Sunday, September 16, .1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page: Seven Sunday, September 16, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Wolverine grounds ground Iawkeyes, game 31-7 (Continued from Page 1) back on the next play for the third miscue in the first four minutes of the game. Six plays later, Harry Kokolus blew a field goal attempt from the Michigan 30. f The Wolverines then about-faced and marched 80 yards in only 8 plays. Heater scooted around left' end for the touchdown. Skogman opened up the Iowa de- fense on their next offensive series with three straight first downs, in- cluding passes to Brian Rollins of 16 and-12 yards. That drive'stalled when Kokolus missed a 45-yard field goal attempt, and Michigan retained a 10-0 first quarter lead. TWO PLAYS INTO the second' quarter, Rollins fumbled after a 12-yard Ypass completion on the Wolverines' three. After guiding Michigan almost to midfield, Franklin gave the ball back on a sideline pass intended for Clint Haslerig which Douthitt picked off, prancing 45 yards for the score. The Michigan offense immedi- ately went back in business and moved :77 yards in 11 plays for its second touchdown and a 17-7 half- Hy SUNDAY SPI:AIS NIGHT EDITOR: MARC FELDMAN i air. Not a bad job against a pass passing percentage (Franklin was defense which was third in the 2-for-8), but that should have been nation last year. And linebacker, more than offset by his ball-han- Andre Jackson, who led the Big dling. Ten in tackles with 164 last year "You aren't going to believe as a freshman, covered up for the this," Bo wisecracked, "but we Hawkeye linemen and found his really are a much better passing way to the ballcarrier 20 more team than you saw today." times yesterday, including 13 solo Well, the running game is to- tackles. gether, anyway. And the option SCHEMBECHLER, as always, play appears to be in tune. The was quietly jubilant. He had to be offensive line isn't bad. And the delighted with the revamped offen- defense didn't' give up a point. Re- sive line, which just blew the member, the passing game is Hawkeyes out in the second half. I never together this early in the fie probably had reason to be dis- season, but give it time, and then pleased with his quarterback's . . . look out! Creamed corn time lead. Franklin contributed runs of 23 and 19 yards and Bob Thornbladh chalked up the TD on a three-yard charge. "They really went at us, and did just what we were afraid they'd do," Lauterbur moaned. "When you let Michigan control the ball the way they did today, there's no way you can come out ahead." Michigan did just that. THE WOLVERINES opened the second half with a 75-yard drive which consumed 12 plays and five and one half minutes, and clearly demoralized the Iowa defense. Chapman sprinted u n t o u c h e d around left end for the touchdown, nJ - s.eecb &set' and the home team failed to mount much Qf an attack for the remain- der of the game. Franklin amicably threw an in- terception to Rick Brooks to open the final quarter, but Iowa didn't do anything with it. When the Wol- verines-got the ball back they pro- ceeded to mount a final thrust, to the tune of 66 yards in 9 plays,t all running efforts, as Franklin demonstrated his expertise in run- ning the option. "We felt Iowa would be a little: r vulnerable to the outside," reflect-! ed Bo. "We probed a little inside and then went to the pitch outsideG and it worked really well for us." Franklin kept the ball on his 11- yard touchdown spurt, and Lantry added his fourth extra point in as many attempts to wrap up the scoring. LAUTERBUR HANDLED ques- tions quietly after the game, chain smoking, elbows-on-knees, which was quite a change from his volatile behavior after a 63-7 pasting in Ann Arbor two years ago. "I was encouraged by the fact that we moved the ball pretty well against a good defense," concluded FXL. "I was discouraged by the, fact that we didn't !score. (Mich- igan's offense had allowed the only Iowa touchdown.) But I feel we have the makings of a fine foot- ball team." With reason. Skogman and Cald- well combined for 115 yards in the TEAM: First Downs Ruches Passing yards Return yards Passes Fumbles-lost Penalties-yards LINESCORE: IOWA MICHIGAN Iowa Mich. 14 28 34/118 75/440! 