Page 10-Sunday, September 21, 1980-The Michigan Daily Nobody could teach them heartbreak By STAN BRADBURY Special to The Daily SOUTH BEND-If you have ever taken a course in statistics, you probably know the ins and outs of such concepts as expectations, probablility, and chance. % But there is certainly one totally unrelated topic on which your instruc-i tor never expounded-heartache.c It's something the Michigan footballt team learned experientially in the span4 of 41 seconds yesterday. THE WOLVERINES absorbed one of their toughest defeats in recent memory in sun-drenched Notre Dame Stadium as they fell 29-27 to a Notre Dane team which gave new meaning to the word "'persistance." Bo Schem- bechler's crew had seemingly pulled off a stunning victory before Harry Oliver's 51-yard field goal squirmed over the crossbar with no time left and transformed a gleeful group of football players into a horde of despondent, heartbroken men. Expectationsof victory were at their peak following: tight end Craig Dunaway's reception in the end zone of a John Wangler pass. As the Michigan secondary went into a prevent for- mation following the score, the probability of an Irish comeback was very low. And the chance that Oliver could sink his inexperienced foot into aI sucessful 51-yard field goal looked anything but good. It was these three elements, then,j that placed the Wolverines atop theI world for those precious 41 seconds of; the game's final minute, 41 second during which they held a 27-26 lead. And; Blue defeat came against all odds it was the enormous value and effort contained within that lead that made the fall twice as hard when referee Gene Calhoun extended his arms ver- - --.6"s -:::k:y 't'":i.,:%1" i ".t." # :r::2::"."i:;qf{:?:_. ,.::...'.".% It would have been easier on them had the score been 29-0. Defensive back Brian Carpenter just laid down in the middle of the field in It was a great Michigan effort. We have nothing to be ashamed of. I'm very proud of this team yet, Schembechler's 12-year tenure as coach. But in most cases the Wolverines' failure to score late in the game could be attributed to the losing cause. This marked the first time during his reign that an opponent came from behind in the last minute to claim vic- tory. "We don't take any loss lightly. We figured on winning this game-and we didn't," said Schembechler. "It was a great Michigan effort. We have nothing ' to be ashamed of. I'm very proud of this team yet, I never think it's great when we lose." Statistically, the Wolverines had nothing to be ashamed of. They beat Notre Dame in every department ex- cept score. The difference turned out to be a 49-yard interception return by Joh Krimm for a touchdown in the third period and the 51-yard field goal. IT'S HARD for Michigan to prepare a defense against interception returns, "Hail, Mary" field goals, and the luck of the Irish. After the game, Notre Dame coach Dan Devine said, "I've never seen Oliver kick one that far, but it went through today and that's all I care about." It was the first time in 19 years Notre Dame has won a last-second fi'eld goal like Oliver's. Make that a double "Hail, Mary," at least. John Wangler, the senior quarter- back who led all four of Michigan's scoring tries, said after the game, "This probably would have been the highlight of my career if we had won, but we will just have to use it as a lear- ning experience." I never think it's great when we lose.' -Bo Schembechler ... ..:. ::.:.: :. ..:X'... ...... ...too,...., .,;....,.,..,..::r: >..::.a:+>:;:: ...::,: : iifSSri;""t ro-::r:-:ar::::::.:a::>:: :r:;;";: :i;: :5:i>:;:::;;:2 i ::'tt :::;;.;::;,>: :>::: : ..k .o ... .. ?s: :. . .. .............. . tically, indicating their fate had been sealed. WITHIN AN INSTANT, thousands of rabid Notre Dame partisans spilled on- to the field in mass hysteria. The minority contingent among the crowd of 59,075, the loyal band of Michigan supporters, felt about two inches tall. disbelief as the winning three points registered on the board. Heartache, plain and simple. The rest of the team just lowered its heads and slowly trot- ted off the field and into the tunnel to avoid the masses. MICHIGAN HAS LOST more than a lion's share of close games during Daily Photo by MAUREEN OMALLEY Wolverine Fred Brockington (25) drops a pass as he is hit by a Notre Dame defender, in yesterday's game at South Bend. The Fighting Irish defeated Michigan in the final seconds with a field goal by a score of 29-27. 