MMMEq Sunday, November 23, 197 _ THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page e Eleven Sunday, November23, l97~. THE MICHIGAN DAILY ay Griffin outplays Archie By MARCIA MERKER It has been said many times that in the great football rivalries, the record book is thrown away and that emotions make the victory. Yesterday's Ohio State - Michigan game was no excep- tion as long streaks were broken, and back-stage players came into the lime- light. Certainly, some predictions on the game came true. For examples, the offenses were based on the ground at- tack, Michigan did not upset the Buck- eyes, the game was basically a defen- sive struggle and Schembechler did run Lytle off left tackle on the first play of the afternoon. HOWEVER, ANOTHER seemingly obvious prognostication was made for yesterday that one specific Griffin would greatly affect the Ohio State play. It is true that a Griffin did turn the tables but it was not the same man to whom the sports writers had allud- ed. Pay Griffin finally overshadowed his older brother Archie. The Heisman Trophy winner, Archie, failed to make 100 yards, breaking his 31 game streak. In fact he only netted 46 yards during the entire afternoon. Michigan's linebacker Calvin O'Neal said, "One of our team goals was to keep him (Griffin) under 100 yards, but we didn't do anything different. We played our basic defense. I thought we contained their running attack pretty well." That may be so, but Ray Griffin, a safety, same through with some timely plays to spoil Michigan's fun. FOR THE game, Griffin made 14 tackles, 10 solos and 4 assists. He broke up two passes during Michigan's first and last possessions of the first half. The timeliness of the latter break up proved to be important for Michi- gan's second half morale. When Griffin made his big play, Michigan was on the Ohio 21 yardline, it was second and ten and Leach was moving the team down for a score. Leach threw to Jim Smith but Griffin got in the way. Because the time was running low, Michigan was forced to just get better field position before attempting the field goal. GORDIE BELL got the ball on third down and ran for yardage instead of better position, thus Bob Wood kicked at a bad angle and missed the up- rights. Schembechler commented on the importance of this score, "If we'd have come in 10-7 at halftime, it would have been a lot different ballgame. Ohio would have been down 17-7 after our next touchdown and it would have been h~arder to come back." Besides this play, Griffin threw Leach twice for losses of seven and two yards. He also intercepted the Leach pass near the end of the fourth quarter which set up the Buckeyes for their winning tally. ANOTHER ELEMENT of surprise in the game, was the Leach-pitch-to-Bell- pass-to-Smith-touchdown play. Bell had never before passed the ball for the Wolverines and it evidently threw the Buckeye defense off enough to be suc- cessful. nary for the freshman quarterback. Leach was two of 13 to Smith and -three of five to Johnson for the day. Although the aforementioned people and plays might have been forecast, they were unusual. There is one play of Hayes' which stands out as the most amazing to a do-or-die winner like him- self and that was when OSU punted the pigskin on third and 12. Above all, Michigan broke its unde- feated streak at 41 games at Michigan Stadium. Bo will just have to work at more surprises in the coming years against Ohio State and friends in order to build this statistic again. FINAL BIG TEN STANDINGS Conference All Games Ohio St. MICHIGAN Mich. State Illinois Purdue Wisconsin Minnesota Iowa Northwestern Indiana 8 7 4 4 4 3 3 3 2 1 0 1 4 4 4 4 5 5 6 6 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 a 1 11 8 7 5 4 4 6 3 3 2 0 4 6 7 6 5 8 8 S 0 2 0 0 U 1 0 0 0 1 Dailv Photo by KEN FINK That's right, Rick--another Griffin! Ricky passes Smith, Leach also completed' more to Keith Johnson than Jim which is quite out of the ordi- :ra""v: rr av.".. .:.:n:.wt ...:} . . .... v".ir i i~d .