*ra Illini hopes end on two-yard line (Continued from Page 1) pires when the Illini play. Illinois took the opening kickoff and drove to the Wolverine nine, but had to settle for a Mike Bass 26-yard field goal'to go up, 3- 0. The Illini lead was short-lived, however, as ,Steve Smith teamed up with Anthony Carter on a 40-yard touchdown pass just 3:07 later. On the play, Carter ran a crossing pattern over the middle. The fleet receiver hauled Smith's pass in at the Illini 25, put on a burst of speed as he headed for the sideline, picked up a block, and eased his way into the end zone untouched. "He made a great run after he caught the ball," said Smith. "Normally that's a 15-yard gain but he made a great play." LATER IN the first quarter, the Wolverines had a golden opportunity to take a comfortable lead but the Illini defense stopped Lawrence Ricks when he went over right tackle on fourth and goal from the one-yard line. Schem- bechler took the setback with a grain of salt. "A goal-line play kept them in the game, and it was a goal-line play that won it for us," he said. The Wolverines took a 10-3 lead in the second quarter when Ali Haji-Sheikh booted a 30-yard field goal. Illinois took the ensuing kickoff and drove 62 yards for the tying touchdown, with the last seven yards coming on an Eason to Mike Martin aerial strike. On the day, Eason completed 28 of 47 passes for 272 yards. "TONY LOOKED like he was on," said White. "He made things happen. He pulled us out of a couple of deep holes." In the third quarter the Wolverines' Haji-Sheik put the Illini into one of those holes by kicking field goals of 45 and 47 yards to put his team back up, 16-10. "It was imperative we get something on the board in the third quarter with the wind behind us," said Schem- bechler, noting the brisk wind his squad had in its favor during the third stanza. ON THE afternoon, Michigan's Ricks rambled for 177 yards, but the Illini outgained the Wolverines 515 to 354. But despite all of Illinois' yardage, it could only put 10 points on the board. "That's the history of all passing teams," said Schembechler. "The ability to move between the 20's and not get it in the end zone. The Wolverines, meanwhile, weren't capitalizing on their scoring chances at an alarming rate either. Five times Michigan had the ball in Illinois territory only to come up empty. AP Photo Pittsburgh quarterback Dan Marino (13) is brought down by Notre Dame defenders during the second quarter of yesterday's 31-16 Irish upset of previously unbeaten Pitt. Daily Photo by BRIAN MASCK Keith Bostic picks off a pass intended for Illinois' Mike Martin. The intercep- tion halted a fourth quarter Illinois drive. ., .. .. ... .:. . . . : . .v . . . . . . .r.. . . . . ... .. :::v ::. .. . .. .. .. : .;.: v:r. .. v . ....v. . .r .. . . . . . .'."G . ... . .. . x .. ... ........r...t.....:::n ..:.: .::::::.. . . . .:i":t:n :;::. :;::: :":{":;? ^ i1 iii. n., N..., ::: X :, ............... ..... ...... _. Illini stop talking after '1M1' win By BOB WOJNOWSKI Special to the Daily CHAMPAIGN- When Illinois tailback Dwight Beverly fell under a wave of Michigan tacklers two yards short of victory yesterday, the Fighting Illini and their record crowd finally stopped talking. They had been talking since last November, ;!hen Michigan mauled Illinois, 70-21, in a game in which many Illini observers felt the Wolverines had run up the score. They had been talking about revenge. They had been talking about pay-back. Oliver Williams, Illinois' fine receiver who was bothered by back spasms in yesterday's game, was quoted as saying the Illini would run up the score on Michigan this time around. But yesterday, after Michigan had won, 16-10, and all the fans had gone home, the Illini stopped talking and the Wolverines started. "THEIR PLAYERS and coaches were yelling at us the whole game," said Michigan quarterback Steve Smith after the game. "It was a hostile atmosphere-probably the most hostile stadium I've played in. "But we got the satisfaction of beating a team that wanted to beat us so bad-the self-satisfaction of beating a team that's telling you you're no good, you're lucky." Indeed, the talking done on the field served only to intensify an already outrageously emotional game. "THEY'VE BEEN talking about this big revenge game," said Wolverine defensive back Jerry Burgei. "And I think that's unsportsmanlike to be saying that. I didn't think we ran it up (last year)." While Illinois played any emotional edges it might have had-including the raucous home crowd-to the hilt, Michigan had an ace in the hole in the form of assistant head coach and defensive coordinator Gary Moeller. Moeller coached the Illini for three seasons before being un- ceremoniously dumped after the 1979 season. "It was a big thing for coach Moeller because he was fired from here," said Smith. "And then they get down near the goal line and we stop them. Coach Moeller is the defensive coordinator so that's a big thing for him." "HE WAS excited," reiterated linebacker Mike Boren. "It was his