Page 8 - The Michigan Daily - Sunday, November 6, 1983 Smith does it all in 2-10 Blue triumph (Continued from Page 1) rolled left and spotted Bean standing all alone in the left cor- ner of the end zone and hit him for a four yard score. That pass also gave Smith the Michigan record for most TD passes in one game. SMITH'S OTHER scoring throws came in the second quar- ter. Leading 14-0 after the first 15 minutes, the Wolverines took control of the ball after a Purdue punt with just 10 seconds gone in the period. Michigan promptly went 60 yards in just 62 seconds, the score coming on a 41 yard touchdown pass from Smith to Triando Markray, who was wide open on the left side at the Purdue five. Smith said he thought the Purdue defenders misread the play, allowing Markray to get wide open near the Boiler- maker goal. "I think they read option first and came up, then read pass and went to the side I was on," the Michigan quarterback said. "My biggest concern was throwing it over (Markray's)_head. I just sort of threw it up in the air." WITH JUST a little over a minute left in the first half Smith threw an 18-yard scoring pass to tight end Sim Nelson. That came just after Smith's 30 yard scoring strike to Bean, and was set up when Michigan's Tim Anderson intercepted a, Scott Campbell pass on the first play after the Wolverine' kickoff. Smith also accounted for Michigan's first touchdown when he scored on a 29 yard option play on the Wolverine's first drive of the game. The only score that Smith did not have a hand in was when Jeff Cohen blocked a Boilermaker punt. The ball rolled into the end zone where Carlton Rose grabbed it for six points just before it went out of the end zone. That gave Michigan a 14-0 lead with over eight minutes left in the first quarter. PURDUE COULD muster only a 31 yard field goal against the Michigan defense until late in the game. Boilermaker quarterback Scott Campbell didn't play well at all and was under heavy pressure from the Michigan rush. "Campbell did not throw very well," Purdue coach Leon Burtnett said. "He was bad right from the beginning. Part of that was (Michigan's) defense. They blitzed more than I thought they would." Schembechler said he had seen Campbell "play a lot bet- ter" than he did yesterday. "WE GOT some pressure on Campbell," he said, "but I don't think that was his best game." The Purdue quarterback completed just 14 of 29 passes for 118 yards and was intercepted three times before leaving the game inthe fourth quarter for back-up Jim Everett. Everett engineered Purdue's only touchdown drive when the Boilermakers made a "surge" late in the fourth quarter. On fourth and nine with under a minute remaining in the game, he hit flanker Jeff Price for a 50 yard touchdown pass, to make the final score 42-10. I Daily Photo by SCOTT ZOLTON Jeff Cohen blocks Matt Kinzer's first quarter punt in Michigan's 42-10 victory over Purdue yesterday. Carlton Rose recovered the ball in the end zone for a touchdown. Four if by air SCORING Purdue......................0 3 0 MICHIGAN .....................14 21 7 7-10 0-42 RUSHING MICHIGAN SCORING PLAYS MICH-S. Smith 29 yd run (Bergeron kick) *ICH-Rose recovered blocked punt in end zone (Bergeron kick) MICH-Markray 41 yard pass from S. Smith (Bergeron kick) PURDUE-T. Clark 31 yard field goal MICH-Bean 31 yard pass from S. Smith (Ber- geron kick) MICH-Nelson 18 yard pass from S. Smith (Bergeron kick) MICH-Bean 4 yard pass from S. Smith (Bergeron kick) PURDUE-Price 50 yard pass from Everett (Clark kick) S. Smith ........... Rogers......... K. Smith ......... White........... Armstrong ........ Garrett............ Harbaugh ......... Hail ............... Gray............ Carter ............. Jordan.......... Hawthorne :. King............ Feulner ........... Campbell .......... Everett ........... P M S. Smith.......... Hall ................. Harbaugh ........... Att. 12 17 8 7 2 3 1 1 Yds. 126 62 40 21 9 7 -13 -17 Avg. 10.5 3.6 5.0 3.0 4.5 2.3 -13.0 -17.0 4.4 4.0 3.0 3.8 7.0 2.5 -3.0 -11.0 PURDUE 14 5 6 4 61 20 18 15 TD 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 TD 4 0 0 PURDUE Campbell........... 29 14 Everett ............. 5 2 RECEIVING MICHIGAN No. Bean ...................... 7 Nelson .................... 2 Markray .................. 1 Rogers .................... 