Sunday, October 17, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page i f ine Sunday, October 17, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY 4 ..saw,.. ineI .. Second-quarter surge drives Michigan over Northwestern l1 I '.- 26 Touching all (Continued from Page 1) took a Leach pitchout and tated a bit and it threw off our slashed to the ten where he was timing and he wasn't expecting hit simultaneously by two pur- to get the ball, said Leach. ple defenders. He then made a 360 degree turn and sprinted ON MICHIGAN'S second pos- in for the score, leaving the two session, Leach directed a 57 Wildcats sprawled on the field. !I I lL leQyard drive to the Wildcat 16 be- "I got into the crease and tried h Uase fore it stalled out on an illegal to make a move on one guy -lf procedure penalty and two in- when the other hit me from the Bill Stieg complete passes. Bob Wood blind side just as the first guy W h n then connected on a 33 yard got me. I spun around and I hen going gets tough... field goal to open the day's guess I lucked out," said Lytle. scoring. Another poor Northwestern " Michigan owned the second punt gave the Wolverines the willBlue get going? period, scoring all four times it ball at their own 47, and this had the ball. After moving the time it only took three plays to EVANSTON Wolverines 27 yards on six hit paydirt. YOU DIDN'T MISS A THING: It was the same old show. plays to their own 48 on their LEACH HIT Curt Stephenson' first possession of the quarter, with a 42 yard bomb. Fullback Leach lofted a bomb down the Russell Davis moved the ball to Those of you who considered driving out here for the game right sideline. Smith had sneak- the seven and on the ensuing but decided against it can rest assured you made the right ed behind the Northwestern play Leach scored on the option. move. Yesterday's game was nothing special. coverage, corralled the ball at Four plays later Michigan It wasn't the kind of devastating rout that fans can savor the 20 and pranced unmolested had the ball again, following for a long time - a flawless performance that makes you into the endzone. John Anderson's interception of shake your head in awe. A short Paul Martin punt a Randy Dean pass. Two plays It wasn't a close game where each snap of the ball makes gave Michigan the ball at the and 46 yards later, Lytle was everyone edge forward and sit up straight, their eyes fixed on Wildcat 37 shortly thereafter, in the enzone with his secondj the field. and it only took the Wolverines touchdown of the day. The In other words there was nothing memorable, nothing that four plays to score once more. senior speedster raced 45 yards stood out. If you saw the Wake Forest game two weeks ago, Iaround end, and on the next stood out. If yo seaht the hwFrer game weeks IWITH A THIRD and one at play dived over from the one' you'd have a good idea of what the Northwestern game was the Northwestern 18, Lytle, to cao Michigan's second period like, ;running from the tailback spot, explosion. 1 r, T ; i j 1 ;i ,! i ; k I Michigan's scoreless third quarter was the first time the Wolverines were unable to reg- ister any points in a period since the third quarter of the season opener against Wiscon- sin. Northwestern threatened in the period moving to the Michi- gan 27 before wolfman Jerry Zuver picked off his third in- terception of the year to thwart the Wildcats. MICHIGAN CLOSED out its scoring in the fourth quarter with an 80-yard drive in 12 plays aided by two Northwestern pen- alties. Huckleby scored the touchdown with a 12-yard run. With just over half a minute to play in the game, Northwest- ern managed to get on the scoreboard, Dean moving the team 66 yards on 14 plays. The senior signal caller hit Scott Yelvington with a four yard scoring strike to cap the drive. Dean played the entire game with a broken bone in his left hand, bundled in tape as tight- ly as King Tut's grandmother. The win leaves Michigan with a 3-0-0 record in Big Ten play, tied for first with Ohio State and Minnesota. Next week the Wolverines travel to Indiana (3-3) while the 0-6 Wildcats host Wisconsin. Once again, Michigan totally outclassed the opposition. Winning was a perfunctory chore and playing a strong S ; game was unnecessary. Michigan played well enough to MICH. run up a nice score, and then sat back to watch North- First Downs ........... 