Tuesday, November 27, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine Tuesday, November 27, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine : ose blossoms F - ..Seed4L C& . .Sirn 'The Big T'en will live . . . . to regret this decision' Dan Borus THE McDONALD'S of Ann Arbor, who offered to do so, doesn't have to send Woody Hayes to the Rose Bowl this year. The Big Ten Athletic Directors, in a capricious and vapid decision, relieved the burger chain of the responsibility. .... In their Sunday telephone whom saw the clash, decided .of the conference regulation, to send to that prestigious bowl. vote, the, directors, only three of that Ohio State is, in the words "the most representative team" Well, the directors' august and mighty opinion reeks. A gutty band of Wolverines streamed out of the tunnel to start the second half and took it to the number one team in the country and took it to them good. Trailing 10-0, the Wolverines never called it quits and proved to those who had given up hope that they are as good a football team as there is in the land. But the Athletic Directors didn't see that comeback. They didn't see the team effort. They didn't see the Buckeyes walk off knowing that, though the scoreboard didn't say so, they were beaten. They didn't hear the deafening silence in the Buck locker room after the tilt. No, those six who voted nay to Michigan's bid to go West, didn't know that the awesome Buckeyes didn't get a first down in the first quarter. No, those old coots didn't know that Larry Cipa has never lost a game in a Maize and Blue uniform. No, they can't measure the dedication the Wolverines put into this game. All these ADs know is Dennis Franklin broke his collar bone. They do not know how badly it is broken or how quickly it will heal. Dr. Gerry O'Conner, the team physician, does not yet know and not one Athletic Director took the trouble to phone him. Admittedly, Denny is the best quarterback in the league. He must be the best player as well-if his suspected absence would cause the best team in the league not to go West. But there are forty other Wolverines who put out supreme efforts last Saturday and are being punished because a bunch of old men don't want to see their conference go down to a fifth straight defeat in the New Year's showdown. So, what are they doing? They're sending a team, which admittedly can not pass, against a team which destroyed the UCLA running game. Consider this. Lantry hits one of those field goals-he didn't miss them by much-but Franklin is still hurt. Michigan goes West and there's no question, no fuss. That's the same team that outplayed Ohio Staturday and will sit out this New Year's wondering who had a grudge against them. The team that would be going West under those circum- stances (without Franklin) still would have the best fullback in the Big Ten, the best safety in the nation, the best defensive tackle, and the most under-rated linebackers. The team that's staying home has heart and character and an offensive line that moved "the best defense" in the country around as con- vincingly as an offensive line can move a defense around. But the athletic directors wouldn't know about that. They weren't watching-as if that would have made any dif- ference.- As Schembechler pointed out yesterday, "Ignorance played a part in the vote." The six-five, excepting Ohio State's Ed Weaver-have set a dangerous precedent. If injury to the opposition's key player can change the result of the vote, then there will be a lot of headhunting in the Big Ten next year and for many years to come. The five will have to answer for thoseinjuries. All the rationalizations, all the excuses about "over-all record" and "consistency" and "most representative team" ignore the ,real issue here-whether the Rose Bowl bid is a reward or a public relations gimmick. The Five, more concerned with image than with people, have answered loud and clear: "GIMMICK!" In doing so, they dissolved any semblance of principle in the league and have disillusioned those who naively assume some may exist. If you don't want to watch the Rose Bowl, you can always read Woody's next book, "You Win with Athletic Directors." Yesterday Schembechler, his voice choking, distraught with the raw deal his thirty seniors have been dealt, vowed to a cheering Quarterback Club luncheon, "The Big Ten will live to regret this decision!" He further asked Commissioner Wayne Duke (who, through his report of the injury and not of the game, may have in- fluenced the vote) and the Five to come before his team and say to Dennis Franklin-"You're not healthy enough to play in the Rose Bowl" and to Larry Cipa-"You can't quarterback a Big Ten team against Southern California in the Rose Bowl." They won't, of course. They don't call them the Little Five for nothing. By BOB HEUER It was a win, then a tie, then a loss. As Larry Gustafson knelt at the 34-yard line waiting for Mike Lantry's strong