Sund©y, October 31, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Eleven EIGHTH STRAIGHT WIN: ""::..mEfr.u.. .. n °"' Blue weathers (Continued from Page 1) Not that the Wolverines de- rived any value from the rout.; "Minnesota changed their de- fenses totally against us," Schembechler said. "I'm glad; Inside Straightthey did, it gave us experi-a ence making adjustments." INDEED, THE scrimmage atmosphere dominated what ndy Glazer was supposedly the opening: bout of the tough part of Mich- igan's schedule. Through mostI of the contest, the only real Tostruggle came between Michi-I ~ ~tl B~ e Igan quarterback Rick Leach!I * " " and running back Rob Lytle for, ]iEMORIES ... . rushing honors. Lytle, playing two more se- Johnny Rodgers catches the punt and races past 11 de- ries than Leach, picked up 129 fenders, two ballboys and a stadium guard. It seems that yards to his signal-caller's 114, only the stadium itself can stop him . . .moving within five yards of his second consecutive 1,000-plus Alabama changes running backs on almost every play, season and earning Chevrolet's and each substitute seems faster than the last. . . Offensive Player award. Pat Baden lofts his umpteenth touchdown pass of the game .i"In my opinion, no other back to J KMcKan gam in the United States of Ameri- t J-K. Mc -ay.ca can do everything Rob Lytle: Anthony Davis glides past Notre Dame defenders as if does for this team - block,' they stand still. He scores six touchdowns ... catch, lead, run," Schembech- ler said of the senior who ran Rick Leach breaks loose for 20-yard runs every time for a score and caught a touch- he touches the ball. Whenever he deigns to pass, the throws down pass. are flawless . . . IN REFERENCE to backs like Heisman Trophy frontrun- ners Tony Dorsett and Ricky What? Not Rick "Knuckleball" Leach. Oh; sure, he has Bell, Schembechler added, his good games, like yesterday. But what about Wake Forest? "Those other guys can carry, He was 314. the ball thirty times a game- Ah, but the memories above are television memories. Fleet- and look good, but Lytle does ing rememberances of great players and great teams. Bill more for our team than they' Flemming, Keith Jackson, et al, don't harp on the bad mo- dorfor theirs But no one overlooked Leach, ments, who despite a first-half thigh Why do the memories run like that? Why don't I recall muscle cramp pooled his run- the tremendous collisions in the "pit" - the middle of the ning talents with another per-! Gophers spotlight to yet another area of a 51-yard runback. the multitalented Wolverine THEN, IN THE game's final squad. minutes, Minnesota mustered a "Our (offensive) line did such march to the Michigan 44, a good job today that we could where Wolverine defensive tack- do pretty much what we want-' le Bill Jackson tipped a Dungy ed," said Leach, who ran for toss to freshman linebacker Ron two touchdowns and passed for Simpkins to end the Gophers' two more. final scoring threat. THEN MIKE KENN, an of- Minnesota's initial field posi- fensive tackle on what Schem- tion proved most impressive. bechler called "a very unsel' Bobby Weber brought Bobby fish team," again passed along Wood's opening kickoff back to the praise. the 24, just one yard short of "Our defense played a great a Wolverine opponent's farthest game," the huge lineman sum- kickoff return. med up succinctly. But the Gophers, who came Minnesota, trying to ride the out throwing as Schembechler mediocre-but-accurate arm of j expected, repeatedly faltered in quarterback Tony Dungy in its! their own territory while the vain upset hopes, found itself Blue kept busy scoring on each completely contained by Michi- of its first three possessions. gan's perenially-suspect pass de- I fense.1 "WE FIGURED they'd try to t pick away at us with their short passing game," Schembechler t said in reference to the Gophers'! strategy in last year's narrow 28-21 Wolverine win. "They hit a few short ones, but we did a better job defend- ing them," he concluded. Junior Dwight Hicks, return- ing to his starting safety slot following hand surgery, creditedc the defensive line's rush and containment for the secondary's! success against the rain-hamp- ered