Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, October 13, 1974 Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, October 13, 1 974 By JOHN KAHLER Denny Stolz stood in the visitors locker room facing an unpleasant, but unavoid- able task: trying to explain away the ;<..Spartan's fifth straight loss to Michi- gan. To the inevitable "What happened?" he responded, "You saw the game, you must know what happened out there." IF STOLZ' personality were different, it would be easy to sympathize with the fr* youthful Michigan State mentor. Once " again, his team has failed to achieve the primary goal of any MSU season-a victory over the hated Wolverines. But waste no tears on Denny Stolz. Yesterday's 21-7 Michigan victory was "A_ handed to the Wolverines by State's own mistakes. Michigan's second touchdown came when the MSU punting game broke down, leaving punter Tom Birney alone near the end zone to face the wrath of Dan Jilek. And Michigan's final points came when Jim Smith slipped past the Spartan secondary to grab a 44-yard TD toss as the first half expired. Stolz was very defensive when ques- tioned about that pass. "We were play- ing the right defense, but we just didn't Daily Photo by STEVE KAGAN execute it right," he claimed. MICHIGAN DEFENSIVE END Dan Jilek slams into State's Tom Bierney after the Spartan punter let a low snap bounce THIS BRINGS to mind an interesting past him. Moments later Jilek fell on the loose ball in the end zone to put Michigan ahead, 14-0. The fumble was one of a series point. Coaches usually take great pains to of costly mistakes by Michigan State. insure that their defensive backs execute explain the prevent defense perfectly. One has to question the coaching when a breakdown of that magnitude occurs. One could also question the quality of coaching that went into the Spartan offensive unit. That bunch came through with enough fumbles (four lost) intercep- tions (two) and missed blocking assign- ments (innumerable) to offset any chance State might have had to parlay Michigan's lackluster offensive perform- ance into an upset. You can say what you will about Bo Schembechler's conservative offensive philosophy, but his teams usually do not make mistakes. Michigan State teams do, and often at the worst pos- sible moment. BUT STOLZ didn't seem to care. "We run an option offense, and you've got to expect some fumbles running the op- tion." And on Michigan's four fumbles (two lost): "We expected them to fumble. This is the first time they've been hit all year.'' To hear Stolz tell it, the game was a moral victory for his team. "Our guys weren't pushed around out there. Does anybody in this locker room really look down?" (No Spartan players were cry- ing.) And in response to a question about S lOss Burt Smith and last November's Rose Bowl vote: "That's all television talk. ;Do you think their middle guard on a fourth and one play remembered the Rase Bowl Vote?" To which middle guard Tim Davis r'- sponded, "We weren't really concerned about that, we just wanted to go out' and beat them. But we were conscious of the vote in the back of our minds. We thought of a lot of things; this was a big game, and Stolz said he could beat us." STOLZ HAS MUCH to be concerned about in the weeks ahead. There is a good chance State could finish with an- other losing season. Michigan's unheralded freshman class appears to be just as good as MSU's highly touted bunch. And the fine poten- tial of Stolz' players is being wasted by their inability to play good fundamental football. Those impatient Spartan alumni cannot be held off much longer. As the MSU players left the locker room for the bus ride home, they passed a sign that listed the scores of the last f~",r Michigan-Michigan State games. Under 1974 was a question mark. That question mark can now be re- placed by the numerals 21-7. No amount of explaining by Denny Stolz can make that score go dway. BY GEORGE George Hastings wu Buckeyes Badgers, Expert claims . . . . ..'I' coaching poor M A very unusual utterance was heard in the Michigan press room yesterday after the 21-7 Wolverine victory over Michigan State. "That was bad coaching for Michigan in the second half," the voice said. Who had dared to offer such a suggestion to Bo Schembech-1 ler, one of the most successful college football coaches ever?1 Had Denny Stolz gone beserk from frustration and journeyedi