Tuesday, November 14, 1972 I HE MICH!GAN DAILY Page Seven Browns rip SAN DIEGO (P) - Mike Phipps suilted in Cleveland regis threw a 38-yard touchdown pass fourth straight victory. to Frank Pitts with 41 seconds left umph kept the Browns and the Cleveland Browns stunned hopes alive. the San Diego Chargers 21-17 last Cleveland, 6-3, now t night in the National Football Pittsburgh Steelers by a League. the American Football C The winning pass came just 20 Central Division, The seconds after Mike Garrett ran dropped to 2-6-1 with t three yards for a San Diego touch- straight loss. down, giving the Chargers a 17-14 Phipps, who did not cc lead, pass until the final minu But Phipps brought the Browns first half, hit three straig right 'back into the game with his winning drive. three-play, 64-yard drive that re- le threw seven yards t r*aja (44pect4_ Lunching with Bo .. . thesame old me john papanek "WHO WOULD HAVE guessed back before the season that after nine games, Michigan would be one of the undefeated teams in the country?" Thus spaketh the prophet Bo Schembechler yesterday shook his head in mock bewilderment when bombarde such questions as "How do you compare this years' te last?" and "Did you think you'd be 9-0 at this point in th son?" Bo greets these same questions every week at his N press luncheon and has become almost as adept at ans them as he is at coaching football. One writer broke the ice after Bo's entrance by askii must feel pretty good to rebound from last week's ga Indiana." He referred to Michigan's very poor perfor despite winning 21-7. "Well," Bo cracked, "it's always nice to rebound fro victory to another." Chargers tering its at the Cleveland 43, then tossed a The tri- swing pass to reserve Ken Brown, ' playoff who raced 19 yards to the Charg- er 38. rails the On the next play, Phipps drop- game in ped back and spotted the veteran onference Pitts five yards behind San Diego Chargers defensive back Ray Jones in the heir fifth right corner of the end zone. Phipps fired the ball to Pitts and )mplete a the Browns had their victory in the te of the nationally televised game.< ght in the The Chargers took the opening o Bo Scott kickoff and drove 73 yards on 14 plays, all but one on the ground, to the Cleveland four. But on sec- ond down and goal, John Hadl fumbled the snap from center and Bob Briggs recovered for the Browns. The Browns were forced to punt and the ensuingnCharger drive was r 'flu climaxed when Dennis Partee kicked a 26 yard field goal to put San Diego ahead 3-0. The teams exchanged punts be- started fore the Browns marched 67 yards e three in nine plays to take a 7-3 half- time lead. Mike Phipps scored the touchdown on a one-yard sneak as he with 16 seconds left in the first as wih half. d with Early in the third quarter, Hadl am to took to the air on a 12-play, 86-yard he sea- touchdown drive. The score, a four - yard pass from Hadl to Ed- wards, put the Chargers ahead 10- against Monday 7 after three quarters. Charger wering EXTENSIVE INJURIES: ". * ~ Michigan soars upward in poll, Buckeyes, Cornhuskers tumble By The Associated Press Southern California, Alabama and Michigan, the only major college football teams with perfect records, nailed down the 1-2-3 spots this week in the Associated Press rat- ings. The Trojans of Southern Cal,, pacesetters since the first week of the season, had last weekend off but still received 42 firstplace votes and 984 points from a nation- wide panel of sports writers and broadcasters. Runner-up A 1 a b a m a whipped Louisiana State 35-21 in their battle of Southeastern Conference un- beatens and held onto second place with five first-place ballots and 890 points. 89Nebraska's 23-all standoff with Iowa State dropped the Cornhusk- ers from third to fifth, virtually Medical Info Due to the hip-pointer injury of Wolverine Greg Ellis, there have been a number of inquiries as to the nature of the disability. A. hip-pointer is actually a deep bruise or contusion at the point where the hip articulates with the torso. The injury, according to Sports Editor John Papanek who has suffered through one, feels "like your hip is coming out where your shoulder should S i This Week in Sports THURSDAY MICHIGAN WATER SHOW-Matt Mann Pool, 8:00 p.m. FRIDAY HOCKEY-Michigan Tech at the Coliseum, 8.00 p.m. MICHIGAN WATER SHOW-Matt Mann Pool, 8:00 p.m. SATURDAY CROSS-COUNTRY-NCAA Championship at Houston FOOTBALL-Purdue at Michigan Stadium, 1:30 p.m. HOCKEY-Michigan Tech at the Coliseum, 8:00 p.m. RUGBY-at Palmer College respectively. They replaced Texas 8. Louisiana State 7-1-0 397 Tech, a 31-7 loser to Texas Chris-' 9. Ohio State 7-1-0 365 '10. Notre Dame 7-i-0 339 tian; Stanford and Yale, which 11. Auburn 7-1-0 273 bowed to Penn 48-30. 