Saturday, November 22, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Pace Nine Saturday, November 22, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY N. s(inet tom. MVic i an e e to Buci odds By ANDY GLAZER another Rose Bowl trip. Michigan State have taken on There was last year's battle less and less meaning recently. One thousand ninety-two days. in Columbus, when a 33 yard The Wolverines are supposed to That's how long every Michigan! field goal in the final seconds wipe those teams out. senior who cares anything about'would have given Michigan a You're supposed to get an A The juniors have had it eas- Rose Bowl trip and probable in Spanish 101 after spending e juniors. hvnational championship. your last six summers in Mex- ier. 728 days. ico. The sophomores? A mere 365 _ _ _._ days. Or 8660 hours. Or 537 But Ohio State is different. wishful thoughts. Or 181 jokes _ The Wolverines are not going from friends at other univer-;Aitime to clobber a team with that sidies. Today's Michigan - Ohio many superbly coached, su- The freshmen haven't had to State State game begins at perbly talented athletes. If wait. But they're not looking 1:00 p.m. and will be broad- they manage it, Michigan! forward to starting, either. cast over radio stations fans will be ecstatic. Waiting. Waiting for re- WWJ-AM (950); WAAM-AM But they're not favored to do venge. Waiting for another (1600); WPAG - FM (1050); it. Why? shot at Woody Hayes and the and WUOM-FM (91.7). Tele- A principle reason is that Ohio State Buckeyes, the team vision coverage begins at Ohio State's record is 10-0, com-, that is 2-0-1 against the Wol- 12:30 p.m. on channels 7 and pared to Michigan's 8-0-2. While verines over the past three 24. you have to give OSU points for seasons - no matter how consistency, many of the prob- many excuses and explana- lems that caused those two ties tions Michigan partisans.- of- ITwo feet wide to the left are problems no longer. And in fer. later, Ohio State was heading this class, an A on the final west again. Final score, Tom is an A for the course. It's been a trying three years. Klabon 12, Michigan 10. Three Firstly, Michigan's quarter- There was the Michigan power- Frty ihgnsqatr house that went down to Colum- consecutive co-championships. back situation is now in infinite- bus three years ago. Favored Three straight years watching ly better shape. Just who the to win the game, they out-gain- eBukeyes play USC on New starter was to be was still in. ed, out-played and out-classed doubt, causing both Rick Leach Woody's "rebuilding" team all Those are painful memories I and Mark Elzinga to play too, day, for Michigan fans, which cautiously. Two fourth down goal line seems kind of silly, because And Leach, the eventual stands later, OSU had a 14-11 the players are the only ones starter, was just green as win, although a young back by with a lot at stake, grass at that point in the sea- the name of Harry Banks will Or are they? Why do so many son. He had no experience as tell you about a touchdown he Michigan fans care? Why was an option quarterback, and itl still believes he scored. there such anguish when Mike showed. But Leach's rushing There was the infamous 10- Lantry's field goals sailed and passing have improved 10 tie, when either of Mike wide ? visibly in recent weeks.~ THE LINEUPS MICHIGAN OHIO STATE Offense (27) (78) (60) (52) (72) (73) (82) (7) (5) (37) (41) K. Johnson (175) Mike Kenn (230) M. Donahue (237) Jim Czirr (225) W. Downing (232) Bill Dufek (265) M. Schmerge (225) Rick Leach (180) Gordon Bell (178) Jim Smith (198) Rob Lytle (190) SE QT LG C" RG ST TE QB TB WB FB (89) (79) (60) (61) (64) (73) (85) (7) (45) (48) (33) D)efense Lenny Willis (185) Chris Ward (270) Ted Smith (240) R. Applegate (260) Bill Lukens (230) S. Dannelley (250) Larry Klein (230) C. Greene (170) Archie Griffin (180) B. Baschnagel (190) Pete Johnson (245) Pat Curto (225) E. Beamon (245) Aaron Brown (220) N. Buonamici (235) B. Brudzinski (220) E. Thompson (225) Ken Kuhn (230) Ray Griffin (180) Craig Cassady (180) Bruce Ruhl (190) Tim Fox (185) (81) (97) (56) (77) (40) (96) (55) (35). (22) (18) (17) Dan Jilek (21) LE J. Perlinger (242) LT Tim Davis (212) MG G. Morton (225) RT Mike Holmes (210) RE C. O'Neal (230) WLB D. Devich (210) MLB Don Dufek (195) Wolf J. Bolden (175) WIIB J. Pickens (180) SHB D Hicks (185) S (90) (67) (55) (75) (84) (9) (54) (44) (23) (43) (12), Daily Photo by KEN FINK WOLVERINE TAILBACK Gordon Bell (5) gallops for yardage against Ohio State in action from last year's 12-10 Buckeye win. Bell, Michigan's leading. rusher this season, needs another superlative performance tomorrow to help the Blue try to reverse last year's results. Lantry's 58 and 44 field goal attempts at the finish would hive sent Michigan to the Rose Bowl. "Oh, they'll still go anyway," thought almost everyone who had watched. One vote of the Big Ten Ath- letic Directors later, OSU had Why? Because football, and sports in general, are outlets for aggression. Mess up a test? Beat up on Northwestern. Ty- rone Romeo at MSU stole your girl? 16-6, Tyrone. Shove it. But the wins against North-. western and Iowa and even The moment of truth may, have been a key fourth and one play against Michigan State. With the score 6-6, Leach was hit at the line and seemed sure to go down. But he struggled, fought, pushed - and made it.c Michigan had its quarterback. Gordie Bell soon scored the win- ning touchdown, and the Wol- verines have been rolling ever since. The second major problem was an offensive line that was decimated by injuries. Steve King and Kirk Lewis, both all- Big Ten choices, were hurt, as was Greg Bartnick. Lewis and Bartnick are still out. But King will be back, and with Jim Czirr and Bill Dufek will form the nucleus of a more experienced, improved line. There are 21 seniors on this Michigan team, seniors that have been waiting those 1092 days. Bo Schembechler, in an emotional move, is dressing ev- ery yone of them. They're going to get that one last shot. If they win, all the pain will have been worth it. This one's for the seniors. They've waited long enough. FIRST CAREER SHUTOUT Il ore wrecks Tech, George Lyle of Michigan Tech had a couple of golden oppor- 4O Moore-tiferous By ED LANGE The Wolverines took advan- The Michigan hockey team tage of key scoring opportuni- shut out Michigan Tech, 4-0, last ties and, backed by freshman night before a jam packed crowd Mark Miller's two goals, put the at Yost Ice Arena. The lights in game out of reach midway, the ancient arena shone bright- through the final period. est on the. Wolverines' amazing N 0 0 N E left their seat netminder, Robbie Moore, who though, as the crowd suffered finally snared that precious! through the waning moments of shutout that has eluded him for the game to see if, maybe this three agonizing years. time, Robbie Moore would get' A clamoring throng of 7,612 his just reward. was on hand as Coach Dan Far- "I was really pleased. It's a rell's icers put together their, great win for us," beamed Far- finest defensive effort of the rell. "Of course, Robbie's shut- season and the first Michigan out was the big thing. Our guys shut out since 1968. rallied behind him and our de- fense played as well as it ever has." , The game was quality hockey in every respect. The officials doled out but seven penalties in an amazingly clean game. As Tech coach John MacInnes put it: "There was a lot of good hitting and that's the way hoc- key should be played." Tech took it to the Blue dek- ers in the opening minutes of the game, keeping the puck in Michigan's zone for the better part of two minutes. The Michigan defense soon began to assert itself and, ex- cept for some lapses through- out the game,. was successful in shutting off the Tech offense. Mat romp Michigan's wrestlers down- ed Rhode Island 33-3 in a dual meet at Rhode Island last night. Havyweight Mitch