Page 10 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday; November 12, 1986 THE SPORTING VIEWS By GREG MOLZON Detroit football fans have suffered long enough and it's time the Lions' brass does something about it. It's been a long time since the Detroit Lions have been a serious championship contender and this season is no different. The Lions are currently bumbling along at 3-7 and this is turning into another very long and disappointing season. The Lions are a long way from becoming a quality team, but some changes can be made to improve the team. Since the quarterback position is the focal point of any team, this is the one spot that the Lions could use to make a change to begin the long road to becoming a championship team. ERIC HIPPLE has done a decent job of directing the Lion offense, but he has been given long enough to prove himself and has not succeeded. Until now, the team hasn't had anyone better to replace him with, but after a long wait, the Lions finally have a quarterback with the potential to be a star for a long time. Okay, Okay, enough of this long stuff, it's time to get serious. The time has come for the Lions to forget about this season and make an investment in their future by starting their rookie quarterback from Iowa, Chuck Long. Head coach Darryl Rogers insists Long isn't ready to handle the complicated NFL defenses yet, but what does he have to lose? Chuck Long is the future of the team and since the present season is hopeless, why not get a head start on that future? Hipple has had his chance and has-failed to make the Lions a winner. He has been adequate in the Lions short passing ball control offense, but lacks the strong arm to go long. If the Russians had the same accuracy as Hipple does with bombs, President Reagan would have no need for SDI. THE LIONS have become, to borrow a phrase coined by Brian Bosworth, a "legitimate doormat" and they must make changes to improve. Whether it's fair or not, quarterbacks get the majority of the blame when their team loses, just as they get most of the Lions' QB change.. . ... Long overdue credit when their team wins, so this is the obvious place to make a change. The Lions made their version of a major change last week when they cut punter Mike Black and signed Jim Arnold. Arnold averaged 46.3 yards per punt in a sterling performance in last weekend's 24- 10 loss to Minnesota, but punting doesn't exactly put the fans in the seats.t Speaking of the fans, they have simply had enough of Hipple and displayed their disapproval in a unique manner against Minnesota. In what was perhaps a first in NFL history, the hometown Silverdome crowd was booing Hipple so loud that his linemen couldn't hear the signals and jumped offsides. So what's the problem? Are Rogers, General Manager Russ Thomas, and owner William Clay Ford deaf? It's time to start Long. THE LIONS face Philadelphia, Tampa Bay, Green Bay, Pittsburgh, Chicago, and Atlanta the rest of this season and with the exception of the Bears, this isn't exactly a list of Super Bowl contenders. The Lions have a great opportunity to give Long some playing time against mediocre teams and although he may get roughed up a bit, he would gain invaluable experience and maybe even win a few games. Long definitely has the credentials to be a star quarterback in the NFL. The college All-American was the twelfth pick in the first round of last year's draft and was the runner-up to Bo Jackson in the closest Heisman Trophy race ever. Now it's time for him to embark on his NFL career. The Lions successfully delayed his progress by taking most of training camp to sign him, but they have no excuses now. So how about it Darryl? Why not go for broke and take a long shot? One player isn't going to turn the whole franchise around, but it's a start and the team definitely isn't going to get any worse. Give Chuck Long the starting spot for the rest of the season and it'll make him a better quarterback and the Lions a better team in the long run. Gopher leads busy life By JAMES L. JOHNSON Minnesota Daily Special to the Daily MINNEAPOLIS - It's 10:45 p.m., and Jim Hobbins is pushing and rushing and swinging through the door of his Minneapolis apartment to answer the phone, quiet the baby, and go to Cub Foods and buy breakfast for tomorrow. The day isn't over. "And I'm beat, Hobbins says. "I've been running all day.". HE'S BEEN running all day because the baby needed shots at 9 a.m., and Hobbins, the father, had a management informations test at 10:15 a.m. Because Hobbins had to take Matthew, his son, back to the babysitter's house in between, and football practice began soon after lunch. On top of that, Amy, his wife, is still mad because the Gopher senior tackle took six-month-old Matthew for his first motorcycle ride on his 750 Honda Tuesday, since the 1977 Grand Prix with 107,00 miles on it burned out last week and... "MAN I'M tired," Hobbins repeats. "But I don't have any tests tomorrow. I only have 12 credits this quarter. "We're getting by," he says. The football scholarship check only carries $708 worth of credit each 10-week quarter, and Hobbins has to scrape. Amy's paycheck carries the rest, and rent is only $375. And yes, it might mean that in the morning, Jim Hobbins Hobb ins anchwrs. line Hobbins ... "a lunch pail player" might have to scramble and run the baby over to Smiley's Point Clinic before a mid-morning test. BUT THAT'S okay. It's alright if Hobbins gets caught up in the middle of everyday life once in awhile. That's what the Gopher senior tackle's life is all about - and not just since he and Amy were married in January. That's the way Hobbins was from the start in Green Bay, Wisc., where he grew up on the edge of town, living the everyday life, helping farmers throw hay when they needed help or hopping on a motorcycle with friends and driving to Joe Rahr's