Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, September 30, 19 r:5 l'age Eight [HE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, September 30, l"us Mammoth Blue wave flounders _..-_Silence is golden, but . __ 'M' grid machine . . *0* 77 ill needs oil Frank Longo Wolverines stave off stubborn Midshipmen (Continued from Page 1) a punt on their own 19 yard line. and through the Michigan line for Two Franklin keepers produced chunks of six, 18 and seven yards only five yards, but on third down, before Bob Jackson survived a he scampered 18 yards inside lift jarring hit from defensive back end to the 42. Dave Elliot to grab Glenny's pass That drive ended with Heater BO SCHEMBECHLER was mildly perturbed. Mildly perturbed? Who's kidding whom? If Michigan's head football coach was at all pleased with his team's performance during yesterday's 14-0 win (those other nouns like "annihilation". and "onslaught" don't apply) over Navy, he certainly did a good job of hiding it. "If I act like I'm hot, I'm hot," snarled Schembechler in his post-game interview, which was conducted as if his defending Big ,Ten co-champion Wolverines had just been knocked on their collective ear. That was appropriate. They might as well have been. The Middies, outscored 81-7 in their last two visits here, refused to acknowledge Michigan's No. 4 national ranking, its undefeated status, its size, depth, personnel, and all those other things you're supposed to be afraid of when you come to town to play the Wolverines. "There was some spark out there today," suggested Navy's first-year coach George Welsh. "We were better today than last week (39-0 loss to Penn State), but we still should have been better." Whatever the case, the fact is that Michigan played much worse than everyone expected and Navy pltyed much better than everyone expected. The Wolverines executed poorly on offense, tackled sloppily on defense, and, win or no win, shutout or no shutout, just did not live up to their advance billing for this one. "We didn't block, we didn't tackle, we didn't do anything right," emphasized Bo. "Michigan played the worst game I have ever coached in Michigan Stadium. We were sluggish, very sluggish in everything we did. Our blocking broke down all over." And consider this. When was the last time Michigan's opponent ran more offensive plays than the Wolverines did? It happened yesterday. When was the last time the Blue defense gave up 173 yards in the air? It was last week against Stanford, when Mike Boryla picked up over 200 passing yards. Still, yester- day's was "the poorest performance by a defense for a shutout I've ever seen," quoth Bo. But stop. Did you catch that word "shutout?" Have we ever mentioned "always bending, never breaking?" Because that's just something you don't pass over, even if the Wolverines have registered ten whitewashes in the past three years and have led the nation in scoring defense the last two. A shutout should never become commonplace. And this one was not. It was obvious the Michigan team was not up for this game, not like it had been for Stanford, at any rate. But how easy is it for a team to get up for two games in a row? And it was obvious that Navy was up for this game. No team likes to come to Ann Arbor and get blown out two years running. The Middies in. particular have always been known for never quitting. Always fighting. Never giving in. Scrappy. And they intended to turn things around this time. But how do you argue with three interceptions, a fumble recovery, and no points against? Cleveland Cooper, a 1,000-plus yard rusher a year ago for Navy, was held to 44 net yards, which was more than half his team's total of 83. "We got down there, but that's not good enough," said Welsh. "They did it when they had to and we couldn't. Michigan is awfully tough to score against." And when the clock runs out, that's all that matters. Besides, "You gotta give Navy some credit," insisted Bo. "They're a pretty good team. They were reading the option fairly well, and we weren't. They played good defense, they threw the ball well, they were scrappy!" Michigan had a game like this last year. The Wolverines overcame Indiana 21-7 at Bloomington in a mistake-filled contest that featured 13 fumbles and one interception. They rebounded to whip Iowa. Yesterday's game was comparably