}i:".L4: . ...:i" i{> [: ~.. Some must be s Spectators :: y." .4 A . h1 .4 -" '':'.: :l!":f:}'.Y: :: . S;}:: 1 WOLVERINES ORANGE BOWL BOUND 1ichigan surrenders to osU Yesterday's epic battle . . . After a 14 yard pass from' Greene to Griffin on second down, the Buckeyes proceeded a football I clas sl to march downfield. Then on a * """-third and five at the Wolverine$ seven, Greene threw an aerial QAD BUT TRUE. to Johnson who pushed in for "Michigan outgained us today," said Ohio State coach the score. Woody Hayes, "but it isn't the statistic that counts." Anderson (twice) and Tom Skladany then had to punt on Michigan outrushed, outpassed, and outplayed Ohio State the next three offensive series yeserday and came out on top in just about every statistic but as neither offense could move' the score. And that grim 21-14 fact will remain fixed forever the ball.f in memories and record books. !n '.i more moved against the Buck- punt on a third and 12 situation eyes. But at Ohio State's 32 at his own 4 yard line, thej yard line, Leach fumbled and Wolverines drove the ball 431 Aaron Brown recovered. yards in 10 plays to give them the lead for the first time in MICHIGAN was not to be de- the game. nied a score in the first half, however. With 24 seconds re- ON THIRD and nine, Ohio maining in the half, Leach pitch- State was called for an offside ed out to Bell who rolled right penalty, Bell then ran four yards and passed to Jim Smith for an for a first down. On the next 11 y a r d touchdown. Smith's play, Leach hit the first of his score climaxed an 80 yard drive two completions in the drive to and brought the partisan Mich- Smith for nine yards to the 24 igan crowd alive. . yard line. On second and 12 at the 15, The elder Griffin brought the Smith caught an 11 yard pass. bfollowing kickoff back 10 yards, Lytle ran for three yards and but fumbled on his own 21. With' the first down. On the next play, five seconds left in the half, Bob Leach ran over left tackle for Wood attempted a 37 yard field the score. - goal, but the kick veered wide But the Buckeyes never said die. After two incompletions, Greene hit on passes of 17, 14 and 18 yards. Five running plays later, Johnson went in for the score. Tom Klaban tied . the game with an extra point. SINCE A TIE would send Ohio State to the Rose Bowl (based on the best overall rec- ord), Michigan was forced into a passing game. This set up Griffin's interception that put the game out of reach for the Wolverines. "Woody went for the tie be- cause he knew I had to gam- ble," Schembechler said. "Kick- in g the extra point was aca- demic. "We decided prior to the game that we would not settle for a Uf'g I ir~iogat DaiIly SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: BILL STIEG But, depressed Michigan fans, swallow your orange juice and admit it. It was just a great game. Unlike most Super Bowls in professional football and some college bowl games and big rivalries, this game lived up to and exceeded its build-up. wth only 2o seconds Lett in the quarter, Jim Bolden picked off an errant Greene pass on the one yard line. On the next play, Lytle gave M i c h i g a n breathing room as he ran through the right side for 10 yards. tie. Ties always seem to go my team. Not after that kind of against us." I effort." Schembechler felt no conso- The loss left the Wolverines lation that his team would not with a 