defense which shut them down." And after the defense had squashed the last Illini hopes and handed Michigan its sixth win in a row, the Illinois players talked to a slightly different tune. "When you play a team that's going to' the Rose Bowl and you go 90 yards and can't score, that's tough," said quarter- back Tony Eason as he fought back tears in the Illinois dressing room. "I was very confident (on the last play). Their backs were up against the wall and they came up with a big play." "The hole was there (at first)," said Beverly, who found that it quickly closed. "All the players from Michigan sort of came around me shouting 'we won! we won!' " And the Wolverines, gagged by head coach Bo Schem- bechler about the game all season long, finally began to talk. One for MICH. ILL. First Downs ...................... 21 34 Rushes-Yards..................44-224 45-243 Passing yards ..................... 130 272 Total Yards ....................... 354 515 Punts -........................... 4-30.8 3-33.0 Fumbles-lost ..................... 0-0 1-1 Penalties-yards .................. 5-40 7-93 Time of Possession ................ 24:02 35:58 SCORING ILL.-Bass, 26-yd field goal MICH-Carter, 40-yd pass from S. Smith (Haji- Sheikh kick) MICH-Haji-Sheikh, 30-yd field goal ILL-Martin, 7-yd pass from Eason (Bass kick) MICH-Haji-Sheikh, 45-yd field goal MICH-Haji-Sheikh, 47-yd field goal RUSHING the Roses Kyles ..................... 6 Brookins.................3 PASSING 37 6.2 4 2.7 Att/comp/int S. Smith..................A18/6/0 Carter ..................... 1/0/0 ILLINOIS Eason .................... 47/28/2 RECEIVING No. Yds. Carter..................... 5 125 Ricks ..................... 1 5 Yds TD 130 1 0 0 272 1 0 0 TD 1 0 ILLINOIS Martin ................. 8 Brewster.............. W ilson .................... 3 Murphy ................... 3 Brookins .................. 2 Curtis.................. 2 Beverly............... Williams .................. I DeOliver .................. 1 7 3 3 2 2 1 1 1 81 69 41 27 11 19 11 7 6 1 a 0 0 0 0 0 MICHIGAN Att. Ricks .................... 31 S. Smith ................... 9 Carter..................... 2 Rice ................... 2 ILLINOIS Yds. 177 24 17 6 57 57 42 42 Avg. 5.7 2.7 8.5 3 4.8 4.1 8.4 8.4 TD 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 RETURNS MICHIGAN Punts Kickoffs. No/Yds No/Yds Carter................. 1/18 S. Johnson ............. 1/18 Cooper ............. Bostic .............. ILLINOIS Martin ................ 1/4 2/42 Int'cept No/Yds Curtis..... ............. Beverly ................... Rooks ..................... Eason................. 12 14 5 5 1/24 1/Q ., t. . .y."" .v ry . q:.. ^;.".+:,{.:}X"4: .v. X4Y :n v.:.":: "::. ". :.:'vv.; .... .. r::...::.: T ...... :....... :.... :: rvv.k:::..v ::.. r. n...:" ................: .: a.:C G.... no \\:. .. .. a'+.... ...:}:::{: ..??:.. A.,,.+k+::::::.{ , v.:.: a'G :..::av ::.:::: r.:"::0:4:4::":ti" n. L :i .a: v....... BIG TEN ROUNDUP: Barb's Wire By BARB BARKER I Wildcat flea-flicker thwarts MSU By JOE CHAPELLE Special to the Daily EAST LANSING - Northwestern quarterback Sandy Schwab did it all yesterday, throwing for a touchdown, running for one and catching a pass for another, as the Wildcats upset Michigan State, 28-24. "It was Schwab's reception on a flea- flicker with only 22 seconds on the clock that give Northwestern the surprise victory. With the Spartans leading 24-21, Sch- wab engineered a Northwestern drive that covered 61 yards in ten plays giving the Wildcats the edge that they needed. On third and goal from the seven, Sch- wab handed off to Ricky Edwards - who moved to the right while Schwab rolled out into the left flat. Edwards then lob- bed the ball to Schwab who literally dove into the endzone from the three, scoring the winning touchdown. DOWN 17-6 at the half, the Wildcats came back to take the lead 21-17 in the third quarter. With the Northwestern offense seemingly stalled, Schwab compelted a 26 yard pass on fourth down to Jon Harvey who was stopped at the Spartan one yard line. Schwab then took the ball in on a sneak. On the next Wildcat possession with first and 10 on the Michigan State 45, Tim Cummings broke five tackles as he whirled into the end zone. A North- western two-point-conversion made the score 21-17. The Spartans drove again, briefly re- taking the lead on a four-yard run by Tony Ellis before the Wildcats won it on Schwab's score. Indiana 20, Wisconsin 17 MADISON (AP)- Sophomore Doug Smith kicked a 42-yard field goal again- st a stiff wind with four seconds to play, lifting Indiana to a 20-17 victory over Wisconsin yesterday. Quarterback Babe Laufenberg passed the Hoosiers into position for Smith's winning kick after Wisconsin's Kevin Rohde tied it at 17-17 with a 44- yard field goal field goal with 1:15 to play. State to a 35-10 victory over Minnesota in Big Ten Conference football. Tomczak, the target of boos in Ohio Stadium earlier this season, connected on 10 of his first 11 passes and had 166 air yards by halftime. That helped the Buckeyes into a 21-3 lead. Tomczak