SPORTS Tuesday, September 29, 1981 Page 8 a Michigan's wounded recover quickly By MARK MIHANOVIC "Carter should be ready to play." Those words, from the mouth of Bo Schembechler, should lay to rest the anxieties of Michigan football fans who saw wide receiver Anthony Car- ter hobble off the field with a sprained ankle in the second quarter of Saturday's 21-16 Wolverine victory over Navy. At his weekly Weber's Inn press luncheon yesterday, Schembechler said that Carter along with fullback Stanely Edwards, defensive tackle Winfred Carraway, and guard Stefan Humphries, will probably be ready for action this weekend when the Wolverines travel to Bloomington'to take on Indiana. But the status of defensive back Brian Carpenter, who sprained his left ankle against Navy, is "uncertain" for the Indiana contest, according to Schembechler. EDWARDS (HIP pointer) and Carraway (two sprained ankgles) both sat out the entire Navy game, while Humphries suffered strained ligaments in his right knee during the con- test. Unfortunately for Schembechler, he is not in a position to save any of his walking wounded for bigger games, because after an opening Big Ten loss to Wisconsin, the Wolverines are now basically in a must-win situation the rest of the way. - "Our task now is rather plain," explained Schembechler. "We simply have put ourselves into a position where we can- not lose another game this season if we honestly hope to return to Pasadena for the Rose Bowl. Carter-to play against Hoosiers "IF WE LOSE again, we're out of it," said the man whose teams have compiled an 83-11-1 record against Big Ten op- ponents in 12 years. "That is a great deal of pressure to play under each and every week, but we have nobody to blame but ourselves.", Bo remained perturbed by the lackluster play of his squad versus Navy, although his anger had subsided a mite from its level on Saturday. "We're not playing with intensity and concentration," he said. "It's been a result of the tremendous media build-up at the beginning of the season. "THIS IS A typical Michigan team, typically talented, no more and no less. We've won in the past because we've been a very intense football team. They're not playing like that. "We expect more out of our group than what we've got- ten," Bo continued. "What we consider problems at Michigan are normal things at other places. We've got no problems . . we've got good people,, they've just gotta play better." The Wolverines begin tackling the rest of their Big Ten op- position this weekend. Indiana is 1-2 on the year after nipping Northwestern in its opener, 21-20, then losing to Southern California, 21-0, and Syracuse, 21-7. Schembechler was par- ticularly impressed by the fact that the Hoosiers held USC scoreless until late in the third period of that contest. "I THINK THAT speaks very highly of their abilities," Bo said. "Indiana's got the potential to be a good team. Indiana is 1-0 in the conference, and we're 0-1." Hoosier mentor Lee Corso whistled a different tune, citing his team's inability to put points on the scoreboard. "We lost 90 percent of our running game and 85 percent of our passing game," Corso said yesterday in a phone interview from Bloomington. "So far we have not been able to run the ball, and there's a direct correlation between that and not being able to score." The graduation of standout quarterback Tim Clifford and the tailback tandem of Lonnie Johnson (1,075 yards in 1980) and Mike Harkrader (567) certainly explains some of the