Friday, October 6, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wage Nine' GRIDDERS DUEL S -' JY's' i By BOB SIMON Denny Brown's biggest problem as coach of Michigan's Varsity Reserve team is finding out who will be eligible tol for his team. He usually finds this out only two days before the day of the game.' This week's game, which will be against Purdue, will start at one o'clock Monday afternoon. The game was' originally scheduled for Friday, but due to the new, rule I this year making freshmen eligi- ble for varsity play, the change was made. According to the ruling a player cannot play in one game if he has played in another game four or less days before. This is the reason for Denny Brown's pre- dicament this week. t Any players who don't play in the varsity game against Navyj this Saturday will be eligible to play .Monday. This leads to a very interesting relationship between the success of Bo's Big Boys and the Baby Blue. For .instance, if theWolverines slaughter the Middies it is likely that Bo will bring the second and third string in near the end of the game. This will decrease1 the number of players who will be allowed to take the field against Purdue on Monday. If, however, the Wolverines have a tough time against the Navy, the first string will probably stay in the whole ickle Purdue 7Big. Ed' third-place rusher; defensive stalwarts grab first daily NIGHT EDITOR: GEORGE HASTINGS 'f III r I E game. This would leave a large number of good players left for the varsity reserve team. Though loyal Michigan fans will I not be hoping for a tough game! I against the Middies, even if it might make it more exciting, the relationship seems to bear out. Last week, after a route of Tu- lane on Saturday, the Baby Blue l6st to Notre Dame on Monday. Coach Denny Brown, though, feels that the score, 17-7, was not indicative of the play. The score was only '10-7 until the last five minutes of the game. Then "they out physicalled us," said Brown. The Wolverines were worn down primarily because some players had to" play both offense and de- fense due to a lack of players. Brown seemed confident as he predicted, "I think the guys will be ready to go against them this Monday." Thanks to Michigan's ever present powerful defense one can be sure they will be respect- able. In the first game against v, Michigan State the defense lim- ited the Spartans to only nine . . .,&r"< points in a 16-9 win. The offense is another story, however.4 "The offense takes a lot longer time to get jelled into a unit," said Brown. This is the reason for . 4 the lack of high scoring by the Baby Blue. "Defense is quickness .. and speed in getting to the ball," commented Brown, but offense is more of a team effort and tim- ing must be just right." . J Swinging action! I ,:. , "{,w:.< The Wolverine Fall Invita- tional Golf Tournament begins f today with Michigan hosting Purdue and Michigan State. Thirty-six holes will be played at the 'U course and 36 more {:.:: tomorrow at Radrick Farms. The Varsity reserves, made up entirely of freshmen and sopho- 1 mores, does have some outstand- ing offensive and defensive play- ers. Dan Jilek, a freshman from - Sterling Heights, has been strong. as a fullback on offense and has also been a part time defensive' safety. Speedster Gordon Bell, of .Troy, Ohio, provided excitement in the State game by returning a' punt 83 yards for a TD.' On defense sophomore Jeff Per- 1 linger at 6-3,s225 pounds2and line- backer Carl Russ, a 6-2 215 pound "~ sophomore, have headedan all- round team defensive effort. AP Photo Purdue fans canbe happy for JUNIOR FULLBACK Ed Shuttlesworth (31) bulls for yardage the new ruling allowing sopho- against the Green Wave of Tulane. Blocking for the running mores to play on the varsity re- back is offensive guard Tom Coyle (60). Shuttlesworth ranked serve team. Due to the recruit- third among conference rushers in statistics released this week, ing rules that allows only 120 with 341 yards in his first three contests. scholarships to be given out over' __ur y a p e i d P r uel_ a four year period, Purdue .only recruited 20 freslnan ball players FISCHER SUED this year. So, not counting walk- ons, it would have been very diffi- cult for them to put together a 22- man freshmanteam this year. Chess chamn ion invo Roggeman tries to employ the fourth team offense and the third team defense, but he can't count By The Associated Press 'with the Federation Internationale on it. Injuries to fourteen varsity NEW YORK-World chess chain- Des Eschec (International Chess players have forced some of these pion Bobby Fischer yesterday was Federation) under which the Ice- players to play on the big squad. sued for $3,250,000 in damages for landic federation would put up a In the reserves only game, soph- refusing to permit the filming and total prize of $125,000. It also omore quarterback Mike Terrizzi videotaping of his championship agreed to give both players 60 per completed two of two passes for match with Boris Spassky in Ice- cent of the net income derived 55 yards and one TD. Freshman land. from the exclusive television and Artis Zachary rushed six times for movies of the games. 