Wednesday, November 21, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Ihigan set f An =AH he aa special a Fhanksglving treaT Nov 22-23-24 Thurs-Fri-Sat ESTHER PHILL Woody's boys last, toughest season foe }. , f -3 By BOB McGINN and All-American right tackle John Five years ago Woody Hayes Hicks, who destroyed Michigan's walloped his way into Michigan all-league Fred Grambau a year Stadium with a team people ago. likened to the Minnesota Vikings. This time it'llbe eitherasenior Michigan won, 24-12. Doug Troszak or junior Jeff Per- Saturday afternoon the "Fat linger, depending on Troszak's Man" will again lead his Ohio State sore shoulder, who will get the call Buckeyes, an assemblage that he opposite Hicks, and the success has called "his finest team in 23 they and middleguards Tim Davis years," onto the floor of the "Big and Don Warner have could likely House." tell the story. And some three hours later the Linebacker Steve Strinko must throng of over 104,000 and the tele- play his best game if the Wolver- vision and radio audience which ines hope to contain that awesome should reach nearly 25 million will Buck ground game. know who the Big Ten champion IT'SGE RAL coeddta is who will make the trip to the if Ohio State is forced to the air Rose Bowl,, and even, perhaps, the ball game is over. Greene ho he atioa hampo doesn't pssess"a strong arm, and he isn't a very accurate (37 per FOR THE TEAM that loses Sat- cent completion average), either. urday their football season will Hare would likely replace him in have been a complete failure, even a desperation situation. thought both the Buckeyes and the Nobody really knows if Schem- Wolverines have steamrolled all of bechler will turn Dennis Franklin's their previous opponents. rair-arm loose as he did so imagi- Genn E Schembeciler and natively in Colimbus, but the feel- Wayn W.Haye hae cra'e in is that he may have to. Ohio monsters out of their football pro- State ranks first in the nation in grams, and only one item-victory points allowed-33, over one another-will satisfy their The Bucks gave up 171 points a win-glutted followers. year ago, and although Michigan There never was really much moved almost at will against them doubt that these two giants would they couldn't score inside the 10 have the brilliant seasons they have line. yard line. j had, especially after some coin- "We made a vow-not a goal, a mentator told his listeners that vow-that no one would stop us Ohio State would return 19 startersvth arninside the 10," S'hm- and Michigan 14 only minutes after bechler stated, "and so far, no one the Buckeyes had defeated Mich- has-nd they (Ohio State) won't ... igan 14-11 in Columbus last No- either." ' eiehber., vember. . The Wolverine offensive line has ..., ..:... And with the. . . ..ema.nin.g. . ..ht. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ."...": x::: F..:: .....' ea n the Tenmirein eh made great strides over the course ' r tamsmethioritehathasrenmbhof the campaign, and with fullback sae m dsicrity that has d-n b k Ed Shuttlesworth, along withtail- neither club had to work up much man (if he's ready), Michigan cer- of a sweat to march to Saturday's tainly has the capability of con- WOLVERINE QUARTERBACK DENNIS FRA showdown unscathed. trolling the ball. has still provided Michigan fans with some f But the feeling persists that the catch the Buckeyes of Ohio State in the game Saturday's game will be na- Buck defenders, led by All-Ameri- tionally telecast over ABC at can linebacker Randy Gradishar R;rATDXY IJ I 1ALE Dr 12:50 p.m. with the local outlet and tackle Pete Cusick, won't R ALRJ l E UUA LED: being Channel 7 in Detroit. The bend unless they are forced to game will be broadcast over think pass, too. E /Etr T3 T COMING Nov 24.30 &Dec 1 Eddie Harris ;,Y Daily Photo by TERRY McCARTHY NKLIN speeds through the Illini frontline. Franklin, though injured much of the season, fine memories this season. Franklin might have to open up a bit if the Wolverines hope to you've all been waiting for. All the -marbles 2333 E. STADIUM BLVD. below the Frontier Restaurant (near Washttnaw) Ann Arbor AMPLE FREE PARKING Call 663-9165for information MAlusical oasis a .1 >I Todays liveliest issues and ideas... ..8 brought to you in paperback FIRE IN. THE LAKE The Viet- BEYOND THEOLOGY The + namese and the Americans in Art of Godmanship by ALAN Vietnam by FRANCES FITZ- WATTS. An irreverent yet lov- GERALD. One of the rriost ing look at the One who wears highly praised titles of the the mask of God. "This witty year, this best seller won the little book is a large theological Pulitzer Prize, the National event, an Olympian laugh." 