4 Page 8 - The Michigan Daily - Sunday, October 16, 1983 'M' mauls clawless 'Cats (Continued from Page f) "I COULD HAVE run better in the first half, but I think I had the wrong shoes on," Rogers said. "We hadn't heard if the turf was wet or dry, so I wore my dry shoes and it cost me." The Wolverines played the second half as if the en- tire team was wearing the wrong shoes, according to Schembechler. After Smith passed to Rice for a two- yard touchdown, the Wolverines spent the rest of the afternoon trading mistakes and punts with the Wild- cats. "The defense played well and the offense didn't," Schembechler said. "No big plays and no passing game. In the second half we didn't block well, and we didn't play well in general." "(SCHEMBECHLER) SAID he thought the offense lost a little of its incentive and didn't go out to kill them in the second half," added Rogers. "I think that when you're ahead 35-0 you tend to let up a little, and I guess that is what happened today." "I think we looked dead in the second half," added offensive captain Stefan Humphries. Northwestern was even more dead, however, as it failed to move against Michigan's second and third- string defensive units, and suffered its fourth shutout in six games this season. Michigan's reserve offen- sive units sputtered as well. , IN ALL, MICHIGAN used 62 players-31 offense, 27 on defense and four on special teams-and the second half featured the debuts of running backs Thomas Wilcher and Gerald White. Both had missed the early season with injuries, and got a chance to carry the ball late in the game against Northwestern, with White gaining 29 yards on nine carries. "We got to look at a lot of players and give some of them game experience," Schembechler said. "We played a very good team today," said North- western coach Green, who saw his teams overall record fall to 1-5. "It's a better Michigan team than in the past because of experience and athletic ability up front." "I DON'T FEEL that we blew them out," added Michigan receiver Vince Bean, who caught three passes for 37 yards. "We could have been better." Schembechler said that the Wolverines will have to be better next week when they face Iowa in a nationally-televised game that will go far toward determining the conference champ. "We've played six games, but realistically we haven't played a contender," Schembechler said. "We don't really know how we will do against a con- tender yet." "WE'RE ALL getting ready for Iowa," added Rogers. "We know how important it is going to be, and I think we will be ready for them next week." Eight days ago, the Hawkeyes crushed North- western 61-21, and set a Big Ten record for total of- fense in a game during the contest. Bean, however, said that a comparison of the two teams' respective performances against the Wildcats is not indicative of the caliber of football Michigan is capable of playing. When push comes to shove and we have to get it done, we can do the job," Bean said. "I think we know that, so any let down today doesn't really worry us." 4 I 1 Nothing NU SCORING Northwestern ................... 0 0 MICHIGAN .....................14 14 0 7 Total Yards ........ 0- 0 Fumbles (No/Lost) 4--35 punts (No/Avg).... 409 2/0 3/48 79 1/0 10/46 NORTHWESTERN Schwab............ 13 0 Edwards........... 9 15 Cummings......... 2 2 Robertson.......... 1 14 0.0 1.7 1.0 14.0 0 0 0 0 SCORING PLAYS MICH.-Rogers 2-yard run (Bergeron kick) MICH.-S. Smith 1-yard run (Bergeron kick) MICH.-S. Smith 1-yard run (Bergeron kick) MICH.-Rogers19-yard run (Bergeron kick) MICH.-Rice 2-yard pass from S. Smith (Bergeron kick RUSHING MICHIGAN RECEIVING MICHIGAN No Yds Bean ...................... 3 37 K. Smith .................. 2 14 Nelson .....................1 20 Markray .................. 1 17 Rogers .................... 1 11 Carthens ..,............... 1 10 Rice ........................ 1 2 First downs ....... Rushing (att./yrds.) Passing Net Yards . Passing (Att./ Comp/Int)....... MICH. 24 64/298 111 20/10/1 NU 6 25/31 48 20/101 Rogers ............ S. Smith.......... K. Smith......... White ............. Garrett ............ Rice ............... Perryman ....... Logue.......... Wilcher ............ Hall ............... Att Yds Avg. 20 124 6.3 10 58 5.8 9 49 5.4 9 29 3.2 6 24 4.0 5 15 3.0 2 6 3.0 4 0 0.0 1 -2 -2.0 1 -5 -5.0 TD 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 PASSING MICHIGAN Att. Comp. Int. Y S. Smith.............. 12 7 0 Hall ................. 7 3 1 Harbaugh ........... 1 0 0 NORTHWESTERN Schwab.............. 20 10 1 TD 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 I TD 1 0 0 NORTHWESTERN Edwards................ Cummings .............. 48 0 Harvey-................. Ilujik.............-..... 