'Tuesday, October 14, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Eleven ,.1 OEM= Redskins stifle Cards WASHINGTON (P)-Joe Theis-. mann shocked St. Louis with a 30-yard scoring pass to John Pergine on a fake field-goal at- tempt and rookie Mike Thomas bulled his way for two touch- downs to lead the Washington Redskins to a 27-17 victory overj the Cardinals last night. j Theismann's touchdown strike and Thomas' 100 yards rushing in the nationally televised Na- tional Football League game overcame an electrifying 93-yard scamper by Terry Metcalf with the second-half kickoff and a 48-yard pass from Jim Hart to Mel Gray for the Cardinals' two touchdowns. Thomas' second touchdown of the game, coming with 10:58 remaining in the game, snapped a 17-17 tie and enabled the Red- skins to raise their record to 3-1 and stay one game back of un- beaten Dallas in the National Conference East. St. Louis, the defending division champion, fell to 2-2. The one-yard b u r s t by Thomas, the Redskins' heir apparent to heroic but batter- ed running back Larry Brown, came after Billy Kilmer had comvleted passes of 19 yards to Charley Taylor and 18, 11 and 9 yards to Roy Jefferson, putting the ball on the Cardi- nals' doorstep. the St. Louis 42-yard line and Brown's 16-yard burst. The game was a lackluster affair until the second - half kickoff, when Metcalf took the ball on his own seven-yard line, swept to his left, streaked through a bevy of Washington tacklers, then angled to his right and outraced Larry Jones to the right corner of the end zone, tying the game 10-10. Washington didn't wait long to get back ontop. Kilmer passed 13" yards to Jefferson and Thomas and Brown alter- nated on rushes to move the ball to the St. Louis 30. The drive stalled there - but only for an instant. On came Theismann - Washing- ton's third - string quarter- back behind Kilmer and Ran- dy Johnson - to hold for Moseley's apparent kick. And on, too, carne Pergine, a linbacker who blocks on such kicks. There was never any question in Theismann's mind as to what to do with the ball when he took the snap. He leaped to his feet, rolled to his right and found Pergine all alone on the Cardinals' 20-yard line. Pergine rambled down the right sideline for the touchdown that made it 17-10. GRIDDE PiCKINGS WIN a U-M UMBRELLA (or a $10 gift certificate) from Marty's Fashion Clothing Get your picks to the Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, by midnight Friday. Mail entries postmarked before cutoff time are valid. Winners will be announced in Tues- day's paper. 1. Northwestern at MICHIGAN (pick score) 2. Purdue at Illinois 3. Mich. State at Minnesota 4. Iowa at Indiana 5. Wisconsin at Ohio State 6. Tennessee vs. Alabama (at Birmingham) 7. Missouri at Colorado 8. Northern Mich. at Eastern Mich. 9. Albion at Klamazoo 10. Texas at Arkansas 11. Kentucky at LSU 12. Mississippi at S. Carolina 15. N. Carolina at N.C. State 16. Auburn at Georgia Tech 17. Navy at Boston College 18. Kansas at Iowa St. 19. Kent State vs. Bowling Green (at Cleveland) 13. Nebraska at Oklahoma St.20. DAILY LIBELS vs. The 14. Tulane at W. Virginia Hill Street Gang AP Photo' BRAD DUSEK (59), the birdman of Washington, tries to drop his load on Cardinal running back Jim Otis (35) in last night's National Foothall Leg enntnt. -SPONSORED BY- MEN'S FASHION CLOTHING 310 S. STATE St. Louis waited even less to tip it nnnn ag in ?tiTor_ 511; 0 A\;i;iLli;l1 i' VV;()Qll LVAjj li G. VVII;G.?L. rie it once again. Gary Hram- Mark Moseley, with his sec- mond took the kickoff and ond field goal of the game, a brought it to the Cardinals' 42- B lu e ' 34-yarder w ith 5:53 to play, iced yard line. A fter tw o short runs t e i o y T e f l g a w b M t l an J O i , r the victory. The field goal was by Metcalf and Jim Otis, Hart set up by linebacker Chris sent Gray flying down the left burger's interception and 30-1 sideline, a few strides ahead of j ] 7 eaJI~?1 yard runback of a Hart pass to cornerback Mike Bass. ers down CMU, 7-2, string no Some must be Spectators ?. A ?; ;2. The Michigan women's tennis tighter. In the number one group team swept five of six singles it took Selden and Karzen the matches in defeating Central full three sets to defeat Cen- Michigan 7-2 in Ann Arbor yes- tral's Murphy and Chapman. terday. Michigan lost the first set 1-6, Ali~l -1. -4- ri A but squared the match by win-! w at four igan combination of Fertig and Traber got by Sue Stuligross and Jenny Crawford 6-2, 5-7, fi-3. Again the only Michigan loss was in the number two spot, and again Toni Ser res was re- mm -,.% 7 ' 4...X --t _ iii .W.. . . f.W.4,.iv. . .. .*.**. /*...4 Although quite warm, the Ann Arbor winds were quite gustyr for the matches. ning the second set 2-5 in the third s women rallied tot BARB SELDEN led the net- and the match 7-6. Leadership essential . .". ters by trouncing Central's num- The third doubles ber one player, Wanda Murphy, went to three sets for a championship ta 6-3, 6-4. Murphy played in the ... or champinshp team nationals this past year. In other singles matches, Jodi UNIVERSALLY ACKNOWLEDGED as a necessity for every Strahm defeated Mary Ann football team is a vague quality called leadership. Just about Chapman 6-1, 6-3. Missy Pol- as universal is the assumption that the quarterback inherits this lick topped Cindy Merz 7-5, 6-3 function. He, after all, directs every play with a handoff or a in the foirth match. pass, talks to the coach on time outs, and calls the plays (if the Michigan's fifth and sixth coach doesn't). What else after all is there to being a leader? matches were won by almost A lot more-Michigan's quarterback Rick Leach just doesn't identicalscores. Theresa Tra- ases te ecssrber defeated Janelle Pohlman C A possess the necessary qualities simply because he's a freshman. 