gage 10-Sunday, September 25, 1977-The Michigapn Daily Navy persistence pesters a a By Scott Lewis F OR A MAN WHOSE TEAM has yet to make much progress this season, Bo Schembechler was in very good spirits after yesterday's too-close- for-comfort game with Navy. During most of the post-game press conferen- ce, he'd sit back, sip his Coke, and answer the reporters' questions in as very s'relaxed manner. re.Then somebody asked Bo to compare this year's team with the Michigan teams of the past. Schembechler quickly sat upright in his chair, paused for a second, and in a sharp tone declared, "I'm not going to do that, and I never have. Especially not the way we're struggling now." Perhaps Bo was trying'to put to rest a statement in a Detroit newspaper which said that Schembechler has privately called this year's team the wor- st of those he's coached since he's been here. Indeed, his quick answer made it seem that he had expected a question like this to come up, and he was careful to make it very clear that he wonid never consider comparing the different teams he's coached here. But isn't it possible that Bo really does rank this team low in the hierar- chy of super Michigan teams since 1969 After all, he's promised im- provement each week, but judging from Michigan's performance on the field, the team has deteriorated from its initial showing at Illinois. So far he's brought up many excuses, but lack of talent has not been among them. His alibis include: a wet field, poor, officiating, lack of en- thiisiasm, the opposition's strength, injuries, etc. Some of these-strength of Duke and Navy, and injuries-are valid reasons for a possible breakdown, but there's no way they can account totally for the difference between the performance thus far of the 1977 Wolverines, as opposed to that of the 1976 squasd. This is not the same quality team that defeated Stanford and Navy by scores of 52-0 and 70-14 on weeks two and three last season. "Michigan doesn't seem to be as explosive as they were last year," said Navy Head Coach George Welsh, who must be given due credit for turning the Middies' program around substantially in the five years he's reigned there. "They don't seem to be making the long runs and passes this year like they were last year." The spark which ignites those big plays, on defense as well as offense, seems to be missing thus far. The defense didn't turn the ball over to the of- fense Inside the Navy 45 at all yesterday. I's part of a defense's job to create mistakes like interceptions and poor pitchouts, which is primary reason past Michigan teams have rolled up such high scores on the opposition. In addition to the failure of abruptly stopping opposition drives with a big play, the defense has also been spotty in preventing long drives. Controlling the ball is important if Michigan is to decide the tempo of the game, but both Duke and Navy have succeeded in mounting sustained drives with their ground games. In the past, stalwarts like linemen Dave Gallagher, Tim Davis, and Mo Morton have forced the opposition to the air, where the probablility of inter- ceptions goes up. But his year, the interior defensive line has been very suspect. Although it has accounted for its share of sacks, the defense has also faced too many second-and-five and third-and-one situations-not exactly positions which make offenses put the ball in the air. Remember: Purdue defeated Michigan last year because it was able to control the ball for most of the game. Yesterday, Navy tallied more first downs, gained more total yards, and ran more plays than the Wolverines. Michigan's biggest offensive problem in the game came from the failure to mount any long drives in the second half yesterday. The Wolverines took possession six different times, and five of those resulted in punts four plays later. The other resulted in a missed 29-yard chip shot from the inconsistent footof Gregg Willner. ~ Consider Michigan's opening plays on each of those six possessions: 1) Huckleby off tackle for five yards, 2) Davis up the middle for 1 yard, 3) Davis up the middle for 2 yards, 4) Davis up the middle for 1 yard, 5) Huckleby around end for 6 yards, and 6) Davis up the middle for 1 yard. Is passing on first down so terrible? Even the results of an incompletion aren't much different than those plunges through the line. Perhaps