Rose Bowl not seniors' The Michigan Doily-Saturday, January 7, 1978-Page 7 Assin season inal..e I Preparing for r.: a : . r -y J °$ f t is all-star By DON MacLACHLAN For some Michigan seniors the football season did not end with the' 27-20 Rose Bowl loss to Washington last Monday. Some post-season all- star games, including the Hula, Senior and the initial Challenge Bowl, have Wolverine players on the roster. However, the Michigan phase of the seniors career ended on a very sour note with the loss in Pasadena. 1 "The game was there for the taking," said All-American guard Mark Donahue. "It slipped away twice. You gotta give Washington credit.'' "Ending my career with a loss is tough, but what can I say?" contin- ued Donahue, who will be joined in the Hula Bowl by teammates Walt1 Downing and John Anderson., "We may have lost all three Bowl games, but I have no regrets. I have memories and friends from Michigan that I will keep for the rest of my life." MOST WOLVERINES took pride in the fact that they came back from a 24-0 deficit and nearly won the game by scoring four touchdowns in the last nineteen minutes of the game. "I am impressed with this Michi- gan team - being down so badly and coming back with a chance to win the game," said Coach Bo Schembech- ler. "In the second half, we got it together and started to play like we could," said Rick Leach. "We didn't do enough. But we never quit - we came back like champions." "We just fell short," said wingback Ralph Clayton, who juggled a Leach pass and barely dropped it for the tying touchdown late in the game. games "We didn't want to lose again. But we wanted to say if we did lose that we fought like hell." INDEED, MICHIGAN fought like hell, but the Blue offense just couldn't push across that final touch- down. Schembechler would definitely have gone for the two point conver- sion if the Wolverines managed to pull within a point. Under pressure, Michigan came to life, but the weak first half perform- ance gave Washington just enough leeway to preserve the Rose Bowl victory - the fourth consecutive year a Pac-8 club has copped the honor. Native Californians weren't sur prised with the outcome. They wit- nessed the Husky destruction of Southern Cal and at the same time were not impressed with Michigan's 14-6 victory over Ohio State. The Huskies used a balanced attack to down the Trojans and the west coast partisans saw the Big Ten title clash as an extremely dull type of football. The Pac-8 co-player of the year, Husky quarterback Warren Moon, provided Michigan with a test it hadn't received in the regular sea- son. Moon, as Schembechler stated before the game, was indeed the best quarterback the Wolverines encoun- tered this season. WITH THE BOWL extravaganza behind, the Big Ten really took it on the chin. Minnesota and Ohio State joined the Wolverines as losers over the holidays. On the other hand, the Pac-8 finished 3-0 in Bowl competi- tion. However, the Big Ten does get one last chance to win a Bowl game this Daily Photo by ANDY FREEBERC WHILE STANLEY EDWARDS led the way, Rick Leach cranked out the yardage on the Rose Bowl turf. Leach did not have much of a day rushing wise as he only collected a net total of five yards, but the junior from Flin had a tremendous passing day. He was 14-for-27, totalling 239 yards, which included a 76-yard touchdown pass to Curt Stephenson, a Rose Bowl record. full court * PRESS Michigan's offense . . . relies on its defense By RICK MADDOCK W HENEVER I VIEW Nhis year's Michigan basketball team-whether it W be during a game or merely in practice-I constantly ask myself what type of team is the Big Ten's defending champs. Are they serious Big Ten contenders? If not, can they at least make the NCAA tourna- ment? The Big Ten, as we have heard over and over, is a rugged basketball conference. No one knows how many legitimate contenders there are, and what makes the situation more complicated is that the non-contenders have the talent to play spoiler throughout the year. As simple as it sounds, home court performance looks as though it's going to separate the contenders from the spoilers. To stay in the race, Big Ten teams will have to win at home, because once a team faces a must win situation on the road it's like trying to roll double sixes in backgammon to win ... or percentage wise, even worse than that. As for the Wolverines, their non-conference home performance has been disappointing. They needed an early victory against Louisville to prove to themselves, and the rest of the basketball world, that they were a national power, at least at home. Michigan played well, but it lost. Then on the road came the fold in the final minutes to Alabama. Finally, another fold occurred but this was not to a national power, and it