7 1 1 1 28 14 7 -1 0 0 0 0 Daily Phqto by BRIAN MASCK Quarterback Steve Smith is about to hand off to tailback Rick Rogers. The two paced the Michigan running attack in the 35-0 whitewash of North- western yesterday by combining for 208 yards. Rogers had 126 and Smith J had 62. 11 i Mallory rises to stabilize linebackers By RON POLLACK Mike Mallory is the Rock of Gibralter of' Michigan linebackers. Playing at a position that has been a magnet for injuries, the junior inside linebacker has escaped the carnage in good health. He has helplessly seen inside linebacking mates Mike Boren, Mike Reinhold, Tim Anderson, Phil Lewan- dowski, Andy Moeller and John Balourdas stricken down by an assortment of injuries that boggles the imagination. "IT'S KIND OF A joke with us, who's going to go down next," said Mallory who leads the team in tackles with 45. But with Michigan's inside linebackers going down like flies, Mallory hasn't had much time for laughing matters. When fellow starting inside linebacker Mike Boren's season came to an abrupt halt because of a knee injury earlier this year, the defensive play-calling responsibilities were heaped on Mallory's shoulders. H has responded in fine fashion. "WHAT HE'S DOING IS something we preach," said Milan Vooletich, Michigan's linebacker coach. "He's improving every week. Calling signals adds pressure and he's stepped in and played well with that extra pressure. There's a lot of extra pressure because he's now the quarter- back on defense. He's got to set up the defense properly and carry out his assignment." Of equal importance, he's been a steadying influence for Michigan's bruised and battered linebacking corps. He's been stabilizing the linebackers," said Carlton Rose, a Wolverine outside linebacker. "He's very quiet and he keeps to himself. He is intense on the field, though." SAID MICHIGAN defensive tackle Vince DeFelice, "He's a winner and for a first year starter he's very confident." Mallory's self-assurance in the face of adversity this season was forseen by the Wolverines' coaching staff. "g We expected that of him because he grew up in a football family," Vooletich said. THE HEAD OF THIS family is Mallory's father Bill Who is currently the head coach at Northern Illinois. Since he grew up with tales from the gridiron rather than the more traditional nursery rhymes and children's stories, Mallory is indeed well versed to handle the dif- ficulties inherent in the life of a college football player. "I came in as a freshman and I already knew what freshmen go through and the whole transition process," Mallory said. "I knew that when a coach yells at you it's nothing personal." And when a son says, "pass the peas Dad, and by the way I don't want to play for you," that too is nothing personal. "WHEN I WAS A little kid I always thought and dreamed about playing for my dad," Mallory said. "But when the time for college came, it seemed good to get on my own. I guess you want to break away from the home. Part of college is to be on your own." Nonetheless, Michigan head coach Bo Schembechler might do well to bring in Mallory's father as an assistant coach. That way the rest of Michigan's inside linebackers could learn about the elusive secret of good health. "Mike's father wouldn't let him get hurt," Vooletich said. "His father is a hard-nosed sucker and that's the way the youngster was bred." As i SeeKt By LARR YMISHKIN Improved 'M' defense.. . .. , reality or illusion? BDO SCHEMBECHLER is either one hell of a coach or a LIvery good magician. Two weeks ago, following his defense's sloppy performan- ce in the Wolverine's 43-18 win.over Indiana, Bo said that his defense still needed a lot of work. Just 14 days later though, Bo is singing praise for his defen- se after it held Northwestern scoreless in Michigan's 35-0 win yesterday. With the shutout, the Wolverine defense has now gone nine quarters without giving up a point, including last week's shutout at Michigan State and Indiana's scoreless fourth quarter. Granted that the Spartans and Wildcats are not exactly known for having high powered offenses, but in past years, those teams have at least been able to move the ball on Michigan. In last year's game against Northwestern, Wildcat fresh- man quarterback Sandy Schwab passed for 436 yards, an NCAA record for a freshman. This year, Northwestern's total offense output for the en- tire game was only 79 yards, or 1.4 yards a play. Schwab passed for 48 yards and the Wildcat runner's could churn out only 31 yards on 25 carries. Northwestern actually had 57 yards rushing but lost 26 yards. Ad for the second week in a row, Michigan's opponent only crossed the midfield stripe once the entire game. Sure the Wolverines were playing the Wildcats, but last