Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, November 17, 1974 Grace By CLARKE COGSDILL Ales Agase, the Purdue coach, did not look like a man whose team had ab- sorbed its school's worst loss in 52 years. He might just as well have been a commodity broker in a windbreaker, ex- hausted after a hard day of buying soy- beans and unloading pork bellies. He took the day's events in stride. In football - as in most sports - it is often easier to endure a rout, than to lose narrowly on a score in the final mo- ments. Doubts, recriminations, and if- onlys come easily after close games, and can be remembered for a long time. But when you've been stomped, you have nothing to explain, and therefore nothing to regret. "We got beat by a real good football team," Agase said without emotion. "We met a highly skilled team we couldn't stop." WHEN YOU'VE given up 51 points, that's about all you can say. In such a situation, it's hard to recall that your team held the vaunted Michigan attack " .. ; to three points in its first four posses- sions. Not many other Wolverine victims have fared as well.. In fact, the Boilermaker defense might have worked all day, without Dennis Franklin's passing to louse it up. Pur- due's interior linemen shut down Michi- gan's interior ground game thoroughly. The Boilermakers defensed the option, Daily Photo by STEVE KAGAN too, by assigning a tackle or end to go after Franklin, and force a pitchout, hoping for a turnover or a relatively in ad short gain by the tailback. But this plan works only if you can get away with weakening your pass de- fense. Unless the defensive cornerbacks and linebackers remain almost exclusive- ly run-conscious, there is no way they can possibly consistently contain the tail- back moving down the sideline. FORCED TO PAY more attention to their pass defense, the Boilermakers promptly began to march backwards the rest of the day. Holes began appearing through the middle for Chuck Heater. Vast spaces greeted Gordon Bell as he carried the pitchouts around the ends. The linebackers and cornerbacks, assign- ed to protect these spots, were occupied elsewhere. Many plays later, Jeff Spahn ran his first play from scrimmage for Michigan. A graduating senior, his misfortune was that he was recruited in the same posi- tion, and in the same year, as Dennis Franklin. "It's a lot of fun," a smiling Spahn remarked in the jubilant Michigan lock- er room. "Out there, it's a bit more organized than practice, but I really en- joyed it." HE SPOKE WITH even more enthus- iasm when discussing his team and its nrosi-ects. "I wasn't surprised we beat Purdue this bad," Spahn claimed. "The tenm was really ready for this one." When asked to predict next week's outcome in Columbus, his resnonse came qpi(c.klv: "We'll beat 'em for sure." If they do, Jeff Snahn will watch it ersity from the stands. He doesn't expect to make the traveling squad, and he doesn't regret it, either. Four years of hard work have yielded him a couple of min- utes of playing time, and a degree. As far as he's concerned, that's great. Agase, whose porous defense had just provided one of the highlights of Spahn's life, began to concentrate on the upcom- ing Purdue-Indiana clash. He flatly re- fused to compare the Wolverines with Notre Dame, whom his Boilermakers up- set earlier this season. He responded "no," when asked for the ritual Ohio State - Michigan prediction - and with reason, since Purdue hasn't met the Buckeyes this year. HE WAS DEPRESSED only while he looked over the list of Purdue players injured yesterday, eight in all. "We've had a lot of injuries," he sighed, "and I had a lot of injuries when I was at Northwestern, too." As with the chorus of a Greek tragedy, defeated coaches and obscure substitutes provide the unifying force without which the serious action would be impossible. Excellence in anything is impossible un- less there is a standard of comparison. Whether in defeat or obscurity, partici- nants in football deserve great credit when they nl-v their parts well. Alex Agase accented his loss with more grace than many neople show in triumph. Jeff Snahn has learned to make his obscure role a source of great personal satisfac- tion. Such neorle give football dignity and, ultimately, its worth. Armour goes after the bacon - I heads or tales ___Mrc