitter, and the St. Louist e Cardinals rode Ted Simmons' The Orioles added two more three-run homer and Reggie runs in the ninth on Belanger's Smith's two-run triple to a 5-1 bases loaded single off hold- victory over the Montreal Expos sworth. MICHIGAN COACH, Bo Schembe favorite quarterback, Dennis F verines put together a team eff Franklin the praise due him. Boiler kers 1,00t But Schembechler has never overly concerned himself By ED LANGE with the polls, and he still hasn't changed his tune. "It takes a The contenders are falling by hell of a combination of circumstances to win the national cham- the wayside. The second "week- pionship and I don't feel it's a realistic goal for the team because end of the upsets" has left' three more grid giants' dreams it's not decided on the football field. of a national championship shattered. This week, mighty Franklin; Blue's next Heisman? Notre Dame fell to the sup- 9 Posedly weak Boilermakers of Purdue, Texas was upended byj Naturally the subject soon turned to the Heisman and quar- Texas Tech and powerful Okla- terback Dennis Franklin's chances of becoming the first Michi- homa State was upset by the Baylor Bears. gan winner since Tom Harmon dazzled the voters in 1940. How- T ever, Bo is not the type of guy who will pass out publicity re- the nation, were 35 point fav- leases, 8 x 12 glossies or extol the moral virtues of his players as orites over Purdue but they does a certain overweight mentor in Columbus. were never in the game. The! Boilermakers took advantage of "We're not playing football for the sake of one player at the three key mistakes by the Irish, expense of the team. We have much more important goals," jumped out to a quick 21-0 lead Irish Little Baylor University, with a student enrollment of 8,000, caused the biggest upset in the southwest when they upset. the NIGHT EDITOR. LEBA HERTZ and never looked back, winning 31-20. The key to the upset was the initial Purdue blitz. Stun- ned to find themselves three touchdowns down with the first quarter not yet half over, the Irish were forced to come out throwing. Quarterback Tom Clements passed for 237 yards, but had three of his tosses intercepted, all very costly. Meanwhile, the Boilermakers urn ed Okuahoma Mate modified their own game plan. Cowboys, 31-14. Originally intending to go heav- The Bears ran a ball control ily to the air, the Boiler instead offense to completely stifle the protected their lead by doing a lot of running off the option Cowboys, breaking the game series. They ended up throwing open with a 84 yard screen pass only 11 times. from quarterback Neal Jeffrey Schembechler emphasized. "But if you want to talk about the best, I talk about Dennis Franklin. I like him and I think he's great, but thereI are other guys who are worthy, too." Although it didn't show up in print everywhere, Bo had blasted a group of writers in the lockerroom after Saturday's 52-0 win over Navy for failing to give Franklin enough coverage. The tirade came as a surprise, and Bo trooped out of the room almost immediately after he said it.I Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE East Baltimore New York Boston Cleveland Milwaukee Detroit W L Pct. GB 88 71 .558 - 88 72 .550 1 83 77 .519 5 76 84 .472 13 75 85 .469 131/2 72 88 .450 17 West Although Schembechler didn't say it, speculation was ram- Oakland 90 70 .563 - Texas 83 75 .523 6 pant then that one of the reasons behind the outburst was a Minnesota 81 79 .506 9a .PChicago 78 80 .494 11 Saturday mornig Detroit Free Press headline about "Heisman Kansas City 77 83 .481 13I Trophy candidate Clements" (Tom of Notre Dame). That story California 66 94 .413 24 graced the same page as a Joe Falls column about "what Bo Results Baltimore 12, Detroit 6 should do to get attention." One of Falls' suggestion was streak- Cleveland 2, Boston I ing. Today's Games Baltimore (Palmer 7-12) at De- troit (Coleman 14-12), 1:30 p.m. P s ov loDTexas (Bibby 19-19) at Minnesota (Albury 8-9 or Decker 16-14), 2:15 Cleveland (Bosman 7-3) at Boston Franklin was upset with the coverage in Michigan's second- (Barr 0-0), 7:30 p.m. New York (Medich 19-14) at Mil- largest newspaper. "They're supposed to be a hometown paper waukee (Kobel 6-14), 8:30 p.m. and they put Notre Dame on the front - that's pretty lousy" Kansas City (Bird 7-5)" at Chicago moaned Dennis. (Kaat 20-13), 9 p.m. Oakland (Hunter 25-12) at Cali-j ['_LW .-. . . a.. L:'..,.. ,, fornia (Tanana 13-19), 11 p.m. I i a s NATIONAL LEAGUE East W L Pct. GB Pittsburgh 86 74 .538 - St. Louis 86 74 .538 - Montreal 78 82 .488 8 Philadelphia 78 82 .488 8 jNew York 71 89 .444 15 i Chicago 66 94 .413 20 west Los Angeles 100 60 .626 - Cincinnati 98 62 .613 2 SAtlanta 86 74 .538 14 Houston 80 79 .506 19 San Francisco 71 89 .444 29 San Diego 59 101 .369 41 s Results Pittsburgh 2, Chicagos New York 5, Philadelphia 2 St. Louis 5, Montreal I Los Angeles 4. Houston 1 Today's Games Chicago (Dettore 3-5) at Pittsburgh (Reuss 16-11), 7:30 p.m. Cincinnati (Gullett 17-11) at At- lanta (Capra 15-8), 7:A p.m. Philadelphia (Lonborg 16-13) at New York (Seaver 11-10 or Webb 10-2), 8:05 p.M. LOS Angeles (Sutton 18-9) at jHouston (Roberts 9-12 or Richard 2-2), 8:30 p.m. St. Louis (Gibson 11-12) at Mon- real (Torrez 15-8), 8:05 p.m. San Diego (Freisleben 9-13) at San Francisco (Caldwell 14-5), 10:30 p.m. Down in Lubbock, Texas, the sixth ranked Texas Long- horns were upended by a tena- cions Texas Tech squad. Red Raider quarterback Tommy Duniven threw three touch- down passes to flanker Law- rence Williams. The longest was a 77 yard bomb in which Williams was ten yards be- hind the nearest Longhorn. If also caught scoring tosses of fifteen and eighteen yards. They made a lot of mis- takes early in the game and we took control both offensively anda defensively," said Jim Carlen, head coach of Texas Tech. Carlen discounted revenge as a factor, even though Texas beat Tech 28-12 last year. "We just like to beat Texas," he said. "They're to us what Michi- gan State is to Michigan." The Red Raiuers jumped to a 26-3 lead at the half and were con- tent to sit on that margin throughout the rest of the game. SERGEI EISENSTEIN'S 1944 - Part I Eisenstein's greatest and lost project was a three-part film about Russia's most feared czar. He never finished it, but the two parts tha remain reveal 1 a heroic style of acting, rich historical details, and the extremely expres- sive compositions and cutting that give this film a sublime, epic quality. Music by Prokofiev WED.: RAY'S THE MUSIC ROOM THURS.: REED'S OUTCASTS OF THE ISLANDS CINEMA Jul' U y . ADM. ONLY1 ARCHITECTURE AUD. LILI14U L)TON iG HT at 7 & 9 ARC TETUREAU. to taili also r Jeffrex score. .ack Steve Beaird. Beaird ushed for 91 yards while y passed for another J Schembechler understood his quarterback's feelings. "Well, how would you feel if you were a three year quarter- back, had lost one game in that time by 14-11 and the sup- posed hometown newspaper has a headline about the Heis- man Trophy candidate in South Bend?", Bo posed rhetoric- ally. "Detroit is by themselves--they're not in Michigan. All they want to know about is the pros", commented the Wolverine boss. One of the writers asked Bo if he was going to follow Falls' advice and streak for attention. With his tongue firmly embedded in his cheek, Schembechler responded, "Yeah, if I were faster." - 1313 SO. 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