25 western' try to make a respectable showing. Rushing (att/yds) 57-366 Passing This isn't surprising. In fact, it's a natural and common (att/com/yds) . 7-3-101 1 occurrence in all sports. Few teams play their best against Totai Yards ... 467 weaker opponents. They save their strongest efforts for the Interceptions ..-.. strongest teams. Fumbles (no/lost) ... 2-0 Problem is, the Wolverines haven't faced anyone worthy Yards PenalizRUSHINd 55 of a really strong effort. Coach Bo Schembechler is understand- Michigan inned cai s Daily Photo by SCOTT ECCKER FROM THE LOOK OF THINGS Michigan's Harlan Huckleby has no intention of letting anyone get a hand on the precious pigskin as he charges through the Northwestern de- fensive line yesterday. Rob Lytle is shown here providing a key block for Huckleby, who went on to tally 80 yards for the afte rnoon. NU 16 55-162 RECEIVING Michigan no. 16-11-111 273 6-31 2 1-0 50 Smith1 Stephenson.1 G. Johnson .....1 Northwestern . .yds. t 52 1 42 1 7 WISCONSIN WINS IN OT: Yelvington............... Bailey... .. Kastrzycki.............. Whims. SCORING PLAYS 5 3 I 48 39 11 13 Ba dge rs melt ably worried. His players aren't getting any competition. "I think its haunting us," Schembechler said. "I'm con- cerned. I'm not saying we're playing bad football - Its just that we've had nothing to measure it against. I want a slug- fest." All of the teams Michigan ,has played have losing records. The Wolverines are operating in a vacuum. They have no way. of knowing how good they really are. It's the same thing, game after game: run a few plays, then break away on a long run or pass. Michigan's last three touchdown drives in yesterday's first half lasted four plays, three plays, and two plays, respectively. The other att 'Lytle.......... . Huckleby.17 Davis.6 Leach.............6 Clayton ................. 1 Smith........... Northwestern Whims ................. 24 Geegan................14 Maycan . Dean .......... .. 9 PASSING Michigan att. eom. Leach ........ 7 3 Northwestern Dean ......... . 16 "11 s yds. avg. 172 9.5 M NU 80 4.7 MICH.-Wood 33-yard 40 6.6 field goal.........3 40 6.6 MICH.-Smith 52-yard pass 4 4 from Leach 4 4 (Wood kick).........10 3 3 MICH.-Lytle 18-yard run 83 34 (Wood kick) ..---.17 43 3.0 MICH.-Leach 7-yard run 24 3.0 (Wood kick).........24 -15 -1.6 MICH.-Lytle 1-yard run (Wood kick) . 31 MICH.-Huckieby 12-yard run int. yds. (Wood kick) . 38 2 101 NU-Yelvington 4-yard pass from Dean 2 111 (Poulus kick)........ 38 0 By BOB MILLER Special To The Daily o MADISON - It was a carbon copy of Friday's game, and as 0 was the case of last night's, the wrong team won. Wisconsin's 0 Dave Lundeen, standing in a o crowd in front of Michigan goalie Frank Zimmerman, shov- 0 ed in a shot at 2:53 of overtime * day's game had been replayed tie up the game. in its entirety, save the over- time period, so that the home BEFORE THE period -en crowd could go home happy. Eaves scored again and g the Badgers back the lead. icer Dan Hoene scored shorthand- ed at 11:30 and Dean Turner ded, put one high over Mike Dibble's ave right shoulder 19 seconds later. Zimmerman was excellent in as the third period, single-handed- -ept ly keeping the game from be- ice coming a rout, stopping 17 of 18 hots shots, including eight superb saves. In all, Zimmerman saved 56 of 63 shots. W I S C O N S I Nscored first as its top line of Steve Alley, Tom Ulseph, and Mikes Eaves combined at 8:30 with Eaves getting credit for the goal. first half scores came That's not much of on a forty-eight-yard pass.. a challenge. i 3 to givet 7 It wa the Badgers a 7-6 win. taThe Badgers went up by two as almost as if yester- as star defenseman John Taft fired a shorthanded goal a cou- ple of minutes later. The second period seemed if all the Wolverines, exc Zimmerman, had left the as Wisconsin poured 23 sl on goal, scoring twice. Norm McIntosh and Cr Norwich slipped the puck p Zimmerman at 13:29, and 16 respectively. MICHIGAN'S powerful So what is wrong with that? Ab 'tely nothing. Schem-, bechler certainly can't criticize his Wolverines. It would be