Thursday, November 20, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine Thursday, November 20, 1975 THE MICHGAN DAILY T _Pac...ine I ............. -- ............................ - ............ - - --.- I - Some must be r a % Spectators OVERCOME SKEPTICISM: i I ,.^ ,'c- Bucks b0 OrSW~ . . . . . . .. . i:ie .ti? ':;i; ?i.' Sv:%s":' ;; :: ! Rt).lpg-g fr tlat !luj . By JEFF SCHILLER IIMU. in I t7 -' 41/6!1L. 5 MICHIGAN WILL take the B straight season by dumpin the Wolvernes will win it outri to deny Michigan a Rose Bowl. Yes, I've often heard the Buckeyes-the fabulous Archie Glorious adjectives spring eter Take their terrific offense Michigan may just be superior. If the Buckeyes are bett ing to do. When asked how he attacked Ohio State's defense, Penn State . sorry O U coach Joe Paterno responded, * 0 '-'---"-' We prayed." If the result of that game is a reliable indicator, the Michigan Big Ten Championship for the fifth offense better turn to another ng Ohio State Saturday. This time source on Saturday - Paterno's ght; no co-championship this year Nittany Lions failed to score a touchdown in suffering a 17-9 defeat. praises sung about the mighty Defense w a s a pre-season Grifin, songebius Grene, ety question mark for the Buckeyes. Griffin, Cornelius Greene, et al. Ohio State lost eight starters nal from the lips of W. W. Hayes. from last year's unit, and there were doubts about the talent for example. Watch out Woody, and experience of the replace- ments. But the first ten games seem to mark the Buckeye de- ter they still have a lot of prov-fense as LESS vulnerable than last year, and a great deal more consistent. broken up, having batted down nine enemy aerials before they reached the line of scrimmage. And no discussion of Ohio' State's defensive strengths would be complete without mentioning the Buckeyes' wide-side pass defenders, cornerback C.r a i g Cassidy and safety Tim Fox. Cassidy, the son of former Heisman Trophy winner Howard "Hopalong" Cassidy, has al- ready intercepted six passes this year including three against Michigan State. Fox is a genu- ine All-America candidate who leads the nationin punt return- ing in addition to his defensive chores. LEST THE Buckeye defense sound more invulnerable than Superman, it must be remem- t stingyIf bered that lowly Indiana was probable that they are the play- able to move the ball quite well ers that will be worked on in against it. Indiana coach Lee Michigan's offensive game plan. Corso explained that, "We tried Pdt to pit our strengths against their Prayers didn't beat the Ohio weaknesses," adding that by State defense. Neither did its weaknesses, he meant areas of first ten opponents. But then, inexperience. none of those games was played Where Ohio State is most ex- against Michigan. ploitable this year is at both de- fensive ends, and on the short tside of the secondary. SCO RES Not that these players lack talent. But none of them played -- --- a lot prior to this year, and none NBA have demonstrated the outstand- Detroit 120, Portland 114 ing talents that some of their Atlanta 104, Golden stateC 98; o Philadelphia 113, Kansas city 103 counterparts have. Los Angeles 118, Houston 110 Though ends Bob Brudzinski NHL and Pat Curto, and backs Bruce Detroit 3, Boston 3 Ruhl and Ray Griffin (Archie's Kansas City 6, New York Rangers 4 Rh ) a I Vancouver 5, Washington brother) are good players, it is;z- We Are Accepting Orders Now, For PHYSICIANS DESK a : t REFERENCE 1976 TO BE PUBLISHED JANUARY 1976 ONLY $12.25 plus tax if payment. accompanies your order. P r i c e is $13.50 plus tax if not prepaid. WE SPECIALIZE IN Medical & Nursing L BOOKS OF ALL PUBLISHERSI CHARGE IT! BANKAMERICARD MASTER CHARGE OVERBECK BOOKSTORE 1216 S. UNIVERSITY 663-9333 Michigan's backfield quartet of Jim Smith, Rick Leach, Rob Lytle and Gordon Bell certainly have not been overshadowed by Buckeye backs. Lytle, Leach and Smith have carried for more yards per run than each of their Buckeye counterparts-Lytle 5.4 compared to Pete Johnson's 4.9, Rick Leach's 5.6 compared to Cornelius Greene's 3.9, Jim Smith's 8.7 compared to Brian Baschnagel's 8.2. Even Archie Griffin's incomparable record seems not so incomparable. Though Archie has rushed for 100 yards more than Michigan's Gordon Bell this season, in Big Ten play the two tailbacks are just about even, rushing for about five