left foot to finish off Ohio State's desperate Buckeyes, victory seemed imminent. But as Lantry's field goal attempt went a few feet wide to the right, an anti- climactic, immensely satis- fying, yet agonizingly frus- trating 10-10 verdict flick- ered i n t h e scoreboard lights. Then came the shocker. Disregarding the edict of all who witnessed Saturday's titanic struggle, the Big Ten athletic di- rectors voted to send Ohio State, not Michigan to the Rose Bowl on INew Year's Day. Sunday's decision came as a cold slap in the face to the Wol- verines, not to mention the howl- ing Michigan partisans (an NC- AA record 105,233) who watched their team come from the brink of disaster to within inches of a win over the nation's number one ranked football team. But how six prestige-minded politicos voted Sunday in no way diminishes the fact that one hell- uva football game unfolded be- neath the threatening skies over Michigan Stadium on November 24, 1973. Neither will it diminish the fact that Michigan dominated the top-rated Buckeyes in three of the game's four quarters, or that Ohio State gained not a sin- gle first down in the opening quarter and not a single yard in the final six minutes. Despite all that, things looked dark indeed for the Maize and Blue at halftime. Behind the in- comparable running of tailback Archie Griffin, the Buckeyes powered their way to a 10-0 lock- erroom lead. Griffin set up Blair Conway's 31-yard field goal with a 38-yard sprint, then single- handedly pounded the Wolverine defense into near oblivion, gain- ing 41 of Ohio's 55 yards in its disheartening touchdown drive. But the aroused Wolverines stormed back. Led by the pun- ishing running of fullback Ed daily sports NIGHT EDITORS: CHUCK BLOOM JOHN KAHLER Shuttlesworth, and the superb play of the offensive line, they drove from the Michigan 33 to the Ohio State 12 as the third quarter waned. But the Bucks stiffened and a 30-yard Lantry field goal had to suffice. The Michigan defense held Ohio in check on the next series and OhiohState's punt gave the Wolverines possession on their own 49. From there it took only seven plays to knot it up. Dennis Franklin passed to tight end Paul Seal, who high-stepped his way down to theh19-yard line. Then on fourth and inches from the Ohio 10, Franklin faked the dive to Shuttlesworth, slipped inside right end and danced untouched into the endzone. Lantry added the point after and the stage was set for a pres- sure packed, heart rending, nail- biting, agonizing finish. Ohio State took the kickoff and drove to the Michigan 44 before having to punt. Dave Brown called for a fair catch at the 12-yard line and the last six minutes belonged solely to Michigan. Mixing his plays beautifully, Franklin engineered a drive that fade had the Wolverines headed for victory before disaster struck. Under heavy pressure, Franklin fired a short pass to Shuttles- worth for a first down at the Ohio State 48. But in the process, the cool Michigan signal caller was hammered to the turf by end Van DeCree, suffering a broken collarbone - the injury that pro- bably kept his team out of the Rose Bowl. Larry Cipa replaced Franklin, but the drive stalled, necessitat- ing a 58-yard field goal try that sailed less than a foot to the left of the uprights. With 1:01 remaining, Woody Hayes gambled for victory; opt- ing to fill the air with footballs. He went with supposedly pass or- iented Greg Hare at quarterback. But Michigan cornerback Tom Drake picked off Hare's first off-balance toss to give Michi- gan a second chance at the Buck- eye 33. However an unfortunate time- out call and a hurried pass out of bounds left the Wolverines at the 27-yard line with 28 seconds and no timeouts remaining. Bo Schembechler elected to go for the field goal on third down and it missed. Of course everything that hap- pened on the field became sec- ondary when the decision to send Ohio State to Pasadena was an- nounced. But one Woody Hayes post-game statement casts doubt on that decision. As to why he had gambled with desperation passes in the final minute, Woody said: "We knew we had to win this one to go." Say it ain't so, Bo! Ohio St. Mich. RUSHING OHIO STATE First Downs Rushes-yards Passing yards Passes Punts-avg. Fumbles-lost Penalties-yards MICHIGAN Ohio State 9 49-234 0 0-4-1 7-31.4 0-0 0-0 16 56-204 99 7-12-1 ,5-39.8 1-1 4-37 WINGBACK CLINT HASLE- RIG (43) goes high in the air to make a fine grab of a Dennis Franklin pass in Saturday's 10- 10 tie. Despite the effort of such Buckeyes as Randy Grad- ishar (53) and Steve Luke (46) Haslerig split the Ohio State zone for five receptions total- ing 64 yards. Griffin Greene Johnson Elia Lippert Franklin Shuttlesworth Chapman Heater Haslerig MICHIGAN 0 0 0 10-10 0 10 0 0-0 att 30 9 5 4 2 4 27 19 5 1 no. 5 1 1 yds. avg. 163 5.4 34 4.0 22 4.4 13 3.3 4 2.0 17 4.3 116 4.2 58 3.1 12 2.4 1 1.0 yds. long 64 14 27 27 a a Daily Photo by STEVE KAGAN ,.