The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, November 11, 1980-Page 9 Michigan starts second season Saturday p rduRe first of two obig Obstacles' By ALAN FANGER The preliminaries have been' done 1 away with. All the worry, the speculation on what might or might not happen, the cautious optimism that permeated every press conference or luncheon that Bo Schembechler, Earle Bruce and Jim Young spoke at during the first nine games of the 1980, is gone now. One, two, just like that. That fab led "second season" of Big Ten football, -once titled the "one-game season" but :changed to _accommodate, a newcomer to the chase; will last ones week and about three hours long. Michigan and Purdue, each un- defeated in the conference and peaking after pairs ofhearly losses, square off in a nationally-televised contest at 12:25 p.m. Saturday in Michigan Stadium. If the Wolverines fall to Mark Herrmann and the explosive Boilermakers, they 'will put themselves, for all practical purposes, out of contention for the Big New Year's Day (see related story and table). Purdue faces a slightly different situation. While a loss would put the Boilermakers out of the running for the roses, a tie would keep a glimmer of hope in their camp. Purdue would then need a Michigan victory over Ohio State to earn the trip out West. AMichigan win this Saturday, of course, would set the Wolverines up for tyet another season-ending showdown in Columbus against the Buckeyes, whom they would also have to defeat to get the bid. It all adds up to quite a bit of ex- citement and anticipation for the three teams and their fans. As for Schembechler, it's just another trip into the pressure cooker. "This is a key game," he said, getting Sthe media to believe him for the first time in a few weeks. "This is it-the , next two weeks are it. I don't know how these games are going to go," he told reporters at yesterday's media lun- cheon. "The question," he' said 'with a great deal of candor, "is whether we're really good enough." Good enough to stop Mark Herrmann, that is. The Boilermakers live and die by the efforts of their Heisman trophy- contending quarterback, and most of the time they have lived. And lived well. Herrmann toyed with the Iowa secondary last Saturday, riddling the Hawkeyes for 439 yards (on 26 of 34 passes) and three touchdowns en route to a 58-13 romp. For the season, he's completed 180 of 283 passes for 2,471 yards and 18 touchdowns. Blue controls its own fate By ALAN FANGER Michigan controls the cards of Rose Bowl and Big Ten championship destiny as it heads into games with Purdue and Ohio State the next two Saturdays. MICHGAN Who goes there? MICHIGAN WHO DETERMINING PERFORMANCE GOES? FACTOR Win both games MICHIGAN conference record Beat Purdue, lose Ohio State conference record to Ohio State Lose to Purdue, Purdue conference record beat Ohio State |' Lose both games Ohio State overall record Beat Purdue, tie Ohio State overall record Ohio State Lose to Purdue, Purdue conference record tie Ohio State rTie Purdue, beat Purdue last appearance rule f Ohio State Tie Purdue, lose Ohio State conference rule k to Ohio States Tie both games Ohio State over all record But destiny can be a cruel element. On the low-risk assumption that Ohio State will defeat Iowa this Saturday and Purdue will defeat Indiana November 22, the Wolverines must defeat both the Boilermakers and Buckeyes to earn a trip back to Pasadena for the Rose Bowl New Year's Day. Any other result, and it's curtains for Bo Schembechler and his team. The adjoining table lists all possible outcomes of both games, then deter- mines which team will go to Pasadena. The Big Ten has established a system for selecting its Rose Bowl represen-' tative which eliminates any possible vote of the conference's athletic direc- tors. Such'a votedwas needed in 1973, af- ter Michigan and Ohio State tied for the title with 7-0-1 league records. The two teams played to a 10-10 deadlock that year, and in the ensuing vote Ohio State was elected the Rose Bowl represen- tative. The system contains several deter- mining factors that are employed in the following order: 1. CONFERENCE RECORD-On the premise that Purdue and Ohio State both win their non-Michigan games, this standard can be applied in five of the nine possible cases. The Wolverines would be at an obvious disadvantage here, since they must play both conten- ders while Purdue and Ohio State do not play one another. 2. HEAD-TO-HEAD RECORD--This criterion could not be used to break a tie between Purdue and Ohio State, for the aforementioned reason. Once again, using the initial premise, head-to-head records could not be used to resolve a tie since Michigan, the only team to which the rule could be applied, is out of the picture if it does anything other than win both games. 3. OVERALL RECORD-Another minus for Michigan, as well as for Pur- due. This would determine a Purdue- Ohio State or deadlock in the standings; the Buckeyes would also go under this rule if they tie the Wolverines in their battle in Columbus, provided Michigan defeats Purdue. 4. LAST APPEARANCE RULE-The only criterion that is not based on per- formance this season, this rule would be employed only if Michigan and Pur- due tie for the title. Both teams would have 7-0-1 Big lien records and 8-2-1 overall marks, thus eliminating the use of the first three determinants. Sihce the Wolverines have traveled, to Pasadena more recently than their West Lafayette counterparts, Purdue would get the nod. , ,'C' d" IN->@ 'i ,..,}..: 4:i"':y;: ;: >i;?: :\}$Y,:":i}:' : ;:":i'n'.::' ,'{ 4:::i:ti":a !y " rr V"4 ,: " ": ' ;N:+tivY"ti:.: ?,¢ ,,r {:"i S.:v;;" ".?v:C":":ryi:;: :::":}\":>.: i ::?vi:"'i{:; 1?. ::":: . L :::y:: " v+ {:i',xl,,2 r A v:: ; ! fi. 1 r " " T "':f a :.s , '.'fr''..:x":r .E:k':" ,. :" :.r;3;'.'r3 "N''x '.::."k.':::, a .' ::: r'fi "., A. .::.>.nx ..a:.:.u. ""i:">:: s':":,........,:.:.,.::...,, <..:..,.,....,.. The statistical picture points to potential trouble for the Wolverine defense, which managed to hold two other aerial giants-California's Rich Campbell and Illinois' Dave Wilson-in check. In its last four games, the Pur- due attack has chalked up an average of 543 yards a game in total offense, 328 passing and a surprising 215 on the ground. While the Boilermaker defense has been suspect, especially against con- ference doormats Michigan State (giving up 26 points) and Northwestern (yielding 31), Schembechler calls the unit "really improved since the begin- ning of the year." Yet in the end, the conversational ball always seems to return to Herrmann, who has never had what could be con- sidered a "field day" in his three previous encounters with the Wolverines. When asked if Michigan's young secondary can keep Herrmann from bombing away, he replied, "They don't have the experience. 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