Tuesdoy, October 10, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven t Tuesdoy, October 101 1972 EHE MICHIGAN DAILY "c~ge Seven I Pirat By JIM ECKER Special To The Daily CINCINNATI - The Pittsburgh Pirates nipped the Cincinnati Reds 3-2 at Riverfront Stadium yester- iay to grab a 2-1 lead in their best of five National League playoff. Pinch runner Gene 'lines tallied the Bucs decisive run in the eighth inning on Manny Sanguillen 's ground ball. The Reds' infield failed to turn over an inning end- ing double play, costing relief ace Carroll the ballgame. Willie Stargell drew a one out walk to start the winning rally. Al Oliver's opposite f i e I d double chased the lumbering Stargell to third. AN INTENTIONAL w a 1 k to Richie Hebner loaded the bases and brought up the free swinging Sanguillen. At this point, Pitts- burgh manager Bill Virdon insert- ed Clines for Stargell at third. Sanguillen stroked a one hop liner which Cincinnati shortstop Darrel Chaney bobbled. The split second delay in getting the ball to second baseman Joe Morgan allowed the hustling Sanguillen to beat the relay. Cincinnati had grabbed an early third inning lead when they scored both their runs. Chaney led off es clip Reds In on S wreck Purdue Carroll, whose 37 saves set a major league mark this year, took; daily over. Gene Alley greeted "The Hawk" with a perfectly placed sacrifice bunt. Runners stood on second and third with one dead. Vic Davalillo, pinch hitting for Bucs' starter Nelson Briles, re- NIGHT EDITOR: ceived an intentional pass. Rennie ROGER ROSSITER Stennett's infield chopper knotted the score at 2-2. The high bouncer eluded Tony Clemente in right field. Clemente's Perez at first, Morgan knocked it peg to the plate was just late. down, but was unable to make a play. The sacks remained loaded. MORGAN THEN obliged the an- imated Cincinnati scoreboard by CARROLL ESCAPED further stealing second. He then raced damage on the strong arms of Ce- home on Bobby Tolan's liner to sar Geronimo and Johnny Bench. center. Geronimo snared Dave Cash's fly Sanguillen cut the Cincinnati lead and pegged home, chasing Sanguil- ih half with a round tripper in the len back to third. Bench's return fifth inning. The Panamanian na- throw to second caught a wander-{ tive lofted starting pitcher Gary ing Davalillo. Nolan's first serve high over the Cincinnati's reprieve was to lastk 375 foot sign in left-center. only an inning, however. Bruce Ki- Pittsburgh knotted the ball game son, standout Buc hurler in last in the lucky seventh. Nolan came season's post season action, breez- out for his eight warmup pitches ed through the home half of the but abruptly decided to call it a seventh. day. The stage was thus set for Pitts- Tom Hall, winning pitcher in re- burgh's winning tally. lief of Jack Billingham in Sun- Cincinnati's Big Red Machine day's second game, was beckon- did not die. They threatened in ed in. This time "The Blade" the bottom of the eighth. Pete couldn't cut it. Rose lashed his second double and He hit Hebner in the foot with third hit of the game with one late scoring pass By ROGER ROSSITER Passing may not be Bo Schem- bechler's favorite mode of attack. Nevertheless, Michigan reserve coach Dennis Brown would be foolish to knock it after Jeff Spahn's 46 yard aerial to Keith Johnson with :56 seconds left pull- ed one out of the fire for the Wol- verines 19-10 over Purdue yester- day. Michigan appeared headed to- ward a dull 7-3 victory until Pur- due gained possession on the Mich- igan 40 yardline with just over three minutes to go in the game. From there on things really got hairy. With third and eleven from the 41, Boilermaker second string re- serve quarterback Mike Terrizzi arched a bomb to isplit end Errol Patterson, who took the pass in full stride at the 15 yard line and outraced three Wolverines to the goal line. After Steve Schmidt's conver- sion split the uprights, Purdue had their first lead of the ballgame 10- 7 with the clock showing only 2:12 remaining. Purdue's kickoff was fielded by Mike Strabley at the Michigan 25 and returned to the 37. From there Soahn scrambled for seven and pitched a seven yard strike to Johnson for a first down at the Purdue 48. Spahn, on second down, rolled left behind perfect pass protection and rifled a strike to Johnson be- tween two defenders for the, win- ning touchdown. A two point con- version pass failed, leaving Michi- gan on top by only 13-10. Terrizzi desperately attempted to get Purdue in range for a last second tying field goal attempt, but one of his long passes was in- tercepted by Michigan's Mike Holmes and returned 29 yards to the Purdue 40. Two plays later Gordon Bell circled right end and turned on the jets, going 35 yards untouched for an insurance touch- down with only three seconds left. Brown was admittedly disap- pointed with his offense. "It seems the more we work on of- fense the worse we look," he moaned. Michigan's ground game was almost non-existent until Bell's last second gallop. We should be getting a breakaway a week from either Bell or Ed Gonzalez," claim- ed Brown. "but up until now noth- ing has materialized. The Wolverine's first touch- down came on the ground, how- ever, when Dan Jilek punched 'over from six inches, :56 seconds into the second quarter. The score materialized after Jeff Perlinger pounced on a Purdue fumble at the Boilermakers' 12 yardline from where a Purdue offside pen- alty and four rushes culminated the drive. IThe Boilermakers got on the scoreboard with 1:52 remaining in the first half on Schmidt's 35 yard field goal. That was all of the scor- ing until the final wild 21/2 min- utes. Terrizzi put on qute a display of throwing ability in the second half, although he completed only S of 17 passes, he proved him- self as an accurate long thrower, having many attempts dropped or barely tipped away by Michigan defenders. Brown conceded that Michi- gan was unaware of Terrizzi's prowess coming into the contest, "We saw him in their game films and he didn't look any- thing like what we saw today." Normally Michigan would have alternated Phil "Peppy" Powers and Spahn at quarterback, but Powers was still nursing an in- jury from last week's reserve tilt with Notre Dame which prompted Brown to go all the way with Spahn. Though Spahn did not have by any means a good day, he came through with the big play in the clutch the way winners do. Neither team could hold onto the ball as both teams lost three fumbles and recovered their own on numerous occasions. Early in the first quarter, Mich- igan recovered a Purdue fumble on the Purdue eight, but Spahn's pitchback on third down was wild and the Boilermakers recovered. Purdue also was given a golden opportunity to score in the sec- ond quarter when Bell bobbled a punt and the Boilermakers recov- ered at the Michigan 35 yardline. Michigan's defense tightened this time, however, and held on downs. The big plays made the differ- ence yesterday, and Michigan made the big plays. AP Photo OAKLAND RAIDER RUNNING BACK Charlie Smith is halted by Houston Oiler safety Ken Houston (29) in last night's National with, a walk and had advanced to his first delivery. Sanguillen's second. . subsequent single to center, con- Morgan's humped back liner vinced Red manager "Sparky" An- landed safely in front of Roberto derson to call for another arm. It's MOO U Weed... . Seize the time, john papanek OKAY, here we go again. Announcing the official beginning of O what's known as "Michigan State Week." Well, you might not get worked up enough to call it that, but a couple of years ago it was a different ball game. Anyway that's what the members =of the Alumni 'M' Club still call it - all those middle aged insurance salesmen, car dealers, doctors, 'and merchants, who transform themselves into football freaks' on Saturday afternoons. They'll go to see a Michigan-Michigan State game come hell, high water, or the revolution. And there are enough of them around the state to fill the big Stadium six times, if there were enough tickets. So anyway, what I'm trying to say is if you've seen a lot of Michigan football over the last three or four years, you know, pretty much what you're going to get. And what you generally don't get is what you really want-excitement, right? You're going to see a lot of up the