Feldman. -= Michigan seniors .. e.. .roses not thorns FINDING heroes in yesterday's smashing 51-0 Michigan vic- tory over the Purdue Boilermakers is about as hard as finding a dishonest politician in Washington. Tailback Gordon Bell ran for 166 yards, giving him 601 in the past four games, the defensive platoon played flawlessly against a normally potent Purdue attack, and Michigan piled up a big score without the aid of a single Riveter turnover. Bo Schembechler has said many times that his teams are built around great senior performances and the All- American teams of the last six years back up his statement. Ironically, in-many ways until yesterday, Mike Lantry and Gil Chapman's final seasons have been less noteworthy than their underclass records. While tailbacks Bell and Rob Lytle have dominated the stat sheets and headlines, the accomplishment of three-year main- stays like Chapman and Lantry have been pushed to the side. Few performers in Michigan history have had a penchant for the long play like "The Jersey Jet," Chapman. Chapman has electrified crowds with punt returns, scrimmage runs and TD passes but on a switch from tailback to wingback is a sentence to anonymity, in Schembechler's system. The professional leagues seem to find fellows like Glenn Doughty, Clint Haslerig and Chapman but it is a rare day when any Michigan receiver catches five passes like Chap- man did yesterday. Wrecking havoc in the Boilermaker secondary, Chapman scored one touchdown and garnered 76 yards in all. While Chapman's problems stem from his exile to wineback, Lantry's were a bit more unclear. "Automatic Mike," had been less than automatic on field goals this year after enjoying out- standing sophomore and junior campaigns. Two years ago, Lantry gave Michigan a televised victory over Purdue with a tie-breaking field goal, and smashed Michigan records with 50 and 51-yard boots against Stanford in 1973. Seemingly snakebit since the last moments of the 10-10 tie with Ohio State last November, Lantry had hit but four field goals before his three kicks yesterday, and it had been bothering him. "It got me down mentally. When that first one went through (43 yards), it really helned my confidence," said the 26-year-old left-footed kicker. "A lot of my attempts have' been good hits but just off. "A lot has to do with our playing our last game in the Stadium. I'm a nostalgic guy. My lasting memories will come from the last things we do. This game gives me a lot of con- fidence."' Still another colossal rout was a fitting farewell for the seniors who played their last game in Michigan Stadium. In their three years, Michigan outscored 19 guests, 572-79, and never met defeat. Indeed, Purdue absorbed its most lopsided loss since a 56-0 pasting by Iowa in 1922. But undefeated streaks, shares of Big Ten titles and near record setting crowds could mean nothing if the Buckeyes manage a victory next Saturday in Columbus. Schembechler was able to fire up his forces yesterday for that fourth con- secutive conference title before thoughts began wandering 200 miles south on US-23. Defensive signal-caller Steve Strinko finally was ready to begin talking about Ohio State. "We're not satisfied yet. We're not going to give the Big Ten Athletic Directors a chance to send somebody else to the Rose Bowl. Why let there be a vote? The best way is to win-then nobody has any qualms," said Strinko. Of course, technically Michigan could go to the Rose Bowl even if Woody's Scarlet and Grey triumph, but one has to believe that Michigan has the incentive, not to mention the support of millions of Hayes-haters throughout the civilized world. As teams like Florida and Vanderbilt get ready for trips to the Pear and Avocado Bowls to meet other juggernauts with 6-4-1 records, Michigan knows it has to win its eleventh game BOILERMAKERS RIVETED, 51-0 Defense throttles Purdue (Continued from Page 1) outcome, however, did not look so obvious in the opening min- utes of the contest. First-quar- ter Wolverine offensive efforts! were stymied by sloppy ball- handling, and after 15 minutes: the only score was a 43-yard field goal by Mike Lantry. Four times in the first half, Blue tailbacks Bell and Rob Lytle coughed up the football, and although only one of the fumbles was lost, they cut se-. verely into Michigan's offensive effectiveness. Early