was not on the road. The once mighty Wolverines fell to Toledo in Crisler. The question is whether Michigan can use their stunning loss as an incentive to push themselves. Also, can the local cagers build themselves into a legitimate contender or at least gain a NCAA bid? In order for the Wolverines to be able to answer yes to one of the preceding questions, not only will they have to be virtually unbeatable at home, but they will have to consistently use a pressure defense. Their size disadvantage almost warrants this type of play. Another key factor will be the performance of the substitutes. A pressure defense requires constant hawking and continuous move- ment. An excellent example of this is Tom Staton. Sometime when you're at a game watch him for a couple of minutes. Don't watch him too long though, because he will tire you out. He never stops moving. The pressure defense wears players out, maing the bench all that more important. A team that relies on a hawking defense needs fresh players, and ones that can substitute with enough authority so that they don't cause the team to lose control of its established game. Michigan substituted well against a less than complete Northwestern team on Thursday. "Our starters really didn't perform well (in the second half) until down the stretch. I think part of that was due to the fact that they played with intensity and played hard in the first half. That's what we want them to do-play hard and go hard for as long as they can," said assistant coach Bill Frieder. When the time comes for substitutes, the Michigan coaching staff still doesn't have any clear cut answers. "We're still searching as to who's our third guard and who's our third forward," Frieder said. "I tried to match up with Tex (Winter, Northwestern's coach). When he went with three big men, then I came in with Heuerman for McGee. When he had Roberson, Marifke and another guard on the floor, we used Staton and another guard. So we tried to match up size wise with them," Frieder added. "That wasn't anything that I decided to do on my own. John and I discussed that. We felt our loss to Toledo was due to the fact that our kids got tired and we let them play out there," Frieder concluded. You may be asking, "What about offense?" With most teams the defense and the offense blend together, with a slight emphasis on one or the other. Then you have the run and gun teams, ones that depend on high-power offense. In a way Michigan is like this, except it cannot rebound well enough to build an entire game plan around this concept. Michigan's offense, more so than other teams' offenses, depends on its defense. The defense must cause mistakes, so that the offense can take off down the court. Sure, you have to have a patient offense at times, but Michigan's strength is its speed. To win the Wolverines have to be able to run, and to run they must force the turnovers. "In order for us to run we've got to force some turnover situations," David Baxter said. "We're going to have to scrap, because Minnesota's big and we're not. We can't just go out there and let teams take advantage of us. We've got to force the action away from the ball." In tomorrow's Minnesota contest, an important trend to note will be how tough Michigan's defense is hawking at the start of the game. If the defense is not tight, then the Wolverines will get trounced by the Golden rnnharc z Daily Photo by ALAN BILINSKY a THE FINAL TOUCHDOWN of the year for Michigan came in the Rose Bowl on a 32 yard touchdown pass from Rick Leach to Stanley Edwards. Edwards, a fresh- man tailback, raised the ball in happiness as the score was 27-20. Little did he know that his six would be the last flicker on Michigan's part of the scoreboard. winger. One week from today the best seniors of the Pac-8 square off with the best of the Big Ten in the first Challenge Bowl in Seattle, Washing- ton. Moon and- three other team- mates will represent the Pac-8 while Dwight Hicks, James Pickens and- Mike Kenn take the field for the Big : Ten. I I THIRD STRAIGHT LEAGUE LOSS Another defeat: leers ambushed By BRIAN MILLER Special to The Daily MADISON-It was Rudy Varvari's birthday but Wisconsin spoiled the party. The Badgers scored seven straight goals to erase an early 1-0 Wolverine lead as a sell-out crowd of 8,662 saw Wisconsin defeat Michigan, 8- 2, here last night. Varvari was in top form, but he received little help from his team- mates. In fact, Michigan played con- fused and disorgaized all game long. The Badgers scored four of the five goals in the third period but.the game was decided by then. The first period was all Wisconsin, as the Badgers repeatedly peppered the Wolverine net with every type of shot imaginable. Varvari turned back 18 of the 19 shots he faced. Some