Minnesota air attack. "When you put good pressure! on the quarterback, he has to1 throw on the run," Hicks ex- plained. "The one (interception) I caught was throwtw high." HICKS' INTERCEPTION was FIRST IT WAS Harlan Huck- leby, scoring on yet another third - and - short outside play. Then, following some explosive, tackle-breaking running, Lytle capped a 71-yard drive with his touchdown catch. After some more Lytle hero- ics, Leach got into the act, bare- ly nicking the end zone corner on a 28-yard touchdown scamp- er. Michigan's final first - half drive sputtered when fullback Russell Davis, playing little after his Indiana start, dropped the ball on Minnesota's three- yard line. The Wolverines then took the ball in on their first three sec- ond-half possessions before Ly- tle added his fourth - quarter ground touchdown as an after- thought Daily Photo by SCOTT ECCKER MINNESOTA LINEBACKER Steve Stewart (97) makes a futile attempt to snag Michigan's Harlan Huckleby (25). Huckleby took a pitchout from quarterback Rick Leach at the six yard line and sped in for the Wolverine's first touchdown as they downed Minnesota 45-0. line? Why do the runs seem longer, the passes better? players faster, the There are a few reasons, really - none of them that un- usual. From the sidelines a game seems like a tremendous physical battle - not much artistry at all. Move into the stands and youhave more of an overview. The collisions are still there, but you don't really hear them. i TV is a different world, though. For run seems longer than just nine yards nouncers sing the praises of the mighty U. And if someone makes a great play, once, or miss it getting your hot dog. three, sometimes four or more times. one; a nine-yard out of 100. An- men of Football you don't see it You see it two, I think I've seen Levi Jackson's 88-yard TD run against Ohio State (two years ago) about 20 times by now. Yesterday we had mightly Mich in, unseen Michigan,' show up on the tube for the first time this year. MillionsI saw that old smoothie Leach taunt the Gophers. Rob Lytle probably resembled something flying out of a cannon. And, the Michigan defensive line probably looked like the Minne- sota Viking front four to the entire nation. No one else has to know this was the first game Greg Morton and Co. have really rushed the/ passer successfully. Since television is a thing that legends are made from, then, you'd think the players would be super-psyched to do well. But the reactions varied. "It's our .first game on TV," said Lytle, who ripped for 129 yards in 20 carries yesterday. "That fires you up. You sure don't want to make a fool of yourself, especially if home- town people are watching." But burly Calvin O'Neal differed. "You know what you have to do," said the middle line- backer. "TV can't change anything. The exposure is nice, but you don't worry about that." But perhaps the most analytic, middle-of-the-road view be- longed to Harlan Huckelby. "Going into the game I thought TV would mean some- thing," said Huckleby. "I thought about it during the week. But you know, you don't even think about it while, you're out there. The only time you remember it is for those /time-outs."j From the 45-0 score, you have to believe the Wolverines were indeed concentrating on the game. The exposure just comes naturally. fect, 4-4 passing day in a steady one of the turnovers which drizzle. p o proved inevitable each time "Leach has put great pefr-Minnesota managed a deeper EDGE ENN S ' TE ances back - to - back," Schem- penetration of the waterlogged bechler said of his quarter- Tartan Turf battleground. back's showings against Indiana The Gophers first fathomed and Minnesota. "Right now, he their own forty midway through probably has no peer in our con-' the third quarter. But tailback ference." , Bubby Holmes, realizing the er- LEACH DECLINED to com- ror, juggled a pitchout right By ERNIE DUNBAR The 1 pare his play to last week's into the hands of Wolverine de- Special to The Daily pulled romp over the Hoosiers, which fensive end John Anderson. I KENT, Ohio - Michigan rac- theyr Schembechler called the best: Minnesota again crossed its ed to its second consecutive the las