A --f I It % -1s mr - Page Four THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, September 15, 1973 Saturday, September 15, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Four THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, September 15, 1973 Saturday, September 1 5, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Hawks use youth - 'Cats, Pont for 1st division run By ROGER ROSSITER Frank X. Lauterbur embarks upon his third campaign at the helm of the Iowa Hawkeyes with a highly optimistic outlook- and a fine crop of 'veteran' sopho- mores that just might pull the Hawks back into the Big Ten's first division. The Hawkeyes face a demand- ing schedule that pits them against national powers Michi- gan, UCLA, and Penn State in its opening trio of games includ- ing the Uclans and Nittany Lions on the road. LAUTERBUR has reason to be hopeful, however, considering his 15 member enclave of sopho- more lettermen led by lineback- er Andre Jackson and quarter- back Butch Caldwel. Jackson entered the Hawkeye camp last season as a walk on and proceeded to steamroll his way into the starting lineup. By the season's end Jackson was the overall leading tackler in the Big Ten, and he was only a fresh- man! Caldwell, on the other hand, was not the instant success Jack- son proved to be. Not until the eighth game of the campaign did he get a chance to start, and then only because first stringer Kyle Skogman was injured and second stringer Bobby Ousley proved ineffective. The Iowa staff has been so im- pressed with Caldwell, that he has been acclaimed the team's number one quarterback ahead of both Skogman and Ousley. WHENEVER Caldwell et al should decide to throw, o n 1 y one proven receiver, split end IOWA (3-7-1, 2-6-1) Michigan Opponent No. 1 Starters back-Offense 6 Defense 8 Series: Michigan, 21-4-3 and co-captain Brian Rollins will be available. Rollins latched on to 29 aerials in '72 for 378 yards and two touchdowns. After Rollins, however, the sum total experience of the Hawk- eyes likely starting lineup is two catches for a net of minus one yard. Help here, needless to say, is essential. The three running back slots will all be manned by sopho- mores, and two deep at that. Royce Mix, a tailback, led the returnees in rushing with 179 yards, but he was listed as a back up to Mark Fretter on Iowa's depth chart. Though the Hawkeye backs are young and inexperienced, they are high in potential and great in number - which looks pretty good on a team still build- ing toward the future. . Tackles Jim Waschek and Er- nie Roberson, along with tight end Tom Cabalka will be the only senior offensive starters for Lau- terbur, while overall only two seniors will get the opening nod. One of those two, though, is de- fensive end Dan Dickel, voted Most Valuable Hawkeye in '72. At 6-3, 220, Dickel will likely be drafted by the pros as a line- backer. RICK PENNEY and Earl Dou- thitt, both juniors, anchor the Hawkeye secondary along with their duties on punt and kickoff returns. Penney nabbed five ene- my aerials in '72, while Douthill finished sixth nationally in kick- off returns. The Iowa defense kept the Hawkeyes in most ballgames' last season, and with continued' improvement from a host of young players the Hawks could emerge as one of the toughest defensive squads in the Big Ten. ALTHOUGH points as well as victories may be tough to come by early in the season, the Hawk- eyes anticipate an increase in production over last season when Iowa managed only 13 touch- downs and 109 points in 11 games. Iowa might be a year or two away 'from title contention but under. Lauterbur's firm guid- ance, football fortunes should take a major upswing in Hawk- eye country. Hawk humblers S-15 MICHIGAN 22 at UCLA 29 at Penn State 0- 6 Arizona 13 at Northwestern 20 Minnesota 27 at Illinois N- 3 Purdue 10 at Wisconsin 17 at Ohio State 24 Michigan State