Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, October 21, 1973 Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, October 21, 1 9'13 A beat Mesfinale today OAKLAND (P) - Reggie Jack- bullpen. Willians called for left- ning with his third hit of the game, order until the fifth, when Jerry n smashed a pair of doubles yes- hander Darold Knowles and Wayne a single to center. Don Hahn let Grote opened with a single. so terday, driving in two Oakland auns and the A's kept their World Ser- ies hopes alive with a 3-1 victory over the New York Mets in the sixth game of baseball's cham- pionship showdown. The A's triumph tied the best- of-seven Series at three victories apiece and sent it into a decisive seventh game today. Left-handers Jon Matlack of the Mets and Ken Holtzman of the A's, who have split two decisions so far, will clash in that one. JACKSON ripped Tom Seaver for RBI doubles in the first and third innings and Oakland pitcher Jim "Catfish" Hunter made the slim two-run lead stand up until the eighth. The ace of Oakland's pitching staff, a 21-game winner in each of the last three seasons, simply ov- erpowered the Mets, limiting them to three hits until the eighth. Then, with one out, Ken Bos- well batted for Seaver and lash- ed a single to right. Oakland Man- ager Dick Williams, thinking Hun- ter might be tiring; hustled to the mound acid decided to go to his Garrett greeted him with a single to tenter that sent Boswell to third. Felix Millan poked Knowles' next pitch for a single to right, scoring Boswell and sending Garrett to ' third. the ball get past him and it rolled all the way to the wall as Jackson steamed into third on the two-base error. After Gene Tenace walked, Jesus Alou batted for Vic Davalillo and World Series Game Seven NEW YORK METS (Matlack 1.1, 0.00) at OAKLAND A'S (Holtzman 1-1, 7.20), 4 p.m., WWJ TV and radio THE METS' hottest batter, Rusty Staub, was next. The red-haired slugger with nine hits in 21 World Series at-bats, got three swings at Knowles and missed on each of them for the Mets' second out. Williams went to his bullpen again for Rollie Fingers, the re- liever with the. handlebar, mus- tache. Fingers threw just one pitch and was out of the inning when Cleon Jones flied to center. THE A's QUICKLY got that run back in their half of the eighth against Tug McGraw, the Mets' top reliever. Jackson opened the in- flied to left. Jackson tagged up and scored on the catch, restoring the A's two-run lead. It was Jackson who provided Oakland with the two-run edge in the first place. THE OUTSPOKEN A's slugger had four straight hits in the second game of the Series but had been held in check in the next three. He broke loose against Seaver, the ace of the New York staff. Hunter had weaved his way out of a jam in the top of the first when the Mets had runners at first and second with one out. He then mowed down 11 Mets in HUNTER LEFT him stranded and retired seven more in a row before allowing 'another New York hit. Holtzman and Matlack faced each other in the first game in the Ser- ies, won by the A's 2-1 on a pair of unearned runs. Holtzman pitch- ed five innings in that game, al- lowing the only New York run and Matlack went six and was charged with the loss. In Game 4, Matlack pitched two- hit ball for eight innings and got credit for a 6-1 victory. The Mets kayoed Holtzman in the first in- ning when Staub hit a three-run homer. There have been rumors that Charles 0. Finley intends to sell the A's but-he denied this in an interview with The Associated Press Friday night. A local group called "A's Fans For Local Own- ership" has been formed to try to buy the club if Finley decides to sell. Af Photo Bando scores for A's .. aine 7 today Balanced smashes (Continued from Page 1) time, almost half the