115 35' 57 10' 10-19-1 3-9-2 5-4 2-1 0-0 6-70 IOWA Sko-man Caldwoll MICHIGAN Franklin Cipa 8 2 2 26 1 1 0 9 RECEIVING 0 7 0 0- 7 10 7 7 7-31. SCORING PLAYS: Michigan: Lantry, 39-yard FG Michigan: Heater, 1-yard run; (Lan- try kick) Iowa: Douthitt, 47 yard pass inter- ception; (Kokolus kick) Michigan: Thornbladh, 3-yard run;' (Lantry kick) Michigan**kChapman( 12-yard run; (Lantry kick)f Michigan: Franklin, 11-yard run;' (Lantry kick) INDIV [DUAL: IOWA. Rollins Schultz Jensen Johnson Hayman MICHIGAN ' Johnson, K. no. yds. 5 65 2 38 1 4 1 1 1 7 avg. 13.0 19.0 4.0 1.0 7.0 PASSING att. comp. 15 7 4 3 int. yds. 0 92 1 22, 3 35 11.7 The word is.. . .the line will hold PUNTING IOWA no. yds. avg. Hepper 2 66 33.0 t MICHIGAN4 Dotzauer 3 120 40.0 AP Photo Run, run, runt Archie Griffin (45) had a big day against Minnesota yesterday with 249 yards rushing as the Buck- eyes ran all over the Gophers, 56-7. Gopher Ollie Bakken (50) flails at the elusive sophomore. Dan Borus - ___ RUSHING OSE WHO THOUGHT the Michigan meatgrinder was another victim of the beef shortage got a rude awakening yesterday. Canny Bo Schembechler unveiled his "Stick 'em up-knock 'em down" offense and his Wolverines rolled up over 400 yards on theground in the process. Superbacks Chuck Heater, Gil Chapman, Dennis Franklin and Ed Shuttlesworth swarmed through the highly-touted Hawk- eye defense as easily as they 'ran through practice. No-one doubted the Michigan backfield was, as adver- tised, one of the finest in the Big Ten. But the word, passed along on the Bo Schembechler Show, was that the line needed a test. Well, in case anyone can't interpret football scores, it passed. The Michigan line, spearheaded by Jim Coode, Curtis Tucker, Dennis Franks, Kirk Lewis and Mike Hoban, with a large assist from tight end Paul Seal, cleared holes big enough for an Iowan farmer to start a pretty good homestead. You don't run up 400 yards on the ground if you don't got the men to clear the way. "We knew we had to do the job," senior strong tackle Jim Coode said. "We were fired up. With all this talk about how Michigan was going into the season without an overpowering line, we had something to prove." Coode, who switched from last year's quick tackle to this year's strong tackle (a position which allows him to play more head-to-head with the opposing line), exploded across the line with probably more quickness than he' did all of last year. Again and again, Shuttlesworth banged through his block for the crucial gain. "At first (when the Maize and Blue took the ball over after the opening kickoff was bobbled), we were nervous. what with the sudden change and all. They (the Iowa de- fense) were really charged up. But then we got together and worker as a unit. The only time they gave us problems at all was when they angled at us and laid back When we were supposed to double- team 4 tackle, they had already taken themselves out of the play and it was a little confusing. But when we drove on them we moved then," Coode continued, adding the last to show how he approved of the result. "They hit hard," Coode summed up, "but Andre Jackson was not exactly the stud everybody said he was. 