GOPHERS DOWN STA like a baseball manager telling his players to stop hitting home runs so they can practice their baserunning. But still, these early, easy successes may eventually hurt the Maize and Blue. There were some warning signs yester-Bs s io p day. TE raig past :37, of- IqdorprQ, Dave DeBol scored his fourth goal in two nights at 13:27, taking a pass from Kris Man- AT THE END of the game both coaches were satisfied with his teams play. "We played ten times better than last night," said Michigan coach Tense tied the gamei un in the Michigan fumbled twice, threw two interceptions, and By The Associated Press were penalized five times. None of these miscues, however, MADISON, Wis. -Jeff Logan meant much. Victory was never in doubt, so lapses in con- rushed for 113 yards in 19 car- centration were harmless. Srim, ha sthe last four ries, setting up two touchdowns{ Simply put, this can't happen in games of apiece by quarterback Rod the season, when Michigan plays Minnesota, Purdue, Illinois, Gerald and fullback Pete John- and Ohio State. Likewise, Michigan can't expect to break long son to power ninth-ranked Ohio plays against these better teams. Every yard, every first down, State past Wisconsin 30-20 in must be earned. Big Ten college football yester- "There are several teams on our schedule that can beat day. us," Schembechler said, referring to the last four games. "We'll The Buckeyes took the lead have some tough games. I don't know if we've improved, either. permanently at 14-7 as John- We've never been in a game where we've had to sustain our son capped a 57-yard drive effort with a one-yard scoring run It's a legitimate concern. Who knows. how Michigan will with 8:15 left in the second react in a close game? Picture a Purdue game. where Michi- quarter. A five-yard run by hs' Logan, holder in a field goalf gan has lost two fumbles, been intercepted twice, and hasn't formation on fourth dawn and been able to break away for a long touchdown. Purdue leads; four from the 19, sustained the by five going into the last quarter. drive. Will the Michigan players respond with a relentless, ! The Buckeyes raised their! grind-it-out touchdown drive? Or, being unfamiliar with record to 4-1-1 and 3-0 in the such pressure, will they just fall apart? These first six Big Ten. Wisconsin is 2-4 over- games have given no indication of what to expect in such all and 0-3 in the conference. a jittery situatipn: It's true we haven't been in a dog fight," admits quarter- Dungy douses back Rich Leach. "But when it comes down to it, we'll come EAST LANSING, Mich. - through, especially with our great offensive line blowing peo- Quarterback Tony Dungy set ple out like they have. We'll be able to do it." up two touchdowns with his That's easier said than done. Just remember last year's passing and "designated scorer" Ohio State game and Orange Bowl. Jim Perkins scored both times as Minnesota edged Michigan When a team is challenged, the mental part of the game State, 14-10, yesterday. comes to the fore. That's when a team knows how good - or The Gophers withstood a how great - it is. These last few games should be very fourth-quarter rally by MSU interesting. which saw reserve fullback i. JimEarley go 16 yards for v score while racking up 13F yards in a relentless Spartan ground game. Minnesota is now 5-1 on th year and 3-0 in the Big Ter while MSU dropped to 1-4-1 an is winless in three conferenc games. Illini rll ,y WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Chubby Phillips' one-yard toucl down dive with a minute to g highlighted a frantic, fourtl quarter Illinois rally yesterda as the Illini broke a three-gam losing string and handed Purdu a 21-17 setback. Purdue seemingly had the contest wrapped up, leading 17-7 early in the fourth quar ter, before the error-plague Illini came to life behind Kur Steger. The junior quarterback, wh scored Illinois' first touchdow on a one-yard run in the secon period, unleashed an aerial a tack that set up both fourt period scores. The Boilermakers fell to 2 in the conference and 3-3 ove all. The Illini also are 2-1 an 3-3. * a n 7 m e ra n, w d lif( e ;ov -F 94 A5 _/Uery at the goal mouth to put Dan Farrell. Michgan n th boad. =third period