Page 8 - The Michigan Daily - Sunday, September 18, 1983 i Late W (Continued from Page 1) MICHIGAN THEN LOOKED like it would put the game out of reach as it went down the field, picking up four first downs, and found itself at the Huskies' 20. Two plays later, though, Smith's pass to Steve Johnson was broken up on third down and Schembechler called on Schlopy. The 32-yard kick was no good. "It went close over the post, but it was no good," said a disappointed Schlopy. "We should have put it out of reach and we didn't do it," said Schembechler. "He (Schlopy) should have knocked it in and we wouldn't have to worry about it." BUT THE MISSED kick was not the only reason for the Michigan defeat. The Wolverines simply could not control Pelluer. Michigan's lack of pass rush was very ap- parent and didn't help the situation any. The Washington quarterback had all the time in the world to throw and he made good on it. "I wish we would have done a little bit bet- ter job rushing," said Schembechler. "Maybe we should have (blitzed) more." In fact, the Michigan defense forced the Huskies to punt just once. Washington stop- ped itself three times on two fumbles and an interception. SCORING MICHIGAN ........................... 3 0 14 7-24 Washington ........................... 3 7 0 15-25 SCORING PLAYS MICH. -Schlopy 35-yard FG WASH. - Jaeger 33-yard FG WASH. - Stransky 19-yard pass from Pelluer (Jaeger kick) MICH.- Rogers 5-yard run (Schiopy kick) MICH.- S. Smith 1 yard run (Schlopy kick) MICH.-- Mallory fumble recovered in endzone (Schlopy kick WASH. - Hunt 3-yard run (Jaeger kick) WASH.- Pattison 7-yard pass from Pelluer (Michaels pass from Pelluer) ashington rally beats Michigan MICHIGAN ALSO HAD trouble running against the Huskies. Rogers seemed tired in the second half and gained only 70 yards on 22 carries in the game. Schembechler noted he may have used the tailback too much early in the game. That forced Smith to go to the air and he responded brilliantly as the Huskies' defense, like Michigan's, had trouble with the pass. Smith found tight end Sim Nelson for seven passes and wide receiver Vince Bean for five, many in crucial situations. "We wanted to pass, not necessarily up- field, but we did want to pass," Schembechler said. "I was pleased with the way Smith played." SMITH PLAYED WELL right from the start as he put Michigan in position to score first, after Vince DeFelice recovered a Washington fumble at the Wolverine 47 early in the first quarter. Smith took Michigan to the Huskies' 18 where the drive stalled and Schlopy connected on a 35-yard field goal. Washington responded on its next series with a 37-yard field goal and in the second quarter added a touchdown on a 19-yard pass from Pelluer to split end Dave Stransky to lead 10-3. Michigan had a chance to narrow the gap Last-minute Blues before halftime when Smith, with the help of three crucial passes to Nelson, led a drive down to the Huskies' 15 with about a minute to go in the second quarter. Three plays later, Michigan faced a fourth and two at the seven and Bo elected to go. Rogers took the handoff up the middle but was stopped inches short and the half ended, 10-3 Washington. THE THIRD QUARTER was all Michigan as the Wolverines controlled the ball for all but three minutes. With a little over eight- and-a-half minutes to go, Michigan tied the game at 10-10 when Rogers ended the 72-yard drive with a five-yard run up the middle. Mallory intercepted a Pelluer pass at the Huskies' 35 and 11 plays later Smith scored on a one-yard keeper to give Michigan a 17-10 lead with a minute left in the third quarter. The third quarter ended with Washington facing a third and seven at its own 21. On the next play, however, Pelluer was hit hard while trying to pass, fumbling the ball into the endzone where Mallory jumped on it for a touchdown. It looked like the Wolverines had the game well in hand, but Pelluer more than made up for his fumble with his fabulous four- th-quarter performance. Passing........................ (Att/Comp/It).............. Total Yards ....................... Fumbles (No/Lost) ................ Punt (No/Avg) .................... RUSHING MICHIGAN Att. Rogers .................... S. Smith............... K. Smith ............... Armstrong ................ Mercer.................... Rice ....................... Garrett .................. WASH Hinds ..................... 22 8 5 5 1 2 2 26/18/0 406 0/0 2/34/.0 Yds. 70 50 E 38 1 11 5 4 3 29 26 21 4 6 .7 Avg. 3.2 6.3 7.6 2.2 5.0 2.0 1.5 4.1 2.2 4.2 2.7 1.5 -1.2 33/27/1 352 2/2 1/31.0 TD 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 PASSING MICHIGAN Att. Comp S. Smith .....................C26 18 WASHINGTON Pelluer ...................... 33 27 RECEIVING MICHIGAN No. Nelson ................ ........... 7 Bean .............................. 5 Rogers.......................... 3 K. Smith .........................1I G. Johnson ........................ 1 Armstrong ........................ 1 WASHINGTON Greene.......................... 6 Michaels ......................... 6 Stransky .......................... 