Page 4 - The Michigan Daily - Sports Monday - September 25, 1989 FOOTBALL NOTEBOOK by Adam Benson and Richard Eisen Daily Football Writers -Elvis Grbac's first quarter interception marked the first time in nine games that Michigan had been intercepted. The last time Michigan was picked off was on October 8, 1988 against Michigan State.F -Michigan basketball coach Steve Fisher and assistant coachN Mike Boyd made appearances in thes press box. Both were out on the coast recruitinga player from San Diego. Fisher spoke at a coaching clinic earlier Saturday morning. -The Bruins have now scored in 208 straight games. The last time UCLA was shut out was in 1971 when Michigan won, 38-0. -eroy Hoard's return to the Rose Bowl brought out some emotion from last year's MVP: "Being here brings back a lot of good memories," Hoard said. "I have some good memories of this place." DAVID LUBLINER/Daiy Michigan 's Tony Boles dodges a UCLA defender during Saturday's Wolverine victory. D Elvis and Co. spearhead final drive special teams rebound vs. UCLA by Richard Eisen Daily Football Writer LOS ANGELES - After a dismal performance against Notre Dame, Michigan's special teams unit - especially the kicking game - turned in one fabulous performance after the other against UCLA, helping pave the way for the shocking victory. When Michigan placekicker J.D. Carlson and punting partner John Azcona failed miserably against Notre Dame, Michigan coach Bo Schembechler likened the kicking game to a golf shot that had gone inexplicably awry. Against the Bruins, however, the kicking game - which included four field goals, two John Albertson punts of 50 and 41 yards, and a successf onside kick - looked like a hole in one shot with the wind in your face. "I took over the coaching of the onside kick," Schembechler laughed. "I think we won the kicking game today. We covered the kickoffs, blocked an extra point and got an onside kick. I'm kind of excited about the kicking game." The rest of the special teams raised its level of play with the kicking game too. Not only did it produce a 63-yard Tripp Wellborne punt return, but also a blocked extra point. "We blocked a kick and had a long punt return. I'm very pleased with the special teams," Schembechler said. What a difference a week makes. Carlson's onside kick attempt had fails the week before, but on Saturday, it couldn't have gone any better for the Wolverines. "The onside kick was perfectly executed," UCLA coach Terry Donahue said. "We saw them do it against Notre Dame and when, they shifted, we shifted. The ball just took a perfect bounce and we're fortunate that they didn't run it back for a touchdown." Carlson said he took a different approach to the ball this time around, charging the ball from the left and sweeping the ball instead of approaching the right side of the ball and pushing it. And the ball travelled more than three yards this time, bouncing over two lines of waiting Bruins and itlt the hands of safety Vada Murray 15 yards away. "I saw J.D. kick it and saw it on the ground and when it just poppedsin the air over the second line (of Bruins), I knew I could get it," Murray said. "We got some breaks. We worked hard (on onside kicks) this week because Bo wasn't too happy. We worked our butts off." How the ball jumped over three Bruins and into Murray's arms remains a mystery. Maybe a little "Luck of the Irish" had rubbed off onto the Wolverines a week before. "Onside kicks have to be one of the luckiest things," Carlson said. "I just kicked the ball and it bounces to us. That's the way it happens-this 1 week." While Carlson had a game to remember, UCLA place kicker Alfreaf Velasco had one to forget with his streak of 47 straight successful extra points snapped by Michigan. The block, however, loomed larger on the scoreboard rather than in the record books, because Michigan eventually won by that one point. "One of -the big plays of the game was the blocked extra point," Michigan defensive coordinator Lloyd Carr said. "It's something that we worked on all spring practice. We had tremendous penetration in the middle by (lineman) T.J. (Osman) and that allowed us to penetrate." Murray, who also intercepted Jim Bond's last gasp bomb with no time on the clock, blocked the kick along with Welbourne. Needless to sa Murray had a monster game. "I wanted to go up and get it and I could have caught the thing because it hit me in the face," Murray said. "Tripp could have caught it, too." With 6:20 in the third quarter, Wellborne caught UCLA punter Kirk Maggio's punt and blew past the first line of Bruin pursuers, who might have been expecting Wellborne to signal for a fair catch. Wellborne danced past diving Bruins and broke a tackle or two only to be taken down by cornerback Eric Turner at the UCLA six-yard line. "It felt good, but I would've felt better if I could have walked it into the end zone and threw un my arms ." WellhrnegrlA by Adam Benson Daily Football Writer LOS ANGELES - Bo Schembechler began his UCLA post-game press conference by saying: "We're not a very good offensive team, we can't drive the ball yet..." Excuse me Bo, did you see the last 3:41 of that game? In those final dramatic moments, your second-string quarterback Elvis Grbac produced a 43-yard touchdown drive and after an on-sides kick moved-the club 30 yards for the game winning field goal. Remember that Bo? UCLA coach Terry Donahue does. "I never feel like its over," said the downcast Donahue. "I felt like with 3:56 left and up by 8, and with us with the ball, I felt like all we had to do was make two first downs. We had a great chance to put the game away." But then - Elvis came back. "Elvis towards the end started to get on track a little back," said Schembechler. "Up until then, he had a tough time. I thought he was guiding the ball. His throws were soft. That wasn't the guy we practiced with and that wasn't the guy that we know. I thought he came through in the end and he did a great job for us." On those two final drives, Grbac threw seven completions out of eight attempts for 71 yards. True, he won't yet challenge Joe Montana or John Elway as one of the great final-drive engineering leaders, but his late emergence led to the Wolverines to victory. Grbac felt that: "The last couple games, I've done pretty well (late in the game). Maybe that is something I have to concentrate on, working on the whole game scheme." Grbac's late showing impressed his competitor, UCLA quarterback Bret Johnson. The two red-shirt froshes finished with similar