Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 4, 1986 .,,' " % r , ' " ' .' ,; s HARBA UGH RETURNS TO LEAD OFFENSE Wolverines shooting for Big en title t By PHIL NUSSEL A year ago, Michigan football preview stories like this painted a dismal picture of the 1985 Wolverines. Some even predicted it would be coach Bo Schembechler's first losing season. They were unusual previews. -But they were wrong. THIS FALL, the predictions are positive again. Michigan is back in the top ten and is the odds-on favorite to win the Big Ten. The Wolverines may even contend for their first national title since 1948. 'So then everything is great, right? "It's nice whenever you're rated high and all that," said 1985's most ef- ficient quarterback in the nation, Jim Harbaugh. "But I think we proved last year that those ratings don't mean a heckuva lot. The main thing is being up there on top when it's over, like we were last year." INDEED THE Wolverines were 4imost on top - they finished second in the nation and in the Big Ten with a 10-1-1 overall record in- cluding a 27-23 win over Nebraska in the Sunkist Fiesta Bowl. It was the first season a Schembechler-coached team finished second in both wire polls. Still, there was a void in 1985 - no .Championship and no Rose Bowl. That is what drives Michigan heading 'into the 1986 campaign. "We didn't win the Big Ten title or the national championship and those are the two things we are going to try to do in '86," Harbaugh said. SCHEMBECHLER also has higher goals this season. "We have a lot of things we want to do, so I don't fear any complacency," he said. "If we see it, then we'll attack it and I hope we don't see it. If we had a soft coaching staff, then I'd worry about it.", Another area the 18th-year head coach doesn't have to worry about is a lack of returning experienced players. He has 16 starters and 44 let- termen back. Eight starters and 25 lettermen return on offense and six starters and 18 lettermen return on defense. All four punters and placek- ickers also come back. Those are all numbers a head coach raves about. Whenever Schembechler gets on the subject of quality returners, he says .................... is a real plus. We are really happy to have back this year.'' When................is Har- baugh, though, the 196-55-7 head coach really means what he says. The 6-3, 204-POUND quarterback was the first Big Ten quarterback to lead the nation in efficiency last year, completing 145 of 227 passes for 1976 yards and 18 touchdowns. He threw six interceptions in 12 games and set three single season Michigan records. Harbaugh also ran for four touch- downs. His two favorite receivers - Paul Jokisch and John Kolesar - also return. Jokisch, entering his fifth year (his first two were on the basketball team), used his 6-8 frame to gather 37 passes and 681 yards and two six-pointers. Kolesar swallowed 12 passes and 336 yards and three touchdowns in his freshman season. Gene Lawson and Kenny Higgins will be the backups. In the backfield, the only problem facing the Wolverines is how to split playing time among the talent. Star- ters Jamie Morris and Gerald White will see the most action after com- bining for 1933 total yards and 15 touchdowns, Morris led the team rushing category with 1030 yards at tailback. BEHIND MORRIS and White are backs like Thomas Wilcher, who was an All-American 55-meter hurdler last spring. The senior speedster had 361 yards on 71 carries before an ankle injury. Ernie Holloway, Phil Webb and Bob Perryman add to the backfield's experience. The Wolverines also have five freshmen running backs reporting to camp. The main offensive problem is on the front line, especially at tight end. Jeff Brown is the only experienced returning tight end, but saw almost all his action as a blocker and caught just one pass for ten yards. Keith Mit- chell had a good spring and may be the top contender. The coaches spent all spring ex- perimenting in the five other line spots. Mark Hammerstein is back at one guard spot after recovering from knee surgery last fall, but remains unclear whether or not he will return to his old form. John "Jumbo" Elliott is also returning at tackle. Mike Hussar, John Vitale, Andy Borowski, Dave Herrick, Michael Dames, Jerry Quaerna, and David chester all are battling for the three other positions. BUT THEN there's the defense. Despite losing standouts like Mike Hammerstein, Brad Cochran and Mike Mallory on