Page 10-Sunday, September 28, 1980-The Michigan Daily ocks subdue Blue, 1714 (Continued from Page 1 ) Michigan had the first genuine scoring opportunity with about six minutes left in the stanza. Rogers, who had moved the ball out from SC's own 20 to the 31 in two carries, left the field for a tem- porary breather, and on the next play, backup Percy Reeves fumbled and Bluerlinebacker Mel Owens fell on it at the 28 yard line. Wolverine tailback Butch Woolfolk cut off right tackle for a 20-yard burst and then added on four more up the middle to the Gamecock four on the next play. But on third down from the one, Wangler fumbled the center snap, and on the next play, Woolfolk dropped the pitchout, and Michigan had squan- dered the opportunity. With Rogers carrying seven times for 28 yards, South Carolina mounted its first drive over a five-minute span in the second period. The Gamecocks ad- vance the ball from their 25 to the Michigan nine but stalled there and set- tled for a chip-shot 26-yard field goal by Eddie Leopard to take a 3-0 lead. Wangler tosses of 19 yards to Mitchell and 18 yards to Carter and the latter's leaping TD grab in the right side of the end zone were the big plays in Michigan's 80-yard march to a 7-3 lead with 2:54 showing on the clock. Bo slips below .500 for first time at M' Michigan got the ball back 1:35 later at its 32 and quickly pushed into Gamecock territory. Ricks kept the, drive alive by tightroping down the right sideline for 11 yards on fourth- and-six. After being sacked for a loss of six, Wangler (who completed 17 of 30 passes on the day for 206 yards and only, threw one interception) hit Mitchell for 21 markers, Carter for nine, and Carter See more sports, Page 9 ced on it. Carolina followed suit with its own long offensive maneuver. After quar- terback Garry Harper (who completed nine of 15 for 118 yards) kept possession of the ball with a successful fourth- down sneak over center, Wolverine safety Tony Jackson intercepted a Harper pass at the Michigan 26-yard line. But linebacker Andy Cannavino, who tackled Rogers after the tailback had faked through the line, was called for interference, and Carolina had a fir- st down at the Michigan 41. Schembechler was enraged about the costly penalty. "When a guy carries the ball 36 times, you have every right to hit him when he fakes through the line," the coach emphasized afterwards. "He (the official) blew it." Two Harper passes to Smith for 23 and 14 yards, respectively, took it down to the nine-yard line, and Rogers carried it the rest of the way in two plays. After Ingram rushed fpr nine yards in three carries on the next} series, Don Bracken dropped into punt formation. But the snap went to Edwards, who ran to the right side but was stopped well short of the first down marker. Schembechler blamed himself 'for giving South Carolina the ball only 29 yards from paydirt. "Second-guessing myself, it was a bad call," the dejected coach admitted. "You're dealing with a coach that doesn't have any confidence in his defense, and that's wrong. Our defense is not that bad, and I've got to stop playing like we can't stop anybody. "Our intent was not to run," he ex9 plained. "The intent was to run if they gave us the run, and they did. We were trying to run a safe play. However, we couldn't hear the signals, and two players at the point of attack didn't hear them." Rogers carried the pigskin for 17 of the 29 yards, and Wright's score put the Gamecocks in front for the first time. The squads each traded punts, an* then Wangler was intercepted by Perlotte at the Wolverine 35. SC took it to the five, but Harper gave Wangler and the Wolverines another chance by throwing an interception to linebacker Robert Thompson in the end zone. But the Maize and Blue came up just short. Again. again at the goal line for a three-yard touchdown. Michigan headed for the tunnel at halftime with a seemingly comfortable 14-3 advantage. The Wolverines took the second half kickoff and marched at will against SC for seven-and-a-half minutes, but on first down from the Gamecock eight, fullback Stanley Edwards fumbled, and the pigskin rolled into the end zone, where SC linebacker Walt Kater poun- AP Photo GAMECOCK CORNERBACK Chuck Finney deflects an end zone pass from John Wangler to Anthony Carter (1) in the final five seconds of yesterday's