'You know, this line could be as good as any I've played on." Even the hard-to-please Schembechler, who has not grad- ed the game films, found things to rave about. "I've never worried about whether we'd have the bodies in the front line, but whether, with injuries to front-line people this week, they would work together. Basically, I think our offensive line did a good job. Especially in the second half." So well-tuned was the Michigan ball control game that the Hawkeyes had the ball in their sweaty little feathers for seven minutes in the entire second half. As everybody who has follow- ed Michigan knows, other teams don't score when the Wolverines have the ball. Someone asked dejected Iowa coach Frank Lauterbur, whose team has made some important strides forward despite the score, if he thought Bo's complaint about the inexperienced line was valid. FXL laughed and said "Bo's always complaining about something." Despite his two interceptions, Franklin looked sharp running the option and many of Heater's yards were the direct results of Franklin's poise under pressure and Denny's ability to pitch when hit. In all, the play selection was superb. "We felt Iowa would be vulnerable outside," said Schembechler. "We probed a little inside and then went to the pitch outside and it worked 3 ~real well for us.", But what of the passing game Schembechler promised? "I hate to tell'you this, and I bet you won't believe it, (Note: I didn't) but we're a much better passing team than you saw today." Pass- ing will come in time, but first there is that small matter about the line. ""y ra" r vr °° i?§."g}i:?S{:.:".'.'"^,"iW h::: % i:{ ::' { ".;xrjy pr };. . :M1" d}4:r IOWA Skogm an Hayman Fetter Jensen Johnson Mix Wellington Caldwel MICHIGAN Franklin Heater Shuttlesworth Chapman Thornblad h Bell att. 7 5 2 6 1 6 11 17 19 15 8 5 yds -1 45 18 11 12 22 -3 14 62 133 $8 69 38 50 avg. -.02 6.4, 3.6 5.5 6.0 3.7 -3.0 2.3 Bucks STATE SPILLED skewer Gophers. I.J By The Associated Press 5.7 COLUMBUS - Archie Griffin 7.8 returned a kickoff 93 yards and 4.6 Neal Colzie, a punt 78 yards for 4.8 touchdowns and Harold "Champ"' 10.0 Henson scored three times yester- day, powering third-ranked Ohio State to a 56-7 triumph over Min- nesota in a Big Ten football opener. The Buckeyes unleashed another powerful rushing game builtaround Griffin, Henson and Cornelius Greene, the first black quarter- back to start for Ohio State. >: Griffin was nearly as sensa- tional as his freshman debut a year ago, rolling up 249 total yards and breaking the Gophers' spirit with his dazzling return after Minnesota's lone touchdown in the second quarter. That play shot the Buckeyes, into a 21-7 lead and the Gophers never recovered, falling behind 35-7 at ning streak, scoring twice in less halftime before a shirt-sleeved than seven minutes of the first Ohio Stadium crowd of 86,005. quarter. Henson, who paced the nation Meanwhile, Ohio State's veteran in scoring with 120 points last fall, f defense, with ten starters backj complemented the Buckeyes' long from last year, held Minnesota to: distance strikes with touchdowns 199 total yards. The Gophers, who of three, two and one yards. The averaged '280 rushing yards last 245-pound sophomore rushed for fall, managed only 163 on the 81 yards. 1 ground. Greene, a sophomore from Wash- ington, D.C.,iran up 84 yards on the ground, including a three-yard1 touchdown, in his first big varsity test. He played briefly as a fresh- The Buckeyes marched 64 yards man. the first time they had the ball, John King, Minnesota's big full- with Henson scoring from the back who led conference rusherstr for a 14-13 victory yesterday in the Big Ten college football opener for both teams. Bobrowski, a senior quarterback, sparked the Boilermakers' decisive 89-yard drive by passing to Larry Burton for gains of 47 and 22 yards. Burton's second catch put the ball on the Wisconsin 12, and Bobrowski rambled over on a right side keeper three plays later as Pur- due took a 14-7 lead. Ken Starch, sophomore fullback who gained'104 yards in 23 carries, capped an 80-yard Wisconsin march by punching over from one yard out with 5:10 to play. * * * f , last season, scored the Gophers' only touchdown on a one-yard run. The Buckeyes easily ended