with a parade of Michigan on the board. goals that started with Manery Badger co Ioosiers hustle Kip Maurer was the benefic- at 6:48, and Dan Lerg at 7:51. said "the w IOWA CITY Iowa - Fresh- iary of another Manery setup The drive stalled as Wisconsin overtime isl an tailback Mike Harkrader pass less than a minute later to went up 6-4 on Alley's tally. play all year n 18 yards for a touchdown~ ith 4% minutes remaining to I e Indiana to a 14-7 victory',H rrirs hustle to vctoi er Iowa yesterday. oach qay how r" Bob Johnson we played in I'd like us to r/y; Harkrader, 5-foot-7 and 174 pounds, set up the scoring drive on a 46-yard dash. Six - plays later he scampered up the right side to break a tie that had been forged early in h- the first quarter. ly e The victory spoiled Iowa's te homecoming in Kinnick Sta- dium, dropping the Hawkeyes to e 0-3 in the conference and 2-4 g over-all. Indiana improved to - 2-1 in the conference and 3-3 d over-all. VField goal id h- records 'smashed DALLAS (AP) - Soccer-style kicker Ove Johannson booted a 69-yard field goal - the long- est in football history - for Abilene Christian in the first quarter of a game yesterday against East Texas State. Johannson, aided by a 16-mile- e per-hour wind broke the NAIA e mark of 62 yards set by Hills- dale's Chester Marcol in 1969. Meanwhile, Texas A&M's d barefooted kicker, Tony Frank- t lin, broke the NCAA field goal record twice yesterday. Frank- r lin booted 64-yard and 65-yard s field goals, breaking the NCAA i E I w/ women netter whEip S By ERNIE DUNBAR er. "I felt good the whole way,! Special To The Daily and I was just waiting to seeI EAST LANSING-Michigan's what happened. Greg Meyer out kicked Spartan "After about a mile to go, I Herb Lindsay in the final 300 thought I was going to get yards to win the individual ti- him," said Meyer. Then with tle in yesterday's double-duall cross country meet with Minne- - sota and Michigan State. In team scoring, Michigan defeated Minnesota 25-30, and downed State 27-30. The third 300 yards left, I took a little portion of the meet had the Go- bit of a lead and I said I'll go phers taking the Spartans 25-32. ow and see what happens. I Meyer shattered the old looked over my shoulder and course record of 29:52, as he had 15 yards on him and said blasted the six mile race in goodbye." Running toether for the ;Meyer's second consecutive week of course records over- entire race, Lindsay and Mey- shadowed Steve Ellitt's meet- er seemed content to wait and winning kick, who flew past rst who was going to move two Spartans and rescued the fist meet for Michigan. After the meet, Lindsay gave Dm eikin s an indication of the type of Dan Heikkinen was the meet- ndual he and Meyer had. te saver for the Wolverines against "I gave it everything I had," Minnesota, as he kicked past the said the 1976 Big Ten outdor Gophers' forth and fifth men. 1,500 meter champion. "It's definitely one of the best races Netters upset I've ever run." Playing their most important Even though he looked com- match of the fall season, the fortable throughout the race, Michign women's tennis team 'Lindsay obviously showed signs upset Big Ten champion Ohio of the quick pace in the final State 6-3, yesterday at Colum- kick. b7's. "With about 300 yards to go "Evervbodiy played as well as I put it to the floor and there I've seen them nlav," stated just wasn't anything left," Coae JIohn Atwood. "The team said Lindsay. .' was am---inelv nisvched nrn." On the other hand, Meyer felt The WVolverines, victorios the pace wasn't all that gruel- at first, second and sixth' ing. 0i"Rleq and in all three dou- Bigp By RICK BONINO Special To The Daily EVANSTON -- Jim Smith clutched the Rick Leach bomb firmly in one hand, and sashayed it into the end zone to cap a picture-perfect play. Twenty-five minutes later, Smith again turned to snare a long distance Leach lob. But this time, Wildcat safety Jim Hutch- ings grabbed the glory. And there you have the story of yes- terday's game. AS NORTHWESTERN'S BAND took the field at halftime this story was taking shape as the anatomy of a rout. But some- where between that second hot dog and the final gun, the Wildcats led one to sus- pect they indeed belonged on the