4 Page 8 - The Michigan Daily - Sunday, September 9, 1984 Defense KO's Kosar; Harbaugh shines By KATIE BLACKWELL There were no breaks but bad breaks for Miami's ace arm, Bernie Kosar yesterday. Kosar's famed passing talents were inexplicably missing and never found as he allowed Michigan newcomer Jim Har- baugh to steal the show. Kosar came to Michigan sporting 629 passing yar- ds on the year, a 64.8 success rate and more impor- tantly, two convincing wins over very good teams - Auburn and Florida. Luckily for Michigan, the 6-5 sophomore quarterback could not improve on those statistics. Kosar struggled to gain 228 yards in the air. His completion percentage plummeted to 42 per- cent and he tossed six of his 38 passes to the boys in blue. FOR MIAMI fans, Kosar's display was dishear- tening. For Kosar, it was quite distressing. "It was the worst game I've ever had," said the dejected young man. But regardless of his play yesterday, Kosar, a serious Heisman trophy possibility, is still the object of respect from his peers. "He's good," stated Michigan tackle Mike Ham-. merstein, who snagged a Kosar screen pass early in the fourth quarter. "Everybody has an off day." Wolverine linebacker Rodney Lyles concurred, "Bernie's a gambler. I think he's got a lot of con- fidence." Perhaps Kosar gambled a bit too much with the Michigan pass defense. Lyles tied a SCORING MICHIGAN ..........................6 0 6 10-22 Miami ...............................0 0 7 7-14 SCORING PLAYS MICH-Perryman 6-yard run (kick missed) White ........ MIAMI-E. Brown 32-yard pass from Kosar (Cox kick) Perryman .... MICH-Perryman 3-yard run (run failed) Morris ....... MICH-Perryman 1-yard run (Bergeron kick) iarbaugh .... MIAMI-Shakespeare 44-yard pass from Kosar (Cox Logue ........ kick) MICH-Bergeron 27-yard field goal MICH MIAMI Highsmith .... First downs ....... 20 23 D. Oliver .... Rushing (att/Yds) . 62/179 32/167 Williams ..... Net Passing Yards. 163 228 Kosar ........ Michigan record with his three interceptions on the day. Even he was caught off-guard with Kosar's inef- ficient passing. "THE LAST two (interceptions) I was very sur- prised," he said. "He just threw the last two to me and I just had to concentrate on catching them. Those were two nicely thrown balls." If Kosar got the bad breaks, then the Wolverines' junior quarterback got the good ones. Harbaugh completed his first pass of 1984 - an 11-yarder to split end Vince Bean and seemed only to gain poise and confidence as the game progressed. He dished out 163 yards in the air connecting on 11 of his 21 pass attem- pts. Granted, Harbaugh threw two interceptions, but again got the breaks as Miami could not capitalize on the gifts. Bo Schembechler praised his new leader following the game. "I think what you saw out there was a youngster that's going to be a great quarterback. How'd you like to start your career against Kosar and Miami?" he said, obviously pleased. "My only criticism is that he hurried some of his throws. I thought he handled himself quite well." HARBAUGH, though was not entirely pleased about his debut. "It (the victory) was a great team effort," he explained. "Personally, I made a lot of mistakes out there and they'll show up at the game films. I really don't think I played all that well." Hurricanes blown away Over and over again, Harbaugh gave credit for the win to his teammates and coaches, especially the of- fensive line that gave him ample time to pass, and Michigan's strong defense that kept getting him the ball, via eight Hurricane turnovers. Yet, Harbaugh's play drew sighs of relief from skeptical and worried Michigan fans. Most noteworthy is Harbaugh's ability to take-some hard hits. He's not afraid to fight for yardage or throw a block. Early in the fourth quarter, Harbaugh was intercepted by Miami's defensive end Julio Lor- tes, who returned it 19 yards where he ran into the 6-3, 202-pound frame of the Wolverine quarterback and hit the turf. With Harbaugh taking over there was concern over the loss of Steve Smith's outstanding speed in Michigan's option play. Although the option was run just a few times yesterday, without great success, Harbaugh showed potential as a scrambler. He carried the ball eight times, once for a gain of twelve yards. Though Harbaugh was not thrilled with his after- noon outing, his performance has won the respect of many fans and members of the media. It's not easy to replace the likes of an all-around talent such as Steve Smith. But Harbaugh did it and he did it in style. He faced a national champion quarterback and came away the winner. RETURNS 4 4 4 RUSHING MIAMI Kosar ..................... 