4 1984 Sugar Bowl ticket applications Mon.-Fri., 8:30-5:00 Michigan ticket office The Michigan Daily SPORTS Tuesday, November 22, 198 Wrestling Michigan vs. Oregon St. Crisler Arena, Nov. 27, 7:30 p.m. Page 8 BLUE BASH SET FOR BOURBON STREET 4 Bo chomps on n"~ 0 By RON POLLACK The Auburn Tigers are a team Michigan head coach Bo Schembechler can respect. They are also a team he will have a heck of a time preparing for. Schembechler respects the Wolverines' Sugar Bowl opponent because it plays football the way he feels the game was meant to be played - it runs the football over and over and over, and plays good, solid defense as well. HE WILL HAVE a tough time preparing for the Tigers because they use a wishbone offense which is vir- tually extinct in college circles these days. "It's a different concept," Schem- bechler said. "Our defense is set for pass-oriented teams. Now we'll face a team like we used to in our conference. The wishbone is a unique attack. It's not so much the option, but a lead block who can chop you down. "The problem is if you don't face it that much, it's better for the team that uses it. How do we effectively practice it against our defense? I'll have to talk to a lot of people about it since we haven't faced it (in a number of years)." ALTHOUGH SOME people might consider the wishbone to be a boring style of play, Schembechler finds it rather exciting. "If I ran that type of offense with modest success you'd say it's neander- thal football," Schembechler said. "It looks like nothing, but that dive play is a bear. When you've got backs like that, the other team has one hell of a problem. It's not boring to me. I enjoy it." One of the drawbacks to the option is that teams do not usually pass efficien- tly out of it. Schembechler noted, however, that the wishbone allows a receiver to get single coverage. "YOU CAN'T PUSH threb backs into the backfield and pass effectively," Schembechler said. "But they can force single coverage on the split end or you'll never stop the wishbone. "They're not going to pass the ball, hell no. I wouldn't pass either if I had those stallions." Outside of the Auburn wishbone, Schembechler's press conference was an opportunity for the Wolverine coach to relax, speculate, throw in an assor- tment of one liners, offer cigars to reporters and get friendly with an Auburn football writer. Among Schem- bechler's more quotable comments: " On the fact that he came charging out of the tunnel at the beginning of the Ohio State game and jumped up to touch the banner: "I've never done that. I came out there and I was jacked. I looked at that and said 'nah.' Then iger wis 'yeah.' I'd have been embarrassed if I'd come up short." " On the fact that Auburn has a run- ning back with Schembechler's first name, Bo Jackson: "He's got to be good. You've got to figure he's good." * On how the Michigan-Auburn game should be billed: "The Michigan air at- tack against the Auburn run attack. Air Wolverine." " On the Michigan fans during the Ohio State game: "That was a hell of a spectacle in that stadium." * On Illinois: "I know we're a better team than them, but we didn't play well against them." " On how much of New Orleans his players will be able to see: "We don't go home right after the game so if they want to walk down Bourbon Street and say hello to everyone they'll have time then." * On defensive back Brad Cochran who quit the team last year, cane back in the fall, and, on Saturday, intercep- ted two passes against Ohio State: "I want you to know that when he came back we had 23 defensive backs and he was 23rd. By opening day he was a star- ter. That