Field Hockey vs. Iowa Friday, 7:30 p.m. Tartan Turf SPORTS The Michigan Daily Two Thursday, October 27, 1988 Field Hockey vs. Ohio State Sunday, 10 a.m. Tartan Turf Page 9 age Wolverines come of Leroy Hoard-s starting position BY MICHAEL SALINSKY Introducing Professor Leroy Hoard of the University of Michigan. Professor, teach Indiana what happens when you key on tailback Tony Boles and forget about the fullback. Boom, a 54-yard touchdown run. Nice lesson. But professor, the Hoosiers still haven't learned. Repeat the lesson. Boom, another 54-yard scoring run. Hoard has learned a lot since arriving at Michigan. He learned how to switch from tailback to fullback at the end of his first year here. At St. Augustine High School in New Orleans, Hoard was all-state at tailback. In the year and a half since, he has learned to excel at his new position. DURING HIS sophomore year, Hoard learned what it's like not to be first-string. Hoard sat out the first seven games because of academic troubles, and Jarrod Bunch seemed entrenched as the starter. Hoard gained 122 yards for the year. Players who are the first in their high school's history to rush for 1,000 yards two years in a row don't expect to be on the bench when the game starts. This year as a junior, Hoard has stepped into a key role on the Wolverines. The ingredients for this change have been a pinch of this and a few dashes of that. The pinch was a pinched nerve in Bunch's neck that sidelined him early in the season. The dashes were Hoard's big runs that should insure him of playing time. With his increased role, Hoard has been teaching as well as learning lessons. Like teaching defensive linemen and linebackers just how well a fullback can block in opening up holes for Boles and the other tailbacks. And teaching all future foes that Michigan's running attack is anything but one-dimensional. "IT SURPRISED me that they (the Hoosiers) were all coming from the outside," said Hoard. "Michigan State did that also. I guess now they'll have to watch the fullback, and that will open things up for Tony." Mike VanDiest, defensive line coach at Northwestern, the Wolverines' opponent on Saturday, has watched the Michigan films and apparently has learned the lesson. "He's an outstanding back," said VanDiest of Hoard. "To have him in front of Boles adds a lot to the offense. You can't key on one guy. You have to play what you see in front of you." A new lesson - taught to McMurtry displays 40, _:_,. i variety of BY ADAM SCHEFTER Everyone knew that Greg McMurtry could play center field - he was the No. 1 draft pick of the Boston Red Sox in June 1986. Everyone also knew that McMurtry could play wide receiver - he led the Wolverines last year in receptions and receiving yardage. But no one knew he could throw long touchdown passes - that is, not until last Saturday. WITH MICHIGAN leading Indiana, 10-6, McMurtry took a reverse handoff from Tony Boles, rolled right and threw 46 yards to the wide-open Chris Calloway. A perfectly executed double play, from running back to wide receiver, back to wide receiver. Who needs baseball? "I had practiced that play since my freshman year," said McMurtry, of Brockton, Mass. "I wasn't sure that the pass was going to reach. But I'd still rather catch a pass than throw one." Over the past four games, McMurtry has had his most productive stretch for Michigan, catching 14 passes for 234 yards. That's a lot of receiving yardage for one who plays under three-yards-and- a-cloud-of-dust Michigan coach Bo Schembechler. EARLIER in the year, however, he was catching as many balls as a designated hitter. No one seemed to understand how Michigan could have a receiver as good as McMurtry and not get the ball into his gloves. Now that he is floating underneath more balls, everyone wants to know why. "Believe me, we are not trying to go to him more often," assistant coach Gary Moeller said. "The play is just unfolding in his direction. He's doing a good job of getting open." It doesn't help matters that McMurtry isn't the most physical receiver over the middle. Or that he rotates in and out of the lineup with Calloway and John Kolesar. Or that he's missed plenty of football practices because of baseball practices and games with the Michigan baseball team. BUT MCMURTRY is aware of his lack of aggressiveness. He is aware of his lost time on the football field. Even though he is loaded with talent, he always puts forth a little bit of extra effort when hash marks, not baselines, line the field. "I know he likes baseball," Schembechler said. "But he loves football. And he never comes to