1 White.................... 1 Garrett...................1 PURDUE 3 0 118 60 Yds. 96 28 41 8 7 3 97 19 15 15 7 9 8 8 0 1 TD 2 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ' M'getting bowled over by choices By RON POLLACK Alex Crutchfield, who is on the Fiesta Bowl Board The Rose Bowl may be out of the question, but the Michigan tors, said that there is a good chance that the win football team looks like it will still be able to soak up some Michigan-Ohio State game later this season will sun in a prestigious bowl game. bowl. "I heard we may go the Orange, Cotton, Aloha or Fiesta "THE POSSIBILITY of Michigan or Ohio Statei Bowl," Wolverine offensive guard Stefan Humphries said, our list," Crutchfield said. "That would be very cloy "I've just heard those four. I hear that from the papers and our first or second choice." around the football building from players and coadhes." Other teams being considered for the Fiesta] A FIFTH possibility is the Sugar Bowl. Present at'yester- Notre Dame, Pittsburgh, Alabama, Georgia, North day's Michigan-Purdue game was Sugar Bowl Executive and Boston College. Director Mickey Holmes. Holmes said that when he goes to In a phone interview earlier this week, 'Al see a team play late in the season, it means that squad is Executive Director Mackay Yanagisawa said ghat being given major consideration for the New Orleans-based would probably have to lose another game if it is to bowl. post-season in Hawaii. "It's too bad they aren't going to Pasadena, but from a With Michigan scheduled to play Minnesota next selfish standpoint we've got to be happy Michigan is Ohio State matched up against Northwestern, sou available," Holmes said. "We've got to be happy, you can't the Wolverines football program said a deal could b get a better name." week to decide where the two teams play. Other teams under consideration to play the Southeast Conf- According to offensive guard Jerry Diorio, the W ference champion in this bowl are Ohio State, Notre Dame, players and coaches will talk about the bowl situ Pittsburgh, North Carolina, SMU, Nebraska and Oklahoma. meeting today. d of Direc ner of the play in hi is high on se to being Bowl are h Carolina oha Bowl Michigan o spend it4 Week and rces from be cut this Nolverines ation at a 1 7 First Downs ....... Rushing (Att/yds.) Passing Net Yards. Passing (Att/ Comp/Int) ...... Total Yards . Fumbles (No./Lost) Punts (No./Avg.) .. MICH 22 51/235 183 16/13/0 418 2/1 4/34.0 PURDUE 17 34/111 178 34/16/3 289 2/1 4/19.5 4 3 1 10 -9 -11 PASSING ICHIGAN Att. Comp. 13 1 1 1 2 1 Price................. Benson ................... Brunner ................ Jackson ................ Jordan ................... Carter......... ....... Hawthorne................ Retherford.............. f S 1 6 2 2 2 1 1 Int 0 0 0 Yds 159 17 7 Bo would like to waive some offans' enthusiasm MICHIGAN TAILBACK Rick Rogers takes the hand-off, evades a defensive lineman, two shelves of books, and the card catalog to burst into the Graduate Library Reference Room for the touch- down. The fans gathered at the tables quietly look up from their books, nod their approval and return to studying. But even playing in a library would not satisfy Michigan coach Bo Schembechler's desire for silence. After all, the rapid movement of pages - chapter after chapter - bears a striking resemblance to waves of cheering Michigan Stadium fans. Call it spontaneous eruption, but 104,946 Michigan fans became 4a perpetual-motion machine yesterday. While the Wolverines rocked Purdue 42-10, the cheering sections were strictly New Wave. The fans spent much of the afternoon playing their newest game, the Wave cheer, in which each section of onlookers stands to cheer in succession, encircling the entire stadium. Schembechler, however, toyed only with ideas on how to stem the new tide of fan enthusiasm. "That thing (the Wave) should never have started," Schembechler said. "If it never started, nobody would know that we have an oval stadium and that you can make an ass of yourself all the way around the oval. "I can't believe that fans are not sophisticated enough to understand the game," he added. "It's unsportsmanlike to both teams." But what the fans lacked in football sophistication they made up for with cheering innovations. Keeping Score By CHUCK JAFFE Inconsistent 