Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, November 7, 1976 Boilermakers end Blue streak (Continued from Page 1) effort. "THE CROWD (57,205, some 12,000 under Ross-Ade Stadium's capacity) got us going;" said Purdue quarterback Mike Vi- tali. "We got the adrenalin flowing and knew we could do it." "Everyone was sick and tired of hearing how Michigan was going to come down here and kick our ???," said Purdue full- back John Skibinski. But on the Michigan side, pea- ple weren't talking emotion. "WE DIDN'T TACKLE well," Schembechler, who kept lock- er room doors shut for half an hour before allowing the press in. "They moved the ball on us. "We had, enough opportuni- ties,". continued the visibly up- set Schembechler. "They turned it over too. It was just a total breakdown." The breakdown wasn't imme- diate. After a first quarter Pur- due fumble, Michigan ripped 58 yards in six plays to take a 7-0 lead. THE-BOILERMAKERS came right back at Michigan, though, returning Wood's kickoff to the 35 (the furthest anyone has re- turned a Michigan 'kick this yearj, and then marching down to Michigan's ten before being stopped on fourth and one. Michigan moved dut to its own 48, but Russell Davis, temporarily subbing for Rob Ly- tle, fumbled on his first carry. Lytle, who suffered a hip point- er came back to finish with 153 yards. Purdue took only four plays to score and it looked like Mich- igan was in for another Wis- consin-type game - both teams moving at will. BUT MICHIGAN soon found out it couldn't move at will: the Blue punted after three plays on their next possession. The Boilers keptpmoving, though, and with 9:57 remaining, Dierking, magnificent all after- noon, swept 25 yards to score. Mike Jolly blocked Purdue's point-after try, but the Boiler- makers led 13-7 and Schembech- ler had the dogfight he'd been 'wishing for in recent weeks. Purdue stopped Michigan again, and the play that typi- fied the afternoon better than any other followed. JOHN ANDERSON punted from his 46, the ball landing at Purdue's.15. Smith and Max Richardson were near the ball but not in front of-it, and when the oblate spheroid took a pre- dictably unpredictable bounce and headed into the end zone, the pair were out of position to down it. Not a major physical error, not even a heinous mental mis- take. Just a little less than the two were capable of, and it cost Michigan 15-20 yards. The Boilermakers again mov- ed smoothly up the field, twice converting on fourth-and-one sit- uations - the first of which came at their own 29. The Boil- ers were rolling enough to take chances. AFTER THE SECOND fourth down conversion Vitali, who was 10-14 for 109 yards, let loose a long pass from Michi- SUNDAY SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: MARK WHITNEY gan's 40. Jerry Zuver picked it off for Michigan, probably sav- ing Michigan the ignominy of a 13-point halftime deficit. Michigan came out passing: for the first time in the game, and an apparent reception by Curt Stephenson was ruled incom- plete by the umpire who had been 30 yards farther away than the referee who first ruled the catch good. "The umpire was totally out of position," said Schembech- ler. "He had no business stick- ing his nose in. That was a com- pleted pass." SIDELINE observers agreed with Schembechler, but the play. was history and Purdue left the field six points ahead - with- out having punted in the first half. B Uoilin MICH. PUR.I Lytle popped for runs of 20 and 34 yards in Michigan's sec- ond half bpening drive, the sec- ond giving Michigan a first and goal at the four, but on fourth - and one quarterback Rick Leach pitched to Harlan Huckleby and the drive was fumbled away. "The goal line stand was in- describable," exclaimed jubilant Purdue coach Alex Agase. "It was a sight. To hold Michigan out is impossible." THE WOLVERINES finally displayed some of their famed offense when Leach led Smith perfectly on a 64-yard touch- down strike. Michigan, outplay- ed and outgained, was suddenly ahead. The Wolverines couldn't keep things together though. They exchanged Zuver's second in- terception for a fumbled Leach- Smad to-Lytle pitch before Purdue drove down to Michigan's six, setting up Supan's winning field goal. Dierking again provided most of the yardage., Schembechler's been looking for a "test" for several weeks now. There were the inevitable questions about what he thought of this one. "WE DON'T accept defeat," said Schembechler. "No defeat works out in anyone's favor. It might have helped if we'd kick- ed the field goal or caught the pass or scored inside the ten, but we'll see. We'll find out what we're