A e 2-D-Thursday, Seotember 10, 1981-The Mic-h Hih expectations r Few holes for gridders to fill By MARK MIHANOVIC If ever a team ended a football season in impressive fashion, the 1980 Michigan Wolverines did. After a pair of heart-wrenching losses in the second and third games of the campaign to Notre Dame (29-27) and South Carolina (17-14), they began turning themselves. around with a 38-13 trouncing of California. And by November, Michigan was in- vincible. It destroyed Indiana, Wiscon- sin, Purdue, and Ohio State by a com- bined score of 94-3, while playing only the Boilermaker contest in friendly Michigan Stadium. Then came perhaps the most significant accomnplishment of all-a 23-6 thrashing of Washington to end the Maize and Blue's bowl game losing streak at seven games. THUS, THE WOLVERINES enter the 1981 season with Bo Schembechler's post-season monkey off their backs. As if last fall's strong finish is not enough reason to be optimistic about the up- coming year, consider who returns from that ballclub: * Eight of 11 starters of the stingiest defensive unit in the Big Ten, including the complete secondary contingent which bottled up highly-touted quarter- backs Rich Campbell, Tim Clifford, Mark Herrmann, and Art Schlichter. * All-Big Ten offensive linemen Kurt Becker, Ed Muransky, and Bubba Paris. * The backfield trio of Butch Woolfolk, Stanley Edwards, and Lawrence Ricks which ground out 2,793 yards. . Punter Don Bracken, second in the conference in '80 with a 40.9 yard average, and kicker Ali Haji-Shiekh, third among Big Ten kickers in scoring last season. * Anthony Carter. What it all adds up to is the kind of* team preseason pollsters drool over, and if Schembechler has any worries about his squad, it is the effect that a possible Number One ranking might have on his squad. "I hope we have confidence, but I hope we're not overconfident," Schem- bechier said. "I have a feeling, in the preseason, we're gonna be a highly overrated team. We're in the same situation Ohio State was a year ago. "THEY (THE POLLSTERS) are gonna pick us on the basis of having eight of our.11 defense(men) back, but it's not the same defense. (The graduation of Andy) Cannavino and (Mel) Owens are astronomical losses. Cannavino was the absolute leader of the defense. That's number one. "And number two," he continued, "you shouldn't be picked as a potential national champion, or great football team, when you don't have an ex- perienced quarterback." But while Michigan does not have an experienced signal-caller to replace John Wangler, who finished third in the Big Ten in passing efficiency behind Herrmann and Schlichter, it certainly does have a talented one. Sophomore Steve Smith emerged from spring prac- tice as the first-stringer, and Schem- bechler has high hopes for the 6-0, 186- pounder out of Grand Blanc, who saw very limited action in his freshman year. "DURING THE COURSE of the spring, Smith established himself as an excellent prospect because he can run, he can pass, he's a strong kid, he's very. competitive, and he's smart," the coach said. Not far behind Smith, however, in the annual quarterback derby is junior Rich Hewlett, who started the first two contests last fall before Wangler took over. With either Hewlett or Smith calling the signals, Schembechler can feel free to go to the option, a pleasure he wasn't afforded last fall because of Wangler's immobility. Hewlett, however, with limited passing ability, does not provide the kind of versatility that Smith does. Sophomores David Hall and Greg Powell and senior B. J. Dickey, who returns after being suspended by Schembechler for the 1980 season, wait in the wings. A KEY CONSIDERATION for Bo as he chooses among his quarterbacks is certainly their relative abilities to deliver the ball into the hands of Carter. The 5-11, 161-pound Florida native became the first Michigan sophomore since 1925 to gain All-American honors, Smith ... awesome potential Michigan s 1981 Football Schedule September 12 September 19 September 26 October 3 October 10 October 17 October 24 October 31 November 7 November 14 November 21 OPPONENT at Wisconsin NOTRE DAME NAVY at Indiana at Michigan State IOWA NORTHWESTERN at Minnesota ILLINOIS at Purdue OHIO STATE LAST YEAR 24-0 27-29 after a 1980 season in which he caught 51 passes for 818 yards (16 yards per catch) and a season-record 14 touch- downs. Kenny Gear, a 6-1, 185-pound junior, is the front-runner for the opening at the other wide receiver created by the graduation of Alan Mitchell, with sophomore Vince Bean and senior Fred Brockington challenging. Incoming freshman Brad Cochran has the size (6- 3, 197) and speed (4.4 in the 40) to make his