Page 12 - The Michigan Daily - Monday, November 14, 1988 Vi Subs f BY MICHAEL SALINSKY On the day of the game for the Rose Bowl, Leroy Hoard and Tracy Williams woke up to find out they would be carrying the running load for Michigan. Tony Boles' groin pull had put him out of action. All week, Boles was expected to see at least limited action. Hoard and Williams knew that the ball would be in their hands more than in recent weeks since Boles would probably not play every down. But Boles' recovery was not as quick as expected and Friday Boles told Williams: "I don't think I'm going to be playing. My leg's still hurting." At Saturday's morning meeting, coach Bo Schembechler pulled the two aside. Boles would not play, no matter how the game was going. Schembechler told them to be ready to carry the ball 25 or 30 times. HOARD said he laughed when he was told he might carry 30 times. By game's end, he had carried 29 times for 137 yards and two touchdowns. Williams added 85 yards and a touchdown on 16 carries. Hoard, for the first time this year, found himself at tailback in the "I" formation. "It wasn't really a big change," he said. "I ran tailback during two-a-days before the season. It's just not as much blocking." His performance came just two weeks after being suspended by Schembechler for missing two 8 a.m. classes. Hoard, a third-year sophomore from New Orleans, started off slowly, gaining only six yards on six carries in the first quarter. On his first carry of the second quarter, he ill Boles' role took a pitch from quarterback Demetrius Brown from the option for 20 yards. Hoard gained 30 more yards in that series - including a gutsy third-down draw play from the Illini eight-yard line and a three-yard scoring run - as the Wolverines widened their lead to 17-3. Hoard's second touchdown - Michigan's final score - exemplified his running all day. Hoard bounced off two Illini before finally powering into the end zone. Throughout the game Hoard seemed to be dragging guys along or running through them. "It wasn't easy," Hoard said. WILLIAMS was also doing some dragging and pushing. His touchdown came on a fourth down from the one. Williams jumped and landed on the back of teammate Jarod Bunch, but kept his feet and scored. "We had all the power backs in today." Williams said. "Their defense is a small team, so we knew we had to just beat them up. Williams, like Hoard, has had to overcome adversity. It was Williams' fumble on the one-yard line that prevented Michigan from taking the lead at Iowa, resulting in a tie and the only blemish on Michigan's conference record. "I was a little ball conscious on the first couple of plays," said Williams, who only carried the ball four times in between the Iowa game and Saturday's contest. Williams started the game in the spot that has been monopolized by Boles this year. He and Hoard switched in and out throughout the game. LIKE HOARD, Williams started slowly, gaining most of his yards in the second half. "The first few plays, everyone was uptight," said Williams, a third-year sophomore. "As everyone relaxed, you're going to get better blocking. The offensive line blocked really well." Although Schembechler insisted during the week that Boles would play, some players seemed to know more than Bo was letting out. "We knew (Boles) was hurt all week," Walker said. "We weren't going around publicizing it." In the end, it didn't matter. "We knew Boles was hurting," Illinois coach John Mackovic said. "We didn't change anything. They ran all the same plays, the same as they've run against other teams." Hoard echoed Mackovic's feelings: "I don't think whether (Boles) was going to play or not was a factor. Every guy that backs someone up is capable of doing the same thing in a given situation." Even Boles - who was on pace to break the Michigan single-season rushing record - was not irreplaceable. Williams and Hoard woke up Saturday to find they would be carrying the load. With standout performances from both, one would imagine that they went to sleep Saturday night very satisfied, having led the Wolverines to victory and a berth in the Rose Bowl. Michigan running back Leroy Hoard bowls over an Illinois defender during Saturday's game. Hoard helped make up for the absence of starting tailbacl Tony Boles by gaining 137 yards on 29 carries.. Continued from Page 1 Wolverines won the game handily. "The way we practiced and the way our frame of mind was, I really believed coming into this game, we were going to win," said Michigan fvllback Jarrod Bunch, who contributed a third-quarter touchdown. "I didn't think they could come in and take it away from us." ILLINOIS coach John Mackovic said: "That's the best anyone has played against us all year. Michigan has shown that they can play with anyone anywhere." For outgoing seniors such as Husar, co-captains Mark Messner and John Vitale, David Arnold, John Kolesar, Jeff Brown, and Mike Gillette, it was one last chance to play before the home crowd. Kolesar's 34-yard return on the game's opening kickoff gave the Wolverines excellent field position at their own 47-yard line. They later scored on Demetrius Brown's six- yard pass to wide receiver Chris Calloway. Kolesar added a 19-yard punt return in the fourth quarter, which he nearly broke for more yardage, but he fell down. Arnold returned to the lineup after missing two games with a hamstring injury. His first interception of the season early in the first quarter led to a Gillette 28-yard field goal. THE WOLVERINES' next score came after Welborne stripped the ball out of the hands of Illini tailback Keith Jones, and Messner recovered the fumble. Michigan marched 74 yards in nine running