THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, November 11, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, November11, 1913 0 Whew! overcome stubborn olverines fumbles, I , Illini, 21-6 I (Continued from Page 1) THE STUNNED Wolverines fin- first Illini drive and three-pointer, ally got on the board after a Walt but that ho-hum attitude changed Williamson recovery of a Perrin quickly after the inspired visitors fumble negated a Franklin bobble reeled off three quick first downs a play earlier. to the Michigan 21. Junior tailback Gil Chapman, Even the staid Michigan March- making his first appearance after ing Band sensed things were not pulling a groin muscle three weeks progressing "According to Hoyle", ago, sparked the short 32 yard as they broke into a spirited ren- march, capped by an Ed Shuttles- dition of the "The Victors", usually worth one-yard crunch behind Seal reserved only for touchdowns. and tackle Curtis Tucker. WITH FOURTH down and a yard The Wolverines, notably guard on the Blue 12, Blackman elected Mike Hoban, had been confused by to go with the reliable Beaver again the shifting, stunting Illini defense despite the wishes of his quarter- during the first half, but they back. straightened things out at half- "I'm not saying it was a bad de- time and drove 62 yards in eight cision, but I felt we had the mo- plays with the second half kickoff. mentum to score a touchdown," CHAPMAN GOT the score on a Hollenbach stated later. finely - executed pitch from Frank- Beaver's 29-yard boot hit the left lin, cutting inside Shuttlesworth's upright, bounded off the crossbar, leveling block and outracing three and fell through, giving the upstart Illini defensive backs to the flag. Illini a 6-0 cushion with five min- Nursing a 14-6 lead, Shuttles- utes before intermission. worth fumbled a series later and SUNDAY SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: MARC FELDMAN V Daily Photo by STEVE KAGAN DEFENSIVE END -Don Coleman (39) and tackle Doug Troszak give Illinois running back George Uremovich (29) a taste of the big Michi- gan defense in yesterday's 21-6 Wolverine triumph. - - Nine and oh with two to go TEN ROWS DEEP - Bob Heuer ----- - F,- "good, close, game" . t 0 ... good enough? THE SURFACE it was still another Michigan victory: A big win over "a darn good football team" as Bo Schem- becher called the Illini. Comments like, "good close game," "just the type of game we wanted," and "they tested us pretty good" rolled around the Michigan locker room after the game. But beneath the surface of a good, close game are factors that could bode ill for Michigan's final two (three?) games of the year. First and foremost in the minds of Schembechler and his charges was the fumble factor. The stats tell the story-six fumbles, four lost. Bo does not understand why his backs can't hold on to the football. "Hitting does not cause a fumble," he commented. "Carelessness causes fumbles." In nine games this year, the Wolverines have fumbled 29 times, losing 14. In 11 games last year, they fumbled only 22 times, losing 11. As Schembechler candidly admits, "These are not the best backs I've had in that respect (fumbling)." But "fumble" wasn't the only dirty word to rear its head in yesterday's aftermath. The defense, in Bo's words, "bent as much as I've ever seen 'em bend, but they didn't break." The defenders sparkled in the second half, holding the Illini to only 52 total yards and stopping a drive inside their own ten yard line. But there were plenty of raised eyebrows in the first half as ' the lightly regarded Illinois attack ground up yardage at ten yards a crack. In the drive which ended in Dan Beaver's second field goal, consecutive Illini thrusts netted nine yards on a screen pass, ten on a completion over the middle and eight more off left tackle. Those kind of bends could put Michigan in deep trouble two weeks from now. Another defensive factor could give Michigan headaches, especially against Ohio State. Of the six touchdowns given up this year, four have been on "big plays." An interception return by Iowa, a 30-yard