presence felt, also. At tight end, Norm Betts (Michigan's second-leading receiver last year with 17 catches) and Craig Dunaway should share the chores. IT IS NOT likely that any new faces will break into the backfield. Edwards (6-1, 210) made the adjustment from tailback to fullback in seemingly fine fashion last fall, gaining 901 yards with 35-0 27-23 17-10 37-14 45-14 26-0 9-3 a 4.7 yards per carry average. Schem- bechler, however, is looking for more from him. "He's not the kind of fullback that we want yet," the coach said. "He's got to do a better job of blocking for us. If he does that, then he can be an outstanding fullback." Gerald Ingram's knee injury makes him a question mark behind Edwards; thus depth could be a problem there. Schembechler is considering the option of trying recruit Greg Washington, a 6- 3, 220-pounder named by one publication as the nation's best high school athlete last year, at fullback. Woolfolk (6-2, 207) and Ricks (5-10, 195) shared playing time at tailback in '80, as each was hampered by injury at various times. Woolfolk, who led the Blue with 1,042 yards on the year, saved his best performances for last, with 141 yards versus the Buckeyes and 182 in the Rose Bowl. MOST OFFENSIVE LINES would be considered decimated by the loss of an All-American center (George Lilja) and All-Big Ten guard (John Powers). But when the likes of guard Becker (6-6, 255) and tackles Muransky (6-7, 275) and Paris (6-7, 270) are returning, that is anything but the case. Sophomore Tom Dixon, (6-2, 235), who started the Minnesota game at guard last year, is the leading can- didate to try to fill Lilja's large shoes. Junior Jeff Felten (6-2, 230) and sophomore Larry Sweeney (63, 235) were both injured much of the spring, but could challenge in the fall. Junior Rich Strenger (6-7, 245) and sophomore Stefan Humphries (6-4, 234) are the two front-runners for Powers' left guard spot. Junior Tom Garrity (6- 4, 245) and sophomores Jerry Diorio (6- 4, 235) and Dan Yarano (6-3, 238) provide depth up front. FOR THE MICHIGAN defense, the magic number stands at 22. That's how many 15-minute quarters of football it has been since an opponent has penetrated the Wolverine end zone with the pigskin. The Blue defenders finished first in the Big Ten against the run, second versus the pass, and first in both total and scoring defense. The major problem confronting Bo is the replacement of three of his five leading tacklers (Cannavino, Owens, and defensive tackle Mike Trgovac). Juniors Winfred Carraway (6-3, 230), who started five of the last six games last season, and Cedric Coles (6-2, 241), who started three games, are likely to man the tackle spots, at one of which Trgovac was a second team All- American last fall. Schembechler moved offensive lineman Tony Osbun (6-5, 258) to defense and he, along with sophomores Doug James (6-2, 240) and Dave Meredith (6-4, 233) and recruit Clay Miller, out of Norman, Oklahoma, will push for playing time. AT MIDDLE GUARD, Jeff Shaw (6- 1, 250), who last year started as a freshman over the last half of the cam- paign and finished second to Trgovac among down linemen with 46 tackles, is the frontrunner. But Bo said that he is also going to take a close look at Nate Rodgers (a 6-0, 231-pound sophomore) and a few incoming freshmen. The linebacking posts are where graduation took its biggest bite, however. On the outside, Owens' opening could be filled by any of a num- ber of athletes, including 6-5, 219-pound junior Mike Lemirande and sophomores Carlton Rose (6-1, 205) and Rodney Lyles (6-3, 210). On the other side, the blitzing Robert Thompson (a 6- 3, 215-pound senior), who led the team in tackles behind the line of scrimmage with 15 in '80, returns. Only a debilitating injury could force junior Paul Girgash (6-1, 205) from one of the inside linebacking posts. "GIRGASH IS A quiet leader," Schembechler said of the Wolverines' second-leading tackler last season. "No man-no man puts more into football than Paul Girgash. His heart and soul is in the game always, anytime you wan- na play." At the other inside position, those bat- tling to assume the unenviable task of replacing Cannavino (in second place among all-time Michigan tacklers), are 6-2, 219-pound junior Jim Herrmann and 6-2, 210-pound sophomore Mike Boren. Senior Ben Needham (6-4, 215), who started two years ago at outside linebacker but, like Dickey, was Sports Information Photo POSSIBLY THE MOST explosive player in college football, Anthony Carter draws the attention of every eye in the crowd anytime he gets near the ball. Hold on, though, says Bo. "He isn't as good as he can be yet. He's still got a ways to go there." suspended last season, fits