clash at Michigan Stadium. Carter hauled in two Wangler touchdown tosses, but the Blue offense, beleaguered by fumbles at crucial times, could generate no points after halftime as South Carolina held on to win, 17-14. BIGGEST WIN IN YEARS FOR SOUTH CAROLINA: 'Cocks can crow louder now By STAN BRADBURY Respect. George Rogers has been receiving it for two years, but until yesterday the South Carolina team as a whole had lacked it. The Gamecocks' 17-14 upset of the Wolverines in Michigan Stadium may well be the most important game in the 86-year history of the team in terms of putting Carolina on the national football map. It has given this team respect. SOUTH CAROLINA -HAS beaten good teams in recent years, teams like Georgia and Clemson. But a win at Michigan represents the first big win over a team outside the Southeast. It finally gives the Gamecock program a feeling of national prominence, something it has never had in a most meiocre history. In 86 years of South Carolina football, the Gamecocks have gone undefeated only once (1907; 3-0) and the most wins they have ever claimed in one season is eight (1903, 1979). The school's winning per- centage since football began on the Columbia campus is .501. But times are changing at Carolina, and coach Jim Carlen said he felt his team is a great one. "Nobody has a better coaching staff than I have and nobody has kids that try harder than mine," said Carlen. "I thought we would win today, that's what I told my players, and we did." CARLEN HAD SPECIAL praise for Rogers, the 1979 All-American and current Heisman Trophy can- didte. "He's the best football player in college foot- ball today," Carlen said. "He had 142 yards and we consider that to be a bad game for him. I thought that he was better than Billy Sims was for Oklahoma last year." Carlen said that, in his opinion, the only better back in the country today is Earl Campbell, only because Campbell is shorter and stockier and thus doesn't take as much punishment as does the 6-2, 220-pound Rogers. Rogers collected his 142 yards in 36 carries, averaging only 3.9 per carry, but he played three quarters of the game with a bruised thigh he contrac- ted in the quarter. ROGERS IS NOT only the greatest player in his school's history, but the only really great player the Gamecock gridders have ever laid claim to. A quick look through the South Carolina record book reveals a lack of tradition, the kind of tradition that schools like Ohio State, Oklahoma, Southern Cal, Alabama and Michigan have thrived on. Does anybody really know who Tommy Suggs or Jeff Grantz are? How about Steve Wadiak, Warren Muir, and Fred Zeigler? Those five names highlight Carolina's past, a past which includes only three bowl games (Peach-1969, Tangerine-1975, Hall of Fame- 1979) all in the last 12 years and all three resulting in losses. The Gamecock football program has lacked tradition. That's the most important reason why Wolverine fans just couldn't believe what they were seeing yesterday. Was it really South Carolina that beat Michigan? YES, AND IT was not luck. The Gamecocks have a very good team, worthy of beating Michigan, and as it proved before over 100,000 fans, capable of doing the same. What all those people witnessed was the evolution of a recognized football organization. The Gamecocks broke away from its past and into a hopefully brighter future. Welcome to the big time. Alan Fonger There s more to Blue woes than just plain bad luck Excuse me for asking, but is there a gridiron guru in the house? If there is such a character hanging around these parts, I would like to ask him (or her) just one question, if I may. Oh, fair wizard, where hath the Michigan football team gone awry? To phrase it more succinctly, what is wrong with this team? The Wolverines have what many coaches consider to be the finest offen- sive line in the country. They have the nation's most explosive receiver in Anthony Carter, a pair of agile tailbacks who can rip into any opponent's secondary, and a pair of small, yet powerful fullbacks.w John Wangler has proven he can pass with the finest quarterbacks. Their defense, though it may be inexperienced, proved yesterday that it could muffle the effectiveness of adangerous runner, holding South Carolina tailback George Rogers to less than four yards per carry. Yet as a team, Michigan