Page 8 - The Michigan Daily - Monday, November 4. 1985 ie 'devastates'Illini; 0 'M' still in race (Continued from Page 1 For Michigan, the fact that the gdme came down to a last second field goal exposed the Wolverines con- tinued problems on offense. Jim Har- baugh and company drove well at times, but inconsistency was a problem, as were inopportune penalties. MICHIGAN DROVE to the Illinois 20 in the second quarter, with most of the yardage coming on a 40-yard pass from White to Paul Jokisch, but on the next play, Harbaugh's pass to Jokisch at the ten was ruled a trap. Jokisch and Schembechler were upset with the call, and Jokisch was flagged for unsportsmanlike conduct, moving the ball out of field goal range at the 35- yard line. "I didn't say a word," said Jokisch, who caught six passes for 130 yards. "He told Bo I said something, and I didn't. I don't want to point fingers, but I don't know, that guy (the of- ficial)..." Schembechler agreed with his receiver, saying that "they called the penalty on Jokisch for something he didn't say. "IT WAS another case of officials, being intimidated by the home crowd, and this group was intimidated, which is standard in the Big Ten." Michigan drove to Illinois' 22-yard line just before the half, but Mike Gillette missed a 39-yard field goal in- to a strong wind. That series was also marred by a questionable pass inter- ference call against Eric Kattus that negated a big gain to John Kolesar, and was highlighted by Monte Rob- bins impromptu 23-yard run from punt formation on fourth-and-21 from the Michigan 36. "I could not believe what I was seeing," was all Schembechler could say about Robbins, who continued to have problems putting the ball in the coffin corner on punts. THE WOLVERINES took the opening kickoff in the third quarter and drove from their own 16 to Illinois' 32. Harbaugh's third down pass from there fell short, so Gillette came on and kicked a 49-yard wind- aided field goal. The 3-0 held up for only eight minutes. Keyed by short completions from Trudeau and a 42-yard run by running back Ray Wilson, the Illini drove to the Michigan 11 where they had a first and ten. As it has all season long, however, the Michigan defense rose up and stopped Illinois cold. A sack and an incomplete pass forced White to kick a 36-yard field goal that also was tipped by Heren but then slipped over the crossbar. Michigan's final drive was a classic Michigan series-thirteen running plays to one pass, and all worked beautifully until White fumbled the ball. "WE HAD the game won there," said Schembechler, "but we should have been far enough ahead where that drive would have put the game away. We could have put this game to the point where a field goal couldn't have beaten us. "Our offense would have won this game if we had not turned the ball over." Mike White also lamented his team's mistakes. "WE HAD SOME fumbles, a couple from the center, and that's not tough minded play," said the coach. "We showed some inconsistencies on of- fense, but give credit to their defense. "I'm disappointed. I don't remem- ber feeling worse after a game." Michigan coach and player respo- nse wasn't so drastic. Most were upset with the tie, but realized they had escaped a loss and were still alive in the Big Ten race. "I hate tying," Heren said, "but seeingthe situation we were in in the last four seconds, it's better than a loss." a THIS WEEK AT GUILD HOUSE 802 MONROE ANN ARBOR, MI HU5E "48104 Monday, November 4 8:00 p.m. GUILD HOUSE READING SERIES LAWRENCE SMITH and J. RADCLIFFE SQUIRES Reading from their works. L Philling it Up i November 4 6-8 p.m. November 8 Noon Forur RICE & BEANS NIGHT PROFESSOR LEMUEL JOHNSON $2 requested Eng. Lang. Lit.: Proceeds for material "Blacks, Nuclear War, and the aid to University of Michigan" m Central America. Lunch available for $1. ** >f IMUSIC EQUIPMENT SALE The 5th Annual * Nov.9th NALLI NOSE IT O"ly * * SATURDAY, NOVEMBE R 8th, 1985 10:00 A.M. - 8:00 P.M. *- H UGE STOR EW IDE SA LE - [BUY IT, LAY-IT-AWAY, OR DE R IT AT A SA LE PR ICE) ALL: aFROLAND. ENSONIQKORG,SEQUENTIAL KAI.CASIO CZOLA RIS -keyboards * PEAVEY, J.B.L., E.V., ROSE - P.A. equipment and acces. f * ~TASCAM. FOSTER,.AKAI, LEXICON, DB.XAPH EX ART TAMA PREMIER, PEAR L. LU WIG, PAISTE, SABIAN, ZILDJIAN SONOR - drums and acces. MAGISONL.ENDER, BAENEZHAMERPAUL REEDSMITH - guitars. * CROWN, CARVER, PEAVEY, E.V., I-AMP FURMAN - audio equip EVERYTHING!! * i -ALL PDLS /2OFF * ROLAND JUNO 106 . .. $695.00 * ~~~SEQ UENTAL MUL-TRAK .. 