Sunday,.September 24, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine Michigan ground game smothers Bruins " By JOHN PAPANEK Special To The Daily LOS ANGELES-It wasjust like old times last night, as Michigan handed a crushing 26-9 defeat to sixth-ranked UCLA before 57,129 spectators at the Los Angeles Coliseum. While it may be a little too early to order your Rose Bowl tickets, you can rest assured that the Wolverines are not the pushovers t h a t many cynics said they would be. "It was a key game for us," Coach Bo Schembechler said after the game. "We had to prove we could move the football and we did. We are going to get better and our players will get better." In walloping the Bruins, Mich- igan officially ended its myster- ious "Southern California Jinx." The Wolverines were upset in their last two visits here, by Southern Cal and Stanford in the 1970 and 1972 Rose Bowls. Two-point underdogs a g a i n s t UCLA, the Wolverines ground out 381 yards on the ground and spiced their attack with four key pass completions, all thrown by sopho- more quarterback Dennis Franklin. Powerhouse fullback Ed Shuttles- worth was the big workhorse of the game, carrying 24 times for 115 yards and two touchdowns. He was named offensive player of the game. Harry Banks, fleet but petite tailback, rambled for 78 yards in 16 carries, and Franklin gained 68 SUNDAY SPORTS NIGHT EDITORS: FRANK LONGO and DAN BORUS AP Photo BILLY JOE DUPREE, Michigan State's premier tight end, lets the ball slip through his Spartan fingers, a familiar scene yes- terday in State's game with Georgia Tech. Flubbed plays cost the Spartans a chance or seven. yards, mostly on option plays. Michigan was as 'up' for the game as a team could be. In an attempt to psych the team, Coach Schembechler kept his squad at the same hotel they stayed at for both Rose Bowl defeats. And Fri- day evening, the team worked out under the lights in the Rose Bowl, where Schembechler gave his play- ers an emotional pep talk. "I don't have to tell you about this place (the Rose Bowl)," he told them quietly. "We're not go- ing to let anyone push us around on this trip!" Apparently everything worked. The Wolverine defense held the Bruins to just one touchdown, a one-yard drive by James McAllis- ter in the third quarter, but ny then, Michigan already led 20-3, and dominated the game until the final gun. Ba added, "We knew we had to control the ball, because they have two great backs. They are one of the finest offensive teams we've seen, and we could not afford to let them get possession of the ball." The Wolverines did execute clas- sic ball control. Their four touch- down drives consumed 74, 60, 80, and 53 yards, mainly on the ground, and eating up valuable time. Michigan iced the game with a drive in the fourth quarter that consumed over seven minutes, but ended on the UCLA 12 when the Wolverines stalled on fourth down. Michigan stayed mainly on the ground, but took advantage of two Franklin pass completions to score touchdowns the first two times it had the ball. UCLA received the opening kick- off, but the Mark Harmon-led of- fense was stymied by the Wol-, verine defense. Kermit Johnson was blasted by Fred Grambau on the first play,. and Harmon re- covered his own fumble to put the Bruins in a deeper hole. Bruce Barnes' punt rolled out of bounds at the Wolverine 26-yard line and the Michigan machine got itself in gear. With third and three on the Michigan 33, Franklin hummed a pass over the middle to tight end Paul Seal for 10 yards to keep the Michigan drive alive. Schembechler called on big Ed Shuttlesworth to power for 27 yards in six carrys during the drive, while the Michigan line was slic- ing giant holes in the Bruin de- fense. With third and six on the UCLA 14, Franklin kept the ball and scrambled behind left tackle Paul Seymour for seven yards and