each carry. Michigan also comes out ahead of Ohio State in both rushingI offense and total offense in the Big Ten. The only concession Michigan might make offensively is in the passing department where Greene has more yards and a better passing percentage than Leach. But even here Leach has improved considerably from the early weeks of the season and has completed seven of his last ten passes for 245 yards. Overcame costly injuries Defensively, Michigan has shown itself superior leading the Big Ten against the run and in total defense. People skeptical of the Wolverines' chances in this classic will cite the scores the Buckeyes have rolled up over opponents all year while Michigan has struggled and tied twice. But the Wolverines have overcome the two factors most responsible for Michigan's ties with Stanford and Baylor- injuries and inexperience. A healthy offensive line and a more experienced defensive backfield have made Michigan tough to stop on the ground and less vulnerable defending against the pass. It seems like every year Ohio State breezes through the schedule while Michigan just hangs on against lesser teams. But in spite of this Ohio State has outscored Michigan in the last four years, 43-41. In 1969 the Buckeyes rolled past opposition before the Mich- igan game with an average score of 46-10. An 8-2 Michigan team was not intimidated and handed the Buckeyes a 24-12 loss. Incentive, home field important Besides being at least evenly matched physically with the Buckeyes, Michigan has two big advantages going for it- incentive and Michigan Stadium. The Ohio State team, with a record for four years of 39-4-1, has gone to three Rose Bowls. No one on the Michigan team, meanwhile, with a record over four years of 38-2-3, has yet to go to a Rose Bowl. The frustrations built up from denials will give Michigan an additional boost. The Orange Bowl is all right for the Buckeyes, but not for Michigan. At Michigan Stadium, Bo Schembechler has not lost to a Big Ten team. The home town fans make a difference, as Ohio State has discovered going 0-2-1 against Bo and his Wolverines in Ann Arbor. Home field advantage has worked both ways in this series as neither team has been victorious as guests since 1967. Sorry Woody, Michigan has the edge in this one. If Michigan and Ohio State can be considered equal physically-which is about the case, Michigan has the decided edge because of in- centive and the home field.j People in Ann Arbor are anxious to find out what Pasadena is like around New Year's Day. It has to be better than Ann Arbor or Miami. WOODY HAYES' defenders differ from their Michigan counterparts in one obvious re- spect. Physically, their front five outweighs the Wolverine front five by about 15 pounds per man. The result is that Ohio State's defense relies more heav- ily on physical superiority than does the smaller, quicker Mich- igan line. Perhaps the Bucks greatest strength lies at the linebacking position. Junior Ed Thompson and senior Ken Kuhn rank first and fourth in number oftackles! by OSU defenders, and between them they h a v e intercepted three passes and recovered a( fumble. Paterno said simply, "They have great linebackers, especial- ly Kuhn. He's a real leader." ALMOST AS powerful, and maybe equally so in terms of front line quality, is the middle of the Ohio State defensive line. Tackles Nick Buonamici and Eddie B e a m o n, and middle guard Aaron Brown have been chiefly responsible for the lim- iting of opponents rushing at-; tacks to an average of 142.9 yards per game this season. In addition, the trio has ter- rorized enemy quarterbacks who! attempt to throw against Ohio State. Maybe the most interest- ing statistic of all those bandied about this week is that Buona- mici leads the team in passes &k zFR E- EE SATURDAY NOV. 22 5pm & 7pm ! t SUNDAY NO.23 2pm & --- - 4pm CARRENTFR 3150 CARPENTER ANN ARBOR PHONE 971-SNOW -TONIGHT-- "THIS WEEK IN SPORTS" ANN ARBOR'S ONLY PHONE-IN SPORTS TALK SHOW LOOKS AT: MICHIGAN vs. OHIO STATE Join DAVID STEINMETZ, JEANNIE FORREST and SPECIAL GUEST-CURT SYLVESTER at 6:00 p.m. on WCBN-FM 89.5 ml i m AP Photo A classic confrontation Atlanta Hawk forward Lou Hudson drives low past forward Rick Barry of the Golden State Warriors, in an NBA contest last night. The Hawks prevailed in overtime, 104-98. 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