4 Page 10- The Michigan Daily - Sunday, September 11, 1983 Wolves cool off steaming Cougars (Continued from Page 1) (Turner) is a dangerous option quarterback," said Schembechler. "The nature of our defense was to stop their passing game and that exposed us up front. Keeping the ball on the ground was a smart move by them." THE MICHIGAN defense was able to finally pull itself together though and one of the main reasons was the play of outside linebacker Tom Hassel who led the team with nine tackles. Originally' assigned to cover the trailing back on the option, Hassel switched over to keying on Turner and helped control the Cougar offense. On Washington State's final drive, with a second and 12 situation on the Michigan 21 yard line, Hassel got into the back field and hit Turner as the quarterback's pass fell incomplete. The hit knocked the wind out of Turner, forcing him to leave the game in place of Mark Rypien whose third down pass to Mayes fell incom- plete, setting up the final field goal at- tempt. "the option really hurt us the most," said Hassel. "We changed defenses and I took the quarterback. He was in the habit of keeping the ball and on that last play I hit him hard and knocked him out. When the pressure is on, we have to come together as a team and we did. We gave up more yards than I expected but we came together and stopped them when we had to." At the outset of the game, it looked as though the only thing the defense would have to worry about was what to do while resting on the sideline as the Wolverines looked sharp in marching down the field for a touchdown on their first possession. Fullback Eddie Garrett scored Michigan's first touch- down of the season as he caught David Hall's six yard pass on the goal line and fell into the end zone for the score. Senior barefoot place kicker Todd Schlopy kicked his first collegiate extra point and Michigan led, 7-0. HALL, STARTING in place of injured Steve Smith, completed his first four passes of the game before throwing an incomplete pass. His next pass, though, was a forgettable one as Taylor picked it off and ran for a touchdown to tie the score. The offense cooled off after that and it took an Al Sincich fumble recovery on the Washington State 12-yard line to on- ce again put the Wolverines in scoring range. Junior running back Rick Rogers then broke the tie with an eight yard run off tackle for the touchdown. Following the Cougar's two second half scores, Hall finally got the offense back on track and moved 75 yards on seven plays, scoring the eventual win- ning touchdown himself on an option play from the four yard line. The highlight of the drive, and the play that put some life back into the Michigan players, was a 52-yard run by Rogers from his own 38-yard line. Rogers, who was the leading ground gainer on the day with 124 yards rushing, swept to the outside and twisted and turned his way down the field before Cougar cornerback Cedric Brown pulled him down on the 10-yard line. "THE FULLBACK was in motion to the tight end's side on Rogers' run," said Schembechler. "He put a block on the cornerback and that created a crease for Rogers." After the game, no one could deny that unheralded Washington State hadi put up quite a battle and head coach Jim Walden was quick to point out that his team's success was for real. "We had a chance to win and we should have won," said Walden. "I'm' one of the teams that everybody says is an also ran. We don't like to hear thaf. We came to beat Michigan and I think we can beat any team in the country on any given day if we play the way we can." "on the other side of the coin was Schembechler who said although his team made some mistakes, he liked what he saw. "I was happy to win," said the Michigan mentor. "I think this is 4 game we can build on. I would have liked to have won big, but I don't think we are going to beat anybody big and no one will beat us big. We should end up having a pretty good team." Phew!! SCORING MICHIGAN .........................7 7 0 6 20 W ash. St.............................0 7 3 7 17 SCORING PLAYS MICH-Garrett, 6-yard pas from Hall (Schlopy kick) WASH ST.-J. Taylor, 63-yard interception (traut kick) MICH.-Rogers 8-yard run (Schiopy kick) WASH. ST.-Traut 33-yard FG WASH. ST.-Mayes 2-yard run (Traut kick) MICH.-Hall 4-yard run (kick failed) Fumbles (No/Lost) Punts (No/Avg.).. .P Daily Photo by JEFF SCHRIER Michigan quarterback Dave Hall scampers in for the winning touchdown in yesterday's game. Throwing a key block against Washington State's Mike Dreyer (77) is Sim Nelson (95). First downs ....... Rushing (Att/Yds) Passing Net Yards. Passing (Att/Comp/Int) . MICH 17 48/250 50 14/8/1 WASH 15 39/112 150 22/12/0 Rogers-......... K. Smith ........-. Hall............... Rice............... Garrett............ Mercer......... S. Johnson....... . Armstrong....... W Turner.......... Mayes........... LaBomme....... Porter.......... Rypien.......... 2/0 7/40 RUSHING MICHIGAN Att. Yds. 19 124 9 36 5 26 5 22 3 15 5 14 1 9 1 4 Avg. 6.5 4.0 5.2 4.4 5.0 2.8 9.0 1.0 TD 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 Rogers ................. Nelson ................. Armstrong ................ Garrett.................... 