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September 16, 1972 - Image 16

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Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1972-09-16
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4u- r

0

Page Eight,-

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Saturday, September 16, 1972

Saturday, September 16, 1972

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

i

ED SHUTTLESWORTH ( 3 1 )
rambles and rolls in a play
against Indiana. Shuttlesworth,
netted 875 yards last season, his
first with the varsity. Despite
his slashing play, staffers at the
Daily have been unable to de-
cide upon a nickname for the
junior.

BAKB
to
SCHOOL
306 So. Main St.
Anr Arbor, Mich.

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Talent filled
line anchors
'M' offense
(Continued from Page 7)
sparingly in spring drills due to
injury.
Returning from the summer
overweight, Shuttlesworth,mone of
the few Michigan players being
promoted for national honors,
had not clinched the starting
berth as of this writing.
Michigan lost a fine back ear-
ly in fill drills when Alan "Cow-
boy" Walker decided to leave the
squad. Backing up Billy Taylor
last year, the crowd-pleasing
Walker averaged 6.2 per carry
for 403 yards.
Even if Walker had stayed on,
it was a toss-up whether he or
lightning-like junior Harry Banks
would have started.
THE 5-10, 177 BANKS showed
breakaway moves last year be-
fore being shelved with a knee
injury which required surgery.
His performance in the spring
and early fall workouts leave lit-
tle doubt that, barring an injury
which is ever present at his size,
he should have a sparkling sea-
son.
Behind Banks is gutty sopho-
more Chuck Heater and the in-
experienced Slade.
Doughty's old slot at wing-
back was thought to be securely
in the hands of junior Larry
Gustafson after spring workouts.
But a major elbow injury has
thrown the position wide open, at
least for the opener with North-
western.
Versatile junior Clint Hasle-
rig and mercurial soph Chapman
will probably split the opening
game assignment. The former
can do it all like Doughty, but
he is slightly smaller. The lat-
ter is but 5-9 and 180, but he
has surprised with some tough
blocking.
One area in which Schembech-
ler has no worries is his offen-
sive line. Although three regu-
lars, McKenzie, Murdock, and
Jim Brandstatter are gone, re-
placements have been found. Bo
does not expect any reduction in
production here.
The key to the rebuilding up-
front was the switch of Seymour
from tight end to strong tackle.
It is obvious that the powerful
senior should be one of the
standout blockers in the Big Ten.
Senior Tom Poplawski and good-
looking sophs Pat Tumpane and
Mark McClain give solid depth
at tackle.
Second team All-Big Ten selec-
tion Jim Coode returns at quick
tackle. He's 6-4 and 237. Mich-
igan's six man front wall, inci-
dentally, averages 233.
McKenzies backup of a year
ago, junior Mike Hoban, is set
at left guard, while two-year
regular Tom Coyle returns at
right guard. Co-captain Coyle,
a second team All-Big Ten pick
last year, has a good shot to
move up a notch in 1972. Depth
will be provided by two year
letterman J e r r y Schumacher,
junior Gary Hainrihar, and soph
Dave Metz.
Experienced senior- Bill Hart
should be more than an adequate
replacement for Murdock. At 6-4
and 227, Hart provides the bulk
which his predecessor lacked.
Soph Dennis Franks and Hainri-
har are in the wings.
Michigan stats
RUSHING

Non-league

foes

By ELLIOT LEGOW
Non - conference football for
Michigan used to be the equiva-
lent of pre-season games. First
the Wolverines would ' spend
three weeks meeting some non-
conference powers, like Mis-
souri, or patsies like Vanderbilt
with the real importance not ly-
ing in the winning of the game
but in preparing a team that
could win in upcoming Big Ten
play.
Now that the Big Ten has
gone to an 11-game schedule
most teams open up with a cru-
cial conference game and the
non-conference activity then is a
period to re-evaluate and re-de-
sign.
UCLA, Tulane and Navy com-
prise the trio of mediocre for-
eigners who will provide Michi-
gan fans with their annual diet
of the exotic. Both UCLA and
Tulane could spring upset sur-
prises and the Middies are un-
likely to be as bad as they were
last season.
The first of the non-conference
games will be at Los Angeles
against the Bruins who gave the
Wolverines little trouble last Sep-
tember in Ann Arbor, bowing to
the Maize and Blue, 38-0.
There will be two notable
changes in the UCLA lineup this
year, however, which could
mean a much more proficient
offense. Both of the additions
are associated with some classic
sports sagas and UCLA coach
Peper Rodgers hopes they can
add some on-field heroics.
The first is Mark Harmon, the
son of the fabled Michigan half-
back, who has compiled a fine
record of his own in two years
of junior college play. Voted a
junior college All-America last
year based on 46 per cent com-
pletion mark and 845 yards of
total offense, Harmon impressed
the Bruinspinbtheir spring game
and will probably be the num-
ber one man at quarterback this
year.
Joining him in the Bruin back-
field will be the highly publiciz-
ed James McAllister. Last sea-
son was not a good one for Mc-
Allister, since he was declared
ineligible before the season for
irregularities in his recruiting
and sat out football and track
competition.
Now McAllister is eligible and
UCLA expects a lot from him.
As a freshman he rushed for
360 yards and added 170 in the
1971 spring game. The speed-
ster's track specialty is the long
jump and he and Harmon as
running threats are major rea-
sons for Rodgers' shift to the
wishbone offense.
Only two starters return on
the offensiveline, however, and
that could nullify any hopes for

