Page Eght THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, October 27, 1974 Injuries By CLARKE COGSDILL more imp On a day filled with nostalgia and down bet bathos, nothing could have been more Beloit. appropriate than the reincarnation of Stoll, g the classic rivalry between Michigan slumped ' and Minnesota. Gophers and Wolver- he dipped ines, huge, swift and fiery-eyed, have of timeles often settled conference and national debacle." championships in their clashes against run hard one another. than we d Of course, that didn't happen. The hausted wl days when Michigan - Minnesota de- we just ca cided anything more than the posses- THE M sion of an over-eulogized sample of ing to ke antique cheap crockery, are as dead as captive u the Hudson Terraplane and Major elaborate. Bowes Original Amateur Hour. "I gotk YESTERDAY WAS Michigan's sev- even be p enth straight victory over their once- out anyon feared rivals. Of that series, only the ing on pu 1968 game, which Michigan won 33-20, proceeded could be considered even reasonably examples. close. Outside Cal Stoll, incumbent Gopher master- denressed mind, has lost his three clashes against ments. A1 Michigan by a combined score of 7-125. right unti That one statistic, more than any sup- ONEA M posed youthful irreverence for the past, and hisa exnlains why the fabled battle for the could to, Little Brown Jug has deteriorated into tioning, to a footnote, slightly (but not much) mines wh hamper Gophers ortant than the annual show- ween Carleton College and gray-haired and pokerfaced, way down low in his chair as deep into the coaches' well s cliches to explain the latest "They block and tackle and and they do it much better do," he murmured in an ex- 'hisper." They do some things an't do." INNESOTA coach, not wish- eep the assembled reporters rtil next Wednesday, did not kids out there who shouldn't playing," Stoll continued with- e disagreeing. "They're play- ure courage," he added, and to name a large number of his cubbyhole was a sea of players, tapes, and lini- lot of those Gonhers won't be i after post-season surgerv. UST WONDER whether Stoll assistants are doing all they reduce this problem. Condi- o a surnrising degree, deter- ether a team in any sport will be able to keep its 'players functioning at their best throughout a long season. Michigan, not noted for pantywaist. gridiron antics, has suffered only one truly serious injury: Larry Johnson's strained knee ligaments. And even this injury would have been much less se- vere had Johnson not tried to return to the lineup too soon. "In order for The University of Mich- igan to continue its excellence in foot- ball," claims assistant coach Jed Hughes, "we believe that well-condi- tioned athletes are a necessity." There- fore, Michigan's players are worked throughout the year, in activities vary- ing from time-honored windsnrints to the fiendish Nautilus machine. STRANGELY ENOUGH, most Mich- igan players manage to struggle through the season without injuries in- terfering with their work. While career- ending injuries (such as those suffered by Craig Mutch and Kevin Master- son) cannot be eliminated, thev can be reduced, and the same holds true for less serious physical problems. Meanwhile, as his players prepared to leave, Stoll tried to explain what had gone wrong. "We thought if we could play perimeter defense and hold Franklin inside," he said, "we could control the ball some ourselves. "You can't let those people get on the perimeter," Stoll continued. They've got too much speed. If we could have contained them more to the inside, we sure wouldn't have lost by any 49 points." PROBLEM IS, it's not very plausible that a team with inferior speed (the Gophers) could win a series of foot- races to the sidelines with any con- sistency. Surprisingly, Stoll did not seem to be dismayed when it was pointed out that during his three years in Gopherland his team hasn't made any progress to- ward closing the gap between