Tuesday, September 26, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Chiefs martyr By The Associated Press NEW ORLEANS - Jan Stenerud kicked a 22-yard field goal with d a il less than two minutes to play. to lift the two-touchdown favorite Kansas Ctiy Chiefs to a 20-17 vic- tory over the New Orleans Saints last night in a nationally televised NIGHT EDITOR: National Fotball League game. CHUCK DRUKIS The Chiefs generally appeared ._ able to do what they wanted to with the. Saints, but New Orleans ed a 12-yard field goal eariler in capitalized on numerous Kansas the second period.' City errors and were in it until The Saints had gone on the score- Stenerud's winning boot with 1:21 board first with Charlie Durkee's left in thie game. 31-yard field, goal in the second period after linebacker Ray Hester A crowd of 7,793 saw the under- fell on Larry Marshall's fumbled dog home team ahead until the punt reception at the Chief 27. final period when Kansas City tied The Saints went back ahead it 177 on a 22-yard pass from about two minutes after Stenerud's quarterbactksLey Dawson to wide first field goal when safety Doug receiver Otis Taylor. Wyatt picked up a Jeff Kinney FDawson had hit tight end Willie fumble and streaked 35 yards into Frazier with a three-yard scoring! the end zone. pass with only 43 seconds to play The final Saint touchdown, which in the half and Stenerud had kick- gave them a 17-10 lead in the thirdI /a~t .faPectL The. torrid terrors ofr Tinsel Town, _h__n_-i a nek Saints quarter, came on an eight-yard pass from quarterback Archie Manning to tight end Dave Parks. It was the only sustained drive of the night for the Saints, covering 74 yards in 10 plays. However, this drive, .too, .zem- med from a Kansas City fumble.' Dawson and center Jack Rudnay sintcomplete the snap and de- fensive end Richard Neal grabbed the ball. The Chiefs tied it on a thirdj play of the fourth period when Dawson found Otis Taylor for a 22-yard touchdown, culminating a' 57-yard drive. The Chiefs appeared headed for a winning touchdown on their next posession, but Taylor slipped and fell at the New Orleans five yard line and cornerback Bivian Lee gathered Dawson"s pass in and re- turned it to the 'Saint 39. New Orleans drove out to mid- field. but started losing- grounda and wound up punting to the Chiefs, who started their winning drive at their own 28. The big, gainer on the drive was a 23-yard pickup by split receiver Elmo Wright on an end-around play. Stenerud kicked the . winning points with just 1:21 remaining in, the game. The Saints could not move and turned the ball over to the Chiefs on downs. The clock ran out before Kansas City could run a play. Pro Standings NATIONAL CONFERENCE National leaders crush feeble weekend rivals' By RON PARSON It seemed that this was the week for top teams to show their power, as there were some very decisive victories along with a surprising upset. Top ranked powerhouses completely demolished their opponents, proving their superiority. Oklahoma showed they deserve their number two ranking as sophomore halfback Mike Thomas raced 90 yards for a touchdown the first time he carried the ball, leading the Sooners to a 68-3 victory over Oregon. All-American halfback Greg Pruitt made up for an early fumble by scoring a two-yard touch- down and gaining 103 yards. With the new freshmen eligibility rule Joe Washington, an Oklahoma freshmanscored twibe on two devastating runs. Oregon's coach Dick Ehright had this to say after the game, "If Oklahoma is not number one they will do until something else comes along." In the south, Tulane, Michigan's next opponent, pulled a surprising upset over Georgia. Two 80 yard scoring drives plus a 57 yard punt return for a touchdown by safety George Ewing gave Tulane a decisive 24-13 victory. Meanwhile, the powerful Georgia running attack was unable to move consistently against the rug- ged Tulane defense. Air Force quarterback Rick Haynie took to the air with two touchdown passes and Mike Mark ran for two more touchdowns, as the Air Force bombed Pittsburgh, 41-13. Air Force capitalized on two of four Pittsburgh fumbles and completely overpow- ered the Pitt offense. Injuries and all, Tennessee went to Wake Forest and pulled a convincing 45-6 victory. Tennessee, with three of four running backs injured, was bad ly handicapped entering their game with Wake Forest. Conwood Halloway passed for one touchdown and then made way for substitute Gary Valbuena who hit on three scoring tosses. Defending national champion Nebraska com- pletely dominated Army, crushing them 77-7 and scoring the most points ever against the Military, Academy. Johnny Rodgers, who in the past has had some trouble with the law, seems to be settling down to business, scoring twice in the first quarter lead- ing the Cornhuskers to their overwhelming victory. Sophomore quarterback Dave Humm passed for one touchdown and ran for another while running back Dave Goeller scored twice as the Cornhuskers built a 35-0 lead at the halftime. It was no contest as Nebraska dominated the entire game, scoring seven touchdowns within a span of nine minutes and 13 seconds. Eleventh-ranked Penn State had to rally in the second half to finally outscore Navy 21-10. Navy led early in the game but made costly mistakes which Penn State capitalized on. The Nittany Lions' John Skorupan returned an interception 32 yards for a touchdown in the fourth quarter to end any hope for a Navy victory. ,im- V4p p S ANGELES. Home of movie stars, used cars, drive-in churches, surfer boys, Jesus