flat. "I hope that's a humbling victory, if there is such a thing," remarked Schem- bechler. "They played a helluva game," said center Dennis Franks. "Mentally we were unprepared," Wolfman Geoff Steger agreed. "We just weren't thinking. We just didn't react like we should and could have." "Their offensive line was better than we thought they'd be," lauded defensive tackle and co-captain Dave Gallagher. "But we expected to win. A lot of our mistakes were execution, but that's no excuse. After this we'll be ready." They'll have to be ready. Three down and eight to go, maybe, but of those eight there won't be one in which Michigan will be able to play this way and get away with it. at the Wolverine 31 yard line. 1 A Glenny to Bert Calland aerial netted seven more yards and threatening field position at the Blue 24. But another Navy mistake, rather than a big play from the defense thwarted the Middies as- sault. Glenny threw into the arms of tight end Bill Smyth for what could have been a first and goal, but Smvth ju yled the ba11 nut of. knifing through a small hole for a good gain, only to have the ball pop loose, and into the hands of Navy's Ward Hill. The fumble, which sent Heater to the bench for the remainder of the contest, gave the Middies pos- session at their own 39. Aided by a personal foul and a 17 yard gain on a deflected pass, Navy once y"'o " gg again sailed into scoring territory. bounds and to comopund Naval This time, the threat died when woes, offensive pass interference Glenny pitched out behind Tupuola, was called, putting the ball back resulting in an 18 yard loss. on the 39 yard line. A Navy punt gave Michigan pos- ON THE NEXT play, Glenny's session and Franklin ran out the home run ball fell into the waiting clock on the first half, to the sound armsof ' dfendr Brry ot-of scattered boos from the student arms of 'M' defender Barry Dot- section. zauer, bringing the drive to a The boos subsided in the second screeching halt. Dotzauer reversed half as the crawl to victory con- engines, broke a tackle at the one, tinued, but some tartshouts of and returned the interception to "Oh my God" and "Wow, a four- Michigan's 18 yard line. -.yard gain" greeted Michigan's first pass completion of the game (in The Wolverine offense quickly the game's final three minutes). shifted into low gear with Heater and Shuttlesworth supplying the THE WOLVERINES managed to power. The pair ran the ball seven score again in the second half, go- straight times for 36 yards before ing 54 yards in 11 plays with Shut- tlesworth handling the final four theaNavy d efense smothered carries. But for the most part, as Franklin on a third-and-one from Bo put it "We were sluggish in the 47. everything we did." Following Dotzauer's fourth punt - of the game, the defense hemmed NL EAST RACE Navy in with third and 12 at their Page own ten yard line, but a 14 yard Losing coach George Welsh had run off left guard by Tupuola IOU- nothing but praise for the Wolver- bled by a coach on the field pen- ines' offensive strategy. "I'd do alty gave the Middies breathing exactly the same thing with their room and spoiled Michigan's shot team," he claimed. "When you've at ideal field position. got a great running quarterback, why send him back to pass? I Daily Photo by JOHN UPTON DENNIS FRANKLIN (9) tries to evade George Markulis (54) in a play during yesterday's Michigan-Navy game. Navy defensemen spent a lot of time chasing Franklin and with some success. Michigan's outside game was contained quite well by the Midshipmen. OSU ROMPS: B adgers From wire Service Reports Big Ten football teams emerged THE WOLVERINES held on the following series and took over after Seasick TEAM: First Downs Rushes Passing yards Return yards PassesV Fumbles-lost Penalties-yards LINE SCORE: NAVYd MICHIGAN7 SCORING PLAYS: Michigan: Heater, 8-yard Michigan: Shuttlesworth, (Lantry kick) INDIVIDUAL: hope we don't play another quarter- f r o m yesterday's intersectional: back like Franklin again," he battles with a far from glossy 3-7 added. slate, but in the process came! Glenny had some eyebrow-rais- away with increased prestige. j ing comments on the vaunted In. only one game did a loop rep- Michigan defense. "We thought resentative turn in a poor perform- theyhgadomeeknesWesintheiance, Minnesota's 34-18 defeat at they had some weaknesses in their the hands of Kansas. pass defense," he explained. "They But in the other six losses, four play a 5-2 with their halfbacks and came at the hands of teams rank- safetv nrettv far from the line of ed in the top ten nationally, and 141 SUN Navy 20 45/83 173 3 17-30-3 6-1 5-38 Mich. 15 59/268 4 28 1-3-0 1-1 5-58 scare Yebraska state rival Purdue, 20-7, at Ross- Ade Stadium. I The Boilermakers did not go down without a fight, however, as they seldom due with the Irish. It toolt some fancy running £Y71 by the Irish tailback Art Best to overcome a 7-3 Purdue margin. Best dashed 94 yards in seven NIGHT EDITOR: DAN BORUS first half carries, 124 in 16 over- all. The huge but slow Minnesota Gophers fell before Big Eight rival three-touchdown 20 touchdowns a year ago, was Kansas 34-19 at Lawrence. The ut the triumph. wheeled to the operating table this Gophers had earned a 10-10 dead- is staved off the morning after suffering torn knee lock at intermission. a 14-yard scoring ligaments. He'll miss the remain- ;The Jayhawks pounced on two :h 83-yard 'Husk- der of his junior campaign. . third period fumbles to take a quick Soph quarterback C o r n e 1i u s 24=10 lead which the Gophers could the lead seem- Greene excited an all-time Ohio never erase. Delvin Williams scor- n a superb 96- Stadium throng of 87,439 with a ed the last of his three scoring urn by Selvie 72-yard scoring jaunt, while tail- thrusts for Kansas in the final barely five min- back Archie Griffin sprinted 68 stanza, knifing through for the fin- yards to paydirt in the rain-soaked al score. State was not tilt. ' 1-1 00 0- 0 7 0 7 0-14 run; (Lantry 1-yard run; scrimmage the Big Ten clubs held their own in each of them. "That defense gave us a lot of The wins yesterday came from seams and we figured we could hit the league's traditional spearcar- the inside curl pattern, which we riers, Ohio State and Michigan. The did. Michigan may have had an off Bucks thrashed Texas Christian 37- 3 at Columbus, while Michigan got day today, but I thought Penn State by Navy, 14-0. Indiana surprised' (39-0 winners over Navy last week) slight favorite Kentucky for the had a much tougher defense. They third win, 17-3. came at you from all different di- Perhaps Wisconsin's 20-16 loss at rections." the hands of second-ranked Ne- . .mtb.cbraska best symbolized the frus- Direction seemed to be k in trating Big Ten afternoon. all facets of the Michigan game The winless Badgers (0-3) heldI yesterday. the lead until the final three min- utes until the picks could pull o Tailback Tony Dav major upset with a run capping a clutc er drive. Wisconsin took ingly for good or yard kickoff ret Washington with b utes left. Although Ohio RUSHING NAVY Cooper Tupuola Jackson Gilmore Glenny MICHIGAN Franklin Shuttlesworth Heater Chapman Bell Thornbladhl NAVY Glenny MICHIGAN Franklin att. yds. avg. 18 44 2.4 10 37 3.7 5 19 3.8 4 4 1.0 8 -21 -2.6 17 21 10 3 7 1 69 4.1 90 4.2 47 4.7 16 5.3 42 6.0 4 4.0 MIZZOU ROLLS PASSING Tide sinks Van att. comp. int. yds. 30 17 3 173 frustrated on the scoreboard the Up in East Lansing the Mich- Coachkrank eaueye rursh eow- medical report was not so encour- igan State Spartans fell victim of their brutal schedule for the aging. Buck fu11back Harold to an overwhelming UCLA third week in succession. Yester- "Champ" Henson, who blasted for ground attack, spoiling head day it was Penn State, as the -~~~~~1coach Denny Stolz's home open- Nittany Lions used three first quarter scores to dump Iowa, The Spartans catapaulted to an 27-8. early advantage but the Bruins The Indiana Hoosiers handed new methodically ran down the out- coach Lee Corso his maiden win weighed Green Meanies to ice the at Bloomington yesterday as his d e rbconvincing verdict. MSU led 13-6 crew posted a surprising 17-3 tri- on T y r o n e Wilson's one-yard umph over Kentucky. Indiana took defense, the passing of Condredge plunge, but the 286 yard Bruin control of the game in the second Holloway and the running of Haskel rushing game gradually wore them canto as tailback Ken Starling Stanback in beating Auburn 21-0 down. plunged in for the go-ahead score. yesterday in a Southeastern Con- Seventh-ranked Notre Dame pow- Previously unbeaten Illinois was ference football opener for both ered its way past a tenacious Pur- toppled in a seesaw battle to West teams. due squad to eclipse their inter- Virginia, 17-10. Danny "Lightning" ..,..........'EBuggs streaked 55 yards with a pass with 3:25 of playing time re- maining to lift the Mountaineersto their third straight win. At Evanston, Pittsburgh unveiled 3 RECEIVING NAVY Cooper Smyth Calland Jackson Ameen MICHIGAN Chapman NAVY Stufflebeemn ni 1 0 By The Associated Press NASHVILLE, Tenn. - A host of Alabama. running backs, compli- o. yds. avg. mented by Wayne Wheeler's clutch 1 8 8.0 catches, propelled fifth-ranked Ala- 5 67 13.4 bama to an easy 44-0 victory over 3 18 6:0 Vanderbilt last night in a South-' 3 34 11.3 eastern Conference football game. Alabama scored the first four 1 4 4.0 times it had the ball and eight of its 11 possessions. o. yds. It was 17-0 after one quarter and 223 36.1 27-0 at halftime. Mike Stock had touchdown runs 320 40.0 of 13 and one yards, Randy Billings- PUNTING 6 zICHIGAN Dotzauer 8 sley scored from 13 yards out, Ellisc Beck from three yards out andI Wheeler caught a 14-yard TD pass from quarterback Gary Rutledge.3 Bill Davis hit field goals of 35,f 23 and 37 yards to complete thet Tide scoring. Tigers roar CHAPEL HILL, N.C. - Quarter- back John Cherry threw two touch- down passes and directed Missouri to a 27-14 victory over North Caro- lina yesterday- as the Tigers re-' mained unbeaten after three games. BULLETIN LOS ANGELES (P)-Oklahoma pounded 70 yards for a third- q u a r t e r touchdown on Steve Davis' short run and the eighth- ranked Sooners shocked top-rank- ed Southern California with a 7-7 tie last night, snapping the de- fending national champion Tro- jans' winning streak at 14 games. GRIDDE PICKINGS MICHIGAN 14, Navy 0 Ohio State 37, Texas Christian 3 UCLA 34, Michigan State 21 West Virginia 17, Illinois 10 Indiana 17, Kentucky 3 Notre Dame 20, Purdue 7 Pittsburgh 21, Northwestern 14 Penn State 27, Iowa 8 Nebraska 20, Wisconsin 16 Kansas 34, Minnesota 19 Texas 28, Texas Tech 12 Tennessee 21, Auburn 0 Oklahoma 0 at Southern Cal, 0 (1st quarter) SMU 37, Virginia Tech 6 Delaware 21, Lehigh 9 Arkansas 21, Iowa State 19 Missouri 27, North Carolina 14 Bucknell 0, Columbia 0 Slippery Rock 17, Edinboro State 3 Daily Alumni at DAILY LIBELS, game today OTHER GAMES Amherst 24, Springfield 14 California 51, Army 6 Nichols College 14, Albany St. NY 7 Wilkes College 25, Pycoming Col 0 LSU 24, Rice 9 Appalachian St 24, Davidson Col 8 Kentucky State 9, Jackson State 7 Salem College 22, Concord College 21 Ferris State 14, Michigan Tech 14 Moorhead State 17, Bemidji State 7 No. Dakota St 14, Morningside 0 Oklahoma St 70, Southern Illinois 7 South Dakota 18, Northern Iowa 7 American Int'l 22, Norwich Univ 14 Coast Guard 28, Colby College 6 Cornell 35, Colgate 21 C. W. Post 25, Montclair 22 Harvard 24, Massachusetts 7 *Middlebury 17, Wesleyan 14 New Hampshire 10, Dartmouth 9 NY Tech 14, West Conn St 0 Newark St 3, Fairleigh Dicksn 0 Rutgers 39, Princeton 14 Georgia 31, No Carolina St 12 Maryland 31, Villanova 3 Virginia 7, Duke 3 Bowling Green 31, West Michigan 20 Bowdoin 6, Worcester Tech 0 Brown 20, Rhode Island 20 Dickinson Col 41, Swarthmore 13 Lafayette 16, Pennsylvania 14 Temple 63, Holy Cross 34 Williams Col 15, Trinity College 10 Georgia Tech 29, Clemson 21 No. Carolina Cen 11, Morgan St 8 Washington & Lee 22, Centre Col 0 Connecticut 27, Yale 13 western Illinois 28, Wis. Milwaukee 3 Colorado 52, Baylor 28 Stanford 23, San Jose State 12 Washington 21, Syracuse 7 washington St 51, Idaho 24 freshman tailback Tony Dorsett on a rain-sodden field as he carried them to a 21-14 victory over North- western. Dorsett ran for 265 yards in 38 trips, including 43 yards of a game-winnig 68-yard drive. RELIABLE ABORTION SERVICE Clinic in Mich.-l to 24 week pregnancies terminated by li- censed obstetrician gynecolo- gist. Quick services will be ar- ranged. Low rates. CALL COLLECT (216) 281-6060 24 HOUR SERVICE A crowd of 40,500 saw the 20th- ranked Big Eight power grab a 14-0 first period lead on Cherry's touch- down passes of 13 yards to Mark Miller and nine yards to John Kel- sey. Vols fly KNOXVILLE, Tenn. - Ninth- ranked Tennessee used a swarming SWICKER FiL i i WELCOMES RETURNING U of M STUDENTS with a , 1 ..m viero".....,te: ........ ...v,.. n }x _.. __ ....... . :::_...,: .?A :: b?.,.?r.,.. _. .v :::..t ",a:c:;t":;:o-:::.; :a:"i:":::: ,. ' .":.:,::">::: :: :: i: :; t ' _. _...