across the hall to insult his chief tormentor? Had a foolish young' sportswriter ventured to test the Schembechler temper? No, it was Bo himself speaking the sacreligious syllables, and his criticism of his own performance reflected the less-than-1 satisfying Michigan performance out on the gridiron. Schembechler referred, of course, to the sorry show put on by his offensive platoon in the final two periods. It was his faulty3 playcalling that was behind it, he claimed.1 "I did a real sloppy job out there in the second half," Bo admitted. "We shoulda run right at 'em-I didn't let our offense run at them enough." Indeed, the second half Michigan offense did not seem to be inspired by genius. The Wolverines gained a mere 101 yards in the thirty plays they ran. They registered only four first downs, and did not get their first one until well into the fourth quarter. And, of course, they failed to even come close to scoring.1 Bo insisted on taking all the responsibility. "I don't blame the kids," he emphasized. "I blame myself. We got a 21-0 lead and then weatried to get a little too fancy. When you get a little older like I am, I guess you get a little frivolous." I -A- v -m- -ML. -=L- Jw- -m- -m- A", mw mwmw From Wire Service Reports COLUMBUS - Top-rankedj Ohio State, stung by an early Wisconsin touchdown, stormed back behind the running and passing of quarterback Cornelius Greene and three pass inter- ceptions by safety Bruce Ruhl for a 52-7 victory over the; 11th-ranked Badgers yesterday. Greene, who carried 16 times for 146yards, scored onruns of 11 and six yards and hit; five of seven passes for 81I yards, including a six-yard touchdown toss to wingback Brian Baschnagel. All-American Archie Griffin had his 16th straight 100-yardj rushing game, getting 110j yards in 18 carries and scor- ing the first Buckeyes' touch- down on a nine-yard run. Wisconsin coach John Jardine called Ohio State the best team he's seen in his five years as a Big Ten football coach. "Since I've been in the Big i S portF NIGHT EDITORS BILL STIEG LEBA HERTZ game, "this is the bes we've played. "Their offense is mor tile than last year," he A record Ohio Stadium of 87,717 witnessed the g * * * Hoosiers harass bury 52-7; axed ing passes and Dan Beaver kicked two field goals to lead Illinois to a 27-23 Big Ten vic- tory over Purdue. The Illini, 2-0 in the confer- ence and 4-1 overall, never trailed. But they couldn't clinch the game until their defenders broke up a Mark Vitali pass in the Illinois end zone with 3:05 left to play. t team r Hawkeyes humble e versa-1 added. IOWA CITY - Iowa struck for n crowd two touchdowns in less than a ame. minute late in the first quarter, and linebacker Dan LaFleur recovered a fumble in the end zone in the third period to lift the Hawkeyes to a 35-10 victory homore over Northwestern yesterday- led for their first Big Ten win since hdowns, 1972. caught Iowa's 35 tallies were also the from most points scored by a Hawk- es yes- eye team since 1970. a to a! Iowa is now 2-3 overall and victory 1-1 in the Big Ten, while the ta. Wildcats dropped to 1-4 and 0-2. diana's -- - match- r, and confer- at 1-1. rail. quarter, Texas minated s made Hy The Associated Press showed ll. Mm- Three of the nation's top- ndiana's ranked teamsnarrowly averted fi but nev- disaster and three others were tc ber. not as lucky yesterday in col- v Stallylege football action that sawi d quar- the second, third and ninth o goal by ranked teams pull out last-min- ute victories. d I BLOOMINUTON-Sop] Courtney Snyder ramb 160 yards and two touch and junior Trent Smock two touchdown passes quarterback Terry Jon terday, leading Indiana 34-3 Big Ten football over punchless Minnesot The victory ended Ind 11-game losing string, ing their longest ever evened the Hoosiers'c ence record this year Indiana now is 1-4 ove Daily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS MICHIGAN STATE QUARTERBACK Charlie Baggett eaves Michigan's Rick Koschalk behind as he heads downfield. Baggett's scrambling n etted the Spartans theIr lone touchdown when he completed a 15-yard pass to tight end Mik e Cobb after eluding a series of Wolverine de- fenders. It wasn't enough to offset two key MS U fumbles, though. Sorry, Charlie. 