950.00 i * TAMA SWINGSTA R DR UM SETS WITH PA ISTE CYMBA LS.. . * SR EMO DR UMHEA DS 1/OFF * PAISTE CYMBALS 40% OFF * ,a IBANEZ GRAPHIC EQUALIZER #GE1502/3101 ... $175.00 each I * PURECUSSION "HEADSET" PORTABLE DRUMS * * * AKAI MG1212 RECORDER/MIXER * $ * SEQUENTIAL PROPHET 2000 KYSM.* * ~PAUL REED SMIT UITARS DON'T MISS THIS ONE! NALI MU1SIC AN EX i * "The store that nose!" * 312 So. Ashley * Ann Arbor, MI * 665-7008 By PhilNussel Bittersweet tie... ...keeps 'M'in race CHAMPAIGN W ARNING: IT has been determined that following Michigan football can be hazardous to your health, especially if you are a diehard Wolverine fan. Even sportswriters fall victim to this danger - after Saturday's ner- vewracking 3-3 tie with Illinois, I'm a wreck. I've never seen two teams blow more opportunities to win a football game. But although the contest was filled with a hundred "if only .. ." type plays, the most significant "if only.. ." literally fell on the Michigan side. If only that field goal attempt in the final seconds had hit a fraction of an inch higher on the crossbar, the Illini would have won the game. Damn, I like the way that sounds. It certainly sounds better than if only Gerald White hadn't fumbled the ball on the Illinois seven-yard line, Michigan would have won. In truth, this tie was more of a win for Michigan than a loss. Nothing changes in the Big Ten race for the 3-1-1 Wolverines - they still must win all their games and Iowa still must lose another. Michigan thus comes out of the tie, uhh, smelling like a Rose. Should Michigan and Illinois (which plays Iowa Saturday) win the rest of their contests, the Wolverines go to Pasadena since the Illini went last (1984). All is not flowery, however, for Bo Schembechler's crew in the national picture, since they will certainly fall in the polls behind undefeated Penn State and Air Force. It will be difficult to win the title with a loss and a tie (assuming Michigan can even win its final three games). Another loss will put the Wolverines in a lower prestige bowl like the Liberty or Fiesta. But right now Michigan is only concerned with the Big Ten race, and last Saturday the Wolverines were more than glad to kiss a sister - it was a helluva lot better than the kiss of death which would have resulted from a loss. Another last second defeat at the hands of a bitter rival like Illinois would have been devastating. It would have put Michigan out of the race and into the dumps with Purdue, Minnesota and Ohio State left on the docket. "We're not out of it," said Paul Jokisch, who made six grabs for 130 yards. "This team has great resolve. They say a tie is like kissing your sister, but if that's what it takes to win a Big Ten Championship, we're willing to do it because we're still in the race." One thing, though, was clear. None of the Wolverines were happy with the tie - they were relieved that they didn't lose, and it showed. "I always want to win," said assistant head coach Gary Moeller, who once coached the Illini. "I can't say that I'm down, it's still a tie." The kick-blocking Dieter Heren felt the same way. "I hate tying," he said. "But seeing the situation we faced in the last four seconds, it's better than a loss." But for the Illini, this was a crushing defeat. For them to travel to Pasadena, Ohio State must lose to Northwestern or Wisconsin and then must beat Michigan. Illinois must also beat Iowa in Iowa City. Worse yet, even if Mike White's squad finishes 7-3-1, it is doubtful that it will play on Jan. 1 (the Illini can't appear in an earlier bowl because of probation). I'm sure Schembechler and the Wolverines are all broken up about that. "I don't remember feeling worse after a game," White said moments after his son's (Chris') kick bounced off the goalpost. "It was sickening. I'm devastated. I feel bad for these kids and I feel bad that we couldn't find a way for them to win." Although some fans on both sides may disagree, this game, all in all, was truly a classic. The Hollywood script ending will be remembered for many years. It's just amazing how two teams' seasons can literally hang in the balance. The old football adage says you play to win at home and play to tie on the road. Michigan did; Illinois didn't. 4 S I Daily Photo by DAN HABIB The celebration started early for freshman placekicker Mike Gillette (left) and junior punter Monte Robbins after Gillette nailed Michigan's only points of the game with a 49-yard goal. The University of Michigan has a national reputation for excellence. 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