seek By JIM ECKER Whatdoes a Big Ten football team do following a disastrous hosing season and a year's resi- dence in the conference cellar? Northwestern fans hope the an- swer lies in a head coaching change, the return of the Big Ten's leading passer, and a schedule favored by the absence of a powerful Michigan team. The Wildcats replaced deposed bossman Alex Agase with John Pdnt, the f6rmer Indiana Uni- versity mentor of eight years standing. The switch at the top could prove more a change in name than in substance, how- ever. Pont compiled an embar- .500 Although Pont didn't achieve consistent success at Indiana, he is noted for the remarkable 1967 campaign when his "Kardiac Kids" cascaded to a string of comeback victories, the Big Ten title and a triumph in the Rose Bowl. It took Pont a couple of years in Bloomington before he turned NORTHWESTERN (2-9, 1-8) Starters back-Offense 8 Defense 7 the Hoosier fortunes momentar- ily around. Faced with a similar task at Northwestern, the for- mer Miami of Ohio coach real- izes that several years will prob- ably go by before the Wildcats smell success. Not having to play Bo Schem- bechler's Wolverines this year counts as Pont's biggest advant- age. Michigan defeated North- western the last two years, start- ing the Wildcats off on the wrong foot in two successive seasons. Northwestern opens their cam- ,paign next week in East Lansing against another unsettled crew, the Spartans of Michigan State. WILDCAT QUARTERBACK, Mitch Anderson, gets a Wolverine greeti Spearman (96). Anderson, the league's leading -passer last year, will reti boys. Daily Photo by DAVID MARGOLICK THE STANFORD defense, never the focal point of the Cardinal team, lets Fritz Seyfrith score in the 1972 Rose Bowl. In that con- test the Thunder Chickens, as the defense was known, rose to the occasion. Alas, they are gone. Cards' title hopes- Boryla and a bomb Johnny Pont Andre Jackson rM*.Z: :** :'f . ..Cs'".... ..... 1'..tr.::.\.....: ............ Big Ten Standings 1972 FINAL By ROGER ROSSITER The Indians are now Cardinals and the Thunderchickens have graduated, but the name of the game at Stanford is still pass, pass, pass. The only big names left from the 1971 Rose Bowl crew that tripped the Wolver- ines, 13-12, are halfback John Winesberry and placekidker Rod Garcia, a couple of guys who need no introduction to those Michiganders who spent New Year's Day 1972 in Pasadena. SOPHOMORE Cardinal coach Jack Christiansen, former S a n Francisco 49er head mentor who replaced John Ralston after the latter departed for the New Eng- land Patriots, also has quarter- back Mike Boryla returning with an extra year of eligibility granted by the NCAA. Boryla en- ters the '73 campaign as the leading incumbent passer in all the land and an All-American candidate. But before Boryla and the Cardinals start planning on a national passing title, a couple of areas decimated by gradua- tion, the receiving corps and the offensive line, will have to be shorn up. Winesberry, who lines STANFORD (6-5-0) Michigan Opponent No. 2 Starters back-Offense 4 Dfense 4 Series: Tied 3-3-0 up at the halfback position, is the only major target remaining from last year's talented pass catchers. The biggest knock on Winesberry centers around his alarming susceptibility to injury. A healthy Winesberry could mean a lot of yardage for the Cardinals both in pass receiving and in rushing, but without him, there would be a lot of pressure on some unproven material. THE OFFENSIVE line will MICHIGAN Ohio State Purdue Michigan State Minnesota Illinois Indiana Iowa Wisconsin Northwestern W 7 7 6 5 4 3 3 2 2 1 LT 1 0 1 0 2 0 2 1 4 0 S 0 S 0 6 1 6 0 8 0 Pts. 20.3 24.9 24.5 17.0 18.9 18.6 16.4 8.9 10.4 13.2 Opp Pts. W L T Pts. 4.3 10 1 0 24.0 12.1 9 2 0 26.3 7.6 6 5 0 22.3 8.5 5 5 1 14.4 22.9 4 7 0 16.8 19.5 3 8 0 17.9 25.6 5 6 0 20.1 20.3 3 7 1 9.9 23.5 4 7 0 13.6 25.7 2 9 0 13.3 Opp Pts. 5.2 12.9 12.3 14. 