VF Page 26-Saturday, September 19, 1981-The Michigan Daily Friends sometimes question your taste m movies. But they'lsee them with you anyway. The Michigan Daily-Saturday, Sel Good things expected econdary i strongest spot A. aaitlear-tssinsyurfrens.gredt :a"i." baraeofjke botyortat :~ L a> k:.x, .;,r s~z3:E :So":,toj makeE it-up..to them.. i I I yGiR ( and sowuthemdou atast int nesppe. bad in eything Sl, you o oseit n ih somethingarmatwittle speial Toighstg, edt ^ le it be owenb a. Youve;^ead har a LowenbrauHere'stodgowo.Ad, kfwierrds. b 198 BeerytreedingS y Mdle Brwn opn iwue icn soehiglttepei Toih >< NO2' x ?' ' ret s.t be Lr"wenbrau.; ::tO :' 8' xc' 7 " .'ay . . +ure a0 oo, f: ss n':i 'J 'f : ..:",n : .... * * - c 1981 Beerpa>brewed :An U S b'Ry aler Brewig.41C pE3: .any d a E',{.iscons _:: DEFENSE by MARK MIHANOVIC Bo Schembechler believes in defense. Since he accepted the Michigan Wolverine head coaching position prior to the 1969 campaign, excellence in that phase of the game has been a Maize- and-Blue trademark. But never has a Schembechler defen- sive unit performed at the level that the 1980 one did over the squad's last five games, during which its opposition managed a grand total of nine points. And no enemy ball carrier was able to carry the football across the Michigan goal line during the last 22 quarters of. Keith Bostic - play. Three hundred, thirty-four minutes and eight seconds, to be exact. ONE MUST consider the caliber of Michigan's opposition downuthe stretch to get the complete picture, though. Quarterbacks Tim Clifford of Indiana and Mark Herrmann of Purdue were unable toe put any points on the board, Art Schlichter's Ohio State Buckeyes struggled for only one field goal, and, to break Schembechler's Rose Bowl jinx, the Wolverines only allotted Tom Flick and the Washington Huskies a pair of three-pointers. Thus, with the Michigan roster showing eight returning starters from that '80 defensive outfit, it is clear why pre-season pollsters placed the Wolverines at, or-very near, the num- ber one spot in the nation. Closer examination, however, dims the optimism a bit. While only three starters have been lost to graduation, they constituted an important trio. Linebackers Andy Cannavino and Mel Owens, and defensive tackle Mike Trgovac, three of Michigan's top five leading tacklers last fall (with 168, 100, and 61 stops, respectively) leave some big holes to fill. THESE DEFECTIONS provide Schembechler with plenty of reason to express his standard caution. "They (the prognosticators) are gonna pick us on the basis of having eight of our 11 defense(men) back, but it's not the same defense,".he explained after completion of the squad's spring prac- tice program in May. "(The graduation of) Cannavino and Owens are astronomical losses. There's two great players," Schembechler con- tnue¢ - Ceunuiuo'5 -pax astlear, in. leading the defense, was the best I've had in 12 years. He got together and got going. After the third ballgame, he was a tremendous player. And Owens is a great athlete. Those two guys are dif- ficult to replace." Don't blame opposition coaches if they decline to shed any tears of sym- pathy, though. Plenty of talent remains from the '80 unit, which finished first in the conference versus the run (allowing 115.1 yards per game), second against the pass (122.3 yards per contest), and first in both total (262.4 markers per game) and scoring (eight points per outing) defense. AT THE INSIDE linebacking post beside Cannavino, Paul Girgash finished second on the team in tackles with 114. A 6-1, 205-pound junior who bench presses 430, he is certain to be. even more active this season. "Girgash is a quiet leader," Schem- bechler commented. "No man-no n in-puts more into football than Paul Girgash. Nobody. Not in practice, not in the games. His heart and soul is in the game always, anytime you wanna play." Sophomore Mike Boren (6-2, 217) and junior Jim Herrmann (6-2, 212), who started against California one year ago, entered the fall in a scramble