The Michigan Daily-Sunday, November 23, 1980-Page 9 'M' 'bowlers' deflate Ohio State (Continued from Page 1) phomore wide receiver who has elec trified his team and its fans many times roughout the season - who scored the winning touchdown on a 13-yard pass froin John Wangler with five minutes Ieftlin the third quarter. Blut the joyous victory belonged to the defense, which contained yet another top-quarterback -. the Buckeyes' Art Schlichter, and gave the Michigan of- fense several opportunities to put points on the board. "The Michigan team this year has ne far beyond any of our expec- tations," an elated Schembechler said after the game. "At a time when people thought we were dead, we vowed to come back. And we did." THE COMEBACK was not completed however, until the final minute, when outside linebacker Robert Thompson sacked Schlichter from behind on a fourth down play in Michigan territory. The Wolverines then took over and ran out the clock on one play as their fans ploded in an uncontrollable frenzy. The Buckeyes had taken possession at their own 32-yard line with 1:08 remaining after fullback Stanley Ed- wards was tackled far short of a first down on a fake punt. And for the first time: in the game, they started to generate substantial yardage through the air. Sehlichter opened the drive by hitting split end Gary Williams near the side 'for nine yards. He then followed up of incomplete pass by firing a perfect strike to flanker Doug Donley, who stepped out of bounds at the Michigan 32 with 41 seconds left to play. .UT THE Wolverine defense, aided bythe addition of a fifth defensive back, stiffened up on Schlichter. He was for- cedl to scramble out of the pocket for no Defense halts Bucks as Woolfolk gallops gain on the following play, threw wildly out of bounds on second down, and was penalized for intentionally grounding the ball on third down as he faced three converging defenders. The penalty of 15 yards and the loss of down set the Buckeyes back to the Michigan 47, and brought up a fourth and 25 situation. As his receivers tore down the sidelines, Schlichter dropped back into the pocket, took two steps to his right, and began to cock his arm when linebacker Thompson crunched him from the blind side and brought the junior quarterback down on his left shoulder, ending any further speculation about the outcome. "I knew I had to get him (Schlichter)," said Thompson. "He stayed in the pocket long enough for me to get there. All I had to do was get by 'the tackle, and I was home free." THE WOLVERINES had several'op- portunities to put points on the board, but were frustrated three times when Ali Haji-Sheikh missed two first-half field goal attempts and the Buckeyes intercepted a Butch Woolfolk option pass in the end zone midway through the third period. But Woolfolk could do little, if anything else, wrong. The junior tailback, who has alternated playing the position with Lawrence Ricks, pranced and bulled his way for 141 yar- ds on 31 carries, many of them for first downs as Michigan attempted to con- trol the ball and run down the clock af- ter it had gained the lead. "Bo always tells you to look at the scoreboard to see where you have to get to for the first down," said Woolfolk. "I try to be aware of where I am in relation to the first down whenever I have the ball." ' WHEN THE offense gave the pigskin back to the Buckeyes, the defense stood true to the task, shutting off the Ohio State ground game and presenting a 4-3 alignment that forced Schlichter to shy away from the use of the option play that he executes so well. Schlichter, who prior to yesterday, had averaged 12.5 carries per game, rushed only five times for 25 yards against the Wolverines. A bulk of the Buckeye attack consisted of runs by fullback Tim Spencer and tailback Calvin Murray between the tackles. "Perhaps, looking back, we should have passed more," said Buckeye Coach Earle Bruce. "But so often, in a game like this, you are better off when you are able to jam it in there. There is a point where we have to test them." LIKE SO many other quarterbacks who have faced the Michigan defense this season, Schlichter was rendered ineffective by a constantly onrushing line and a secondary which employed double coverage on Donley, the Buckeyes' most dangerous receiver. He completed just eight of 26 passes for 130 yards, and was intercepted once. Michigan missed its first scoring op- portunity midway through the opening quarter, when Haji-Sheikh's 38-yard field goal try sailed wide to the right of the goalpost. The Wolverines had driven 59 yards in 15 plays before his at- tempt. Linebacker Marcus Marek tipped and then grabbed a Wangler pass over the middle at the Buckeye 42, and Ohio State began its first drive early in the second stanza. OSU offense in-Art-iculate First downs............... Rushing (att/yds)........ Passing (comp/att/int).... Passing Yards........... Fumbles (no/lost)....... Punts (no/avg) ........... MICH. 23 (61/17) (11/23/3) 120 (0/0) (4/40) OHIO 14 (32/114) (8/26/1) 130 (1/1) (6140) Murray..................14 Gayle ..................... 