'M' offense surges back to top form I When the stadium announcer asked for quiet, the fans responded with a silent wave. An important play spawned a key wave. The third quarter produced a tidal wave, which circled the stands six times before dying out. Other variations included double waves, counter- clockwise waves (as opposed to the standard, right-to-left movement) and even a call-for-quiet (Sssshh!) wave. It was a classic case of unbridled enthusiasm at its best and most harmless; wave after wave of proof as to why college football is an emotional fun-filled afternoon. The Wave actually started in Washington, where fans did the cheer during time-outs and halftime. A few weeks later, during the Iowa game, the Wave rolled into Michigan Stadium with the timing of a hurricane. As fans rejoiced in the first complete oval, Michigan suffered a delay-of-game penalty, and Schembechler discovered what he might now call "the home field disadvantage." "We're going to waive the Wave," Schembechler said at his weekly media luncheon following the Iowa game. "There'll be no more waves when either team has the ball, or we'll empty the stadium and play without (fans). Or we'll find anew head of the cheerleaders or the band or whoever-the-hell thought that up." But the cheerleaders and band had nothing to do with yesterday's waves. While row after row got up to cheer, the cheerleaders and band tried to promote quiet - an effort, perhaps, to restore order and retain jobs. "(The fans) got a little carried away with it today," said band direc- tor Eric Becher, who played "Let's Go Blue" in an attempt to re-direct first-half fan energy. "If we could have organized it during a time-out it would have been fine. It's a really neat cheer, but it got a little out-of- control today." "We had nothing to do with it today," added head cheerleader Bob Seymour. "We never do any cheer during the game or injury time- outs. I would hope that the fans would show the same respect, but there is no way to stop the Wave. It just dies out when it dies out. "With all the talk and media hype, it's almost as if (Schembechler) dared'the fans to do it again," Seymour added. "When all these people set their minds to something, it's real hard to control it," said Purdue cheerleading captain Belinda Cook. "I think the cheer just shows a lot of enthusiasm - maybe too much if it inter- feres with the game - and everybody seems to have fun with it." But since no penalties were assessed against the Wave yesterday, the cheer only added to the game, which even Schembechler would admit was conceived to be played and watched for fun. Besides, any college student will tell you that it is no fun to be in the library on a Saturday afternoon. By LARRY MISHKIN "Our name is the Michigan offense. After averaging 375 yards a game all season we can manage only 258 yaTrs against Illinois." "Our name is the Michigan offense. After scoring only one touchdown in our last two games and looking especially ineffective against Illinois we can roll up 418 yards and 42 points against Purdue with no trouble at all." Will the real Michigan offense please stand up. IN YESTERDAY'S 42-10 thrashing of the Boilermakers, the Wolverine offense looked like it had been reborn, or at least woken up, following its dismal showing down in Champaign a week ago. This new offensive enthusiasm ;was apparent from the very first Michigan play of the game. No off-tackle run by Rick Rogers or dive up the middle, by Eddie Garret this time. Steve Smith shocked everyone in the stadium by throwing a pass. It didn't matter that the play was brought back 15 yards for clipping, the tempo of the game had been set. Seven plays later, the Wolverines had covered 57 yards on eight plays and were ahead 7-0 with the score coming on a 29-yard Smith run that was reminiscent of the Steve Smith of old. Juke to the left, juke to the right, spin and walk on in for the score. LAST WEEK on Michigan's first possession, the offense moved 48 yards on 16 plays and had to settle for a Bob Bergeron field goal. On the Wolverine's second possession, they were stopped on the Purdue 48 and forced to punt. But this was a newly revitalized Michigan squad that was not about to let a little adversity stop it. So, upon getting the ball back a minute later, Smith led his troops 60 yards