41 yards. Purdue's defense al- The suit in Manhattan Supreme By ROBIN WAGNER but 3.1 yards a carry. Only Iowa,4 In this week's official Big Ten surprisingly enough, has been hard- football statistics, Michigan ranks er to pass on than the Wolverines. high in many of the individual and Woody's Buckeyes claimed first team statistics. place in scoring defense, just nos- The individual conference stats ing out U.M. regularly d i s p 1 a y Ed Shuttles- Offensively as a team, Michigan worth's name. The junior Wolver- is not quite as impressive on the, ine fullback ranks third in rush- statistics sheets. Tiey are second1 ing with an average of 113.7 yards on the ground with 292.7 yards a per game. He's carried the pig- game, ninth through the air, and skin on 61 occasions for 342 yards. third in over-all offense, Through Shuttlesworth also is listed as its first three contests, the Wol- fifth in total offense and second in verines have averaged 4.7 yards conference scoring, with a fine per offensive play and 343.7 yards average of 10 points a game. * Sophomore sensation Gil Chap- man, on the basis of a 10.9 yard punt return average, is third in G rid d e l this department in the Big Ten. Chapman excited the home crowd in the Tulane game with a 49 yard Welcome to cloud 48. .This m punt return for a score. planet NOSRAP which is slightly A figure of 41.1 yards per punt the zone of the Giant JJJJJJJ's. finds Barry Dotzauer leading the magical umbilical wire which en list of conference punters. He also to the planet earth. This is theo possesses a 63 yard punt, the long- reach such a HIGH frequency as est in the Big Ten this year. Giant JJJJJJJ's. Wolverine linebacker Tom Kee's name is found in the sixth slot for The messages from my plane individual tackling in the confer- hand, if you have many you mayI ence. Kee has made 24 solo tackles Whew??? Don't forget to get and has assisted on 10 others.Whew???aDhnct oeto Defensive team statistics find Friday for a chance at those'out c the Wolverines either first or sec- 1. Navy at MICHIGAN (pick ond in every category. Michigan score) leads the conference in total team 2. Indiana at Syracuse defense. They have allowed only 3. Penn St at Illinois 632 yards in three contests, 39.3 4. Notre Dame at Michigan State yards a game less than Ohio State, S. Kansas at Minnesota the second most effective defen- 6. Northwestern at Wisconsin sive team in the conference. 7. Ohio State at California So far in the season, Michigan 8. Purdue at Iowa has been the hardest conference 9. Lehigh at Army team to rush against, permitting 10. Colgate at YaleI a game. Team scoring average has Mich- igan in, third position with 24.7 points a game. Indiana and Ohio State are first and second in the Big Ten in this category. The sole statistical department in which Michigan placed poorly was passing, where quarterback Dennis Franklin was ranked ninth [in the conference. Thus far in the young season, Franklin has com- pleted but 3.3 passes per game and has connected on only 43.5 per cent of his throws. Pickings essage is coming to you from the beyond infinity and slightly above This is only the beginning of the ables me to transmit my message only spot on earth that is able to the planet above the land of the t: "It's not too big and it fits in get to my land!!!!!" your Gridde Picks in by midnight of this'world Mr. Pizzas. Sports of The Daily Cross Country ... .. doing it yourself By DAN BORUS ANN ARBOR, AS EVERYONE KNOWS, is a football town. The sport captures the hearts and passions of fun-loving students and rich alumni. And when fall comes, the town turns to Blue and Maize uniforms, cleats, and funny helmets. But there are other sports in town, ones which don't have large popular followings, ones that don't represent the American type of hero worship. There are sports in which the drive and desire of one and only one individual are exhibited, rather than lavish spectacles. Not based upon glory antics, cross country is a sport of loneliness and Michigan practioners are among the least cele- brated and hardest working athletes on the campus. Cross ,country is a sport built upon human sacrifice and a measure of the will to improve. The sport is by nature personal in the loneliest sense. It is you and you alone who will determine the course of action' and the preparation for the event is a helleuva lot more than a couple of Schlitz commercials about galloping to the top of some mountain in Kenya. And when you reach that mythical mountain, no photogra- phers are waiting to snap your picture unless it is the Olympics. When you're in cross country you run for yourself, for the pleasure of the physical, for the exhilaration and liberation of the Michigan is not without its outdoor tracksters. While not as strong as some other members of the Big Ten, it does boast some fine runners. Last week in a rain soaked course 'in Toledo, Ohio, Keith Brown smashed _by a good seven minutes the record of Olympic Champion Dave Wottle, only to have the mark disqualified by whimsical officials who claimed he