Page 12-Friday, November 21, 1980-The Michigan Daily M T PUT'EM JUST FO A AWAY If you can live without your cigarettes for one day, you might find you can hive without them forever. I I osu: IT'S JUST THE TALE OF THE NUMBERS .. . DEFENSIVE STATISTICS RA DAY. ____________ __________ 1___ I. II+ h THE - PERFECT ERESCRPTIOI I5 A ' SUBSCRIPTION MICH. Opponents First Downs 165 e Rushing Yards Allowed 1193 Avg. Per Rush Allowed 3.1 Opponents Passing Att. 305 Pass Completions Allowed 145 Passing Yards Allowed 1522 Avg. Per Pass Allowed 10.9 Total Yards Allowed 2715 Avg. Total Yards Per Game Allowed 271.5 Avg. Points Per Game OSU 175 1302 3.2 265 140 1715 11.9 Ricks Woolfolk Ingram Hewlett K. Smith Carter Hassel S. Smith Wangler 147 780 5.1 139°.719 5.2 33 145 4.4 21 61 2.9 7 42 6.0 6 35 5.8 6 17 2.8 9 8 0.9 25 -95 -3.8 3017 Wangler S. Smith 301.7 Hewlett Carter 14.1 PASSING Att Comp. Yds. TD 170 94 1257 14 6 3 44 0 17 7 118 2 1 0 0 0 6 7 Z 0 0 0 0 7 0 0 0 Langley Broadnax Donley Lindsey Myers Stephens Anderson . Schlichter Atha Stephens Donley Williams Murray Dwelle Frank J. Gayle Anderson Spencer Lindsey 11 40 3.6 0 11 35 3.1 0 4 12 3.0 0 6 31 5.1 1 2 7 3.5 0 2 -1 -0.5 0 3 -4 -1.3 0 PASSING Att. Comp Yds TD Int 165 94 1498 12 7 28 15 190 0 0 1 1 12 0 0 RECEIVING No. Yds. Avg. Td 36 731 20.3 5 28 520 18.5 5 17 151 8.8 1 6 80 13.3 1 5 65 13.0 1 5 27 5.4 0 3 67 22.3 0 4 22 5.5 0 3 18 6.0 0 FIELD GOALS Att. Made 20 14 Long Janakievski Donley N. Burrows Skillings Bell PUNTING Johnson Jenison PUNT RETURNS Allowed 12.0 SEASON SUMMARIES MICHIGAN 2 6 3.00' 1 13 13.0 0 Orosz Date 9/13 17 Northwestern 9/20 27 at NOTRE DAME 9/27 14 SOUTH CAROLINA 10/4 38 California 10/11 27 Michigan State 10/18 37 at Minnesota 10/25 45 Illinois 11/1 35 at Indiana 11/8 24 at Wisconsin 11/15 26 Purdue Opp Attend. 10 100,824 29 59,075 17 104,213 13 104,621 23 105,263 14 56,297 14 105,109 0 52,071 0 69,560 0 105.831 Carter Betts Mitchell Edwards Dunaway Woolfolk Ricks Gear. Ingram Brockington Carthens RECEIVING No. Yds. Avg. TD 42 703 16.7 12 13 12,3 9.5 1 11 189 17.2 0 8 84 10.5 0 7 109 15.6 2 7 49 7.0 0 7 44 6.3 1 3 60 20.0 0 3 23 7.7 0 2 31 15.5 0 1 4 4.0 0 Murray Spencer Lindsey Williams N. Miller No. Avg. 52 4.1. KICKOFF RETURNS No. Avg. 19 2.2 12 6.4 10 0.9 4 1.5 No. Avg. 9 26.3 4 25.1 2 20.5 1 25.1 1 10.0 _,_.., PUNTING *...AND IN THIS CORNER .. . Mark MihanoviC Bracken OHIO STATE Nss WE mow HuuifEtAU.m Date OSU 9/13 31 Syracuse 9/20 47 Minnesota 9/27 38 Arizona State 10/4 0 -UCLA 10/11 63 at Northwestern 10/18 27 Indiana 10/25 21 at Wisconsin Opp Attend 21 86,643 0 87,916 21 88,097 17 88,084 0 29,375 17 87,957 0 79,253 Haji-sheikh Carter Carpenter Jackson FIELD GOAL PUNT RETURN No. Avg. 46 42.:3 Att. Made Long 13 9 45 No. Avg. 21 6.2 4 5.8 1 13.0 11/1 48 11/8 49 11/15 41 at Michigan State Illinois at Iowa 16 42 7 77,153 87,952 60,139 Carter Ingram Hassel Edwards Gear KICKOFF RETURNS INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS MICHIGAN RUSHING No. Avg. 14 29.4 2 18.5 1 18.5 1 12.0 1 12.0 , Att Yds. Avg. TD 160 815 5.1 7 Edwards Murray Spencer Schlichter J. Gayle Johnson Atha OHIO STATE RUSHING Att. Yds. Avg. TD 171 1154 6.7 7 93 493 5.3 8 105 333 2.6 7 48 282 5.8 4 53 198 3.7 1 31 179 5.7 5 NO LIVE NETWORK T.V. NO ROUNDS RADIO TUESDAY EveIng, NOV. 25, 1980 (WBC) Direct from the Louisiana Superdome, New Orleans, La. S ~ Space kJar or I1ecktie Does The Mon In Your Life Play Video Games? Score points by wearing this innovative W necktie. Our classic English Club tie features red space warriors on fine poly / silk navy blue fabric. A unique addition to the wardrobe of any well-dressed man. 12.95 Dealer inquiries welcome a ke checks payable to: 3 OLDON ENTERPRISES INC. S3578 E 75th St Suite 309 Department Cleveland, Ohio 44105 ' 1 Send me Tie(s) Name .I Street state __________ did o s e ling Ad1.0frpsaeaPlease allow 4-b weeks for dlvr The Ohio State Buckeyes. Rex Kern and Archie Griffin and Jack Tatum and Randy Gradishar and Champ Henson . . . the names will be with me forever. Because I was a Buckeye for the first 18 years of my life, born and raised in the Ann Arbor-sized town of Canton. While Clevelanders aren't unanimous in their identification with The Ohio State