'BAMA NIPS FLA. STATE Ten," Jardine said after the :- " ....... . Y,:,;:":":::.:":::"::"::".: :... Gr. i Actually, it was hard to accept the idea that it was allI Schembechler's fault. It was just not the most impressive overall display ever by a Michigan offense. Denny FranklinI was not as sharp as he normally is, the holes for the runners did not appear as regularly as in other games, and the Wolverines made lots of mistakes. The errors-four fumbles, two of them lost to the opposition- disturbed the head man the most. "I didn't think we'd kick the ball around out there like we did," Bo grumbled. "We could've executed a lot better out there on offense." But worse than the fumbles, Michigan's offense just could not get up any momentum. The first touchdown drive looked great, as. Michigan stayed on the ground for 48 yards in eight plays right over and around the stunned Spartans. Outside of the gorgeus bomb Franklin dropped in Jim Smith's waiting arms on the last play of the first half, that was it for the Wolverines' offensively. They never again put more than two first downs together. Offensive lineman Pat Tumpane, after a hard day in the trenches, tended to agree with his coach that there wasn't enough good old up-the-middle "gut football." "I don't think we punched inside like we should've," he said. Franklin, obviously pained from the bruised ribs that forcedf him to the sideline midway through the third stanza, felt that sloppy execution was the key. "Maybe we didn't run inside as much today as we usually do," he explained, "but whichever plays we did run, we just didn't execute them properly. We weren't really able to get together any kind of a drive." On the other hand, while the 'M' offense sputtered, the de- pendable defense played magnificently. The Wolverines shut off the Spartans with a mere 43 first-half yards, and only 142 for the game. Only the trickiness of Charlie Baggett, who time and time again slipped out of the clutches of big Michigan linemen chasing him around his own backfield, kept even a flicker of life in the Spartan attack. Michigan's defenders got big lift from the play of Calvin O'Neal, who stepped into the middle-backer spot of injured Steve Strinko and did a bang-up job. The middle of the Blue line was also tremendous, as middle guard Timmy Davis flashed the form that made him such a crowd-pleaser a year ago, and tackles Jeff Perlinger and Greg Morton seemed to spend the whole day crashing into the Spartan backfield. The defense even registered a score of its own, when ends Dan Jilek and Mike Holmes swarmed in to knock the ball away from fumble-fingered State nunter Tom Birney and pounce on Big Ten Standings Conference Games . scares Oklahoma W L MICHIGAN 2 0 Ohio State 2 0 Illinois 2 0 Wisconsin 1 1 Michigan St. 1 1 Indiana 1 1 Iowa 1 1 Purdue 0 2 Minnesota 0 2 Northwestern 0 2 T 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 PF 45 86 43 35 48 34 42 37 22 17 PA 14: 26 23 66 28 19 34 55 681 76 Except for the thirdc Indiana completely dot the game as the Gopher numerous 'errors and virtually no offense at a nesota moved close to Ir goal line several times t er could put the ball ov The only Minnesota came early in the secon ter on a 32 yard field1 Steve Goldberg. * * * Third - ranked Alabama's ed to have picked up the yard- 3ucky Berrey kicked a 36-yard age when he fumbed. ield goal with 33 seconds left All-American linebacker Rod o give the Crimson Tide an 8-7 Scholte recovered at the 50. ictory over Florida State. Oklahoma marched to the Long- And the ninth-ranked Fight- horn 21, where Tony DiRienzo ng Irish scored with 3:08 left kicked the winning field goal. n Wayne Bullock's two-yard The victory extended the Sooner Missouri's backup quarterback Steve Pisarkiewicz, came in t lead the Tigers to three fourth quarter, touchdowns. Pisarkiewicz ran two yards t score after a 71-yard driv which began with just 11:2 left, and then passed nine yard to Mark Miller to end a 25-yar Next Week's Games MICHIGAN at Wisconsin Indiana at Ohio State Michigan State at Illinois Iowa at Minnesota Purdue at Northwestern i Beaver shoots WEST LAFAYETTE - Frank Johnson grabbed two long scor- No. 2 Oklahoma converted a fourth-quarter Texas fumble in- to a 37-yard field goal in the waning moments and a 16-13 victory over the Longhorns, threeTtouchdown underdogs. DODGERS DUMPED, 3-2: 1 Ri do fu ive to earn a 10-3 victory over' he Rice Owls. But No. 5 Nebraska, eighth- ranked Florida, and No. 6t Texas Tech found themselves the victims of upsets. Mis- souri