The Michigan Daily - Saturday, September 29, 1984 - Page 8 'M' won't spare IJ from barbecue By MIKE MCGRAW Special to the Daily BLOOMINGTON - Today's Indiana- Michigan contest is much more than just a game for the inhabitants of Bloomington. It is an event. It's the day when Hoosier fans bring applesauce and eggs to the game along with the seat cushion and binoculars. When the ritualistic tossing of the pigskin on the field takes extra meaning. YES, IT'S Pork Day, and lots and lots of pounds of all kinds of pig meat will be served outside Memorial Stadium prior to the kickoff. First-year coach Bill Mallory would probably like to transfer some of that i meat from the parking lot to his defense which has given up 119 points in In- diana's first three games of the season - all losses. "They've had a lot of problems on defense," said Wolverine coach Bo Schembechler, whom Mallory replaced as coach of Miami (Ohio) when the former came to Ann Arbor in 1969. "Teams have moved the ball on them, and we have to too." Last Saturday it was Northwestern that moved the ball all over the Hoosiers during a 40-37 Wildcat victory in Evanston. INDIANA came back in that game to take a 37-33 fourth auarter lead. but its defense could not bring home the bacon. The Hoosiers allowed NU to march 80 yards for the winning tally with three minutes remaining. Costly mistakes by the special teams cooked the Hoosiers. First they wat- ched a Wildcat kick returner, Curtis Duncan, race 99 yards for a touchdown. Then on the ensuing kickoff, Indiana fumbled away the pigskin at the five. That led to Northwestern's second touchdown in less than a minute. "WE MAKE mistakes that hurt us," said Mallory. "We give up a lot of cheap points each week. Just gifts. The soundness factor is something that will have to be imoroved." Despite the weak opponent, Schem- bechler, as usual, isn't publicly an- ticipating a Michigan slaughter. "Anytime you have a quarterback and receiver like they have, you have to figure they have a chance to win," said Schembechler, who loses tailbacks Gerald White and Rick Rogers and nose guard Al Sincich for the second week in a row to injuries. "Their biggest problem has been defensively, but their defense could rise up because our of- fense has not really generated yardage like we would like it to. Anything can happen." The quarterback Schembechler men- tioned is junior Steve Bradley. In last year's 43-18 Wolverine victory in Ann Arbor, Bradley riddled the Michigan secondary for 246 yards passing. So far this season he is averaging 306 yards per game. Bradley has, however, thrown seven interceptions. "(Bradley's) a big powerful guy that can throw extremely well," said Schembechler. "He's probably more mobile than most quarterbacks we'll meet. And-when you're 225 pounds and decide to run with the football, that's a load." BRADLEY'S prime target when he tosses the ball is senior Len Kenebrew, who ranks sixth in the nation with 19 receptions. The Hoosiers unearthed another offensive weapon last week in tailback Orlando Brown. The 6-1 senior rushed 23 times for 108 yards. But Indiana should rely today on what they do best with the ball - throw it. "I was kind of surprised, knowing my dad is mainly a running coach," said Wolverine' safety Doug Mallory, who along with brother Mike will be op- posing his father today. "We went over the scouting reports and noticed he's throwing almost 60 percent of the time. That's a big change there. I think he's trying to utilize Bradley's ability." PUT THAT 60 percent together with the missing 25 percent of the Michigan secondary in the form of injured signal caller Tony Gant, and Bradley may go hog-wild. "Offensively, I think we can handle this Michigan team," said senior center Tom Van Dyck. "I think we're starting to get in a good offensive groove and think we're going to give them a go game." 4 4 Bradley ... guides the Hoosier attack Besides adding some extra flavor to the game, there's no telling what the excitement of Pork Day can do to fire up a team. And ifIU's offense gets rolling, it could get difficult for the Wolverines to sow up their secon straight Big Ten victory. THE LINEUPS Michigan OF (95) Sim Nelson ....... (230) (79) Clay Miller........