has played only three quarters in 12 of solid football-the final two against Notre Dame and the second stanza against the Gamecocks. One might argue that in both losing efforts, the Wolverines were victims of circumstances. In South Bend, there was the questionable pass inter- ference call on Notre Dame's final drive, the incorrect ruling that split end Tony Hunter caught a key fourth-down pass in bounds, and Harry Oliver's amazing 51-yard field goal. Yesterday it was the inability of two Michigan linemen to hear signals on an unsuccessful fake punt that was cited as the main reason South Carolina was able to assume possession far into Wolverine territory and score the winning touchdown. But you can only go so far in reducing the outcomes to "special" circum- stances. Case in point: on three separate occasions, the Wolverines penetrated inside the Carolina five-yard line, but came away empty-handed. I guess that if you wanted to be persistent in your argument, you could con- tend that Butch Woolfolk and Stan Edwards just happened to cough up the pigskin at an inopportune time. It seems that during crucial situations, such as third-down plays, one component of the Wolverine football machine breaks down. Perhaps Woolfolk and Edwards will fumble; maybe Norm Betts or Craig Dunaway will let a pass slip out of his hands; a lineman might miss a blocking assignment. Whatever the specific instances may be, these key miscues have cropped up on the Wolverins like flies on a light bulb. I cringe at Wangler's statement that "this team has character, we'll come back." It would be nice to believe, but that's where the problem lies. After three games, Michigan has no character, no identity as a football team. After a second consecutive heartbreaking defeat, even Carter cannot be considered the almighty savior-the Gamecocks proved it when they surrounded him with cornerbacks, safeties, and linebackers on the final play of the game. Even Bo Schembechler readily admits that his squad is trapped in an identity crisis. "If you don't have any confidence in your defense, you can't mount an attack and effectively play football. And I don't know whether we are physically good enough to play power football," he said. "I don't want to be a passing team," he continued. "I don't want to pass Fumble-itis Final M First downs ................... Rushing (attlyrd)........... 5 Passing (comp/att/int) ........ 17 Passing yrd ................... Fumbles (no/lost) ...:....... Punts (no/avg)................ 3. SCORING Michigan................. 0 1 South Carolina ............. 0 SCORING PLAYS Se-Leopard, 26-yd. FG M--Carter 9 pass from Wangler (H M--Carter 3 pass from Wangler (H SC-Rogers 2 run (Leopard kick) SC-wright 1 run (Leopard kick) RUSHING MICHIGAN IICH 24 0/172 /30/1 206 2/1 /49.3 14 0 3 7 SC 22 55/176 9/15/1, 118 3/1 ' I/47 SOUTH CAROLINA att comp Harper .................... 15 9 Totals...................15 9 RECEIVING MICHIGAN int 1 1 yds 118 118 4, 1/9.. Carter ....................... Mitchell...................... 0- 14 Betts ............................ 7 17 Woolfolk.................... Ricks .................... ..... SOUTH CAROLINA no. 8 4 3 I 1 A Haji-Sheikh kick) Haji-Sheikh kick) att Ricks......................... 17 Woolfolk .....................15 Edwards......................7 Ingram .......................5 Carter......................... 1 wangler ......................5 Totals.......................50 SOUTH CAROLINA Rogers.... .................. 36 Wright........................12 Harper ......... ............. 4 Reeves ........................ 3 Totals ........................55 PASSING MICHIGAN att comp WandIer................... 30 17 Totals ..................... 30 17 yd 87 66 32 17 0 -30 172 142 33 -3 176 int 1 1 avg 5.1 4.4 4.6 3.4' 0.0 -6.0 3.9 2.8 1.0 -1.0 Scott.......................... 4 Smith........................3 Gillespie ...................... Rogers.......................1 PUNTING MICHIGAN no. Bracken.......................3 SOUTH CAROLINA Norman........................4 FIELD GOALS SOUTH CAROLINA' att Leopard ......................... 