plays for a touchdown to increase its lead to 17-3. Messner played another near flawless game, Schembechler said. "I saw him miss a tackle today, and it shocked me," the coach quipped. Messner, perhaps the best defensive lineman the Wolverines have ever had, saw the potential of this team before fall practice even started. His perception proved correct. "When you got guys that are going in there under pressure in a big game like this, and they step to the forefront like they did, that just shows the attitude of this team," Messner said. "It's just a tremendous, tremendous togetherness." Blue Banter -Third-year sophomore inside linebacker Marc Spencer quickly put to rest any doubts about whether he could fill in for the injured J.J. Grant, the Wolverines' leading tackler. On Illinois' first play from scrimmage in the first quarter, Spencer tackled Illini fullback Howard Griffith, holding him to a two-yard gain. Roses Continued from Page 1 the team joined the'crowd chanting: "ROSE BOWL. ROSE BOWL. ROSE BOWL." The mood in the locker room after the game was, well, rosy. Tony Boles, the tailback who outgrew the shoes he had to fill this season, sniffed a rose. Erick Anderson, who ran 22 yards out of punt formation, had a rose lying on top of his locker. Vitale had a rose pinned to the lapel of his sportcoat. The FTD flower man certainly had paid the Wolverines a visit. There was yelling. Singing. Laughing. A bunch of happy players. The players had good reason to live it up. They had overcome more than losses. They had injuries, too - loads of them. For starters, quarterback Michael Taylor was out with a broken collarbone. But Demetrius Brown, last year's starter, promptly stepped in and had a Taylor-like performance: eight completions in 14 attempts, one touchdown, and no interceptions. That's right, Michigan State fans, no interceptions. It was the no interceptions that coach Bo Schembechler was most pleased about. Schembechler had written on the blackboard before the game that Michigan could not turn the ball over. As diagrammed, there were no turnovers. There was Anderson and Marc Spencer, who filled in for linebackers John Milligan and J.J. Grant, the leading tackler. What happened? Anderson and Spencer tied for the team lead in tackles with eight apiece. MESSNER was asked if he was surprised 'about the play of the two linebackers. He said he would have been surprised if they $had'not played so well. There was Tracy Williams antl- Leroy Hoard taking over they tailback duties with Tony Boles outt with a groin injury. Surely Boles',; was one Wolverine wbo" could na t+: be replaced. He is averaging 14 ; yards per game. Surprise. Hoard ran over, around', an4' through the Illinois defense. Hd. dragged defenders with him for 137';: yards , and two touchdowns Williams ran for 84 yards himself including one touchdown's oqr fourth-and-goal from the one when he rode into the end zone on the !, back of teammate Jarrod Lunch support when he needed it most. Even with the substitutes, the;: toilet paper unraveled. The band blasted "The Victors." The fish; pumped in the air. It was for tho, roses, baby, the roses. ' I PERU A P S Northwestern e coach Francis Peay said it best while his team prepared to battle 4A injured Michigan squad two. weeks ago. He said there is such A thing a#', a Michigan level of performancq O where the replacements maintain the same level as the starters. I have to think Illinois coach., Johq 01 Mackovic subscribes to the same theory now. , And what about Schembechler. What's gotten into him? The fake punt against Michigan State, the reverse flanker pass against Indiana,' and now the snap to the blocking% back in punt formation. Don't worry, he'll have some time to relax in California. Get to Disneyland. Go on the rides. 04 All the Wolverines will. They deserve to. They have been tested along the way. They 'have* persevered. 0 They are on their way tow" Pasadena. The roses, baby, the roses. I DAVID LUBUiNER/Daily Wolverine quarterback Demetrius Brown, who started Sat- urday's game in place of the injured Michael Taylor, is shown here trying to escape the grasp of an Illinois attacker. Brown completed eight of 14 passes for 101 yards. SPRING TERM IN NEW HAMPSHIRE NEW ENGLAND LITERATURE PROGRAM Earn credit as you study Thoreau, Emerson, Frost, Hawthorne- in their native habitat. FREE TUTORING in all 100-200 level Math & Science courses UGLi rm 307 Mon-Thur 7-11 pm Bursley rm 2333 (by main office) Mon & Thur 8-10 pm Markley's Library Mon & Wed 7-9 pm S. Quad Dining Hall Mon & Thur 8-10 pm Sponsored by LSA St. Gov't, UMEC, and MSA I If I I I I Normandie I Flowers I 1104 S. University 996-1811 $1 Off any I pre-made bouquet (good until 11/21/88) a MASS MEETING & SLIDE SHOW Tuesday, November 15, 8:00 pm AUD. C, ANGELL HALL For Further Information, Call 662-9895 between 7&8 pm. .a O L L I E R F IC T ION Writers of daring imagination F R K AZY HAT By Jay Cantor "Kaleidoscopic... Krazy Kat packs a wallop on so many levels ... that it can be ranked with books such as Anima/Farm."-David Ballard, San Francisco Chronicle "An effervescent book ... An X-rated sort-of-sequel to the comic strip... sprightly, delightful, and insightful" l -Tom Disch, front page, NY Times Book Review Blue Banter -Michigan executed its second successful fake punt of the season in the first quarter of Saturday's game. With fourth down and two yards to go at the Illini's 45-yard line, center Dave Weil snapped the ball to the blocking back, Erick Anderson, who 'rambled 22 yards around right end t1 a first down. "I was just nervous hold onto the ball and look the b in," Anderson said. 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