in the second period, however. Franklin & Co. finally made things happen. Denny dropped back from his own 48 and lofted one to Smith all the way to the Purdue five. Smitty took it in from there for Michi- gan's first touchdown of the day. On the next possession, the Wolverines drove 86 yards, all but nine on the ground, with Bell accounting for 69 of them himself. The big play was a 39-yard jaunt by Gordie with a{ nitchout, and fullback ChuckI Heater took it the final yard for the score. THERE WAS TIME for one Sp~orts NIGHT EDITORS: LEBA HERTZ MARCIA MERKER more Michigan drive in the half, and Franklin made the most of it after taking over the ball at the 'M' 45. He sent Heater up the middle once and Bell around the end twice to take it down to the Purdue 37, then hit Chapman over the middle with two straight passes to the nine- yard line. Bell took a pitch around his right end, found three waiting tacklers barring his path to the outside, and cut in beautifully for a six-yard score. The 24-0 Wolverine halftime lead, was only the beginning, though. The big Blue defense kept Purdue punting and the 'M' offense took up right where they left off after the inter- mission. The first drive of the third stanza stalled at the Boilermak- er 15, and Lantry again was perfect on a field goal attempt, this time from 32 yards out. A FEW MINUTES later, Franklin capped a 60-yard drive by flipping a 23-yard aerial to Chapman, and it was 34-zip. Bell accounted for 36 yards in the drive. On the second play of the next Michigan series, a wrenching ankle-tackle sent Franklin to the bench for the day, but substitute Mark Elzinga proved equal to the task. He quickly dropped a pass out into the left flat to Ly- tie, and the sophomore tailback raced 36 yards down the side- line for the score. The Purdue agony was still not over.dLytle, Elzinga, and frosh fullback Scott Corbin hammered away at them for the entire fourthquarter, and Michigan put the final ten points on the scoreboard on a 35-yard Lantry boot, and a sev- en-yard Lytle run. ALL-IN-ALL, it was an en- couraging way for Michigan to enter its final and crucial week of the year. For the fifth straight year, Michigan accom- plished the task that Ohio State once again couldn't ;- winning the first ten to enter the Michi- gan OSU contest undefeated. The Wolverines destroyed Purdue, even though the Boilers didn't commit a single turn- over. "The big plays did it," Bo explained. Boilers run out of steam Illinois 0 0 0 0- 0 ' MICHIGAN 3 21 17 i1-51 Mich - FG Lantry 43 yds. Mich - Smith 52 yd. pass (Lan- try kick) Mich-iHeater 1 yd. run (Lantry kick) Mich - Bell 6 yd. run (Lantry kick) Mich - FG Lantry 32 yds. Mich - Chapman 23, yd. pass (Lantry kick) Mich - Lytle 36 yd. pass (Lantry kick) Mich - FG Lantry 35 yds. Mich - Lytie 7 yd. run (Lantry kick) Pu First Downs Rushes (att/yds.) Passing (,tt com/int) 10 Passing cards Fumbles (nnl/lost) Penalties (no/yds.) Punting (no/avg) RUSHING urdue 10 37-68 0-22-0 117 2-0 5-50 11-34 Mich 29 71-396 8-15-0 185 4-1 2-20 1-34 avg S 7.2 S 4.4 3.7 5.0 21.0j 8.0 1 1.0I Richardson King Dierking Gross Pruitt Northington vitali Beery Boykin Nagel Franklin Elzinga Spahn Vitali Nagel Chapman Smith Lytle Burton Cooper Dierking Arnold wirgowski Beery Patterson Pruitt 1 PURDUE 11 4 9 5 4 1 2 1 PASSING MICHIGAN att 12 2 1 PURDUE 16 7 6 3 4 19 3 53 16 24 6 -29 2 3 -7 comp 7 1 0 4.8 4.0 2.7 1.2 -7.2 2.0 1.5: -7.0. yds 149 361 0; 106i 11 long 23 52 36, 201 18 4 20 17 16 91 d R Beli Lytle Heater Franklin Chapman Corbin Elzinga Daily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS WOLVERINE FRESHMAN fullback, Mike Cor bin (34) carries the ball as Purdue defensive back Tom Andres (13) prepares to tackle him i n the third quarter at Michigan Stadium yester- day. In five attempts, Corbin gained 40 of Mich igan's 396 total yards rushing. FINAL, 7=5 MICHIGAN att 23 15 13 6 1 3 Minnesota yds 166 66 48 30 21 40 3 RECEIVING MICHIGAN no 5 2 1 PURDUE 2 1 1 I 1 1 1 2 yds. 74 75 36 31 18 4 20 17 16 9 2 By BRIAN DEMING Special To The Daily MINNEAPOLIS - After spot- ting the Wolverines two quick goals in the opening minutes, the Minnesota Gophersrebound- ed and earned a 7-5 victory here last night. The 'Gold Country' favorites mercilessly poured shots on Michigan goalie Frank Zimmer- man throughout the first two