quarter. Fea- tured were a 17-yard pass from Franklin to Seal and three short plunges for first downs by fullback Ed Shuttlesworth, who now ranks fourth on the all-time Michigan rushing list with 1976 yards. SUND A Best of all, though, was the masterful working of the option by Franklin, who time and again NIGHT EDITORS: MARC pitched to tailback Gil Chapman just as he was about to be rack- juggernaut Ba gers, 35-6 Y SPORTS FELDMAN and ROGER ROSSITER Daily Photo by KEN FINK All Eyes on "The Jersey Jet" ed by the Wisconsin defenders. slightly off balance, and Brown On first and goal from the three, failed to make up the ground. Franklin was trapped at the five "I didn't know Carl was there," by two Badgers. But halfway. to said. Brown. "When he dove he the ground he pitched back to hit me. I would have gotten him Chapman, who waltzed in for the (Marek) otherwise. score. sre. dh x"Of course, we're kind of dis- Lantry booted the extra point appointed (about losing the, shut- and also the ensuing kickoff, butout)," Brown reasoned, "but may- Wisconsin's S e 1 v i e Washington be it's a good thing. Maybe we promptly fumbled when he was would have gotten lax if we Lad hit by Roy Burks and Michigan's gotten another shutout. But we'll Tim Davis fell on the ball, at the! btenomingebacktouh.next wek," 19 ~be coming back tough next week,'! he vowed. On the fifth play, Franklin oE).ed Larry Cipa came in to direct' the offense with Michigan hold- ing a 28-6 fourth quarter ad- vantage. His first drive' stalled after 12 plays took the Wolver- ines to the 'Wisconsin nine, but three plays later Jovan Vercel recovered a Selvie Washington fumble (his third of the game), giving Michigan the ball at the Badger 22. Gordon Bell then slipped between the tacklers for a seven-yard TD run, and Lantry kicked his 23rd straight extra point and the crowd of 87,723 headed for the exits. The Texas Wedge v i SCORES I! 4 1 a a; Dennis "the Menace" 0 0 * .. .mDnakes Michigan go By RICH STUCK F THERE'S A BETTER QUARTERBACK in these here United States than Dennis Franklin I sure would like to shake his hand. He would have to be one helluva quarterback. 'Cuz I'll tell you Franklin is good, very good. Yesterday the . Michigan field general led the Wolverine offense to an overwhelming 523 yards. He was simply amazing. Oh sure, Gil Chapman had another fine day (92 yards rushing), Chuck Heater ran well (65) yards) and fullbacks Ed Shuttles- worth and Bob Thornbladh combined for 114 yards. But it was Franklin who was themaster of ceremonies Saturday. It was he who left the Wisconsin defenders strewn all over the field like uncollected garbage. Officially he ran for 63 yards and passed for 108 big ones, no small feat in itself. With these statistics and his near-flawless handling of the Maize and Blue offensive machine, is it any wonder that Bo Schembedhler called him "a real comer?" Bo must have realized what an extreme understatement he made to the post-game press corps when he shortly thereafter described Franklin as "The guy who makes us go." Backfield coach Chuck Stobart was even more excited. with Denny's performance. "It was his best game yet. He showed some real quickness out there." The most outstanding example of Franklin's skills came midway through the second period on a first and goal situation from the Wisconsin three yard line. As Franklin took the ball and rolled left there was no question but what hg was to be nailed for a loss. Floating through the ai; after being upended, Franklin let loose with an unbelievably perfect pitch to Chapman who walked into the endzone. The 108 yards gained through aerial antics were a real treat for the home folk. Only a couple of bad decisions marred an otherwise perfect game. Both of those occurred as Franklin passed the pigskin