scoring pass in the Stanford game, a deflected pass where the defenders got in each other's way against Wiscon- sin, and a halfback pass at Minnesota. Call them flukes or accidents, but it's still six points, and the Buckeyes are known for coming up with the "fluke" play, witness Archie Griffin's 30 yard TD run in last year's heart- breaker. Without that, OSU's goalline stands would merely have kept the frosting off the cake. And speaking of frosting, where is the vaunted passing attack that Bo promised would augment the running game this year? Denny Franklin has proven his worth as a passer. But 11 attempts in the last two games (even if he completed nine of them) can hardly be considered adequate use of Franklin's arm. One can only hope that, as he did last year, Bo is saving his aerial barrage for the Buckeyes. And speaking of Buckeyes, is Michigan's preparation for the big one proceeding on schedule? In varying degrees, the Michigan players and their braintrust think it is. Right now Bo Schembechler is asking just two things: that the defense stay healthy and that the offensive start holding on to the football. Veteran assistant coach George Mans went a little further, addressing himself to the touchy subject of momentum. "The game today was good for us," said Mans. "We needed a close game to get the feel of playing under some pressure. But," he added, "it would be real nice if we could demolish Purdue next week." Franklin and guard Mike Hoban echoed Mans' sentiments. Speaking of the upcoming Boilermaker battle, Franklin said, "I think we need to put everything together." Hoban's "We don't want it this close next week" comment agreed. Said Gil Chapman: "We've been sort of inconsistent all year .. . but I think we're gonna reach our peak right on time." In terms of building pre-Ohio State momentum, the Wolverines peaked for their 1969 triumph over the Bucks by shellacking Illinois and Iowa 57-0 and 51-6 respectively. Preceding their 1970 loss at Columbus, the Illini and Hawks were again yipped, 42-0 and 55-0. Runrs qalf for NCAA meet By MARCIA MERKER figure out the problem because By producing its best overall per- Brown has never run two bad or formanc$ this season yesterday, mediocre races in a row. the Michigan cross-country team Jon Cross finished 49th at 31.03 qualified for the NCAA national and Dave Eddy 59th at 31.10. meet next weekend at Spokane, In the words of"coach Farmer, Washington. The question remains "So few rewards come to a cross-' whether Don Canham will send couitry man that the men who the team or not. qualify should be able to go." It Michigan has not been repre- will be interesting to note what sented as a team at the NCAA's Don Canham thinks of his cross- since at least 1954 when it last won country team. the Big Ten cross-country chain-------- pionship. If the squad does go, at least five of the harriers, chances are optimistic that the Wolverines will place near fifteenth in the l In the case that Canham does not approve the expenditure, Bill Bolster will represent the Michigan By ROGER ROSSITER squad solely as he qualified in- special To The Daily dividually yesterday at the NCAAI Region IV finals. Bolster poured it MINNEAPOLIS - "We knew be- on in the last 300 yards to finish fore the game we had to win, and twentieth with a 30.25 clocking. we did it," gushed defenseman During the season, the four-year Tom Lindskog in the jubilantI veteran finished at best third man Michigan dressing room following for the Wolverines, the Wolverines' 4-3 hockey victory Eastern Michigan, led by Gordonover Minnesota last night. Minty's first place finish, won the For a while, it looked as thoughl meet with a total of 81 points. a carbon-copy of Friday night's Right behind were Big Ten Cham- overtime tie was in the making. pion Indiana at 123, Wisconsin at' Michigan again jumped off to an 125, Michigan State with 165, and early lead, only to have the Go-j tied for fifth place, and the final phers come storming back in the qualifying berth, were Michigan third period. and Minnesota with 168 points. But the Michigan defense, In the