Tuesday, November 13, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven One da U I COLUMBUS By DAN BORUS They really believe in football down here. Maybe even more than they believe in God and country. While the record throng of 88,000 plus pour- ed across an intra-mural field to the giant horse shoe alongside the Olentangy, the band began to play the National Anthem. Half of the spectators stopped to listen and watch the flag; the others continued streaming for Ohio Stadium masoleum. They buried Michigan State inside last Saturday. The victims never really had a chance. It was a sweet revenge for the Bucks who have lost to the Spartans two years in a row. IN THiE STANDS, the faithful mixed cheers with obscene epithets about the state of Michigan. For those interested, the epithets rhymed with Bucks. The Scarlet and Grey partisans love the game so much that they even stick around to see what the reserves do. If Woody would only pass. * * * Dawn here they're kind of used to it. They expect it from the old man. But deadline timhe was rearing its ugly head and this hour and .ten minutes after the game was a record everi for Woody. Finally into this locker room he strode, his scarlet and grey tie unknotted and his slightly longer locks combed straight back. * "Sorry, gentlemen, sorry to keep you wait- ing," he said in a voice barely audible in the back of the room, "but I couldn't help myself. I was with some recruits and you guys can't ever score a touchdown for us., inUQI You can give us gi."Polite laughter. That's the way it is when you're number one in the nation, when you've allowed your Saturday opponent just four first downs, and you're Woody Hayes, philosopher extraordi- naire. MAKE NO MISTAKE about it, Ohio State is a formidable, formidable football team. And Hayes coaches them well. With the ex- ception of passing, this teams does it all and may just be a shade better than those Rex Kern-led super squads of '68-70. When you're coach of the best in the coun- try, you've got to be able to be conversant on just about anything and every post-game interview/celebration you're supposed to let a few ,pearls of wisdom drop forth for the benefit of those working stiffs of the fourth estate. For a moment there it looked like this year' s version of number one football coach- down homne thinker had mellowed a wee bit from the enraged mentor who decided Michi- gan Stadium needed a little re-decorating the last time he visited Ann Arbor. Hayes spent the first portion of the press conference doing something he usually does- n't do - "bragging on his players." In that same very precise manner and tone, Hayes went on all about those Buck super-studs- "Colzie (punt returner Neal Colzie who broke open the game) - he's really something isn't he." "BY GOLLY," HAYES pointed out for all those reporters who didn't read the statistics sheet, "Archie Griffin got his one hundred yards." "He would have hit two hundred too, but no use taking any chance. This is fairly an- PASS GOPHIE Blu MATO ES, By ROGER ROSSI' LEASE T e DilySrs **--1 _The air was filled wi uimb Us cient history," Hayes went on, "but in 1951 Wisconsin had that super backfield with Ameche and they had this quarterback Co- atta, who was quite good. Well, he broke his leg that spring sliding into second base with his team ahead 10-0. I'ye never forgotten that. Neither will the reporters. ~ But after that the fun ended. Asked whe- ther or not he would put something new into the offense for hapless Iowa, Hayes wvent on to explain, yes, but not to reporters. "There are many, many disruptive forces in this world-and I, am going to fight them," Hayes added, thumping his fist on the wooden bench and looking northward for emnn1hasis. AMONG THOSE DISRUPTIVE forces, Hayes included sportswriters who cover 0th- er teams "who would love to get something knocking you in the paper." A couple of more football questions and the show was over. S* * Outside the Buckeye lockerloom a group of teenage girls yelled for the autographs of s Buckeye stars. Cornelius Greene, who runs the ba'l1 but can't really throw, walks out in his black cape with red trim and obliges i then, THE CROWD WANTS a little more. Stop- ping a Michigan reporter, they ask for his autograph, mistaking him for one of the S"orlet and Grey. The reporter grinned and signed "Tom Harmon." The girl was not rnlrsed. "I don't give a damn about the whole state Doily F of Michigan," she said. Neither does the old man and, you can bet, he's going to fight it. O B CO U Tu O ~R T EST: eicemen show promise YOU CAN EAT C U Mounds of Spaghetti, Coleslaw, Garlic Bread EVERY WEDNESDAY 4:30-10 P.M. 124Porl--483-1771-(Ypi$ I Coc 1)Uonova.n I TO~ P ___________Bob McGinn - Michigan-Illinois.e U - TER th tension liv * S in te vsitrs'dressing room at Williams Arena Friday night as the Michigan Wolverines prepared for the opening game of the West- ern