middle plays and no passing. You're going to see the outcome of the game decided in the first quarter. I think that if you're a little bit down about the way Michi- gan plays football, you, ought to do something about it. Don't go. No-one will miss you, I guarantee that. In fact, even if by somel miracle Billy Martin's rMisfits made it into the World - Series, and everybody stayed home Saturday to watch the first game, the empty Stadium wouldn't tilt the gate by a penny. The game was sold oit so long ago that some faculty members who turned in their season ticket applications late found that their Michigan State ticket had been sold as a single during the sum- mer. And please don't think that your cheers will have anything to do with the final score. Bo Schembechler is the coach and he ought to know. He says that in order to beat Michigan State, the Wolverines "have to play mistake-free football. Michigan State's defense is better than any we've faced so far," he said. "The only reason why they lost so big to Southern Cal (51-6) is that they made so many mistakes." So there it is. If the Wolverines don't make any mistakes and the defense plays as well as it has in the first four games, Michigan will win. You can stay home and see who the Tigers would have played in the World Series. You can go to the Arb and watch the trees turn different colors. You can do your laundry. Admit it. If you've been around Michigan football for a couple of years, you've learned that Wolverine games are dull. The scores are usually 35-7, or 45-0; no excitement. Oh, once in a while something happens that steals your attention away from your bottle or the body being passed up over your nose. But in general, you leave the stadium feeling like you've just seen a Doris Day - Rock Hudson movie: you really knew what would happen before you went in. And don't think the fans make any difference, no matter how loud they yell or how hard they boo. They will never influence Schmbechler. "I never notice the crowd," he says. "I don't hear a thing. I could care less about the crowd." So if they don't care about you why care about them? It would be a trip that Bo might not know how to handle, having his team come roaring out of the tunnel to tackle the Spartans in an empty stadium. Who knows, he may prefer it that way. But if you just can't allow yourself to miss what some people say might be a good game, you'll be interested to hear what Schembechler had to say yesterday about his Spartan counter- part Duffy Daugherty. "It's entirely possible that we'll see something specially for us from Michigan State," Bo said. "Duffy has pulled something on us every year now. We have to anticipate something." It's been suggested that Daugherty might switch the team's best athlete, safety Brad Van Pelt to tight end or even quarterback. "We'll just have to wait and see," Schembechler said. Meanwhile, though, Bo has shut down his practices and may be cooking up some "funny business" of his own. But if he is, he isn't telling anybody. So go to the game if you must, but don't expect more than the usual. That way if it is an exciting game you'll be that much more excited. But remember this: if the game does get tense, don't make any noise. Show the athletic department the power of the people. - - - -- down. Dave Giusti came in to relieve Football League game, won by the Raiders 34-0. Kison and bail the Bucs out of, trouble. He got Morgan to tap to LA2'MIONICA'S PASSES first and fanned Tolan. Pittsburgh leftfielder Stennett's strong throw saved a Cincinnati run in the fourth inning. He spear- field line, set himself and fired a strike to Sanguillen to nip a slid- HOUSTON (P) - Quarterback' Davis and a two-yard pass ing Bench. Bench had reached Daryle Lamonica broke up a slop- Ken Stabler to Bob Moore third on a ground ball triple which pily played game with touchdown was all alone in the Oiler en had eluded Stennett in the left pass plays of 16 and 27 yards as George Blanda kicked a 4 field corner, the Oakland Raiders routed the er-the first of two field go In the ninth, Giusti surrendered Houston Oilers 34-0 in a nationally the first quarter as