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It will game will be decided by the kick-I V also be delay-telecast via Cable ing game in the fourth quarter" Channel 3 Saturday night at analysis, but Schembechler himself By J. PATRICK CHOWN. 11:00 p.m., Sunday night at has said much the same thin;. 8:00 p.m. and again Wednesday Michigan probably has the edge THE BIGGEST and best college night at 8:30 p.m. in placekickers with Mike Lan:ry grid rivalry is not Army-Navy, (7 'of 10 field goals) over Blair UCLA - USC, or Nebraska - Okla- You just have to believe that Conway (4 of 9), but Buckeye homa. The color and the pageantry both clubs will play their absolute punter Tom Skladany is figured the and all the marbles are going to best Saturday-each has a coach equal of Michigan's Barry Dot- be right here in Ann Arbor when who can manipulate p 1 a y e r s' zauer. 104,000 screaming partisans watch 01a b ltn~ fn t hf0, i _ ti. i SPORTS Go Blue NIGHT EDITORS: DAN BORUS and JOEL GREER Many of the games were mem)- rable ones; among them the 1949 fiercely fought tie, the 1954-55 Vic- tories of the Hopalong Cassidy teams. But probably the most un- usual of the entire series was the 1950 "Snow Bowl" which current Wolverine wolfman Don Dufek's father played in. At the game time for the 1950 clash, one foot of blowing snow was on the ground and a blizzard was raging. It was probably a bet- ter day for skiing as Michigan couldn't muster one first down the entire game, while Ohio State eked out only three. the rresahl tnre met te -i psyches, and neither will nave a ;kyL.'A.LdU. .L UCA111CUL i11 hard time doing it. BOTH TEAMS HAVE dangerous movable object. "We'll have to play our best kick returners, but Ohio State de- This is the sixteenth time that game of the season-by far-to fensive back Neal Colzie is prob- the final clash has been for the win," Schembechler told members ably the one man on the field who loop championship and Rose Bowl of the "M Club" Monday. "But could turn the game around. He's berth. Michigan holds an overall don't get down, because I think we returned two punts for toucadowns, edge in the series with 39 wins and can do it." besides averaging almost 13 yards four ties to Ohio State's 26 wins. Bo is a shrewd man who is an; a return. But the Buckeyes have won eight eternal pessimist when it comes But Colzie, or for that matter of the title deciding games to to assessing his chances, but you Archie Griffin Cornelius Greene, Michigan's six, with one tie cam- just have to believe he means it Ed Shuttlesworth, or Dennis Frank- ing in the 1949 classic. when he says, "My main concern lin, won't go anywhere unless is how the defense does the job." someone is blocking. That, together The rivalry has been intensified with tackling, is really what the in recent years as four of the last OHIO STATE HAS come itmost game Saturday is going to be five season enders have decided exclusively by land all year, and about. the conference championship re- with multi-talented sophomore tail- Ohio State has the edge on paper sut. back Archie Griffin and lightni 'g- and i the eyes of most football It all started in 1968 when like quarterback Cornelius Greene "authorities," but revenge, emo- fourth rated and 8-1 Michigan got running behind a multi-muscled tion, and a wild-eyed home crowd clobbered 50-14 by the Rex Kern offensive line you, cansee why. could spell 1969 all over again, a led "super sophomores," wa went Grff ns 2lne you cn nice way to celebrate the 75th an-su6syh m r ,"wpe t niversary of the composition of the on to the national championship. Brockington's season rushing rec- "Victors." Noteworthy was Woody Hayes' de- -i cision to go for two late in the times and moved the ball to the game which proved to be Bump one, although he swears he was in Elliot's swan song. the endzone on the second try. Bo The Wolverines were ripe for re- Schembechler elected to go for venge in Ann Arbor the next year. the win instead of tie, and Denny And they got it. Swiping six Rex Franklin was stopped on a quarter- Kern aerials and holding the cocky back sneak on fourth down. juniors scoreless in the second half r Y S, ti e. ord,' and Greene has given te' Bucks the option threat that senior Greg Hare didn't present a year ago. "Griffin is just a super, super tailback," o f f e r e d Michigan's Chuck Heater, "and while I think we are better off at the position than they are, they have one man who is unreal." Blocking for Griffin, Greene, plunging fullback Bruce Elia, and seldom-used wingback Brian Bas- chnagel is a line that is strong and agile.x The Bucks like to run Griffin be- hind junior right guard Dick Mack RANKED FIRST: Icers host Badgers By ROGER ROSSITER For those of you who think Ohio