Page 10-Sunday, November 15, 1981-The Michigan Daily . . AND IN THIS CORNER... Mark Mihanovic Up from the dead .. . m" .. Michigan comes back WEST LAFAYETTE L ATE AFTERNOON shadows enveloping the toilet paper-covered grass field at Purdue's Ross-Ade Stadium provided a gloomy contrast to the wide smiles which the Michigan Wolverines wore as they boarded their awaiting team bus. And it was impossible to avoid smiling with them. This was a team given up for dead by its own coach four weeks ago, a team that couldn't make the big plays, a team that lacked the character necessary to win on Saturday. Now the Michigan Wolverines control their own Rose Bowl destiny for the first time in the fall of 1981, since their season-opening, dream-shattering loss at Wisconsin. A lot of events had to break Michigan's way since its second Big Ten loss, four weekends ago to Iowa, and most of them have. The culmination came in the form of yesterday's 17-7 Hawkeye defeat of the Badgers. And as the players climbed into the buses with the scoreboard lights still showing the 28-10 Michigan victory, it seemed that with the regular season entering its final week, everything was back to normal: Pur- due plays Indiana for the Old Oaken Bucket-Michigan plays Ohio State for the Big Ten Championship. Michigan versus Ohio State. For the Big Ten Championship. Again. If Michigan wins, that is. The Buckeyes, on the other hand, enter Ann Arbor in a precarious situation; should they prevail, they will still need outside help in the form of a Michigan State upset of the Hawkeyes in Iowa City if they are to advance to Pasadena. The situation is a reversal of that of two years ago, when Michigan hosted. Ohio State knowing that it might win the battle yet lose the war if the out- come of a different game on a different field was unfavorable to its cause. Bo Schembechler did not look at the upcoming showdown in that context in his post-game interview yesterday, though. For him, it will always be Michigan and Ohio State for'the Roses. "Isn't that the way it's been down through the years?" he exalted. "It hasn't changed much. Down to one." What has changed is Schembechler's team. In its last two victories over Illinois and Purdue, Michigan has won simply because it has made the key plays at the key times. Move the clock back eight days. If Darrell Smith had held on to Tony Eason's pass in the end zone and the Illini had taken a 28-7 'second-quarter lead over Michigan, would the Wolverines have retained their composure to come back? Would Eason have lost his composure so quickly, allowing Michigan to blow Illinois out of the stadium? It's all con- jecture, because defensive back Jerry Burgei slapped the ball away from Smith and came up with the big interception two plays later, turning the game around. Young was gun shy The Michigan defense again performed well at the key stages of yester- day's contest. Purdue coach Jim Young, perhaps a mite obsessed with the 26-0 shutout that Michigan defensive coach Bill McCartney's six defensive backs hung on ex-Boilermaker QB Mark Herrman one year ago, drew up a game plan which failed to utilize the explosive passing talents of quarter- back Scott Campbell. He was determined to move the ball on the ground, which is a fine strategy if you are satisfied with an offensive output of 10 points. "I was very much surprised that they didn't throw more;" McCartney said afterward. "Their game plan caught me by surprise. I was especially sur- prised when he (Campbell) didn't come out throwing in the second half. The most encouraging thing about our defensive performance was that in the . fourth quarter, when the game was in the balance, we played our best defen- That was also when the Blue played its best offense. The Wolverines began the period behind, 10-7, with the ball on their own 24-yard line, but moved it at will on that drive and the succeeding two, for the 28-10 win that set them all alone at the top of the conference. In a sense, the comeback is over. The Wolverines, with a generous allot- ment of luck, have seen their own poor play in two earlier conference losses nullified. Obviously, though, there remains one final task, one which their best player, Anthony Carter, feels they're up to. "This is about as good as we felt last year," Carter said in the buoyant locker room. "We've got it (the Ohio State game) at home. We have it in front of 105,000 people. It's going to be great to win it (the Big Ten title) at home."