of his saves were so spectacular, even the Wis- consin fans were applauding. EVEN SO, Michigan scored first. Senior captain John McCahill dug a loose puck out from a jam-up in front of the players' benches and fed it ahead to Kip Maurer. Maurer carried the puck over the Badger blue line and threw it over to Bill Thayer who promptly drilled a shot high over Wisconsin goalie, Julian Baretta's left shoulder. But that lead did not last long. Theme Badgers' Rod Romanchuck picked up an errant clearing pass during a Michigan power play and tied the game on a break-away goal at 12:19 of the period. Wisconsin dominated the Wolver- ines in all phases of the game throughout the entire second period, scoring three unanswered goals to take a 4-1 lead. BADGER LEFT winger Les Grauer broke the 1-1 tie at 6:25 of the period mainly because of Michigan's inability to get the puck out of its own zone. Grauer was handed the puck by the Blue defense and, shooting it through a screen, beat Varvari. Defenseman Bob Suter assisted on the play. Wolverine center Dave Debol, who rarely spends time in the penalty box, was whistled off the ice half a minute later. Wisconsin cashed in on the man advantage. NORM MCINTOSH slipped a pret- ty pass across the goal mouth where Theran Welsh tipped it, by the Wolverine netminder, upping the Badger lead to 3-1. Michigan's Tim Manning picked up a tripping penalty at 8:35 and it took Wisconsin only 15 seconds to notch its second power play goal. Mark John- son blasted a low drive along the ice past Varvari. Space rockets can achieve no more than a small fraction of the speed of light, hence, space travel time to the moon is about three days, two years to Jupiter and 15 years to Pluto. It would take nearly 100,000 years to reach Alpha Centauri, the nearest star, at a distance of 4.3 light years. i1 III U "I did-it-myself at -Megaframes in less than an hour. With my time and their equipment, I saved 50% and had fun doing it," 4 -4 I Icers incinerated FIRST PERIOD Come in and let us show you how simple and rewarding it can be to frame-it-yourself and save money, too. 205N MAIN STREET 7 ANNARBOR MICH PHONE 769-9420 Scoring: 1. M-Thayer (Maurer, McCahill) 9:13; 2. W-Romanchuk (Eaves) 12:19. Penalties: W-Kavolinas (elbowing) 11:40: M- Waymann (roughing) 14:37. SECOND PERIOD Scoring: 3. W-Grauer (B. Suter) 6:25; 4. W- Welsh (M. Johnson,>McIntosh) 8:12; 5. W-M. Johnson (Eaves, Welsh) 8:50. Penalties: M-Debol (hooking) 7:05: M-Man- ning (tripping) 8:25; W-Grauer (unsportsmanlike conduct)14:47. THIRD PERIOD Scoring: 6. W- Ulseth (Paves. Welsh) 7:41: 7. W-M. Johnson (unassisted) 15::32; 8. W-Scheid (Capouch. Murray Johnson) 1li:13: 9. M-Miller (Oiver, Turner) 17:21; 11. M. Johnson (unassisted) 19:O1. Penalties: M-lloene (interference) 7:12: M-Iloene (hooking) 10:21: W-Welsh (tripping) 11:16: M-Ierg (slashing) 11:19: W-B. Johnson (slashing) 11:49: W-Bench (delay of game) 19:01. SCORE BY PEIODS 1 2 3 T M IC IGI AN ............................. l )0 i-2 Wisconsin............................. 1 :3 4-8 1 2 3 T Varvari (M).........................19 8 11-38 Baretta (WV)........................... 5 9 10-24 BILLBOARD SKI LESSONS from Dept. of Recreational Sports for BEGINNERS & INTERMEDIATES WHAT YOU GET: 7 Afternoons of Skiing 7 Lessons (1 hr. each) ... Including Transportation & Rental Equipment WHERE: MOUNT BRIGHTON m If you're planning on going to the Michigan - Minnesota basketball game today, plan again. The game has been rescheduled for tomorrow at 2:00 p.m. thanks to regional television.dForget what your ticket has printed on it. The tickets were printed way ahead of the schedule's finalization. The women's basketball team will give a demonstration and play an intra-squad game at the Central Campus Recreation Building tomor- row, January 8 at 7:00 p.m. During halftime the team members will take on all comers in a free throw challenge contest with the winners receiving tickets to the January 10 women's game. Entries for I.M. basketball in men's, women's and co-rec divisiong are due on Monday, January 9 at the I.M. Building on Hoover St. For more information, call 763-3362. The Department of Recreational Sports is looking for I.M. sports officials in basketball and volleyball. No experience is necessary, training is provided. If you're interested, call Sandy Sanders, 763-3562. WHEN: TUESDAY AFTERNOONS Leaving 12:30 pm On These Dates. ... Jan. 10, 17, 24,. 31, Feb. 7, 14, 21............... Return At 5:15 WHO'S ELIGIBLE: PEOPLE OF ALL AGES PRICE: $65 with own equipment $88 with equipment rental REGISTRATION: UNTIL MONDAY, JAN. 9 ... at CENTRAL CAMPUS RECREATION BLDG. at 401 WASHTENAW /t ur Te. Housing Available for Winter Semester Short informal discussion and presentation on Crnrrnfiv~ mlivnin the I C C Cnn