A Page 8 - The Michigan Daily - Sunday, October 21, 1984 By Douglas B. Levyv NoRosesfor Blue... but there's hope for a bowl IOWA CITY Special to the Daily You know your team is hurting when Fiesta Bowl official Art Grandprix, comments, "Things are looking pretty grim for Michigan's chances of receiving a bowl bid." Grandprix uttered thoseprophetic words during the fourth quarter of Michigan's dreadful, 26-0 loss to Iowa. Grandprix made the trip to Iowa City to check out two prospective Fiesta Bowl participants. What Grandprix, and a national television audience wit- nessed, were two fine defenses. Yes, the Wolverines proved once and for all, that they can still lav defense with anybody. But the offense - what a profound difference. Iowa's Chuck Long, Ron- nie Harmon, and Owen Gill are future professionals of NFL calibre. Russell Rein, Chris Zurbrugg, Rick Rogers and Eddie Garrett are fine athletes, but who toil for an offense that is, yes, outmoded. "It was very simple, very simple," emphasized Hawkeye cornerback Nate Creer of Michigan's offensive attack. "You could look at them from six years ago and they're still running the exact same plays. They live and die with what they do best." Michigan football '84 is dead and buried. Barely afloat, the Wolverines are mired at 4-3, 3-2 in the Big Ten. There will be no Rose Bowl to look forward to, nor the Sugar and according to Fiesta bigwig, Grandprix, no Fiesta. Well, the Holiday, Hall of Fame and Citrus Bowls also had representatives in Iowa City. And right now they're probably praying for Michigan to somehow finish at 7-4 or 6-5 so they can extend the Wolverines one of their precious bids. Do you want to see Michigan in the '84 Holiday Bowl? Did UCLA allow its basketball team to participate in the NIT last winter after years in the NCAA tournament? - No! Forget it, Michigan's director of Athletics Don Canham has far too much class for such childish antics. Michigan will go to a post-season bowl game. Canham and Wolverine head coach Bo Schembechler agree that Michigan owes a bowl trip to its seniors. By now, everyone knows that the last time Schembechler was blanked was at Minnesota in 1977. Seven, long years ago. "Yes, they (the Hawkeyes) are good," admitted a shaken Schembechler, "not quite that good. Not good enough to shut us out." One consistency with Schembechler; he has only one goal for his football team, to achieve a Rose Bowl berth by virtue of capturing the Big Ten title. Anything less to Bo, is plain and simply a failure, a misguided effort, an un- forgivable fault that must be corrected. Yesterday's game was for the Rose Bowl and Michigan lost. Iowa, on the other hand, is the most legitimate of powerhouses. The Hawkeye offense is explosive averaging over 31 points per game. Iowa's defense has not allowed a touchdown in three consecutive games. Both units are improving on a weekly basis. Iowa's two losses this year came at the hands of Penn State and Ohio State, in weeks two and three of the campaign. In Iowa City, those losses are long forgotten. _ Consider for a moment, if you will, the great strides the Ohio State Buckeyes have made in recent years. One needs a program to remember what bowl games the clowns from Columbus have participated in recent years. Bo will be back. His talent has worn thin this season and '84 will prove to be the leanest Michigan year in memory, but the future will be as bright as the past. Hey, the Holiday Bowl won't be so bad after all. 'M' Go Blue! Blue glued Michigan offense stymied (Continued from Page 1) "Our offense didn't play up to par," explained tight end Sim Nelson. "We didn't make any big plays again." ACTUALLY the Wolverines were making big plays in the negative sense all game long. The problems started early. After stopping Iowa on three plays to open the contest, Gilvanni Johnson misjudged a wind-blown punt and fumbled it away near mid-field. The Hawkeyes gave that one back on a fumbled snap a few plays later, but played errorless ball the rest of the way. THEY DOMINATED the opening quarter, holding the football for over 13 minutes. Most of that time came during their 81-yard touchdown drive that opened the scoring. A key play during that possession was a second-down run by Ronnie Harmon on which he fumbled into the arms of Michigan cornerback Brad Cochran. But the officials questionably ruled that Harmon was down before coughing up the ball. Soon afterwards, the Hawkeyes were on top to stay. In the second quarter, Mitchell grab- bed his first interception and returned it 20 yards to set up a 29-yard field goal Hospital releases injured cheerleader Special to the Daily IOWA CITY-Michigan cheerleader Andy Fogel was treated and released from University Hospital here yester- day after a national television audience watched him leave the field on a stret- cher. The game was delayed for several minutes in the fourth quarter while the injured senior from Bloom- field