University, 50 mires south in Canton, there is no other way to go than Scarlet and Gray. So I was a Michigan-hater in November of 1969, when rookie coach Bo Schembechler's Wolverines stunned Kern, Tatum, Jim Stillwagon, Jan White, and the rest of those defending national champion Buckeyes by a 24- 12 count. It was hard for a nine-year old to figure out; the Buckeyes were the better team, so why didn't they win? As I was to learn, there is never any way to figure out this Michigan-Ohio State game, no matter how old and wise one becomes. The 1973 matchup stands out in my memory perhaps as much as any foot- ball game I've ever seen. Michigan was 10-0, its defense having recorded three shutouts during the campaign. Ohio State came to Michigan Stadium at 10-0, as well, with four shutouts and an offense explosive enough to score at least 35 points six times in the season. It was a football game which added a new dimension to the adjective classic. The Buckeyes jumped on top early and held a 10-0 advantage at halftime, but it was a different ball game in the second half. Woody Hayes decided to sit on the lead, and it cost the Ohioans the national championship. The old coach instructed quarterback Cornelius Greene to hand the ball off to the great Griffin time after time. No back can carry an attack by himself again- st a Michigan defense, and the game's momentum turned quickly. Wolverine fullback Ed Shuttlesworth pounded away at a tired Buckeye defense, Dennis Franklin scored the tying touchdown, and it ended in a 10-10 deadlock, as Michigan's Mike Lantry barely missed two fourth period field goals. Then came the decision that still sends Schembechler into an outrage when discussed, the one that sent Ohio State to the Rose Bowl. But every time Schembechler begins his tirade, I look at it from the Ohio standpoint; Woody choked, and if he hadn't, the Buckeyes would have ridden their 42-21 Rose Bowl rout of Southern Cal to a national title. That game reinforced my anti-Michigan outlook;.the next two Buckeye victories over the Blue only began to satisfice this Ohioan's feelings of vengeance. Then the rivalry shifted gears, as Rick Leach led the Wolverines to wins in 1976 and 1977, and it was apparent in Buckeyeland that Woody Hayes was on the downswing. The old man was no longer calling most of the shots in Columbus; assistan- ts George Hill and George Chaump were playing more and more vital roles. Everybody seemed to be down on Woody for his "big game" failures. His players were so enraged by his conservative coaching in the '73 tie with Michigan that they considered turning down the bowl invitation. But all that didn't seem to matter to me anymore because I enrolled at Michigan for the 1978-79 school year. Originally, my allegiance remained with the Buckeyes. They had recruited a high school quarterback named Art Schlichter who would make everybody in the Big Ten forget that Rick Leach ever existed. After all, I was going to Michigan for academics; I didn't have to root for Schembechler's squad. During that summer before the '78-79 school year, however, a strange thing happened. I often found myself the target of anti-Wolverine remarks, and I started to defend the Maize and Blue. "How can you compare Schlichter with Leach .. . the guy hasn't even played a game yet?. . . (Tom) Cousineau is no better than (Ron) Simpkins.. everybody knows Woody is senile... 'put your money where your mouth 1s..." I loved Michigan before I even set foot on the campus. Now there is no ambivalence about my loyalties-I would like nothing bet ter than to see the young, incredibly-improved Wolverine defense shut down Schlichter, Doug Donley, and the rest of the Bucks. The anticipation is as ex- citing as ever; it's hard to imagine any more potent college rivalry. But now when I gripe about conservative coaching and bowl game blues, the words are directed towards Bo rather than Woody. GEORGE, WkY DO POWI.E L IKE OHIO STATE 0 0 0 i WELL, LITTL BTINER, PEOPE LI/E / STATEALL BECAUSE T CI//LL EN6:,/G TlRILU/N&, EXCI A 4/ - / "Buckeyes Welcome Wolverines to Columbus. Good luck nnd hnvcp fun!I" Of COURSE, OUR OPPONENT /A S SOAIE TH/A' TO DO rWTH TAT, TOO.0 -0 A \\6 o OpGS 25 CQ c goo - _ -. I I