falloff. Corso indicated that there would not be any major changes in the Hoosier game plan in light of his 0-6 record against the Maize and Blue. "We're gonna do the same things, only we're going to try to do them better," Corso said. "If you try to trick these guys, it's ridiculous. We're gonna coach a solid, tough, hard-nosed football game." I 6 N 7 ,. _.. Sports Information Photo MICHIGAN WIDE RECEIVER Anthony Carter will be ready to play against Indiana, Saturday. Carter suffered an ankle sprain in Michigan's 21-16 win over Navy.s U AP TOP TWENTY 1. Southern Cal (57 ) ...... 3-0-0 1,311 2. Penn St. (5%) .........2-0-0 1,208 3. Texas (1) ............. 3-0-0 1,104 4. Pittsburgh ...........2-0-0 1,027 5. Oklahoma (1) ...........1-1-0 1,022 6. North Carolina (1) .....3-0-0 967 7 Ohio St....... ........ 3-0-0 922 8. MICHIGAN ..............2-1-0 835 9. Mississippi St...........3-0-0 ,743 10. Brigham Young .......... 4-0-0 708 1iL Alabama..............3-1-0 658 l. Washington...........3-0-0 533 13, Georgia .. ............. 3-1-0 492 14, Clemson .............3-0-0 386 15. So. Methodist ............4-0-0 324 10. UCLA ... ..........2-1-0 266 17 Miami, Fla. .,......... 2-1-0 225 l Iowa ...................2-1-0 169 19. Arkansas ..............3-0-0 156 20; Iowa St..............3-0-0 134 UPI TOP TWENTY 1. 2.1 3. 4.. 5.1 6.+ 7.+ 8. 9.1 10. 12.+ 13.' 14.+ 15.1 16., 17.1 18.I 19.1 20.1 Southern Cal (39) 3-0 ........... 626 Penn St. (2) 2-0 ..............565 Texas 3-0......................500 Pittsburgh 2-0 ................447 North Carolina (1) 3-0 .......... 408 Oklahoma 1-1................... 404 Ohio St. 3-0..................... 357 MICHIGAN 2-1 ................ 337 Mississippi St. 3-0 .............. 250 Alabama 3-1 ................241. Brigham Young 4-0...........201 Georgia 3-1..................169 Washington 3-0.............. 161 Clemson 3-0........... ..83 Miami Fla. 2-1 ................ 42 Arkansas 3-0 ................... 41 Missouri 3-0..................36 UCLA 2-1....................... 35 Nebraska 1-2................. 27 Iowa 2-1........................ 20 TEAM STATISTICS Michigan Grid Statistics PUNTING PASSING MICH Total First Downs ..... 40 Rushing........... 29 Passing............. 9 Penalty ............... 2 Total Net Yards ...... 886 Total Plays ..........191 Avg. Per Play ...: 4.6 Avg. Per Game.295.3 Net Rushing Yards 634 Total Attempts .... 143 Avg. Per Play ....... '4.4 Avg. Per Game ...... 211.3 Net Passing Yards..... 252 Att/Comp/Int ........48/17/6 Avg. Per Attempt.... 5.3 Avg. Per Comp...... 14.8 Avg. Per Game ...... 84.0 Punts/Yds /Avg.......22/955/43.4 Punt Ret./Yds/Avg . 16/108/6.8 KO Ret./Yds/Avg......7/120/17.1 Int/YdsAvg............ 5/36/7.2 Fumbles/Lost ..........2/1 Penalties/Yards.........21/189 Scoring Total Pts./Avg........60/20.0 Touchdowns ..........9 Opp. 51 29 17 5 896 207 4.3 298.7 478 143 3.3 159.3 418 64/29/5 6.5 14.4 139.3 23/873/38.0 4/0/0.0 5/63/12.6 6111/1.8 6/2 8/54 44/14.7 5 Rushing............ 6 2 - Passing............ 3 3 Returns............ 0 0 PAT's/Att............. 6/6 5/5 2-pt. Conv./Att.........0/3 0/0 Field Goals/Att...... 0/3 3/4 Third down cony....... 12/42 12/45 Success Pct...........286 .267 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS Bracken......... MICHIGAN ....... Opponents........ No. 22 22 23 Yds. 955 955 873 S. Smith......... MICHIGAN ....... Opponents......... PA PC 48 17 48 17 64 29 Int PctYds TD 6 .354 252 3 6 .354 252 3 5 .453 418 3 Avg. 434 43.4 38.0 Long 60 60 53 71 71 71 RETURNS SCORING / TDrTpl%~ExP 2Wt FRxIP S. Sih.......... Hater.......... WMIH GA ..... ... Ridsp............. Bean............ tiajgeikh ...... .. OppoGnes........ 