them- selves and the Maize and Blue. "No, i'm not surprised," he said when ques- tioned about the result, and later claim- ed that "you give me all my kids healthy and I don't know how well t1,ev'd do out there." But Stoll doesn't know how to keep his players healthy. Until he learns bow - and it is aoite definitely possible -the Michigan - Minnesota rivalry will continue its insinid course, producing a grnwi'ng sken of 'nsatisfying routs. Bring on Beloit! Doily Photo by PAULINE"LUBENS The correct way to tackle an end wound attac ...,_. -----_t i roger. over and ou ROGER ROSSITER -- L" Awesome Michigan... .,,puts it all together THE SCOREBOARD READ MICHIGAN 49, MINNESOTA 0. The stats sheet read Michigan 620 total offensive yards, Minne- sota 149. The Michigan Wolverines' total domination of the thoroughly outmanned Minnesota Gophers cannot be denied. The score shows it, and the stats show it. The 96,284 strong homecoming crowd saw a fired up Wolverine squad destroy the Gophers. "This is just what we needed to propel us into the final four weeks of the season," said a particularly jovial Michigan coach named Bo Schembechler. "We'caught Wisconsin at their absolute best last week and won. I thought that game was good for us just like I think this one was," Bo said. Virtually everything Michigan tried, offensively and defen- sively, worked. The fans got their rout, and the Michigan play- ers can be proud because, as Schembechler put it, "they did it the way they were supposed to." The lopsided score will impress the pollsters, and the Wolverines need that badly. Michigan's 27-16, 21-7, and 24-20 wins over Stanford, Michigan State and Wisconsin, respective- ly, were making the Associated Press and United Press In- ternational voters skeptical. These select group of sportswriters and coaches don't like to admit they have made mistakes. They like their top rated teams to win by huge margins which, in their eyes and in the eyes of many fans, signify a team's greatness. What they fail to take into account are the relative strengthsj and weaknesses among the teams each national power plays. If Michigan and Ohio State playany Big Ten teams, except each other, they have to roll up the big score. The 'Little Eight' all get lumped together as a group of also rans in the pollsters' philoso- phy. That's not fair to Michigan or Ohio State. Minnesota coach Cal Stoll's post-game commentary circles this short- coming without really getting specific. "We played with a lot of freshmen and a lot of injuries," he said. "Our freshmen are not ready to play Michigan, yet." ,Stoll finally gave in and made the comparison between Michigan and Ohio State all the writers wanted. "Let's face it, we gave Michigan a lot of easy points to- day-a' blocked punt, fumbles and interceptions. We had all snmmer to urenare for Ohio State. We played a better foot- ball team the first week of the season." Don't let Stoll's statement surprise you. Coaches don't al- ways judge their opponents' strengths by comparing scores. Stoll stated his oinion just like every Big Ten coach will after his' team has played both Michigan and Ohio State. Their oinions can be interesting, provocative and revealing. but they are also merely oninions. The Wolverines gained a lot more from yesterday's game than a score could ever indicate. They finally got a superior offensive and defensive performance in the same game. "T'm more pleased with the defense than the offense," Schem- bedhler said, and well he should be. Minnesota's defense was a battered unit, nearly devoid of veterans. By rights Michigan should have looked un- stonopble offensively. Schembechler knew that as did Stoll, though neither would say so. Not everyone was as tight linned. "I didn't think their defense could stop us," said strong tackle Pat Tumpoane. The Wolverine defense faced a much more formidable foe, Gooher back Rick Upchurch. Upchurch, like Gayle Sayers in his heydey, doesn't need a super offensive line to