beat the Cornhuskers 21- 10, Vanderbilt clouted Florida 24-10, and Texas A&M, ranked sixteenth, rolled over bitter rival Texas Tech 28-7. In Dallas, with the score tied' 3-13, Longhorn Coach Darrell loyal opted to go for the first own on fourth and one. Texas ullback Earl Campbell appear-1 SCORES I Florida State led - Alabama drive ,that began with a fum: 7-3 when the Seminoles gave up recovery. a safety to the Crimson Tide. Reserve quarterback Dav Punter Joe Downing ran out of Lee scored one touchdow the end zone with a little more and passed for anotheri than a minute left, giving Ala- l e a d i n g Vanderbilt in i bama two more points and set- Southeastern Conference u ting up a free kick that drove set of Florida. the Tide back into its own ter- Lee gave Vandy a 14-7 le ritory. in the third quarter when Berrey's field goal capped the scored from seven yards, a ensuing Alabama drive to give then he hit tight end Ba the Crimson Tide its fifth Berton with a five-yard scor Vi it It p. ea n an rr in unbeaten string to 19. Oakland wins opener LOS ANGELES (/P)-Reggie Jackson, hobbled by a painful leg injury that made him a doubtful starter until just before game time, walloped a 400-foot home run yesterday, help- ing the Oakland A's to a 3-2 victory over the Los Angeles Dodgers in the opening game of the 1974 World Series. With a record Dodger Stadium crowd of 55,974 watching, Los Angeles repeatedly threatened to break the game open, outhitting the A's 11-6. BUT WHEN IT was over, the opening game of baseball's 71st World Series belonged to Oakland, mostly because of Jackson's homer and the relief pitching of Rollie Fingers. In the second inning, with the count one ball and one strike, Dodger starter Andy Messer- smith made a mistake on Jackson and Reggie unloaded on the pitch, sending it soaring into the left-center field seats for the game's first run. In the fifth inning, they caught up with the Oakland starter and knocked him out. With one out, Davey Lopes hit a bouncer to shortstop. Campaneris tried to short-hop the ball but was unable to handle it and Lopes was safe on the error. The Dodgers, who seemed anxious to test Oakland catcher Ray Fosse's arm, sent Lopes on a hit-and-run play and Bill Buckner rifled' a single to right. JACKSON CHARGED the ball, had trouble picking it up and third base coach Tommy LaSorda began waving furiously for Lopes to keep running. Jackson recovered quickly but Lopes had that extra step and, when Jackson heaved a wild throw back to the infield, Lopes scored easily. When Jimmy Wynn followed with a walk, Dark came out to lift Holtzman, who had sur- rendered seven hits in 4% innings. ntif ofnPthn h..llnnn 'nrnm nFnarc th.br GRIDDE PICKS Michigan 21, Mich. St. 7 Illinois 27, Purdue 23 Indiana 34, Minnesota 3 Iowa 35, Northwestern 10 Ohio State 52, Wisconsin 7 Kansas 20. Kansas St. 13 LSU 20, Tennessee 10 Missouri 21, Nebraska 10 Oklahoma 16, Texas 13 Pittsburgh 31, W. Virginia 14 Rutgers 37, Lehigh 16 Stanford at UCLA, inc. Texas A&M 28, Texas Tech 7 Tulane 10. Air Force 3 Miamno (0) 31. Ohio U 3 Georgia Tech 29, N. Carolina 28 Maryland 41, Clemson 0 Vanderbilt 24. Florida 10 Alma 17, Albion 3 Daily Libels 42, State News 0 OTHER SCORES Alabama 8, Florida State 7 Auburn 31, Kentucky 13 straight victory. Bullock's winning touchdown against Rice ended Notre Dame's only sustained drive of the day, going 80 yards in 20 plays. Alan Pringle put Rice ahead 3-0 in the first quarter on a 36- yard field goal, but Dave Reeve tied the score with 1:03 remain- ing in the half with a 45-yard field goal. Nehraska had led 10-0 after the first three quarters, but strike in the fourth quarter. Skip Walker scored three sec and - quarter TDs in T e x a MM's Soithwest Conferenc victory over Texas Tech. Walk er scored his first two touci dow-s in a span of 1:22, t, first on a one-yard plunge ' cap a b?-yard drive and tt se ond from three out after a interception off Tech's Tomm Diniven. The loss was Tech's first 14 grmes. Spartans spiff icated MICHIGAN 7 14 0 0-21 Michigan State 0 0 0 7- 7 SCORING PLAYS: MICHIGAN - Bell, 13-yard run (Lantry kick) MICHIGAN - Jilek, recovered fumble in end zone (Lantry kick) MICHIGAN - Smith, 44-yard pass from Franklin (Lantry kick) MICH. STATE - Cobb, 15-yard Lytle Heater Elzinga Chapman Franklin Jackson Baggett Baes Bullock 12 I1 2 3 8 MICH. STATE 14 9 16 6 54 36 13 11 -21 49 23 20 18