a key first down. Two plays later, fleet wingback Clint Haslerig swept left behind blocks by Banks, Tom Coyle and Shuttlesworth for Michigan's first touchdown. Mike Lantry booted the extra point and the Wolverines took a 7-0 lead. After Lantry's kickoff, Michi- gan again held UCLA, this time dumping the Bruins for minus five yards. The Wolverines took over, and promptly mounted another touch- down drive. Michigan looked to be in trouble, with third and five on the' Bruin 42, but Franklin again .ametthrough with a clutch 12-yard pass to Bo Rather in the right flat. Shuttlesworth continued to power, and broke loose once for an 18- yard ramble. From the UCLA ten-yard line, Haslerig carried around left end for five, and Branks took the ball down to the one. On third and two' Shuttlesworth was stopped up the middle, but on the first play of the second period, Banks took a pitch and flew around left end for the second touchdown. Lantry's extra point attempt was wide, so Michigan led 13-0. UCLA's three first half points came on an Efren Herrera 39-yard field goal. UCLA had a drive going late in the half, as Scribner came in to lead the Bruins in place of Har- mon. But a costly penalty, for hav- AP Photo MICHIGAN'S CLINT HASLERIG (43) rambles and rolls en route to the first Wolverine tally in last night's contest against the Uclans. The Wolverines marched relentlessly in their first possession of the pigskin and backed the Bruin defense against the wall and into a weak position throughout the contest. BIG TEN FALTERS: Husk ies nip Pu rduep i By The Associated Press { two touchdowns each and the third- WEST LAFAYETTE - Washing- ranked Colorado Buffaloes explod- ton's 15th-ranked Huskies over- ed for 24 second-period points, as came their own e r r o r s and they punished Minnesota 38-6 yes- Purdue's 21-point first half with a terday. furious rally to gain a 22-21 victory Davis, whose 119 yards rushing in an intersectional football game in 15 carries gave him his sixth yesterday. straight game with 100 or more The clincher came with only yards, punched in Colorado's first 2:04 showing on the clock on a touchdown in the second period 25-yard field goal by senior Steve from three yards out and the Wiezbowski. That gave the Huskies fourth TD with a 13-yard sweep in their only lead of the game and the fourth period. their third straight victory of the Johnson, quarterbacking Colo- season. rado to its third straight victory Purdue dominated the first half, without a loss, ran in twice from going into the intermission with a one yard out in the second. Fred 21-0 lead. But Washington took the Lima booted a 40-yard field goal momentum at the outset ,of the and was five-for-five on points third period and kept it the rest after. of the way. The Gophers, 0-2, made a game The loss, the Boilermakers' sec- of it for one period, once driving ond in as many games, oversha. to the Colorado 15 before a holding dowed the super performance of penalty pushed them back, and senior quarterback Gary Daniel- Steve Goldberg was 10 yards short son, who rushed for 213 yards in on a 47-yard field goal attempt. 16 carries. * * * Syracuse, 1-2, was stymied by 10 fumbles, seven of them lost, and an intercepted pass. Orangemen fell behind 24-0 before scoring in the third quarter on Allen's 28- yard sweep around left end. * * * Hawkeyes hammer IOWA CITY - Fullback Frank Holmes scored two touchdowns on two runs and rammed 193 yards rushing yesterday to lift Iowa to a 19-11 nonconference football vic- tory over Oregon State. Iowa, 1-1, ground out 313 yards before 51,229 fans to win its firsts game in 11 tries on artificial turf. The home opener was . the first played on the Hawkeyes' newly' AstroTurfed Nile Kinnick Stadium. Holmes, who set a school record with 34 carries, scored on a one yard run to cap a 22-yard drive in the first quarter