game of the sophomore's ca- forty early in the fourth period, Central Collegiate Conference ish: reer. but Dungy's third-down bomb cross - country championship: MallE And, as Michigan players re- ended up in Hicks' newly-heal- here yesterday, edging Penn breakin main prone to do, the strong- ed hands as \he safety turned State 48-51. j rights armed southpaw shifted the on his punt return form for The harriers posted their sec- .elected Y ond CCC title in as many tries, ing ere oo1eeuv aisi v since entering the conference As th MICH MINN MINNESOTA in 1975. who w First Downs 24 10 att com int yds Wolverine standout Greg Mey- walked Rushing (att-yds) 65-378 33-80 Dungy 20 12 2 85 er found himself in a rather wardst (att-com-yds) 5-4-40 20-12-85 RECEIVING strange position at the end of Whe Total yards 418 165 AICHIGAN the meet. In the past four fjudge, Punts (no-avg) 1-32.0 7-34.6 no yds long weeks, Meyer has won four in the Fues-etlost 1'2 0-1Smith12 2 ?1 meets, setting course records" ley ta Penalties-yds 1-5 4-45 G.Jothnsen . 'o0 104 on two of the occasions. legiat RUSHING MICHIGAN MINNESOTA But yesterday Meyer ran andI att yds avg no yds long into George Malley, Penn self t' Lytle 20 129 6.4 Iitlas 2 23 14 State's tough number-one Thisi Leach 10 111 11.4 Breatilt 2 16 8wh tok op onr cls Hucklehy 12 55 4.6 Anhorn 2 i 7 man, who took top honors close r R. Davis 4 28 7.0 Mathews 2 7 5 with his time of 24:19 for the ners ha S. Johnson 5 20 4.0 Ki'zmann 1 7 1 five-mile course. "I d Clayton 2 14 7.0 Holmes 1 6 4Rinning neck and neck for go the Smith 3 8 2.6 Wypysynshi 1 6 6 most of the race, Meyer and ley. "I M. Davis 1 4 4.0 SCORING PLAYS Malley, considered the best run- have ru Richardson 1 2 2.0 ner on the East Coast, left the lasthu Reid 2 0 0.0 MICH. Iuckleby, 6 yd. run -*Ancron the~East.Coast,-le.tthe last hin Nittany Lion ace quickly, even with Meyer and raced side-by-side until t instant before the fin-! ey lunged for the tape, ng the string with his shoulder, while Meyer to cross the line stand- ect. he crowd waited to seel von, Malley and Meyer next to each other to- the finish judge. n they reached the the two were lined up eir correct order, Mal- aking the Central Col- e Conference champion, M'ieyer relegating him- L second place., is by no means the first ace the two distance run- ave had. idn't want the race to race. Then it wouldn't have' come down to a kick." Obviously dejected after tak- ing second for only the second time in seven meets, Meyer said that the race turned into a tactical run. "We were sort of testing each other the last two miles because neither one of us knew how fit the other was," said Meyer. Comparing the CCC meet to some of his other races this season, Meyer said, "the pace really wasn't that fast." I just didn't feel good enough to run fast in the middle. I don't know why, maybe it was an off day." The three-point margin indi- cates just how tight the meet actually was. Michigan took places 2, 6, 7, 13 and 20 while ' Penn State grabbed numbers 1, 9, 12, 14 and 15. irriers earn f title Bruce McFee took thirteenth in 25:12. Wolverines' Mark Foster and Bruce Scheper finished 21st (25:27) and 43rd (25:45), re- spectively. Considering past performances, Donakowski ran one of the Wol- verines finest races. Known as a late season bloom- er, Michigan's number two man finally is running up to his capability. The All-American from Dear- born has had breathing difficul- ties all season, but seemed to be at full strength yesterday. Both Donakowski and Elliott will be keys to the Wolver- ines title hopes' next week when they must defend their Big Ten title against a strong Wisconsin team. Michigan coach Ron War- hurst felt this meet was a criti- cal race for his team. "We needed a good victory here," said Warhurst. "This is really going to give them (the team) a lot of confidence. "If we'd have gotten beaten here, the guys would be( head- ing into the Big Ten meet with question marks in their heads. But now they're all' talking like they can win it." 1 l l way it went," said Mal-1 Other teams in Michigan didn't Every race Greg and I fare as well as the Wolverines, ,un it's come down to the; Western Michigan taking