~ And everything will be back to normal, right Anthony? SCORES BIg Ten MICHIGAN 28. Purdue 10 Iowa 17, Wisconsin 7 Michigan State 43, Minnesota 36 Illinois 35, Indiana 14 Ohio State 70, Northwestern 6 East Alabama 31, Penn State 16 Clemson 21, Maryland 7 Princeton 35, Yale 31 South Georgia 24, Aurburn 13 Arkansas 10, Texas A & M 7 So. Mississippi 58, Florida State 14 Midwest Bowling Green 28,Eastern Michigan 0 Oklahoma 14, Missouri 10 Nebraska 31, Iowa State 7 West Washington 13, USC 3 UCLA 34, Arizona State 24 Brigham Young 13, Hawai 3 Washington State 17, California 0 NBA Detroit 117, Atlanta 104 Washington 104, Chicago9 NHL Detroit 6. Chicago 3 Washington 4. Hartford 0 6M' rally downs Purdue (Continued from Page 1) the final score 28-10. Despite the 18-point victory, the of- fensive mistakes occupied the thoughts of some Wolverines. "Things started bad for me today," said Smith, who was 12 of 20 passing with one touchdown and one interception. "I threw that inter- ception on the first play and then on the next series I fumbled the ball away." After three turnover-free games in a row, Michigan lost two fumbles, one in- terception and was penalized five times for 36 yards. "Today we were fumbling the ball," continued Smith. "That's just giving it away." - DEFENSIVELY, the Wolverines were ready for the talented arm of sophomore quarterback Scott Cam- pbell, but the Boilermaker signal-caller didn't throw too often. "I was very much surprised," said defensive coor- ... dinator Bill McCartney. "I really thought he'd throw a lot more, Their game plan caught me by surprise." Campbell, one of the nation's top passers, only tossed 22 passes, com- pleting 11 of them for 125 yards and no touchdowns. Steve Bryant, the Big Ten's leading receiver, had only three catches for 39 yards. Michigan defen- sive back Brian Carpenter drew the dif- ficult assignment of covering Bryant one-on-one. "I thought I did pretty well," said Carpenter. "He's a good receiver and I shut him down quite a bit. We figured that they would try to establish the running game and try to surprise us with some passes." For Purdue coach Jim Young, the only surprise was the officials' decision to penalize the Boilermakers two second half time-outs for excessive crowd noise at the student end of the stadium. In the third quarter, Michigan quarterback Smith tried three times unsuccessfully to' call the offensive signals, but the sophomore could not be heard by his teammates. WHILE HE was still under the cen- ter, Smith appealed to the officials, who told Smith to continue, but the quarter- back appealed again, and the striped- shirts penalized the Boilermakers. "I think it is entirely wrong to destroy a team's momentum the way they did," said Young. "The way I understand the rules, the quarterback has 25 seconds to run the play if he is denied the crowd noise delay. Both of the timeouts charged to us came after Smith was told to run the play. What I don't under- stand is how the crowd could have been that loud on the 20-yard line." Schembechler, however, disagreed with his former defensive coordinator. "I agree completely with the officials," said the dean of Big Ten football coaches. "Everybody has got to hear what you say. This is not 1898 football where you walk to the line and say 'hut hut' and go. Even my right guard could not hear, and he's right next to the cen- ter. "There's no way you can allow the crowd to intimidate the offensive team," Schembechler elaborated.- "If our crowd ever did that,;I'd be upset. I hope what Bobby Knight said last year isn't true about the Purdue people." Schembechler was referring to the In- diana basketball coach's squabble with the Boilermaker fans. Next week's Michigan-Ohio State showdown, which will be televised by ABC, is scheduled to start at 12:30 p.m., instead of the usual 1:00 p.m. kickoff time. 09 Smith ... engineers comeback Campbell soup First Downs ................... Rushing ....................... Passing ....................... Penalties................... Rushing Yardage........... Passing (comp/att/int)........ Passing Yards ................. Fumbles ...................... Punts'.................... SCORING MICH PUR 22 14 9 8 11 6 2 0 235 139 12/20/1 11/22/1 196 125 3/2 2/1 2/35.5 6/38.0 RUSHING MICHIGAN MICHIGAN ....................7 0 0 21 - 28 Purdue .........................3 0 7 0 - 10 SCORING PLAYS PUR-Clark 26 yd. FG MICH-Dunaway 27 yd. pass from Smith (Ha ji-Sheikh kick) PUR-Feulner S yd.run (Clark kick) MICH-Smith 26 yd. run (Haji-Sheikh kick) MICH-Woolfolk i yd. run (Haji-Sheikh kick) MICH-Ricks 5yd. run (Haji-Sheikh kick) PASSING MICHIGAN Att Comp Int Yds TD Smith................... 20 12 1 196 1 PURDUE Campbell................ 22 11 1 125 0 Woolfolk ................... Smith............. .. Edwards ......... ........... Rogers.................... Ricks .......... ..... Carter ..................... PURDUE Feuiner .................... King ......................... Pruit....................... Campbell........................ Bryant -.......................... RECEIVING MICHIGAN Carter....................... Bean ............................ Dunaway ...................... Edwards ....................... Woolfolk .................... PURDUE Att 22 14 8 3 4 2 24 2 5 I Ree 7 2 I 1 Rec 4 3 2 2 Yds 82 66 27 26 22 12 106 39 6 -2 -10 Yds 103 35 27 18 13 Yds 46 39 30 10 Avg 3.7 5.5 3.4 8.7 5.5 6.0 4.4 4.9 3.0 -2.5 -10 TD 0 0 1 0 0 TD 0 0 0 0 0l Daily Photo by BRIAN MASCK QUARTERBACK STEVE SMITH rolls out on the option against Purdue. The sophomore quarterback engineered a 21-point fourth quarter rally to over- come the Boilermakers and set up a Big Ten title showdown next week against Ohio State. Benson..................... Bryant .................... Retherford........... ...... Feulner ...................... R BIG TEN ROUNDUP Hawks Ih MADISON (AP) - Tailback Phil Blatcher dived one and two yards for tpuchdowns andIowa's Big Ten-leading defense forced five turnovers as the Hawkeyes defeated Wisconsin, 17-7, in a college football showdown yesterday. Iowa, 7-3 overall and 5-2 in the Big Ten, jumped into prim contention for what could be its first conference championship since 1960, when the Hawkeyes shared the crown. WISCONSIN, held to three first downs until the last three minutes of the third quarter, fell froma share of the Big Ten lead to 5-3 in the conference and 6-4 for the season. Iowa drove 53 yards in 10 plays on its second series and took a 3-0 lead on a 35- yard field goal by freshman kicker Tom Nichol. Gordy Bohannon completed five of six passes for 40 yards on the drive. Illinois 35, Indiana 14 CHAMPAIGN (AP) - Quarterback elp 'M', Tony Eason passed for two touchdowns and ran for two more yesterday to lead Illinois to a 35-14 triumph over Indiana. Eason, one of the nation's leading passers, gave Illinois an early 14-0 lead with his touchdown runs, but stepped up the aerial attack after Indiana used a trick play to tie the score at halftime. THE HOOSIERS' scoring came in the second period when quarterback Babe Laufenberg threw a 34-yard touchdown pass to Todd Shroyer, then surprised Illinois by catching a 7-yard TD strike off the halfback option. Eason put the Illini ahead to stay in the third quarter with a two-yard touchdown pass to Mike Murphy. Darrel Smith added a 37-yard scoring run in the fourth quarter, and Eason finished it off with a 52-yard touchdown pass to Oliver Williams. Ohio State 70, Northwestern 6 COLUMBUS (AP) - Quarterback liminate Badgers Art Schlichter's three touchdowns helped Ohio State smother North- western, 70-6, yesterday, keeping the Buckeyes in contention for the Big Ten title and extending the Wildcats' all- time record losing streak to 30 games. The point total represented the highest figure for Ohio State in 31 years. The Buckeyes routed Iowa 83-21 in 1950 and had not scored more than 63 points in a contest since then. Michigan State 43, Minnesota 36 EAST LANSING (AP) - Bryan Clark bolted 15 yards for a touchdown with 56 seconds to play as Michigan State topped Minnesota,43-36, in a top- sy-turvy Big Ten football game yester- day. Clark, who passed for a 70-yard touchdown to Daryl Turner on Michigan State's first play from scrimmage, scored the winning touch- down after engineering an 80-yard, nine-play drive. EARLIER IN the fourth quarter, Clark hit split end Ted Jones for a 30- yard touchdown, then threw to tight end Al Kimichik for a two-point conversion which tied the game at 36-36 fand negated a spectacular Minnesota comeback. F Big Ten' MICHIGAN .. Ohio State .... Iowa ......... Illinois...... Wisconsin .... Minnesota .... Mich. State ... Purdue ....... Indiana ..... Northwestern Standings Conf. Overall W L 6 2 5 2 5 2 5 3 5 3 4 4 W L 8 2 7 3 7 3 6 4 6 4 6 4 4 3 2 0 4 5 6 8 5 5 2 0 5 5 8 10 Daily Photo by BRIAN MASCK IT WAS A ROUGH day for Purdue's heralded offense; Michigan cornerback Brian Carpenter torpedos a Boilermaker receiver, exemplifying the Boilermakers' frustration. Carter wins No. 1 By DREW SHARP Special to the Daily "All I 've heard is stuff about number one (Michigan 's Anthony Carter). On Saturday, the real number one will stand up. -Purdue wide receiver Steve Bryant at Michigan coach Bo Schembechler's weekly media luncheon last Monday. WEST LAFAYETTE- With those words, the senior pass catcher from Los Angeles laid the foun- dation for an interesting match-up. Instead of got it in front of 105,000 people. It's going to be great to win it at home." Both players declined comment on Bryant's earlier statement, but Purdue quarterback Scott Campbell felt that Bryant's words were misinterpreted. "I am sure that if he did say something to that ex- tent, he didn't mean to put down Carter in any way," said Campbell, squelching reports that Bryant's teammates were upset at him for instigating bad feelings between the two teams. "We don't like to talk about other players. If the team gave him any flack, it was in jest, because we just don't like the idea of our players trying to start something with the op- position.,I know Steve wouldn't do something like that." howdown bechler. "I am not surprised Purdue ran on us. I am surprised they were so successful, particularly on that trap play. They had us split out too far. We hadn't seen that one before. It took a little time to ad- just. I think that early, we played a little too much pass defense." Most of the reason for that was Bryant, who, coming into yesterday's contest, had 51 receptions and ten touchdowns to his credit. "We knew where Bryant was," added Schem- . bechler. "He is a very dangerous receiver and a fine player. You cannot overlook him. We had Brian Car- penter on him, and Carpenter is a very fine one-on- one defender." AW