set up by Mike! Dillner's pass interception. * * * ing an ineligible receiver down field, put them out of field goal range as the half ended. The Wolverines struck again the second time they got the ball in the third period. Starting on their own 20, after Herrera missed a 54- yard field goal attempt, Michigan drove 80 yards in 12 plays, all on the ground. A personal foul penalty on UCLA moved the ball to the Bruin 15, and Shuttlesworth ate up the rest of the yardage all by himself. - UCLA immediately marched 63 yards for its only touchdown, the big play a 21-yard pass from Scrib- ner to split end Terry Vernoy at the Michigan 45. He hit another seven-yard pass to Vernoy to set up McAllister's touchdown dive. Michigan began its final TD drive On his second try from the one, on its own , 47, late in the third Shuttlesworth pushed over for his period. After a first down, the second touchdown. Lantry failed to Wolverines had third and five on add the 27th point, but Michigan the Bruin 42. Franklin dropped hardly needed it. back and zipped a pass to Rather The Michigan defense was out- for 10 yards and a first down. The standing, but Randy Logan was period ended as Shuttlesworth con- named defensive player of the: tinued to dazzle the crowd with an game, with Clint Spearman and 11-yard breakaway. Tom Kee a close second. . The big fullback lugged 15 more "m h bc teod yards in his next two carries "o Michigan won because they just, yplayed better football than we did, move the Big Blue Machine to the said UCLA coach Pepper Rogers. UCLA 21. "They are a bigger team, they Franklin sprinted out and hit 'il don't take chances and they conrl Chapman with a bullet on the one, Anyay S e s the same play that scared Mich-, iAnyway, Bo Schembechler shoul the ame laythatscoed Mch-find out what a good night's sleep, igan's only touchdown last week in Southern California is like to- against Northwestern. night. He finally earned one, Tiers, Lolich squnash Red Sox; li-ui-sing Y1 Y 1 ! I , 1' Washington, led by senior quar- Irish ower Hoto d terback Sonny Sixkiller, rolled up pooosiers opped 336 yards total offense to 316 for EVANSTON - N o t r e Dame's BLOOMINGTON - Texas Chris- Purdue. *Fighting Irish opened their football tian scored early, then held off a * * * season by scoring the first five furious In'diana charge led by Tedl times they handled the ball yester- McNulty to beat the Hoosiers 31-28 ' Illin iEced ;day and rolled to a crushing 37-0 yesterday. CHAMPAIGN - Top r a n k e d triumph over Northwestern. McNulty, a six-foot senior from Southern California, twice trailing The Irish, ranked 13th nationally Columbus, Ohio, tied an Indiana at 7-0 and 14-7, was ignited by without having played a game, un- record with 23 pass completions as sophomore tailback Anthony Davis leashed a devastating ground at- 'he rallied Indiana from a 14-0 and exploded in the second ,half tack engineered by sophomore deficit early in the second quarter.! for a one-sided 55-20 victory over quarterback Tom Clements and ex- McNulty hit on 23 of 35 at- out-manned Illinois in an intersec- ecuted by such hard-running backs tempts for 282 yards in the air.j tional football game yesterday. as Darryll Dewan, Eric .Penick Flanker Glenn Scolnik caught nine Davis, used sparingly in opening John Cieszkowski and Andy Huff. of the passes for 175 yards, an IU; Trojan routes of Arkansas and The Irish ran up a 30-0 halftime Stadium record. Oregon State, boosted USC to a score and shut off any Northwest- ! The Horned Frogs broke open' 14-14 tie late in the first half with ern hopes of a second-half come- the contest with key plays for the first of his two touchdown back when they took the kickoff long yardage, including the final smashes. and marched 81 yards in 14 plays touchdown on a 62-yard pass play, After that, the Trojans crushed capped by