The Michigan Daily-Friday, November 20, 1981-Page 13 .yet nother one-game son Do numbers ever lie? SEASON SUMMARIES MICHIGAN 4 atWisconsin.................. 2. NOTRE DAME .................. . 21 NAVY...... ............. 38' at Indiana..... .. ...... 38- atMichiganState.................. 7 IOWA .............. 38 NORTHWESTERN ............. 34 at Minnesota!...................... 70 ILLINOIS ......................... 28 at Purdue ........................ OHIO STATE.................. Record-8-2 overall, 6-2 Big Ten Yards passing.............. Punts/Avg................. . Points allowed.............. Yards rushing allowed........ Yards passing allowed........ 1,447 44/44.3 134 1,378 2,049 2,902 52/38.3 216 829 2,409 OHIO STATE RUSHING Att. Gain Avg. TD 179 1,011 5.6 12 Opp. OsU 34 27 24. 27 21 34, 29 45 31 70 21 7- 16 S17 20 9 9 13' 21 10 Opp. 13 13 19 - 36 24 27 10 33 35 6 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS MICHIGAN RUSHING Spencer.................. Gayle.................... Broadnax ................ Atha ...................... O'Cain ...................... Dunn...................... McDufie................ Langley................ Anderson.................. Tomczak .................... Blair ........................ Myers ....................... Richardson .................. Stephens .................... Schlichter ................... 135_ 43 18 5 22 4 2 6 2 2 1 1 3 66 649 161 79 43 36 23 17 17 15 9 4 2 -2 -29 Woolfolk .................. S. Smith ................... Edwards .................. Ricks ..................... Rogers .................... Carter .................... Ingram................. Hassel ................. K. Smith .................. Dickey ................... Mercer .................... Att. 207 112 74 72 21 11 8 7 3 5 I Gain 1,189 550 385 358 12S 57 30 22 19 5 2 Avg. 5.7 4.9 5.2 5.0 6.0 5.2 3.8 3.1 6.3 1.0 2.0 TD 5 11 1 9 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 4.8 3.7 4.3 8.6 2.8 5.7 8.5 2.6 7.5 4.5 4.0 2.0 -0.7 -04 OHIO STATE DUKE ............................ MICHIGAN STATE ............... at Stanford ........................ FLORIDA STATE ................. at Wisconsin................... ILLINOIS...................... INDIANA ......................... at Purdue ......................... at Minnesota ...................... NORTHWESTERN .............. at Michigan ....................... Record-7-3 overall, 5-2 Big Ten PASSING Att. Comp. Schlichter ............. 300 160 Tomczak .............. 7 4 Atha................... 12 4 Stephens...............2 2 RECEIVING No.Y Yds. 2,261 73 59 16 TD 15 1 1 0 Int 7 1 2 0 PASSING Att. Comp. S. Smith ...............169 79 DickeyE..............8 3 RECEIVING Yds. TD Int. 1,373 14 8 74 1 0 Yds. Avg. TD J EAM STATISTICS MICH OSU Points scored ................ 313 362 First downs ... 214 229 Yards rushing. 2,742 2,011 Carter ...................... Bean ....................... Dunaway .................... Edwards................. Woolf olk ................. Betts ................... Brockington............. Ingram ..... ............... Hassel............. ..... No. Yds. Avg. 40 773 19.3 11 242 22.0 9 129 14.3 7 97 13.9 7 47 6.7 4 76 19.0 2 67 33.5 1 10 10.0 1 6 6.0 TD 7- 1 3 2 0 1 0 0 0 Williams .................... Frank ...................... Anderson.................. Spencer ..................... Gayle................... Langley.................... Jemison................... O'Cain.................... Penn...................... Gatewood ................... Atha................... Broadnax ................... 46 35 24 21 20 6 5 2 1 1 1 1 854 345 480 195 191 120 83 7 34 12 4 -7 18.5 9.8 20.0 9.2 9.5 20.0 16.6 3.5 34.0 12.0 4.0 -7.0 S 3 4 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 OfDaily Photo by KIM HILL MICHIGAN TAILBACK Butch Woolfolk (24) takes the handoff from quarterback Steve Smith (16), while fullback Stanley Edwards (32) looks for a block. The Michigan backfield trio has combined for 2,124 yards rushing this season, while Smith has added 1,373 more passing. - v By GREG DeGULIS A closer look at Bo... ... just give him a competitor H E IS THE most famous person on this campus, yet he appears in public only three hours per week every Saturday. The alumni heartily support him, but students are more reserved in their praise. He wears a con- spicuous 'MV' ring and directs a powerful operation which affects thousands of people in southeastern Michigan. Who is this person? Michigan coach Bo Schembechler, of course, the dean of Big Ten foot- ball coaches