38/16/6 228 2 MICHIGAN Att Yds Avg TD 27 17 8 8 2 89 79 24 -7 -6 126 29 21 -9 3.3 4.6 3.0 -0.8 -0.3 7.9 4.1 5.3 -1.8 0 3 0 0 0 RECEIVING MICHIGAN Bean ...................... Nelson .................... White..................... S. Johnson ................. No. 4 3 3 1 Yds 81 44 22 16 TD 0 0 0 0 MICHIGAN Punts Kickoffs No/Yd No/Yd Gant ................ 1/14 Morris ...............1/23 S. Johnson ........... .. 1/20 D. Mallory......... Lyles ................ Cochran........... Mike Hammerstein Int No/Yd 1/12 3/20 1/2 1/16 MIAMI 16 7 4 5 0 0 0 0 MIAMI Passing (Att/ Comp/int) .... Total Yards ....... Fumbles (No/Lost) Punts (No/Avg) ... Penalties (No/Yds) Time of Possession 21/11/2 342 0/0 7/43.4 5/35 35:52 38/16/6 395 2/2 3/43.3 4/22 24:08 PASSING MICHIGAN Att/Comp/ H.t Harbaugh................. 21/11/2 Shakespeare.............. lighsmith ................. E. Brown .................. W. Smith................. Oliver.................. Williams ................ 6 4 2 2 1 111 19 52 33 9 4 0 1 0 0 0 MIAMI Perriman ............3/21 Kintigh .............. Penny ............... Fullington.......... Cortes ............. 1/14 1/11 1/16 1/19 Yds TD 163 0 Wolverines sail past Hurricanes Daily Photo by DAN HABIB Wolverine QB Jim Harbaugh looks for a receiver during his team's 22-14 win over top ranked Miami. Quick on theDraw Byv Mike McGr11i (Continued from page 1) passing day, well below his success ratio of 64.8 percent entering the game. Kosar also had 'one of the Hurricanes' two fumbles for an unheard of eight turnovers. "You can't win football games after turning the ball over as many times as we did," said first-year Miami coach Jimmy Johnson. "I have no excuses for this loss. We simply did not play well enough to win." Nonetheless Miami had an oppor- tunity to avoid defeat in the final quar- ter. On a fourth-and-10 play with a little more than six minutes to play, Kosar rolled left to avoid the rush and hit wide receiver Stanley Shakespeare for a 44- yard TD, cutting the Michigan lead to 19-14. THE PLAY annoyed Schembechler, who thought his defense had Kosar in a hole. He was able to joke about it later, though. "Yeah, I didn't like that at all," Schembechler said playfully after the game. "They shouldn't score on that. He (Kosar) shouldn't do that. That's not right." After a Michigan drive stalled on its own 44, Miami got the ball back on its nine-yard-line with 3:37 to play. On the first play from scrimmage Lyles step- ped in front of a Kosar pass at the 22, and returned it to the 11. Bob Bergeron turned the miscue into three points and a 22-14 lead after the Michigan offense failed to push the ball across the goal line. MIAMI GOT the ball back with just over a minute to play, its only hope a quick touchdown and two-point conver- sion for the tie. But the omnipresent Lyles shattered that scenario with his final interception on the Miami 41. Michigan quarterback Jim Harbaugh kneeled down on the final three plays of the game and the Miami juggernaut had at last been crumbled. The year- long joy ride had ended. But Michigan's own fortunes could be on the rise. Harbaugh's debut put to rest doubts about his ability at the helm. The junior connected on 11-of-21 passes for 163 yards, including a 45- yarder to senior split end Vince Bean. Harbaugh was picked off twice, a paltry total compared to Kosar's six. Still he was dissatisfied. "I REALLY don't think I played all that well," said Harbaugh. "I think I was rushing my passes a little." Schembechler agreed but promised his field-leader would be "all right ... I can almost guarantee he'll be better next week." Perryman ... three trips to end zone The Michigan running attack demon- strated its depth as neither of last year's starters - Rick Rogers and Ed- die Garrett - touched the ball. Bob Perryman, who replaced a lame-kneed Garrett at fullback, scored three times on runs of six, three and one yards. He and tailback Gerald White combined for 168 yards. More importantly, neither coughed up the ball. BUT THE REAL story of the day was the Wolverine defense. Schembechler heaped praise on defensive coordinator Gary Moeller for devising a strategy to stop Kosar and Miami.. "I think that Moeller did a great job," Schembechler said of his assistant. "He put that defense together. I thought he was nuts. He knew what he was doing and it paid off." Miami's Johnson agreed that his team had problems with Michigan's defensive formations. "They did some things in this game that we did not see in last year's film," he said. "Specifically they disguised their defensive coverages very well. At times they would show blitz and then not come. They also blitzed without tipping it off." HURRICANE wide receiver Eddie Brown, who had two receptions and one touchdown, said the Wolverine defense was quicker than either Auburn's or Florida's. "They really get to the ball quick," said Brown 'of Michigan. "They're real headhunters. They get to the-ball quick.". The fleetest