(258) (77) Bob Tabachino .... (263) (59) Art Balourdos .... (255) (73) Doug James ...... (267) (79) Mark Hammerstein (262) (25) Vince Bean........(190) (24) Steve Johnson .... (172) ( 4) Jim Harbaugh .... (202) (37) Bob Perryman .... (225) (23) Jamie Morris ..... (170) Indiana FENSE TE LT LG C RG RT SE FLK QB FB TB (82) (66) (65) (54) (58) (75) (87) (95) (10) (34) (47) DEFENSE Daily Photo by CAROL L. FRANCAVILLA Defensive back Garland Rivers (13), hangs onto Wisconsin's Larry Emery company will have their hands full against hot-handed Steve Bradley and in last week's victory as linebacker Jim Scarcelli (85) closes in. Rivers and Indiana's aerial offense today in Bloomington. (85) (66) (92) (52) (80): (57) (42): (13) ( 8) (17) (30) (43) (19) Jim Scarcelli ..... Mike Hammerstein Joe Gray ......... Kevin Brooks ..... Rodney Lyles ..... Tim Anderson .... Mike Mallory ..... Garland Rivers ... Doug Mallory ..... Ivan Hicks ........ Brad Cochran ..... Monte Robbins .... Bob Bergeron ..... (220) (239) (240) (245) (226) (218) (217) (182) (175) (180) (219) (195) (160) OLB LT MG RT OLB ILB ILB LC FS SS RC P PK (86) (98) (56) (91) (85) (37) (62) (17) ( 4) (21) (44): ( 6) ( 3) Dave Lilja.........(225) Bob Riley ......... (268) Jeff Lemirande ... (2464 Tom Van Dyck .... (248) Vince Fisher ...... (275) Kevin Allen ....... (285) Len Kenebrew .... (173) Terry Smith ...... (185) Steve Bradley .... (225) Jack Walsh........(215) Orlando Brown ... (195) Charlie Mallory .. (205 Tom Weidenbenner (237) Dave Kinniry ..... (232) Rob Schmit....... (247) Lou Cristofoli ..... (217) Mark Weiler.......(234) Joe Fitzgerald .... (223) Mike Pendleton ... (174) Christ Sigler ...... (184) Bobby Garrison .. (186) Leonard Bell......193) Chuck Razmic .... (186) Doug Smith ....... (178) '. : rue Doii/as Hoosiers can't handle*... ... a ball they can't dribble * * * * * BLOOMINGTON W E'VF ALL wondered who is the very best and who is the very worst at one time or another. Who is the best president in United States history? Who was the worst Detroit Lions head coach ever? Which is the best undergraduate university in the Midwest? Or, what is the worst fast food restaurant in Ann Arbor? Many best/worst questions can be answered, many cannot. Here's one that may prove of passing interest to Big Ten football fans. Which is the worst, the very worst, and yes, the most pathetic team in the history of Big Ten football? Wrong! It's not Northwestern. No, it's not Min- nesota. No, it's not Illinois. That's the school that cheats the most. It's the Hoosiers of Indiana. In 97 years of intercollegiate football, the Hoosiers have gone through 23 head coaches. Only two of these coaches have had winning records at Indiana, and only one of those had a winning record in the Big Ten. "Nobody gets psyched up around here for foot- ball," lamented Anthony Anderson, who covers Hoosier football for the Indiana Daily Student. "All the enthusiasm goes for basketball." Get this one. Indiana does not have an overall edge over any of its Big Ten rivals in football. Its best percentage is .412 against Iowa. The series is at 19-28-4. Michigan is 32-8 against the Hoosiers, its last loss coming in 1967. Anderson has a pretty good idea why there is no enthusiasm for football in Bloomington. It has something to do with coaching. In 1983, first-year coach, Sam Wyche, had a 3-8 record. Before Wyche, Lee Corso reigned from 1973-82, amassing an embarrassing 10-year mark of 41-68- 2, 28-52-2 in the conference. Preceding Corso was the legendary John Pont. From 1965-1972 Pont went 31-51-1. Pont is the genius who built the Northwestern Wildcat dynasty of the late 1970s. Pont's legacy is still a factor in Evanston. Apparently, Wyche did a good enough job here to get hired as head coach of the NFL Cincinnati Bengals. So the Hoosiers have their third head, man in three years, Bill Mallory, and an 0-3 record this season. "Mallory doesn't have a personality like Corso or Wyche," said Mark Alesia, sports editor of the Daily Student, "But he gets mad when his team loses. Wyche and Corso were only disappointed." Mallory has a reputation among his peers as being an excellent coach, having led winning programs at Miami of Ohio, Colorado, and Nor- thern