fourth ndred yards before some- I and Eastern Michigan captur- 'n rrr , ',ing sixth Wangler MINNE Breault Mathews Kitzmann Dungy Hlmhes PASS: MICHI L~each S Johnson By The Asso SOTA att 6 7 9 8 3 -g yds 28 23 22 10 -3 (Wood kick) MICH. Lytle, 13 yd. pass avg from Leach (Wood kick) 4.7 MICH. Leach, 28 yd. run 3.3 (Wood kick) 2.4 MICH. Smith, 22 yd. pass 1.3 from Leach (Wood kick) MICH. Wood, 46 yd. field goal MICH. Leach, 6 yd. run yds (Wood kick) 40 MICH. Lytle, 2 yd. run a (Wood kick) 7 14 21 28 31 38 45 a 0 0 0 0 1 6 ndividual title up for grabs un- one inany puns away.ng. til the final 400 yards. Both runners complained of Michigan received some fine As the two entered the feeling badly, Malley saying he performances from the upper stretch towards the finish line, had stomach problems, and half of the team, as Bill Don- both runners picked up the Meyer saying he didn't feel akowski ran sixth in 24:50, pace. good in the middle of the race.; Steve Elliott finished right be- Meyer started his kick first, When asked if he might of hind Donakowski in 24:51, and pulling to a seven-yard lead started his kick a bit early. before Malley decided it was Meyer replied "No. I should time to move. have run harder during the I "; " [ .414 . r ING GAN att corm 4 4 1 0 int 0 0 '"" . t rckeyes trounce Indiana sr bu sronrs, ciated Press when Scott Arnett connected I B L - -w( X M TI I" U 1!'f IT Television even affected some of those 104,426 fans (and Fullback Pete Johnson scored 30,000 maize and blue caps) in the stands. When the rain came, two touchdowns following Indi-' thousands of students headed for a dry dorm lounge or apart- ana fumbles and Ray Griffin ment TV. ABC probably prevented more than a few colds. And ,raced 65 yards with an inter-: you thought He was the only one who could affect such things. cepted pass for another scorej yesterday as the eighth-ranked Seriously, though, yesterday was Michigan's big chance, Ohio State Buckeyes whipped its day in the sun. The mystery team and mystery men are 'the Hoosiers 47-7. mysteries no longer. People all about the nation now know how Indiana's defense held Ohio. goodthee 'olvrins ar .. an iftheState without a first down until good these Wolverines are ... and if they get a slightly in- late in the second quarter. And flated view, who are we to tell them otherwise? the Hoosiers took a 7-6 leadI with yard first George Edgar on a' 15- touchdown pass on the play in the second period. A 59-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Jim Pa- centa to Jim Harrell late in the third quarter and a 10- yard TD run by Jeff Logan early in the final period put the game out of reach for the Hoosiers, who have not beat- en Ohio State since 1951. The Buckeyes remained tied loubt Defe n By RICH LERNER The verdict is in on the Michigan de- fense. Following the season opener against Wisconsin, the Wolverine defenders were accused of being more permeable than their counterparts of recent history. After yesterday's 45-0 razing of Minnesota, the fourth shutout of the season, those indict- ments can be dismissed outright. THE MICHIGAN DEFENSE utterly paralyzed Minnesota's attempted attack, All-America hopeful Tony Dungy regard- less. The Golden Gophers crossed into Michigan territory only once, that with only one minute and 11 seconds remain- ing in the game. Its pride hure, the defense retaliated, second-string linebacker Ron , Simokins ers dispe gan secondary, completing 17 of 31 passes for 198 yards. Yesterday, he connected on 12 of 20 passes for a meager 85 yards. On the sole occasion Dungy tried to throw deep, Dwight Hicks intercepted and ran it back 51 yards. Only two Minnesota plays netted more than 10 yards, a 15-yard run by Steve Breault and a 14-yard Dungy-to-Ron Kul- las pass completion. "The defense is coming along and that's the important thing as far as I'm concern- ed," said Bo Schembechler. Having Hicks back in helped us out an awful lot." HICKS AND HIS defensive mates were particularly fired up to stop Dungy after the Gopher quarterback's success last year. "We just did what we had to do," said TFinks. "This ras a hipa ne afor itne h- l C pass rush with blitz assistance from the ends and