1/1 6/44.5 WASHINGTON ST. No. Yds. 3 15 2 21 2 8 1 6 WASHINGTON ST. Turner ..............12 6 Rypien...............10 6 0 0 83 67 RECEIVING MICHIGAN ASHINGTON ST. 15 38 11 34 10 32 2 4 2.5 3.1 3.2 2.0 0 I 0 0 TD 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Mayes................. Moore ..................... Marshall.................. White................. La~omme.............. James ..................... Porter..................... 3 3 2 1 1 42 33 38 21 9 4 3 Hall overlooks miscue, leads Blue 1 4 4.0 0 PUNTING MICHIGAN PASSING 4 MICHIGAN Att. Comp. Int. Yds. Hat................14 8 1 50 TD i Bracken............... WASHINGTO No. Avg. 7 40.4 N ST. 5 46.0 1 37.0 By CHUCK JAFFE Michigan quarterback David Hall decided to keep the play, the ball and his job yesterday, when he scored the game-winning touchdown on a four- yard option run against Washington State.' Hall's first touchdown as a Wolverine capped an up-and-down afternoon, and directed Michigan to a season-opening, 20-17, win. THE 6-4205-pound senior filled in for injured starter Steve Smith, completing 8 of 14 passes for 50 yards, while rushing for 26 more. Despite the strong perfor- mance, however, Hall's day could have been ruined when a second-quarter pass was tipped, intercepted and retur- ned 63 yards for a touchdown by Washington State strong safety Joe Taylor. "I changed the play after, it was sent in," Hall said after the game. "It was supposed to be a pass play, and I swit- ched it to a different pass play. It would've worked out if I threw it low." "(Hall) played well," said Michigan coach Bo Schembechler. "He made the one critical mistake, and if he hadn't it might not have been so close." AFTER THE interception, Hall returned to the sidelines, where he had to face the .Michigan coach, who had called the original play. "I didn't say anything to him. I just listened," Hall said. Schembechler did ,not say if he con- sidered taking Hall out of the game af- ter the interception, but the senior from Livonia said it never occurred to him that he would be replaced. "It was a bad play, it happened, and it was over," Hall said. "I just went out and tried not to think about it." DURING THE NEXT series, Hall broke out of the pocket and ran for nine yards, before taking a tremendous hit from the Cougars' Ted Jacobsen. "Washington State has some good players, and they really hit hard," Hall said. "They don't fool around. I don't think the coaches want me to do a hook slide, but that hit really stung." But in the end, it was Hall who did the stinging, running left down the line and into the end zone with the winning score. "THAT'S A PLAY we run on the goal line, and I'm just glad everyone blocked well," Hall said. But with the thrill of his first start still glowing brightly, Hall added that his performance yesterday will not guarantee him a spot on the field next week against highly-touted Washington. Should Smith and his bruised shoulder be well enough to play, Hall could find himself waiting on the bench again, as he has done in three previous Wolverine seasons. "I'll go along with whatever the coaches want," Hall said. "I'll be ready if I am going to start, or if I have to come off the bench. That's my job here." Harper ............ .... Traut .................. Blue Banter + Yesterday's win raised Boo Schern- bechler's home-opening record to 14-0-1 as Michigan's head coach. The game was Michigan's fifth consecutive home win, and marked the 48th consecutive sell-out of Michigan Stadium. * Michigan had 42 offensive plays to Washington State's 20 in the first half, but the Cougars held the ball for 41 plays to Michigan's 20 in the second half. - Washington State did not get a first down until there was just 2:53 left in the first half. The Cougars didn't move into Michigan territory until 3 minutes into the second half. The Cougars first four drives started at their own 20-yard line, * Michigan coach Bo Schembechler on the 101 degree on-field temperature. "1 don't usually take time to drink water, but I had a few drinks today." " Michigan linebacker Mike Boren on whether he would play next week in Washington, despite the fact that Saturday is the Jewish Holiday Yom Kippur: "All of my family will be praying for me. I can't really fast either, so my Morn and Dad will fast for me." * Placekicker Todd Schlopy, who hit on two of three extra point attempts, and kicked two of three kick-offs for touchbacks. "I don't feel I can afford the luxury of missing kicks. The rest of the kickers here are too good," * Washington State coach Jim Walden: "We had a chance to win and we should have won. I'm one of the teams that everyone says is an also- ran. We don't like to hear that. I think our coaches and playerscan beat any team in the country on any given day if we play the way we can. We came to beat Michigan." KERRSE WORDS' BY JOHN KERR WSU shakes reputation . . . .. no slouch on the field T HE WORDS WERE there for everyone to read and, make no mistake about it, Jim Walden saw them. Michigan plays "Washington, which is down this year, and Washington State, which is down every year," said the story in Sports Illustrated's college preview issue. Walden, the Washington State coach, has heard it all before. Like Rodney Dangerfield, Walden and the Cougars get no respect. "We're one of those teams that everyone