5 Pattison ........................... 5 H inds ............................. 3 Hunt ............................. 1 Defeo ............................ 1 Yds. 88 88 19 13 12 5 79 40 73 58 11 5 3 Int. Yds. TD 0 225 0 1 269 2 TD 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Hunt ...................... Robinson ............... MICH. WASH. Defeo................. 22 25 Jackson............... 45/181 37/83 Pelluer................. 225 269 HINGTON 7 12 5 3 4 6 First downs ....................... .Rushing (Att/Yds.)................ Passing Net Yards ................. Wolverine fullback Greg Armstrong (34) goesd (5). The Huskies staged a big comeback in, thef AP Photo down in the clutches of Washington's Fred Small fourth quarter to beat Michigan 25-24 in Seattle. KERRSE WORDS, BY JOHN KERR The new Rich Hewlett returns To all Smith's critics.. . :You should have been her. By JOHN KERR SEATTLE The fans that boo Wolverine quarterback Steve Smith when he plays at Michigan Stadium should've seen him play here yesterday against Washington. That would only have been just. Smith played what was probably one of the best games of his career as he completed 18 of 26 passes for 225 yards. He also ran the ball well - 50 yards on eight carries, and led a Michigan offense that moved the football with relative ease against the Huskies. No, this time Smith's critics couldn't call him a choker. They couldn't hang the loss on his shoulders. The blame had to go to the defense which, despite forcing three crucial turnovers, couldn't do the job when it had to be done in the fourth quarter. But Smith's performance was outstanding, especially considering this was the first time he played a full game since the Ohio State contest last year. He also didn't work out very much 'in spring practice. It wasn't even apparent how much Smith would get to play yesterday. Bo said early last week that he wanted to use him, but the quar- terback said his shoulder was still a little sore. So for the Grand Blanc native to go the whole game and compile his stats is amazing. Schembechler has always known what his quarterback is capable of, but Smith's performance yesterday even surprised him."He said he felt good," the coach said, "but I'm surprised that with the amount of work he's had he threw so well." Smith said that even though his arm had been a bit stiff on Friday he knew he'd still be able to play. "I'd-been throwing all week and I'd been throwing real well." But it wasn't just in the air that Smith excelled as he scored one touchdown rushing and picked up key yardage on several option plays while scam- bling. He gave the Husky defense fits and Washington coach Don James will be happy if he never sees Smith again. "Steve Smith is a very good quarter- back," he said. "He just picked us apart." Smith looked a little tentative to run, probably fearing that his shoulder may get reinjured if he took a good shot. But that fear is unfounded. He is simply too quick to get hit hard often. The Rose Bowl injury was a fluke. Still, Smith did take a couple of lesser blows. "I took a couple of hits and it didn't really bother me too much," he said. But what did bother Smith was the outcome of the game. He sat dejectedly by his locker after the game, but still volunteered to answer questions. "I'm disappointed that we didn't put the ball in the endzone a little more," he said. "We had some opportunities but didn't do it. "We should have won the ballgame, what can I say. When you're ahead 14 points in the fourth quarter you should win. It's disappointing." The Wolverines though have nine more games to play and if Schembechler can get his defense together Michigan should have a good football team. Bet- ter than that, however, if Smith can keep his play anywhere near the level it was yesterday, he won't be hearing any boo birds. Boston beats Tigers By RON POLLACK R ICH HEWLETT is back. Actually, he was never gone. It just appeared that way to the casual observer of Michigan football. Hewlett now occupies the Wolverines' starting strong safety slot, but the path he took toward this niche on the Michigan squad was as difficult as it was unexpected. As a freshman quarterback he ac- complished the seemingly unheard of - he started his first college game ever against Ohio State. As a sophomore, he was the Wolverines' starting quarterback for two games before being replaced by John Wangler. Then Hewlett disappeared from sight. It was as though the world were flat, he walked too close to the edge and fell off. But as everyone knows, the world is not flat. And as Michigan fans are now learning, Hewlett did not fall off the edge. What he did do was change positions in 1981. Plagued by arm problems and the knowledge that then sophomore .