Volleyball Michigan vs. Eastern Michigan 7:00 p.m., CCRB he Michigan Daily SPORTS Tuesday, September 27, 1983 Field Hockey Michigan vs. Toledo at Toledo, 4:00 p.m. Page 9 Michigan Grid Statistics 'U coach sings the blues TEAM Passing .... 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 Att.... Avg. Per Comp. . Avg. Per Game.. Punt/Yds/Avg..... Punt Ret./Yds/Avg KO Ret/Yds/Avg.. Int/Yds/Avg ...... Fumbles/Lost ..... Penalties/Yds ..... Scoring: Total Pts/Avg Touchdowns .... Rushing ....... Passing ....... Other ....... PATK/Att . 2 pt Conv/At .... Field Goals/Att.. Third Dn. Conv/Att Success Pct...... M 65 43 19 3 1109 215 5.1 369.7 792 160 4.9 264.0 317 55/31/3 5.8 10.2 105.7 11/412/37.4 6/43/7.2 6/88/14.7 3/35/11.7 3/1 20/161 82/27.3 11 8 2 7/10 0/1 3/4 20/44 .454 Opp 52 27 22 3 832 188 4.4 277.3 324 104 3.1 108.0 508 84/50/3 6.0 10.2 169.3 12/478/39.8 3/18/6.0 8/ 12!4/15.5 3/109/36.3 5/4 14/109 63/21.0 8 3 4 7/7 1/1 2/3 16/39 .410 PA S. Smith 41 Hall ........14 PC 23 8 31 50 Int 2 1 3 3 Pct TD .561 1 .571 1 By RON POLLACK MICHIGAN Opponents . 55 84 Nelson ........ Rogers ........ Bean ........ Armstrong K. Smith ...... G. Johnson .... Garrett........ MICHIGAN ... Opponents ..... Receiving No ............. 12 ............ 7 3 ............ 2 ............ 1 1 ............. 31 ............ 54 8050 Scoring Dr TDp TDo 4 11 1 - 1 1 Indiana head football coach Sam Wyche is lowering .54 2 the boom on his squad as it prepares for next Satur- day's game against Michigan. The Hoosiers lost to Northwestern, 10-8, to lower its Yds Avg record to 1-2, on Saturday, and Wyche minced no 137 11.4 words yesterday about his dissatisfaction with his 38 5.4 88 17.6 team. 13 4.3 "WE PLAYED a sorry football game," Wyche 23 11.5 said. "I congratulate Northwestern for winning, but 12 12.0 6 6.0 they aren't a very good football team and they beat us. We are better than Northwestern. Our ball club 317 10.2 was totally apathetic. They had no emotion. I called 508 10.2 on all my coaching resources - from coaching to yelling to embarrassing - and it just didn't help. PAK TP So we don't have to worry about that happening again 24 because we won't be favored again. We're certainly 6-8 9 not as good as Michigan." 1-2 7 As biting as these words were, Wyche was only 6 warming up. He then ripped into his squad with a 6 6 bluntness that is rarely heard from a coach. 6 "I KNOW THAT we are completely disappointed in 6 the team," Wyche said. "We have a 'loser' per- 6 sonality on this team . . . I thought we were further along. I'm embarrassed for the university. We played 7-10 82 down to the worst level we could. So we can get bet- 7-7 63 ter. "The telling thing is you can have a few rotten ap- ples who can destroy the fiber of a team. My problem was thinking I could change them. You can upgrade them from bad to better, but not past mediocre." With this in mind, Wyche has begun to weed out the riff-raff. HE ASKED THREE players to leave the team during spring practices, dismissed another player from the team Sunday and said yesterday that "there are at least three more I've earmarked for the next 14 days. "There are some fair weather fans and bandwagon riders that already jumped off," Wyche said. "They're out, ready to criticize. And some of them happen to be on the club, that's the unfortunate part. We've got to find them." None of the players already dismissed, or those on their way out, are starters. "Usually the starters have more pride," Wyche said. THE FIRST-YEAR Hoosier coach admitted that his methods since taking over the Indiana coaching duties have been tough, but argued that they have not been unreasonable. "It could be that I've asked too much of a college athlete too fast," Wyche said. "But as I look at it, my opinion is they could and should handle everything" we've asked," Wyche said. Wyche's verbal castigation of his team came as a surprise to Michigan head coach Bo Schembechler. - "I DON'T SEE quite what he's talking about in the Northwestern game," Schembechler said. "Maybe he knows something I don't. I'm sure he does. But that was a tight game. You must not make the mistake of thinking Northwestern doesn't have good players. Those are two teams that just went after,7 each other. I don't see what he's talking about. "I didn't see loafing. Maybe it's there, but I didn't see it. They didn't look bad to me." Then Schembechler offered a possible explanation for Wyche's heated outburst. "I'll tell you men, you get mad when you lose," he said. "It's no fun." INJURY UPDATE: Indiana's Duane Gunn, an All- America wide reciever candidate, has only a 10- percent chance of playing against Michigan accor- ding to Wyche. "Duane bruised everything but 'his lower lip," Wyche said. "He's walking around like an old man." Michigan tailback Rick Rogers suffered a bruised thigh against Wisconsin on Saturday and was expec- ted not to practice yesterday. Schembechler said, however, Rogers will probably practice today. Running back Gerald White's knee injury appears to have mended well enough to scrimmage, accor- ding to Schembechler. Rogers .... Schiopy. Bergeron .. Hall ....... S. Smith ... Mercer .. Rice.... Garrett.... Nelson .... Mallory ... MICHIGAN Opponents . TDr-Rush TC 4 i i i i i 8 2 3 4 TDp-Pass 1 1 TD O-Other INDIVIDUAL Rushing s Att .ogers ....... . K. Smith................. 