SPORTS Tuesday, September 28, 1982- Page 9 The Michigan Daily. OficiatI By RON POLLACK Bo Schembechler's mood was not unlike the calm after the storm yester- day during his weekly press luncheon. Gone were Schembechler's theatrics from Saturday afternoon when he stormed onto the field to yell at a referee and twice slam his cap to the ground. The coach's ire had been raised when he thought the officials took too long to credit Michigan with its last timeout in the waning seconds of the Wolverines' 31-27 loss to UCLA. When the ref finally did so, Schem- bechler no longer wanted it. HE WAS CALM and collected yester- day, and while his face did not flush with anger at mention of the game's of- ficiating, Schembechler did have some stinging words for the men in stripes. "It was a terribly officiated game, for both sides," said Schembechler. From there, the 14-year Michigan head coach went on to mock the game's officials for not calling a penalty on him for his on-the-field antics. "THERE'S NO way any officiating crew in control wouldn't have called a penalty on me there," Schembechler said. "I knew they wouldn't call one on me, though. They were completely in disarray. So I thought I'd tell them." Bo was then struck down by a momentary twinge of repentance and he added, "Coaches should not be allowed to do that." This admission aside, Schembechler was still not willing to , forgive the referees for what he considered to be numerous bad calls. In addition to the controversial timeout late in the game, Schembechler rattled off a number of other calls that ing ange he took exception to. IN THE SECOND quarter, Michigan led 21-7 when Bruin quarterback Tom Ramsey threw a pass to Jojo Townsell. Townsell was credited with a catch and went out of bounds at the Michigan one- yard line, setting up UCLA's second touchdown of the day. "The ball was not caught," said Schembechler. "Not only was he out of bounds, but he didn't catch it. No part of his body came down in bounds." Schembechler was again irked when, on the second play of the third quarter, the Wolverines' Steve Smith had a pass intended for Anthony Carter intercep- ted. "They knocked Anthony down on that interception," said Schembechler. "I don't know if it would have been caught, but it wouldn't have been inter- cepted." TRYING HIS best to be fair, Bo then gave an example of how UCLA had been hurt by the officiating. Schem- bechler brought up a play in which the Bruins' Ramsey threw a pass toward tight end Paul Bergmann. Wolverine Jerry Burgei batted down the pass, but it looked like a clear case of pass inter- ference. No flag was dropped. "We knocked their tight end down flat," admitted Schembechler. "(The bad calls) went both ways." The distasteful topic of the game's of- ficiating out of the way, Schembechler moved on to a subject of far greater en- joyment to him - Anthony Carter. THOUSANDS of adjectives have been used to describe Carter in his four years at Michigan, but it is doubtful whether any can do justice to his performance against UCLA. Schembechler tried his best, however, when he described Car- ter's last of eight catches, a diving rs Schembechler 4e S 4 finger-tip grab at the UCLA eight-yard line with only :18 remaining in the game. "No man in the world can make that catch," said Schembechler. "I don't know how he did that." Particularly impressive about Car- ter's performance was the fact that he had been kept out of practice all week because of a groin injury suffered during the previous week's Notre Dame game. But the senior's post-game health also gave his coach reason to smile. "HE CAME OUT of the game in pret- ty good shape." said Schembechler. "I don't anticipate any problem there." If there was a problem with Carter's play in the game, it was that it may have been too spectacular for quarter- back Smith's own good. "That mightL, have given Smith some false security,". said Schembechler. "When Anthony's hot like that, just get it near him." The end result of this "false sense of security," was that Smith threw more than one ill-advised pass, three of which, were intercepted. "In some cases, he - tries to force the ball a little," said Schembech ler. SMITH ONLY completed 14 of 37 passes, but Schembechler is far from . giving up on his junior signal-caller. "He had some spots against UCLA where he was terrible, but he also had> some good spots," said Schembechler.. "There were times where he was brilliant. On the two drives we scored touchdowns, he was brilliant." %l Advancement WITHOUT AN ADVANCED DEGREE Daily Photo by BRIAN MASCK Bo Schembechler voices his opinion to an official during the Wolverines' 31-27 loss to UCLA. Michigan's head coach said he was upset over several of the referees' calls on Saturday. Michigan Grid Statistics Receiving College seniors. If you plan to get ajob after graduation, why not consider a profession? In 3 months, we prepare you for careers in law, management, finance. ® Our 8 intensive courses are nationally recognized for high aca- demic quality. Over 90% of our graduates secure jobs in their specialties. Over 5.000 graduates hold positions in law firms. banks and corporations in 110 cities. We provide a substantial tuition refund if we cannot secure ajob for you in the city of your choice. Guarantee your future. Learn how the Institute can help you advance in a career. Our representative will be on campus on October 12, 1982. RUM Q I would like to arrange a n inter- view. Please call me. Q Please send me inlbrmation about theInstitute for Para legal Training. Name Address Cit. State, Zip College Graduation Date AP Top Twenty Team Defensive No. Total First Downs....... Rushing..... .... Passing ............ Penalty............... Total Net Yards........... Total Plays ........... Avg. Per Play........ Avg. Per Game.......... Net Rushing Yards......... Total Attempts ........ Avg. Per Play .......... " Avg. Per Game.......... Net Passing Yards......... Att/Comp/Int ........... Avg. Per Attempt ....... Avg. Per Comp.......... ® Avg. Per Game ........ ~ut/Yds /Avg......... Punt Ret/Yds/Av .......... KO Ret/Yds/Avg. ......... Int/Yds/Avg....,....... Fumbles/Lost ............. Penalties/Yards ........... Scoring Total Pts/Avg......... Touchdowns. Rushing .............. Passing ................ Returns ............. PAT's/Att ............ 2-Pt. Conv./Att........... Field Goals/Att.......... Third Down Conv/Att. . Success Pet.......... MICH 57 "30 19 8 962 212 4.5. 320.7 .495 135 165.0 - 467 77/38/6 6.1 12.3 155.7 17/697/41.0 10/156/15.6 8/169/21.1 2/14/7.0 7/4 8/58 64/21.3 8 5 2 1 7/7 0/1 3/4 14/40 .350 Opp. 61 28 32 1 1061 231 4.6 353.7 412 133 137.3" 649 98/57/2 6.6 11.4 216.3 22/847/38.5 7/15/2.1 7/165/23.6 6/51/8.5 6/2 20/193 Carter........... Duna way.......... Bean ................ Ricks............ Rogers........... Garrett .............. Rice................. Kattus .............. MICHIGAN....... Opponents........ No. Yds Avg. 11 167 15.2 10 88 8.8 7 117 16.7 3 13 4.3 2 42 21.0 2 15 7.5 2 13 6.5 1 12 12.0 TD 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 LP 23 16 32 6 39 8 10 12 39 46 Name 7 Boren............. Girgash ............. Thompson........... Bostic............... Burgei .............. Sincich............ Brooks........... Rose ................ Carraway .. Body - Lott .....+.+ -Y- :- Cooper ............. Cochran........... Hassel............ Meredith,... Anderson......... DeFelice......... Tkis 32 29 13 16 15 13 8 7 6 6 6 6 5 5 3. 1 1 Assts Total TFL* Yds. 21 53 3 3 19 48 9 22 5 38 4 20 1 1 4 19 2 15 3 13 4 12 4 10 4 11 4 10 2 8. 2 8 1 7 1 6 6 6 2 5 1 2 - 1 1 2 1. Washington (25)...... 2. Pitt (19) ............. 3. Penn State (7)........ 4. Florida (1)......... 5. Alabama (4) ......... 6. Georgia (1) ............ 7. So. Methodist (1)...... 8. Nebraska............. 9. UCLA (1)............. 10. Arkansas............ 11. Notre Dame., ....... 12. North Carolina....... 13. Arizona State....... 14. West Virginia....... 15. Texas ................ . 16. Southern Cal......... 17. Miami, Fla......... 18. Boston College....... 19. Minnesota............ 20. Auburn ................ 3-0-0 3-0-0 4-0-0 3-0-0 3-0-0 3-0-0 3-0-0 2-1-0 3-0-0 3-0-0 2-1-0 3-0-0 2-0-0 2-1-0 3-1-0 2-0-1 3-0-0 3-0-0 1,114 1,107 1,032 973 968 864 803 702 662 607 600 529 521 395 372 317 285 132 80 70 38 57 467 12.3 64 11.4 2 The. Institute for ParalezaI Training 235 S. 17th St. Philadelphia. PA 19103 (215) 732-6600 Approed b/ the America niar Association Opcrard 1), vPant 4,, (. i t .r Scoring TDr Haji-Sheikh ......... Carter............ Ricks ................2 Rogers.............. S. Smith..............2 MICHIGAN ..........5 Opponents ........... 5 r* TDp TDo 1 1 ExP TP 7-7 16 12 fa 12 12 l l 1 / i 1 Present phone Permanent phone Interceptions 2 1 7-7 2 0 6-7 64 63 63/21.0 7 5 2 0 6/7 0/0 5/5 16/49 .327 *TDR-rush TDp-.pass TDo-other Punting No. Yds. Avg. Long Bracken............. 17 697 41.0 49 No Yds TD 2 14 0 LP 14 Join the Cooper............ Fumble Recoveries: Bostic-I Body- 'Tackles for Loss Daily Sports Staff MICHIGAN ......... 17 Opponents ........... 22 697 41.0 49 847 38.5 59 Field Goals Individual Rushing 0-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 Total 0-1 3-3 34 SHORT OR LONG Hairstyles for Men and Women DASCOLA STYLISTS Liberty off State........468-9329 East U. at South U........662-0354 Arborland ..............971-9975 Maple Village ...........761-2733 Haji-Sheikh......... MICHIGAN ......... Opponents........... 0-1 3-3 1-1 3-3 1-1 3-4 5-5 Att Ricks .............. 64 Rogers ............. 28 S. Smith ........:.... 32 #arter............... 3 K. Smith ............ 2 Armstrong ..........4 Garrett ............. 2 MICHIGAN ......... 135 Opponents ..........133 Yds Avg. 298 4.7 76 2.7 62 1.9 24 8.0 20 10.0 13 3.3 2 1.0 TD 2 1 2 0 0 0 0 LP 19 11 19 11 16 7 2 Score by Quarters V MICHIGAN ......... 14 Opponents........... 12 2. 23 24 3 10 24 4 17 3 T/Av. 64/21.3 63/21.0 495 412 Passing 3.7 3.1 Int 6 5 19 5 37 FAST STEREO SERVICE TV RENTALS USED EQUIPMENT HI FI STUDIO 215 S. ASHLEY DOWNTOWN 1 BLOCK WEST OF MAIN '2 BLOCK NORTH OF LIBERTY 769-0392 or 668-7492 PA S. Smith ............. 77 MICHIGAN ......... 77 * Opponents .......... 98 PC 38 Pet. 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