Hills was treated on the field. He reportedly fell from a mount onto his head and shoulder, and most of the aid given on the field was only precautionary. A spokeswoman at the hospital last night said only that he was treated and released and would not discuss his injuries. by Tom Nichol that gave Iowa a 9-0 halftime bulge. AFTER THE Hawkeye lead reached 19-0 in the fourth quarter, Schem- bechler inserted Chris Zurbrugg at quarterback. The sophomore from Alliance, Ohio could only complete four of 12 passes, but did drive the Wolverines inside the Iowa 10 in the final minute thanks to a quarterback scramble for 14 yards. However, Zurbrugg was sacked by noseguard Jon Vrieze and his fourth down toss for Vince Bean fell incom- plete as the Hawkeye fanatics screamed with delight over the shutout. "THE NUMBER one thing we didn't want to do today was turn the ball over and we didn't do that," said Schem- bechler. "Our problem all year is that we haven't been able to move the ball. It doesn't matter if you run or pass, just as long as you move the sticks. And we haven't done that." If it's any consolation, the Wolverines did gain a fan for the rest of the way. "I hope Michigan wins the rest of their football games," said Fry, "and I ho we do too." But Fry was being more than just a neighborly victor. The Hawks need Michigan, or someone else, to down the Buckeyes in order for Iowa to win the Big Ten. And who knows, with Illinois, Purdue, and Ohio State left still to play, the possibility of spoiling things for OSU may be all that Michigan has to look forward to this season.14 Associated Press Iowa fullback Owen Gill blasts past Michigan's Doug Mallory (8) and Kevin Brooks (52) for the Hawkeye's final touch- down in their 26-0 thrashing of the Wolverines yesterday. NY foursom e rips Blue SCORING MICHIGAN .................. 0 Iowa .......................... 6 0 0 0-0 3 3 14-26 SCORING PLAYS Iowa - Harmon 3-yard run (kick failed) Iowa - Nichol 29-yard field goal Iowa - Nichol 46-yard field goal Iowa - Gill 9-yard run (Nichol kick) Iowa - Long 2-yard run (Nichol kick) Garrett......... Morris ............ Perryman ......... Rein............ Zurbrugg........ Gill ............ Harmon........... Long............ 6 3 1 2 3 IOWA Att 16 27 11 25 9 3 -3 15 Yds 95 63 -22 4.2 3.0 3.0 -1.5 5.0 Avg 5.3 2.3 -2.0 0 0 0 0 0 TD 1 1 1 MICHIGAN No RECEIVING First Downs ....... Rushing (Att/yds) . Net Passing Yards. Passing (Att/Comp/Int) ... Total Yards ....... Fumbles (No/Lost) Punts (No/Avg) ... Penalties (No/Yds) ......... Time of Posession . MICH. 13 34/104 83 11/25/3 187 2/1 6/38 1/5 26:21 Iowa 18 54/126 146 14/20/0 272 2/1 4/31.8 4/35 33:39 Nelson .................... Markray .................. Bean.................... Garrett.................... IOWA Happel ................... Gill.................... Smith................. Harmon ................... Flagg ..................... 4 2 2 3 Yds 37 24 20 2 TD 0 0 0 0 TD 0 0 0 0 0 By DOUBLAS B. LEVY Special to the Daily IOWA CITY-As Hayden Fry's Hawkeyes were cruising to their 26-0 Big Ten victory over Michigan yesterday, four young Hawks stood apart from the rest. Two of the four stick out anyway, by virtue of being tailback Ronnie Harmon and fullback Owen Gill. Harmon and Gill combine with quarterback Chuck Long to give Iowa a nationally reknowned offensive backfield. THE OTHER two free safety Devon Mitchell and corner- back Nate Creer, picked off three Wolverine passes and are the unheralded anchors of a formidable Hawkeye defensive secondary. Interestingly, neither of the four stars can boast of a mid- western football heritage. Coincidentally, all four were reared in New York City. And amazingly, the trio of Gill, Mitchell and Creer graduated in the same class from the same high school-Brooklyn's Tillden High. "WE'RE ALL seniors here and we played together for three years in high school," said Creer, a senior with junior eligibility. Mitchell too, has another year of eligibility, while Gill's college eligibility expires at the end of the 1984 cam- paign. Incredibly, Tillden High never captured its class of the City football championship while the tremendous trio performed there. According to Creer, Tillden lost in the finals both in 1979 and '80 to archrival Midwood. "Ha-ha, my team won it every year," claimed tailback Harmon, who attended Bayside High in the burrough of Queens. Harmon arrived in Iowa City one year after his pals from Brooklyn, and after two years as a top Big Ten wide receiver, he has emerged as the true superstar of the Hawkeyes this season once transplanted as tailback. HARMON replaced his best friend Gill, who moved to fullback. "When we're together we play as one," said Har- No Yds 6 74 3 24 2 18 2 4 1 26 mon. "Owen is still running as a tailback. He sees and hits the holes as a tailback. Where he goes I go. I just follow him." Coming into the Michigan game, Harmon was playing follow the leader to perfection. In six