run effectively. Stopping him was no mean accomplishment. "We did a good job defensing Upchurch," Schembechler said. "We had a good idea where he was all the time." Upchurch had averaged 114 yards per game, but Michigan held him to just 24. The Gopher speedster couldn't shake the Wolverines' pursuit, and eventually Minnesota quit giving him the ball, using him almost exclusively as a decoy. Defensive tackle Jeff Perlinger, a Minnesota native, seemed surprised at Minnesota's lack of physical exertion. "They sat up, read the defense and leaned," he said. "They really didn't (Continued from Page 1) gan won by seven, or nine touch- downs. ACTING OUT the familiar home script, the Wolverines onened the afternoon onslaught with a basic 70 yards-10 plays touchdown drive right after the referee's whistle. Lytle carried five times for 28 yards before the Wolverines stalled momen- tarily with a third and two at the Gopher 20. Catching Minnesota napping, quarterback Dennis Franklin faked the option and handed to wingback Gil Chapman on a counter. Chapman broke into the clear about three yards be- yond the line of scrimmage and waltzed into the end zone. Michigan got the ball again on a Gopher punt at midfield, but three rushes left the Wolverines a yard short of the first down. Franklin,. whose tender ankle hampered his mobility all day, danced along the line of scrim- mage, and just as a menacing Blue-mungous! Gopher was in pouncing posi- tion, he pitched perfectly to Lytle, who slashed for 38 yards to the three. However, the locomotive was temporarily derailed when full- back Chuck Heater fumbled in- to the hands of Gopher end Jeff Smith. "I wasn't hit hard," said Heater, "I was just careless." Quickly, the Wolverines rev- ved up the grinder again, mov- ing from their own 23 to the Minnesota 33 before Franklin overthrew tight end Greg Den Boer on fourth down and one. MICHIGAN gained 166 yards in the opening quarter including 96 by Lytle, but the scoreboard was less imposing, 7-0. The Gophers didn't hang close for long. The Wolverines took over after a Frank Mosko punt and powered 69 yards in 11 plays for a second touchdown. Lytle continued his workhorse role with another 48 yards in this drive as he burst through some monstrous holes in the Gopher defense. Franklin kept them honest with a nine yard pass to Chapman and a seven yard gallop, but Heater got the six pointer from a yard out. Michigan increased the mar- gin to 21-0 with a ten play, 87 yard march through the already reeling Gophers. Bell, seeing his first action of the game, con- tributed 58 yards in five carries and Franklin surprised every- body with a rollout pass to Heater for 14 yards, early in the drive. The reception was Heater's second as a Wolverine. -Blue Beri Bell dove off tackle for the final two yards. SOON AFTER intermission,' the final vestiges of Gopher re- sistance were quashed when the defensive end Larry Banks blocked Mosko's fifth ;punt and Rick Koschalk pounced on the Thinclads frolic The Michigan cross country squad streaked to its sixth consecutive season win yes- terday in the United Nations Day Cross Country Invita- tional at Kent State. Led by the individual winner Greg Meyer, the thinclads mount- ed 24 points to second place Kent State's 78. Over the six and one quar- ter mile course, Meyer clock- ed 30.17. Wolverine Mike Mc- Guire finished second in 30.40. The top seven for Mich- igan was rounded out by Bill Donakowski fourth, Jay An- staedt sixth, Keith Brown 11th, Jon Cross 13th and Jim Simpson 18th. pigskin on the Gopher 11. Two plays later, Chapman tallied his second touchdown of the day from five yards away. Lantry's extra point made it 28-zip. Relentlessly, the Wolverines began another march after the Gophers failed to move. Frank- lin controlled the throttle, hand- ing to Lytle and Heater, and throwing in a little 15 yard flip to split receiver Jim Smith for spice. The Wolverines moved to icers brawl in the third period, and will be