2 38 2.7 5 2.5 PASSING MICHIGAN accuracy on a 43-yard field goal that tied the game at 3-3. The Wolverines were foiled in theirs effort to put three more points on the board in the final 90 seconds of the first half. Wangler hit Ricks, Carter, and tight end Craig Dunaway on successive short patterns, setting up Haji-Sheikh for a 42-yard try with three seconds showing on the clock. But the sophomore placekicker sliced the pigskin to the right of the mark once more as time ran out. IN ITS ONE sustained drive of the third quarter, Michigan marched 56 yards in 14 plays for the game's only touchdown after free safety Tony Jackson recovered a Williams fumble on the opening series of the half. Woolfolk carried six times during the 'drive, picking up a first down on three occasions. But on a third -and 11 situation, Wangler went to the air and found Carter. He had run his patented crossing pattern, and hauled in the ball between two Buckeye defenders for the score. Haji-Sheikh's conversion attem- pt hit the crossbar and bounced back, leaving the contest at 9-3. Ohio State's one other second-half scoring push ended in futility when Janakievski's 35-yard field goal was deflected wide to the left by defensive back Brian Carpenter. SCORING MICHIGAN .....................0 3 6 0-9 Ohio State.......................0 3 0 0-3 SCORING PLAYS O-Janakievsk%-33 yd. field goal M-Haji-Sheikh-43 yd. field goal M-Carter-13 yd. pass from Wangler (kick failed) RUSHING Wangler ........... Wolfolk ............ Att. Comp. 22 11 1 0 Int. 2 1 Yds. 120 OHIO STATE Schlichter.......... 26 S 1 0 ON THIRD and three, Schlichter unloaded a screen pass to Murray, who broke a pair of tackles and scooted 130 down the sideline before stepping out of bounds at the Michigan 16. The drive stalled there and Vlade Janakievski booted a 33-yard field goal to give the Buckeyes a 3-0 lead. RECEIVING MICHIGAN MICHIGAN Alt. Woolfolk --.................31 R icks .. . . . .. . . . . 14 Wangler................... 3 Edwards................. 13 OHIO STATE Spencer................... 11 Scllichter................. 5 Yds. 141 49 9 Avg. 4.6 3.5 3.0 No. Yds. Carter...................4 47 Dunaway.................2 26 Wolfolk ................... 2 9 TD 1 0 0 OHIO STATE Wangler threw another interception on the Wolverines' ; next series, but. Michigan regained possession at its own 28 on a punt two minutes later. The offense, utilizing the outside running of Woolfolk, drove to the Ohio State 26, and Haji-Sheikh had plenty of distance and 18 1.4 Williams.................4 55 5.0 Murray ................... 2 16 3.2 Donley...................2 50 46 34 0 0 0 Grandstand View By Stan Bradbury The ugly duckling. ... Blue ready for bowl Other Michigan teams have had better records, more impressive statistics, and a higher ranking, but Coach Bo Schembechler couldn't be more proud of his 1980 Wolverines. They have done everything he could have possibly hoped for since the time they were 1-2. They have won eight straight games, they have won their first outright Big Ten championship since 1971, and they have developed into the finest defensive unit in the nation. The Michigan football jrogram has done an incredible job of turning the season around. It is like the Mother Goose tale of the ugly duckling. After a not-so-appealing beginning, the Wolverines have grown to become a sight to behold. W At the beginning of the season most of the people in the prognosticating business were not giving Michigan much of a chance at the conference title. OhioState was said to be the best team in the country and both Purdue and Indiana were fielding very tough squads. Figure the Wolverines to battle the Hoosiers for third. After losing two of three games at the season's start, that was revised: figure them to battle to save respectability. Well, they now have the respect of the entire nation, something they greatly deserve after the way they have played the last eight weeks - like one of the best teams in the country. If voting tendencies in the polls were changed from just dropping a team if they lost, to rewarding a team for con- sistent and improved play, the Wolverines would be looking at some possible first-place votes this week. Devastating Defense If not a first place vote for the team, maybe an honorary first place vote for the defense, which has only allowed three points in the last eighteen quar- ters of play. It is the best effort by a Michigan defense since six shutouts were recorded during consecutive games in 1931. The defense has just been impressive, plain and simple. They have shut down four leading Heisman Trophy candidates; George Rogers, Rich Cam- pbell, Mark Herrmann, and Art Schlichter. They have also turned back the high-powered offenses of Illinois and Indiana. The progress the defense has made since they lost eight starters from last year's 8-4 team is remarkable. Bo didn't trust his defense early in the year, so he tried fakepnt and field goals, one of which cost Michigan the South Carolina game. The defense could not help but be proud of the way they have come back and proved something to both Bo and their critics. As Andy Cannavino, senior co-captain and