of foot may have beeni Lyles. A linebacker, Lyles acted as a. nickel back in passing situations. It was a defensive gamble that returned han- dsome dividends. Lyles had half of the Michigan interceptions. Doug Mallory, Brad Cochran and Mike Hammerstein had the others. Uncharacteristically, Michigan did have problems with the run. WHILE KOSAR suffered through what he called his "worst game ever,'" fullback Alonzo Highsmith ripped off huge chunks of yardage in both halves. Highsmith ended up with 126 yards and a 7.9 average per carry." Some of those runs ripping through there were scary," commeted Schembechler. But not nearly as scary as the way Michigan shut down the Miami offense. Until yesterday Kosar and Miami had come to be thought of as an invincible terror. But now the squall that was the Miami Hurricanes has, at least for the present, been reduced to the reserved calm of defeat. And that new rumbling on the horizon you hear could very well be a storm brewing in Ann Arbor. Stopping National Champs . . ... Good start for 'D' N ine months and six days had passed since it had last been on the field, but the Michigan defense was as powerful as it usually is against the defending national champions yesterday. Miami, , ,with its potent passing attack led by southern Florida's newest glamor boy, Bernie Kosar, presented an especially difficult assignment for the Wolverine defenders. But just as it had in its last outing against Auburn in the Sugar Bowl, Michigan came up with a formidable game plan and played with the tenacity it needed to stop one of the country's most powerful offenses. The Wolverines gave up considerable chunks of yardage both in the air and on the ground. But in typical Michigan fashion, the defense came up with the big plays that limited the Hurricanes' scoring output to two touchdowns. More big plays, in fact, than anyone could have expected - six intercep- tions, two fumble recoveries and a stop of Miami on fourth-and-four at the 17 early in the final quarter. "I thought we'd get some interceptions, but not this many," said coach Bo Schem- bechler. The six pickoffs tied the all-time Michigan record and was triple the amount that Kosar had thrown in the first two games this season. Defensive coordinator Gary Moeller devised a scheme to try to confuse Kosar by giving him coverage he had never before seen. Moeller had linebacker Rod- ney Lyles playing a rover position which allowed him to drop back into the pass coverage, where he gathered in three Kosar aerials. "The interceptions weren't that tough. I don't know if they thought they could get it over me or what," said Lyles, a native of Miami whose high school coach now heads up the Hurricane offensive line. "I think with the coverage we used we were more Lyles of a challenge to Bernie." The different look was all a part of Moeller's plan. "We had some changeups for them," he said. "We were able to get him with a few blitzes early to move them back. Then we tried to fake blitzes in the second half." A new look is nothing new, though, for Michigan's defense. Moeller devised the wisebone-stopping formations that held Auburn in check in January. "They did some things in this game that we did not see in last year's films," said Miami coach Jimmy Johnson, who suffered his first defeat as a Hurricane. "Specifically, they disguised their defensive coverages very well."' Nothing new to Kosar The only person that didn't feel that Michigan's defensive strategy was devasting was the victim, Kosar. "(The coverages were) nothing different than what I've seen the last year-and-a-half," he said dejectedly after the game. Indeed yesterday's turnovers may have been the result of a long-overdue bad day by Kosar. Whatever the cause though, the Wolverines need to avoid giving up the bombs in order to remain successful. Both of the Hurricanes' scores came on long passes. The first was a 32- yard toss to a wide open Eddie Brown and the other a 44-yard prayer to Stanley Shakespeare on fourth and 10. Michigan defensive backs have a reputation of playing well off the receivers at all times in order to avoid the big play and in the future, they may not find the ball floating into their arms with such frequency. "One thing I know about defensing Kosar is for the cornerbacks to go deep into the corners when the quarterback is flushed (forced out of the pocket)," said Schembechler. "He was flushed on the two touchdown passes. In those 4 4 . A 4 11 A Daily Photo by DAN HABIB Miami's Alvin Ward tries his hand at a chokehold on Michigan's Joe Gray (92). In his eagerness to assert his point, Ward loses his helmet. Big Ten Standings Blue Banter " The three interceptions yesterday by Rodney Lyles and following the fourth-ouarter roughing-the-kicker call this t"..,. r.....,.. ,,., .__.. Ii