- 66.2-ST6 tcOn t 1 -e ,6 I/a Ohio-Conway, 31-yard FG Ohio-Johnson, 5-yard run (Conway kick) M-Lantry, 30-yard FG M-Franklin, 10 yard run (Lantry kick) Att-105,223 RECEIVING MICHIGAN Haslerig Seal Shuttlesworth 'SAVE BEST FOR LAST' Seniors By CHUCK BLOOM . After last Saturday's tie, the Ohio State locker room seemed like a morgue. The Buckeye players sat down with their heads bowed in silence-as if they had lost. On the other side of the tunnel that leads out of Michigan Sta- dium, the Wolverines were sing- ing "The Victors" at the top of their lungs-something they do only when victorious. Leading those cheers were the seniors-the men Bo Schembech- ler has called "the backbone of the team"-who had just com- pleted their varsity careers be- fore the home folks. "We saved our best for last, didn't we?" exclaimed guard Mike Hoban. "We really did the job on them today." Indeed, they had saved the best for last. Down 10-0 at the half, the Wolverines came storm- ing back to outgain, outmuscle, and out-play the "mighty" Buck- eyes from down yonder. Spearheading the senior surge was fullback Ed Shuttlesworth. Hampered by injuries in the past two Ohio State games, the Cin- cinnati Crusher showed the Bucks just how formidable he is when he's physically 100 per cent. lead comeback "Gentlemen, that was a great fullback in there today," Schem- bechler commented in his post- game interview. "That was his finest performance as a Wolver- ine-without a doubt." Orange Man The obvious became official yesterday as Michigan assistant. football coach Frank Maloney signed a four-year pact as head coach of Syracuse. Shuttlesworth gave all the cred- it to his offensive line, a unit which included four seniors: Ho- ban, Paul Seal, Curtis Tucker, and Jim Coode. "It was all block- ing," he said of his 116 yards gained. "I can't say enough for them. They (Ohio) knew they'd been in a game." Everyone contributed to the Michigan comeback-even when the contribution was one single play. For e x a m p 1 e, tailback Larry Gustafson showed moxie under pressure by flagging down a poor center snap and spotting it perfectly for Mike Lantry's successful 30-yard field goal that put the Wolverines back in the game. "When I first saw the snap," explained Gustafson, "I thought of running the ball for the first down. But for some reason I just spotted it. Damn lucky thing I did, too." All-American Dave Gallagher received ABC's accolade as out- standing defensive player but other seniors like Doug Troszak played equally as well. "All this talk about how I was going to get eaten by (John) Hicks was bull," Troszak exulted. "I didn't have that much trouble with him. Of course, our defense wasn't out there that much in the second half. So that helped." Who can forget wingback Clint Haslerigand those perfect pass patterns he ran? Certainly not the Ohio secondary. "Haslerig ran some beautiful cuts," beamed Schembechler. "He played some good football out there." But Haslerig considered it ele- mentary. "All I had to do was read their zone every play. They were the ones who were confused all the time because I played four differentbpositions. When they thought I was split out as a flanker, I'd be the slotback and they couldn't a d j u s t quick enough. I even played a little tight end. Man, I've been doing this all year except nobody's noticed." WhendSchembechler first ap- proached the press after the game, he talked about his team's great character and heart. Last Saturday the seniors were the "heart" of the Michigan Wol- verines. EmruMei may Mt RIN ivrni billn For the session starting Fall, 1974, Euromed will assist qualified Amer- ican students in gaining admission to recognized overseas medical schools. And that's just the beginning. Since the language barrier constitutes the preponderate difficulty in succeed- ing at a foreign school, the Euromed program also includes an intensive 12 week medical and conversational language course, mandatory for all students. Five hours daily, 5 days per week (12-16 weeks) the course is given in the country where the student fwill attend medical school. In addition, Euromed provides stu- dents with a 12 week intensive cul- tural orientation program, with American students now studying medi- cine in that particular country serving as counselors. Senior or graduate students currently enrlled in an American university are eligible to participate in the Euremed program. For application and further information, phone toll free, (800) 645-1234 or write. Euro mdot, LW.d 170 Old Coulitry Road Mineola, N.Y. 11501 STAND OUT .. . from the Crowd Make good use of your spare time, working on and learning about newspaper production. JOIN THE DAILY The Toa BY The Associated P 1. 2. 3. 6. 7. 6. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13.1 14. 15 1 16. 17.l 18.l 19. 20. Alabama 36L s (tie) Daily Libels 36Y? Oklahoma 20 Ohio State 2 Michigan 1 Notre Dame 2 Penn State 2 So. 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