State's football team is the only nationally top ranked ath- letic aggregation invading Ann Arbor this weekend, you've got another think coming! The Wis- consin Badger's hockey squad is THE LINEUPS (27) (78) (61) (50) (65) (73) (83) ( 9) (31) (24) (43) MICHIGAN Keith Johnson (170) Curtis Tucker (240) Mike Hoban (232) Dennis Franks (223) Dave Metz (235) Jim Coode (245) Paul Seal (218) Dennis Franklin (180) Ed Shuttlesworth (225) Gil Chapman Clint Haslerig (194) Offens SE LT LG C RG RT TE (B FB TB W B Defens OHIO STATE (82) Dave Hazel (72) Kurt Schumacher (63) Jim Kregel (52) Steve Myers (69) Dick Mack (74) John Hicks (80) Fred Pagac ( 7) Cornelius Greene (36) Bruce Elia (45) Archie Griffin (48) Brian Baschnagel +P also ranked number one, and it also will be storming Arbor town. The Badgers, last year's NCAA champion, sport an impressive 7-1 over-all record which w i l1 likely be 8-1 after last night's visit by Wisconsin-Superior. "This is a tough assignment," understated Michigan coach Dan Farrell, yesterday. "It'll take a superior effort on our part to knock them off." Wisconsin's main strength lies right up the middle in its cent- ers and goaltending. Pivotmen Dean Talafous, Dennis Olmstead, and Gary Winchester rank first, second and fourth in team scor- ing with 13, 12 and 10 points, re- spectively. Olmstead tops the goal scoring list with eight. Badger goalie Don Perkins, who shared Wisconsin's netmind- ing chores last year with since graduated Jim Makey, has hand- led the job in seven of eight starts to date with a stellar 3.0 goals against average. Sophomore Don Fardig paces i !t I a I i of play, the Wolverines marched convincingly to a 24-12 victory in a game still talked about. yJAYES WAS SO shaken that he talked to the press for only 20 seconds to admit that the Bucks were outfought and outhit. They weren't the next year as the Scarlet and Grey really took{ it to the Maize andrBlue by a 20-7 count. In 1971 the Wolvernes clinched a bowl trip with a victory overI Purdue, but had a score to settle the wollowing week and whipped the Buckeyes 10-7, sending Woody into a yard-marker destruction frenzy and the Wolverines to an: undefeated regular season record.; Last year's loss is still vivid in most fan's minds, as visions of Michigan stopped inside the 10- yard line time after time are con- nected with the 14-11 heartbreaker. Michigan had completely domi- nated the game. They piled up 344 yards to Ohio State's 192. This came despite the fact Ed Shuttles- worth was injured early in the game, and Gil Chapman was also sitting on the sidelines; two men who could dim some of that frus- tration with good performances Saturday. But the all important scoreboard proved to be the Wolverines' an- doing as they could not push the ball into the endzone. Late in the game Michigan got a first down on the Buckeyes' five-yard line. Harry Banks got the call hree The Showdowns 1926-M 17, OSU 6 1931-OSU 20, M 7 1932-M 14, OSU 0 1933-M 13, OSU 0 SHE HOME FACTOR seems to1 have been a dominant factor in the recent games. The Buckeyes haven't won in Ann Arbor since' 1967, and the Wolverines haven't emerged triumphant from Colum-' bus since 1966. FXL,0-10, canned IOWA CITY, Iowa (R) - Uni- versity of I o w a football coach Frank Lauterbur was fired yester- day after he refused to make changes in his coaching staff. Lauterbur announced the firing at his weekly football luncheon. The third-year Hawkeye coach, however, will direct the Iowa team in its final game Saturday against Michigan State. Lauterbur, 48, becomes the third Iowa football coach to step down under pressure in the last 13 years. He had two years to run on a five-' year contract. The Iowa Board in Control of Athletics met yesterday to dis- cuss a successor and receive an appraisal of the situation, Ath- letic Director Chalmers "Bump" Elliott said. He said the group probably would take no formal action on a successor until its regular meet- ing next week. "If you are going to coach a football team, the coach has to be in charge," Lauterbur said. He took the job in late 1970. His three-year record is 4-27-1 and the 1973 team is winless in 10 games going into Saturday's home fin- Michigan managed a mere 26 yards total offense. Based on these statistics one would predict a 0-0 tie. Actually the score was 9-3 in favor of Michigan. The Blue de- fense blocked one punt in the end- zone for a TD and added a safety. The Wolverines were on their way to the Rose Bowl with a 5-3-1 rec- ord and a ninth ranking in the nation. I _________________________ 1 r __ SPORT COATS SOLIDS-PATTERNS WOOLS AND KNITS $37.95 to $75.00 Great Selection of SLACKS KNITS " CORDUROY * DENIM from X10:00 Come in-Look around3