periods. The freshman netmind- er was forced to make 38 saves, while allowing all seven Min- nesota goals in those two per- iods - three on second period power plays. The game began where the Wolverines left off Friday night. Goals by Gary Mor- :r ... .. . .. . .. . .. . .... .t Harriers earn NCAA berth Special To The Daily MADISON - After taking the Big Ten Cross Country Championship last weekend, the Michigan Cross Country team qualified yesterday for the NCAA National Cross Country Championships to be held Nov. 25 in Bloomington,' Ind.fgA 'The Wolverines mounted 84 points for third place behind Eastern Michigan with 33 and Wisconsin's 76 in the NCAA IV regionals. As in the Big Ten meet, Illinois' sophomore Craig Virgin finished first in the six-mile jog. Eastern's trio :: rison and Kris Manery befo two minutes had elaps seemed to send Michigan its way to another rout the distress of the 7,383 W liams Arena fans. "Those first two goals g us a false sense of securi Coach Dan Farrell observ "We fell into a defense typ game." Morrison scored at 0:19 o shot that flashed past Gol goalie Bill Moen before sophomore had a chance to r Two subsequent penalties up Michigan's second goal roughing penalty against M Polich followed by a pen against the Minnesota be gave Michigan a two man vantage. Manery scored & Pat Hughes tipped it tol at 1:24. But the Gophers came ba at 10:31 as Warren Mi scored the first of his 1 goals, flicking the puck o a sprawling Zimmerman. Then at 12:12 while1 teams had two men in thex alty box, Gopher freshman R Larson scored on a 30 foot Icers snowed unde FIRST PERIOD SCORING: 1. Mich - Morr (T. Lindskog) 0:19; 2. Mich-I ery (Hughes, Moretto) 1:24 pp Minn - Miller (Polich, Schne 10:41; 4. Minn - Reed Larson decks dekers ore past both Manery and Zim- goals of the defending NCAA sed merman. champs at 14:09 of the second on The Gophers went ahead less stanza. to than a minute later on a goal The Gophers tallied their fi- Vil- by Mark Lambert. I knal goal with less than a min- Randy Neal tied it up for the ute left in the fateful second ave Maize and Blue at 17:01 on a period as Robin Larson scored ty," 15 foot shot that sailed by Moen on a three on one break. ved. from the left side. A Dave De- Michigan layed even with e of bol pass to Neal set up the goal the Gohers in the third e r- by drawing the goalie out of iod bit could only account for n a position.ts one goal, notched by Moretto pher Penalties were costly to at 1:08. the Michigan in the second period est. where a man disadvantage It looked like Michigan was set set up= three Minnesota power going to make a comeback. The . A play goals. "The penalties Wlverines outplayed the Goph- like were the only difference in ers, but countless opportunities alty the game," said Manery. wept awry. inch "They capitalized." "I think we could have won ad- Pat Phippen, Joe Micheletti, it in the third period with a Big Ten SStandings CONFERENCE GAMES MICHIGAN Ohio State MSU Wisconsin Illinois Minnesota Purdue Iowa Northwestern Tnrhinnn w 1 t pfp 7 0 0 203 6 1 0 287 5 1 1 1631 4 3 0 1911 3 3 1 1061 2 50 961 2 5 0 133 2 5 0 1121 2 5 0 1022 1 6 0 1071 pa 47 75 100 165 135 192 201 170 249 167 after him ack Iler two ver both pen- Reed shot f. rison Man- p.; 3. ider) (Po- SCORES 1Ce'"iiv35h}: 5:54 r}:vr: ................... ..... ...}5? {.":::": ii :vi}X :......_. _......... 3F: .F. h ............................ and Miller all found the net in few breaks," remarked Cap- that period on power plays. tain Randy Trudeau. With the score 6-3, Michigan Michigan returns home with center Angie Moretto scored on a split, leaving them 2-4 in the a shot from 30 feet out that WCHA. Next weekend the Wol- bla7ed past a Minnesota de- verines will be tested again, fenseman and M o e n. That this time by the Michigan Tech brought Michigan within two Huskies, at Yost Ice Arena. ': '; .. .. a.. GRIDDE PICKS MICHIGAN 51, Purdue 0 Obio State 35, Iowa 10 MSU 19, Indiana 10 Illinois 17, Minnesota 14 Wisconsin 52, Northwestern 7 N. Carolina St. at Arizona St., inc. Arkansas 24, SMU 24 Bavln 17. Texas Tieh 10 Texas A&M 37, Rice 7 Texas 81, Texas Christian 16 P-nt, State 35. Ohio 16 Notre name 14, Pittsburgh 10 Weber St. 1, E. Michigan 14 Southern Cal. 42, Washington] Stanford 17, Oregon 0 California 37, Washington St.3 UCiA 33. Orre-on St.14 11 33