the leader of the defense, left the field as the final gun sounded, he taunted the Buckeye fans by staring them straight in the eye while pointing at the Maize and Blue helmet cradled in his arms. It was a gesture which accurately represented the feelings harbored in every Michigan fan by game's end yesterday in Ohio Stadium. It was telling the Buckeye partisans, "in your eye." Rose Bowl bound Michigan yesterday realized a dream that seemed so distant in late Sep- tember - they were Rose Bowl-bound for the fourth time in the last five years. This year, as in the 1978 contest, they will face the Washington Huskies in the Pasadena classic on New Year's Day. But this year's team has a much different personality from those which fell in all seven bowl games played in the decade of the seventies. This team has far surpassed their expectations, and has done so without the help of a lot of big-name stars. They have had to join together closely and depend on teamwork and maximum effort. Perhaps that could be a big enough difference to turn around the past bowl game jinx the Schembechler era has suffered through. Just maybe they could give Bo something he has never gotten before, a bowl win, making him even more proud of his ugly-duckling team. .4. -. m. .. Daily Photo by JOHN HAGEN MICHIGAN FULLBACK Lawrence Ricks is brought down by a Buckeye defender. Ricks carried the ball 14 times for a total of 49 yards before he was sidelined with an injury. His replacement Butch Woolfolk went on to run for 141 yards. Buckeye dream turned nightmare By MARK MIHANOVIC Special to the Daily COLUMBUS - Ohioans had the scenario planned out long before the football season's opening kickoff on September 13. The Ohio State Buckeyes, two points shy of a national championship in 1979, would cap off an undefeated 1980 season with a big home victory over a Michigan team on the decline and romp over one of the Pac 10's five eligible members in the Rose Bowl to capture the golden prize. And to give the har- dware just a little added shine, OSU's strong-armed junior quarterback, Art Schlichter, would win the Heisman Trophy and set himself up to become the second player in college history to win a pair of them. BUT ALL THE pre-season hype was only that; pre-season hype. The Buckeyes struggled to a come-from- behind opening-game victory over Syracuse, were blanked by UCLA, 17-0, three weeks laer, and gave up 42 points and 621 yards to Illinois quarterback Dave Wilson two weeks ago. So yesterday's 9-3 loss to a Michigan team definitely on the rise clinched it: .disappointment reigns in Columbus. To their Fiesta Bowl destiny squarely on their own respective shoulders. "WE JUST didn't execute as well as we should have," Schlichter said after- wards. "Offensively, we didn't take ad- vantage of the opportunities we had." "They (the Wolverines) are very good. But I think we stopped ourselves today ... we stopped ourselves today :i w-. - "N;"ua: r :-;i:;:v::t:"iiiiir": "ai:";i xx r::-->: x::: :. "::a":: i5i: ri: :3x -i; a:?'fir+-. ...V a::...... ...... v,.r.i s: };:;:iii .:{:.r ni i*:a. '"..v ."... "v'"nvnv.. ... ...r .....v:.v:v:.w:}:: r:::.v:j:v 4_:: Yii:w:nv:::: :.v "" -'. }yi:{ :iir: i:iii iirlr y:X;:jr: ..v...... { r:.v::::r ...! .. r...... hY{" vvi ri: ?:v:" ................ vi ....... ..... :.. .....:.v .... .n ........ .... vvvv. ... ..... :. 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Last season he coached a supposedly rebuilding OSU outfit to an 11-0 regular season, complete with Big Ten championship; now he finds him- self answeringto a press corps which had expectations that weren't ap- proached by a 9-2 slate. "Everybody expected more out of our team, and maybe out of Art," the weary mentor conceded. "We lost two games; if we had won those two games, there wouldn't be any problem. "If you win, everybody loves ya, and if you lose ... you know what it is." See more sports pgs. 7 and 8 AS SOMETIMES is the case with talent-laden, highly-touted teams, the 1980 Buckeye squad never really found its identity, never determined a definite course on which to set. For instance, the defense recorded three shutouts and, for the most part, bottled up the Wolverine attack; but then how can anyone explain the Illinois fiasco? And it has been no secret that Schlichter is not fond of Bruce's basically conser- vative offensive strategy. , Perhaps one of the reasons for OSU's "We just didn't execute as well as we should have. Offensively, we didn'tt ake advantage of the opposition we had. "They (the Wolverines) are very good. But I think we stopped ourselves today ... we stopped ourselves more than they stop- ped us." -OSU's Art Schlichter MICHIGAN COACH Bo Schembechler =': " ' v.. . v......... w::::: ":.",;:{;::: "::v:":{vY:-:"i:{ : ":tiL": "v' %-v.:::.. ""i}::f."i: ":i?"i ": r.:vii:"}:..... v.... ....... ....v x"::::n:":;; r.}r: v. .w'vv ::"i:": v....v.:....::= ..... 'n"{::."'...{".'::::: vv:.,v:. :vvv::.:.n.".- ":. \-:::.:vv: :::n;}""n"::":: v "i'":4.v:.: .3.v ": "h ..1!. .v $":.,C:vtiv:" ...... r.:::.v.c-: v:: .x ".: :: :v "."r v4 "". ":...":. 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