made of in the next two weeks, won't we?" Middle linbacker Calvin O'Neal, magnificent amongst the mediocrity with 24 tackles, summed it up. "You suffer for a minute after a loss just like you celebrate for a minute after a win,' said O'Neal. "But we're still in the running. If we beat Illinois and Ohio State we still go to the Rose Bowl." But the long, motionless, pain- ed faces on the Michigan team bus afterward indicated the suf- fering might go on for a little longer than O'Neal had hoped. AP Photo Michigan's Rob Lytle (41) fumbles the ball as he is tackled by Purdue's Mark Travline (top) in the closing minutes of yesterday's game at West Lafayette. The Boilermikers recovered the fumble and moved the ball into Wolverine territory to set up the winning 23-yard field goal by the Boilermakers' sophomore placekicker Rock Supan. MICHIGAN WINS BIG TEN Harriers ralce to tit le First downs..............17 Rushing (att-yds) .. 50-256 Passing (att-com-int) 2-8-0 Total yards............335 Punts (no.-avg)....... 3-142 Fumbles--lost...........3-2 Penalties-yds.......... 0-0 21 61-251 10-14-2 360 1-43 3-1 3-15 RECEIVING MICHIGAN no Smith.......... 2 PURDUE Skibinski ............. 4 R. smith ..... .....2 Oliver.................1 Arnold ............... 1 U nk................1 Dierking...............1 SCORING PLAYS yds long 79 64 39 24 17 15 8 6 18 20 17 15 8 6 yak SPRETZEL LOGIC By RICK BONINO U Se 'OZSS . ,. . ...like a bad dream WEST LAFAYETTE A PAIR OF DISRESPECTFULLY downtrodden buttons graced the cold ground outside Ross-Ade Stadium yesterday after- noon. One said simply, "Fod-Dole"; the other read, "Go Blue- Wolverines No. 1." As the final gun's bark pierced my somewhat numbed con- sciousness I again experienced a feeling familiar from election night, the strange sensation that occurs when something you've seen seems still outside the comfortable bounds of reality. Jimmy Carter, the 39th President of the United States ... Ohio State took over the Big Ten lead . .. whether you con- sider such phrases "good" or "bad," neither has really sunk into my mind yet. It's sort of like going to a horror movie-you want to be scared, but not TOO scared. Today proved too much. I began talking myself out of the situation as much as possible, saying, "It's only a football game" like you'd say "It's only a movie - perhaps a useful perspective for a journalist. But movies are only movies and football games are only football games, right? Maybe. As George Orwell might say, "All football games are created equal-but some are more equal than others." This was one of those games, and in that light I can almost forgive Bo for his -post-game atics. He initially barred the panting press from his locker room, a trick labelled Woody Hayes, before his class showed through and he relented. But no man, regardless of character, would've performed much better in Schembechler's shoes. Sure, the loss was hard to stomach, as it brought the undefeated' season and top national ranking crashing to earth to join those aforementioned badges. Bo also learned some things about his personnel that he must've found equally hard to take. While Purdue played an exceptional game, the Wblverine defense did help them a little with some missed- tackling and otherwise poor execution. The game also wrote another chapter in College football's first version of the test-ban treaty, namely the rise and fall of Harlan "H-bomb" Huckleby. While still a good runner, Huckleby's faults are growing painfully obvious, such as his general inability to get past anyone he can't merely outsprint. Fullback Russell Davis, he of the standing reservation in Bo's doghouse after his recent fondness for fumbling, came in and did it again the first time he touched the ball to set up Purdue's initial score. Of course, the truly amazing Rob Lytle has come on to pick up the rushing slack as of late. The elusive Lytle put some more impressive stats in the recordbooks, including his second straight 1,00-yard season. But he and some 'of the other Michigan seniors-the men who've been there, the team's leaders-failed to pull their mates through when it counted. Lytle, after some impressive, tackle-breaking running, com- mitted the crucial 4th-quarter fumble which ended a serious Michigan scoring threat and started the Boilermakers on the drive ot their game-winning field goal. Wingback Jim Smith snared one touchdown bomb and near- ly pulled off a ci'cus catch on another Rick Leach toss. But on Michigan's last drive, with everything on the line, Smith worked his way open and grabbed another TD-ticketed pass - and sim- ply dropped it. And, at the end, reliable