it's stilt early in the season, and there'sstill a lot of time to iron out those problems. In the past, as long as Michigan would peak for the Ohio State game, things would be all right. But not so this year. Texas A&M is sure-to give Michigan much more ttrouble than Duke and Navy combined, and the Big Ten also looks strdrifgr than usual this year. Schembechler looks lack to 1975 for this salvation, when Michigan had a record of 1-0-2 entering the clash with fifth-ranked Missouri. "This could be similar to the situation a couple of years ago, when we did not play well against Stanford and Baylor,-but then really came on strong against Missouri," he rationalized. "I think this team was looking ahead to the Texas A&M game for quite sometime. Texas A&M will tell us what we've got." Hopefully for Michigan, "what we've got" is more than what we've shown so far. GOPHERS S TUN BR UINS: (Continued from Page 1) elected to run - picking up 18 yards to the Michigan 27. A holding penalty brought the ball back to the Michigan 43, and with third and 17 at the Mich- igan 34, Michigan looked fairly safe. Leszczynski dropped back once again though, and tossed one over Michigan's Mike Jolly into the wait- ing arms of Kurowski in the end zone to put Navy on the scoreboard. Bob Tata's extra point put the score at 14-7 with 2:18 left in the third quarter. "You can't fault him (Jolly) for t h a t," explained Schembechler. "Jolly was not responsible. It was a mix-up in the rotation." "WHEN (Leszczynski) rolled out, it was misread - our rotation was not what it was supposed to be," a d d e d co-captain and wolfman Dwight Hicks. Even though Navy seemed to find the airways a pretty easy way to go, Coach Walsh did not really think so. "It's difficult to pass against Mich- igan," he explained. "You have to be good. You may be able to move the ball down, but it's tough to get it across." Michigan's last possession of the third quarter featured Leach being brought down while passing on third and eight. "The thing that hurt us the worst was our pass protection," Bo complained, "and that upsets me. You have a maximum protection pass and you can't get it off . ." MICHIGAN did get the first big drive of the last quarter going as Russell Davis and Huckleby took huge chunks of yardage, alternating cracks at the middle and the end, until the ball rested at Navy's 22-yard line. Leach then hit Curt Stephenson for a first down on the 13 and Michigan looked ready to take the ball in. However, the ensuing three plays were fruitless, and Michigan was forced to kick from the 19 yard line. But even that wouldn't go through for the Wolverines as Willner's kick fell wide to the left with 5:14 remaining. NAVY'S ground assault took three cracks and gained just enough for a. hlue first down. Leszczynski then went to the air but got sacked once by Tedesco, thenhad a pass broken up by Tedesco before he hit Phil McConkey for 19 yards - just enough for another first down. With 2:40 remaining and the ball at Navy's 41, Anderson broke up one p a s s, then sophomore defensive tackle Chris Godfrey sacked Lesz- czynski for a seven-yard loss. A 13-yard' completion to running back Steve Callahan gave Navy a fourth and four at the 47. With 1:29 left, Leszczynski tried another pass, but Jolly deflected it with a diving effort. Navy did get the ball once again at its own 20 with less than 30 seconds to play. Although Navy completed two passes, it still never crossed mid- field. Navy did top Michigan in number, of first downs (17-16) and total offensive yardage (301-277), which very few teams ever do. . But then this was not an average Michigan football Saturday Outmuscled, but not beaten MICH. NAVY First downs..................16 17 Rushing (att/yds) ............ 55/241 41/107 Passing (att/com/int).........5/4/0 28/16/1 Passing yds ................... 36 194 Punts (no/yards).........t.....2/27 4/25 Fumbles (no/lost)........:..... 1/1 0/0 Penalties (no/yards)........... 4/40 5/43 SCORING PLAYS MICH.-Huckleby 13-yd. run (Wiiner kick) MICH.-Huckleby 22-yd. run (Wilner kick) NAVY--Jones 34yd. pass from Leszczynski (Tata kick) Callahan.................3 22 Leszczynski-...............9 -23 PASSING MICHIGAN att comp/int Leach........................5 4/0 NAVY 7.3 -26 yd YO Leszczynski............... 