84-2 overall record, while have to stay home on New the Buckeyes boosted their rec- Year's Day. As he put it, "No ord to 11-0 and a probable na- loss is easy to take for me or tional championship. to tne left. The contest was complete with fine individual and team T efforts, memorable plays, courageous and surprising coaching, and and an exciting come-from-behind win for the Buckeyes. tac to t For Michigan one can recall an abundance of great indvidual on performances. ma and In the first quarter, for example, on Ohio State's first poses- ball sion after its long scoring drive, Wolverine wolfman Don Dufek ripped Archie Griffin down in the Ohio State backfield for a O seven-yard loss. The play electrified the crowd and erased doubts of d that Michigan could contain the Buckeye ground attack. In fact own after that play Ohio State earned only one first down until mid- But way through the fourth quarter. sad And senior tailback Gordon Bell, with the help of the Wolver- at t ine defensive line, helped make observers forget his counterpart S on the Scarlet and Gray. "Gordon Bell is the most valuable aga player in the league," commented Michigan Coach Bo Schem- bechler after the disappointing loss. "I don't think there's any doubt about that." Bell rushed for 124 yards while Archie Griffin was held to just 46. First Rust Pass And let's not forget the play that gave the Wolverines Pass their initial touchdown and made Bell the best percentage Tota passer in the Big Ten. Michigan had the ball first and ten Fum from the Buckeye 11 yard line. I always thought it was Pena sacrilege for Bo Schembechler to call a pass in a situation Pun like that. Bo would at least, safely ram.it up the middle for Kick a few plays. MIC Ohio But, not only did Bo call a pass, but he called a hafback Os pass from Bell to wingback Jim Smith. With a magnificent catch Gree M by Smith, the play worked for the score. (wo M Overall the Wolverines played so well they would easily have os won, if it were not for the fact that the Buckeyes also performed kick Os like the great team they are. kick The Wolverines pushed Ohio State all over the field yet the Buckeyes had the composure and the confidence to come up with that fourth quarter touchdown drive when all seemed lost.j If the outcome of the game could be determined by two plays those plays would have to be the second and third down plays at the beginning of that touchdown drive. Michigan middle guard Timmy Davis chased Buckeye quarterback Corneius Greene all the way back to the end zone from his own 20 before Greene unloaded a pass. The pass deflected off three Michigan players before it fell incomplete. The following play, a third and ten, Greene hit wingback Brian Baschnagel just beyond the 30-yard line for a completion and a first down. Had Michigan caught Greene back in the end zone, or intercepted the pass, or broken up the pass to Basch- nagel Michigan could have iced the game. But Michigan did not and the Buckeyes showed Michigan why they are "Number One" by coolly driving 80 yards for the tying score, a great effort by a team that refused to lose. I know there are many people around who wonder what f makes people pay at least seven bucks a ticket to endure the cold, the traffic, and the crowds to witness an event like that game. But those 105,543 who saw the epic can answer. It is the atmosphere of excitement, the importance of the game, the in- tensity of the rivalry. It is the color, the bands, the music and the cheers. But most of all it is the game itself-the finest in collegiate football. Despite the intensity of the partisanship the game was WO PLAYSlater, in the sec- quarter, Bell, who evaded kle after tackle, ran 43 