4 Page 8 - The Michigan Daily - Monday, April 21, 1986 Grid scrimmage lulls fans, pleases Bo By MARK BOROWSKY One man's junk is another man's art. Boring football scrimmages don't make most fans' weekends aesthetically pleasing, but they do make Michigan head coach Bo Schembechler happy. In the 18-13 win by the White over the Blue squad, there were solid performances, no domination by one side, and, as Schembechler cheerfully noted, no in- juries. Which, to Schembechler, is a mighty pretty picture. "I DON'T think that we got anybody seriously hurt," the Wolverine head man said after Saturday's scrim- mage. "So it was a great, great spring game." Perhaps Schembechler saw it as "great" but with six field goals ac- counting for most of the scoring, "great" wasn't synonymous with "en- tertaining." Pat Moons of the White squad hit field goals of 34, 27, 25, and 25 yards while Rick Sutkiewicz nailed two form the 32 and 24. While the game left Schembechler grinning, the artfulness of the per- formances of quarterback Jim Har- baugh and tailback Jamie Morris couldn't have left him upset, either. Harbaugh threw for 155 yards on 13- for-19 passing in a losing cause, and Morris ran for 110 yards on 24 carries. OUTSIDE OF Morris' trademark bouncing-off-tackle runs and Har- baugh's three-yard touchdown pass to tight-end Keith Mitchell, offensively there weren't many reasons to run out and buy 1987 Rose Bowl tickets. Which suits Schembechler fine, who hardly views the scrimmage as an evaluation. "You can't tell anything from this (game)," he said, making note that the squads were split evenly. Daily Photo by DAN HABIB Jamie Morris (23) follows blocker Gerald White (22) in Saturday's intrasquad scrimmage. Brent White (88) is in pursuit. Morris rushed for 110 yards on 24 carries. :,___ "There's no units on either side. If you're talking about looking at whether you have an offense or a defense, you can't tell there." Harbaugh feels that once it starts playing this fall, the offense will be a thing of beauty. "Offensively, I think that we have the potential to score every time we get the ball," said last year's top- rated passer in the nation. "That's our goal... we're not looking to go a couple of series and then punt." MICHIGAN'S opponents have the same goal, but they may find the going a bit tougher. If the spring game means anything, Michigan's defense will be nice to look at but tough in- deed. Despite the losses of five star- ters- including All-Americans Mike Hammerstein and Brad Cochran-the defense could be as good as last year's squad. Andree McIntyre, who is com- peting for one of the five open spots, led all tacklers with 13 from his spot at outside linebacker. Despite the defensive domination of the scrim- mage, Schembechler still sees work ahead. "On defense, I couldn't tell you for sure who is going to start on those positions the first game next fall," Schembechler said. "I don't think that we have definitely come out of spring with all the positions manned on the first unit." One player who is definitely man- ning a position is cornerback Garland Rivers, who will be entering his senior year this fall. The Canton, Ohio native is a possible pre-season All-American pick and will anchor a defensive back- field that could feature four seniors. Like the intrasquad scrimmage itself, Rivers views his spring practice as unspectacular, but not indicative. "I THOUGHT I played pretty good, but I really didn't have a great spring I like I did the last two Years," he said. "This spring I just tried to get to my technique." Apparently he did get to his technique, as evidenced by his second-quarter interception of Har- baugh. Rivers backpedaled and snat- ched Harbaugh's pass at the 25-yard line to stuff a Blue drive late in the half. With the number of players (over 90) suited up, there were some new faces that made an impact in the game. Junior Ken Higgins made several nice catches at split end, and flanker Gene Lawson played well. Schembechler said that both could see time backing up starters Paul Jokisch and John Kolesar, respectively. Even with