week Schwab managed to put 21 points on the board against Iowa. And let's not forget last week when Michigan blanked Michigan State. The Spartans are not supposed to be pushovers, especially when they're playing the Wolverines in East Lansing. The bottom line is that the defense is starting to come together. That's not surprising because Michigan's defense always takes four or five games to really gel and start stop- ping its opponents. Injuries are the key What is surprising, and the reason that Bo is to be praised or applauded, is that the defense has been, and is still plagued by injuries to many of its key players. Mike Boren, the team's leading tackler for the past two years, is out for the season with a knee injury and his backup, Mike Reinhold missed yesterday's game with a shoulder in- jury and is out indefinitely. Linebacker Tim Anderson and defensive tackle Mike Hammerstein just recently returned to the lineup and are not yet playing up to their true potentials. And if those injuries aren't bad enough, in yesterday's game, both defensive back John Lott and linebacker Tom Hassel had to be helped off the field. There have been no reports as to the extent of their injuries yet, but Lott did leave the locker room on crutches. Although he was happy with the way his defense played yesterday, the injuries have Bo worried. "I was happy with the defense today," said Schembechler, who has never lost to Northwestern. "However, I think all of us are concerned (with the injuries). After six games we've lost some guys. We are facing problem after problem. You can only go so far." In effect, Bo is stuck in a paradoxical situation. He has a defense that is starting to play good football, but he is also without some of his top players as Michigan heads into its toughest two game stretch of the season. The Wolverines play Iowa at home next week and then travel to Champaign to play a surprising Illinois team that has already upset Iowa and knocked off Ohio State yesterday. These next two games will also show the defense's true colors and whether of not Bo has really shaped up his defense or is just good at creating illusions. q Daily Photo by SCOTT ZOLTON Linebacker Carlton Rose brings down Northwestern quarterback Sandy Schwab as Mike Mallory (42) dives for the loose ball in first quarter action yesterday. Schwab was ruled down before he fumbled. ni rally stuns Ohio S 17-13 CHAMPAIGN (AP) - Fullback Thomas Rooks capped a last minute drive with a 21 yard touchdown run and cornerback Dave Edwards stole two passes, returning one for another score yesterday, to lead No. 19 Illinois to a 17-13 upset victory over sixth ranked Ohio State. Trailing 13-10 with 1:43 to play, Illinois took over at its own 17 and quarterback Jack Trudeau marched the team 83 yards, passing to Scott Golden for gains of 24 yar- ds and 22 yards, and then scrambling 16 more yards to set up Rooks' winning score with 1:06 remaining. THE BUCKEYES, plagued by turnovers all day, lost their final chance to score when Edwards intercepted a pass from third string OSU quarterback Jim Kar- satos. Edwards returned a first quarter inter- ception 47 yards for the first points of the game and another Illini interception set up Chris White's second quarter field goal. But the Illini fumbled twice and were in- tercepted once in the second half, leading to a 35 yard touchdown run by tailback Keith Byars and a pair of field goals by Paul Allen for a 13-10 Buckeye lead. OSU marched down the field and moved into scoring position once more, but Kar- satos was stopped on a fourth down run at the Illinois 17. The Illini took over, and Trudeau needed just 37 seconds to provide the winning touchdown. Indiana 24, Michigan State 12 BLOOMINGTON (AP) - Sophomore quarterback Steve Bradley passed for 196 Spartan's 18-yard line. Three short runs took Indiana to the 7, and Bradley passed to Len Kenebrew for the clinching touchdown. The Hoosiers, who scored in the first quarter on a 2-yard run by Bobby Howard and in the second period on Bradley's 9- yard run, added a 38-yard field goal by Doug Smith in the fourth quarter. Iowa 31, Purdue 14 IOWA CITY, (AP) - Freshman Robert Smith returned a punt 55 yards for a touchdown and Owen Gill scored on a pair of short runs to lead No. 14 Iowa to a 31-14 victory over Purdue in Big Ten Conference football yesterday. Iowa recovered from an early 7-point deficit to beat Purdue for only the second time in 23 years and send its record to 5-9 overall and 3-1 in the Big Ten. Purdue fell to 1-4-1 and 1-2-1. PURDUE PUT together two long scoring drives to take a 14-7 lead, but the Hawkeyes' defense stiffened after that and Iowa, sparked by Smith's punt return. dominated the rest of the game. Big Ten Standings 4