benched for the first game against the Badgers. The Wolverines opened up very slowly. As in Friday night's game, Ohio took a 1-0 lead in the first period. Defenseman John Israel took a shot on a powerplay from the right point that was deflected in front of Frank Zimmerman, and trickled through his pads for the tally. The closest that the Wover- ines came to scoring in that first period was when Randy Neal's shot from right out in front and hit the post, with 15 seconds remaining. I MICH. First downs 33 Rushing (att/yds) 78-521 Passing (att/com/int) 8-6-0 Passing yards 99 Funbles (no./lost) 4-2 Penalties (no./yds) 2-10 Punting (no./avg) 1-47 MINN. 35-100 4-12-2 49 2-. 4-38 9-36.41 s G op ers the 23 before Franklin fumbled and the Gophers recovered. The setback was temporary, however. Gopher quarterback Tony Dungy, hoping to strike quickly, aimed for receiver Vince Fuller, but Wolverine de- fensive back Tom Drake stepped in for an interception. Drake returned the ball 11 yards to the Gopher 37 and after a per- sonal foul was tacked on, Michi- gan had the ball again, one yard closer (at the 22) than before the Franklin fumble. EMPLOYING the same post- turnover strategy as Dungy, Franklin reared back and fired a bullet to Smith in the end- zone. 35-0. The third quarter ended 35-0, but on the second play of the final period, Drake picked off another Dungy pass at the Michigan 48 and brought it back three yards. Mark Elzinga, rarely acclaimed for his run- ning abilities had taken over for Franklin and promptly stole a page from Dennis' playbook. Rolling left on the option, the Gophers figured he would hand off to a reliable trailing back, but Elzinga kept it, turned up- field and went all the way for Michigan's sixth touchdown. The 49 yard run became Michigan's longest run from scrimmage this year. After an exchange of punts, the Wolverines added touch- down number seven on a two yard run by freshman fullback, Scott Corbin.' braw, "Our timing was not good at all," said Michigan coach Dan Farrell after it was all over. "Ohio State played a much bet- ter game, though. Their fore- checking was much improved from Friday night. It was hard for us to move the puck." Ohio State came out carrying the play in the second period as well. Doug Boyd took a shot from the point that was deflect- ed by Hugh Prentice in front of Zimmerman, who had little chance to stop it because he was screened. But with five minutes left in the second stanza, Mich- W ca at se lif Lytle Bell Heater Corbin E zinga Chapman Richardson Franklin King Ceddia Pride Upchurch Brady Dungy Trestman Franklin Elzinga Dungy Upchurch Trestman Den oer Smith Heater Chapman RUSHING MICHIGAN att. J 20 17 10 8 4 6 4 7 1 MINNESOTA 14 8 9 1 PASSING MICHIGAN att com 7 6 1 a0 MINNESOTA 10 3 1 1 1 0 RECEIVING yds. 158 134 45 44 43 41 26 19 13 -2 78 24 15 -3 avg. 7.9 7.9 4.5 5.5j 10.7, 6.9 6.5 2.7 13.0 -2.0 5.4 3.0 5.0 -.3 Daily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS OLVERINE TIGHT END Greg DenBoer makes a circus atch of Dennis Franklin's first pass in yesterday's debacle Michigan Stadium. The grab, which DenBoer juggled veral times before eventually hauling in, shot some early e into the homecoming crowd of 96,234. past OSUC 14 -0 By FRED UPTON The Michigan hockey team int yds rallied from a 2-0 deficit and o 99 scored twice in the third period 0 0 for a 4-2 victory last night over 2 41 Ohio State before 3,538 fans. 0 8 The victory enabled the o o Wolverines to start the sea- son with a two-game sweep yds long over the non-conference Buck- 38 26 eye dekers. 