Penick's nine-yard from quarterback Kent Marshall! the Illini with a 35 point splurge touchdown jaunt to make it 37-0. to halfback Bill Sadler. That gave in the second half. * * * TCU a 31-20 lead with 9:48 to go Illinois, relying on a rookie quar- Badgers romp in the game. terback Tom McCartney, carried r the battle to, the heavily favored MADISON - Wisconsin, sparked Trojans most of the second half, by the running of Rufus Ferguson but then collapsed under USC's and Rudy Steiner's two touchdown awesome second half power gen- passes to Jeff Mack, converted , j '.U erated by Mike Rae's passing and three recovered fumbles into scores a relentless ground attack. and rolled to a 31-7 college football! Illinois made its last bid in a victory over Syracuse yesterday. By JOEL GREER 78-yard drive midway in the third Mack's touchdown receptions, on Special To The Daily quarter with Bob Hayes scoring plays covering seven and eight EAST LANSING - Eddie McA his second touchdown on a one- yards, came 12 seconds apart and been waiting over a year to resum yard run. gave the Badgers a 14-0 lead en-soadulwtth MiignS y r.route totheir second victory in as sonal duel with the Michigan St many starts. Syracuse's Greg Allen.sive backfield. As you recall, Buffaloes storm fumbled on the kickoff after the failed to complete a forward pass i MINNEAPOLIS - Charlie Davis first touchdown to set up the sec son's 10-0 Yellow Jacket victory. and Ken Johnson slammed in for ond score. Yesterday, however, McAsha Ut FIRST DOWNS Rushing Passing Penalty TOTAL NO. OF RUSHES Rushing Passing FORWARD PASSES ATT. Completed Intercepted by TOTAL PLAYS (rushes and passes) TOTAL NET YARDS FUMBLES - NUMBER Lost PENALTIES - Number YARDS PENALIZED PUNTS,Number Yards Distance KICKOFFS, by YARDS KICKS RETURNED Punts Kickoffs CLA 11 3 1 46 189 60 10 4 0 56 249 0 0 3 35 4 198 49.5 2 16 42 MICH 24 3, 1 77 381 41 6 4 0 Shuttiesom Banks Franklin Hasierig Chapman Thornblad Heater Totals Individual Rushing/, tries yds loss net avg wrth 116 1 115 4.8 11 75 7 68 6.8 4 26 0 26 6.5 9 41 0 41 4.5 By The Associated Press relief of Siebert in the first, hit a The Orioles tied the sco h 6 27 0 27 45 BOSTON-Mickey Lolich notched triple and scored on Luis Apari- top of the seventh on as 77 389 3 381 4.9 his 21st victory with a six-hitter cio's sacrifice fly. Coggins, a ground out,a 83 422 0 Lyman 0 Vemnoy 0 Johnson 53 Totals 3 104 34.6 34 Barnes 0 53 Scribner Johnson McAllister Campbell Tyler long Harmon 12 Ferrell 10 Totals 10 12 UCLA PASS RECEIVING no yds 1 10 2 28 1 22 4 60 PUNTING no yds l re in the single by and Paul and Duke Sims drove home two runs as the Detroit Tigers beat td long Boston 7-1 yesterday and moved p ion within one percentage point of the 0 21 first-place Red Sox in the Ameri- 0 22 can League East. 0 22 Sonny Siebert, 12-12, making his r-Q= I first start in nearly two weeks be- av~ *lo Singles by Mickey Stanley, Norm Blair's fourth hit of the day. Cash and Sims gave the Tigers a Jim Lonborg scattered 10 hits to run in the fifth, Stanley's sacrifice pick up the victory for Milwaukee fly produced another run in the and end a personal four-game los- seventh and Aurelio Rodriguez hit ing streak. a home run for Detroit in the * * * eighth. Al Kaline hit another home anees cli run for Detroit in the ninth. p ag og 4 198 49.5 75 Seal Rather Chapman Totals Dotzauer Franklin MICHIGAN PASS RECEIVING no yds 1 12 2 19 1 10 4 41 PUNTING td 0 0 0 0 Individual Rushing tries yds loss net avg 15 92 2 90 6.0 10 50 12 38 3.8 10 39 3 36 3.6 3 7 0 7 2.3 5 22 0 22 4.4 1 0 2 -2 -2.0 2 2 4 -2 -4.0 46 212 23 189 4.1 Individual Passing pa pe loss yds 1 0 0 01 no yds avg long 3 104 34.6 36 Harmon Scribner Totals Individual Passing pa pc loss 6 4 0 LINE UCLA yds MICHIGAN 41 Attendance: 57,129 ESCORE 3 . 