freaks, bottomless bars, massage parlors and lots of leggy blonde bronze-skinned coeds. Too bad Michigan's Wolverines had to miss all the fun. Daily Photo by TERRY McCARTHY MICHIGAN LINEBACKER TOM KEE crushes Northwestern runner Jim Trimble during the Wolverines' 7-0 skunking of the 'Cats a week ago, as teammate Don Coleman looks on. Kee was named defensive player-of-the-game for Michigan's 26-9 triumph over UCLA Saturday night. See Last Respects. Well, they didn't miss all the fun. They did manage to enjoy j some of the old ultra-violence, when they went over, to the Los I Angeles Coliseum and destroyed a bunch of guys who thought they were pretty tough: the UCLA Bruins. It was a game that Michigan had to win, and if the 71,000 who yawned through the Wolverines' 7-0 opener against Northwestern had seen it, they would have been awed by the exquisite game that Michigan played. The Wolverines marched relentlessly for touchdowns the first two times they had the ball, while UCLA's touted wish- bone offense, which stunned Nebraska and battered Pitts- burgh, was held to minus six yards in six plays and two punts. Everybody in Los Angeles thought that the Bruins would beat Michigan, even most, of the writers who accompanied the team to the coast. But once everyone settled into the Huntington- Sheraton Hotel, Michigan Rose Bowl headquarters for its two bitter defeats, a geluiqe electricity permeated the air and you could sense that a big game was coming up and that the, Wolverines were not to be denied. The coaches were all business, and a strict minute by minute schedule was arranged for the players. Their Friday night' practice in the Rose Bowl got the juices flowing. Saturday they. had to be up at eight, on a bus at nine, for a tour of an arboretum next to Santa Anita racetrack. They returned for brunch, a short, nap, dinner at three,.,meetings, then the trip to the Coliseum at five. . . . ,, Then the game. Pow, they owned it all the way. Glory- boy Mark Harmon, featured in father-son stories in every Los Angeles paper, was yanked after running six inept, offensive plays. The report was that the son of foemer Michi- gan great Tom Harmon was conked in the head on the second play, and was a bit woozy. They said he could still play. But he never went back in. Michigan's offensive line of Bill Hart, Tom Coyle, Mike Hoban, Jim Coode and Paul Seymour sliced through the Bruin defense almost at will. Big Ed Shuttlesworth ate. up yards through the middle and Harry Banks and Clint Haselrig scooted through mammoth holes off-tackle and outside the ends. Quarterback Dennis Franklin continued to show poise in directing the Wolverines, scrambling for 75 yards, throwing key blocks, and hitting on four of six pass attempts. Once each during the first two touchdown drives he converted third downs with screaming bullets to Paul Seal and Bo Rather. The Wolverine defense, superbly coached by Jim Young (and it's about time he got the credit he deserves), was awesome once more, stopping the wishbone with authority. Tom Kee had ten solo tackles was named by the coaches as defensive champion of the week, and Randy Logan, who also had ten solo stops was - chosen as the defensive star by the writers in the Coliseum pressbox. "We used the best defense a team can use," Schembechler said yesterday. "We didn't let them have the ball. But UCLA never gave it to us either. Whatever we got, we earned." Really, Michigan played the game practically to per- fection. They never fumbled, were never intercepted, and were called for three penalties, none of which, in Schembech- ler's mind, should have been penalties. j EAST DIVISION W L T Pct. Dallas 2 0 0 1.000 washington 2 0 0 /1.000 St. Louis 1 1 0 .500 N. Y. Giants 0 2 0 .000 Philadelphia 0 2' 0 .000 CENTRAL DIVISION W L T Pct. PF 51 48 20 30 23 PA 20 31 27 53 55 Detroit Green Bay. Minnesota Chicago Los Angeles San Franci Atlanta New Orlean 11 0 .500 1-10 .500 1 1 0 .500 0 1 1 .250 WEST DIVISION W L TPTPt. 3 1 0 '1 .750 sco 1 1 0 .500. 1:1 0 .500. as 0 2 0 .000 PF PA 40 50 E40 30 155 34 t34 50 PF PA 47 27 54 30 57 42 31 54 AMERICAN CONFERENCE EAST DIVISION W L T Pct. PF PA N. Y. Jets 2 0 0 000 71 44 Miami . . 2 0 0 1.000 54 23 New England 1 1 0 .500 28 51 Buffalo 1 1 0 .500" 51 61 Baltimore 0 2 0 .000 37 54! CENTRAL DIVISION W L,.rPct. PF PA Cincinnati 2 0 0 1.000 46 17 Pittsburgh 1 '1 0 .500 ' 44 43 Cleveland 1: 1 0e .500 37 43j Houston 0 2 ..0 .00 .30 64 WESTERN DIVISION San Diego 1 1 0 .500 40'51 Denver 1 1 0 .5D0 4'54 Kansas City 1 1 0 .500 30 37 _, ,SUN~lDAY'S GAMESI Minnesota 34, Detroit 10 Los ,AnIes' 13, %hicago 13 -Qaland" 20,.Gr i Bay 14 N.Y. Jets 44, Baltimore 34 Dallas 23, N. Y. Giants 14 Miami 34, Houston 13 Cincinnati 15, Pittsburgh 10 Buffalo 27, San Francisco 20 New Englant'21, Atlanta 20 Cleveland 27, Philadelphia 17 washington 24, St. Louis 10 Sa s* Dieg 37, Denver 17 Kansas City 20, New Orleans 17 iKr Quaalude According to Drug Help of- ficials Quaaludes - a common street drug in the city - are highly addictive and with- drawal is a dangerous process. Withdrawal, they say, is safe only under medical supervi- sion, and "cold turkey" with- drawals can be fatal in some cases. Both Drug Help (761-HELP) and the Free People's Clitiie (761-8952) can arrange fre. medically 'supervised w i t'h- drawal. These agencies urge anyone who- suspeots e or she may be addct d to call'or visit. "It was a good game," Bo said. "We didn't make any. mistakes. I can't say if it was the best game I ever: coached,' but damn, it was a good game." j U AT ARBYS ...Mini Footballs FREE. FREE S '