Page 8 - The Michigan Daily --Monday, November 11, 1985 Kolesar: shades of A.C. in freshman receiver 44 By MIKE REDSTONE When John Kolesar was a freshman at Westlake High School in Westlake, Ohio, he played in pickup football games with friends from school. The youngsters named their favorite pass play, the bomb, after their favorite receiver. There was the "A.C. left," and the "A.C. right." At the time, Anthony Carter was in his junior year as an All-American flanker for the Michigan Wolverines. JUST FOUR years later, Kolesar finds himself running those same kin- ds of routes on the same Michigan turf that Carter blazed across for four straight years. Saturday against Purdue, the frehsman flanker had his finest game of a budding Michigan career. Kolesar was on the receiving end of two Jim Harbaugh touchdown passes, and he caught two other aerials for a total of 148 yards. He is now averaging a whopping 28 yards per catch this year. Not a bad afternoon's work for a guy whose goal for 1985 was to make the Wolverine's travelling team. "I WAS waiting for my first touch- down all year," said Kolesar, who pulled in a 34-yard Harbaugh pass in the second quarter for his first score of the year. "I caught the pass at the four yard line with a guy (cornerback Cris Dishman) right on me. I knew I had to get into the endzone because that would be my first touchdown." Kolesar's success Saturday was due partly to his being open, partly to his speed, and partly to some mistakes by the Boilermaker's defense. Kolesar's second touchdown, a 65- yard bomb with just 25 seconds left in the first half, resulted from such a mistake. Purdue's defensive backs were late onto the field and appeared to be con- fused. Harbaugh noticed this con- fusion, audibled at the line, and sent Kolesar on a streak down the right sideline. THE RESULT: six more points for Michigan and a 28-0 halftime lead. Recruited as a runningback, Kolesar was converted to receiver during summer practice after im- pressing coach Bo Schembechler with his pass-catching ability. "He is a deceptively fast kid and has nice soft hands," said Schem- bechler of Kolesar, who has been clocked at 4.3 in the 40-yard dash. "HE'S A competitive little devil and he's been maturing as a freshman. What you have to remember is that this youngster never played wide receiver in his life." The 6-0, 190 pounder saw his first ac- tion as a Wolverine during Michigan's 20-0 win over Maryland. Kolesar caught one pass for 20 yards in that game. IN THE next five weeks, the speed- ster caught three more passes for 59 yards - one each against Michigan State, Indiana, and Illinois. But three passes in five games as the starting flanker were not enough for Kolesar. "I got my shot against Maryland and I guess Bo liked what he saw," said Kolesar, who earned a starting spot after Erik Campbell went down with a shoulder injury. "I felt I wasn't good enough before. No one was throwing to me. Finally, after today, they (other teams) will have to respect me too." "I think John Kolesar is the closest thing in terms of speed that we've seen here since Anthony Carter," said Harbaugh. Who knows. In a couple of years, high school kids in the area may be running deep pass plays like the "J.K. right," or the "J.K. streak." PRE- Daily Photo by DAN MAE Wolverine receiver John Kolesar struggles for yardage against the efforts of Purdue cornerback Cris Dish- man Saturday. The first-quarter catch netted 47 yards and set up a failed 36-yard field goal attempt by Mike Gillette. Kolesar had his best game this season, accounting for 148 yards and two touchdowns on four recep- tions. BUS lESS MBA DAY UNIQUE OPPORTUNITY TO VISIT WITH ADMISSIONS REPRESENTATIVES FROM GRADUATE SCHOOLS OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION. INFORMATION ON ADMISSIONS, COURSE REQUIREMENTS, AND CAREER OPPORTUNITIES WITH M.B.A. DEGREE, WEDNESDAY NOV. 13 11 A.M. to 3P.M. Mich. League 2nd floor SPRE-PROFESSIONAL SERVICES' A UNIT OF STUDENT SERVICES THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Snap Judgeme nts The Michigan Marching Band couldn't have picked a better halftime theme song on Saturday than Huey Lewis' "Back In Time," because that's exactly what the Wolverines did in whipping Pur- due 47-0. Like they had in no other game this year, the Wolverines took a ride in a time machine back to the glory days of the 1970's, a time when Michigan obliterated opponents before halftime and then coasted home. Teams coming into Michigan Stadium in those days had two chances to win-slim and none, and slim was usually on its way out of the Stadium before the National An- them was finished playing. Michigan was an astounding 60-4-3 at home in the 1970's, including 37-3-1 in the Big Ten. Even more impressive is that the score was usually along the lines of 56-0, or some other ridiculous number. Power offense and demoralizing defense were the