7 9 4 0 60 10 4 0 60 6 9 0-9 6 7 6-26 5d Ashan had ne his per- ate defen- McAshan n last sea- an's luck Teclh stings cause of a twisted right ankle, at- * * * CLEVELAND - Two-run homers tempted to protect Boston's one- rbrewed by Ron Blomberg and Bernie Allen Orioles brdr tdwand a solo shot by Roy White pow- routed in a three-run Tiger first MILWAUKEE - Ollie Brown's ered the New York Yankees and inning, clutch single drove home George Fritz Peterson to a 5-2 baseball Leadoff batter Dick McAuliffe Scott with the tie-breaking run in victory over Cleveland yesterday was credited with a double when the seventh inning yesterday and in a game shortened to 61/2 innings Boston left fielder Dwight Evans gave the Milwaukee Brewers a 2-1 by rain. lost his fly ball in the sun. Mc- American League victory over Alifes lter came oun on anBaltimore, jolting the Orioles' Arroriteroit'sefirstunn anAmerican League East title hopes. Magic Number: 10 error with Detroit's first run and Brown's hit pinned the defeat on With our fat hero coming Sim an J~ Nothrp eental-Pat Dobson who had entered theth hher cm ly knocked in runs with singles PtDbo h a nee h through :with another of his pat- to giveLolich, 21-13, a 3- lead. game with the score tied at 1-1 ented clutch wins yesterday The Tigers' ace lefthander gave in his first relief appearance of Billy's Bengals are right up back up a run in the Red Sox' third as the year for the Orioles, rapidly on top again where they belong pitcher Bill Lee, who came on in fading in the tight East division and with only one and a half pitcerB____e,_ho _amen__ race.' more weeks to go, it's a cinch It was the third straight victory that those latest ten magical for Milwaukee, which swept two digits will quickly disappear. games previously from the New York Yankees to hurt their flag. hopes.Allen's ninth homer of the year Scott led off the seventh with came after Johnny Callison's in a line drive double over the field single in the fourth and tied cAshan for an 11-yard loss. Boni- head of Rich Coggins in right the game 2-2. d another field goal-this time field, and moved to third on a The Yankees knocked out Steve . ground out. Brown poked a sin- Dunning, 5-4, in the next inning less, that was the only time the gle past the drawn in infield to when White slammed his eighth fensive line got to McAshan. "The bring home the deciding run. homer of the season to snap the )wed great execution," praised Milwaukee had jumped on top deadlock and Blomberg followed her. "McAshan had plenty of time in the fifth inning off starter Dave with his 13th after a' walk to. Bobby McNally,John Briggs walked, was Murcer. end he read the defense well." sacrificed to second and scored on Dunning has now surrendered 14 her hand, Mihaiu's protection was a single by Mike Ferraro. homers in 99,innings. s he didn't complete a pass until ninutes of the first half...... .. ...................s....... rgia Tech bench though the game jor League Standings put away late in the third quar- cAshan found Robinson again with . SCORES GRIDDE PICKINGS MICHIGAN 26, UCLA 9 Georgia Tech 21 Michigan State 16 Notre Dame 37, Northwestern 0 Washington 22, Purdue 21 USC 55, Illinois 20 Colorado 38, Minnesota 6 Iowa 19, Oregon State 11 Texas Christian 31, Indiana 28 Wisconsin 31, Syracuse 7 Tulane 24, Georgia 13 Penn State 21. Navy 10 Colgate 33, Lafayet e 14 North Carolina 34, N.C. State 33 Bowling Green 16, Miami (Ohio) 7 Air Force 41, Pitt 13 Stanford 10, Duike 6 Hofstra 23, Boston State 6 Daily Libels, not scheduled Rice 29, Clemson 10 Alabama 35, Kentucky 0 Mississippi 21. Souh Carolina 0 Auburn 14, Chattanooga 7 Hampden-Sydney 42, Sewanee 0 East Carolina 35, Appalachian St. 7r Furman 24, Wofford 7 Southern Methodist 21, Florida 14 West Carolina 10, Citadel 0 Kentucky St. 21, Maryland St. 0 West Virginia 48, Virginaaio MIDWEST Hope College 34, Concordia Tech, I. 13 Northwood, Mich. 30, Georgetown