Bobby Wood watched his last- ditch, 37 yard field goal attempt waft inches wide - an ad- mittedly tough kick, but still a good two yards short of the diminutive booter's seaon average. ,Michigan's outstanding luck with injuries also took a dive, as defensive end-punter John Anderson fell sidelined for an as yet undetermined stretch with a sprained knee. Lytle and "Mo" Morton also spent some time ailing on the bench. But the unkindest cut of all had to be the damper this puts on what kSchembechler has called the most enjoyable season of his coaching career. It proved quite ironic. A mere week after Bo decided to stop pleading for slugfests and said, "We haven't had any close games, let's keep it that way," his team got into a dogfight - RUSHING MICHIGAN att Lytle. ........21 Huckleby............15 Leach ............... 8 Davis ..............4 Smith ............... 2 PURDUE att Dierking............38 Skibinski............17 Vitalil................ 5 Brown ............... 1 M PI yds 153 57 23 17 6 yds 162 81 8 2 avg 7.3 3.8 2.9 4.2 3.0 avg 4.3 4.7 1.2 2.0 MICH. - Leach, 8-yard run (wood kick)....... 7 PUR.-Dierking, 4-yard run (Supan kick).....7 PUR.-Dierking, 25-yard run (kick failed)7........7 MICH.-J. Smith, 64-yard pass from Leach (Wood kick).......14 PUR.-Supan, 23-yard FG . 14 SCORE BY QUARTERS MICHIGAN .... 7 0 7 PURDUE....... 7 6 0 0 7 13 13 16 0-14 3--16 By ERNIE DUNBAR special to The Daily GLEN ELLYN, Ill. - Craig Virgin became the first man ever to win four consecutive Big Ten individual champion- ships, and Michigan captured its third straight team title yes- terday in the 62nd annual Big Ten Cross Country Champion- ships. The Wolverines were sparked by gutty performances from Bill Donakowski (fifth in 24:01), Steve Elliott (sixth in 24:18) and third place finisher Greg Mey-. er (23:50). _ Probably the most remark- able thing that emerged from the -meet was the fact that Michigan won the title with- out their first, fourth, and fifth runners from last year. Mike McGuire and Jack Sin- clair were out with mononu-. cleosis and Jay Anstaett was suffering from a stress frac- ture. Heavy pre-meet favorite Wis- consin seemed likethey had the championship wrapped up, aft- WIN THIRD STRAIGHT, 6-3 er beating Michigan by 40 points in the Notre Dame Invitational. But running with a never say die attitude, the Wolverines to- taled 67 points to Illinois' 78 and Minnesota's 82. Favored Wisconsin slipped into a tie with Michigan State with 98. "It just shows what kind of kids we have," said an emo- tional Michigan coach Ron Warhurst. "All our guys are competitors and I haven't seen them choke in a big meet in three years. "Nobody thought we could win the thing," added War- hurst. "But we knew we were good enough to win it and we bounced back from our Notre - Dame defeat to win." The Wolverines had their hands fullforithe first four miles as Illinois ran a surpris- ingly tough race. But afterhseveral position changes in the final. miles, it was/ Michigan and not Illinois' that went to the victory stand to receive the Big Ten trophy. Running at the front of the pack from the beginning, Vir- gin took command of the race at the 1.5-mile mark and was never challenged. "Ultimately I think I ran harder today as far as effort wise than I did in any of my previous three Big Ten meets." Virgin's winning time of 23:16.7 was twenty two sec- onds faster than Michigan State's Herb Lindsay, who fin- ished second for the second year in a row. Coach Warhurst received an outstanding performance from sophomore Elliott, who kicked past Wisconsin's Steve Lacy and Mark Johnson to give Mich- igan three men ahead of the Badgers first man. "I felt like dropping out aft- er that first mile," said Elliott. "But there was something with- in me that I had to do it. liott surprised himself with his fine performance. "I was really happy with 'the way I finished," he said. "I thought I could do it all the time but I didn't think I'd be. that far up." For Meyer the race had a double meaning. Individually the senior from Grand Rap- ids was.dejected that he did- n't beat MSU's Lindsay. How- Dekei By ERROL SHIFMAN In a hard-hitting game last night at Yost Ice Arena, the Michigan hockey team defeated defending NCAA champion Min- nesota 6-3 for the , Wolverines' third straight victory and a sweep of the weekend series. The Wolverines, now 4-2, came out hustling in the first period and jumped out to a quick 2-0 lead. At 6:03 defense- man Bill Wheeler pounced on a rebound of a Rob Palmer shot and the Blue led 1-0.' Just thirty seconds later, Kris Manery took a pass from Bill Thayer and pushed it past Min- nesota goalie Steve Janaszak as Michigan continued to buzz around the Minnesota net. Michigan looked like iti was headed for a rout butj Minnesota stayed right with' Minneso u FIRST PERIOD SCORING: 1. Mich. - Wheeler (Ro Palmer, Hodne) 6:03; 2. Mich. - Manery (Thayer) 6:33; 3. Minn. - Yackel (J. Micheletti, Lambert) PPG 8:22. PENALTIES: 1. Mich. - Maurer (2-hold) 7:34; 2. Minn. - Larson (2-rough) 8:59; 3. Mich. - Turner (2-trip) 14:04; 4. Mich. - bench (too many men) 17:50. SECOND PERIOD SCORING: 4. Mich. - Brennan (DeBol, Wheeler) 1:04; 5. Minn.