36 S. Smith. ................. 16 Mercer .................. 16 Garrett ................. 15 Rice ...................... 12 Hall ...................... 6 Armstrong ................ 7 S.Johnson ................ 1 MICHIGAN............... 160 Opponents..............104 Yds 253 181 99 83 71 56 21 19 9 792 334 Avg 5.0 5.0 6.2 5.2 4.7 4.7 3.5 2.7 9.0 4.9 3.2 Punting No Yds Avg Bracken... 11 412 37.4 MICHIGAN 11 412 37.4 Long 52 52 Field Goals 30-39 40-49 50 + Bergeron ..........41-1 1-1 Schloppy ...........1-2 Tot 2-2 1-2 3-4 2-3 MICHIGAN........2-3 Opponents ......... 2-3 1-1 USA fall Don't Let a Bad Break Disrupt Your College Budget Whether it's an intramural football injury or a surprise attack of appendicitis, an unanticipated sickness or accident can result in large medical bills. And if you're like most college students, your budget doesn't allow for any "bad breaks." That's why it's a good idea to help protect yourself against the medical expenses of an unexpected sickness or accident by enrolling now in the 1983-1984 Accident and Sickness Insurance Plan, approved by the MSA for University of Michigan students and their dependents. Underwritten by Mutual of Omaha, this plan provides hospital-surgical protection for covered sickness and accidents - plus benefits for X-rays, lab tests, ambulance and even major medical expenses. If you haven't already reviewed the plan description mailed to you, you owe it to yourself to do so now. Brochures describing the benefits, costs and conditions of coverage are available at the Student Insurance Information Center, Room 354, University Health Service, 207 Fletcher Ave., Ann Arbor, MI. But don't wait. The plan's initial enrollment period ends September 24, 1983. 2 i UNMRWRiTTEN 81 .. MUtUd gQmdh& People quo can count on... MUTUAL Of OMAHA INSURANCE (OiPANV HOME OffI(f OMAHA. NEBRASKA 'Austmla NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) -Australia II won the America's cup yesterday, shat- tering 132 years of U.S. supremacy with sturining comeback victory over iberty in the most dramatic finish ever for sailing's most prestigious prize. The 41-second victory, the fourth- closest in Cup history, brought to an end the, longest winning streak in sports history. THE-CUP, first won by the schooner American in 1851 and defended 25 times since, was the only international trophy never to change hands. Now it belongs to the Australians, ho ended 21 years of frustration covering six previous challenges by taking advantage of a crucial mistake by American skipper Dennis Conner to win the unprecedented seventh and decisive race. The victory triggered wild celebrations among Aussie supporters in the spectator fleet on Rhode Island Sound, on the docks and streets of ewport and Down Under, where illions stayed up most of the-night to watch it on television. IT ALSO climaxed a determined comeback by skipper John Bertrand and his crew, who fell behind 3-1 and then won three straight races, the last one marking the first time a Cup series wins CUP had gone as far as seven races. They appeared out of it Monday, as well. Liberty, with Conner reading the winds correctly, held a seemingly safe 57-second lead after the fourth of six legs on the 24.3-mile course on Rhode Island Sound. BUT THERE were nine miles to go, and the Aussies wouldn't quit. Bertrand found a wind shift of his own, while Conner let the Australians get unobstructed air. The. American lead - and the America's Cup - was gone. AUSTRALIA II had outrun Liberty by 1 minute, 18 seconds in the 4.5-mile downwind leg and turned homeward in- to the wind 21 seconds ahead. All that was left was for the 37-year Bertrand, a sailmaker from Melbourne with a degree in ocean engineering from Massachusetts Institute of Technology, to keep in front of Conner and block the wind coming into Liber- ty's sails. He had lost the lead by not doing that early in the race, but he didn't repeat his mistake. The Australians now are expected to defend the Cup against the United States and other countries in 1986. And it will be in Perth, Australia, 12,500 miles around the world, not in Newport for the first time since 1930. 5 An impressive technological journey began over three decades ago at Hughes Aircraft Company. Today, with more than 90 diverse technologies ranging from sub-micron electronics to large scale systems, you'll find Hughes people forging new discoveries, new futures. 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