wants to write about as also- rans," the Cougar coach said, "and also-ran words hurt us." One of Washington State's problems is that it plays in the Pac-10 conferen- ce, arguably the strongest in the country. Every year its schedule includes UCLA, USC, Arizona State, Washington, Stanford, and Arizona. If Michigan had to play those teams each season, fans in Ann Arbor would consider an 8-3 season a blessing. I 4 BIG TEN R OUND UP: State, Perles begin with a win EAST LANSING (UPI) - Using the "brains" of freshman Bobby Morse and the pass catching of Daryl Turner, Michigan State exploded for 17 fourth- quarter points Saturday to post a season-opening non-conference football win over Colorado. The victory gave head coach George Perles something no other Spartan mentor has had in the last 50 years - a debut win. It was also the first time sin- ce 1979 that the Big Ten squad had won a season opening game and it broke a six-game Spartan losing streak at home, which extended throughout last year. THE WIN boosts Michigan State's record to 1-0 for the year while Colorado drops to 0-1. "I'm not big and I'm not strong and I'm not fast," said the 6-foot-6, 188- pound halfback Morse who scored two last period touchdowns on one-yard plunges. "Determination has to be a big part of my game." An exhuberant Perles, mopping sweat from the 90 degree heat said, "'It's insane to have freshmen playing against Big Eight teams but these kids have smarts - brains. That's the dif- ference." Iowa 51, Iowa State 10 AMES, IOWA (AP) - Owen Gill rambled for 136 yards and scored four touchdowns to tie a school record and had the ball en route to a 31-3 halftime lead. Ohio State 31, Oregon 6 COLUMBUS (AP) - Quarter back Mike Tomczak competed 21 of 25 passes for a career high 273 yards and four touchdowns Saturday, leading seventh- ranked Ohio State to a 31-6 non- conference college football victory over Oregon. Tomczak, a junior from Calumet City, Ill., was particularly effective in the third quarter. He completed all but one of his 11 passes in that period in helping the Buckeyes to a 21-point quar- ter. THE OPENING game for the Buckeyes was played in mid-90 degree heat before a sellout crowd of 88,524 in Ohio Stadium, where the temperature reached 120 degrees on the artificial turf. The victory was the Buckeyes' eighth straight over the last two seasons. Oregon, 0-2, made a game of it for the first half. the Ducks, who lost to the Buckeyes for the sixth straight time, trailed 10-6 at halftime. Notre Dame 52, Purdue 6 WEST LAFAYETTE (AP) - Tailback Greg Bell ran for three touch- downs and caught one of quarterback Blair Kiel's two scoring passes Satur- day as No.5-ranked Notre Dame crushed Purdue 52-6 in their season- Washington 34, off to Northwestern to start the game. The Wildcats couldn't cope with a stiff Northwestern 0 breeze and the tough Huskies' defense EVANSTON (UPI) - Washington and were quickly in a hole. made the right decision at the opening WASHINGTON, TAKING advantage coin flip and from that point on the of the wind at their back, scored two Huskies took the wind out of North- opening quarter touchdowns and went western's sails on a sizzling September on to post an easy 34-0 season opening day in Evanston. victory over the Wildcats. With the wind gusting more than 20 "It was certainly a confidence factor miles per hour, Washington Coach Don for our kickers and passers to have the James elected to take the wind and kick wind on our side," said James. X_ & > 'We came in here today to whip Michigan's ass. I'm not happy that we played close. I'm sorry we didn't win.' -Washington State Coach Jim Walden But Walden is doing his best to close the gap between the Cougars and the powers of the west. Two years ago his team was a major factor in the Pac-10 Rose Bowl race. They finished fourth and had an 8-3-1 record, including a trip to the Holiday Bowl. Last season, despite a 3-7-1 season, Washington State knocked Washington out of the Rose Bowl with a victory over the Huskies in the season finale. Since Walden arrived in Pullman, Wash. in 1978, the Cougars have beaten every Pac-10 team except USC. Walden had worked for five years, trying to get some respect for his team. He made another step toward that goal'yesterday. Unfortunately, some of the 100,000-plus fans at Michigan Stadium will at- tribute the close score to poor play by Michigan rather than good play by Washington State. But although it is true that the Wolverines did not play well at times, it is also true that the Cougars are a much better football team than most people thought. Traveling halfway across the country to play a highly-regarded team in 90 degree weather in front of 103,250 fans, Washington State refused to wilt. The Cougars played poorly in the first half, but still managed to stay only seven points behind. In the second half, they dominated. Their defense was tough, and their offense began to move the ball up and down the field. Had it not been for Rick Rogers' 52 yard run which set up Michigan's final touchdown, the Cougars would have left Ann Arbor; with a big victory and a 2-0 record. The bottom line is that the Cougars are no pushovers. Yesterday, Washington State wanted to win badly. Believe it or not, the Wisconsin I0 0 1 A0 }5, II