rules of thumb, and that's exactly the combination Michigan unleashed on the hapless Boilermakers. Sure, the Wolverines beat Indiana 42-15 earlier this year, but they did that in reverse, scoring lit- tle early and then turning the game into a rout in the second half. Against Purdue, they did it the old-fashioned way-28 first half points to put the Boilermakers in a huge hole, a powerful touch- down drive to open the second half and finish them off, and then some garbage points added late in the game when the reserves were in. It was deja vu back to the disco decade all the way. "I think it was (old-fashioned)," said guard: Mike Hammerstein. "Our offense came out and controlled the ball, and we were able to contain them on defense. Everything went in our favor." What made the win most reminiscent of olden days was the return of "THE BIG PLAY" to the Michigan offense. Bo Schembechler had bemoaned all season long that, while the offense was playing adequately, the inability to get the big play was killing them. Saturday, its return killed Purdue. Jim Harbaugh threw touchdown passes of 34- and 65-yards to wide receiver John Kolesar, along with non-scoring adrials of 38 and 47 yards, and reserve tailback Phil Webb raced 65 yards for another score. "It was not the best we blocked," said Schem- bechler "but it was the first time we've gotten the big plays. They made us go after it and we got it. We went in with the idea that we weren't going to fool around-if they were going to bring their men in tight, we were going to go deep." The reliance on the pass is the one difference from past blowouts that existed Saturday. Michigan still managed to gain 275 yards rushing, but they added 276 yards passing to boot, something that never happened in the option left, option right days of Dennis Franklin and Rick Leach. Harbaugh continued to show he is one of the best throwing quarterbacks Michigan has ever had. After missing his first pass against Purdue, he hit his next 12 in a row and sat down early in the third quarter with 12 of 13 completions good for 233 yar- ds. 225 came in the first half, and the junior out of Palo Alto, California would have surely broken the Michigan passing yardage record that he set two weeks ago if he had played the whole game. "I told you before that Jim Harbaugh would be the most underrated quarterback in the Big Ten," said a smug Schembechler. "He's not perfect, but he's smart and he's got a good arm. Thank heavens he's here, he's healthy, and we've got him another year." Michigan now appears primed for their tough season-ending matchups against Minnesota and Ohio State. The offense has proved it can move the ball, the defense is still playing at a level that Schembechler calls "not realistic," and the players are ready to go. "They might not be the best players," said Hammerstein, "but the key is that they don't know that, and they're sure not going to let people find out." Purdue plastering... .. . takes 'M' back in time RAYMOND E. 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Recreational Sports STUDENT EMPLOYEE RECOGNITION WEEK November 11-17, 1985 "We ce a't tD 9E Witut Io"e Our thanks and appreciation to all of our student employees (Continued from Page 1) pound Romeo native has 133 yards and three touchdowns on 15 rushing attempts. The resurgence in Michigan's of- fensive production worked as a great compliment to the Wolverine's defen- se, which has been awesome all season. Defensive coordinator Gary Moeller's forces notched their fourth shutout of the season and improved on their NCAA leading points allowed per game average, lowering it to 5.4. MORE importantly, they shut down Everett completely. The 6-5, 212- pound signal caller is regarded by many pro scouts as the top passer in the Big Ten, even better than Iowa's Chuck Long and Illinois' Jack Trudeau. Nonetheless, the defensive unit held Everett to just 96 yards passing, the first time in two years that he's been held to under 100 yards, and kept him from scoring. "I've been in the league a long time and have seen some good defense," said Burtnett. "Their defense is the best that I've seen this year and they definitely are the best in the conferen- ce." "THIS defense scares me," said Schembechler. "How much longer can we go like this? It's unrealistic. Before the season how could you ex- pect that Long, Trudeau and Everett would not get into the end zone. I was very pleased." Michigan held the Boilers to just one first down in the second half, on a rushing play. Purdue did not cross mid-field the entire game. "Everett had a quote in the paper that said this is the same defense they did so well against last year, so they should be able to move again this year," said Michigan defensive tackle Mike Hammerstein. "That was a little extra incentive for us." o' a". 3AVIAR Injuie Inuries . 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