numbers, as Johnson went 13 for 20, for 140 yards, with 1 touchdown and 1 interception, while Grbac also connected 13 times out of 23 attempts, with 130 yards, 1 touchdown, 1 interception.. Johnson outplayed Grbac for three-and-half quarters. His ability to throw in a moving pocket and create while on the fly impressed Schembechler. Johnson, however, praised Grbac for his clutch play in the Wolverines quarterback's first collegiate victory. "He looked like I did three weeks ago. He showed great leadership to bring the team back. He'll grow to be a better player. He'll end up being a first-round draft choice. It's tough to be a red-shirt freshman - both of us made stupid mistakes - but his last drive really impressed me." As the quarterback battle swung to Michigan's favor, the running game followed. Most worthy of kudos was junior tailback Tony Boles. Boles 17-yard scamper of a screen play with 58 seconds left in the game would position the Wolverines for the kill at the four yard line. The play called for Boles to follow three Michigan blockers moving down the sideline. The blockers fended off the swarming Br.uin defense so that Boles could move inside the 10 yard line. From there, Boles carried three UCLA defenders before being forced out at the UCLA four. "We were working on the linebackers," Boles said about the play. "They were dropping back real deep. So we just put the back in the flat. That had us throwing the ball into the backfield a little more." Michigan did not need to crack the goal line at that point, but they had needed the points just a few minutes earlier. When Bruin sophomore Shaun Wills fumbled to J.J Grant at the UCLA 43, Grbac had an opportunity to move the club. After tossing four quick passes, Grbac moved the team to the four yard line where he spotted tight end Derrick Walker wide open in the end zone for six points. If only Michigan could claim that they planned it that way. "It wasn't the play called in the huddle," Walker said. "They were just in a bad defense. I was left wide open, Elvis stuck it right in there." Grbac's mini-marches left the 71, 797 spectators in Pasadena feeling hazy, for more reasons than just the smog. A quarterback, who appeared out of his league for most of the day, emerged victorious. Moving the team like a Lamborgini would down a clear stretch of Los Angeles freeway, Grbac steered two classic drives in this memorable win. A win that has left Grbac with something of a stigma - even in the mind of his head coach. "I think Elvis plays better when we're in a hurry," Schembechler said. Now coach, you've got a great two-minute quarterback. If you can just teach him to play that way for an entire game. UCLA Continued from Page 1 "I saw a huge hole open up. I didn't think anyone stripped the ball from me." Wills said. "I hit the ground and lost it." With only 3:41 left in the game and down by eight, it fell on the shoulders of redshirt frosh quarterback Elvis Grbac to make things happen. And he did, connecting with Derrick Walker over the middle for a 12-yard gain. After passes to receiver Chris Calloway and tailback Tony Boles, Grbac eventually found Walker all alone in the endzone to bring Michigan within two, 23-21. "It looked like a blitz, the linebackers coming, they played bad defense and I was wide open," Walker said. "(Grbac) keeps his confidence and got us to the right place. He played a hell of a game." Minutes later, Grbac's pass to Walker for the two-point conversion was tapped away by safety Eric Turner and it seemed as if Michigan's goose was indeed cooked. But then Carlson walked onto the scene and booted a picture-perfect onside kick. Safety Vada Murray dove on the loose ball up the field and Michigan was, once again, back in the game. "The biggest difference in this game was the kicking game," Michigan defensive coordinator Lloyd Carr said. "We were outstanding. We executed the perfect onside kick." Grbac went back to work again as he scrambled to evade rushers and found Calloway with 1:33 left. Grbac sandwiched a Boles one-yard run between two passes to the tailback to bring the Wolverines to the UCLA nine-yard line. "Grbac plays better when we're in a hurry," Schembechler said. "He came through at the end." "I'd rather be up by forty points," Grbac said, opting against the hurry- up offense. After two running plays, Grbac downed the ball in the center of the field to set up the 24-yard game winner for Carlson. "It was almost like an extra point," Carlson said. "I knew I would win it if he got it to the center of the field. I didn't know I could have that kind of impact on the game." It was Carlson and the defense that kept Michigan in the game early as it had trouble moving the ball down field. "We're not a very good offensive team," Schembechler said. "We can't drive the ball down the field yet, but we'll learn." UCLA, behind its frosh quarterback, Bret Johnson, kept the ball for 9:22 of the first quarter and took the lead, 7-0. Johnson completed four of six passes on the drive that came down to a fourth and one on the goal line. Johnson handed the ball to Kevin Williams, who jumped over the line but did not come down with the ball. It was called a touchdown. Williams' touchdown was just one weird play in a veritable bevy of strange first half events. Early in the second quarter, Michigan had to punt and Albertson's kick landed harmlessly out of bounds. Due to a Michigan illegal motion penalty, Albertson rekicked and was hit by safety Matt Darby. The first down Michigan received from the penalty angered the crowd and led to a Carlson 46-yard field goal. Johnson brought the Bruins right back with a 70-yard romp to place UCLA in front 14-3. Johnson's first half stats were an impressive 8-12 for 96 yards and one touchdpwn. Michigan scored on its last two possessions of the first half and its first two of the second half to go in front 15-14, the first lead the :p -Am, ress Michigan kicker J.D. Carlson gave the Wolverines their first victory. HEROES Continued from Page 1 "I feel great. Last week, I did not play too much and this week I got the chance to play. I had to let everyone know I'm back to play ball." Although Hoard had some impressed their Bruin attackers. "They are good runners," said Bruin lineman Mike Lodish. "I think the running backs from Tennessee came at you harder, but Boles and Hoard are better athletes: They are shifty, yet very big and they had strength." Even with the improvement from the Notre Dame gamethe running game is still not up to the .:.1mMAW