Marsicano posted a fall and freshman Mark Churella a major superior decision as the Wolverines won their opener., tunities but the Wolverine net- FIRST PERIOD minder shunted him. SCORING: 1. M-Miller (Moretto) 2 :41; 2. M-D. Lindskog (Moretto, T. Lyle was cited for elbowing Lindskog) 18:21sPP. at 17:42 of the opening period PENALTIES: 1. MT-Lyle (elbow- and the " 'igan power play took over. Moretto got his sec- SECOND PERIOD ond assist of the night as he fed SCORING: 3. M-Miller (unassist- Ied) 19:43. Doug Lindskog perfectly on the PENALTIES: 2. MT-Decker (cross- right wing. Moretto only had to checking) 6:39; 3. M-Natale (inter- watch as Lindskog poured over ference) 14:58. Horsch's right shoulder for the THIRD PERIOD second tally night. SCORING: M - Coffman (Thayer, T. Lindskog) 7:26. Defense was the name of the PENALTIES: 4. M - T. Lindskog game in the second period as (high sticking) 3:57; s. MT-Demp- - sey (interference) 8:28; 6. M-Kawa3 both squads began to ~assert (roughiirg) 19:54; 7. MT-- Lyle themselves in their zones. Tech (roughing) 19:54. missed on a couple of break- T LSAVES I Sports of the Daily Mat season opens While the football team determines its fate in Ann Arbor today, the Michigan wrestling squad will be setting its sights on its first victories of the season tonight. The Wolverines open their schedule with a triple dual meet E against Rhode Island, Hofstra and Massachusetts at the Univer- sity of Rhode Island. "Though our, team is young, we have a lot of depth and talent," said Michigan coach Bill Johannesen. "If we play up to potential, we ought to return with a 3-0 record." sI I, i i i aways. Lyle narrowly iissing at 13:03 on a shot that clanged off the pole. The second stanza looked like it would be a scoreless one un- til Miller emerged from behind the Tech goal with the puck and rammed it through the sur- 7 rised Huskie goalie's legs at 19:40 of the period. "THAT GOAL took any chance' we had of winning away," said Tech's MacInnes. "It came in' the last minute and you can't have that. You have to pay the consequences." The Dehol line with Coffman 1 2 Moore (M) 13 11 Horsch (MT) 16 11 SCORES NBA Detroit 104, Buffalo 94 Boston 110, New York 101 Philadelphia 131, Portland 11 Phoenix 107, Houston 92 NHL California 2, washington 0 Pittsburgh 4, Atlanta 1 WCHA Notre Dame 5, Denver 2 MSU 3, Minnesota 1 3 T A :av.},:f 6 30 10 37 Daily Photo by KEN FINK STAR OSU tailback Archie Griffin (45) enjoys a siesta under graduated Michigan All- American Dave Brown (6) in action from last year's game. This year's Blue defenders hope to keep Archie in a similar position when the Big Ten's Big Two clash tomorrow. HOPES ON LINE: MARK MILLER tallied for thej Wolverines at 2:41 of the first I stanza, the irst of two for the aon freshman from Essex, Ontario- n v ....,, _ _, .. _.. ..., . .. f art z:.o11 011 r i rAt (' ar tai+m n Rhode Island, Yankee Conference champin and Northeast drilling a shot from the center eu well aiz lmgmt. Uenterman runnerup last year, remains a strong team but, like Michigan, has several freshmen and sophomores in its lineup.j A key matchup features Michigan captain Mark Johnson1 against Rhode Island 177-pounder Tad Sargent. In last year's. confrontation Johnson narrowly defeated Sargent, 4-2. Rhode Island also boasts three-time Eastern champ Scott Pucino at+ 126, who will tangle with Michigan freshman Amos Goodlow. 