a squad which gave up 98 points all last season, Schem- bechler is not worried about the '86 defense. "Now I may be wrong," he said, "but I think this year's defense will be just as good as last year's." LEADING TACKLER Andy Moeller, now out of Mallory's shadow, looks to shine at inside linebacker. He had 138 tackles in '85 with two fumble recoveries. Mallory's spot will be taken by Andree McIntyre or Todd Schulte - both saw considerable ac- tion in backup roles over the last two years. There is even more uncertainty at the two open outside linebacker spots. Steve Thibert, Dieter Heren, Tim Schulte, and Carlitos Bostic are all at war for the starting nod. Again though, all gained good experience in '85. Junior Mark Messner (6-3, 255- pounds) will lead the front line after making 71 tackles and 11 sacks last season. A first team All-Big Ten per- former, Messner also garnered the defensive MVP award at the Fiesta Bowl. 4 4 SECOND TEAM All-Big Ten mid- dle guard Billy Harris is another boost to the line after starting every game there last season. Mike Reinhold and Dave Folkertsma con- tend for the other tackle spot. In the secondary, Gary Moeller's defense is anchored by three retur- ners: Garland Rivers, Tony Gant, and Ivan Hicks. Rivers, who has not missed a start in two years, led the secondary in tackling with 69 hits and grabbed two interceptions.. Gant, a fifth-year senior, had a solid year in. '85 after spending most of '84' recovering from a broken leg. Hicks led the team with six'interceptions. Dave Arnold has the best shot at the open corner position, but senior Doug Mallory may be moved there from safety. Erik Campbell is back in the secondary after spending a year on offense at wideout. THERE'S A familiar story brewing in the kicking game: Monte Robbins is safe at punter while Pat Moons, Rick Sutkiewicz, and Mike Gillette will battle for the placekicking job. That's the same story as last year. Gillette, now a sophomore, won the job for extra points and Sutkiewicz kicked off. Moons sat until Schem- bechler suspended Gillette and Sutkiewicz for breaking training rules before the Ohio State game. After the spring game, Schem- bechler declared Moons has the edge for '86, just as he did after the '85 game. In the coaching staff, Schembechler has three riew faces after losing reciever coach Bob Thombladh and linebacker coach Milan Vooletich. Thornbladh took a job in private business in Tampa, Fla., while Vooletich took the head assistant position at Rice University. I Michigan head coach Bo Schembechler gets a ride from his boys after Michigan's 27-23 victory over Nebraska in the 1986 Sunkist Fiesta Bowl at Daily Photo by DAN HABIB Arizona State's Sun Devil Stadium in Tempe, Ariz. It was Schembechler's third bowl victory. 0 '85 Big Ten Standings SCORES Iowa .................. Michigan .............. Illinois............. Ohio State........... Michigan State....... Minnesota ............ Purdue ................ Wisconsin.......... -Indiana............. -Northwestern ....... W 7 6 5 5 5 4 3 2 1 L 1 1 2 3 3 4 5 6 7 T 1 1 Date 9/14 9/21 9/28 10/5 10/12 10/19 10/26 11/2 11/9 11/16 11/23 1/1 M 20 NOTRE DAME 34 at South Carolina 20 MARYLAND 33 WISCONSIN 31 at Michigan State 10 at Iowa 42 INDIANA 3 at illinois 47 PURDUE 48 at Minnesota 27 OHIO STATE 27 Nebraska Opp 12 3 0 6 0 12 15 3 0 7 17 23 Attend 105,523 74,200 105,282 105,491 78,235 66,350 105,629 76,397 105,503 64,129 106,102 72,454 SeptemberSchedule 1985 Mi 13 ............ at Notre Dame 20 .........OREGON STATE 27 ........FLORIDA STATE October TEAM 4 ..............at Wisconsin M Opp 11 .....MICHIGAN STATE ft ,,** 18 ............ IOWA Passing . 9683 atIdaa Other k 1510 25 ............ at Indiana l Ne4t ...4652 30 November Totls P l's ...3 74 1 ................. ILLINOIS e 8 ..............atPurdue set4ashiYn yards. 3 13! 15 MINNESOTA T 22 ..............at Ohio State Av.eGme. . . Net Passing Yards December tclnm ,.<3 n13 6 .................at Hawaii Ar A 4 P ;:: r Action SportsWear I l FACTORY CLOSEOUT _ PRICES FOR STUDENT BUDGETS MEN'S & WOMEN'S CLOTHES I 10% OFF WITH THIS AD SWIMWEAR - Speedo, Arena, , Ocean. Dolphin _ Tandy Corporation/Radio Shack Is Pleased to Announce an Agreement With THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Extending to Faculty, Staff and Students a 20% Discount On Any Tandy Computer and Any Software, Accessory or Peripheral Purchased with the Computer. Order Authorization Forms and 4