on only three plays with 41 of those yards coming on a touch- down pass to a wide-open Triando Markray. Possessions three and four for Michigan were deceiving as the Wolverines were stopped both times. On the first of the two drives, the Purdue defense even looked impressive, holding Michigan on a fourth and one. ONCE AGAIN, though, the offensive unit boun- ced back by ripping off consecutive scoring drives of 41 and 53 yards on two and three plays respectively. It was right after Sim Nelson scored on a Smith pass to cap off the 53 yard drive and give Michigan a 35-3 halftime lead one could feel con- fident that this was a different offense than had been shown to Wolverine fans yet this year. The first half of yesterday's game was Michigan's finest of the season and showcased the Wolverines offense at its best. Unfortunately it came a week late, although it was the Illinois loss that slapped the offense in the face and finally got it moving again. "THE ILLINOIS loss hurt because we didn't play well," said a much happier Bo Schem- bechler after yesterday's game. "We were down mentally after (the Illinois loss) and it was a tough week, but the players responded well in practice and played well today." The offensive performance was especially heartening for Smith who finally silenced his critics by hitting on 11 of 13 passes for 159 yards and throwing a Michigan record four touch- downs. "It's nice to know we could come out and move the ball," said Smith, who was given a rest for the last quarter and a half in favor of Dave Hail and Jim Harbaugh. "This takes care of the speculations like 'can we throw?' "I DIDN'T REALLY throw the ball that much," Smith continued, "and got lucky that I threw as many touchdown passes as I did. I threw for as many touchdowns today as I have all season. It makes you think why the passingf game wasn't going all year." One reason that the passing game had not been going all year is that Smith's sore right shoulder had been bothering him in varying degrees before yesterday's game. As a result, yesterday was the first game Smith played all year without his special shoulder brace. And his: performance was testimony to his new freedom of movement. "We felt like we needed to put points on the board," said Smith, who also rushed for 126 yar- ds to give him 285 total offensive yards on the day as he moved into fifth place for Big Ten career total yards. "We were not producing like we felt we should. The big plays today were en- couraging." In fact, the whole Wolverine offense was en- couraging yesterday. However, with two more victories needed to ensure an invitation to a major bowl, Michigan can no longer play games with which offense it uses. Wolverine fans can only hope that after finally standing up, yester- day's offense will not sit back down. A 4 M SU defense EVANSTON (AP) - The Michigan State defens- ive unit held the Wildcats to minus 48 yards rushing, and just 55 total net yards in beating Nor- thwestern, 9-3, yesterday. Spartan defenders also sacked Northwestern quarterback Steve Burton seven times, intercep- ted three of his passes and recovered two fumbles. MICHIGAN STATE opened the scoring with 2:47 left in the first quarter when Roberts capped a bizarre, 10-play, 23-yard drive with a one-yard plunge. Iowa 34, Wwonsin 14 MADISON (AP) - Chuck Long passed for 231 yards and four touchdowns and Eddie Phillips ran for 162 yards as 15th-ranked Iowa rolled to a 34-14 victory over Wisconsin yesterday. The Hawkeyes came out flying and scored on four of their first five possessions. Long was especially brilliant, completing his first 11 passes and 13 of 15 in the first half for 179 yards. IOWA RODE the legs of Phillips to its first . . , , .,. . 1_3 - - . . - for 169 yards and four touchdowns yesterday, but Ohio State Coach Earle Bruce said his talented sophomore tailback can do even better. "He's an outstanding running back," Bruce said of Byars after the 14th-ranked Buckeyes' easy 56- 17 Big Ten Conference victory over Indiana. "But I think he can run better than he did today. I didn't realize he had four touchdowns or that many yar- ds." Illinois 50, Minnesota 23 Big Ten Standings Illinois................. MICHIGAN............... Iow a ............... .......... flig Qinon Conf. WLT 700 610 520 520 Overall WLT 810 720 720 720 I