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September 14, 1987 - Image 16

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Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1987-09-14

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Page 16 -The Michigan Daily-Monday, September 14, 1987

M'

can't

overcome seven

miscues

Loss is Bo's first in home opener

(Continued from Page 1)
placekicker Ted Gradel booted his
second field goal of the game - a
38-yarder - to lift the Irish to a 20-
7 advantage with 8:59 left.
Two plays after the ensuing
kickoff Michigan's Brown was
picked off again deep in Wolverine
territory by Corny Southall, his
second of the game. The Irish
followed up with another abbreviated
touchdown drive and missed a two-
point conversion to move ahead 26-
7. The nail was fully embedded in
Michigan's coffin.
"It's a great feeling for anyone to
come in here in front of these great
Michigan fans and win one," said
Notre Dame quarterback Terry
Andrysiak. "That's the greatest

feeling in the world."
A senior, Andrysiak started his
third game ever for the Irish. The
Allen Park, Michigan native hit on
11 of 15 passes for 137 yards,
including an 11-yarder for a
touchdown to All-American flanker
Tim Brown.
The sequence of events that led to
that score was particularly damaging
to Michigan. The play came three
plays after a Jamie Morris fumble
and 1:13 after Notre Dame's first
score.
ABC television could have run
the replay of the previous play in th:
time Andrysiak had to throw the
ball.
The catch was a seemingly
impossible one. Michigan defender

Allen Bishop was in front of Brown
and Erik Campbell was in back, but
the Heisman candidate timed his leap
perfectly in the left corner of the end
zone and hauled it in.
Most importantly, the catch put
the Irish up 10-0, forcing Michigan
to play come-from-behind with a
quarterback who had never thrown a
pass in a regular season game before
Saturday.
The Wolverines' starting QB
Demetrius Brown attempted 15
passes and completed four to
Michigan receivers and three to
Notre Dame defenders.
On Michigan's touchdown drive,
though, Brown made the big plays
- a 39-yard run on a quarterback
draw and the TD pass to McMurtry.
Schembechler was not critical of
his quarterback after the game. "I
can't tell you why he played so
poorly at that position,"
Schembechler said. "But we're not
going to destroy his confidence."
"We might have gone to
McMurtry to much," he then added
in Brown's defense.
Michael Taylor, also a junior
with three years of eligibility, took
Brown's place midway through the
fourth quarter and promptly threw an
interception on his first play.
Thenext time the Wolverines got
the ball Taylor completed four of
seven passes in leading them 87
yards to the Notre Dame one-yard
line with less than a minute to play
before fumbling it away.
Michigan's other fumble was
Morris' second. It happened in the
second quarter after the senior
tailback's longest run - 22 yards -
of a 128-yard rushing day.
Schembechler wasn't really sure

Michigan Alumni work here:
The Wall Street Journal
The New York Times
The Washington Post
The Detroit Free Press
The Detroit News
NBC Sports
Associated Press
United Press International
Scientific American
Time .
Newsweek
Sports Illustrated
Because they worked here:
0, he M itpt ninf

Daily Photo by JOHN MUNSON'
Senior linebacker Cedric Figaro returns the first of four Notre Dame interceptions, Michigan quarterback
Demetrius Brown, who was hit as he threw the ball, tries in vain to stop him.

if anything good came out of the
game but rumor had it that the
offensive line played well.
"I'm not pleased with my
performance," Morris said. "The
offensive line did an excellent job.
They did the job up front."
"I'm not so sure that the

offensive line didn't play
respectfully. Every time we got
something started we turned the ball
over," said Schembechler.
Those who witnessed the game
would agree that watching Michigan
play football resembled watching a
dog try to walk on an ice-coated

treadmill.
"It was a miserable start;"
Schembechler said, "but I believe we
are going to have a great footbal
team."
Michigan certainly couldn't do
much worse than it did Saturday
even if it really does rain next weel

-_

Sing with
UM Women's Glee Club
Rosalie Edwards, director
Mass Meeting
September 15, 1987
Third Floor
Burton Tower
6 P.M.
Conflicts, call 665-7408
Friends, Concerts, Travel, Fun 1 hr credit,

Tigers vault into A.L. East tie with victory

MILWAUKEE (AP) - Chet
Lemon singled home the winning
run to spark a four-run ninth inning
as the Detroit Tigers moved back
into a first-place tie with Toronto by
beating the Milwaukee Brewers 5-1
yesterday.
The victory snapped Detroit's
three-game losing streak and the
Brewers' five-game winning streak.
The Tigers and Blue Jays each have a
record of 85-57 in the American
League East.

Alan Trammell started the Tigers'
ninth-inning rally with a leadoff
single. One out later, Matt Nokes
singled Trammell to third and
Lemon singled in Trammell for a 2-
1 lead.
After Pat Sheridan was walked,
starter Chris Bosio, 10-6, was
relieved by Chuck Crim. Crim
walked pinch-hitter Dave Bergman,
forcing in pinch-runner Jim
Walewander. Paul Mirabella then
relieved Crim and walked Lou

*UN

Whitaker to force in another run and
Bill Madlock added a sacrifice fly.
Detroit starter Walt Terrell, 14-
10, went the distance for his ninth
complete game. He allowed eight
hits, walked three and struck out
seven.
Yankees 8, Blue Jays 5
TORONTO - Gary Ward, Dave
Winfield, and Ricky Henderson hit
solo home runs as the New York
Yankees rallied from a three-run,
first-inning deficit to beat the
Toronto Blue Jays 8-5 yesterday.
Charles Hudson, 10-6, replaced
starter Steve Trout in the first and
pitched 4 2-3 innings, allowingtwo
hits and one run. Neil Allen pitched

3 1-3 innings, allowing one hit, and
Dave Righetti got the final two outs
for his 27th save.
Trailing 3-1, Winfield started a
three-run Yankee fourth with his
25th home run. Henderson followed
with a single and Ward drew a walk.
They executed a double steal hnd
scored on Bobby Meacham's single
to put the Yankees ahead 4-3.
Ward, who scored three runs, had
hit his 15th homer off John Cerutti
10-4, in the second.
Read and Use
Daily Classifieds

If you've ever dreamed of being behind the controls
of an airplane, this is your chance to find out what
it's really like.
A Marine Corps pilot is coming to campus who
can take you up for trial flights.
We're looking for a few
college students who have the
brains and skill-as well as A

If you're cut out for it, we'll give you free civilian
flight training, maybe even $100 a month cash while
you're in school. And someday you could be flying
a Harrier, Cobra or F/A-18.

Get a taste of what life is like
at the top. The flight's on us.

IT'S HP DAY
AGAIN AT
ULRICH'S!
Stop by the Electronic's Showroom
on Wednesday, September 16, 1987
* A Hewlett-Packard Representative*
will be available for questions.
*Free Painters Caps*
(while quantities last)
* Trade in your old calculator*
It's worth $10 when you buy an HP
calculator on September 16, 1987
(only one trade per customer)

I

Business Cons

L7 an -

140HEW LET T
PACKARD
ultant HP-28C
3C~aml.
M '' cI
E00

"IH_

A

*Uses Algebraic Arithmetic
*Four-line Display
*Four Markup and Percentage
Formulas
*Statistics Functions
*Prompts and Answers in
Words and Numbers

*Symbolic Algebra/Calculus
*Function and Data Plotting
*Matrix, Vector and Complex
Number Artihmetic
*Advanced Statistics
*Powerful Programming
*Unit Conversions

I "

s I

I . WON, " . m 1

m

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