4 SPORTS Wednesday, January 5, 1983 The Michigan Daily Page 12 - t_ UCL I tContinued from Page 1) opening game of the season against :Wisconsin. Michigan began to drive for the first time early in the second stanza as Smith hit flanker Anthony Carter three times for 34 yards and moved the ball to the Bruin 19-yard line. On first down, Smith threw the first of three Michigan interceptions, as co-player of the game Rogers picked off a deflected pass in- tended for Vince Bean. But the hit that Rogers leveled on Smith the next time the Wolverines had the ball would prove to be the junior safety's most significant contribution to the game. rosy, "I LAID a real good solid hit on him but I didn't think he wouldn't return," said Rogers, who has a reputation as one of the hardest hitters in the game. "I'm real sorry he went out but that's part of the game." "It was a super hit. I've been hit like that before, but that ranks with the top ones," said Smith after the game, his right arm in a sling. "I was hoping to go back in the game in the second half. I came in the locker room at halftime and tried to loosen the arm up but it wouldn't come a third of the way up." When Smith went out, he took an Rogers separates By RON POLLACK For the past two seasons, Michigan quarterback Steve Smith has riddled opposing defenses with his execution of the option play. In this year's Rose Bowl, the defense struck back. With 6:42 remaining in the second quarter and UCLA leading, 7-0, Smith scooted around end on the option. Bruins' free safety Don Rogers moved in for the kill and delivered a bone- crushing, teeth-rattling, shoulder- separating hit. SMITH WAS taken out of the game,. never to return, and had an ice pack administered to his wounded throwing shoulder. With slightly more than two minutes remaining in the half he was taken to the lockerroom. When he came back out in the second half he was without shoulder pads and uniform, op- ting for street clothes instead. "It's difficult to judge one hit from another in terms of how much they hurt," said Smith after the game, his arm hanging limply in a sling. "But this was definitely a hard one. It wasn't cheap or anything. It was a good clean hit." "It felt good to me to get a good solid hit on him," said Rogers who recorded 11 tackles and shared MVP honors with UCLA quarterback Tom Ramsey. "I didn't think it would knock him out of the game. I just wanted him to know I was out there." WITH SMITH knocked out of the game, inexperienced junior Dave Hall Smith, array of rollouts and options with him. And though backup quarterback Dave Hall, who completed 13 of 24 passes for 155 yards, performed admirably, he didn't have the experience or running ability to pull it out. "YOU KNOW, Dave Hall has never played," said Schembechler, "and I think, given the situation, he did a good job. When you pull a kid off the bench and tell him to go out and win the Rose Bowl, it's tough." When Smith left the game, the Wolverines also lost some of the effec- tiveness of All-America flanker Carter.1 'Al'from took over the signal-calling duties. Hall, a drop-back passer with limited mobility, completed 13 of -24 passes for 155 yards and two touchdowns, but Smith's lightening speed was sorely missed. "Smith's being out did help because it took away the option," said Rogers. Schembechler concurred. "WE WERE out of the option game and bootlegs," said the Wolverines' head coach. "Losing your quarterback is not one of the things you want to do in a big game. Smith has run our offense for two years and you can't replace that. But Hall did a good job." And with the option no longer a threat, the Bruins' defense had far less to worry about. "Michigan. plays a style of offense that is for the most part very predic- table," said UCLA head coach Terry Donahue. "The key is controlling the option. If you can do that, the rest is regular football. And that familiarity allows the defense to recognize and react much more quickly.", WITH SMITH put out of commission,{ the Wolverines' offensive reins were taken over by Hall who had only attem- pted 14 passes all season. hs "You know, Dave Hall has only' played when we were up by 30 or 40 points," said Schembechler. "And you yank the kid off the bench and tell him1 The slender senior caught five passes on the day but just one after Smith was injured. Said Carter: "It hurts to lose your quarterback but Dave did a good job. I didn't play my best game but I felt he should have come to me a little more." UCLA WENT up 10-0 late in the first half when John Lee nailed a 39-yard field goal. The drive was set up when Carter fumbled a Bruin punt and UCLA recovered on the Michigan 47. The Wolverines finally broke the ice early in the third quarter, relying heavily on the running of tailback options to win the Rose Bowl. That's tough. But under the circumstances I think he played well." "I played all right, but I did make some key mistakes," said Hall. THE MOST damaging of which oc- cured in the fourth quarter when Michigan had the ball at its own two- yard line. On second down, Hall drop- ped back to pass and spotted flanker Anthony Carter slanting over the mid- dle. So too did Bruins' linebacker Blan- chard Montgomery who stepped in front of Carter, intercepted the ball at the 11-yard line and rambled into the endzone to boost UCLA's lead to 24-7. "When he threw it, I wondered if I could jump high enough to get it," said Montgomery. "I did. Then I wanted to get in the endzone. And I did." "That was definitely the turning point of the game," said the Bruins' Rogers. "The quarterback didn't