28 RECEIVING MICHIGAN no Stephenson ..................1 G. Johnson ................... I R. Davis.....................I1 Huckleby..................1 NAVY 16/1 194 y'ds lp 13 13 8 8 8 8 7 7 Daily Photo by ALAN BILINSKY RUSHING MICHIGAN att Huckleby ................... 24 R. Davis .................... 19 Leach ...................... 12 NAVY Klawinski................... 13 Gattuso ..................... 16 yds 1 Rich Leach breaks aways from Middle defensive end Bart Nixon; Mike Kenn (78, on ground) shows the frustration that Blue linemen had with the Navy defenders, as they sacked Leach 5 times for a 35 yard total loss. 147 6.1 Kurowski .................... 4 93 4.9 McConkey ................... 3 1 6.08 Callahan ..................... 3 Gattuso.....I............. 3 63 4.9 Jones ........................ 2 45 2.8 Hendershot .................. 1 64 31 24 18 53 3 avg 27 19 13 10 34 3 BLUE MUST IMPROVE: Mistakes make Wolveri-nes blue, By KATHY HENNEGHAN In the past two home games against Duke and Navy, Michigan has been penalized 12 times for a grand total of 111 yards. The Wolverines have lost two fumbles. Quarterback Rick Leach has been caught behind the line of scrim- mage five times for a total loss of 33 yards. That can't make Bo Schembechler very happy. The number one team in the nation Michigan is not, certainly not at this point of the season. In fact, the polls have been an albatross around Schem- bechler's neck thus far. He has said all along that Michigan does not deserve the number one ranking and is not yet as good as it is made out to be. "WE JUST ARE not playing very well," he said yesterday. "Defensively, something is missing. At both ends of the field, we are not playing very well." And the opponents in these mediocre performances have been Duke and Navy, names that hardly connote foot- ball excebllence. Schembechler has pointed out that the new 95 grant limit should balance teams out. Michigan may no longer win by five or six touchdowns, 'though Ann Arbor fans have come to expect those runaway games. And he contends that Duke and Navy are much better than people realize. "You people won't think they're that good and I don't think I con- vinced my team to think so, but I cer- tainly do," he said. BUT IN ALL honesty the new equali- zation of talent cannot explap away the fact that Michigan is just ot playing well. And much of the damage has been self-inflicted. "These 'mistakes disturb me a lot," said Schembechler abruptly. "They are not characteristic of a Michigan team and I resent it. I don't like it one bit. I may be a nice guy here but I'm not very ,nice on Sunday after these things." On Michigan's first possession early in the game tailback Harlan Huckleby took a pitchout from Leach on the Mich- igan 43-yard line for a 14-yard gain - only to have it negated by a 15-yard clipping penalty. Later in the same drive Huckleby had the ball on second and goal at the Navy one-yard line. Right guard Gerry Szara, starting in lieu of Greg Bartnick, apparently missed a block. Huckleby was popped, promptly' fumbled and Navy recovered on its own two-yard line. "STOPPING MICHIGAN on that first drive of theirs helped our confidence," said Navy coach George Welsh. "Our kids felt at halftime we could stay with them.'.' Schembechler felt that although Szara missed the block and the field was slippery there was still no excuse for the fumble. "I should have been lower," acknowl- edged Huckleby, "Instead I washnk- ing of getting up and over." The next 'goof' came in the second quarter when Michigan was whistled down for illegal procedure, a call Schembechler questions. The officials claimed that Michigan (specifically nmi4dl guard Steve Graves) interfered with the ball before Navy snapped it to the punter. Schembechler contends that the center picked up the ball, at which point it was in play although it may not have been snapped. GRAVES EXPLAINED, "The center moved the ball. I hit it as he snapped it up and the ball went off course. It was a hard call to make." Another costly mistake came in the fourth quarter when Michigan was' ahead 14-7 and could not sustain a drive. The situation was third and one on the Wolverine 24. Michigan was penalized five yards when Szara jump- ed offsides, which brought up third and six. Leach then overthrew split end Rick White and Michigan was forced to punt. But what most disturbs Schembech- ler is poor pass