__ 1 ARM- Steve Smith was the Wolverines' quar- terback of the future, Hewlett decided he'd rather switch than fight. "I had tendinitus in my arm," Hewlett said. "Plus, there was a question of how much I'd play behind Smith. So the coaches gave me an op- portunity to move to defensive back rather than be resigned to being a backup. I didn't see myself resigned to being a backup player. I think that at the time and under the circumstances, I felt it was something I wanted to do as a ball player. I didn't have to give it a whole lot of consideration. It was more that I didn't want to be a backup than the shoulder." Gary Moeller, Michigan's defensive coordinator and assistant head coach now, but the Wolverines' quarterback coach during Hewlett's sophomore season, said that the Plymouth, Michigan native's arm troubles should not be underestimated in his decision to defect to the defense. "Rich is a fine kid who would have probably stayed at quarterback if he didn't have a sore arm," Moeller said. "It was a chronic-type thing. He could only throw 15 to 20 passes in practice and it'd get sore. So he couldn't perfect his passing. He could only work a lot on the option. So he was one-dimensional and never got i chance to develop his throwing." THUS, Hewlett gave up the pain that accompanied throwing the ball for a pain that would gnaw away at him with even greater intensity and agony. This new-found suffering was that of not contributing to the team. During his third year on the team, and first at defensive back, Hewlett was red-shirted. It was a trying period of time for a young man who only a year earlier had felt the bright glare of at- tention that accompanies the job of quarterback. "After being a part of the team for two years and contributing, it was tough to look in from the outside," Hewlett said. "The hardest part was knowing you weren't a part and weren't travelling (to away games). What bothered me the most was looking in on everything and knowing I wouldn't play." Inactivity was not all that Hewlett found troublesome to cope with. "Tackling probably was the hardest thing for me to adjust to," Hewlett said. "I had a lot of hard times learning to tackle and tackle consistently." Hewlett's frustrations were not lost upon the Michigan coaching staff. "He had some hard changes," Moeller said. "Quarterbacks never go through the tackling drills that defen- sive players have to. He had to learn to be tough in a different way. "He's a tough football player, burt of- fensively you're tough as a quarterback because you take hits. On defense you're tough because you initiate the hitting." But since Hewlett has both taken and initiated hits, as well as faced and been a part of various pass defenses, he has an advantage not known to many defensive backs. Hewlett, you see, knows how the mind of a wily quarter- back works. "Obviously it helps him because he has an idea of alignments," Moeller said. "He knows how a quarterback works, inflection of voice. Maybe he can break a fraction of a second earlier." As a quarterback in a defensive back's clothing, Hewlett can sometimes use his experience from his 'signal- calling days to trick the opposition. "I can lead them to believe a man will be open when he's not," Hewlett said. "I know what the quarterback is looking for and at, and what they're looking for in a secondary. I have a gopd feel for what their key is." 4 I Hewlett . . . from QB to DB coverage are as well as my strengths and weaknesses. Right now, one of my weaknesses is probably playing the run, coming up on the run and sweep, and taking on blockers." If all of this seems infinitely less ex- citing than starting at quarterback against Ohio State as a freshman, don't say so to Hewlett. He feels that the Ohio State game of 1979 was anything but the pinnacle of his career. Before the question was even posed to him, Hewlett balked at the idea that his foot- ball career can never again reach the zenith it did that November afternoon against the Buckeyes. "I hope you don't write that I started against Ohio State and that was the only highlight of my career, the only thing I ever did," Hewlett said. "Those were good times, but so are these. I like to consider myself a football player who likes to play the game because I like the game. As far as accolades, that comes with how well you play your position. So I don't miss the spotlight of quarter- back because it'll be put on you regar- dless of your position if you perform well as a player." Regardless of how the rest of this season treats Hewlett, Moeller believes 4 that the 6-1, 195 pound player has per- formed extraordinarily well just in working his way into the starting lineup. "He's done a good job," Moeller said. "The character of the kid shows in a situation like this. When you see a kid start as a freshman against Ohio State, then has a chronic arm problem, changes positions, takes a couple of BOSTON (AP) - Tony Armas belted his 32nd homer leading off the eighth inning yesterday, lifting the Boston Red Sox to a 3-2 victory over Jack Morris and the Detroit Tigers. The loss dropped the Tigers six-and- a-half games behind Baltimore, which played Milwaukee last night. ARMAS DRILLED a 2-2 pitch for a the inning. Boston, held to three hits for six in- nings, tied the socre 2-2 in the seventh on a pop double to left by Reid Nichols and an RBI single by Rick Miller. Jerry Remy singled and Wade Boggs followed with another ground single to score Miller. Phillies 4, Cardinals 1