individual awards, behind Minty were Pat Mandara of In- diana, Craig Virgin and Mike Dur-' l m ill kin, both of Illinois. The harriersS competed in a field of 23 teams, all striving to qualify for the NCAA MICHIGAN 2 2 0--4 Championship meet November 19 Minnesota 0 1 2-3 TEAM ILL. MICH. Rushes-yards 43-135 62-295 Chapman First downs 10 18 Heater Passing yards 84 36 Shuttlesw Passes 8-20-1 3-4-0 Thornbla Punts-avg. 6-36.3 4-36.2 Seal Fumbles-lost 2-1 6-4 Franklin Penalties-yards 4-40 4-35 Bell Illinois 0 6 0 0- 6 Haslerig MICHIGAN 0 7 7 7-21 SCORING PLAYS: Illinois-Beaver, 41-yard field goal Illinois-Beaver, 29-yard field goal Michigan-Shuttlesworth, 1 - yard run Hollenba (Lantry kick) Michigan-Chapman, 33 - yard run Franklin (Lantry kick) Michigan-Seal, 20-yard run on lateral recovery (Lantry kick) RUSHING fILLINOIS Roberson MICHIGAN worth dh cel 1 1 1 1 ,PASSING ILLINOIS a MICHIGAN RECEIVING ILLINOIS MICHIGAN 6 103 1 76 4 59 5 23 1 20 1 11 3 2 1 1 6.4 6.9 4.2 4.6 20.0 1.0 0.7 1.0 yds. 84 36 avg. 14.3 6.8 14.0 15.5 5.0 tt. comp.; 20 8 4 3 no. yds. 3 43 4 27 1 14 2 31 1 5 the Illini's Greg Colby recovered on the Wolverine 25. BUT A keyed - up Michigan de- fensive corps, ignited by reserve tackle Jeff Perlinger, forced Hol- lenbach into a third down inter- ception (Carl Russ) and the threat was ended. Six plays later, however, the Blue defense was on the field again, following a Chapman fum- ble on the 'M' 29. All the Illini could muster though, was a 56-yard field goal stab by Beaver, which tell ten yards short. SEAL'S HEROICS came an ex- change of punts later, with Michi- gan perched on the Illinois 20. The play started out like a hun- dred other Michigan option rights, until outside linebacker Chuck Ko- gut bushwhacked the surprised Franklin. The free ball went bounding into the open, a massive herd in hot pursuit. But Seal got their first, scooped it up, and thundered down the wes- tern sideline untouched to paydirt. "AFTER I PICKED up the ball all I could see was open space," a happy Seal joked afterward. Starting tailback Chuck Heater, who showed flashes of brilliance early, fumbled again late in the game to join the ranks of the but- terfingered. I Uremovich Perrin Greene Hollenbach att. yds. 23 79 14 61 2 8 4 -13 avg. 3.6 4.4 4.0 -3.2 Greene Uremovich Haslerig Seal "I'd appreciate it very much if we held on to the football," a sar- castic Schembechler commented. "I've been too nice a guy, but I'm going to start getting pretty damn tough now." AS FOR the inevitable compari- sons with Ohio State, Illinois of- fensive tackle Gerry Sullivan add- ed his thoughts to the expanding fire. "Ohio State has better lineback- ers," he said. "Strinko is very good, but Gradishar (Randy), Mid- dleton (Rick), and Koegel (Vic) are all better." Well, Gerry, we'll all just have to wait two weeks to see about that. Po loren captureU crown By LESLIE RIESTER "It's been a long time coming." No matter who you talked to on Michigan's water polo team, that was the answer you'd get. It had been a long time since anyt idy could swim by Indiana, but Michigan did it in convincing fashion this weekend to capture the Midwest Water Polo Con- ference championship, beating Loyola 11-5 in the clincher. After downing the Hoosiers 13-6 in the afternoon contest, Michi- gan took on Loyola for the cham- pionship. Loyola started fast, scoring two quick goals early in the first period. Michigan then called a time out. "I wanted to calm them down," asserted Michigan coach John Pheney. "They were really ex- cited-they wanted it so bad." The time out apparently helped as Michigan came back to tally three times in the next two min- utes. Seniors Chris Hansen, Stuart Isaac and sophomore Rich Yawitz pumped in goals to put the Wolverines ahead for good. Yawitz led Michigan with four goals followed by the Bauer brothers, Pat and Joe, with two apiece. Goalie Jim Firestone played a good game but had con- siderable help from his fine de- fense, led by Joe Bauer and Paul Fairman. I 0 J rs spearhe bie Mo nesota a vital Moore al throu edge Minnesota eaded by goaltender Rob- Dore, choked off the