27.6 25.2 24.7 18.6 20.8 26.4 THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN FLYERS INVITE YOU TO Discover Flying IT COSTS LESS THAN YOU THINK FLYING LESSONS FLIGHT COMPETITIONS SOCIAL ACTIVITIES FOR MORE INFORMATION WRITE University of Michigan Flyers 240 MICHIGAN UNION ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN 1$8I ' OR CALL 769-6367 weekday afternoons contain holdovers Bill Reid and Keith Rowen from a crew whose statistics left a lot to be de- sired. Stanford quarterbacks were sacked for over 300 yards attempting to pass last season, and the Cardinal ground game averaged only 2.76 yards a crack. Hudson Houck, coach of Stan- ford's undefeated frosh last year, will move up to the varsity to coach the offensive line, a tough assignment in an area where Stanford really does not have adequate material. AN ADEQUATE ground attack will be a necessity to keep a lit- tle pressure off Boryla. Fullback Scott Laidlaw had an impressive 5.6 yards per rush average last season as a backup to Reggie Sanderson, but whether he can handle the job over the long haul remains to be seen. To be frank, the possibilities of the potent ground game that Christiansen desires look dim in view of the relatively weak of- fensive line, especially in light of Cardinal backs' performance dur- ing spring drills against their own defense, one which by no means measures up to standards of the past few seasons. The last of the "Thunderchick- ens", that vaunted defensive aggregation that stymied Michi- gan in the '72 Rose matchup, have graduated leaving Stanford with a lot of big question marks on the front wall. Defensive end Roger Stillwell, only a junior, See STANFORD, Page 1 Card calendar S-15 Penn State 22 AT MICHIGAN 29 San Jose State -- 6 at Illinois 13 UCLA 20 at Washington 27 Washington State N- 3 at Oregon State 10 at USC 17 Oregon 24 California rassing 31-51-1 record at Indiana, while Agase guided Northwestern to a comparable 32-58-1 mark. Wildcat quarterback Mitch An- derson quietly paced the Big Ten in passing a year ago as a soph- omore, favoring outstanding tight end Steve Craig with his tosses. Anderson set a league record last year with 351 passing yards in a losing effort in East Lans- ing. Pont credits his signal caller with an accurate arm and an "excellent knowledge of second- ary coverages." Northwestern operates out of the Power "I" and "Sprint-Op- tion Quarterback" formations. Sophomore tailback Greg Boykin and junior fullback Jim Trimble anchor the Wildcat backfield, complementing Anderson's potent arm with a decent running game. Boykin made second team All- Conference as a freshman, while Trimble led Northwestern in rushing until injured. Opening holes and protecting the passer is a veteran and adequate offen- sive line. Northwestern should move the ball well enough to consistently dent the scoreboard. The prob- lem areas lie mostly with the defense. Pont has shifted the Wildcats from a four to a five man line, and while ten defen- sive lettermen return, only five remain at their 1972 positions. Northwestern's defenders sur- rendered 290 points in 1972 and the prospects for reducing that figure during this campaign are questionable. The outstanding name on the Northwestern defensive platoon is linebacker Mike Varty, a bruis- ing tackler with a nose for the ball. Varty missed most of last year with an assortment of in- juries, but Pont feels his senior backer is ready for a big year. Wildcat wars S-i5 Michigan State 22 at Notre Dame 29 Pittsburgh -- 6 OhioU. 13 Iowa 20 at Pardue 27 at Ohio State N- 3 Minnesota 10 at Indiana 17 at Wisconsin 24 Illinois A fter PIZZA SPECII the Gar FROM THE PIZZA PEOPLE a . LARGE 16" Plain PA . Cr for ontly $2.30Plus tax a with this coupon . 1 .A - Each additional item 60c . I 1141 Broadway-769-5511 3148 Packard Rid.-- The Domiro people are PZZA PEOPLE, pe