3 0 RUSHING 0 2 0 0 6s 2 2 0 0 1 0 3 3 0 0 s.1 0 10 0 0 01 0 12 0 0 00 0 12 0 0000 6 0 0 00 0 0 0 86 01 03 6 0 66 03 03 0 56 00 34 44 Carter ..... Hassel .... Ricks ..... Burgei .... Carpenters. Jackson ... Opponents . PR/Yds/Avg/LP 0/0/0.0/0 0/0/0.0/0 0/0/0.0/0 0/0/0.0/0 12/100/8.3/48 16/108/68/48 4/0/0.0/5 KOR/Yds/Avg/LP 4/79/19.8/29 1/16/16.0/16 1/13/13.0/13 1/12/12.0/12 0/4/0.010 7/120.17:1/29 5/63/13.6/23 FIELD GOALS Att Gn. loss yds avg TD LP W-U-11r Woolfolk .......... 62 378 S. Smith ........... 32 140 Edwards .......... 16 78 Ricks.............20 68 Ingram............ 6 13 K. Smith.........2 7 Rogers.............1 6 Mercer.............1 2 Carter............. 3 5 MICHIGAN ....... 143 697 Opponents.........143 565 3 375 6.0 43 97 3.0 0 78 4.9 5 63 3.2 0 13 2.2 0 7 3.5 0 6 6.0 0 2 2.0 12 -7 -2:3 63 634 4.4 87 478 3.3 2 3 0 I, 0 0 0 0 0 6 2 89 26 20 10 5 s 6 2 4 89 22 RECEIVING No. Carter............... 7 Woolfolk............4 Bean ................ 2 Betts ................ 2 Brockington ......... 1 Ingram........... i Yds. 160 15 34 8 25 10 Haji-Sheikh MICHIGAN 'Opponents 0-19 20-29 30-39 0-0 0-0 0-1 + 0-0 0-0 0-1 0-0 0-1 1-1 Avg. 22.9 3.8 17.0 4.0 25.0 10.0 TD 2 0 a' 0 0 0 LP 71 5 26 6 25 10 SCORE BY QUARTERS 40-49 0-2 0-2 2-2 50 + total 0-0 0-3 0-0 0-3 0-0 3-4,; 12 MICHIGAN ................... 7 21 Opponents...................0 20 3 26 14 4 tot. 6-60 10-44 Lunch WEYDA YLUNCH-DISCUSSION EPTEMGER29-12 N00N "ENERGY POLICY IN AFRICA: POLITICAL AND INSTITUTIONAL STRATEGIES" Speaker: PROF. ERNEST J. WILSON,, Political Science Department U. of M. at the INTERNATIONAL CENTER, 603 E. Madison Street By SARAH SHERBER The Michigan women's cross country team finished first out of 21 teams at last weekend's Springbank In- vitational meet in London, Ontario. Melanie Weaver paced the Wolverines, finishing third out of 168 participants. Sue Frederick was the second Wolverine across the finish line, coming in seventh with a time of 24:27 for the 4.2 mile course. She was followed in eighth place by Lisa Larsen, who finished with a time of 24:53. Rounding out the top five finishers for the Michigan thinclads were freshman Judy Yuhn, who finished tenth, and Linn Fudala, who crossed the tape 13th. The women runners have their next meet on Oc- tober 10, when they compete in the Western Michigan Invitational at Kalamazoo. Men harriers second The Michigan men's cross country team had its season debut on Sunday when they finished second in rriers wn the Springbank Invitational meet. The Wolverines totalled a team score of 30 points, five over the first- place Track West Club from London, Ontario. Michigan's leading finisher was Bill O'Reilly, who finished third with a time of 20:09. Next for the Wolverines was Dan Beck, who came in 12th in the meet, clocking 20:40 for the course. He was followed closely byJim Schmidt, who finished in the 15th spot. THE NEXT TWO thinclads to cross the finish line. for Michigan were Gerard Donakowski and Steve Brandt, who finished 17th and 21st, respectively. The future still holds some uncertainties for the cross country team. "It's a kind of young team with no real super stars,"' said coach Ron Warhurst. "I think we're going tb be competitive in the Big Ten." The squad.will see its first conference competition when it runs in the Notre Dame Invitational this Friday. -SARAH