-- Lambert (lind) 5:32; 6. Mich. - Ka-, wa (Waymann) .12:19;7. Minn. - Gorence (Strobel) 17:33. 'Ire 1s sweep iviinn it throughout the game and after a good move that turned never allowed the Wolverines two Gopher defenders and Jan- more than a two goal advan- aszak into spectators. tage. The Michigan defense A late Minnesota flurry was and a brilliant goaltending held off by Zimmerman but job by Frank Zimmerman stubborn Gopher forward Tom were the keys to Wolverines' Gorence - who scored the hat dominance, trick in the first game of the "We played much better than series - cut the lead to one Friday night, one hundred per once again at 17:31. cent better tonight," said a A somewhat sloppy third per- pleased Michigan head coach iod saw both teams trade excel-. Dan Farrell. lent scoring opportunities which Trailing 2-1 entering the sec- forced each goalie to make ond period, Minnesota came spectacular saves. Both teams out aggressively and throughout went to a free wheeling style the period they peppered Zim-with ma shots coming from merman from all angles. the ilue line. Eah ea sard ary n While Zimmerman shut out Ea2:hteamBd ewar and the Gophers in the period,. at 12:19 Ben Kawa and John Mcia u w atJns Waymani combined on a beau- zak with put two past Janas- tiful passing display to give ik hishsecond ofManery scor- Michigan a 4-2 lead. Kawa tuck- and Dean Turner adding some ed the puck under the crossbar icing at 19:46 ameltedManery earned first star hon- I Mors for the game and his goal midway through the third stan- PENALTIES: 5. Mich. - Turner za appeared to be the one that (2-trip) 13:02. took the steam out of the Min- THIRD PERIOD nesota attack. SCORING: 8. Mich. - Manery Manery also received a (Turner, Thayer) 9:51; 9. Mich. - seven stitch gash over his Turner (Kawa, Palmer) 19:46. PENALTIES: 6. Minn. -- Boo (2- left eye. Minnesota was play- elbow) 14:07; 7. Mich. - Palmer (2- ing without its top forward holS) 17:3s-IN Tom Vannelli who ironically SCORING BY PERIODSws also caught in the e by MINNESOTA......... 1 2 0-3 was ascughti h ye by MICHIGAN..........2 2 2-6 Manery's stick Friday night. Vannelli is in an Ann Arbor GOALIE SAVES hospital because of internal Janaszak (Minn.) ... 13 8 15-36 hospital aus be there a Zimmerman (Mich.) . 9 12 9-30 bleeding and will p- Attendance: 4,952. proximately ten days. esota Vannelli, a senior, was sore- ly missed by his team. Gopher coach Herb Brooks was disap- pointed with his team's show- ing but pointed out that, "We only had two seniors out there and we're a young team." "We have to be patient with our young players. I expect them to come around about Jan- uary or so." The series lived up to its bill- ing as a tough one. Penalties were extremely light in com- parison to Friday night's in- fraction filled game. Officials allowed a much closer check- ing game and play washalted numerous times because of shaken players. Michigan appeared to justify the number one ranking given them by Hockey magazine and with increased improvement, should be in the thick of the WCHA race all year. "I put the pressure on early ever his feelings on the out- on purpose to see if I could get come of the race reflect fiis anybody to give in," said the his team attitude. j senior from Lebanon, Illinois. "I just opened up and nobody "I ran pretty bad," said Mey- went with me and that was er. "But it'll ,come back. All when I decided I better puter"Bti'lcm bakAl my marbles in the ballgame that I'm happy about is that right there." I wa's still in a position to help Asked if he felt the race had the team the way I did. gone as he expected, Virgin Other Wolverines to figure in replied "No. I didn't think I the team score were Bruce Mc- would get that kind of a leadt4es7reJ , approximately 50 yards) that Fee (24th in 24:37) and Jon soon. Cross (29th in 24:48). ,.