Min- attack and chalked up road victory. was absolutely sensation-I ghout the contest, leaping, ception of the third period. Speedy Mike Polich found himself all alone in front of the Michigan goal for an easy tap-in after the puck took a crazy hop off the boards and landed right in front of him. i t t E in Spokane, Washington. The Michigan freshman Greg Meyer finished 22nd just one sec- ond behind Bolster. Keith Brown took 25th at 30.32. Leading the' harriers all last year and most of this, Brown has now run two me- diocre, for him, races and unfor- tunately they were both in cham- pionship meets. Neither coach Dixon Farmer nor Brown can I'~CIoit FA GRIDDE PICKINGS Michigan 21, Illinois 6 Ohio State 35, Michigan State 0 Minnesota 34, Purdue 7 wisconsin 35, Iowa 7 Northwestern 21, Indiana 20 Oklahoma 31, Missouri 3 Nebraska 31, Iowa State 7 Miami (Ohio) 20, Kent State 10 Kansas 17, Colorado 15 Penn State 35, North Carolina 29 Southern California 27, Stanford 26 Ohio University 14, Cincinnati 8 Brown 17, Cornell 7 Florida 11, Georgia 10' Temple 43, Rhode Island 0 Boston College 25, west Virginia 13 Rice 17, Arkansas 7 Air Force 31, Rutgers 14 Slippery Rock 21, Clarion College 6 Bowling Green 31, Eastern Michigan 7 OTHER SCORES UCLA 27, Oregon 7 Notre Dame 31, Pittsburgh 10 Texas 42, Baylor 6 Texas Tech 24, Texas Christian 10 Arizona 24, Brigham Young 10 Dartmouth 24, Columbia 6 Harvard 19, Princeton 14 Miami (Fla.) 19, Army 7 Yale 24, Pennsylvania 21 Arizona State 47, Wyoming 0E Utah 36, New Mexico 35 Auburn 31, Miss. State 17 Georgia Tech 36, Virginia Mi. 7 Grambling 32, Norfolk State 6 Southern Illinois 37, Drake 20 Colgate 49. William and Mary 42 Montana 10, Weber State 0 North Dakota 41, Montana St. 30 western Mich. 30. Ball State 13 FIRST PERIOD SCORING: 1. Mi-Trudeau (Moretto, Falconer) 12:09; 2. Mi-T. Lindskog (Hughes, Manery) 19:32 (power play). PENALTIES: 1. Mi-Natale (holding) 4:27; 2. Mn-Matschke (holding) 13:06; 3. Mi-Hughes (roughing) 15:00; Mn- Polich (roughing); 5. Mn - Pertich (hooking) 19:13. SECOND PERIOD SCORING: 3. Mi-Werner (unassist- ed) 9:04; 4. Mn-B. Carison (Sheridan, Matchke 12:33; 5. Mi-Palmer (Moretto, Morrison) 13:33. PENALTIES: 6. Mi-Natale (elbowing) 2:57; 7. Mn-Morrow (holding) 5:47; 8. Mi-Natale (interference) 9:29; 9. Ml- Shand (tripping-served by Morrison) 10:27; 10. Mi-Trudeau (tripping) 17:02. THIRD PERIOD SCORING: 6. Mn.-Polich (Cossalter) 2:00; 7. Mn.-R. Harris (J. Harris, Mi- cheletti) 13:55. PENALTIES: None. GOALIE SAVES darting and diving in front of 531 uartg au cvi~ IIIIIIHL I ~ At 13: 55 Minnesota capitalized on Minnesota blasts while only al- a rare Michigan mistake to cut the lowing three to get by. deficit to a single goal. Michigan "Robbie was super tonight,'' forwards Angie Moretto and Gor- grinned elated Maize and Blue die Cullen collided in the Minne- coach Dan Farrell. sota zone and the Gophers quickly "We came in here hoping to get had a three-on-two break. Winger two of four points and we ended John Harris streaked down the up getting three. That just showsrghstrgad ed dpente the character this team has." right wing and fed a perfect cen- iniiaedtering pass to his brother Rob, Captain Randy Trudeau initiated who deftly planted the puck beyond the evening's scoring when he can- Moore. nonaded a long slap shot past Go-' pher netminder Bill Moen, who For the remainder of the game, could only wave futilely at the the Gophers buzzed around theI puck as it zipped into the twine. Michigan goal, throwing every- Keith Lindskog hit the score- thing they had into a final at- sheet next when his long drive - --fehe from the point hit a Goper e- GO fenseman's skate and deflected! O past Moen during a Michigan power play. Midway through the second per- iod, Franw Werner put the Wol- verines ahead 3-0, when he inter- cepted a clearing pass at the Min- nesota blue line, skated through By DAN BORUS two defensemen, and flicked the and CLARKE COGSDILL puck high in the net over Moen's Special To The DailyI shoulder. COLUMBUS - It took Woody Hayes a record one hour and ten Minnesota came back when minutes to meet the