Men's Basketball vs. Bradley NIT opener tickets On sale Tuesday Ticket Office SPORTS Hockey vs. Bowling Green Friday, 7:30 p.m. Yost Ice Arena The Michigan Daily Monday, October 6, 1986 BO GETS 200TH WIN, HARBAUGH THROWS FOR 310 YARDS Page 9A Milestones (Continued From Page 1) "He's pretty humble about those types of things. It was an honor being the starting quarterback for his 200th." HARBAUGH, though, had his own night under the glory spotlight as he broke his own Michigan single game passing yardage record (283 yards vs. Indiana in '85) with 310 yards. He completed 15 of 24 passes, and for the second straight week, didn't throw an interception. Harbaugh also threw a touchdown pass to Gerald White early in the second half and ran four yards for another six-pointer 10 minutes later. The long pass, a rarity in the pre-Harbaugh era, worked all night as Harbaugh nailed Ken Higgins for a 40-yarder, freshman Greg McMurtry for a 62-yarder, and John Kolesar for a 47-yarder. "(THE RECORD) is nice, but it doesn't mean that much," Harbaugh said. "If you compare this performance with all the other record passing performances in the Big Ten, we'd still be at the bottom of the ladder. I mean, it's good because nobody has ever done it before at Michigan." Higgins, quickly making fans forget about Paul Jokisch's injury, *as Harbaugh's top target, catching dight passes for 165 yards. The dffensive line held off Badger :ushers like linebackers Rick 'Thunder" Graf and Tim "Lightning J:rdan. Wisconsin managed one sack all night. "I'm just thankful for the guys d p front,"Harbaugh said. "I wasn't Onder any pressure at all today. I feel obligated to take Kenny lHiggins and some of the others out fqr dinner tonight. They made some teal big plays in clutch situations." :ONE OF THOSE "other Alys" might have been senior fgilback Thomas Wilcher, ,who filled in for the injured Jamie Morris and piled up 74 yards on 22 carries. Wilcher scored touchdowns from the five-yard line and the two- yard line in the first half. A vintage Michigan win, however, is incomplete without tough defense. Until garbage time arrived in the fourth quarter, toughness was exactly what Schembechler got from his oft- criticized '86 defense. Inside linebacker Andy Moeller invaded the Badger passing zones and grabbed three interceptions - two off starter Mike Howard and the other off sub Bud Keyes. It was the first time a Michigan defender nabbed three interceptions since Rodney Lyles turned the trick against Miami (Fla.) in 1984. Moeller led the team with six tackles. IN THE FIRST half, Michigan held Wisconsin to six first downs, 107 total yards, and 13:36 in possession time. The Badgers punted three times. Wisconsin didn't move the ball consistently until Schembechler put in the second team with 9:15 left. Keyes, who hit 16 of 19 passes for 198 yards, engineered two late Badger touchdown drives to give his team hope for next week's Iowa game. "I told the football team I was proud of them the way they came back in the fourth quarter," Badger interim head coach Jim Hilles said. "There weren't any Badgers on the field today that quit. They began to believe in themselves. "If we would have played the entire game like that, I believe we would have had a chance to upset Michigan." Michigan now faces the toughest stretch in its schedule with Michigan State and Iowa on tap the next two weeks in Michigan Stadium. The Wolverines need to win both to sit in the driver's seat for the Rose Bowl race. And that would certainly be vintage Michigan football. Daily Photo by DAN HABIB. Jim Harbaugh looks to avoid two Wisconsin defenders as he scampers downfield during the Wolverines' 34-17 victory on Saturday. BARB'S I BARBS By Barb McQuade Badger fans say their piece... but WI' has last wor .. MDISON ou would have thoughtty were cheering for their lives. The crowd in Madison on Saturday was as boisterous in the fourth quarter as it was at tailgate parties before Michigan's victory over Wisconsin. These people like to have fun. 4 But the cheers turned to jeers when the Wolverine offense neared the endzone and the student section. The noise became a personal battle between Michigan quarterback Jim Harbaugh and the fans. The crowd was louder than a Hawaiian shirt, and drowning out Harbaugh's voice as he called the signals for the Blue