tells you something." INJURY UPDATE: Receiver Trian- do Markray underwent arthroscopic surgery yesterday. Schembechler said he did not know how serious Markray's knee injury is. Offensive guard Jerry Diorio has a sprained knee and defen- sive tackle Vince DeFelice's ankle will be in a cast for a week, although Schembechler said both should be healthy for the Sugar Bowl. hbone Michigan Football Statistics Daily Photo by SCOTT ZOLTON Quarterback Steve Smith attempts to escape the grasp of Ohio State linebacker Clark Backus during Saturday's Michigan-Ohio State game. Smith will direct what head coach Bo Schembechler described as "Air Wolverine" against Auburn in the Sugar Bowl. SPORTS OF THE DAILY: Harri Special to the Daily BETHLEHEM, Pa. - The Michigan Men's Cross Country team finished a disappointing 17th place yesterday at the NCAA Cross Country champion- ships. The University of Texas-El Paso finished first. Lehigh University was the sight where the top collegiate long distance runners and top teams gathered. Michigan earned its place in the field by finishing second at last weekend's District qualifying. UTEP WON the event with a low team score of 108, while defending champion Wisconsin finished second with 164 points. Rounding out the top INTRODUCING THE NUVISION COLLEGE SPECIAL. $199" $q900* " Extended Wear Spherical Soft Contact Lenses. $1000OFF " All Eyeglasses and Sunglasses. $99" $8900* " Non-Specialty Soft Contact Lenses from Bausch & Lomb and American Hydron. *Contact lens prices include eye examination, follow-up visits, and .30-day trial wearing plan. I Present this coupon at time of purchase. Name Address Apt. pt. City State __Zip College/University_ Cls Fr Sonh Ir Sr Other i ie rs la~ five were Oregon, Clemson, and Arkan- sas. Each team in the meet entered seven runner, with the top five finishers scoring points for a team total. Leading Michigan in the 10,000-meter cross-country run was senior Brian Diemer, who finished 58th overall (31:05.7). Junior Bill Brady was 67th (31:12.8), junior Dennis Keane placed 99th (31:31.4), David Meyer was 108th (31:39.4) and Chris Brewster finished 110th (31:43.9). Not scoring points for Michigan were Doug Heikkinen and Jim Schmidt, who finished 137th and 138th respectively. Zakaria Barie of Texas-El Paso won the race in 29:20.0, followed by Yobef Omdieki of Iowa State and John Easker of Wisconsin. Wrestlers finish fourth Reality. In terms of the Michigan wrestling team it is the difference bet- ween the Wolverine Open and the 450- wrestler Ohio Open. Michigan did not totally dominate as they did at home last week. They did show, however, that they are a very strongteam. The Wolverines took fourth in the tournament, behind eventual champion Michigan State, Cleveland State and Northwestern. The fourth-place finish, though definitely respectable, did not truly demonstrate how good the team really is. Scott Rechsteiner wrestled unat- 75C OFF NEW BREAKFAST SANDWICH (Reg. $2.95) Croissant, egg, Canadian bacon, cheddar cheese, Holandaise sauce Pn tre SERVED IN 15 Min. or FREE GOOD MON. - THURS. Expires 12/1/83 Not Valid with Other Promotions $1.00 OFF NEW PONCHO PITA SANDWICH (Reg. $3.95) triU GOOD MON. - THURS. Expires 121//83 Not Valid with Other Promotions $2.00 OFF NEW BARBEQUE CHICKEN Dinner (Reg. $6.95) GOOD MON. - THURS. Expires 12/1/83 Not Volid with Other Promotions 50C OFF NEW DESSERT SOUFF[E in NCAA s M Total First Downs . 254 Rushing ......... 173 Passing ......... 15 Penalty ..... 6 Total Net Yards 4481 Total Plays .... 824 Avg. Per Play .. 5.4 Avg. Per Game 407.4 Net Rushing Yards 3042 Total Attempts .. 614 Avg. Per Play ... 