Wrestling Wolverine Open Saturday, 9 a.m. Crisler Arena The Michigan Daily SPORTS Monday, November 11, 1985 Volleyball vs. Ferris State Tuesday, 7 p.m. CCRB Page 7 Boiler blowout First Downs........... Rushing (Att/yds) ....... Passing (Att/Comp/Int) . Passing-net yards ...... Fumbles (No/Lost) ...... Total Yards ............. Possession Time....... PURDUE 7 21/8 29/12/2 96 3/1 104 19:41 MICH. 25 60/275 21/14/0 276 3/1 551 MICH. - Schramayr falls on ball in end zone for safety Midi-Glilette 36-yard FG MICH-65-yard TD run by Webb (Moons kick) RUSHING MICHIGAN Att Schramayr .............. 1 Huber ................... 1 PASSING MICHIGAN AttComp Harbaugh.............13 12 Zurbrugg ............. 8 2 PURDUE Everett...............22 12 Huber ................1 0 RECEIVING MICHIGAN -16 -16.0 0 5 5.0 0 SCORING Purdue ........................ 0 0 MICHIGAN ................... 7 21 SCORING PLAYS MICH-Nine-yard TD pass Harbaugh to F Gillette kick) MICH-34-yard TD pass Harbaugh to Kol (Gillette kick) MICH-One-yard TD run by White (Gille MICH-85-yard TD pass Harbaugh to Kol (Gillette kick) MICH-Two-yard TD run by Wilcher kick) 40:19 Webb..................9 Morris .................. 12 Wilcher ................. 7 0 0- 0 White ................... 9 9 10-47 Perryman ............... 10 Harbaugh ............... 5 Holloway ................ 5 Kattus Zurbrugg ................ 2 Rein .................... 1 lesar PURDUE Everett ................. 8 te kick) Medlock ................ 4 esar Wallace ................. 3 Grant ................... 2 (Gillette Foster................. I Carter................... 1 Yds 97 73 54 39 16 -8 -2 6 0 -12 7 5 11 6 2 Avg 10.8 6.1 7.7 4.3 1.6 -1.6 -.4 3.0 0.0 -1.5 1.8 1.7 5.5 6.0 2.0 TD 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Kolesar ................ Kattus .................. Campbell................ White ................... Morris...... ......... Higgins ................. Perryman............... Brown................... Jokisch.................. No 4 2 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 Int 0 0 1 0 Yds 148 26 13 -2 4 30 11 8 38 Yds TD 233 3 43 0 96 0 Long 65 17 13 6 4 30 11 8 38 GRIDDE PICKS I Daily Photo by MATT PETRIE Michigan left wing Jeff Urban watches a scoring chance slip away as Michigan State forward Danton Cole steals the puck from him during Friday's 5-4 Michigan victory. Urban, a freshman, tallied a second-period assist Friday and a third-period goal in the 6-2 Spartan victory on Saturday. BLUE UPSETS FIRST-PLACE MSU s~ i By SCOTT G. MILLER The Good, the Bad and the Ugly is the appropriate title for this weekend's Michigan versus Michigan State ice hockey feature. Michigan split the series, winning 5- 4 at Yost Ice Arena on Friday and losing 6-2 on Saturday at Munn Arena. THE GOOD part of the feature was the display of excellent hockey on Friday night. The Wolverines' inten- sity and hard work ended the Spar- tans' dominance over Michigan, which included a six-game winning streak and victories in 15 of the last 16 meetings. "We wanted it more than in the past," said Michigan coach Red Berenson. "I don't think we were hoping to win as much as we were ex- pecting to win." The Wolverines could have quit early when Michigan State forward Mike Donnelly from behind the Michigan net, found freshman scoring sensation Joe Murphy streaking through the slot. Murphy, only ten seconds after the opening face off, poked it by goalie Tim Makris, who was out of position looking for the puck. Makris kept his composure despite allowing the easy goal. "I THOUGHT to myself 'it went in and it's one mistake.' What can you do, it was a rotten mistake," said the Wolverine netminder. "I knew we would come back and when we tied it, it was a new game again." Michigan took full advantage of Brad Jones' tying goal. Brad Mc- Caughey, Chris Seychel and Todd Carlile added first period tallies to give the Wolverines a 4-3 lead. Jeff Norton and Brad McCaughey combined for the most important play of the season in the third period. Nor- ton blocked a shot in the Michigan end and passed the puck from his knees to McCaughey who broke in all alone on Spartan goalie Bob Essensa. Mc- Caughey faked the shot, skated by a sprawled-out Essensa, and tucked in a backhander for the game winner. "I WAS thinking about all the other opportunities I did not score on earlier in the game as I skated in on the breakaway," said McCaughey. "I went in and I saw him coming way out. I knew I was going to deke him, and the puck went in for me." The victory was by far Michigan's with Spa rtans most important of the year and possibly Berenson's finest moment as Wolverine coach. "The win has to rank right up there with the Russian game (Michigan beat Spartak, 5-4, last season)," said Berenson. "But as far as emotion, rivalry and the league, I don't think there is going to be anything better, until we win the league title, than beating Michigan State." MICHIGAN won not only the game but also the ugly phase of the weekend feature. With Michigan State furiously attempting to tie in the closing seconds, Spartan right winger Mitch Messier pushed Makris as he tied up the puck. McCaughey defen- ded his goaltender. "He (Messier) was sticking our goalie so I came in and gave him a lit- tle shove, a little punch," said the Ann Arbor Pioneer graduate. "He turned around, came at me, and dropped his gloves. "He hit me when it was all over. The referees had me held, and he reached over them and hit me." THE BAD part of the feature was the Spartan attack on Saturday. After a scoreless first period, Michigan State scored five unanswered goals. Joe Murphy and Mike Donnelly scored two goals apiece. As the Spar- tans fired numerous shots on the Wolverine net, the vaunted Michigan offense managed a mere 17 shots on goalie Norm Foster. "We were much more psyched up as a team tonight (Saturday)," said Foster. "There is nothing like a Michigan versus Michigan State series. You can win an NCAA title, but if you don't beat Michigan it doesn't make it all worth while." While Michigan's offense may have lacked intensity, the goaltenders were brilliant. Tim Makris made 22 saves, many of the spectacular variety, before giving way to Bob Lindgren for the start of the third period. Makris was pulled to deliver a message to his teammates. "I wanted the team to realize that its performance was not fair to the goalies," said Berenson. "Our goalies were carrying the team. The score was flattering us after the second period." It is said that winning takes away hunger, making it nearly impossible to repeat. But Tim Berry has put that theory to rest. Berry's hunger should have been diminished after winning Griddes last week, and feasting on his choice of a full-tray Sicilian pizza, or Chicago stuffed pizza, or whole sub sandwich from Pizza Express. But he became the first two-time champ this year, taking back-to-back Griddes titles with a 17-2-1 record. He will now have two Dooley's guest passes, good for a total of four people. 1. MICHIGAN at Minnesota (pick total points) 2. Indiana at Illinois 3. Iowa at Purdue 4. Wisconsin at Ohio State 5. Northwestern at Michigan State 6. Notre Dame at Penn State 7. Auburn at Georgia 8. Air Force at BYU 9. Arkansas at Texas A&M 10. Toledo at Bowling Green 11. Maryland at Clemson 12. Southern Cal at Washington 13. Southern Mississippi at Alabama 14. Mississippi State at LSU 15. 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