a super offense. The defense is
much less promising.
Meager talent, inexperience,
lack of depth all mark a de-
fense which had few good days
in 1971 averaging a yield of 334
yards, and a total of 243 points
in 10 games, only two of which
the Uclans won.
The Bruins got off to a rous-
ing start in their season opener
last weekend by stunning num-
ber-one rated Nebraska, 20-17.
Harmon and McAllister both
were impressive on offense and
kicker Efrer Herrara provided
the winning margin with his last
minute field goal.
Tulane is the opponent for
Michigan the following week and
Coach Benny Ellender's Green
Wave is expected to improve on
last season's 4-7 mark with an
all-around stronger offense and
defense.
Last season was supposed to
be a good one for Tulane, fol-
lowing a trip to the Liberty Bowl
in 1970 and an upset win there
over Colorado. But despite a
couple of good days including
upsets of Pitt and North Caro-
lina it was generally a bad year
for the New Orleans contingent.
A pair of top-notch lineback-
ers, Mike Mullen and Glenn
Harder anchor an experienced
defense which boasts seven re-
turning starters. But Ellender's
teams are generally known for
their explosive offenses and the
Green Wave hope for such an at-
tack in 1972.
Senior Mike Walker returns for
his third year at quarterback
after topping 1000 yards in total
offense in both his sophomore
and junior seasons. But he is,
unfortunately, erratic. Of his
season total five touchdown
passes in 1971 four came in one
half of the upset win over North
Carolina.
Heading the ground attack will
be junior tailback Ricky Hebert
who dashed for 819 yards last
year, the most ever for a Tulane
sophomore. But the rest of the
backfield is uncertain and only
three other starters return from
last seasons offensive corps.
The Green Wave will be facing
Michigan for only the third time
in the schools' history, the last
meeting being won by the Wol-
verines in 1953.
The Navy-Michigan rivalry is
a much more frequent one, es-
pecially in recent years as the
two teams have met five times
in the last decade including a
Michigan 46-0 shutout win last
year.
Once again Michigan plays host
to the Middies and Rick Forzano
will be bringing essentially the
same short-haired squad to Ann
Arbor.

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Although Forzano stresses that
"this team believes it can win!",
even in the Navy, ability is de-
pendent on more than attitude;
alone.
Nineteen starters from 1971's
3-8 team return and that experi-
ence will help. A pair of quarter-
backs are back, Fred Stuvek and
Al Glenny, and Stuvek who ral-
lied his team from a 16-0 deficit
to a near miss 24-23 defeat by
the Army rates the starting nod.
Stuvek netted over 1100 yards
through the air although start-
ing only seven times, but the
rushing attack doesn't have such
fancy statistics. Returnees Dan
Howard and Andy Pease led the
way with 411 and 394 yards re-
spectfully and things could be
even worse this year with How-
ard probably out of action after
undergoing knee surgery.
One plus on the offense should
be split end Larry Van Loan,
the Academy's "best athlete
since Roger Staubach" and one
of the top Navy receivers in his-
tory. Van Loan pulled in 41 pass-
es last year as a sophomore and
along with Steve Ogden and Bert
Calland makes a strong receiv-
ing corps.
The line also should be strong,
according to optimistic Navy
sources with four returnees and
better size (maybe they grew).
The defense does not look par-
'ticularly imposing to anyone,
however. Linebacker Chuck Voith
and tackle Glen Nardi are con-
sidered strong at their positions
but the same unit that yielded
331 points last season probably
won't improve too much just
with a little more aging.

gri
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att gain
B. Taylor 217 1270
Shuttlesworth
169 815
Doughty 87 434
Walker 65 407
Slade 64 305
Seyferth 53 188
Thornbladh 30 125
Banks 21 115
Cipa 21 80
Rather 4 51
Gustafson 5 30
Haslerig 4 25
Casey 17 69
Coleman 3 19
McBride 4 15
Zuccarelli 3 7
Szydlowski 1 4

loss yds ave lp
55 1215 5.6 66

2
1'6
7
80
0
1
0
14
0
3
0
54
4
6
0
0

813
418
400
225
188
124
109
66
51
27
25
15
15
9a
7
4

4.8
4.8
6.2
3.5
3.5
4.1
3.1
3.1
12.8
5.4
6.2
0.9
5.0
2.2
2.3
4.0

26
32
42
25
14
11
15
15
20
7
11
29
12
11
3
4

r

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