Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturdav. Octnhar 70 1 973 T !1 !Y ? " T !'v ! - .fir : . -r . . . .... .. " .. ~du t u i uu)'f vt. t VU= F Z-V j 17 r .7 i LOSING RECORD DECEIVING: Bluex By GEORGE HASTINGS Ho-hum. Today at 1:30 at Michi- gan Stadium the mighty Michigan Wolverines, undefeated, untied, and untested, meet yet another seem- ingly lackluster opponent with a losing record. This 'week the ad- versary is Wisconsin, and a Big Ten team with a 1-4 record can't possible give the Blueacontest, right? Quite possibly, wrong. For the Badgers may be 1-4, but they are no Iowa or Navy. Wisconsin today is finishing what is possi- bly the toughest first-half sched- ule of any team in the country, and it has been embarrassed in none of its games. The Badgers have been good, but unlucky: Their bad breaks started when they substantially outgained Purdue but lost anyway, 14-13. Then, the next two weeks they played Big Eight powers Colorado and Nebraska to standstills, only to come out on the short end both times, losing 28-25 to the Buffaloes and 20-16 to the Cornhuskers. nary o Last week, they held Ohio State to a 7-0 margin at the half before succumbing to the awesome Buck- eye ground game, 24-0. - Accordingly, Michigan Coach Bo Schembechler and his army of as- sistants are not taking this con- test lightly. "Anything could hap- pen in this game," Bo says. "They're not your averages1-4 team." It is the high-powered Wisconsin offense that has Schembechler most fearful. The Badger attack has been more than impressive, and the Wolverines will be hard-pressed to register their fourth straight shut- out. At first glance, it is the Wiscon- sin passing game which could pose the biggest threat for Mich- igan. Signal-caller Gregg Bohlig of the Badgers leads the Big Ten in passing so far, throwing for 258 yards against Purdue and Ohio State. Meanwhile, Michigan so far has given up the most passing yardage. But Schembech- ler pooh : poohs that latter sta- ,r _ r } 4 {i f . 4 1 F battl daily sports NIGHT EDITOR: GEORGE HASTINGS [ing Badgers Larry Cipa, while ready to play, consin, though, will be senior de- are still slightly impaired by brok- fensive end Ed Bosold, whose re- en fingers. turn should bolster the defense against the run on a day that the Good news, on the other hand,IBagrwilneit will be the return of Geoff Steger Badgers will need it. to availability at wolf, although Actually, the game should be a Don Dufek will again get the start- revealing one for Michigan fans. ing call at that position. The Wolverines will be taking on what Schembechler terms "a dan- The Badgers also have the of-a gerous team, a team that's been fensive line blues, with starting in tough games before. left guard Dennis Manic out of ac- tion with a sprained ankle, and The super Michigan defense will center Mike Webster slowed by a undoubtedly be facing its best op- similar injury. position yet this year. In addition, Bohlig's favorite The offense, which has been slug- receiver, flanker Jeff Mack, is gish since the first half against also a doubtful starter, so subs Stanford, may be forced to pro- Duane Johnson and Ron Pollard duce'points under the pressure of will man the position. a close game. If they do so, the willn Wolverines will still be unbeaten Coming back into action for Wis- and untied, but no longer untested. - -al Sports of. The.Dil Hunter vs. Seaver in game 6. The World Series scene shifts to California for Game 6 of the annual fall classic. The Oakland A's, trailing in the Series 3-2, will send their ace Jim "Catfish" Hunter against the Mets' Tom Seaver. Both Hunter and Seaver started in the third game eventually won by the A's in 10 innings. Big Ten in full swing nBig Ten football teams move into the third week of confer- ence play this afternoon. Illinois (2-0) hasn't managed to score a touchdown in the last 11 quarters. But their opponents, the Spartans of Michigan State (0-2) are also having trouble generating a consistent offen- sive attack. Alex Agase spent 17 years at Northwestern, nine of them as head football coach. He'll be on the other side of the field today as his Purdue Boilermakers (1-1) host the Wildcats (2-0). Minnesota travels to Iowa (0-2), and the Golden Gophers (1-1) are five point favorites to hand the Hawkeyes their sixth con- secutive loss of the season. Number one-ranked Ohio State (2-0) will be shooting for its fifth straight win against Indiana down in Bloomington. * * * Harriers in MSU Invitational' In cross-country action today, the five best teams in Michigan will meet in the Michigan State Invitational in East Lansing. Competing will be Michigan, -Eastern, Michigan State, Western, and Central. EMU is defending champion and will be led by All-American Gordon Minty. In last year's meet, Wolverine Keith Brown was individual champion, setting a course record in the process. Brown will be backtoday and it should be a thrilling battle between him and Minty for individual honors and a close fight between EMU and the Wolverines for the team tidle. Soccer team ties Dearborn Michigan's undergraduate soccer team battled a tough U of M Dearborn squad to a 1-1 tie yesterday afternoon on Fuller Field. According to coach Fred Grunewald the defensive game was excellent as backup goalie Joe Hudson made some "very very nice saves." Captain Steve Weisberg put in one of his strongest perform- ances and Bob Charness scored the Wolverines' lone goal. Mich- igan's record now stands at 4-0-1, and they're scheduled to face the U of M Graduate Soccer Club November 25. * * * Ruggers battle Spartans Rugby club plays at MSU tomorrow at 1:00 for possession of the Webster Steeby Trophy. Also, club has been hard-hit by graduation, and injuries and is definitely interested in having new people come out. Practice is 9-11 on Tuesday and SThursday on the Tartan Turf down by -Yost. People wanting further in- formation should call Walt Holloway, 763-6662. tistic, saying "That's because nobody's running on us.", But even though Michigan has been extremely stingy against the rush, don't expect the Badgers to just come out throwing. They have also been doing a lot of running, piling up 232 yards on the grounds against Purdue, 248 against Colo- rado, and an astounding 548 in their only victory, 37-28 over Wyoming. The brunt of the ground attack will be borne by two men, Bill Marek, a speedly 5-8 tailback who has 569 yards already, and bruis- ing fullback Ken Starch All told, as Schembechler puts it, the Badgers "have a very fine offense - a hell of an offense - better than any we've faced." However, no one is saying simi- lar things about the Wisconsin de- fense. The Badgers defenders have had their problems, to say the least. After holding Purdue pretty much in check, they yielded over 300 to- tal yards to Colorado, and 400 each to Nebraska, Wyoming, and Ohio State. The Badger invasion of Michi- gan Stadium will hit the airways at 1:30 p.m. over radio stations WAAM 1600 AM; WPAG 1050 AM; WUOM 91.7 FM; WCBN 650 AM and 89.5 FM; and WWJ 950 AM. The low point came last Saturday, when the Bucks pounded out 423 on the ground alone, holding the ball for eighty plays and keeping the Badger offense from getting its paws on the ball too often. Both teams come into today's contest nursing some wounds as well as welcoming back a play- er who has been out with injury. Michigan fans will still see offen- sive linemen Jim Coode,nKirk Lewis, and Mike. Hoban on the sidelines, although the former two could play if badly needed. In addition, split end Jim Smith is out with a shoulder injury, and quarterbacks Dennis Franklin and BM I Ap oom e i i (27) (78) (69) (51) (65) (64) (83) ( 9) (31) (24) (43) (91) (97) (56) (71) (39) (59) (33) (35) (45) (25) ( 6) THE LINEUPS i MICHIGAN WISCONSIN Keith Johnson (170)' Curtis Tucker (240) Gary Hainrihar (223) Tom Jensen (220) Dave Metz (235) Pat Tumpane (235) Paul Seal (218) Dennis Franklin (180) Ed Shuttlesworth (225) Gil Chapman (185) Clint Haslerig (194) Walt Williamson '(224) Jeff Perlinger (235) Tim Davis (200) Dave Gallagher (245) Don Coleman (217) Steve Strinko (235) Carl Russ (215) Don Dufek (195) Dave Elliott (170) Barry Dotzauer (162) Dave Brown (188) Offense SE (45) LT (75) LG (64) C (51) RG (63) RT (70) TE (88) QB (14) FB (32) TB (26) WB (27) Defense Art Sanger (172) Bob Johnson (239) Rick Koeck (225)' Mike Webster (231) Bob Braun (228) Dennis Lick (255) Jack Novak (239) Gregg Bohlig (172) Ken Starch (207) Bill Market (186) Ron Pollard (180) LE LT MG RT RE MLB OLB Wolf DB DB S (65) Mike Vesperman (190) (74) Jim Schymanski (232) (36) Mike Jenkins (227) (90) Gary Dickert (210) (58) Ed Bosold (208) (34) Rick Jakious (208) (47).Mark Zakula (210) (11) Mark. 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