yards he Buckeye 44 yard line. But the following play, Leach de a high pitchout to Bell Ed Thompson recovered the for Ohio State. n the Wolverines next series owns, they moved from their 25 yard line to OSU's 44. another turnover, this time interception by Craig Cas- y, gave Ohio State the ball he Michigan 32. kladany was forced to punt n and the Wolverines once At halftime, Anderson h punted for an average of o 21.3 yards, compared to Sk dany's 49.7 average. "OUR KICKING game sho have been better in the f half," said Schembechler. it had, we might not haveh to throw." Neither team offered much fensively in the third quar The fired-up Michigan defe held Ohio State to only 29 ya in the quarter. The dam broke in the fou quarter. After Hayes elected had nly kla- luld irst "If had SERIES SPLIT: Tech corrals dekers Wait till next year t downs ;ing (at/yds) ing (at/com) ing yards al off, plays l yards. ubles/lost alties ltsng t returns/yds kreturns/yds. Score by HIGAN 0 St. 7 qua 7 0 MICH OSU 19 12 56-248 45-124 21-8-3 16-7-2 113 84 77 61 361 208 2-2 1-1 1-15 2-10 6/29.5 8/44.6 5 19 11 1 18 1/10 rters 0 D 0 Lytle Leach J. Smith Leach' Bell J1. Smith K. Johnson Bell P. Johnson Griffin Greenle Baschnagel Greene Willis 7-14 14-21 1 2 PASSING at com 20 7 1 1 RECEIVING no yds 3 31 3 70 2 12 OHIO STATE at yds 18 52 19 46 5 16 3 10 PASSING at com 16 7 RECEIVING no yds 2 32 2 13 1 17 1 '15 1 7 SU - Johnson 7 pass from ene (Klaban kick) - J. Smith 11 pass from Bell od kick) - Leach 1 run (Wood kick) U - Johnson 1 run (Klaban U Johnson 3 run (Klaban 18 104 5.8 16 18 1.1 2.0 int 3 0 avg 10.3 23.3 6.0 U avg. 2.8 2.9 3.2 3.3 int 2 avg 16.0 6.5 17.0 15.0 7.0 By TOM DURANCEAU of- "Aw, heck, if we coud play ter. two nights in a row ..." nse So exclaimed Michigan hockey rds coach Dan Farrell yesterday af- ter, Michigan Tech scored four irth first period goals and coasted to in with a 6-3 victory over the Michigan dekers to give Tech the weekend split. Michigan goalie Robbie Moore did not have much action early 20 in the first period but when it 15 came it came in streaks. Tech 2 scored first at 8:45 when George Lyle tipped in a Doug Young yds shot from the point over Moore. 102 JUST 15 SECONDS later the Huskies scored again as center tg Stu Ostlund fired a shot past 21 Moore after two nifty passes by 8 Lyle and defenseman Jeff Wol- cox. Ig The Wolverines' Dave Debol, 6 who seemed to be one of the few 11 bright spots for the Wolverines 1 last night, then cut the Tech lead to 2-1 at 9:47 of the first yds period. 84 Debol did it all on his own as 1g he dug the puck out of the cor- 18 ner skated in, deked the de- 14 fenseman and stuffed it past 17 H iskie goalie Bruce Horsch. 7 TECH NOTCHED their third goal of the first period at 12:02 when Warren Young clicked on the light after some nice pass- ing work by Lyle and Ostlund. What had to be the most frus- trating goal against the Wolver- ines occurred at 15:34 of the first period. With Tech's Warren Young off for roughing, defense- man Tom Lindskog had the puck stolen from him behind the Michigan net by Tech's Stu Younger. Younger quickly fed it out to Tech's All-American cen- ter Mike Zuke who fired it past a surprised Robbie Moore for a short-handed goal. The Wolverines cut the scorej to 4-2 busy Mauer goalie break. assiste with the last goal of the first period when Kip slipped a shot past Tech's Horsch after ' 3 on 2 Bill Thayer and Debol d. Michigan had a power play at :23 seconds into the period but a defensive mistake forced Wol- verine Tome Lindskog to take a saving hooking penalty as a Tech deker skated in on Robbie Moore. Then at 2:09 the Huskies' Scott Jessee fired a shot past Moore after taking a pass from Doug