both a harmless single to Tony Perez, televised National Football League offenses fizzled in an ex but Menke and Geronimo popped game last night. passing contest between La up to end the game. Oakland made it a runaway with and Oiler quarterback Dan Pittsburgh throws Doc Ellis three fourth -quarter touchdowns. torini. against Cincinnati's Ross Grims- ' Siani beat Benny Johnson on a 27- ley this afternoon in the fourth yard pass play to make it 20-0. Oakland linebacker Phil game of the series. The Bucs seek piano intercepted a Pastorin their second straight National Interceptions by Sistrunk and with nine seconds left in th League pennant and World Series Wilson set up Oakland's final half and on the next play flag. touchdowns - a 14-yard run by monica hit Fred Biletnikoff end, zone for the Raiders G " P itouchdown and a 10-0 halftim Blanda's 35-yarder in the "Ah, this is a macabre matrimony between what is reality andquarter came after a b what is metricious persifilage" exclaimed Jumbo Jim Harrison as Houstop field goal attempt b he greedily devoured his free Mr. Pizza pizza. "Perchance esoteric all the way back to the Oi meanderings are the foodstuff of the id, but licentious allegories can yard line. also be farm-out!" - With this astute statement safely under hi felt, our hero im-, mediately plunged into catacalmystic spasmsi fod gust and hid his mouldly carcass* under the table. Submitting passively to the onrushing present, Harrison recalled fondly the words of his bosom buddy, "If brains were dynamite you couldn't blow your nose." Is it not better to tred the seething abysses or to mount the munificent mountain. All life is but a parody, signified by man's altruistic visions of goals left unfilled, forever striving, forever grappling, trying to come to grips with the ever-present unknown. If we ever are to shed our existential fantasies we must indeed first realize that they are indeed fallacies, brought on by the ever-present super ego. Before protuding into more malevolent protrusions, send your Gridde Pickings to 420 Maynard, and may the hoary hosts of the' Hoggoth watch over your Burly head. LETHAL Oilers, -0 from The Raiders, who moved into a , who tie with San Diego for second place d zone. in the AFC West, put it out of 6-yard- reach in the fourth quarter with als-in three more touchdowns, two fol- teams' lowing interceptions by Otis Sis- cpected trunk and Nemiah Wilson. monica Villanova rookie Mike Siani beat n Pas- Benny Johnson -to start the fourth quarter and Lamonica hit him on Villi- a 27-yard TD play. ii pass Sistrunk's interception at the e first Houston 14 set up a 14-yard touch- y, La- down run by Clarence Davis, who in the plunged through the middle of the first collapsing Oiler defense. e lead. Only seconds later, Wilson inter- third cepted Kent Nix' pass and return- hlocked ed it 32 yards to Houston's two. ounced Reserve quarterback Ken Stabler ler 23- hit tight end Bob Moore in the end zone for the final tally. ";;.:}::.:.;r. : :i~ n"ai:>"W gi- i ~t::.{.y}i } *.*. "Y."";?:.:":::'"Jv: ": t;v rYi3 rt,, .Se.Yv i:, .. Big Ten Standings 'C.... MICHIGAN Michigan St. Ohio St. Indiana Wisconsin Purdue Minnesota Illinois Northwestern Iowa Conference W L T PF PA 1 0 0 7 0 1 0 0 24 0 1 0 0 21 0 1 0 0 27 23 1 0 0 21 14 1 0 0 24 0 0 1 0 23 27 0 1 0 0 24 0 2 0 14 28 0 2 0 0 45 w L T 4 0 0 2 2' 0 3 0 0 400 3 1 0 3 1 '0 1 3 0 0 4 0 0 4 0 1 3 0 1 3 0 PF 111 62 85 100 90 73 57 48 41 29 PA 23 72 32 90 55 74 148 145 87 70 All Games This weeks games Michigan State at Michigan Wisconsin at Indiana. Iowa at Northwestern Purdue at Minnesota Illinois at Ohio State . " I ; - I I I I - I.. - - -on" 1. Michigan St. at MICHIGAN (pick score) 2. Wisconsin at Indiana 3. Iowa at Northwestern 4. Purdue at Minnesota 5. Illinois at Ohio State 6. Air Force at Boston College 7. Penn at Cornell 8. Navy at Syracuse 9. Iowa St. at Colorado 10. Kansas at Kansas St. 11. Oklahoma at Texas 12. Florida at Alabama 13. Auburn at LSU 14. Duke at Clemson 15. Texas Tech at Texas A&M 16. Washington at Stanford 17. Tulane at Miami (Fla) 18. Villanova at Maryland 19. 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