. LSA Students RUN AS A CANDIDATE FOR LSA-EXECUTIVE COUNCIL (President, Vice-President, and 15 Member Seats) Get an application at LSA-SG office 4003 Michigan Union or-call 763-4799 Filing Deadline: Nov. 14, 1980, 5pm SPORTS Page 1 0 Friday, November 14, 1980 The Michigan Daily Golder By ALAN FANGER The bulky brown envelope was marked with the return address "Pur- due University." Inside was a potpourri of literature, including posters, fact sheets-in sum, an everything-you- wanted-to-know-about-Mark Herr- mann-but-didn't-have-time-to-satifsy- your-curiosity jumble of Heisman Trophy campaign literature. Yes, it was campaign literature. Electioneering. Getting out the vote among the media who will cast their ballots for the coveted award Decem- ber 1. Coax ABC's Keith, Jackson or Bill Flemming into. dropping Herr- mann's name-just as an inciden- tal-and you've spread the message nationwide. FOR FOUR years, Herrmann has been mentioned as someone who could eventually be bestowed with the honor of being college football's player of the year. He was touted as a whiz kid passer his freshman year, moved up the ranks of prestige and good fortune, and is now conveniently perched at the pinnacle of his career. He, along with thousands of loyal Purdue students and alumni, knows that pinnacle may not stand tall enough. A fella named George Rogers may be standing just a bit taller. "Sure, I read the papers Sunday to see how the other guys (in contention for the Heisman) are doing," said the Boilermaker quarterback. "I check out the guys around the country. I guess it's human nature to do something like that." BUT THE Heisman buck stops there for Herrmann. He adopts the standard approach of any viable Heisman can- didate-put the trophy on the back bur- ner of your mind and concentrate "on the team and winning." Winning supercedes all else, especially this week, during which Purdue has been practicing for what its sports information department calls, Arm: Herrmann stalking H~ivman. Wolverines U "The always-mighty Wolverines of Michigan." Through some odd array of circum- stances, Herrmann has not fared par- ticularly well in his three previous engagements with the Wolverines.. In 1977, he completed only 10 of 22 passes for 74 yards and three interceptions as Purdue took a 40-6 drubbing from the Wolverines. A year later, he was knocked out of the game with an injury in the first quarter, after he had gone just two for five with an interception. (Michigan won again that year, 24-6.) Last year he was 16 of 27 for.140 yar- ds-most of his completions were for short yardage-but the Boilermakers were able to sidetrack the Wolverines, 24-21. "I REALLY can't put my finger on it," he said, when asked about the reasons for his lack of success against Michigan. "I know that they've always been a real tough team, and we're ex- pecting a very tough game this week." Herrmann and his mates have the best chance to head west for Pasadena that they have had in the four years the Carmel, Ind. signal-caller has been on the West Lafayette campus. Purdue wins against Michigan and Indiana, combined with an Ohio State loss or tie against either Iowa or the Wolverines, would put the Boilermakers in the Rose Bowl for the first time since January 2, 1967. "All we want is this title. Our first goal is to get that title-the rest is gravy," he said, emphasizing that his thoughts are now geared to more im- mediate matters. HIS MICHIGAN performances have marked the few occasions on which Herrmann has had what could ac- curately be called "a bad day." The rest is in the record books: Herrmann's 8,700-plus yards is an NCAA record, and nearly all conceivable Big Ten marks for aerial performance belong to him. Herrmann likes to downplay his own -IL.JL %-/ AL k--7 -AL AL AL Mwqll -M AIL 6) v v skills in favor of rendering praise for his receivers. While tight end Dave Young is widely considered the finest in the conference, split end Bart Burrell-a teammate of Herrmann in high school-and wide receiver Steve Bryant have been out of the limelight. "Dave's got great size and speed-he just set the Big Ten reception record, and I think that says something for him. Bart doesn't have great speed or size, but he gets the job done. Steve, this past game (a 58-13 win over Iowa), played a heck of a game." HERRMANN knows that everyone will have to play a heck of a game to knock off the Wolverines, whose defen- se has been markedly improved from early in the season. "Potentially this could be the most important (game of my career). We came close to winning it (the title) the last two years. This year we're going into a good position. We're confident," he said. And even if it's on the back burner, the Heisman situation, and all the hoopla surrounding it, occasionally creep into Herrmann's mind. "I know Purdue doesn't get the national attention like other schools do. I know I can't get by with meager per- formances. I'm just going out there to try and play well in an important game." 4:} PURDUE'S record-setting quar- terback Mark Herrmann laun- ches a pass in a game earlier-this year. Herrmann is the all-time NCAA passing yardage leader and holds numerous Big Ten aerial marks. SPOR TS OF THE DAIL Y: Bowls want 'M' 4 illy Y VV _ _ . -_.. ,_. By ALAN FANGER Michigan is likely to accept a bid to either the Fiesta Bowl or the Astro- Bluebonnet Bowl should the Wolverines lose to Purdue tomorrow, it was lear- ned yesterday. Officials of both bowls have ex- pressed interest in extending an in- vitation to Michigan. Athletic Director Don Canham has a preference for the Fiesta Bowl in Tempe, Ariz. which yields a large financial gate and is played in warm weather. Astro-Bluebonnet Bowl officials are apparently looking for a Texas- Michigan matchup New Year's Eve in Houston. The Austin (Tex.) American Statesman reported yesterday that if Texas defeats Texas Christian tomorrow in Fort Worth, the Longhorns would be extended a bid to the Astro- Bluebonnte. The Statesman also reported that the Astro-Bluebonnet Bowl is the only post- season game that is sending a represen- tative to the Texas-TCU contest. Bowl bids can be issued beginning at 6 p.m. tomorrow. Winfield taken NEW YORK (AP)-Slugging out- fielder Dave Winfield was the prize of yesterday's free agent re-entry draft, as he was selected by 10 teams, three less than the maximum that could have selected him. Winfield wouldn't say if any team had an inside track. He has had discussions with the New York Yankees, New York Mets and Atlanta Braves. "There's no one perfect place. There's no one leading the pack," said Winfield. "I have seven or eight'things to consider." One of the surprises of the draft was that speedy Ron LeFlore of the Mon- treal Expos was only selected by one team, the Chicago White Sox, and veteran reliever Tug McGraw of the Philadelphia Phillies was passed over by every team. Pistons sign guard PONTIAC, (AP)-The Detroit Pistons announced yesterday they had signed veteran free agent guard Larry Wright, formerly of the Washington Bullets, to a multi-year National Basketball Association contract. Wright, 6-1 and 160 pounds, could be- in uniform tonight against the Chicago Bulls, the Pistons said. To make room for Wright on the roster, the Pistons asked waivers on rookie guard Tony Fuller.' 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