Illinois. In a few years the Hoosiers may challenge for the Rose Bowl, right now they are a product of their pitiful past. But wait until September Everyone in Bloomington has accepted their- football team's fate, there is no excitement or an- ticipation to greet the perennial powerhouse Wolverines. But yesterday afternoon, out of nowhere, the door to a storefront burst open and out popped the head of a rosy-cheeked Hoosier, who yelled at Daily photographer Dan Habib. "Enjoy tomorrow, because we'll see you in December." Michigan plays Indiana in basketball in Decem- ber. Habib was visibly taken aback. Having been in town for a full day, and clad in Michigan maize and blue, no one had yet noticed him. Basketball is what makes this town go. Assem- bly Hall is comparable, if not finer than any basketball area in the country. Indiana's football stadium consists of two cement blocks and a car- pet with hash marks. How bad is Indiana football? Well, being a bet- ting man, I've offered approximately 25 young men from Hoosierville that I would take Indiana and the 20 point spread, reasoning that Bo Schem- bechler doesn't have the offense or defense to obliterate the Hoosiers. I haven't yet found a taker. These people are convinced that their boys are going to get wasted. The worst team in the history of the Big Ten or not, Indiana fans should take heart. Indiana holds a 9-7 series mark over Nebraska, a 7-2 advantage over Pittsburgh, and are undefeated in a total of four games against Oklahoma and Washington. Besides, it's almost basketball season. Today's game starts at 1:00 EST and can be heard on WAAM AM), WPAG (1050 AM), WWJ (950 AM), WUOM (91.7 FM),' (760 AM), and WJJX (650 AM). (1600 WJR Around the Big Ten Illinois at Iowa 12:10 p.m. EDT WHAT TO WATCH: If Illinois coach Mike White can get his team as fired up as he got Michigan State coach George Perles last week, the Illini should be able to handle the Hawkeyes in Iowa City today. The game features Iowa's offense. Hawkeye quarterback Chuck Long needs just 26 yards passing to become the ninth player in conference history to break the 5000-yard career passing plateau. Iowa tailback Ronnie Harmon is averaging 187 all-purpose yards per game. The Illini "D" is led by defensive backs Craig Swoope and Mike Heaven, last week's Big Ten defensive players of the week. Iowa's defense, which has not yet played up to its potential this season, probably won't reach it today after losing starting noseguard Hap Peterson for the year to a knee in- jury. Northwestern at Wisconsin 2:00 p.m. EDT WHAT TO WATCH: No, it was not a misprint. Northwestern actually did win last Saturday. But, alas, such miracles don't occur every week. The Wildcats should be in for a rude awakening today at Wisconsin. The Badgers proved themselves as a strong club last week against Michigan. Runningback Larry Emery rambled through the Wolverinie secondary all af- ternoon, picking up a Big Ten season- high 185 yards. Quarterback Mike Howard and receiver Al Toon should have a field day against UN's porous pass defense. Wildcat QB Sandy Schwab is one of his team's few shining stars. Schwatl threw for 328 yards and two touchdowns last week, but that was against Indiana. The Badgers' veteran "D" is the league's second best. Ohio State at Minnesota 8:10p.m. EDT WHAT TO WATCH: Perhaps the biggest mismatch of the weekend takes place at The Metrodome in Min- neapolis, where powerful Ohio State plays lowly Minnesota. The Buckeyes have one of the nation's top rushing attacks, led by tailback Keith Byars, a strong /r " ; Grastneau Purdue at Michigan State sued for 3:42 p.m. EDT You know she's a beauty, You think that she's nice, A DAILY PERSONAL is a great way to 4 $500,000 NEW YORK (AP) - Defensive end Mark Gastineau and quarterback Ken O'Brien of the New York Jets were sued for a total of $500,000 yesterday by a New, Jesev man who claimed the WHAT'TOWATCH: Two evenly matched teams take to the gridiron this after- noon at East Lansing. Michigan State hosts Purdue in a series that has always been close. The two teams have met 38 times each winning 18 games and tying twice. Despite a dismal effort at Illinois last Saturday, MSU has the second best I hp~In hrp.k the inr p -I i -