Young to put Tech up 5-2. LESS THAN two minutes later Mike Zuke scored again with assists going to Lyle and Ost- lund again. Midway into the second per- iod Michigan could not seem to get anything going offensively. The Wolverines did have two power play chances later in the second period but ragged pass- ing made them ineffective. Tech seemed content to sit on their 6-2 lead after two periods., THE THIRD period was more of the same. Tech sat on their lead and Michigan, although they had some chances, could not capitalize. Midway through the third per- iod Michigan scored the only tally of the period when big Angie Moretto tipped in a Greg Natale shot from the point. John McCahill also received an assist on the play. "We just didn't play well enough to win, we gave it away," commented Farrell. The crowd at Yost was an- nounced as 7,594 and there seemed to be as many vocal Huskie fans as Wolverine fans. Maybe the Wolverine fans were still numb from the afternoon's e v e n t s. Hopefully, for those Michigan fans the Wolverines will finally sweep next weekend as they travel out to Coors country to take on Denver. FIRST PERIOD SCORING: 1. MT-Lyle (D. Young) 8:43; 2. MT-Ostlund (Lyle, Wilcox) 8:58; 3. M-DeBol (unassisted) 9:47; 4. MT-W. Young (Lyle, Ostlund) 12:02 PP; 5. MT-Zuke (Younger) 15:34 SH; 6. M-Maurer (DeBol, Thayer) 17:32 PP. PENALTIES : 1. MT-Dempsey (el- bowing) 4:12; 2. M-Manery (rough- ing) 4:59; 3. MT-Murray (roughing) 4:59; 4. M-Moretto (roughing) 9:52; 5. MT-W. Young (roughing) 9:52; 6. M-Manery (tripping) 10:57; 7. MT-W. Young (roughing) 14:56; S. MT-Letzgus (tripping) 16:30. SECOND PERIOD SCORING: 7. MT Jessee (D. Young) 2:09; 8. MT-Zuke (Lyle, Ostlund),'3:44. PENALTIES: 9. MT - Dempsey (charging) 0:23; 10. MT - Zuke (roughing) 0:23; 11. M - Moretto (roughing) 0:23; 12. M-D. Lind- skog (hooking). 1:38; 13. MT-Wil- cox (hooking) 4:45; 14. MT-Fergu- son (hooking) 11:48. THIRD PERIOD SCORING: 9. M-Moretto (Natale, McCahil) 10:07. PENALTIES: 15. MT - Letzgus (roughing) 6:51; 16. M - Cormier (roughing) 6:51; 17. M-Natale (in- terference) 18:22; 18. MT-D. Young (slashing) 18:54. SAVES "WE JUST had no spark out there, nobody carried the play,"I lamented Wolverine mentor Far- rell. "We made foolish mis- takes." In the second period Michigan Tech came out and scored two quick goals to take any wind the Wolverines might have had left in their sails. MICHIGAN Griffin RUSHING Baschnagel at yds avg. ig Kain 21 124 5.9 43 Johnson MT--Horsch M--Moore 1 17 7 2 9 17 3 12 12 38 36 COLLEGE FOOTBALL Ohio St. 21, Michigan 14 Illinois 28, Northwestern 7 Purdue 9, Indiana 7 MSU 27, Iowa 23 Minnesota 24, Wisconsin 3 Oklahoma 35, Nebraska 10 1SMU 34, Baylor 31 Boston College 22, Mass. 14 Brown 38, Columbia 13 California 48, Stanford 15 Miami (O) 21, Cincinnati 13 S. Carolina 56, Clemson 20 Rutgers 56, Colgate 14 Colorado 33, Kansas 7 Penn 27, Cornell 21 Dartmouth 21, Princeton 16 I Duke 17, N. Carolina 17 'Harvard 10, Yale 7 Oklahoma St. 14, Iowa St. 7 Tennessee 17, Kentucky 13 Lehigh 40, Lafayette 14 Maryland 62, Virginia 24 3Notre Dame 32, Miami (Fla.) 9 Co RES Ohio St. Lantern 0 Coast Guard 20, S. Conn. 7 Wagner 40, Seton Hall 0 Virginia Tech 40, Wake Forest 10 Utah St. 28, Colorado St. 17 V. Texas St. 49, Louisville 23 TCU 28, Rice 21 Illinois St. 31, E. Illinois 13 S. Carolina St. 39, Delaware St. 0 William & Mary 31, Richmond 21 Wofford 14, Furman 14 Wash & Lee 28, Georgetown 26 Tennessee Tech 30, Mid. Tenn. St 3 Austin Peay 37, E. Tenn. St. 21 Toledo 33, Kent St. 28 NUL Phil. 4, N. Y. Rangers 2 N. Y. Islanders 5, Kansas City 2 Pittsburgh 6, L.A. 3 Montreal 4, Toronto 2 Vancouver 1, Chicago 1 St. Louis 5, Detroit 1 Atlanta 6, Minnesota 3 NBTA r . -