after having crossed the line of scrimmage. And each time it was obvious that Franklin could have easily run for the necessary first-down yardage. But let's face it folks, with the kind of day the sleek junior had against the Badgers, doesn't he deserve to make a couple of boo-boos? The advantages of his behind the line completions overshadow his over-the-line attempts. The most prolific effort through the airways came in the first stanza on a finely feathered pass to tight end Paul Seal, the play covering 46 yards and resulting in the first Michigan touchdown. In the steamy Wolverine dressing room Franklin explained that "We caught the safety up and the cornerback not in- the proper rotation." To put this in laymen's terms, the Badgers. made a mistake and Franklin jumped on it. The superb showing by Dennis Franklin not only proved he is a premier college quarterback but also brought on a collective sigh of relief from Bo and his followers in the GRIDDE PICKINGS MICHIGAN 35, Wisconsin 6 Ohio State 37, Indiana 7 Illinois 6, Michigan State 3 Minnesota 31, Iowa 23 Purdue 21, Northwestern 10 Oklahoma 34, Colorado 6 Alabama 42, Tennessee 21 Houston 30, Miami, Fla. 7 Texas 34, Arkansas 6, Stanford 23, Washington 14 Texas Tech at Arizona, inc. Southern Methodist at Mice, inc. Missouri 13, Oklahoma Stale 3 Auburn 24, Georiga Tech 10 Mississippi 13, Florida 10 Navy 42, Air Force 6 Harvard 21, Cornell 15 Kent State 34, EMU 20 Miami, Ohio 31. Bowling Green 8 Libels 69, Madam Erika's Girls 0 OTHER MAJORS California 24, Oregon State 14 Southern Cal 31, Oregon 10 UCLA3 24, WashingtonState 13 Dartmouth 28, Brown 16 Pittsburgh 28, Boston College 14 Rutgers 24, Delaware 7 Yale 29, Columbia 0 Notre Dame 62, Arny 3 Penn State 49, Syracuse 6 Princeton 37, Colgate 21 Rhode Island 41, Massachusetts 25 Vanderbilt 18,.Georgia 14 Nebraska 10, Kansas 9 Central Conn. St. 19, Slippery Rock 14 Texas A&M 35, TCU 16 Virginia Tech 27, Virginia 15 Western Michigan 21, Marshall 7 NBA, Phoenix 118, Atlanta 108 Chicago85, New York 69 Capital 96, Boston 87 Buffalo 116, Philadelphia 110 Milwaukee 101, Cleveland 88 to the ett aain T'1 is time,hmoug , the defender expected the piton to Chapman but Franklin alertly cut inside for the touchdown and a' 21-0 halftime lead. Michigan's harriers eeked out a lackluster second place finish at the Michigan State InvitationI cross country meet yesterday in a field of five teams. Eastern Michigan easily copped first place, 19-44, while the Wolver- ines edged Michigan State 28-29. The Blue defense, which allov - ed only 109 yards rushing, held for three plays again, and the offense went 50 yards in eight plays for the score. Heater skirt- ed left and from four yards out for the touchdown. The third quarter ended 28-0 but two plays into the final period, Bohlig fired the touchdown pass deflected from Novak to Marek to end the Wolverines' string of 15 consecutive scoreless periods. "The sun was shining that way? and at first I didn't see him," ex- plained safety Dave Brown, who, had the best chance of tackling; Marek.Brown and Carl Russ raced in pursuit of Marek until R-ss. dove and missed, but brushed _ against Brown, t h r o w i n g him Wise. . MICH. First Downs 11 2' Rushes-yards 32-109 79-415 Passing yards 126 10E Passes 7-19-0 5-11-1 Fumbles-lost 2-4. 