4.9 Avg. Per Game 276.5 Net Passing Yards 1439 Att/Comp/Int ... 210/112/9 Avg. Per Att.... 6.8 Avg. Per Comp 12.8 Avg. Per Game.. 130.8 Punts/Yds/Avg. ...42/1502/35.8 Had Blocked ..... 2 Pt Rt/Yds/Avg... 27/416/11.2 KO Rt/Yds/Avg.. 14/258/18.4 Int/Yds/Avg........18/113/6.3 Fumbles/Lost 15/6 Penalties/Yds ... 50/414 Scoring: Total Pts/Avg..... 348/31.6 Touchdowns ..... 44 Rushing ....... 28 Passing .... 14 Other 2 PATK/Att ....... 36/41 2 pt Conv/Att..... 0/3 Field Goals/Att.. 16/19 Safety ..............0 Third Dn Conv/Att 74/156 Success Pct...... .474 INDIVIDU Rushing Opp 169 69 94 6 2937 683 4.3 267.0 1051 360 2.9 95.5 1886 323/177/18 5.8 10.7 171.4 62/2450/39.5 2 11/35/3.2 39/675/17.3 9/155/17.2 20/11 47/389 151/13.7 18 5 12 1 16/16 2/2 7/10 1' 50/143 .350 AL MICHIGAN ....... Opponents ......... Scoring TDr TDp TDo F~G TP Bergeron ............T15-17 75 Rogers .............. 9 54 S. Smith ............. 9 54 Markray .......... 4 24 Bean.................. 3 18 Nelson .................3 - 18 Rice ................ 2 1 18 K. Smith ............ 3 18 Schlop y ... 1-2 9 Armstrong...........1 6 Carthens.............. 1 6 Garrett.............1 6 Hall................1 .6 Kattus................ 1 6 Logue............... 1 6 Mallory................. 1 6 Mercer.............. 1 6 Perryman ........... 1 6 Rose................. 1 6 MICHIGAN.........28 14 2 16-19 348 Opponents........... 5 12 1 7-10 151 Field Goals Rice............... 1 2 2.0 1 112 1439 12.8 14 112 177 1439 12.8 14 1986 18.7 12 tached while pending a decision as to whether he will 'redshirt' this season, so his performance did not count. toward team score. Michigan was also hurt by the early withdrawal of Mike DerGarabedian at 134 lbs. 'D-Man,' as he is called, got bumped pretty hard on the shoulder in his third match. Though he went on to win the match, Bahr withdrew him after it. Bahr explained, "It's only November. If a wrestler is even slightly injuried, I'm gonna yank him." THE POINTS those two wrestlers would have received could have easily placed Michigan up with both MSU and Cleveland State. "I'm really not worried about the team's finish right now," said Bahr. "In these early open tournaments we're looking at our balance and more on in- dividual matchups." On that account, the coach had good reason to be satisfied. Once again, Joe McFarland wrestled up to his No. 1 national ranking, giving the Wolverines their only individual championship at 126 lbs. Michigan also showed con- sistency in the upper weights with the three big men, Scott Rechsteiner (177), Kirk Trost (190), and Rob Rechsteiner (hwt.) remaining in the forefront of their divisions, placing 2nd, 2nd and 3rd respectively. GARY EFFMAN Tumblers place twelfth The Michigan men's gymnastics team finished 12th in the Windy City In- vitational in Chicago this weekend, competing against the nation's best teams. Brock Orwig, Gavin Meyerowitz and Merrick Horn, performed well for the Wolverines, adding strength and leadership to the team, according to head coach Bob Darden. Nebraska led the competition, finishing first, while Iowa placed second and Ohio State third. Michigan ended up 12th scoring a 252.95. "The Windy City was an outstanding. test for us, especially our freshman," Darden said. "All but one or two of the nation's top teams were there, in- cluding five-time national champs Nebraska." Freshmen Orwig and Meyerowitz displayed potential for the youthful Wolverine squad, Darden said. Orwig placed tenth on the high bar with a score of 9.35 and Meyerowitz finished 12th on the pommel horse, also with a 9.35. Senior captain Horn excelled on the parallel bars with a 9.12 and a 12th- place finish. "We went out there to improve our overall score and I feel we achieved that overall goal," Darden continued. Michigan's next match will be next weekend in the Midwest Open, SUSAN BROSER Strawberry named top rookie NEW YORK (AP) - Outfielder Darryl Strawberry, who overcame an early season slump with the New York Mets, was named ,the National League's Rookie of the year by an overwhelming margin yesterday by the Baseball Writers Association of America. 