Wednesday, November 6, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Wednesday, November 6, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven ____ ----. e roger over and out ROGER ROSSITER" Moeller denied Stwice I i i 1. - 4 :.. :: _...._.. _.._ . ..-..-..- i M III I rlr 1 I11 O 111lAiR YI Frank Zimmerman... the pressure is on Frank Zimmerman is one freshman hockey player with a whole lot of pressure riding on his shoulders. Zimmerman was supposed to be Michigan's much needed backup goaltender this year, but All-American Robbie Moore's untimely knee injury will force Zimmerman to handle the majority of the Wolver- ines' netminding, at least for the remainder of the semester. Moore went under the knife Monday to have some damaged cartilage removed from his left knee which he injured a week ago Monday, then reinjured Thursday. The operation was suc- cessful, according to Coach Dan Farrell who said recovery would take "about six to seven weeks." Zimmerman's plight will be doubly rough for the next two weeks since the Wolverines will be on the road at Denver ,this weekend and at Minnesota, the defending National Col- legiate Athletic Association champion, the next. "It will be just like playing my first college hockey game all over again," Zimmerman said of the Denver series. Zimmerman will likely play all four of these road games since Michigan's third goalie, Rick Palmer, has yet to play. "I wouldn't want to put Rick in a situation he couldn't handle," Farrell said. Hostile crowds can have an unnerving effect on young goal- tenders, and their constant jeers eventually can turn a game around. That's the advantage of playing at home. Home hockey' crowds are the most intimidating in any college sport. Zimmerman knows that. Unlike the normal freshman goalie, he has been around. Frank played a year in the Midwest Junior; B League after graduating from Edina East High School in Edina, Minnesota. He has experienced all the arduous travel and the constant cries of "Sieve! Sieve!" before coming. "We now have backup goaltending of Western Collegiate Hockey Association quality," said Moore before the season started. Zimmerman substantiated Moore's statement this1 past weekend in the Wolverines' split with the Wisconsin Badgers. Wisconsin's five goals in its 5-2 Friday night victory can be attributed more to the poor play of Michigan's forwards and defense than to Zimmerman. The Wolverines' forward lines did not forecheck nor help out defensively in their own zone, and the Badgers capitalized with three unanswered third period goals that won the game: "Every goaltender has his own style - his own way of1 steering rebounds and playing the shooters," Zimmerman said. "It just took everybody awhile to get used to me. "Now, we're all more confident." Zimmerman didn't want to place any blame on his team- mates, which is normal for most any goalie. Michigan's forwards played a far more inspired game Saturday night, scrambling for loose pucks and generally i bottling Wisconsin up in Its own zone before it could mount an offensive. But Farrell still wasn't totally pleased. "We're still not doing the job we could be," he said of the forwards' play. Dan is get- ting to be a perfectionist in the Bo Schembechler mold. He is never totally dissatisfied, yet never totally pleased either. Farrell has always expressed his liking for big stand up style goaltenders, but in Moore and Zimmerman he has got just the opposite. Both are small, quick goalies who rely on quick reflexes and a fast glove hand. Farrell may not favor small goalies, but he has got them for better or worse.