6-2, 6-4, and Melinda Fcrtig The responsibilities of leadership must fall on the shoulders of downed Melody McMahon (-3, an individual or individuals who over the course of several years 6-4. have acquired respect by example. -g g 7-6. Trailing soonsible. Serges and Pohlman et, the Biue ' defeated Strahm and Pollick by take the set identical scores of 7-5. 4-0 on the season, the Wolver- s match also ines travel to East Lansing to . The Mich- face Michigan State tomorrow. Michigan's [PY PRUS SELL Pi r[P Till -TQ r~dA On Michigan's team the responsibilities of leadership fall' on the members of the defense. They are both the strength and the maturity of Michigan, football. They set the example against Michigan State that according to coach Bo Schembechler, turned the game around. The crucial point came midway through the third quarter when State's Rich Baes recovered Dwight Hicks' fumble on an attempted punt reception. Lytle, Bell make impression THE ONLY singles lass for Michigan was in the second match. Central's Toni Serges bested Jan Karzen 6-3, 6-0. Coach Carmen Brummet sail the team did pretty well against the strong Central team. "It was definitely our tough- est match of the fall season," added Brummet. THE DOUBLES matches were CRISLER ARENA Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. The Spartans, with excellent field position, had to settle for a field goal six plays later. ieIk ' The kind of character that the defense provides has been the I bulwark of.Michigan's success this season. In the three Michigan in Sports victories the defense has denied opposing offenses chances to take command of the game. Tuesday But the Wolverines must come up with offensive leadership, FIELD HOCKEY vs. Delta College, also, and this responsibility has begun to show in the play of WOR LD SERIES, Boston at Cin- Rob Lytle and Gordon Bell. Observing these two ballcarriers, cjnnati, 8:15 pm, channel 4 one can't'help but be impressed by the effort they put forth. Both VOLLEYBALL vs. Delta College, 6 pm, IM Building. push themselves beyond the limit of their talents. Bell, in the I w- V 1 grasp of tacklers immensely bigger; fights, struggles and crawls for yardage with poewr he simply does not possess. After the State game Leach said, "Gordon's been a great leader all year. He's a great inspiration for our offense." Lytle, meanwhile, playing at fullback where he doesn't even belong and lacking size and strength, has made holes and power-, ed for yards that even Ed Shuttlesworth might not have gained.I Offense maturing This toughness and determination prompted Coach Schem- bechler to liken the junior to a certain member of the defensive unit. "Lytle reminds me offensively of (wolfman Don) Dufek on defense," remarked Bo. "He has great character and is a great athlete." The examples these two men have set this season rubbed off on the offense Saturday against MSU. The showing was by no means spectacular, but it evidenced increasing matur- ity. Often times stopped by fumbles and other failures, the offense never lost composure and finally put together a touchdown drive in the fourth quarter.- The determination shown by Leach on a fourth and one situation made the difference in that drive. Rolling right Leach chose to keep the ball instead of lateralling to Bell. Apparently stopped behind the line he managed to struggle with a second and third effort for the first down. Michigan still has a lot of growing to do but by the standards set against Missouri and Michigan State the team has already come a long way. weanesaay WORLD SERIES, Boston at Cin- cinnati, 8:15 pm, channel 4 PRO BASKETBALL, Pistons vs. Cavaliers, 8 pm, Crisler Arena, ex- hibition RED WING HOCKEY, Detroit at Chicago, 8:30 pm, channel 50 Thursday WATER POLO, Michigan Invita- tional WORLD SERIES, Boston at Cin- cinnati, 8:15 pm, channel 4 Friday CROSS - COUNTRY vs. MSU, 4:30 pm. university golf course WATER POLO, Michigan Invita-1 tional PAN AMERICAN GAMES, high-, lights of past week, 11:45 pm, chan- nel 9 Saturday FOOTBALL vs. Northwestern, 1:30 Michigan Stadium. FIELD HOCKEY at Indiana RUGBY vs. Toronto 11 am, Wiunes Field SOCCER at Spring Arbor NCAA FOOTBALL, regional tele-! cast, teams to be announced after- noon channel 7 V ET ERA N MAKE YOUR WEEKEND PAY Michigan National Guard 483-3184 ~n aacaion ~fo rtwo Jamaica Playboy Re, Undergrad or grad, full or part-time, as long as a "Big Ten" school has you on their register, you're in- vited to take a shot at the National Paddleball Championship. If you lose, you'll get a paddle. If you win, you could have a ball ... in Jamaica. CAN YOU PADDLE A BALL AS FAST AS THE SUNBEAM HOT SHOT CAN HEAT WATER 90 seconds is all the paddle-ball hitting time you've got before the Sunbeam beverage maker gives you ' bubbling water for instant coffee, tea, cocoa, soup, anyt hot drink you want to take a - "sportsbreak" 1st1 Tow 21-2' Q*C14 Final TOURNAMENT cam ao Run era Nat Gran pense to the Hotel Jamaic S h ot Ct Trophy. 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