SHERBER Women golfers seventht The Michigan women's golf team travelled to the nvitationall Michigan State Invitational with high hopes this weekend, but rode back with disappointment. The Wolverines shot a team score of 986 in the two- day tournament, placing them seventh among the eight squads competing. THE HOST Spartans took first place honors, as their green squad combined for a tally of 910. Close behind the winners were second-place Kent State (914) and third-place Marshall (915). Only Ferris State's whopping total of 1008 was. behind the Wolverine mark. In the individual competition, Michigan's top finisher was senior Karyn Colbert. Colbert's two-day total of 238 put her in a tie for 16th place. Finishing behind her were teammates Linda Drillock (241) and Elaine Satyshur (249). The Wolverines hope to turn things around next weekend when they travel to West Lafayette for the Purdue Invitational Tournament.-CHRIS WILSON SPORTS OF THE DAILY: $1.00 For additional information, For additional information, please call 662-5529 Co-sponsored by THE ECUMENICAL CAMPUS CENTER GRIDDE PICKS -\\f I STUDENT HEALTH Q. & A. QUESTION: 'm one of those students who almost never get sick. Since I have to pay the University Health Service fee anyway, what can UHS offer me? ANSWER: First, don't write us off before checking out the expanded and improved services at UHS this year; we may have more than you realize in the areas of prevention and health promotion. And most services are free! UHS also sponsors recrea- tional activities that all students can take advan- tage of. For example, the "RUN FOR THE HEALTH OF IT" is coming up on Saturday, October 10, to cele- barate National Joggers' Day. Check-in time for this 5-km. (3.1 mile) run through the Nichols Arbor- etum is 8:30-9:15 a.m. at Markley Hall; the Run begins at 9:30 a.m. from Washington Heights (be- tween Markley and the School of Public Health). (r lve yourself a ndeoaN ri steak Ialue Meal. 2.. yid99 1 1., . " II Ii1 i! , ..;:w , Jli i i- i TI It was not only a tough week, for the Wolverine gridders, who lost numerous starters due to injury in the Navy bat- tle, but it was also a painful weekend for Ann Arbor's pigskin prognosticators. Keith Bronson of Hill Street picked only 14 correctly, but that was enough to capture this week's title. If you want a chance to claim the free one-item pizza from Pizza Bob's and the chance to match your picking skills with the "experts" from the Daily foot- ball staff, just drop off your picks at the Daily before midnight Friday. 1. MICHIGAN at Indiana (pick score), 2. Michigan State at Notre Dame 3. Minnesota at Illinois 4. Iowa at. Northwestern 5. Purdue at Wisconsin 6. Florida State at Ohio State 7. Missouri at Mississippi State 8. Florida at LSU 9. North Carolina at Georgia Tech 10. Iowa State at Oklahoma 11. Navy'at Yale 12. Arizona State at Washington 13. E. Michigan at Central Michigan - 14. Auburn at Nebraska 15. Pittsburgh'at South Carolina 16. Syracuse at Maryland 17. Utah State at Brigham Young 18.Dayton at Slippery Rock 19. N. Dakota State at Morningside -20. DAILY LIBELS at Indiana-Jones QUESTION: Where do I sign up for the Run? rI ANSWER: Applications can be obtained at the CCRB, NCRB, UHS and Markley Hall, and are due by Monday, October 5. There is a $1.50 registration fee to cover costs; with a "Run For the Health of It" T-shirt, the fee is $4.50. Volunteer to help staff the I event and GET A FREE T-SHIRT. For more informa- I I I Ch ee knoMe r M~m oa rd I I --