Col. 9 Ohio Wesleyan 28, De Pauw 6 Denison 37, Juanita 7 Kent State 37, Ohio U. 14 Carthage 47, Carroll, Wise. 13 Dayton 39, Marshall 0 Hillsdale 25, Ohio Northern 7 North Dakota 33, South Dakota 3 So. Dakota St. 49, Missouri, Rolla 0 Iowa St. 44, Utah 22 Kansas 52. Wyoming 14 changed the first time Tech had the ball. The Yellow Jacket signal caller tossed a 77-yard bomb to fleet-footed Jim Robinson paving the way for a 21-16 triumph over the downtrod- den Michigan State Spartans. McAshan confused the highly touted Spar- tan defense all day long making shambles of Duffy Daugherty's zone coverage. All told, McAshan hit on 16 of 26 attempts for 239 yards and two touchdowns. Daugherty was emotionally drained in the comber Spartan dressing rooms after the game. "Tech shocked us on the very first play and we stayed shocked all day," spelled ! out the usually humorous Spartan coach. But there was very little to be happy about in the Spartan camp as the wishbone of- fense sputtered for the second consecutive week. "I just can't understand our lack of consistency on offense," Duffy continued, Jim Owings in the end zone hit him right on the numerals but defensive back Mark Niesen jarred Owings from the ball prevent- ing a two touchdown Yellow Jacket lead. On the ensuing play, Cam Bonifay's 38- yard field goal attempt was wide. State continued to struggle as the rushing segment of the wishbone was successful but the passing was not. Mihaiu was gaining yardage in chunks on the keepers, but his favorite target tight end Billy Joe Du Pree was unable to latch on to the ball. "I don't know how many passes we dropped," added dejected Duffy. It was even tougher for Duffy to take as he has claimed DuPree the best tight end in the country. The Spartans broke the ice in the second anrter on Mary Roberts 21-yard field goal. The drive, starting on the Spartan 27, was highlighted by Mihaiu's 51-yard sweep. . Before Mihaiu could complete his first pass, Tech grabbed a 14.3 lead. Tech drove 82 yards in 11 plays going most of the dis- tance in the air. Highly touted safeties Bill Simnson and Brad Van Pelt were beaten regularly but the touchdown play fooled the entire crowd of 77,141 - the largest opening day crowd in Spartan history. sacking M fay misses a 32-yarder Neverthe Spartan del squad sho Coach Fulc to set up a On the ot minimal as the final m The Geor was finally ter when M a'36-yard scoring strike. But the Spartans never gave up getting a break midway through the final period. Bill Simpson who ran a punt back for a touch- down against the Illini last week, duplicated the feat with a 74-yard return to cut the Yellow Jacket lead to 21-9. State immediately held Tech's next drive and the comeback was for real. Mimaiu marched his' Spartans quickly down the field taking only eight plays to move 62 yards. Hawaiian Arnold Morgado completed the drive going off tackle for zig- zagging 25-yard touchdown. State got one last chance with less than Boston fDetroit Baltimore New York Cleveland Milwaukee American League East National League East w 79 80 77 76 67 61 West L 66 67 69 70 86 Pct. .545 .544 .527 .521 .453 .415 GB 2 31 131 19 Pittsburgh Chicago 2 New York %,St. Louis 4 Montreal Philadelphiat Cincinnati , Houston 2 Los Angeles :2 Atlanta W L 92 54 81 65 75 70 70 78 66 79 55 91 West Pct .630 .555 .517 .473 .455 .377 .621 .556 .541 .469 GB I1 16 23 25% 37 I 92 11% 22 ' 3 ' Oakland 86 59 .593 - Chicago 81 63 .563 4! Minnesota 75 69 .521 10% Kansas City 71 73 .493 14 California 68 78 .466 181 Texas 52 92 .361 33!/ Results New York 5, Cleveland 2, 7 innings Detroit 7, Boston 1 Minnesota 2, California 1 Milwaukee 2, Baltimore 1 90 80 79 68 55 64 67 77 M2 San Francisco 63 84 .429 28 San Diego 54 89 .378 35 Results New York 5, Philadelphia 3 Montreal 3, Pittsburgh 0 Chicago 2, St. Louis 0, 1st Chicago 13, St. Louis 1, 2nd