20-29 30-39 40-49 50+ Bergeron.............4-5 7-7 3-3 1-2 Schlopy ............. 1-2 Tot 15-17 1-2 MICHIGAN ......... 4-5 Opponents...........2-2 8-9 3-5 3-3 1-2 1-2 16-19 1-1 7-10 Punting GP No Bracken ............11 40 Team.............. 11 2 Rogers.......... S. Smith .......... K. Smith......... Garrett............ Mercer ............ Rice ............... Armstrong........ Logue........... Perryman....... White ............. Hall ............... S. Johnson ......... Bean............ Wilcher......... Harbaugh ......... Att 192 94 98 80 30 35 20 13 16 20 11 1 1 1 2 Yds 916 653 517 335 151 140 91 85 72 64 17 9 9 -2 -15 Avg 4.8 6.9 5.3 4.2 5.0 4.0 4.6 6.5 4.5 3.2 1.5 9.0 9.0 -2.0 -7.5 TD 9 9 3 0 1 2 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 Yds Avg Long 1487 37.2 54 15 . 7.5 15 MICHIGAN.......... 11 42 1502 35.8 Opponents........... 11 62 2451 39.5 Returns 54 58 Cooper...... G. Johnson .: Cohen ......... Gant ...... K. Smith ...... S. Johnson .. Rogers. . Wilcher ....... White....... PR/Yds/Avg/LP KOR/Yds/Avg/LP 29/338/fl.7/414 6/43/7.2/12 4/60/15.0/28 1/25/25.0/25 1/10/10.0/10 4/108/27.0/38 2/28/14.0/20 1/25/25.0/25 1/23/23.0/23 1/14/14.0/14 MICHIGAN........614 3042 4.9 28 Opponents ......... 360 1051 2.9 5 Passing PA PC Int Pct S. Smith...........180 97 7 .539 Hall..............25 13 2 .520 Harbaugh.......... 5 2 0 .400 MICHIGAN ... 37/416/11.2/41 13/258/19.8/38 Opponents..... 11/35.3/3.2/13 39/675/17.3/29 Libels win We won. After three years of getting our butts kicked, the Daily Libels finally beat the Ohio State Lantern in football, winning 12-6 Friday night at the Tartan Turf. 4 MICHIGAN........210 Opponents.........323 112 177 9 18 Receiving I Going hom Thanksgivi Take somethin just your dirtyI T-shirts.... travel sweatsuits....d beer mugs....a Monday-Friday 8: Saturday 9:30-5:00 Nelson .......... Bean........... Rogers.......... Markray .......... K. Smith......... Garrett ............ Carthens ...:...... Armstrong ...... Kattus.......... S. Johnson....... G. Johnson. White ............. No Yds Avg 38 474 12.5 26 375 14.4 18 137 8.6 8 251 31.4 7 49 7.0 5 24 4.8 3 59 19.7 3 13 4.3 2 17 8.5 1 19 19.0 1 12 12.0 1 7 7.0 .533 .548 TD 3 0 4 0 1 1 0 . 0 0' 0 Quarterback Rob Pollard scored the Libels' first touchdown on the six-yard run to make the score 6-0. The Lantern tied the game on a pass to make the score 64. The Lantern tied the game on a pass from a guy with a beard to some 4 other guy, but Pollard found basketball reporter Jim Dworman open in the end zone for an 11-yard scoring strike mid- way through the second half to give the Daily its third victory of the year. I WE'LL PAY YOU' SHAPE THIS TO GET INTO SUMMER. ne for ing? g home laundry. besidesI el bags.... oodle pads.... nd more. If you have at least two years of college left, you can spend six weeks at our Army ROTC Basic Camp this summer and earn approximately $600. And if you qualify, you can enter the ROTC 2- Year Program this fall and receive up to $1,000 a year. But the big payoff happens on graduation day. That's when you receive an officer's commission. So get your body in shape (not to mention your Innly emnt 30-5:30 )0 1:1M I "