Min- nesota's three-game Big Ten win- Rues shuffle Cards; Expos outlast Phillies From Wire Service Report. "I was just looking for some- thing off speed," said soft-spoken Dave Parker, whose home run helped the Pittsburgh Pirates beat the St. Louis Cardinals yes- terday. Instead the 6 - foot - 5 Pirate rookie outfielder teed off on a fast ball and capped a four-run seventh inning which sealed a 7-4 triumph in a nationally-tele- vised National League game. "The first, pitch was a sinker low," said Parker, whose blast cleared the right field fence and' scored two teammates in front of him. Another key blow was Manny Sanguillen's two-run single in a three-run first inning which sent Pittsburgh to its fourth straight triumph and maintained its 1 2- game NL East Division lead over Montreal. St. Louis, which drop- ped ' its seventh straight, fell, three games behind. BOB BAILEY'S bases-loaded single produced the winning run in the 10th inning, leading the Montreal Fxpos to a 5-4 decision over the Philadelphia Phillies yesterday. Ron Santo's leadoff homer touched off a three-run Chicago rally and the Cubs went on to defeat the New York Mets 7-0 to gain a split of their double- header yesterday. TUG McGRAW earned his 21st save of the season as the Mets won the first game 5-1. The split left the fourth-place Mets 3 games behind Pitts- burgh inthe National League's East Division. Hiller: No. 36 DETROIT - G a t e s Brown's three ri double in the eighth inning yesterday gavetJoe Cole- man his second straight 20-vic- tory season. and enabled John Hiller to set an American League record for saves as the Detroit Tigers n i p p e d the Milwaukee Brewers, 4-3. Hiller, who came on in the ninth, tied the record of 36 saves that Sparky Lyle of New York set in 1972 with a rescue job on Friday night and the save yes- terday pulled him within one of the major league record of 37 set by Cay Carroll with Cin- cinnati last season. Jim Slaton, 12-13, was handed a 3-1 lead on the strength of five IMilwaukee stolen bases and two wild pickoff throws by catcher Duke Sims which gave the Brew- ers single runs in the fifth and sixth. Doubles by Joe Lahoud and Pedro Garcia in the second in- ning gave Milwaukee its first run. Coleman got his 20th victory against 15 losses when Detroit loaded the bases on two singles and a walk before Brown de- livered his bases clearing dou- ble.rEddie Brinkman's seventh homer of the season in the third inning was Detroit's first run. r ' Hoosiers fumble Spartans shamed BLOOMINGTON - Ilinois and EVANSTON - Mitch Anderson's Indiana traded mistakes here yes- 10-yard touchdown pass to Steve terday with the Illini taking advan- Craig in the fourth quarter lifted tage of the most chances to grab a Northwestern to a 14-10 victory 28-14 Big Ten college football vic- yesterday over Michigan State in tory. a Big Ten football opener. The Illinois triumph spoiled The game marked the coaching the debut of Indiana ~Coach Lee debut of Denny Stolz at MSU and Corso, who had to be disappoint- Johnny Pont at Northwestern and .ed by the Hoosiers' five fumbles was the Wildcats' first opening and four Illinois interceptions. victory in six years. . A pair of second period touch- Both of Northwestern's touch- downs by Illini sophomore full- downs resulted from turnovers. back Steve Greene were decisive. The Wildcats picked up a fumble Indiana, .however, scored on its in the second quarter and then second offensive series after the marched 53 yards with Stan Key halftime to 'make it 21-14. diighe 5 ardsr thtdKwny Illinois committed six fumbles- diving over for the touchdown. three in each half-and cost itself Trailingy 10-7rinsthemfinalrperiod, Pete Wessel intercepted a Charle dearly nuerous times throughout Baggett pass and returned 25 yards a game in which it outplayed the to set up the winning touchdown. opposition. Michigan State opened the scor- ing in the first quarter