with a 122-23-3 record in 13 years of coaching the Wolverines. Prior to this season, I could only rely upon sideline observation, speculation, reputation, rumor, and quotes in forming a coherent opinion of the man. My perception of the man was not a positive-one, but then again, it was not first hand. This fall, however, I have had the opportunity to observe the coach from a different vantage point than the stands. From several post- game interviews and the weekly media luncheons on Monday, a jigsaw puz- zle of Bo began to fall into place. My introduction to this coaching legend and his infamous post-game meetings with the press came at a bad time-or so I would have thought. Af- ter the shocking loss at Wisconsin, a group of reporters. was herded into almost every catacomb of vast Camp Randall Stadium, searching for an in- terview with the 0-1 Schembechler. The chase finally ended in the red and white Badger wrestling room, where a reticent Schembechler explained the loss to a small group of repor- ters. It was simply an informal chit-chat with the coach of the former num- ber one team in the nation. This guy isn't so bad after all, I thought. A totally different impression was created after the Iowa loss, though. A fuming Schembechler clashed with the press and then left in a huff, amidst the sound of slamming doors. All post-loss cordiality in Schembechler was obviously left in Madison. It was obvious from his speech and demeanor that the Iowa defeat hurt a lot more than the setback to Wisconsin. The coach, for all practical purposes, completely discounted any Rose Bowl chances for his team and proceeded to leave the interview room, and a lot of bad feelings, behind. This was Schembechler at his worst, the antithesis of Schembechler in Madison-but then again, Bo doesn't care what the press thinks. Beat the press I knew from reading about Bo that he verbally sparred with the media, but I didn't realize the openness of his sentiments. Often when he meets with the press, the coach begins with a side comment that suggests, in a friendly way, what he would like to do with the media. After the Purdue game in West Lafayette, Bo met with reporters next to an equipment truck. The coach approached the awaiting reporters and said, "I'd like to round up all you guys and pack you away in there," motioning in the direction of the truck. The reporters laughed, but after being told you're excess baggage for the hundredth time, why not laugh? Bo isn't unfriendly with the press, he just considers the media an un- necessary inconvenience he must put up with as he continues the process of winning football games. In fact, the press is not all that Bo finds impertinent. "It doesn't make any difference where we play the game. Play it in a parking lot, throw out the spectators, it doesn't make any difference," he has said. "Throw out the press, Bo?" a reporter added. "Throw out the press," Bo echoed. The perfect game for Schembechler would include none of the hoopla and attention paid to the program, none of the trimmings. Two teams, two coaches, and a group of competitors who love to play football. That's plenty. Those are the people responsible for winning and losing the games-they alone are the essentials. It isn't as if the coach dislikes the b)and, the press, the fans, the photographers-it's just that they're all extra. Bo's a Smith booster Bo needs old-fashioned competitors on his team to the same degree that he considers useless a press that quotes his players out of context. The coach admires those who.have that certain mental toughness which overcomes any physical limitations they may have on the field. Rick Leach, Rob Lytle, and Andy Cannavino are among the top "competitors" in recent Michigan foot- ball history. This year, Bo has found another competitor in the person of sophomore quarterback Steve Smith. Even when Smith struggled at the beginning of the year, Bo stood fast in his defense of the starting signal-caller. "We never lost confidence in him," said Schembechler. "He's never been shaken." I believe Bo realized that Smith is a gutsy player who may at some time in the future be a ferocious leader in the mold of Leach. Bo always speaks of Smith's talent in defending the sophomore, but the "competitive" quality means much more in the coach's eyes. This love for the competitor has got- ten Bo into trouble this season in his praise of Lytle after Butch Woolfolk broke the school's all-time rushing record. The remarks were interpreted to be a put-down of