a healthy and productive spring, Schemechler still sees reasons to be concerned. With the defensive holes, no established tight end, and an offensive line that isn't very deep, Schembechler can't be thrilled en- tirely. But nothing is definite until the fall. That's when offensive and defensive units play together, and mesh into something resembling a football team. Without a doubt, it should be nobody's junk and everyone's art-especially Schembechler's. Mic hig an rowers romp at regatta Yanks nip Brewers in extra it MILWAUKEE (AP)-Dave Win- field's double and a pair of throwing errors on Mike Easler's ground ball in the 10th inning yesterday lifted the New York Yankees to a 5-4 victory over the Milwaukee Brewers. Winfield opened the 10th with a double off the left-field wall again- st Mark Clear (0-1). EASLER FOLLOWED with a grounder that first baseman Robin Yount fielded, but threw past Clear covering the bag for an error. Clear picked up the ball in foul territory but Winfield crossed the inings,5-4 plate as Clear threw wildly to the plate. Dave Righetti (2-0), who gave up Ernest Riles' tying RBI single with two outs in the ninth, worked the final two innings for the victory. The Yankees broke a three-game losing streak. New York starter Joe Niekro took a two-hitter and a 4-1 lead into the eighth, but left after leadoff singles by Billy Jo Robidoux and Riles and one-out, run-scoring single by Jim Ganter. * U e 1/2 lb. HAMBURGER: *a . COOKED TO ORDER LB. FRESH GROUND CHUCK STEAK ON KAISER ROLL WITH FRENCH FRIES with this coupon AND COLE SLAW $ i. 0 O F A1.00 OFF m MONDA S 4:0 - 0:00p~m.(expires April 30th, 1986)U NOW HIRING 1 MUG EATERIES AND COMMON MICHIGAN UNION FOOD SERVICES Daily Photo by DAN HABIB Bob Perryman (37) tries to pull down Garland Rivers after Rivers intercepted a pass from Blue quarterback Jim Harbaugh. The White Squad went on to beat the Blue, 18-13. Buspeople Days/Late Nights Kitchen Cleaners Days/Late Nights Counter People Mornings/Days/Nights Prep People Mornings/Days North Ingalls Building Mornings/Days U of M Students Only, Progressive Pay Structure Apply in Person, Room 2400 Michigan Union A Non-Discriminatory Affirmative Action Employer ACTIVISTS Apply now with state's largest and best paying canvass. The Michigan Citizens' Lobby is hiring. Help win the ballot proposal to stop rate hikes for the Fermi & Midland nuclear power plants. Great campaign ex- perience. Call 663-6824. Scores NBA PLAYOFFS Portland 108, Denver 106 Boston 135,.Chicago 131 (2 OT) Milwaukeei111, New York 97 Philadelphia 102, Washington 97 National League New York 8, Philadelphia 0 Los Angeles 7, Atlanta 3 Houston 6, Cincinnati 4 Pittsburgh 8, Chicago 8 (susp., darkness) Montreal 2, St. Louis 0 San Francisco 4, San Diego 0 American League Boston 6, Chicago 2 Baltimore 6, Texas 1 New York 5, Milwaukee 4 (10 innings) Kansas City 6, Toronto 4 California 8, Minnesota 5 Cleveland at Detroit (ppd., rain) By EMILY BRIDGHAM Stroking to first-place finishes in all but two races the Michigan rowing club easily out-muscled the four visiting clubs Saturday at Gallup Park. Racing against Michigan State, Notre Dame, Grand Valley State College, and the Detroit Boat Club, the Wolverines shined in the 2000 meter events. The men's varsity eight encountered the closest race of the day against the Detroit Club, but managed to pull off the win by a foot. Looking unusually strong, the women's varsity eight and varsity four also hammered out wins with the closest opponents more than a full boat length away. The novice crew was equally vic- torious for the day, dropping their only race in the women's novice four category. The clubwill move to Wisconsin this weekend to face the toughest com- petition of the year in the Midwest Rowing Championships. Be Prepared and Train Yourse~ifor a C titive World 12 week intensive program for secretarial skills: THERE ARE TWO SIDES TO BECOMING A NURSE IN THE ARMY -0 Anr What's Happening And they're both repre- sented by the insignia you wear r as a member of the Army Nurse m , 1 ( Recreational Sports INTRAMiTRAL SPORTS PUOGRAM m