practice with any other disposition than (he's) ready to play. He's had to work extra hard at football because of the time he has missed." talents McMurtry ... leading receiver JOHN MUNSON/Daily Fullback Leroy Hoard, shown here against Michigan State earlier this season, had a career best last Saturday against Indiana. He rushed for three touchdowns and 128 yards - six yards more than his rushing total last season. Another thing McMurtry has had to work hard at is school. Playing for two of the top-ranked teams in the country cuts into his study time. THE PROBLEM became serious last spring when the baseball team took its annual spring trip to Texas. Missing one-and-a-half weeks of school became too much for McMurtry to handle. When McMurtry 'began to have difficulty, Schembechler picked up the phone and called McMurtry's mother, Sarah McMurtry. Schembechler suggested that Greg cut his trip short and head home. "Coach Schembechler promised us that he would not let Greg's grades drop, and if Greg was struggling, he would call," Sarah McMurtry said. "If he didn't get his grades back up.' he was going to have to drop baseball. He's on a football scholarship and there is a certainr grade level that he has to maintain." SO MCMURTRY studied and studied some more. On the days of baseball games and footbll practices he would come home and-somehow have to muster up enough energy td make it to the library. "I was drained at the end of the semester," McMurtry said. But if anyone knew how to pull through, it was McMurtry. He had always *been a winner - his Brockton High team won state football championships his junior and senior seasons, and his Michigan teams won Big Ten football and baseball championships during 1986- 87. Beating the books was almost instinctual. And he won again. He got to play baseball. He got to play football. And he even got to throw a pass. Ever wonder if McMurtry has tried on a pair of hockey skates? Indiana's secondary on the two longest runs of his college career - was what it's like to try to take down Hoard with some room to run. On his first touchdown, Hoard split Brian Dewitz and Joe Ziegler and held off safety Marc Ferry just enough to reach the end zone. "I'M NOT fast," insists Hoard. "The team says I have a turtle shell on my back." "We kid him about that," said backfield coach Tirrel Burton. "He's fast enough. He's plenty quick for the position." Burton estimates Hoard can run the 40-yard dash in about 4.5 seconds. According to VanDiest: "He may be an atypical fullback. He can accelerate and he has moves." On his second score, Hoard bounced away Dewitz and Ziegler. "If you create a crease for a guy like Hoard ... Once they're out in the secondary they're really a load to tackle," says Michigan head coach Bo Schembechler. Dewitz and Ziegler learned that the hard way. "Leroy had a couple of nice, little runs there," said Schembechler with a grin as wide as Hoard's runs were long. MAKING HIS second run more amazing was the fact that Hoard was shaken up on the kickoff after Indiana's first score. "He got his bell rung," said Schembechler. "I didn't think that we'd have him back." Hoard did come back and with a vengeance. Hoard's two-yard run around right end in the third quarter, and his second 54-yard run in the fourth quarter increased Michigan's lead from 17-6 to the final 31-6 margin. Hoard caught some flack from Schembechler for fumbling earlier this season. But if anyone thought Hoard's fumbles would make his running more tentative, the evidence was proven otherwise Saturday. "I never think about fumbling," said Hoard. "I just think, run as hard as you can." ACCORDING to Burton the competition of Bunch and Chris Horn have also made Hoard run harder. "Competition's always good," said Burton. "We have a tendency to be complacent if we're not pushed." The Professor taught the Indiana defense numerous lessons Saturday. After the game, he had one more lessont- humility. "This definitely is real important," said Hoard of the Michigan win, "but I believe that any other fullback could have done the same thing. I just happened to be in on certain plays. "I'm happy for the team more than for myself. It's hard going a whole lot of time without helping the guys you practice with." The tailbacks who run behind his blocking and the defensive players for whom he blocks would surely argue that Hoard does help the team every week. Those quiet contributions, though, don't always stay in memory. The Professor's contribution against Indiana will be remembered for a long time to come. 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