press after Bruce Carlson notched a goal just yesterday's final gun. It took his seconds after Michigan had suc- first-ranked Buckeyes just two min- cessfully killed off a two-man dis- utes to obliterate the Michigan advantage. .State Spartans. But the Wolverines came right Ohio State's defense allowed the back one minute later to restore floundering Spartans just four firstj its three-goal lead. Rookie blue- downs. Meanwhile, Neal Colziel liner Rob Palmer uncorked a netted 178 yards and one touch- low drive from the right point down on nine punt returns as the that sailed unmolested through a Scarlet and Grey enjoyed a ho-1 maze of players into the Min- hum 35-0 blitz. nesota net. "We didn't have a chance withI Just as the night before, Minne- that kicking game," MSU mentor sota struck back quickly at the in- Denny Stolz said after the game. tempt to pull even and force an- other overtime encounter. But the Michigan defense rose to the occasion and sent Minnesota to the showers unvictorious for the fourth straight time in WCHA action.j "They wanted the game more than we did," muttered the en- raged Minnesota coach H e r b Brooks. "We lost to a hungrier hoc- key club." "The victory was a tremendous moral boost for our team," Far- rell commented. "Now we know what we can do-we just have to go out and do it." The win kept Michigan unbeaten with a 3-0-1 overall record, and gave the Wolverines three extreme- ly valuable points in the WCHA1 title chase. 'PHERS RI P PURDUE yes batter MIS U 1 / "A good team like that can beatI you so many ways and we were just worrying about getting the3 'snap back to Simpson. They're really quick." After a Cornelius Greene pseudo- pass was intercepted at the goal line, the OSU defense held. Spar- tan punter Bill Simpson flicked the ball to Colzie, who sped 46 yards to the MSU 26. Then it was' six plays to paydirt and a 7-0 Buck lead. The Woodymen's s e c o n d TD- came as a direct result of a 34- yard Archie Griffin sweep. Mixing I a variety of running plays, a la the, 1971 Wolverines, the Bucks tookI five plays to push the ball in forj 34-7 Big Ten victory yesterday. G o p h e r speedster Rick Up- church, subbing at fullback for the injured John King, ran and passed for 124 yards in the first quarter. Upchurch galloped 18 yards around right end on Minnesota's first play from scrimmage, and eight plays later, quarterback John Lawing walked in from the one giving the Gophers a 7-0 lead. Purdue then drove to the Gopher 16 where freshman sensation John Northington fumbled for the sec- ond time in the quarter. Upchurch went to work again for the Go- phers racing 61 yards on a straight dive play to set up Steve Gold- berg's first of two field goals, a 32 yarder. In other Big Ten action, North- western nipped Indiana 21-20, and Wisconsin topped winless Iowa, 31-7. Moore (MICH.) Moend(Minn.) Attendance: 3.072 14 18 18 50 15 10 7 32 a score. Fullback Bruce Elia dis- l appeared over right tackle and .:; }the referees alleged he scored. Ohio State's fulminant defense,, S. led by legitimate Heisman Trophy candidate Randy Gradishar at line- backer and middle guard Arnold Jones, was never seriously threat- ened. The Spartans, quarterback- ' ed by literally-in-over-his-head Ty- rone Willingham (pressed into service by last week's injury to Charlie Baggett) could neither penetrate the trenches nor bypass the OSU linebackers'pursuit. Thuis, the Spartans were forced1 into frequent aunt situations which1 egrentually proved fatil. Simpson . :knocked another line drive in the F second quarter to Col7ie, who took , to the west sidelines and scooted 431 yards for the Buckeyes' next score. "Except for the passing game," ::H1Tec whisnererI "we werenaef- mammmm Big Standi ren ings MICHIGAN Ohio State Minnesota Illinois Purdue Northwestern Wisconsin Mich. State Indiana Iowa W 6 -6 4 4 3 3 2 2 0 0 L 0 0 2 2 3 3 4 4 6 6 T 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 PF 291 242 155 105 110 119 85 44 64 75 PA 39 14 166 81 105 178 108 93 190 276 .:...:.a r. b::zSii ::2ii.:::: :iS:>: :.:..,c . >a....::.U.:;: : U::.i:. YESTERDAY'S RF.SUI.TS