37 22 But the game could turn out 10 10 to be costly next week when MICHIGAI MINNESOT N no y 2 1 1 r Puclitel Fuller Pride TA j Michigan faces Wisconsin. Both 2 16 8 R a n d y Trudeau and Doug 1 27 7 Lindksog were expelled because 0 0 o0- o of game misconduct penalties 7 14 14 14-49 due to the result of a 15 minute MINNESOTA MICHIGAN From wire Service Reports SUPER TAILBACK A r c h i e Griffin churned 173 yards on 19 carries to match an NCAA record as top-ranked Ohio State crushed Northwestern 55-7 in a Big Ten football victory yesterday which boosted the Buckeyes record to 7-0. Griffin, who left the runaway contest midway in the third quarter, tied the rec- ord of 17 consecutive 100-plus yard rush- ing gains set by Oklahoma's Steve Owens in 1968-69. Northwestern, contributing to its own downfall by having three intercepted pass- es turned into touchdowns, engineered a surprising 85-yard drive in 21 plays to gain a 7-7 tie late in thetfirst quarter on Jim Pooler's seven-yard touchdown run. crush wildcats igan finally put the puck in After Morrison took care of the net on a powerplay. Kris Boyd, both he and DougLind- Manery shoved in his own skog went after Stergiou. Lind- rebound from the corner 0i skog and Stergiou both received the crease. game misconducts. That seemed to light the fire After ten minutes, 'the re- under the Wolverine team. feree and linesman finally With but four seconds left in the took control of the action, but period, Dave Debol cruised the not for long. Trudeau, whb length of. the rink and circled had been a peacemaker by behind the Ohio net, firing a holding back Morrison, went pass to Randy Neal who put after Jim Kish. Both receiv- it away for the tying goal. ed game scon n sk Angie =Moretto scored twice Tog oh.Lnso n ingthethirstanatoedutwhe Trudeau will be gone for Fri- in the third stanza to put the day's action with Wisconsin, gamne away for the Wolverines. Farrell 'said that "I think we'll Manery took a shot from have the depth to make up for the left side, and OSU goalie it. Tonight's game was a tough, Dan Stergiou made a nice hard nosed game. You won't save -but he couldn't con- find any more physical ones trol the rebound. Moretto than tonights." flagged the puck, waited until Moretto summed up the brief Stergiou went down and back- two game series by stating, handed it past the fallen goal- "We finally got some backup tender.' goalies. It gives us that extra The final goal came on a pow- bit of confidence that we need er play. Greg Natale fired a to get rolling. It was a good blazing shot that Moretto and weekend." an Ohio defender deflected past FIRST PERIOD Steri~tI SCORING: 1. 05u -Israel (All- Stergiou. worth) 2:10; 2. osU-Prentice (Boyd, Then a spectacular brawl Aliworths) 3:35: began. Gary Morrison made SECOND PERIOD blatnt hare, ammng oydd ISCORING: 3. M-Manery (Werner, a blatant charge, rammig Boyd DeBol) 15:07; 4. M-Neal (DeBol, into the boards.Bothwbenches werner) 19:56; emptied and there were sev- THIRD PERIOD eral major skirmishes all over D.sI 5. M-Morett (Maner the rink. (Matale, McCahill) 8:33. SCO R ES R Big Ten MICHIGAN Ohio State Michigan State Illinois Wisconsin Iowa Purdue Indiana Minnesota Northwestern Standings W L T PF 4 0 0 118 4 0 0 190 2 1 1 100 2 1 1 76 2 2 0 90 2 2 0 73 1 3 0 75 1 3 0 68 1 3 0 45 0 4 0 50 PA 34 42 56 58 115 69 112 103 134 162 with 17 seconds remaining to lift under- dog Iowa to a 14-12 Big Ten victory yes- terday over Illinois. Iowa, 3-4, had been stopped twice pre- viously in the final quarter inside the Illinois 20-yard line, but drove 49 yards in 13 plays for the deciding touchdown. DEFENSE DOMINATED the game be- fore a Dad's Day crowd of 49,000. Iowa finished with 240 yards net of- fense and Illinois, which went into the game averaging 373 yards, managed only 219, including just 55 in the last half. FULLBACK KEN STARCH and tailback Mike Morgan each powered for a pair of touchdowns as Wisconsin fought back te- nacious Indiana, 35-25, yesterday in ar Big Ten football game. their offense, but their offense is tre- mendously explosive." VERSATILE QUARTERBACK Charlie Baggett ran for his fifth and sixth touch- MICHIGAN 49, Minnesota 0 Ohio State 55, Northwestern 7 Iowa 14, Illinois 12 Wisconsin 35, Indiana 25 Michigan State 31. Purdue 7 3 Oklahoma 63, Kansas St. 0 I Alabama 41. TCU 3 Pittsburgh 13. Navy 11 Auburn 38. Florida St. 6 USC 31, Oregon St. 10