cut seven yards off the course when he avoided a tree. "In the beginning of the race, there is always a crowd, at least for the first few miles. Rather than cut to the inside and lose time when I saw the tree, I went to the outside, which is sometimes not questioned," the fleet sophomore explained. He also added that despite the record book, he was quite proud of the race he had won. Running Baas been a long trek for Brown. Choosing the sport in the sophofiore year of high school, Keith has stuck with it and when he realized he could excel and improve at it he was hooked. In fact all the Cleveland Browns (not the football team) have adopted the practice. While most members of the somewhat gilded generation disdain the physical exertion, Brown craves it, enjoying running along the farms and dirt roads near Ann Arbor. But it is the individual achievement, the search for m- provement that fuels Brown. "Every year I feel I have im- proved," Brown states. "If I didn't I would quit." And he means it. Unlike many sports in which improvement is measured linearly in an upward direction, cross country and long distance running proceeds forward in an ascending spiral, a "long cycle" as Brown puts it. First a foundation is built, 15 miles a day and then shorter andeshorter with an attempt to quicken the pace. The process is repeated, with non-beer guzzling fans and coaches checking the progress with instruments and watches. European runners reach their peak in their late twenties but in America, where sports which don't have a taint of violence lack popularity, the climax of a runner's career must come earlier as one can't make a living trucking through the trees. Brown, who has from all indications improved considerably, under the watchful guidance of Michigan coach Dixon Farmer, refuses to consider the prospects of an Olympic berth, but should he try the age old cross country problem remains-"If you blow a race, you have only yourself to blame." Hungry for the real thing? Try it . .. you'll like DELONG'S BAR-B-4 CARRY-OUT, PICK-UP, and DELIVERY SERVICE 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. Rhode Island at Maine Kent St. at West Michigan Missouri at Oklahoma-St. Alabama at Georgia Auburn at Mississippi Duke at North Carolina St. Florida at Florida St. USC at Stanford New Mexico St. at SMU Northern Arizona at Montana St. r I ved in suit Fox, the vice president of the firm, met with Fischer in the Yale Club, where "he evidenced his de- sire to have the championship filmed by Fox." Fischer demanded and received, according to Fox, "additional com- pensation beyond monies received for participation in the games." The amount was not indicated in the court papers. The suit seeks $3 million in ac- tual damages and $250,000 in puni- tive damages. Fischer has 20 days in which to respond to the com- A representative from WAYNE STATE UNI- VERSITY LAW SCHOOL will be at the Univer- sity of Michigan to meet with students in- terested in attending Law School. Anyone interested is urged to attend the meetings at 10:15 A.M. and 2:15 P.M. on October 6 and 9, 1972. For further information contact, Career Planning and Placement. lowed the Hoosiers only 38 yards rushing, 57 yards passing and on- ly seven first downs. With only three hours. of prac- tice a week Denny Brown will do hiepac neniet ha nilrmka a g t Ala :ourt was brought by Chester Fox According to court papers, the nd Co., which said it had been Icelandic federation entered into ranted the exclusive right to an agreement with Chester Fox nake motion pictures and video- and Co., giving it the exclusive apes of the match, by the Ice- right to film and videotape, "thus nnr Chefi midtnn mkn t P lnintiff the ofiia 1dF1Ult t I1GS5 1" UUI1Ui1LtU11, C MUK1119 U1G p1d1I11111 t1IG V11141ci1 is est against the BDilerma ers..-u .3 . . .V N As he says, "We've got a good re- The federation's rights had been film producer of the match." plaint. sreLd.We3snentm. acurutruhan agreement The agreement also provded .,.::. ::_....... :, ......,::> .. that, if necessary, the Fox firm $':: ~***** could bring a court action on be- half of itself and the Icelandic y' OPEN MON., THURS., FRI. NIGHTS 'TIL 9 P.M. federation. , Relying on the agreement, Ches- ter Fox and Co. said it entered into numerous contracts "subject- ing it to substantial financial lia- bilities." The court papers said Chester t Major League IStandings 1 American League , FINAL STANDINGS EAST DIVISIONM$ } W L Pct. GB " SDETROIT 86 70 .551 - Boston 85 70 .548 Yjt Baltimore 80 74 .519 5 New York. 79 76 .510 6z Z sxCleveland 72 84 ' .462 14r Milwaukee 6591.41721 WEST DIVISION #a xa n W L P ct. G BFt Oakland 92 62 .597 - } ; Chicago 87 67 .565 5 ' w!Minnesota 77 77 .500 15 Kansas City9 "California 75 79 .487 17>3 Texas 54 100 .351 3 National League FINAL STANDINGS EAST DIVISION AP'Photo W L Pct. GB Pittsburgh 96 58 .623 - y__C_ WU BKa A Js St.Los Chicago 85 70 .548 11}4Es i ~New York 83 73 .532'131/ ous7 1 4124 Montreal 70 86 .449 26A " Philadelphia 59 97 .378 37 S . .... -= GWEST DIVISION APPoto WV L Pct. 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