( "Zimmerman did an outstanding job against Wisconsin," Farrell said. "He's nb stand up goalie. He's a bit of a scrambler, but he makes up for it with quickness." Zimmerman also had a lot of help Saturday night which makes all the difference in the world. Friday, Wisconsin had time to set up, get off a good shot and get a lot of re- bound shots. That didn't happen Saturday. Michigan's defense cleared nearly every rebound, allowing Zimmerman to con- centrate almost exclusively on the initial shot. "The goalie shouldn't have to make more than one or two saves at a time," Zimmerman said. "If they (the opposition) get more than that, there's nothing the goalie can do about it. They're gonna score."' Cutting down its goals against is one of Michigan's prime objectives this year. So far, progress has been made in that direction. Whether that progress continues through the next few weeks, will determine where the Wolverines will eventually finish in the WCHA. Denver, Minnesota, Michigan Tech, Colorado College, Notre Dame and Michigan State will all test Michigan's mettle before the semester break. Zimmerman will be placed in the same pressure situation his predecessors Moore and Karl Bagnell faced as freshmen. Moore and Bagnell had little chance to lead' mediocre teams to greatness. This year, however, Michigan has the potential for greatness. If Zimmerman can close the door on the opposition, that potential can be realized. bowl By JOHN KAHLER Gary Moeller, the Michigan defensive co-ordinator, has re- corded a remarkable set of ac- complishments.From co-captain of the 1962 Ohio State Buck- eyes, he has risen to the second most important position on the Michigan coaching staff. His defensive unit currently ranks first in the Big Ten in fewest points surrendered per contest. As his players will readily volunteer, the Wol- verine defense has preserved the team's currently Inbeaten status. But Moeller has also recorded an achievement he would just as soon forget. He is the only person to have been voted out of two Rose Bowls. The incidents of last Novem- ber are too familiar to bear re- counting here. But the fate of the 1961 Ohio State team de- serves some mention. That particular version of Woody Hayes' stalwarts rolled up an 8-0-1 season mark and was rated number two in the country. Following a 50-52 mas- sacre of Michigan, the Big Ten awarded the Buckeyes the honor of representing the conference in the Rose Bowl. Though anti-football sentiment had been building on campus, all observers expected the fac- ulty vote on acceptance of the bid to be a mere formality. But in a stunning move, the faculty voted 28-25 to reiect the Rose Bowl bid and keep3 the Buckeyes at home. Moeller, a junior linebacker on that team, painfully recalls the memory of the incident. "We had no idea that we wouldn't be going. We knew we were going, and it was un- believable that we weren't be- cause of a vote. If we'd known that vote wasn't just a formal- ity, it would have been better. "We had planned on going to the Rose Bowl, and were ex-' cited about it," he continued. "We had already started prepa- rations. I remember watching1 the USC-UCLA game on TV to see who we'd be playing." Moeller coldn't remember how he got the word of the vote, though it was probably throah the radio. The news of the vote sparked what The TOg 20 By The Associated Press 1. Ohio State 49 8-0-0 121? 2. Oklahoma 10 7-0-0 1,090 3. Alabama 2 8-0-0 918 4. MICHIGAN 1 8-0-0 850 5. Texas A&M 7-1-0 643 tie DAILY LIBELS 8-0-0 643 6. Florida 7-1-0 51 7. Penn State 7-1-0 52 8. Notre Dame 7-1-0 503 9. Nebraska 6-2-0 464 10. Auburn 7-1-0 381 ii. So. California 5-1-1 344 12. Texas 6-2-0 324 13. Miami, O. 7-0-1 149 14. Maryland 5-3-0 54 15. Houston 6--0 42 16. Arizona St. 5-2-0 36 17. Oklahoma St. 4-3-0 33 18. California 5-2-i 20 19. Pitt 6-2-0 19 tie Texas Tech 5-2-1 19 * n * By United Press International 1. Ohio State 34 8-0 349 2. MICHIGAN 8-0 295 tie Alabama 1 8-0 295 4. Texas A&M 7-1 192 tie DAILY LIBELS 8-0 192 5. Notre Dame 7-1 166 6. Penn State 1-1 158 7. Florida 7-1 155 8. Nebraska 6-2 120 9. Auburn 7-1 73 10. Texas 6-2 53 11. Southern Cal 5-1-1 51 12. Miami, Ohio 7-0-1 ,8 13. Houston 6-2 7 14. Pittsburgh 6-2 2 15. Maryland 5-3 1 dri Daily Photo GARY MOELLER (with cap) restrains boss Bo Schembechler during a particularly awkward moment in the Stanford game. Moeller, who constructs the impregnable Michigan de- fense, holds the record for most Rose Bowls lost through votes. Special Next Week Bowling and Billiards TRAVEL MICH. UNION 763-21 Half Price Mon.