linebackers. "After last year when Dungy hit on 17 of 31, we were determined to really get after him and not let him stand back there and pass the ball," said Morton. "We contained him (Dungy), we put pressure on him. He couldn't throw be- cause he couldn't see his receivers," said Hicks. "A lot of.people think pass defense is all with the defensive backs and it's not." VERSUS THE RUN, the Michigan de- fense has been as stingy as it has ever been. With the Gophers only able to mus- ter 85 yards on the ground, the Wolverines have allowed less than 100 yards per game.j Not since Wisconsin's Ira Matthews cnnted for 27 vairds on a reverse on onen- with No. 1 Michigan for the two touchdowns yesterday to NIGHT EDITOR; Big Ten lead at 5-0. lead Illinois to, a' 31-25 home- KATHY HENNEGHAN ENIb GOLDMAN Smith sparkles in a rain - marred game. comingpar e vitroe'Wicni Phillips started the scoring!, .,::::..:::;.:::.:.::,... . . . . . . . . . . . . . EAST LANSING - with a 46-yardttouchdown run Michigan State exploded for on the fourth play from scrim- five second - half touchdowns, mage and then broke a 17-17 tie &D i R S U 1 e three on scoring passes by early in the third quarter on a quarterback Ed Smith, as MSU five-yard slant which put Illi- came from behind yesterday to nois ahead to stay. By PAULINE TOOLE swamp Purdue, 45-13. Trailing 13-10 at the half With 1:05 remaining, the The Michigan field hockey team closed out its home sea- Trilig 13-10t e halfn Badgers' got a final chance son with an 8-0 rout of Olivet College at Ferry Field yester Smith hit split end Eugene Crolcmlee Byrd for a 24-yard strike and stCarol cpeste t he day. then tossed an eight-yard flip to straight passes only to ha e The victory was sparked by a six goal performance fullback Levi Jackson for an-' rpletedpassby junior transfer student Dawn Kohut. Kohut was not too other score.pt a impressed with her own performance, though, remarking, Moments later, reserve tail-* * * back Leon Williams roare Wldsiped "Oh, they were all garbage (goals)". 33 yards in three plays, the IOWA CITY-A rollout three last a 12-yard sweep, to capu th AS INDICATED by the score, the game was primarily a third-period scoring spree. Caldwell with three minutes,14 an offensive contest. The Olivet team rarely'controlled the Smith notched his third TD seconds remaining let Iowa es- ball in Michigan territory, leading left fullback Pat Cohen pass of the day in the failing 'cape gambling Northwestern to comment, "The defense didn't get much of a workout. minutes on a four-yard toss to 13-10 yesterday We hardly ever touched the ball." tight end Mike Cobb, and re- serv fl k oza Mide Northwestern, w h o s e 14 Right fullback Roberta Zald cpmmented, "We all chred14 ard A oranotder straight defeats over two years played a good game, our offense was aggressive in the is the nation's longest current circle. Jean McCarthy, especially, played an excellent Sscore at the fal gun. losing streak, took a 10-3 lead game," she continued, referring to the freshwomen half- in the first quarter when fresh- back whose year-long performance has shown constant im- Illinois cashes in man Todd Sheet returned a rovement. C HAM PATIGN-Tail-kickoff 93 yrsfr. oc back Chubby Phillips scored kIdown. The game was a showcase for the amount of work the team has put in this year and their level of improvement F a over the season. Both defensive and offensive players cut well for the ball, playing their positions-confident others Would do the same. MICHIGAN 45, Minnesota 0 1 western Michigan 21, Ohio U. 10 THE GAME also provided coach Phyllis Ocker with an Ohio State 47, Indiana 7 Brown 16, Harvard 14 TEGM lopoie oc hli ~e iha Iowa 13, Northwestern 10 Dartmouth 34, Columbia 14 opportunity to test future possibilities. Substitutes were Iuinois 31, Wisconsin 25 Holy Cross 33, Rhode Island 14 made in the second half which gave second team players Michigan State 45, Purdue 13 Pennsylvania 10, Princeton 9 Texas Tech 31, Texas 28 Pittsburgh 23, Syracuse 13 varsity experience, and the coach an idea of new player S. Carolina 27, N.C. State 7 Rutgers'24, Massachusetts 7 combinations. N. Carolina 34, Wake Forest 14 Villanova 22, Boston College 3