1 Hofstra, last year's East Coast Athletic Conference? champions, finished 19th in the nation and are expected to provide the stiffest competition tomorrow night. The Wol- verines defeated them 27-5 last year in a meet that was closer than the score indicates. Hofstra's heavyweight, an All-American last year, should give fellow All-American Mitch Marsicano of Michigan a tough match. Marsicano defeated him 7-6 last year in the bout's final seconds. Nick Gallo, fourth in the nation at 118 last year, should give Michigan sophomore Greg Haynes a tight battle. Graduated Big Ten champ Jim Brown barely overcame Gallo in the national quarterfinals last season, winning 4-2 in overtime, after a 12-12 tie. The individual matches will last only six minutes instead of the usual eight, which Johannesen thinks will work to Michigan's disadvantage. "We are a superiorly conditioned team and we could stay alive longer and score more points near the end of the matches when our opponents are tired," Johannesen said. -PAT RODE * * * Curt canned Curt Gowdy has been dropped as NBC-TV's main baseball and slot past the hapless Huskie goalie, Bruce Horsch. Angie Moretto made a beautiful pass to Miller, who had a clear path' to the net. The Blue dekers had a few close calls after Miller's initial goal but despite a couple of breakdowns in the defense, Moore was up to the task. I Dave Debol was all over the ice and with a few breaks, could have had some scores. As it was, the sophomore from St. Claire Shores was praised by Coach Farrel who stated, "next By RICK MADDOCK ta's quarterback. In all pro- to Robbie Moore, Dave Debol Even though it seems hard bability, whichever star has the outstandingae on to believe in Columbus or Ann the bigger day will be a main s was g player on Arbor, there are other Big Ten factor i nthe game's outcome. s the ice tonight." games today. In these contests, The other Big Ten team in t battles shape up for the confer- Michigan plays at Iowa and is' ence's two vacant first division a ten point favorite to knock I spots. off the Hawkeyes. With a win, g j'Wisconsin, currently in third the Spartans would finish with place, with a 3-3-1 record, holds an overall 7-4 record, a slight g a one-half game lead over drop from last year's 7-3-1,w Michigan State, Illinois, Purdue; showing. h and Iowa. All those challeng- Pride could be the only in-1o ers have 3-4 records in the Big centive i nthis game, but coachj Ten. Bringing up the bottom Bob Commings doesn't agree. in are Minnesota and Northwest- "Pride, I don't like to call it to ern with 2-5 showings, followed that," said Commings. "What1h by basement-bound Indiana, 1- we want - like we have every. c 5-1. game this season - is improve- The Badgers travel to Minne- ment." sota an dalthough Wisconsin Iowa stands at 3-7 overall, butz h ranks higher in the standings, has won three of its last five the Gophers are four point fav- games. One of the defeats came orites. in last week's controversial 19- k1 The game should be a bat- 18 loss to Purdue. tie between Billy Marek, Wis- Commings, still ijpset over g } consin's star running back, last week's loss commented, 2 and Tony Dungy, Minneso- "The loss at Purdue should g #have no adverse effect on our i ,r- - -I team this week. Our players t * ~I have more courage than any .Big Ten 'team in the country. key for position. spot. the season he has 1,045 yards "We ca nstill finish strong," and seve ntouchdowns on 74 aid Stolz, who still has an out- completions. ide chance at taking his team The Indiana Hoosiers host o a minor bowl game. . Purdue, with the Boilermakers "Our only worry right now is favored by six. Indiana has to owa. They think they have a win if it has any hopes of leav- reat chance against us." ing the Big Ten cellar. Purdue, Iowa has a strong ball control which has been erratic, - needs round game, but remains very a win to even its conference weak in passing. The Hawkeyes record. ave completed only 25 per cent f their passes. Last year Iowa led 21-17 late n the first half, but the Spar- ans exploded in the second' EE alf and took, the game in a 4 ake walk, 60-21. Northwestern hosts Illinois H O W for the championship of Ii- - SATURDAY nxois. The Fighting Illini are , . SATURDAY favored by eight to claim theN title. p&7 The Illini came close to Michi-SNDA2 an last week, but fell short,N2& 1-15. In that game, Kurt Ste- -- 4pm er passed for 103 yards to be- ome the best sophomore quar- erback in Illinois history. For Vn~iaE aa t WASHTENAW ;;: