Wednesday, November 20, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven e. - I! rw.-2/he Sandujihc J/.,1aih 'Orr's hopes dampened.. .. , awaits vote on transfer John Kahler - THERE HAS BEEN much talk in recent days about how last year's Rose Bowl vote was a great injustice to Bo Schembechler and the Michigan football team. But Bo should not feel that he is the only person ever given the shaft by the Big Ten. In a few days he will have company. Johnny Orr and the Michigan basketball team face a vote by three Big Ten faculty representatives this Thursday on the eligibility of 6-10 center Tom Bergen. Barring an unexpected turn of events, Orr will lose the vote. There is a long and bizarre story behind Tom Bergen's presence at this university. Last year, as a freshman, Bergen was a backup center for the University of Utah, and played in 18 of that team's 26 games. The native of Mt. Prospect, Ill. was expected to step in as the starting center this year, fol- lowing Mike Sojourner's decision to turn pro. But the NCAA thought otherwise. It seems that Bergen's high school physical education grades were added onto his cumulative gradepoint on his transcript, in violation of his high school's rules. Without the phys ed grades, Bergen would have been a non- predictor (could not "predict" from his high school gradepoint that his college grades would be "C" or above) and hence ineligible to play as a freshman. In punishment, the NCAA ruled that Bergen could not play for Utah this year. But since he had done nothing wrong himself, the NCAA ruled that Bergen could play this year for any other school in the country. Bergen sneaks in Johnny Orr found out about Tom Bergen a few weeks after fall classes started, and reacted as though the young lad had fallen from heaven. Orr convinced Bergen that he could make up the missed weeks of classes, and slipped him past admissions. Then the troubles began. The NCAA had to rule that Bergen was eligible to play at Michigan. This they did, but it was Oct. 25 before the ruling came down. And the Big Ten has its own rules in matters like this. Transfers into Big Ten schools must sit out a year regardless of the situation that made them transfer. (The only exceptions occur when athletes transfer from a school that has dropped a sport.) Why, then, should Michigan hope to get special treatment? "I have never heard of a situation like this before," claims Orr, And, indeed, the NCAA's action in this case is utterly unprecedented. Michigan must petition the Big Ten faculty representatives to waive the transfer eligibility rule in Bergen's case. A com- mittee of four faculty reps (since reduced to three) will decide on the petition. Big Ten to foil again There is a reason why no one is expecting a favorable vote. That reason is the composition of the committee of three. Faculty representatives from Iowa, Michigan State and Ohio State will decide Bergen's fate, and the latter two schools have been known to carry grudges against Michigan. If that wasn't enough, it appears that the Big Ten is adding injury to insult. The decision was supposed to come last Friday, but was postponed. "We've had all sorts of problems getting together," says Marcus Plant, Michigan's faculty rep, who is presenting the petition. "One of the representatives was in the hospital, and we couldn't arrange the phone hookup." So now the decision is expected Thursday, eight days before the basketball season is scheduled to begin. That does not give Orr much time to work Bergen into his team plans. Vote comes tomorrow There is no question that Bergen could help the basketball team. At 180 pounds, he is rather skinny, and Orr would play him in the pivot only with reluctance. But in practice, he has shown that he can handle himself at forward. He does not harm the team's speed and defense when in the lineup, and his effective hook shot should prove to be a crowd pleaser among the Crisler Arena faithful. "It's not as though he would be the difference between us and a national championship," says Orr. "But we would like to have him this year." Neither Tom Bergen nor Johnny Orr have ever done anything to harm the Big Ten. Simple justice would grant Bergen the right to play this year. But then, the same principle would have sent the Michigan football team to Pasadena last year. Buck( By JON CHAVEZ1 Television football "experts" never tire of flaunting their knowledge by pointing out that, "In this game, the best offense is a good defense." . Ohio State, a fountainhead of cliches in its own right, tried to change the hallowed idea to "the best offense, is all you really need." And it worked for awhile, as its offense scored 41 points a game and - gave plenty of playing time to the fifth string. HOWEVER, PAT formulas don't work all the time,as any- one who was present at Spar- tan Stadium on November 9 will attest. It became painfully ob- vious that day that, while Woody had built something re- sembling the ultimate offense, somebody let his defenders slip. Last year's Buckeye defense gave up an average 207 yards I 00PS* Yesterday in Roger Ros- siter's column, Bo Schem- bechler was quoted as say- ing, "I'm looking forward to this coming to a vote." The quote should have read, "I'm not looking forward to this coming to a vote." of total offense a game. This year, through eight conference contests, it has allowed the op- position 310 yards each outing. That doesn't exactly thrill the Columbus faithful. What's the major difference between those two units? Last year's starting trio of linebackers graduated, and Woody tried to replace them with Bruce Elia, Arnie Jones The Top 20 By The Associated Press eye spe defense hurt h liebacking ####%%20%# Daily, Sports NIGHT EDITORS. RAY O'HARA MARCIA MERKER and Ken Thompson. Otherwise, it's the same team. ELIA, CONVERTED from fullback, leads the team with 60 solo tackles. Jones, who has also played some time at de- fensive tackle, comes right be- hind Elia with 39. Converted quarterback Thompson, a soph- omore,has done little to dis- tinguish himself.. "These three kids aren't as good as last year's," claims MSU head coach Denny Stolz. "Michigan will have success running inside." "The question is," Stolz con- tinued, "will Ohio State allow Dennis Franklin to run the op- tion?" Unless their linebackers improve, the Buckeyes just might. Cal Stoll, whose Minnesota Gophers scored 19 points and ran for 232 yards against the Bucks, also felt Michigan could run successfully against Ohio State. THE BUCKEYE DEFENSE has "no apparent weaknesses," said Stoll, an acknowledged ex- pert in that area. He also called the Buckeyes "a better offen- sive team than defensive," even though OSU ran up only 33 points against his squad. The line is the strongest part of the Buckeye defense. Pete Cusick and Nick Buonamici are both strong tackles who will give their Wolverine counter- parts plenty of trouble. All-American Van DeCree and running mate Jim Cope protect the flanks, and will concentrate on creaming Dennis Franklin should the Michigan quarter- back decide to keep the ball on the option play. It was DeCree who sent Franklin to the bench last year 'vth a vicious thunk to the collarbone. HONDA "civic" { IA "Try this one on for size 1974 HONDA CIVIC Sedan with 4-cylinder $2539 Plus dealer prep, transportation & taxes The 1975 Hondas will not be available until January. Now you can still buy a 1974 HONDA at very low 1974 prices. So come in soon and d r i v e the Country's greateest, gas miser. It's what economy cars started out to be. WE HAVE MANY MODELS AVAILABLE FROM WHICH TO SELECT PAUL C. ,CHAPMAN PONTIAC * CADILLAC * HONDA "Ypsilanti's oldest new car dealer" 15 E. MICHIGAN 483-0322 U a Daily Photo by STEVE KAGAN OSU'S DEFENSIVE END Jim Cope (91) and tackle Pete Cusick (71) converge on Wolverine Chuck Heater in last year's 10-10 tie in Ann Arbor. The Buckeye defensive line is touted as the bulwark of their defense. 1. Oklahoma 45 2. Alabama 9 3. MICHIGAN 8 tie DAILY LIBELS 4. Ohio State 5. Notre Dame 6. Nebraska 7. Auburn 8. So. California 9. Texas A&M 10. Penn St. 11. Maryland 12. Miami, O. 13. N. C. St. 14. Michigan St. 15. Houston 16. Baylor 17. Texas 18. Pitt 19. California 20. Florida 9-0-0 10-0-0 10-0-0 10-0-0 9-1-0 8-1-0 8-2-0 9-1-0 7-1-1 8-2-0 8-2-0 7-3-0 9-0-1 9-2-0 6-3-1 7-2-0 6-3-0 7-3-0 7-3-0 7-2-1 7-3-0 1,198 1,078 -1,040 1,040 874 Described by press releases 639{ 630 as anything from "physically 560 powerful" to "exceptionally 542 quick," this line has allowed 35its Big Ten foes to run for a 311 mediocre 3.7 yardstper carry. 227 187 BUCK OPPONENTS have had 168 better luck testing the OSU sec- 113 ondary, As Charlie -Baggett 105 proved several times, Ohio 63 State is vulnerable against the 50 bomb, even when the touted 42 Neil Colzie isn't on the bench. r T f i you're way ahead," Stolz re- minded. Attempting to stop Jim Smith, Gil Chapman et al will be Col- zie, who's swiped five tosses this year, and an obscure crew consisting of Steve Luke, Doug Plank and Tim Fox, each of whom have intercepted thrice. Colzie also returns the punts, and might be the best in the country at this specialty. Dave Brown he quite definitely is not. IN ALL, THE Buckeyes have given up 101 points - 58 more than last year-and do not have a shutout to their credit. Co- lumbus football freaks, who well remember how two bril- liant goal-line stands saved the Michigan game for them two years ago, have reason to wor- ry. Should worst come to worst, though, Woody can rely on his fabled "twelfth man," - the Stadium itself. Buckeye foes traditionally have to break the plane of a line two