for Can- navino's spot at the other inside backer. Beri Needham, a 6-4, 210-pound senior who was a starting outside linebacker two seasons ago, but missed the 1980 campaign after Schembechler suspen- ded him, could-see action at an inside spot in'81, as well. SHOULD NEEDHAM return to the outside, he would have to battle junior Mike Lemirande (6-4, 220) and sophomores Carlton Rose (6-1, 205) and Rodney Lyles (6-2, 214) foruthe position vacated by Owens. On the opposite side of the field roams 6-3, 219-pound fourth-year junior Robert Thompson. Last season Thompson was _overshadowed by Cannavino and Owens, but his 84 tackles placed him fourth on the squad, and he nailed 15 ball carriers behind the line of scrim- mage for 50 yards in losses to lead Michigan in that category. Schembechler successfully recruited a large crop of linebacking prospects, as well, including Detroit's Kevin Brooks (6-6, 230) and Joe Gray (6-2, 220) Jim Scarcelli (6-5, 220) from Warren, Mike Mallory (6-2, 207) and Riley Mc- Phee (6-2, 225), both out of Illinois, Ohioan Phil Lewandowski (6-3, 215) and Maryland native Jeff Akers (6-2, 220). THE RECRUITING was not as boun- tiful in the defensive backfield, but that is not usually a major concern when all four starters return from a secondary which yielded only one score through the air during the conference schedule. At the corners, senior Brian Carpen- ter (511, 116) and fourth-year junior Marion Body (5-10, 178) each picked off five passes to tie for club leadership. The latter was hurt through much of the spring practice session and could be the only member of the foursome to be sup- planted for a starting role, with sophomore Evan Cooper (5-11, 170) and junior Jerry Burgei(5-11, 182) waiting impatiently in the wings. Keith Bostic (6-1, 201), "the best guy back there," according to Schem- bechex', returns for his junior year at, strong safety, and 5-10, 174-pound Tony Jackson mans the free safety spot. DESPITE THE secondary's perfor- mance last fall, Bo sees it as vulnerable for one reason - only Bostic exceeds the six-foot, 200-pound mark. "It's a secondary that, if you wanna play into their hands, they can gobble you up," the coach said. "They're very fast, they're very quick, they cover well, they're good - but they're not big." There is manpower to spare on the sideline should any of the regulars suf- fer injury. Fifth-year senior Stu Harris (6-2, 196), who started at strong safety in 1979 but was forced out of action by a knee injury last season, juniors Jeff Reeves (6-1, 192), John Lott (6-0, 180),- and Jeff Cohen (5-11, 191) and sophomore Harry Gosier (6-1, 190) are all capable of filling in when needed. Despite being hampered by injury during much of 1980, Trgovac garnered second-team All-American honors at tackle, and how well the Wolverines compensate for his graduation will be a key factor this season. Both junior tackles Winfred Carraway (6-3, 230) and Cedric Coles (6-2, 237) gained valuable experience last fall (with five and three starts, respectively), and they are the front-runners for the tackle spots. SCHEMBECHLER MOVED offen- sive lineman Tony Osbun (6-5, 254) to defense, and he, along with sophomores Doug James (6-2, 242) and Dave Meredith (6-3, 225) and recruit Clay Miller, a 6-5, 240-pounder out of Barry Switzer's Norman, -Oklahoma backyard, will vie for playing time behind Carraway and Coles. A void was made in the middle guard spot with the abrupt dismissal of sophomor removed Schembe reasons". Despite lbs.) step games in and pla; Wolverine down the among dE Schembec that spot. "He di( man, but you make "If you quickness five-man got proble Thus, S foot, 22 Rodgers Ohio-6-1, 230-pound "He did man, but you make "If you quickness five-man got proble Thus, S foot, 22 Rodgers Ohio - 6- 2, 230-pou Possibl secure p0 a frest Wolverine team to a new schc yard aver nation. WOLVERINE SENIOR defensive back Stu Harr tion. Harris is not a starter in Bo Schembechle valuable as a reserve. Harris is an example of the defensive backfield.