offense. Wisconsin players signaled for the fans to be quiet, but they were having too much fun to obey. So Harbaugh waited. And waited. And waited. Twice Wisconsin was charged with a timeout in an effort to silence the crowd, but the punishment was not enough to prevent the crime. "It's unfortunate people do not understand the intricacies of football and the importance of communication," said Michigan head coach Bo Schembechler. "I thought it was ridiculously loud." Harbaugh agreed. "The linemen told me they just couldn't hear me," he said. "We had an audible on those plays. I couldn't take a chance on a miscommunication." But the longer the Michigan quarterback waited, the more fun it became for the crowd to taunt him. Harbaugh would step away to let the din die down, and the moment he lined up under center, it would come back to life. No one was going to silence the Badger fans - and no one was going to convince Harbaugh to give in. Wisconsin head coach Jim Hilles thought the Wolverines were too stubborn. He said he blamed the situation on Schembechler for not instructing Harbaugh to get "his butt under center and snap the football." "You're going to have a tough time convincing me that later on (Harbaugh) had any different situation to react to. He stepped up and snapped the ball then, but they were two touchdowns ahead. A referee tried to get Harbaugh moving despite the noise, but the Kalamazoo native wouldn't budge. "He doesn't have to answer to Ro on Sunday," Harbaugh said. "I do. A bad play would be my fault." The Badger fans didn't have to answer to anybody. From the moment the game began, they participated in every cheer from pretending to row in their seats to the wave. They were interested in everything but the football game. The highlight for most seemed to be the "fifth quarter," the post-game band show. Before the contest, one Wisconsin student said fans have learned that the score of the game doesn,' matter. They're more concerned, he said, with having a good time. Part of the problem of controlling the crowd may have been the game's starting time. With a 6 p.m. kickoff, fans had all day to become intoxicated. Pregame parties roared on throughout the day. The real problem, though, is that the rule just doesn't provide enough incentive for these people to shut up. Referees take away a timeout from the home team every time they have to stop play for a prolonged period. After all three timeouts are used, it becomes a delay of game penalty of five yards or half the distance to the goal line. It's a judgment call that's not strictly enforced. With the score 31- 3, who cares about losing a timeout. Hilles, who said he didn't think the crowd noise was excessive, stated that the rule puts too much responsibility on the fans. Schembechler, however, said he doesn't think it's too much to ask that fans allow the game to proceed. "People who come into Michigan are treated courteously." . But the fans at Michigan have a winning team to cheer. They don't need diversions. Students in the stanids Saturday had a blast. Let them have their fun. But at the point where the noise disrupts the game, only a steeper penalty or a muzzle will silence them. Daily Photo by DAN HABIB Badgers' coach Jim Hilles stands dejectedly on the sidelines near the end of his team's loss to the Wolverines. Blue Banter - The word "interim" is taking on added significance for Wisonsin's interim head coach Jim Hilles. With his squad now at a disappointing 1-4 mark, Hilles is not a fan favorite. Badger faithful criticized him for not going to sub quarterback Bud Keyes earlier. - Now that he has his 200th win, Bo Schembechler can look forward to becoming the winninest coach in Michigan history. He GRIDDE Dave Kerska turned in an 18-2 record to take the pie from Pizza Bob's in last week's Griddes. Win yours this week by turning needs five more wins to pass up Fielding H. Yost's 165 career wins. " Schembechler tried to avoid complaining about playing at night, but he couldn't help sayinga few wise cracks. "They're not going to make any money on this game," he said. "You could give the Big Ten five dollars and they would broadcast a game at midnight. Don't let me me get into that." PICKS 8. Arizona at UCLA 9. SMU at Baylor 10. Georgia at LSU 11. North Carolina State at (.~ if n. . . . T y 4 1' rr d Y' N *4' "q