into the pic- ture, also, but Bo is not sure where. "NEEDHAM HAD A good spring," the coach said. "We moved him from outside to inside to see if he could help us there 'cause we're not deep there. He's tall, and he's got great range as a pass defender. He'll be a key guy in our defense." There is less uncertainty when it comes to the Blue defensive backfield, which relented only a single touchdown through the air in conference com- petition. And the foursome of corner- backs Brian Carpenter and Marion Body and safeties Tony Jackson and Keith Bostic is a year more experien- ced. The only one likely to face a challenge for a starting spot is Body, who was hurt much of the spring and will have. to fend off sophomore Evan Cooper and junior Jerry Burgei. Schembechler is high on his secondary but remains wary of its lack of size-of the starting four, only Bostic, (at 6-1), is at least six feet tall, and Jackson is the only back whose weight, 217, reaches the 200-pound mark. "IF YOU WANNA play into their hands, they can gobble you up," he ex- plained. "They're very fast, they're very quick, they cover well, they'r good. ...but they're not big." Depth should not be a problem in the defensive backfield, with senior Stu Harris (6-2, 196), who started at strong safety in 1979 and returns after a knee injury knocked-him out of action in '80, senior Jeff Reaves (6-1, 192), out much of the spring with a bad back, and junior John Lott (6-0, 176) ready to go. Thus, the tools are there, on both sides of the ball. Last season Schem- bechler cast aside the bowl jink-he has now won everything a coach* possibly can, with the exception of a national title. If he can adequately fill a few holes (a couple of them big, a couple not-so-big), if Steve Smith even approaches his awesome potential, if his squad avoids that dreaded cbm- placency, and, of course, if Anthony Carter remains able-bodied, the coach may make that final addition to his illustrious record. Then again, as Bo knows so well, "if" is such a big word. a 6 0 1980 Football Statistics TEAM STATISTICS Total First Downs ...............260 Rushing ..........................156 Passing ...........:...............86 Penalty ...........................18 Total Offensive Plays.... .........911 Total Offensive Yards...........4707 Rushing Attempts ..............674 Rushing Yards ................3023 Passing Attempts.................237 Pass Completions..............127 Passing Yards ................1684 Average Yards per Game...........392 Rushing ..........................252 Passing......................140 Average Yards per Play.............5.2 Average per Rush.................4.5 Average per Completed Pass .....13.3 Total Number of Punts...............56 Total Yards ..................2389 Average per Punt.............42.7 Interceptions/Yards............20/75 Fumbles/Lost ....................22/13 Penalties/Yards .................50/445 OPP. 199 89 95 15 780 3333 450 1399 330 171 1934 278 117 161 4.3 3.1 11.3 74 2846 38.5 10/67 22/13 62/574 K. Smith..... ... Hassel..... . S. Smith...........3l Powers'.......... Wangler' .......... Comp. Wangler ...117 S. Smith..........3 Hewlett.........7 Carter......... 0 Woolfolk........0 8 46 5.8 6 17 2.8 9 8 0.9 0 7 7.0 32 -122 -3.8 PASSING Att. 212 6 17 Yds. 1,522 44 118 0 0 TD 16 0 2 0 0 RECEIVING 0 0 0 0 0 TD [nt. 9 0 0 TD 14 1 0 0 =2 0 0 0 0 Carter.......... Betts............ Mitchell*.......... Woolfolk.......... "unuway .......... Edwards ........ Ricks............. Gear............ Ingram.......... Brockington .. Christian* ......... Carihens .......... No. 51 17 13 10 9 9 8 3 3 2 1 1 Yds. 818 161 225 68 135 93 56 60 23 31 10 4 Avg. 16.0 9.5 17.3 6.8 15.0 10.3 7.0 20.0 7.7 15.5 10.0 4.0 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING PUNTING Woolfolk........ Edwards .......... fucks ............. Ingram......... Carter........... Hewlett ......... Att. 196 192 167 33 10 21 Yds. 1,042 901 850 145 68 61 Avg. 5.3 4.7 5.1 4.4 6.8 2.9 TD 8 8 6 2 0 0 No. Wracken ................... 56 Att. Haji-Sheikh ............... 17 *(Asterisk denotes those players 1981.) Yds. 2,389 Made 11 Avg. 42.7 Long 45 not returning in Daily Photo by JOHN HAGEN IN ITS LAST five games, the swarming Michigan defense blanked three opponents, held Ohio State to a field goal, and yielded a pair of three-pointers to Washington in the Rose Bowl. Mel Owens (53) has graduated, but Paul Girgash (No. 50 and inset), second to Andy Cannavino with 114 stops, returns at inside linebacker for his junior year. "Full line of backp & camping equip ARMY SURPI We stock a full line of clothing. acking ment" LUS /1 ARMY SURPLUS t t ..tw A .. Big Ten Standings a - ~ ~ w .a. w*~~u.u'