Woolfolk and then . .. a pre-fabricated Butch-Bo feud hit BUCKS 'ARE BETTER THAN A YEAR AGO' Bo says it may open u By GREG DeGULIS After the 28-10 Michigan victory over Purdue at West Lafayette, a score of reporters combed the southwest side of Ross-Ade Stadium for the Wolverines locker room. Suddenly, a robust chant of "Ohio State, Ohio State" boomed from behind one of the walls, eventually changing into a rousing "Hail to the Victors". Sources in the locker room- claim that "The General", Bo Schem- bechler himself, led the victorious singing. That's how Schembechler feels about the annual Buckeye clash. "THE OHIO STATE game is a quality confrontation in every respect," said Schembechler, puffing on a cigar, at his crowded media luncheon on Mon- day. "That's not bad, Bo," said an Ohio State reporter, in reference to his ex- pressive vocabulary. "Just like Winston Churchill with the cigar, hey?" Schembechler responded with a smile. MAYBE HIS RHETORIC does not approach that of the former British leader, but a relaxed Schembechler had all ears of an anxious press awaiting his sentiments on the Ohio State game. "How do you rate the Buckeye secon- dary?" a reporter asked. "They've played a lot of great passing teams like Stanford and Florida State, and all the teams in our league," Schembechler responded. "As you know, this is a passing league," he added, prompting a laugh from the Big Ten reporters. "DO YOU THINK this Ohio State game will be the same as the others?" asked a Detroit columnist. "This one may change," said the dean of conference football coaches. "I see some high-powered offenses en- tering this game. In the big emotional games, though, the defneses play bet- ter. Defenses thrive on emotion, and the offenses are not as liberal." The last response triggered an ob- vious question. "Do you coach any dif- anything special this week in preparation for the game?" a Detroit writer asked. "We have to guard against the Ohio State offense," said Schembechler. "They are much better than a year - z.:.. x- - - 'You coach. on the relative importance of the game. In this game, the team that blocks, tackles, and runs the best will win. You do all the things you've done in the past with a few new wrinkles.' -Bo Schembechler things Donley did ; or them." "How would you compare Schlichter to the last two q iarterbacks (Tony Eason and Scott Campbell) you've faced?" "HE'S BETTER THAN all of them," said Schembechler, who has always been a supporter of the Buckeye senior quarterback. "The thing that separates him from all the others is that he puts the ball upfield better than the others. They dump it off to their backs a lot." "What about the home-field advan- tage?" a reporter inquired, prompting talk of a "home-field advantage." "We have always played better down there," said Schembechler dragging on the conspicuous cigar. Then the coach's face lit up, and he proceeded to tell the media a Wolverine tall tale. "I'LL TELL YOU what I'm going to do," said the coach. "I'm going to get 20 grand from Athletic Director (Don) Canham, and I'm going to get a plane and fly in here like (it is) an away game." "What about the $20,000?", asked a media representative. "The money won't be a problem," said the man whose team packs in over 105,000 for every home game. "He (Canham) will just ask if it will help me win the game." "WHAT ABOUT WOODY?" asked an Ohio State reporter. "He's been to every home game." "Woody's always welcome here, anytime," said his former adversary. "I'l get a private place for him." With that, the conversation centered around Woody and the thought that a degree of intensity has been lost from the rivalry since the Ohio State legend was fired. "This rivalry will always go on," said Schembechler. "It will continue long after I'm gone." It won't be quite the same, though. ferently in this game than the others?" "YOU COACH ON the relative impor- tance of the game," said Schem- bechler. "In this game, the team that blocks, tackles and runs the best will win. You do all the things you've done in the past with a few new wrinkles." Those "few new wrinkles," of course were not part of the conversation. "Do you have to guard against ago." "HOW ARE THEY better, Bo?" the columnist persisted. "First, you have the best quarter- back in the country with another year of experience," claimed Schembechler. "The offensive line is better than a year ago; the tight end is now getting the ball. (Cedric) Anderson replaced (Doug) Donley, and he can do the - ~ ~ Vol ' , . .,