after Mark , Niesen intercepted an Andersonpo Nuarrie rs ps nthe NU 30. But the Spar- NE tans had to settle for a 25-yard field goal by barefooted kicker Dirk Krijt. o u t Clarence Bullock fumbled late in the second quarter and Bob Mason recovered. The Wildcats then mov- I ed 53 yards in 11 plays for touch- down with 29 seconds remaining in the half to take a 7-3 lead at the half. By MIKE LISULL * *% * AP Photo STANFORD'S MIKE BORYLA feels the pressure from Penn State. linebacker Ed O'Neil (87) while attempting to pass in the Cards' 20-6 loss to the Nittany Lions. Boryla and Company will be here Saturday for a battle with the Wolverines. Boiler power MADISON - Purdue scored the go-ahbad touchdown on Bob Bo- browski's nine-yard fourth quarter run, then blocked an extra point try by Wisconsin's Rick Barrios with just over five minutes left Lions By The AssociatedI a " m SCORES EPr Gridde Pickings MICHIGAN 31, Iowa 7 Ohio State 56, Minnesota 7 Northwestern 14, Michigan State 10 Purdue 14, Wisconsin 13 Illinois 28, Indiana 14 LSV 17.E Colorado ,6 Arkansas at Southern Cal., inc. Oklahoma 42, Baylor 14 So. Methodist 49, Santa Clara 7 Penn State 20, Stanford 6 Alabama 66, California 0 Vermont 14, Amer. Int. 7 Dakota St. vs. Bemidji St.. mising in ation Midwest Cent. Michigan 14, Ball State 7 Kansas 29, Washington State 8 North Dakota 31, Montana 10 Missouri 17, Mississippi 0 Oklahoma State 56, Texas Arlington 7 Cincinnati 40, Xavier 7 Kent State 10, Louisville 3 No. Illinois 34, So. Illinois 28 WMU 13, Long Beach State 8 Eastern Mich. 21, Louisiana Tech 19 Wayne St. 19, Valparaiso 17 South Auburn 18, Oregon State 9 Georgia 7, Pittsburgh 7 STANFORD-Defensive back Ji two important plays, including a which led to Penn State's first to seventh-ranked Nittany Lions be yesterday in a college football op Penn State virtually shut off the ing offense and sacked quarterba 4 seven times in the nationally tele' John Cappelletti, the Nittany L ning senior tailback, and junior q Shuman were the Penn State offe' stfing Cards Carolina crunch m Bradley made CHAPLE HILL - North Carolina recovered a fumble recovery fumble and went 37 yards for a touchdown in the uchdown, as the final two minutes to come from behind and defeat at Stanford 20-6 William & Mary 34-27 yesterday. ener. Quarterback Nick Vidnovic fired a five-yard pass Cardinals' rush- to Jimmy Jerome to give the Tar Heels the victory. ack Mike Boryla * * * vised game. Tigers surprise Lions' hard run- BATON ROUGE - The passing of untested junior luarterback Tom quarterback Mike Miley inspired underdog Louisi- nsive stars. Cap- ana State to n 17- nset ner 10th-nrakd Coin- W Ohio State 1 Michigan 1 Illinois 1 Northwestern 1 Purdue 1 Wisconsin 0 Michigan State 0 Indiana 0 Iowa 0 Minnesota 0 Yesterday's MICHIGAN 31, Iowa' ? : I I L Pct. PF PA 0 1.000 56 7 0 1.000 31 7 0 1.000 28 14 0 1.000 14 10' 0 1.000 14 13 1 .000 13 141 1 .000 10 14 1 .000 1428 1 .000 731' 1 .000 7 56t Big Ten Standings The Michigan Cross Country squad took its first step towards that long-awaited Big Ten title yesterday, as the harriers opened their season at the Eastern Mich- igan Open. While the Hurons._ domin'ated the meet, the Maize and Blue runners showed a lot of promise. GREG MYER, who was fighting mononucleosis only four weeks ago, ran a strong race and fin- ished fourth overall. Cross Coun- try mentor Dixon Farmer named him Wolverine of the Week. Sophomore Jon Cross finished sixth overall, only sixteen sec- onds behind Myer. Gary Rizzo, Fred Gault and " Jim Simpson were the next three Wolverine finishers,_ taking 13th, 16th and 19th respectively. Gault is a senior while Rizzo and Simpson are Junior transfers from Ma- comb Community College. Another pleasant surprise was the appearance of senior Bill Bolster from Ireland. Bolster is a notoriously slow starter and Results 7 Ohio State 56, Minnesota 7 Northwestern 14, Michigan State 10