-Sat. I MICHIGAN UNION ISKUTAH - --SPECIAL WINTER SKI WEEK * DEC. 24-31, 1914 1282.00 triple occupancy $291 .00 double occupancy INCLUDES: a round-trip air transportation from Detroit on American - Airlines. 0 accommodations at the Temple Square Hotel in Salt ( Lake City. . 0 round-trip transfer from airport to hotel. ( daily lift passes at 6 resort areas-Alta, Brighton, Park $2.50 City. Park West. Snowbird, and Solitude. for further details and reservations, contact: U.A.C. Travel Center International Student I.D.s Now Available FRI.-SAT.-SUN. - -.---__._ Folk Legacy Records MICH AE L COON EY & quitar, 12-string, bonjo, harmonica, concertina, jews-harp pennywhistle, etc. "the country's best known unknown. -N.Y. Times stole the show -Phil. Bulletin V t "consistently -L.A. Nightlife one doesn't talk about Michael Cooney, one listens to him." -Mich. Daily WED.-r H OOT 75c * THURS. HESITATION j' & RON- MARAN IAN $1.50 207 E. LIBERTY $ AM'S STORE NO 3-8611 INDIVIDUAL TICKETS NOW ON SALE 20% STUDENT DISCOUNT would be the bi gest student' riot in Ohio until the Kent State shootings. Hordes of en- raged fans trashed Columbus. The teary's mood was more subdued. "Basically, we felt that we were cheated out of being able to represent the Big Ten, and that we deserved to go," Moeller relates. That would have seemed to be a once in a lifetime situation.I But twelve years later, Moeller saw it happen to him again. "Somebody called home? (about the athletic director's vote) and I heard it on the radio as I was on my way to view films of the OSU game," he relates. "When I got here, (the athletic department of- fices) Don Canham and Al Ren- frew verified what I'd heard. "You never believe that' something like that'shappen- ed. In a way, it's like the death of a president. You can't beF-ve it, and you don't want to believe it." When Woody Hayes heard of the faculty vote in 1961, he re- acted with rage against the "petty-minded political maneu- vering" that denied him Pasa- dena. Bo Schembechler's feel- ings toward Wayne Duke last November are well documented. Moeller feels both coaches reacted in similar ways. "They were both very frus- trated. There wasn't really very much they could do, but they felt they had to speak out for their team." Moeller has lost two Rose Bowls through votes. He is de- termined that it will never hap- pen again. "This year, we're all working hard toward the end result of going to the Rose Bowl," he says. "We're not after revenge against any one person. If any- thing, we're after revenge against the decision that was made." 41(I~de Picks 1. MICHIGAN at Illinois (pick score)' 2. Indiana at Northwestern 3. Ohio State at Michigan State 4. Wisconsin at Iowa S. Minnesota at Purdue 6. Alabama at LSU 7. Tulane at Boston College 8. California at Washington 9. North Carolina at Clemson 10. East Carolina at Richmond 11. Vanderbilt at Kentucky 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. Lamar at Louisiana Tech Penn St. at N.C. State Wash. St. at Oregon St. Yale at Penn Stanford at USC Hofstra at Georgetown Eqstern Kentucky at Tenn. Tech Cornell at Brown Daily Libels vs, Datum Technics (rematch) STAGE PEOPLE: MUSKET (The all campus musical) NEEDS YOU TO BUILD SCENERY FOR JEIRICHO - An Original Musical Comedy Eyenintrs (except Sunday 7-1 1 p.m. in the Student Activ.i- ties Building Shop at the corner of Jefferson & Thompson NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY! Leorn new skills! Meet new people! Help build a great new show! COME ON DOWN TO THE S.A.B. b6N V I CAREER PPRTUNITIES FOR WOMEN IN BUSINESS sponsored by CAREER The second in a series of informal lunch hour discussions with employers and graduate school representatives. Meet with spokespeople from Columbia U. School of Business Admin.; Dunn & Bradstreet, Inc.; and Bankers' Life and Casualty. ALL WOMEN WELCOME-freshpeople-seniors, grad students, faculty and staff. Feel free to bring your lunch. THURSDAY-NOV. 7-12 NOON Held in Conference Rooms 4 & 5, MICHIGAN LEAGUE Planning t Placement 764-7460 0m w - -'**,