same field as Michigan. The frantically = finishing first half shat- tered some recent stereotypes. Northwestern, herald as yet another ed typical form in moving well between the twenties, the Wolverines brewed up some of the big play potion that charac- terized earlier wins. It began innocuously enough. After a five yard penalty, Leach managed to find Smith for that fifty-two yard score. Then came a deluge of four-, three- and two- play scoring drives as the befuddled Wild- cats strove vainly to adjust. Even Curt Stephenson, a rare target, added a 42 yard catch to set up a Leach score. The big play was back. "Michigan doesn't sustain drives, they beat you on big plays," said Northwestern strong safety Pete Shaw. "We knew that, but we didn't defense them." "It was a compounding of problems," Pont said. "Our punting was bad and that gave them field position. 'Then the Smith touchdown pass really shook up our de- fense." "We started doubting ourselves, second po ten t Smith's touchdown catch provided th first half turning point, the failure of th same largely delivered the second seg ment into Wildcat claws. "In the second half, when they 'trie that pass again, we did it properly," Pon said. "We intercepted it." And while each team added anothe score, they left no questions which wa ' a 6-4, 6-3 win over Grimes and j Stewart. Kercher, and Rentsch- ler swept Olazagasti and Wal- tan 6-4, 6-1 at second doubles, while Janet Wilson and Missy Pollick playing their first match together registered a 2-6, 6-3, 6-3 victory over Schubert and Jones at the third doubles posi- tion. 'This was a real test of pres- sure which We got through," stated Atwood. "Ohio State will probably get better with more practice, but we will also im- prove by the spring regional tournament." --DAILY SPORTS AI tops field T e x a s A&M claimed the championship of Michigan's Second Annual Invitational Wat- er Polo Tournament. The Ag- gies knocked off a cinderella bid by the University of Illinois Chicago Circle Campus (UICC), 16-14: The Michican polomen dronoed two games yesterday, leering them in fourth place. UTCC edged the Wolverines yesterday morning 15-14. The winner of the game, UICC, won the right to play in the r'hamniorshin, while Michigan f woed Loyola for third place. . The Wolverines ran out of gqs and -lost by a wide 14-7 m urgin in the consolation match. -.RICK MADDOCK hOl'E rs smqeah Michigan's volleyball team came on strongly in the rubber S'me of the match to defeat f Cnl-in College, 2-1 Friday. It took the Wolverines three t vmes to disnose the scranpv t -Al"in College team from f,---d Rapids, 15-9, 7-15, and Mi~nhan's starters played the entire game as coach S-nev Vonir, elected not to most important. With the clock ticking record of 63 yards set by Clark into its final half-minute, Dean climaxed Kimble of Colorado State last a lengthy, impressive Northwestern drive year. with a four yard flip to his favorite flank- er. Scott Yelvington. From the crowd's reaction, you'd think the Wildcats had won the game. Or may-SC be the Rose Bowl. COLLEGE FOOTBALL "It meant a lot for us to be able to sre"Dean said. "W~e never gave up." MICHIGAN 38. Northwestern7 score," DMinnesota 14, Michigan St. 10 "We didn't lav down for them," Shaw Ohio St. 30. Wisconsin 20 , added. "We hit them as hard as anyone." Indiana 14, Iowa 7 Illinois 21, Purdue 17 THERE LIES THE KEY to what may Alabama 20, Tennessee 13 prove one of the most satisfying defeats Georgia Tech 28, Auburn 10 i,~ 1'*Colorado 20, Oklahoma St. 10 "I can go faster," said Mey- PRES Ohio U. 28, Miami (O.) 14 Grand Valley 17. Saginaw 6 Iowa St. 21, Missouri 17 Nebraska 51, Kansas St. 0 Houston 26. SMU 6 Texas A&M 24, Baylor 0 Central Michigan 16 ,Indiana St. 13 Wayne State 35. Evansville 28 Boston Collge 14, W. Virginia 3 Florida 33. Florida St. 26 f r Crnlina 0. Nlisssi) bles matches, upned their re- cord to 5-0 with the win. Barbara Selden, playing in the )'Mnbpr one nosition, set the pace with a 6-3,4-6,7-5 triumnh oveur Maria Olazaaasti, ranked n-mber two in Puerto Rican iinior tennis. Freshwomen Kathy Karen sweat veteran r-keve TLe-nn Grimes 6-1, 6-4 at seco-d singles, and Elaine Crnsbv scored a 6-2, 6-1 victory o0'er Tlene Sommer at sixth sin-