games he had rushed for 664 yards on 5.8 yards per carry. Fullback Gill, meanwhile, was averaging 5.6 yards per rush and had 447 yards on the year. Against Michigan, Harmon was once again the workhorse, carrying the ball 27 times, but for only 63 yards. Gill had a strong day with 85 yards rushing on 16 carries. Both scored touchdowns. Harmon's was a three-yard burst putting Iowa up, 6-0. Gill's was a ten-yard power play up thN middle which buried the Wolverines at 19-0. Though the running back's touchdown runs put the points on the scoreboard, no single play broke Michigan's back more than Devon Mitchell's 75 yard interception return. Russell Rein's third down and goal pass was intended for Vince Bean but Mitchell nabbed it at the one-yard line and started running. Rick Rodgers tackled Mitchell 75 yards later, at which time the free safety was lost for the game with a shoulder injury. Mitchell had intercepted an earlier Rein pass and returned that one twenty yards giving him 95 yards in interception returns. On the afternoon, the Rein-Zurbrugg combos amassed only 83 yards through the air. Due to the injury, Mitchell was unavailable after the game. According to Harmon, the four (including his younger brother Kevin who is a quarterback) are particularly close because there are so few Hawkeyes 'from the east coast "I think people are scared to take the chance on coming to Iowa. It's a kind of slow, definately a big culture shock," said Har- mon. The ones shocked yesterday'were the Wolverines thanks to the "east coast kids"-Creer, Mitchell, Gill and Harmon. PASSING MICHIGAN RETURNS Att Comp Int Rein .............13 7 2 Zurbrugg .......... 12 4 1 Yds TD 40 0 43 0 MICHIGAN RUSHING IOWA Att Comp Int Yds Long .............. 20 14 0 146 MICHIGAN At Yds Rogers ............ 19 55 TD 0 Morris ................. S.Johnson............. IOWA Smith ..................... Punts Kickoffs (No/Yds) (No/Yds) 3/19 2/5 Punts Kickoffs (No/Yds) (No/Yds) 1/2 Avg TD 2.9 0 BIG TEN ROUNDUP Spartans stumble on bad boot, 23-2Q EAST LANSING, (AP) - Ohio State tailback Keith Byars rushed for 121 yards and a touchdown and Rich Spangler kicked three field goals yesterday, but only a shanked field goal attempt by Michigan State's Ralf Mojsiejenko with three seconds left gave the No. 8 Buckeyes a 23-20 Big Ten victory over the upset-minded Spartans. Michigan State's defense forced the Buckeyes to punt and the Spartans took over the ball 39 yards from the goal line with 2:56 remaining in the game. The Spartans moved the ball to the 23 before quarterback Dave Yarema was sacked for a 3-yard loss, setting up a fourth and 13 situation. Mojsiejenko attempted a 43-yard field goal from the left hash mark, but shanked the ball low and to the right of the goal posts. Wisconsin 20, Indiana 16 BLOOMINGTON, (AP)-A 4-yard touch- down run by holder Bob Kobza on a fake field goal attempt snapped a 10-10 tie and sparked Wisconsin to a 20-16 Big Ten Conference foot- ball victory over winless Indiana yesterday. It was the Hoosiers' 12th straight loss over two seasons, the longest in the school's 100 year football history. The go-ahead touchdown capped a 10- minute drive in the third quarter and came seven minutes after the Badgers' leading rusher, Larry Emery, went out with a knee injury. Emery had rushed for 127 yards and the fir- st Wisconsin touchdown in the second quar- ter. After he left with 9:46 to go in the third period, fullback Joe Armentrout and backup tailback Marck Harrison picked up the Badgers' ground game. Illinois 34, Purdue 20 CHAMPAIGN (AP) - Illinois quarterback Jack Trudeau fired two touchdown passes yesterday and guided the Illini to a 34-20 Big Ten football victory over Purdue. The loss stripped the Boilermakers of their share of the Big Ten lead, and kept alive the Illini's hopes of successfully defending their 1983 conference championship. Trudeau connected with David Boatright in the first quarter on a 52-yard touchdown pass, then hit David Williams with a 35-yard scoring pass in the third quarter. He also moved Illinois into position for a one-yard touchdown plunge by Thomas Rooks in the first quarter and a five-yard TD run by Ray Wilson in the fourth quarter. Trudeau completed 17 of 27 passes for 321 yards. Purdue's Jim Everett was 23 for 51 and 289 yards, but had two potential touch- down passes intercepted-one deflected out of the end zone and into the hands of Mike Heaven in the second quarter, and another picked off by Craig Swoope at the Illini goal line in the fourth quarter. NCAA ROUNDUP: South Carolina dumps Notre Dame, 36-32 SOUTH BEND, (AP) - Backup quarter- back Mike Hold scored two fourth quarter early in the fourth quarter. His 33-yard run on a third down broken pass play capped a 75- vaird maroh tn nin u nth Cornlina ahead to yards short of a winning score. After the fumble, Arkansas moved 99 yards for a touchdown, which came one a 54-yard Y:n. .rr ruruue.................s - 4 3 I I