started the Ohio State rout by throwing 21 yards to tight end John Frank for a touchdown with 46 seconds left in the first quarter. Purdue 16, Iowa 7 WEST LAFAYETTE (AP)- Fresh- man Steve Griffin returned an Iowa punt 71yards for a touchdown yester- day, and Tim Clark added three field goals as Purdue upset the Hawkeyes 16- 7. The Boilermakers took a 6-0 lead on Clark's first two field goals, each coming after freshman Randy Fichtner recovered Iowa fumbles in Hawkeye territory. Another Clark field goals opened a 9-0 advantage before Griffin's run, the first punt returned, for a touchdown by a Purdue player here in more than 10 years, and Clark's conversion kick put Purdue up 16-0 at the half. Iowa, which has defeated Purdue only once in their last 22 meetings, got its offense moving after taking the second half kickoff. The Hawkeyes converted once on a fourth down situation and twice on third down before scoring on a 5-yard pass from quarterback Chuck Long to tight end Kelly O'Brien. The big play of the drive was a 27-yard run off left tackle by Owen Gill. Notre Dame 31, Pittsburgh 16 PITTSBURGH (AP) - Joe Howard caught a 54-yard touchdown pass from Blair Kiel on a trick play and Allen Pinkett shocked top-ranked Pitt with a dazzling 76-yard touchdown run as unranked Notre Dame rallied to upset the previously unbeaten Panthers 31-16, yesterday. Pinkett's touchdown with 8:09 left to play broke open the Irish upset. He also ran seven yards for a Notre Dame touchdown with 4:02 remaining. The Fighting Irish, 6-1-1, atoned for an earlier upset loss to Arizona and a tie to Oregon as they cooled the Panthers' hopes for the national college football championship. Eastern Michigan 9, Kent St. 7 YPSILANTI (UPI) - Freshman Bob Hirschmann kicked three field goals Saturday to help Eastern Michigan squeak by Mid-American Conference foe Kent State 9-7 and end the nation's longest collegiate losing streak at 27. Two of Hirschmann's field goals - 21 and 23 yards - came in the second quar- ter to lift Eastern to within one point of Dent State at halftime, 7-6. His 29- yarder in the third quarter was the lone score of the second half. With about a minute left to play. the 7,208 victory hungry Huron Fans began pouring out onto the field to celebrate. Eastern Michigan is now 1-8 on the season and 1-6 in the MAC. Kent State - which has now lost 11 straight - is winlessin nine games this season, in- cluding seven league contests. Overeager Ilinit.. ... own worst enemy. THIS COULD HAVE been the year of the Illini. This could have been the season they beat Michigan for the first time since 1963, but once again Illinois fans found themselves choking down the bitter wine of defeat. After Memorial Stadium's memorable minute which ended yesterday's game, one had to wonder-why Michigan? Why not Illinois? It played well enough, out gaining the Wolverines in total yardage, 515-354. However, one might trace the answer to the conflicting attitudes which have characterized the two teams throughout the 1982 season. The contrasts are obvious. California golden boys versus midwestern con- servatism. A passing fetish versus a traditional "three yards and a cloud of dust." Boisterous pre-game enthusiasm versus quiet confidence. ' The dispute was inevitable: new versus old. And this time the old won. This misplaced West Coast team broke the code of discipline which has long been the backbone of Big Ten championship teams. And it paid for their deviation in a painful last-minute loss. All talk, no action They talked too much. The Illini broke the vow of caution which marks Big Ten Pre-game etiquette. Earlier this year, Illini wide receiver Oliver Williams accused Michigan of running up the score in last year's 70-21 bout, and predicted that the Illini would return the favor this year. They tried to build the game into an arch-rival matchup, and every Michigan fan knows that's a privilege reserved for Ohio State. They played too rough. The Illini saw the yellow flag seven times for 93 yards. The Wolverines were called five times for a loss of 40. Illinois has been penalized 85 times this season for 741 yards, while Michigan has a mere 34 black marks for 274 yards. They got too involved on the sidelines. After the game, several Michigan players said this was the most hostile stadium they had ever played in. Michigan quarterback Steve Smith took offense at the jeering remarks emit- ted from the Illini bench. "When you're into the game you always want to say something," he said. "But we're taught not to say things. The only person you see going wild on our side was Bo. He kind of just does it for the whole team." Confidence is good, but... They became too successful too quickly. The Illini lack the experience needed to come from behind and beat a good team as exemplified by their four losses this season which have come against the top four teams they have played (Michigan, Pittsburgh, Ohio State, and Iowa.) They were too confident. Schembechler pointed to the Illni's newly .,... . 1IllIinoi . . .. . .. . 5 3 6 4 I I I