3- . AND IN THIS CORNER ,Mark Mihanovic a If,,laif ... .'. Blue booted, again SOUTH BEND ICKING. BO SCHEMBECHLER must wish that the act of driving one's foot into the football wasn't such a key factor in the game that he coaches. Last season it was his own kicking game that beat the Wolverines at least thrice. But yesterday's 29-27 loss to Notre Dame had to hurt the worst. The vic- tory was Michgan's. There were four seconds left, and it was desperation time for Notre Dame, as it's kicker came out to try a 51-yard field goal. Harry Oliver had never kicked a 51-yarder in a football game before and he had only kicked one field goal, period, for the Fighting Irish. Harry Oliver wouldn't even have been the kicker of choice had strong safety Steve Cichy (who usually handles the long-range attempts) been healthy. But Harry Oliver nailed the kick of his life, it cleared the crossbar, Notre Dame par- tisans charged the field in incredulous joy, and Michigan had lost a very big game. Again. It was an incredible seesaw battle, and the cliche about both teams deserving to win, fits it well. Michigan deserved it, too John Wangler certainly deserved to win. He came off the bench with Michigan behind by two touchdowns and five minutes remaining in the first half. As he has done so often over the last two seasons, he quickly erased the deficit with scoring passes to Lawrence Ricks and tight end Norm Betts. Wangler ended up completing 11 of 19 for three touchdowns. He also threw one bad pass, and it ended up in the wrong team's endzone when Irish corner back John Kimm picked it off and returned it 49 yards. But the positive, by far, outweighed the negative. Yep, Wangler deserved to win. Michigan tailbacks Ricks and Butch Woolfolk, who combined for 153 yards, deserved to win also. Ricks scored the Blue's first TD on an eight yard pass reception, and Woolfolk set up the last one with a 37-yard jaunt to the Notre Dame three on a third-and-ten draw call. Yep, Ricks and Woolfolk sure did deserve to win. As did Anthony Carter, who played only part of the game because of bruised ribs and a sore knee, but still managed two passes and once again showed moves that most players only dream about on a 67 yard kickoff return. And the Michigan offensive line, which opened up several gaping holes in the Irish defensive front, deserved to win. So did Wolverine cornerback Marion Body, who intercepted two of Notre Dame quaterback Mike Courey's passes within 1:06 at the end of the opening half. But they were all basically helpless, in the end. They watched the pigskin drop between the uprights just the way Brian Virgil's last attempt didn't one year ago vs. Notre Dame. And all they could do was get dressed and head on back to Ann Arbor, 1-1. Cursing the luck of the Irish all the way. Emotional win for ND It is an understatment of the greatest degree to say that the mood was different in the home team's lockerroom. Notre Dame coach Dan Devine, who has coached in dozenls of big-game victories, and Oliver, who has kicked in only two (if the 31-10 victory over Purde two weeks ago is included), received the game balls and were equally elated. "No win was more emotional than this one," Devine said. "Of coruse, the last one is always the best. But this one will hang in there with the rest of them. I'm just so proud of our team and our players and our coaching staff. We beat a good football team and had to come from behind to do it." Notre Dame's man of the hour nearly broke down with emotion when his teammates presented him the pigskin.. "This is by far the greatest moment of my life," Oliver cried. "Getting a scholarship to Notre Dame was a close second. I love all you guys." But Oliver didn't have the limelight all to himself. Freshman Blair Kiel replaced starting quarterback Courey for the dramatic final series and came out throwing. On first down from his own 20, Kiel dropped back into a shotgun and heaved one high into the air in the direction of split end Tony Hunter. Hunter leaped and came down without the ball