protection, which re- sulted in Leach biting the dust five times for a deficit of 33 yards. "What can you do when your pass protection breaks down like that?," he asked. HE HAD BETTER find some an- swers in practice this week since Texas A&M comes to town this weekend. Michigan has to stop beating itself if it is to beat the Aggies. (The team from Texas boasts a 265-pound fullback and the nation's best place-kicker among other things). The mistakes clearly have both play- ers and coaches worried and everyone is busy reassuring everyone else that the situation will take care of itself - or else. "I THINK WE have to start playing with more consistency," said co-cap- tain Dwight Hicks. "We'll be all right. It's just a matter of putting our minds together and playing as a unit." "We've got to have it together next week," said Huckleby. "I guess it will come as the season goes along. A lot of little things are keeping us from being the team we were.last year. "If we're not playing any better than we did this week, look out." Michigan booters win third straight, 7-1 By ERIC OLSON Irish overcome stubborn Purdue It was the old versus the young last night at Ferry Field and something new happened. For the first time ever, the Michigan Soccer Club defeated the Michigan graduate club by trouncing then -1. The Blue Booters led from the start as Forward Dave Ritchie scored in the first minute of the game on a cross by David Sutton that rebounded off the graduate goalie. Sutton headed the Wolverine attack with two goals and two assists. His first goal was on a corner kick from Bruce Davidson. Sutton hammered the ball in- to the upper right hand corner of the goal with his head. Davidson had three assists for the game. Ihor Federowice scored to make it 30 and Sutton's second goal gave the Boot- ers a comfortable 4-1 advantage at the half. Michigan. substituted freely in the second half and wore down the older and slower graduate club. It kept the play in the graduate half of the field for almost the entire second half. Walt Bianchi, Tom Coher, and Rit- chie added insurance goals in the second half to make the final count 7-1 The Blue Booters have now won three straight games and are undefeated this year. They have outscored their op- ponents 13 to 2 and last night's seven goals equaled last season's total offen- se. By The Associated Press WEST LAFAYETTE* Ind. - Re- serve quarterback Joe Montana di- rected three Notre Dame scoring Idrives in the fourth quarter and Dave Mitchell ran five yards for the go-ahead touchdown with 1:459 to go yesterday, rallying the 11th-ranked Irish over the aerial attack of Purdue, 31-24. The Boilermakers led 24-14 at the half and maintained that advantage going into the final period as fresh- nan quarterback Mark Herrmann, who riddled the Irish pass defense for 351 yards, threw three touchdown npases. later when Luther Bradley made the fourth interception off Herrmann at the Boilermaker 33-yard line. Mon- tana completed a 22-yarder to Mac- Afee, and then hit MacAfee on a 13-yarder for the touchdown. Reeve's extra point tied the game with just over 10 minutes to go. The final Irish drive started with just over four minutes remaining after a bad Purdue punt gave the Irish the ball at the Notre Dame 41. A 26-yard pass to Haines brought the ball into Purdue territory and five plays later Mitchell ran in for the winning score. and 30 yards to build the Gopher lead to 20-7. Minnesota whipped the Bruins 21-3 in the 1962 Rose Bowl, the only other time the teams have met. * * * Lions roar STATE COLLEGE, Pa. - Quarter- back Chuck Fusina's 38-yard touch- down pass to flanker Jimmy Cefalo snapped a 3-3 third-quarter tie and triggered fifth-ranked Penn State's Nittany Lions to a 27-9 victory over the Maryland Terrapins Saturday. Maryland to its three-yard line. The return kick carried to the Lions' 39, and on second down Cefalo raced behind the Terps' secondary and grabbed a 58-yard touchdown pass from Fusina. Maryland scored with four minutes left in the game on a 49-yard pass from quarterback Larry Dick to wingback Dean., Richards, but it wasn't enough to avert the second loss in three games for the defending ACC champions. Cardinals- chirp MICHIGAN 14, Navy 7 U55, TCUO0 Stanford 37.Illinois 24 I SCORES I Massachusetts 17, Harvard 0 Boston College 49, Army 28 Central Michigan 31, Ohio U.14