- Puirdui By RICH LERNER Special to The Daily WEST LAFAYETTE - They didn't have any champagne on hand in the Pur- due locker room after the Spoilermakers' 16-14 upset of Michigan here yesterday. However, what the Sprite may have lacked in luster the Boilermakers com- pensated for with their own bubbling high spirits. Tears still marked the visages of assistant coach Fred Conti and wide re- ceiver Jappy Oliver a full thirty minutes after the game. AFTER BOUNDING from the field to their locker room with shouts of "We beat them!," "I can't believe it!," and "What a ??????? game!" the Purdue players rallied and shouted around their head coach Alex Agase for ten long min- utes before their ritual post-game pray- er. ' Following an ear-piercing "Amen," the rejoicing resumed. '" 49M.... - - . - m - - - a m i of myregains of my lifetime, our lifetime," beamed Agase to the assembled writers only after he had congratulated each of his players individually. "We lost a lot of respect last week against ,Michigan State (losing 45-13)," said Agase. "But we couldn't have gain- ed back our respect any better than by beating the number one team. "We took a step backwards a week ago, but we took 99 steps forward to- day," Agase enthused. After each of his answers to mundane questions about third down conversions, field position and weak-side coverage, the ecstatic coach would slam the table and shout superlatives about his players' ef- forts. "Oh my God, what a great, great team effort and a great win," he grinned. "We didn't do anything special, just play- ed with intensity. We came to play and get our respect back. 'It T nDTHF. KTn hefre t he Lame. face buri while his bration. "After good' I fumble th two touch was than stairs." "EVER hearing h< down here fired us u Skibinski, SPORTS OF THE DAILY: Clubbers lose regional d By PAULINE TOOLE The loss destroyed all hopes seemed to belie all those state- The Michigan Women's Field for a state title, and dreams of ments of satisfaction. Hockey Team ended their season regional participation dissolved * * * on a sour note as they lost to into nothing. Central Michigan University yes- "The team played well," Ruggers romp terday, 1-0, in the State Hockey Coach Phylis Ocker stated. "The The Michigan Rugby Football tournament at Adrian. defense really pressed. One of team put its experience to work our problems was that we had yesterday afternoon defeating an no consistent attack (stressing injury-laden but aggressive Kent the word consistent)." State squad for the second time "We met our season's goals: this year, 11-3. rid e we had a season over .500, The Michigan scoring cpme the team scored 52 goals com- on two tries by Alan Salisbury pared to 11 scored against us. and Calvin Bittner, a 25-yard ed in the natural grass field We are just a year away from drop kick by Rory O'Connor teammates started their cele- state and regional success, and a penalty kick. Kent Ocker prophesied. "All in all, State's lone' score also came I saw the official signal 'no I'm satisfied." on a penalty kick. was just hoping s we wouldn't "I'm not upset," said goalie The Kent State defense man- e ball," said King, who made Robin Gelston, who replaced aged to hold the Wolverines on ehbown,"saingckles.whenmailing Laura Pieri at the half. their own side of the field early down-saving tackles. "Then I The sentiment was echoed by on. However, by the final part king somebody - the Man up- other team members. "I'm not of the game Michigan, was mov- depressed," declared senior ing easily-typified by a 65-yard 1YONE WAS SICK and tired of wing Sylvia Aretakis, who play- run by Bill oCnway which was ow Michigan was going to come ed in her last game for Michi- stopped just short of the goal e and kick our ???. That's what gan. However, glum faces line as time ran out. ip," said Purdue fullback John ................. who r'an for 81 yards and w h a o 1 ya d n : ............. ... . ...... ... .,:... ........,:.:.::.: .::, .::,:::: caugntW Aou passes xor0anAauuARu0%aOft caught four passes for an additional 39. "I had a bad angle, but I thought Wood's field goal was in,", said Purdue's leading rusher Scott Dierking. "When I saw the official wave his arms, it was the feeling I had all year. We did it for Agase." "There's no longer the Big Two," yelled split end Ray Smith. Denite Smith's analvsi. only Minne- i SCvREBA SCORES Purdue 16, MICHIGAN 14 Michigan'State 23, Indiana 0 Minnesota 38, Northwestern 10 Ohio State 42, Illinois 10 Wisconsin 38, Iowa 21 Missouri 16, Colorado 7 Nebraska 14, Oklahoma St. 10 Miami (Fla.) 13, Boston College 6 Alabama 28. LSU 17 Columbia 35, Cornell 17 Massachusetts 21, Holy Cross 14 Pittshiwrgh 37, Aimy 7 Rutgers 34, Louisville 0 Yale 39, Princeton 7 1 Vilianova 23, Marshall 10 Virginia 21, Lehigh 20 Wake Forest 38, Duke 17 William & Mary 23, Appalachian 22 Grand valley 3, Wayne St. 0 Kalamazoo 14. Adrian 10