but with something just as good-an interference call on Michigan's 48-yard line which brought a raging Schembechler onto the field. After two incomplete passes (one of which Blue safety Jeff Reeves nearly intercepted), Kiel threw over the mid- dle of ND tailback Phil Carter, who finished the contest with 103 yards on 30 carries, for nine. He then hit Hunter on the sideline at the Wolverine 34, and out came Oliver. Irish field goal defeats Michigan in final seconds * (Continued from Page 1) to the Irish 27 with 1:30 remaining in the half. The Irish defense stiffened and Michigan was forced to settle for a field goal on fourth and four at the 21 yard line. However, on the attempt holder Hewlett rolled out left and passed for 12 yards to Stanley Edwards for a first down. Michigan tied the score with 31 seconds left on a nine-yard touchdown toss from Wangler to tight end Norm Betts and a successful conversion by Haji-Sheikh. "I wanted a tie score at halftime," explained Schembechler of why he selected the fake field goal attempt. Body intercepted his second pass of the game on Notre Dame's next possession, but Michigan selected to run out the clock with the score tied and the momentum. MICHIGAN'S CARTER received the second half kickoff at his one-yard line and zig-zagged for 67 yards to the Notre Dame 32 yard line. Running back Ricks, who finished with 90 yards on 12 carries and Edwards did most of the work, with Edwards dive up the middle for the touchdown and Haji-Sheikh's conversion, pushing Michigan in front, 21-14. Both teams' defense dominated the remainder of the third quarter and late in the period, following an exchange of punts, Notre Dame cornerback John Krimm intercepted a Wangler pass in- tended for Carter at Michigan's 49-yard line and he returned it for a touchdown. Oliver missed the conversion, leaving Michigan with a slim one-point advan- tage, 21-20.. "He misread the defense," said Schembechler of Wangler, who finished the game 11 of 19 for 98 yards and three touchdown passes. HEWLETT RETURNED to the lineup after the interception but was unable to move the offense on con- secutive possessions. Schembechler made the switch back to Wangler once more and Michigan quickly drove to the Notre Dame 24- yard line when on third and one Butch Woolfolk fumbled and Notre Dame's Dave Duerson recovered. Notre Dame struck quickly on an end- around option to Hunter who-passed to Holohan for 31 yards to the Michigan 43 yard line. Ten plays later; Phil Carter dove off left tackle with 2:53 remaining in the game, pulling Notre Dame back in front, 26-21. The Irish failed on a two- point conversion attempt. MICHIGAN BROUGHT the kickoff out to the 22 yard line and began its fight back, primarily with the work of Wangler and Woolfolk, who in a brief appearance rushed for 72 yards in nine carries. Wangler hit Woolfolk on a swing pass for 12 yards and Woolfolk took a delayed draw for 20 yards to the Notre Dame 39. After two incomplete passes, Michigan caught the Irish off guard on another draw play on third and ten with Woolfolk twisting for 37 yards to the #Notre Dame four yard line with only 1:07 left. After two successive plunges by Woolfolk failed, Dunaway grabbed a Wangler deflected pass in the back of the endzone, putting Michigan back in front, 27-26. The Wolverines attempted the two- point conversion but the attempt to Dunaway fell incomplete. This set the stage for the final 41 seconds of play when Dan Devine removed the starting quarterback, Courey for freshman Kiel. 6 SCHEMBECHLER said his team had several opportunities to win but injuries to key players and an unlikely set of circumstances hampered their changces. "We lost the effectiveness of Ricks and Carter in the second half. Carter had a contusion on his knee and some bruised ribs. From the middle of the third quarter on he was just a decoy. But he still brought the second half kickoff back for us. I know of no other man who could do what he did on that play," said Schembechler. "There were so many sets of circum- stances where we could have won the game. If they don't get the pass inter- ference, they are not going to score. If we catch the interception, they're not going to score. And finally if we keep their out-cut in-bounds, they're not going to score," said Schembechler. Olive r'ss tory First downs............... Rushing (att/yds)........... Passing (comp/att/int)........ Passing yds ................... Fumbles (no/lost).......... Punts (no/avg)............ SCORING MICH 17 47/221 12/24/1 109 2/1 5/44.2 ND 14 42/127 9/18/2 107 0/0 6/43.5 6-27 9-29 Michigan ..................0 14 Notre Dame................. 0 14 SCORING PLAYS ND-Caarter 6yd. run (oliver kick) 7 6 ND-Holohan 10 yd. pass from Courey (Oliver kick) MICH-Ricks 8yd. pass from Wangler (Ha ji-Sheikh kick) MICH-Betts 10 yd. pass from Wangler (Ha jl-Sheikh kick) MICH-Edwards 3 yd. run (Haji-Sheikh kick) ND-Kamm 49 yd. interception return (kick failed) ND)-Carter 4 yd. run (pass failed) MICH-Dunaway 1 yd. pass from Wangler (pass failed) ND-Oliver, 51 yd. FG NOTRE DAME Carter ..................... 30 Sweeney .................. 2 Buchanan.................3 J. Stone ................... 2 Courey .................... 6 Totals.................. 43 PASSING MICHIGAN attc Hewlett...................5 Wangler..................1 Totals................... 24 NOTRE DAME Courey ............. .. 13 Hunter .................... I Ki .....................4 Totals .................... 18 RECEIVING MICHIGAN Carter ........................... Edwards ........................ Betts............................ Ricks . .. ...................... Ingram ........... .... Woolfolk..................... Dunaway ................... Totals ........................... NOTRE DAME Hunter............ E........ M asztak .....s................... Holohan ......................... Carter ....................... comp 11 1 6 1 2 9 no. 2 2 2 2 2 1 1 12 103 11 6 4 13 127 int 0 1 1 2 0 0 yds 30 22 17 17 10 12 1 109 3.4 5.5 2.0 2.0 0.5 yds 11 98 109 62 31 14 107 TD 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 Tide rolls over, '01 Miss, 59-35. RUSHING MICHIGAN att Ricks ..................... 14 Woolfolk -................ 9 Edwards................12 Hewlett ................... 9 Ingram................... 1 Wangler.................. 2 Powers................... 0 Totals .................... 47 yd 83 70 40 2 -9 221 avg 5.9 '1.8 3.3 3.1 2.0 -4.5 (fumble re'vrv) 1 3 32 3 25 2 41 1 9 9 107 Totals........... JACKSON, Miss. (AP)-Top-ranked Alabama left little doubt yesterday about its ability to win what could have been described as a track meet. Alabama handed Coach Bear Bryant his 298th victory with an awesome display of offense and some rather loose defense as it romped 59-35 over Southeastern Conference foe Mississip- pi. It was the 23rd consecutive victory for the two-time defending national champions. ALABAMA RUNNING backs Billy Jackson and Linnie Patrick each gained more than 100 yards and scored a touchdown, and Major Ogilvie added two scores. The Tide wasted no time NCAA Roundup asserting itself, grabbing a 21-0 after just nineoffensive plays. The Alabama defenders were kept busy by Ole Miss quarterback John Fourcade who completed 21 of 43 passes for 296 yards and four touchdowns. His passing enabled the Rebels to get back into the game at 28-14 by halftime. "It was a mighty long afternoon. I've never sen a cnlok on sn low." said Marino's two touchdown passes enabled mistake-prone No. 5 Pittsburgh to overcome wind gusts of 45 mph and defeat Kansas 18-3 Saturday in non- conference college football. Pittsburgh, which committed nine turnovers in beating Boston College 14-6 in its opener, spent most of the after- noon dropping passes, missing assign- ments and committing mental mistakes that let the obviously out- manned Jayhawks stay close. eorgia 20, Clemson 16 ATHENS, Ga. (AP)-Georgia's defensive back Scott Woerner returned a punt 67 yards for a touchdown and made a leaping end zone interception and raced 98 yards to set up another score to lead the punchless 10th-ranked Georgia Bulldogs to a 20-16 college football victory over the Clemson Tigers yesterday. Clemson threatened to pull out the con- test in the closing minutes when Woer- ner almost turned into the goat by picking up a pass interference penalty on the Bulldogs' 10 with only 2:42 remaining. But 42 seconds later a bat- ted pass by Clemson quarterback Mike Gasque was intercepted at the 1-yard line by Jeff Hipp to seal the victory. Army 26, California 19 AJ