see (Mon- tgomery) come over. That was the key play. " "I just didn't see him," said Hall. "I saw the safety, but I didn't look far enough to see the linebacker." "That interception I don't fault him on," 'said Schembechler. "On that one, we shouldn't have put that kid in there to read that defense. He knows what to do, but it's a problem because that's not the team we practiced with." Lawrence Ricks to drive 45 yards in 10 plays, with just two of them passing plays. The touchdown came on a one- yard pass from Hall to freshman Eddie Garrett on fourth down. Ali Haji- Sheikh's conversion made it 10-7. "When we closed it to three, I thought we were in there," said Schembechler. "I thought if our defense would hang tough, we could win it." BUT THE defense didn't hang tough, and Ramsey directed a brilliant 80-yard drive, capped by a nine-yard touch- down scamper by tailback Danny An- drews. Lee's conversion made it 17-7 and effectively took the wind out of the Wolverine sails. "It was one of the biggest drives we've ever,-had," said 'Ramsey, who finished with 18 completions in 25 at- s V _i.. v a/ VLOW v ov w +v N-Av '711' hlack and blue I tempts for 162 yards. "We needed something big and that drive took up1 lot of time." The Wolverine defense stopped Brujh running back Kevin Nelson on fourth- and-goal from the one on the next possession, but UCLA linebacker Blan- chard Montgomery intercepted Halle next pass and returned it 11 yards for the touchdown that put the game out dt reach. Michigan scored its final touchdown on a four-yard pass to freshman Dan Rice on fourth down to make the final outcome respectable, if predictablk Michigan has now failed to win the final game of its season 12 out of the past 1 years and finishes the season at which equals its worst mark ever under Schembechler. Once-A-Week Audio Presents: WALKMANS Nat'l. Adv. OUR PRICE FM STEREO Walkmans .................... $62.90 .$25.00 AM/FM STEREO Walkmans ................. $89.90 $30.00 Cassette Stereo Walkmans ............... $110.00 $42.00 FM Stereo-Cassette Walkmans ........... $179.80 $65.00 Portable AM/FM Cassette Stereo Systems ... $233.50 $75.00 Full-feature clock radios .... ..............$27.00 $22.00 Many other audio items at unadvertised sale prices-FREE Gifts! SOLD EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT 6-10 pm ONLY, Sold at RAGS TO RICHES: 1218 S. University-next to Campus Theatre Daily Photo by DEBORAH LEWIS UCLA's Danny Andrews plunges into the end zone for a touchdown in the third quarter of the Rose Bowl game. Pac-10 again ~~1~ .1 Sperry Univac in Salt Lake City You like your job, huh ... Love it. I'm into some very exciting stuff... really challenging. Doing what? Microwave communications . . high technology... Hey .. I'd kind of like that... Get on out here then. Salt Lake City's terrific .. the mountains.. the air. Does Sperry have any more jobs? Not jobs, opportunities ... at their two Divisions here. Really? Sure .. the Communication and Terminal Products and MDTS Divisions .. and with your grades, you've got a great chance. First downs................ Rushing (att/yds) ............. Passing (att/comp/int) ........ Passing yards ................. Fumbles (no/lost) ............. Penalties (no/yds) .......... MICH 19 38/110 34/19/3 209 1/1 3/17 UCLA 19 47/181 25/18/0 162 1/0 2/10 Passing MICHIGAN Att/Comp/Int Hall................24/13/2 S. Smith ............. 9/6/1 UCLA Ramsey..............25/18/0 Yds 155 54 TD 0 162 0 SCORING UCLA ............................7 3 7 7 - 24 MICHIGAN........ ..........0 0 7 7 - 14 UCLA-Ramsey 1-yd run (Lee kick) UCLA- Lee 33-yd field goal M- Garrett 1-yd pass from Hall (Ha ji-Sheikh kick) UCLA-Andrews 9-yd run (Lee kick) UCLA- Montgomery 11-yd interception return (Lee kick) M- Rick 4-yd pass from Hall (Haji-Sheikh kick) Receiving MICHIGAN r Rushing MICHIGAN Att Dunaway............ Carter ............... Rice.............. Ricks ............... Bean ................ Rogers ............ Garrett.............. Bergmann........ Townsel.......... Carney............ Bruno ............... Nelson .............. Young........... Andrews .......... Cephous.......... M Carter ............ No Yds 5 110 5 59 4 17 2 4 1 12 1 6 I 1 Yds Avg TD Ricks................. S. Smith.................... Rogers.................... Rice................... Carter n.................. Hall................... UCLA Nelson ................. l Cephous ................ Andrews..............1 Ramsey ................... 1 Bruno ..................... Wiley ..................... Scott . . ................. TD" .0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 "4 0 23 3 2 4 2 4 I1 8 12 10 3 2 1 88 15 '12 8 -3 -10 3.8 5.0 6.0 2.0 -1.5 -2.5 4.3 5.8 3.5 2.5 4.7 2.5 1.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 i 0 0 0 UCLA 6 4 2 2 I I 1 .eturns [ICHIGAN Punts 2/5 UCLA 3/21 - 48 45 33 11 14 9 2 0l 48 46 42 25 14 5 1 Kickoffs Int'cept 2/58 -/ 1/8 1/8:a 1/17 Sanchez ............. Williams......... Rogers............ Montgomery........ Turner............ Sperry Univac has openings for college graduates in many electrical engineering and computer programming areas including systems, design, and test. Entry level positions require BSEE/BSCS degrees and course work related to RF and microwave theory, com- munications and/or controls, digital/analog design, microprocessor design, assembly level language, or operating systems. In addition to a challenging plus retirement, stock pur- chase, and you have a total life opportunity almost impossi- ble to duplicate. 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