1 RETURNS MICHIGAN yds s 94 72 29 7 4 52 56 13 -3 avg lo 49.3 d 47.8 made lo 1 TD 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Daily Photo by JIM KRUZ MICHIGAN SAFETY Jeff Cohen, sprawled on the turf, can only watch the sad proceedings as George Rogers rumbles for part of his 142 yards. Rogers is the main reason South Carolina's football program has begun to receive the respect it commanded yesterday. Gamecock coach Jim Carlen calls Rogers "the best college player in the nation." NCAA SCORES South Caroline 17, Michigan 14 Michigan St. 33, Western Michigan 7 Ong Central Michigan 21, Kent St. 6 ng Grand Valley St. 44 ,Michigan Tech 6 Wayne St. 23, Towson St. Md. 14 68 Saginaw Valley 24, Central St. 0. 19 Hillsdale 16, St. Norbert Wis. 7 Adsian 25, Geneva Pa. 14 Franklin Ind; 19, Hope 14 ng Wabash Ind. 43, Kalamazoo 7 26 Depauw Ind. 35, Albion 6 EAST ept Colgate 38, Cornell 20 - Harvard 14, Holy Cross 13 Massachusetts 39. Delaware St. 0 North Carolina 17, Maryland 3 Rutgers 44, Princeton 13 Syracuse 42, Northwestern 21 Yale 20, Connecticut 10 SOUTH Alabama 41, Vanderbilt 0 Florida 21, Mississippi St.15 Georgia 34, Texas Christian 3 Georgia Tech 17, Memphis St. 8 Kentucky 21, Bowling Green 20 Miami (Fla.) 10, Florida St. 9 Tennessee 42, Auburn 0 MIDWEST Illinois 20, Air Force 20 Iowa St. 10, Iowa 7 Kansas St. 31, Arkansas St. 10 Louisville 17, Kansas 9 Miami (Oh.) 42, Ball St. 9 Missouri 31, San Diego St. 7 Nebraska 21, Penn St. 7 WEST - Arkansas 13, Tulsa 10 Indiana 49, Colorado 7 Montana St. 18, Boise St. 17 Ohio St. 38, Arizona St. 21 Stanford 31, Oklahoma 14 UCLA 35, Wisconsins0 Southern Cal 24. Minnesota 7 Punts Kickoffs No/Yds No/Yds Carter ...............1/26 Thompson .......... SOUTH CAROLINA Int'ce No/Yd 1/0 1/4 Thomas .............1/11 yds Bishop............ 206 Smith............ 206 Perlotte........... 1/24 I/0 Cifford lad Idana t 97rout By The Associated Press oo -.A - min the hird niar- deficit. Qr ntL £"I 9A BOULDER, Colo.-Senior quarter- back Tim Clifford threw five touchdown passes, including three to flanker Nate Lundy, as Indiana blitzed Colorado 49-7 yesterday in a record-setting college football game. The victory enabled the Hoosiers to snap an eight-game losing streak to Big Eight teams and boosted their season record to 2-1. Colorado dropped to 0-3. CLIFFORD, WHO LEFT the game after three quarters, completed 11 of 14 passes for 345 yards. The 11 com- pletions enabled him to eclipse the In- diana career record of 259 and the yar- dage tied theschool'sssingle-game mark. The five TD passes were the most ever by a quarterback against a Colorado team. Lundy, whose scoring passes covered 75, 74 and 43 yards, caught five passes in all for 256 yards, the highest single game yardage figure in Indiana history. And tailback Mike Harkrader. Hawminsits-yarn run i n e innqu 1 A ter. Ohio State 38, Arizona State 21 COLUMBUS, Ohio-Quarterback Art Schlichter set a school record with three touchdown passes yesterday, propelling second-ranked Ohio State (3- 0) to a 38-21 romp over Arizona State (2- 1) in a matchup of college football un- bea tens. SCHLICHTER ACCOUNTED for 310 total yards. He completed 14 of 19 passes for 271 yards and ran 15 times for 39 additional yards. Ted Sundquist put Air Force back in the game with a 63-yard touchdown run in the third quarter, and teammate Charlie Heath put the Falcons ahead with a one-yard plunge in the fourth quarter. ILLINOIS' LAST REAL chance to win the game fizzled with an incom- plete pass in the ebd zone, and Bass came in to tie the game with his second field goal of the day. Iowa State 10, Iowa 7 IOWA CITY, Iowa-John Quinn threw a touchdown pass to Jim Knuth ,tuioiern Ua t4, Minnesota 7 MINNEAPOLIS-Marcus Allen rushed for 216 yards and two fourth quarter touchdowns and Gordon Adams passed 29 yards to Kevin Williams as No. 5-ranked Southern Cal (3-0) turned back stubborn Minnesota 24-7 yesterday. Minnesota (1-2) had cut a 10-0 lead to 10-7 on Marion Barber's 16-yard TD run midway through the fourth quarter. But Allen, the latest in a long line of great USC tailbacks, raced 20 yards for ai touchdown with just 3:30 remaining. Heu also scored on a 37-yard jaunt with 1:02 left to silence the near capacity crowd of 56,115 at Memorial Stadium. Syracuse 42, Northwestern 21 SYRACUSE, N.Y.-Joe Morris ran for 172 yards and quarterbck Dave Warner eanred threet uihdowns a Big Ten Roundup Mike Pagel, Arizona State's quarter- bck, threw for two touchdowns, and and Alex Giffords kicked a 49-yard field goal for the winning points to lift un- t-e o T., - - 4 t - . . i. ,._. ..