bar, where they serve those "whole-side-of-beef" steak burgers that hang off the bun two inches on all sides. "Big and greasy," Hobbins said. That's the burger, not Hobbins - who in his workaday way has worked through the University of Minnesota to pursue his business management degree, which he'll complete this year before taking an insurance job with State Farm this spring. "OH SURE" Hobbins says, maybe he'll try pro football next summer. And sure, because of his 6-5, 265-pound size Hobbins has a chance to make it "because he's got the reach," according to Gopher coach John Gutekunst. But no big deal. Pro football is one thing. Plain old Jim Hobbins is another. "He's a lunch pail player," said Gopher center Ray Hitchcock. "A blue collar man." "A regular guy," said Gutekunst, who calls Hobbins his "most consistent performer" on the line, Hobbins wasn't yelling rah rah Wednesday night, either, when his M.I.S. 3300 recitation group quit studying at 10 p.m. and he drove the old brown Chevrolet Malibu station wagon borrowed from his parents home to sleep - only to find there was no cereal. "Probably get Sugar Pops or Froot Loops," Hobbins said, as Matthew continued crying in the background,. and Amy, who works at an accounting firm during the day, held up a shopping list. They'll have breakfast. They'll make it work. __ STUDENT THANKSGIVINGSPECIAL I I AM I 1 1 week of Tanning......$17 I session a day in bed or HEX for 7 days 1896ON CAMPUS 1 1896W. Stadium 216 S. State St.j I 662-2602 747-8844 1 I student ID required Expires Nov. 26, 1986 I ----- -- - - - - -- - - - I Blue hits 2nd in AP I From staff reports Tbe 9-0 Michigan Wolverines cruised past Penn State to No. 2 in the AP college football poll yesterday after passing up the Nittany Lions in the UPI poll Monday. This week's voting keeps Mich - igan's hopes for a national title alive. Penn State passed up Michigan last week despite the Wolverines' 69-13 pasting of Illinois. This week, however, the Lions nearly lost to mediocre Maryland and fell to third. The Wolverines boast a 13-game winning streak and a 15-game unbeaten streak - both of which are the nation's longest in Division I-A. The 13-game streak is the longest under Bo Schembechler. Michigan also rides a 14-game home field unbeaten string going into Saturday's last home game against Minnesota (4-2 Big Ten, 5- 4 overall). The game renews the battle for the "Little Brown Jug," a tradition began back in 1892. Gamtime is set for 1 p.m. AP Top Twenty Team Record Pts. 1. MiamiFla. (57) 9-"01195 2. MICHIGAN (1) 9-0-0 1102 3. Penn State (1) 9-0-0 1075 4. Oklahoma 8-1-0 1041 5. Arizona State (1) 8-0-1 973 6. Nebraska 8-1-0 878 7. Texas A&M 7-1-0 890 8. Auburn 8-1-0 782 9. Ohio State 8-2-0 711 10. Washington 7-2-0 006 11. Alabama 8-2-0 580 12. LSUJ 6-2-0 529 13. So. California 6-2-0 506 14. Arizona 7-2-0 415 15. Clemson 7-2-0 310 16. Stanford 7-2-0 249 17. Arkansas 7-2-0 242 18. Baylor 6-3-0 195 19. UCLA 6-3-0 95 20. Mississippi 6-2-1 68 4 q GRIDDE PICKS Like, this is griddes, dude. The freshman leaned over the pool table, a confident look on his face. With a smooth, seemingly effortless motion, he banged home the eight ball in the corner pocket. "This game's too easy," he said, collecting his money. "Why should I be so base as to associate myself with something Tom Cruise would do? "Griddes is where it's at, dude." Turn in your picks by midnight Friday to win a free pizza from Pizza Bob's. .1. Minnesota at MICHIGAN (pick total points) 2. Michigan State at Northwestern 3. Illinois at Indiana 4. Purdue at Iowa 5. Ohio State at Wisconsin 6. Penn State at Notre Dame 7. Rutgers at Pitt 8. Syracuse at Boston College 9. Clemson vs. Maryland at Baltimore 10. Virginia at North Carolina 11. Georgia at Auburn 12. LSU vs. Mississippi State at Jackson 13. Kansas State at Iowa State 14. SMU at Texas Tech 15. Oklahoma at Colorado 16. UCLA at Washington 17. California at USC 18. Oregon State at Brigham Young 19. Michigan Tech vs. Northern State, S.D. at Minneapolis 20. Fogged in at DAILY LIBELS Rose plaCes himself on 4 4 Astros' cott earns . ( What's Happening Recreational Sports waivers CINCINNATI (AP) - Cinci - nnati Reds player-manager Pete Rose agreed to give up his spot on the team's 40-man winter roster to allow the Reds to protect a younger player, the club announced yesterday. The 45-year-old Rose, the most prolific hitter in baseball history, was put on waivers, which means he cannot play before May 15. He has a year left on his contract as a Cy Young NEW YORK (AP) - Mike Scott of Houston, whose no-hitter on Sept. 25 clinched the, Astros' first National League West Division title since 1980, won a narrow victory over Fernando Valenzuela of Los Angeles to become the league's 1986 Cy Young winner yesterday. In voting conducted by the Baseball Writers Association of America, the Houston right-hander received 98 points, 10 more than Valenzuela. SCOTT WAS 18-10 with a major league-leading 306 strikeouts and 2.22 ERA in becoming the first Houston player to win the Cy Young award. Valenzuela, who won the award in 1981, had a 21-11 record for the Dodgers. Mike Krukow of the San Francisco Giants, who had a 20-9 makan .n 1,05A PPZDA weth Award more ballots. Valenzuela received the other nine first-place votes. Two ballots are cast by writers in each of the National League cities. They are asked to vote for their top three picks, and points are awarded on a 5-3-basis. TSN honors managers St. LOUIS (AP) - Hal Lanier, who piloted the Houston Astros to a National League West title, and John McNamara, who skippered the Boston Red Sox to the World Series, have been named co- managers of the year by the Sporting News. Both Lanier and McNamara polled nine votes among their managerial peers. Davey Johnson of the world champion New York Mets was third with 3 1/2 votes STUDENT EMPLOYEE RECOGNITION WEEK