Collegiate Hockey Association season. Everyone had something to prove.. For the veterans, the ghost of NIGHT EDITOR: GEORGE HASTINGS * *a real foot bal game FUNNY THING happened Saturday to those who made the A trek up to the place Bo Schembechler likes to call "The Big House"-they saw a real football game.t n mke You know, a game in which two teams, not on, tmase mistakes, score points, and have a shot at winning. One of those games that they play out each weekend at the Evanstons,ArWest Lafayettes, and Madisons, but that never seem to hit Ann Aror. Imagine, somebody actually wearing a white shirt and kicking a field goal, running for 15 yards, or tackling a quarterback with a winged helmet behind the line. That kind of thing was supposed to go on only when the other o d guys were Purdue Boilermakers or Ohio State Buckeyes, not Illinois Fighting Illini. But go on it did, and for every one of the 76,000 fans who satei on theo weird proceedings there ngust have been a like The act aretha Miciga triled for the first time all seaso (6-0)s fumbled the ball six times, losing four; and didn't cement the 21-6 triumph until deep into the fourth stanza. Now depending on your point of view, Illinois either was a whole helluva lot better than they were generally figured to be, or Michigan isn't all that it is cracked up to be. Te choice is yours. But the man who should really have the answers, Mr. Schembechler himself, chose a third tact when he broke bread with reporters yesterday afternoon. "You know, this kind of game might really have helped us," he said, sounding like a man with not a care in the world. "It was a good test. But other than the fumbles, we Soye inetthe edBo seemed genuinely happy about his tea's pla against the dogged Illini, even though that two | touichdown margin surely didn't help his alread fleig * dreams of a national championship-. And really, you sort of have to agree with the man, since the Illini are without a doubt the third best-team in the Big Ten-. It isn't that the league has shown much improvement, because it hasn't, but Coach Bob Blacksman's crew did win four loop contests and gave Ohio State a meager three point first half edge. Several weeks ago it appeared as if the traditional pre- Buckeye vigil, Purdue, would at least be more than the laugher a team torn by the graduation losses of All-Americans Otis Armstrong and Dave Butz, among 15 starters, will probably Ervx-Northwestern head man Alex Agase put together a sur- prisingly competitive unit, certainly not anything to write home about, but a force that could conceivably give Michigan a tussle at grass-surfaced Ross-Ade Stadium. That outlook all changed last week, as the injury-mangled Riveters fumbled eight times enroute to a humiliating 34-7 loss at Minneapolis. Schembechler knows that he must guard against that powerful urge to look two weeks ahead, and he'd be a fool not to after the scares (20-17, 9-6) Purdue has given him the past two seasons. "Everyone knows that they're not as physically strong as before," Bo said, "but they're still Purdue. And that means that they'll have some good talent who'll be fired up for us. They've got a good coach and a lot of pride." But even Bo Schembechler is human, and as he got up 'to leave with the "any more questions, men" routine, he added', Puordue isow things butoodytivHayes and Ohio State are What did happen on ' the Cahulawassee River? SHOWS S3,5,7 Like the best darkhorse possibility in the league. The second reality involves ex- perience. Can a teanm that has only two seniors and eight fresh- men in its regular line-up win consistently in the WCHA? In last weekend's performance against a veteran Minnesota team the freshmen were brilliant, par- ticularly the defensemen. But when the heat was on Saturday, Farrell was compelled to go with his veteran forwards and keep the frosh on the bench. Finally, it remains to be seen if Moore can stand the strain of playing every night in goal and remain sharp throughout an entire season. Granted, Moore did play virtually every minute of every game last year, but the situation was not the same. Farrell himself conceded earlier last week that, "Anyone can stand out there and make fifty saves a night (as Moore had to do last: year). What we need to find out now is if he can make the big saves that win games," which is something Moore seldom had the opportunity to prove. This week's home and home series with Michigan State will be the second major test for the youthful Wolverines in a season1 that will demand that they prove themselves over and over again each successive week. To date their grades have been excellentI but every week the exams get tougher. "I *tbt last season's horrendous 5-28-1 rec- -'| _______ ord still haunted their memories. gan did not surrender the tying For the eight freshmen, the time to goal after 1Minnesota rallied for i prove their heralded