12. Iowa State 5-2-1 148 The Top Twenty teams, with first- 13. Tennessee 5-2-0 141 place votes in parentheses, season rec- 14. UCLA 8-2-0 129 ords and total points based on 20-18- 15. Colorado 7-3-0 88 16-14-12-10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1: 16. North Carolina 7-3-0 47 1. Southern California (42) 9-0- 984.17 Washington 8-2-0 38 2. Alabama (5) 9-0-0 890' 18. Arizona. State 7-2-0 29 3. MICHIGAN (3) 9-0-0- 812) 19. Missouri 5-4-0 11 4. Oklahoma 7-1-0 65420. Washington State 6-4-0 9 5. (tie) Nebraska 7-1-1 527 Others receiving votes, listed alpha- Daily Libels (1) 18-0-0 527, beticaily: Air Force, Florida State, 6. Penn State 8-1-0 450 Michigan State, San Diego State, Texas 7. Texas 7-1-0 437 Tech, West Virginia. AP Photo KELLY (44) is off to the San Diego zoo in this romp the Chargers yesterday eve. The Browns whipped the s, 21-17. Griulok Picki gs Damaged 'M' dekers regroup He apologized for the wisecrack and attacked his seafood salad. He was there to answer questions, not initiate discussions, and I'm sure if he had his druthers, he'd be back in the office watching films, formulating battle plans and doing other things that coaches do that sometimes drive them to heart attacks. But the few silent moments ended, when some of the writers (virtually the same ones who were at the luncheon When Michigan was 9-0 last year and the year before that) got down to the serious stuff. Since all the variables that make a football team great or good or bad seem the same in Michigan's case, the most sought after thought from Bo was whether being 9-0 this year felt any different from being 9-0 any other year. And the only way Bo could answer the queries was the same way he always answers those questions: He talked around them. "With all the players we lost before the start of the season," he said, "we were very worried about our defense. We lost five defensive starters and we don't have anywhere near the depth we had last year. "On the other hand, our offense can do more things than last year." The reason? "(Dennis) Franklin," Bo says without hesitation. "Besides being able to throw the football, he's a good runner. We didn't have that kind of speed at quarterback last year." "But is this team as good as last year's?" the writers per- sisted. "Well, I really can't say until after the next two games," said Be. "I can truthfully say that when we play Purdue this Saturday, they will be the best football team we've played this year." After that one, it'll be the once-beaten Buckeyes in Columbus and after that one (if there is an after), it will be another Rose Bowl and maybe even a national championship. But we ought to get the message: We're not going to know how good the Wolverines really are until the season is officially over. Now chances are-and I'm only guessing-that if Michigan beats Purdue and Ohio State and wins the Rose Bowl, that some- one might get Bo to say that this team is better than last year's. But I wouldn't bet on it. If the Wolverines lose either of the first two (which would most likely preclude the third), we'll never get an answer. Well, somebody finally woke up and asked Bo what he particularly likes about this team, that others may have lacked. And for that question, he had an instant answer, and a valid one, too. "Coachability," he said. "The toughest coaching is when you walk into a season and you've got all the players, like last year. You're 11-0 before you start and then you have to go out and prove it. "But you know, what did people think of a (Chuck) Heater, or a Franklin or a Davey Brown? Nobody ever head of them. They said, 'Well you lost Mike Taylor and Billy Taylor and Darden, and McKenzie and Doughty and Beckman.' That's what I like about a group like this. They're conscientious and fun to coach. That's why it is a challenge. And I like challenges." With the money you save on our clothes you could take Susan out tonight and Irma tomorrow Wrangier Jeans_ 6By JOEL GREER There is no possible way the Michigan hockey team could have d aily left the campus of Notre Dame this past weekend in worse shape. 