2-1 Penalties-yards 2-20 5-25 LINESCORE: WISCONSIN 0 0 0 6-6 MICHIGAN 7 14 7 7-35 SCORING PLAYS: Michigan: seal, 46-yard pass fron' Franklin; (Lantry ick) Michigan: Chapman, 3-yard run; (an- try kick) Michigan: Franklin, 1-yard run;. (Lan- try kfek) Michigan: Heater, 4-yard run; (Lan- try kick) Wisconsin: Marek, 65-yard deflected pass from Bohlig; (kick failEd) Michigan: Bell, 7-yard run; (Lantry kick) RUSHING 5 I$ I 1 5 Big Blue blasts Bucky Badger WISCONSIN Bohlig MICHIGAN Franklin Cipa WISCONSIN Marek Pollard Sanger Novak D. Johnson MICHIGAN Seal Johnson PASSING att. comp. int. yds. 19 7 0 126 9 2 RECEIVING 5 1 0 4 46 0 no. yds. long 2'* 65 65 1 2Daily Photo by STEVE KAGAN 1 91 21 GIL CHAPMAN rushed for 92 yarns and a TD in less than half of 1 6 6 yesterday's win over the Baigers. Here the speedy tailback is 2 63 46 brought down by the ankles courtesy of Wisconsin tackle Jim 3 45 19 Schymanski (74) after a short gain. 1 :. ::;:. WISCONSIN Marek Bohlig Starch Washington Pollard D. Johnson Kopina MICHIGAN Chapman Shuttlesworth Heater Franklin Bell Thornbladh Cipa . fei 0 ~ ByDAD att. 9 6 7 3 3 1 1 yds. 33 28 25 14 10 2 -2 avg. 3.4 4.7 3.6 4.1 3.3 2.0 -2.0 5.1 3.7 5.2 5.1 7.3 10.1 SBo/s fr 18 92 19 70 11 65 11 63 12 61 6 44 2 20 I 7 9 :; 7 t 3 D r : .; I s i:i:f I : f i.i 1 ; 'I j r I :iri i :2 ;2 About the nicest t h i n g s to befall Bucky Badger yesterday was the joyride up the stands Michigan fans gave him during half- time proceedings. During the four quarters of football he was kicked up and down the field. The Wisconsin mascot claimed he rather enjoyed the view he got of Michigan Stadium. The Wisconsin coach did not. A SAD John Jardine, the man who has led Bucky into a semblence of football respect- ability with near upsets over powerhouses the likes of Colorado and Nebraska, and a fine showing versus Ohio State this season, had little to say about the debacle that had un- folded before the eyes of 87,723 homecomers. "They out executed us," he told newsmen in the crowded and noisy Michigan Stadium runway, disappointment etched all over his tightly compact features. "We were hurt at a couple of positions, but they had an excellent defense. They shut us off. They surprised me by throwing so well." THAT WAS about all anybody could get out of Jardine, ,who did his best to back every- body out of the locker room. There was no upset in the making yesterday, there wasn't even a hint of it. Those tough Badgers who were to give the Wolverines a tough fight of it just proved to be as congenial as kissing cousins. But.the questions would not go away. And the man decked out in Wisconsin Cardinal stood and took it. Soon the inevitable came: "Now that you've played Ohio State and Michigan, ~istra tion "Well," said Honest John, "he and Greene (Ohio .State's Cornelius Greene) are very good. Franklin throws well. Yes, I think I could say that." Across the hall in the slightly more spacious quarters, the Maize and Blue were figuring out the positive side of the dogfight that wasn't. The running game on which Wisconsin had built its ' reputation didn't materialize. The Michigan -defensive unit, which is becoming more cohesive with each passing week. saw to that. "They weren't as tough as the film indi- cated," Gallagher said. "Their guard was a replacement and I could tell I had him licked. Their center was supposed to be real tough, but Donnie (middle guard Don Warner) said he could handle him okay. Once we knew that we knew they wouldn't score on us." IN FACT the only score on the Wolverines in 15 consecutive periods of play came on a deflection play that is illegal in high school, and in the pros, but is peachy keen in the college game. It was the only Wisconsin thrust "That was the only way they were going to score on us," Gallagher said. "They just couldn't move the football any other way." Bo- Schembechler noted the same thing, "I think I'll put in that pass play Wisconsin has. That is really a shame for our defense." Jardine, for his part, wasn't too concerned about the Wolverine defense scoreless skein. He was more concerned about the morale of his ball players. "WE HAD some tough ones,",he said, "but , u. b 06L : n" . . W' 'c . 4.. { : EIXJ 6. , . }b : ..5 -0dA}: } } 5,::; .... ... . 4 1 174. {. : u' ..:..A {.1:. a