talents was at two early markers: 1) They I hand. ,stayed out of the penalty box for | Despite the previous weekend's the full twenty minutes, and 2) | relatively easy two-game sweep Robbie Moore played superthief, over Waterloo, no one could be robbing the Gophers of the ap- sure how far the Wolverines' re -parent equalizer on five separate building program had progress- (it asions. I ed. As Dan Farrell, Michigan's The three out of a possible four rookie coach, admitted earlier in 'points Michigan garnered in the: the afternoon at the Minnesota series matched its entire road out- Blue Line Luncheon, "We're not put from last year, and the pros- sure ho goodanWaterlsorereall pet fr more road triumphs lok good we are either. Tonight we'll hope a couple months ago. find ut."dut before visions of league titles I IC So econd A4venue I I U A NEW COMEDY BY' mentor Herb Brooks Farrel sdid dancing through their heads, the find out how good his team is and 1Wolverines must face a few stark the conclusion was an emphatic, realities. In the next month Michi- "very good indeed." gan must play, in order, Michigan The Wolverines came out like State, Wisconsin, Michigan Tech, gangbusters not only Friday night and Notre Dame. The last three are, but again on Saturday. They to- rated among the top four teams tally dominated the the first two in the country, and the Spartans, periods on each occasion, outplay- fresh from a weekend sweep over ing the Gophers in the area that the Irish in East Lansing, look wvas supposedly Minnesota's forte, -gg..:......amito esg defense. e The 4-4 overtime tie gave the The T p 0 Wolverines the confidence they so 3.Ohio state Top) i--v 1, vitally needed. True, they saw 2. Alabma (13) 8-0-0 1,068 their 4-2 two-period lead evaporate 3. Oklahoma (10) 7-0-1 966 under the heat of a late Gopher 4. MICHIGAN (1) 9-0-0 834 resurgence.. But both goals came16 en t te (1) 9-0-0 768 I on power plays after Blue defense- I7. Louisiana state 8-0-0 572 Smen Dave Shand and Greg Natale 8. UCLA 8-1-0 469 were whistled off the ice on inter- '. o.ralfornia 7-1- 407s I ference calls that Farrell termed 11. Texas 6-2-0 188 "questionable." 12. Texas Tech 8-1-0 176 Again Saturday night the Wol- 13. Arizona State 8--0 16 verines carried a lead, this time 15. Houston 8-1-0 112 41, into the third frame, and again 1.Tennessee --0 8 h18. Kansas 6-2-1 44 Bt for two big reasons Michi- 20. Noarolina St. 6-0 15 Griadde pickings Harriers stay home Michigan Athletic Director Don Canham announced yesterday that the athletic department would not send its cross-country team or individual qualifier, Bill Bolster, to the NCAA champion- ships this Saturday in Spokane, Washington. According to cross country mentor Dixon Farmer, Canham would not approve the expenditure because of the squad's some- what weak performance during the fall season. Michigan placed fifth in its NCAA regional last Saturday, in one of the top two regions in the country. The harriers also took third at the Big Ten meet ten days ago, while in dual meets they have only lost once. -MARCIA MERKER Ruggers romp The Michigan Rugby Club took command at the onset of its contest Sunday afternoon against U of M-Flint and powered to a 20-4 victory. The devastation began early in the first half as Bruce Kings- bury scored the opening try, recovering the ball in the endzone. The Wolverines scored later in the half on a quick burst by fly- half Zeke Pires followed by a successful conversion by Wes Lawton. -BRIAN DEMING Soccer club triumphs Steve Panaretos' goal was the deciding factor Sunday after- noon as the Michigan graduate soccer club defeated Central Michigan, 1-0, to capture the Dearborn Invitational. CHICAGO /P-The Chicago Cubs yesterday traded Glenn Beckert, a four-time National League All-Star second baseman, to the San Diego Padres for outfielder Jerry Morales. As part of the deal, the Cubs also assigned infielder Bob Fenwick from their Wichita farm club to San Diego's Hawaii farm club. RIINAL DIRECTION BY I M ike Nielhols NOV. 17-18 (Mats. and Eves.) POWER CENTER GOOD SEATS AVAILABLE FOR SAT. MATINEE Advnce tickets sales at PTP Tice fce , ich- igan League, 764-0450 I I Due to the fact that Ffats Strops and the rest of staff will probably be stoned out of their minds by night, those who wish to contest the FINAL Gridde their entries in by midnight next Tuesday, November the Daily sports next Wednesday picks should get 20. 1. Ohio State a MICHIGAN ( score) 2. Michigan State at Iowa 3. Purdue at Indiana 4. Illinois at Northwestern S. Wisconsin at Minnesota 6. UCLA at Southern Cal 7. Nebraska at Oklahoma 8B LS vs Albm (aei pick 10. Pittsburgh at Penn State 11. Harvard at Yale 12. Texas A&M at Texas 13. Tulane at Maryland iS Massachusetts at Boston College' 16. Colgate at Rutgers 17. Missouri at Kansas 18. Oregon State at Oregon 20. 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