1p Not only did the Wolverines drop S a pair of games to the Fighting Irish, they returned with an injury NIGHT EDITOR: list so devastating that Coach Al Renfrew could not hold a full-scale DAN BORUS practice session yesterday. The most costly injury, of course, was suffered by freshman goal- Moore's collision with Wolverine, tender Robbie Moore in the second Gary Kardos and the right goalpost period of Saturday's 8-S defeat. brought on some cartilege damage With the score tied 3-3, the Irish to the right knee. The acrobatic greeted Roy Bolles with three quick netminder began skating on the goals, spoiling the sophomore's bad leg at practice yesterday, "but Western Collegiate Hockey Asso- we'll have to wait until he can go t deb full speed before putting the pads ciation deut. o, de efe. "He (Bolles) was shaky when on," added Renfrew. he went out there," mentioned Randy Neal, who suffered a Renfrew concerning Bolles' per- thigh injury in last week's North formance, "but he played very Dakota series, was not at full well in the third period." strength and missed his regular Michigan came within one goal turn in Friday's 5-2 defeat. of the Irish in the final stanza but In fact, Neal viewed the festivi- a power play goal by captain Paul ties from the press box Saturday Regan made the Wolverines losers until being forced to dress for the for the second straight night. third period when Bob Falconer But now Renfrew must be con- was a victim of a high stick. Fal- cerned about the possibility of coner underwent oral surgery Sun- Moore missing n e x t weekend's day and it will be at least a couple series here with Michigan Tech. days before his return. It will take Neal until the end of the week before being able to again skate at full speed. The list, unfortunately, continues. O Paul Andre Paris, who suf- fered a shoulder bruise in Friday's game, didn't dress Saturday and freshman Mike Burgett took his left wing spot. Paris, however, did skate yesterday, as did defense- man Pete Dunbar who is still re- covering from the broken ankle he acquired before the season. O Julian Nixon is still troubled with a bad ankle that kept him from making the trip to Notre Dame and he is also a question mark for the Tech series. O And Michel Jarry, who scored the three-goal hat trick Saturday, suffered a badly cut elbow and missed practice yesterday getting it drained. To make matters worse, Angie Moretto was forced to fly back to Toronto for the funeral of his' uncle, and he likewise missed the series. If there was one bright spot last weekend, it was the successful shift of Michel Jarry back to de- fense and Tom Lindskog up to Jarry's vacated right wing posi- tion. be." Okay, class, it's time to don your thinking caps! What team, ranked ninth in the country's most highly reputed college football ending their hopes for a third con- polls, put their historical undefeated streak on the line Sunday after- secutive national championship, noon against the Michigan rugby football club only to come away and enabled Michigan, victor over victorious, 118-3. Iowa by 31-0, to inch up from fourth to third with three first- 1. Purdue at MICHIGAN 11. Kentucky at Florida place votes and 812 points. (pick score) 12. SMU at Arkansas Oklahoma defeated Missouri 17-6 2. MSU at Minnesota 13. Texas Tech at Baylor and rose from seventh to fourth, 3. OSU at Northwestern 14. Colorado at Air Force ahead of Nebraska. 4. Wisconsin at Illinois 15. Brigham Young at Utah Penn State climbed from 10th to 5. Iowa at Indiana 16. Wyoming at Arizona sixth by trimming North Carolina 6. Colgate at Boston U. 17. Oregon at Oregon St. State 37-22 for its eighth in a row. 7. Navy at Georgia Tech17. gon at St. Then came Texas, up from ninth 8. Iowa St. at Missouri 18. Washington at Wash. St. to seventh after beating Baylor 9. Idaho at Western Michigan 19. USC at UCLA 17-3; Louisiana State, down from 10. VPI at Alabama 20. UC Davis at Pacific sixth to eighth; Ohio State, which_---- fell from fifth to ninth, and Notre Dame, up from 12th to 10th follow- ing a 21-7 triumph over Air Force.You're Going To Be Auburn, which also had the week-Y uG no end off, remained 11th, followed byRe ly AD ... I o w a State, Tennessee, UCLA, Colorado, North Carolina, Wash- if you wait 'til the lost minute to get ington, Arizona State, Missouri and: Washington State. your seats for this Friday night's concert. Washington and Washington State 0 joined the Top Twenty by defeat- ing UCLA 30-21 and Stanford 27-13, So do it now: UNION 11-5:30 p.m. NFL Cleveland 21, San Diego 17 NBA - Boston 119, Detroit 117 (exhibition) WHA 4 Houston 4, New England 4 0 r' THIS WINTER, RECESS, TWA S THE BEST WAYS TO oEUROPE YO ROWNWAY TWA. IF YOU WANT GREAT CITY AND SKI PACKAGES. Cities like London, Paris, Rome and Amsterdam. (Only with TWA can you leave when you want.) For example, for only $50.00 plus airfare, you can get 7 days in London. Including a room with private bath, breakfast, four tickets to the London theatre, free admission to six discos and much more. Or, there are our Great Ski Packages to places like St. Moritz, Zermatt and Innsbruck. 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