yards deep in the endzone before the offic- ials will risk instant death and signal the touchdown. It hap- pened to Harry Banks in 1972, and it could easily happen; again. SCORES NBA New York 86, Washington 85 Buffalo 110, Golden State 106 Atlanta 122, Seattle 113 Milwaukee 122, Phoenix 108 K-C Omaha 97, Detroit 87 NHL NY Islanders4, Pittsburgh 3 Washington 6, California 4 Cycleskack The Unique Bike Bag 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 20. By The UPI Alabama 23 10-0 MICHIGAN 12 10-0 tie DAILY LIBELS 10-0 Ohio St. 9-1 Notre Dame 9-1 Nebraska 8-2 Auburn 9-1 Southern Cal 7-1-1 Texas A&M 8-2 Penn St. 8-2 N.C. St. 9-2 Maryland 7-3 Miami O. 9-0-1 Houston 8-2 Texas 7-3 Pittsburgh 7-3 Baylor 6-3 Mich. St. 5-3-1 tie UCLA 6-2-2 tie Tulsa 7-3 San Diego St. 7-2 6 Facing panic - stricken of- fenses, Ohio State's defensive 335 backs have cobbed a mislead- 321 ing 19 interceptions. "It's easy 321 to play pass defense when 266 204 188 186 173 87 52 30 His faithless troops quiver 25 mad fatman ("or fat madm 18 Schenkel), turned toward' the 1 was here. Calling to his first-b he commanded, "Get these pic 6 day and I'll win a free pizza. Beg 2 1. MICHIGAN at Ohio State 2 (pick score) 2 2. Indiana at Purdue 1 3. Northwestern at Illinois That Becomes An Instant Shoulder Bag Coach es By JEFF SCHILLER of several Everyone turns football expert this Iowa's B week. Even Michigan fans who think gave Mic Archie Griffin plays quarterback are devising a strategy for Bo. The people BUT T who should know, the coaches of the weak. Th teams who have played against one or unit as "I both squads this season tend to favor out that Michigan. Their comments offer valu- same ass able insights into the likely game plans "Ohio S that the respective coaches will employ, he expla Michigan State's Denny Stoltz and them. Wf Southern Methodist's Dave Smith share maneuver a common opinion: OSU's linebackers them. Bt are vulnerable. where yo get across "THEIR (OSU's) weakness is in the Then th middle defensively-that is, at the line- matchup- backing position," Smith commented. Maize anc And Stoltz suggested a specific set of tactics for exploiting the sore spot. "OHIO "Michigan will move the ball on Ohio team," S State," the Spartan mentor said. "They'll there's an rate [ coaches, Minnesota's Cal Stoll, ob Commings and Stoltz who higan the edge defensively. HE OSU defense is far from e coaches rank the rest of the highly skilled" and Stoll pointed moving the football is not the scoring. State has a 'reading defense'," ined. "They let you come at 'hen there's a lot of room to r, you can move the ball against ut down near the goal line u're more limited, it's hard to s." he coaches turned to the other -OSU's offense versus the A Blue defense. STATE HAS a great offensive toltz claimed. "I don't think nything they've done all season game' when to employ it, they don't pass well." Now all Bo must do is devise a way to stop Archie on the first two downs. Stoll thought Michigan might be able to force some turnovers. "MICHIGAN'S DEFENSE is more ag- gressive than Ohio State's," he declared. "They keep coming at you. They create the big play when they need it." Blackman sounded a word of warning, however. "In addition to all of OSU's other weapons, the major problem with de- fensing Ohio State is Greene's improvis- ing. When he runs back against the flow on a broken play, he's very dangerous." THE COACHES SPEAK of four other factors as being important, though there is disagreement as to how crucial one of these, the home field advantage, actually is. All feel, however, that in- juries, in particular . the condition of Piceks ing over a nameful dread,, the ian, who knows?" cried Keith flattening wind. The Revenge orn and handing him the scroll ks to the Daily by midnight Fri- gone." 4. Iowa at Mich. State 5. Minnesota at Wisconsin 6. Mississippi at Mississippi St. 7. Oregon at Oregon St. 8. Wash. at Wash. St. 9. USC at UCLA 10. Penn St. at Pitt. 11. Tulane at LSU 12. . Carolina at Clemson 13. Stanford at California 14. Baylor at SMU 15. La. Tech at N.E. Louisiana 16. Oklahoma at Nebraska 17. Kentucky at Tennessee 18. Yale at Harvard 19. Furman at Wake Forest 20. DAILY LIBELS at Ohio State Lantern Billboard Basketball season tickets will go on sale today from 8:30 am-12:30pm for students whose ID cards have 1, 0, 9, or 8 to the right of their names, and from 12:30-4:30 pm for juniors with 2 to the right of their names. Tomorrow, soph- omore tickets (1D-3) will be on sale at 8:30 am, and freshman tickets (ID-4) will go at 12:30 pm. Unsnap two snaps, untie two ties and your colorful orange Cyclesack is a shoulder bag. Unbeatable for school, picnics, cycle touring, shopping and just plain carrying stuff from place to place. 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