Sports Monday Trivia Name the two days of the year there will definitely not be a major sporting event. (For the answer, turn to the bottom of page 2) Inside Sports Monday 'M' Sports Calendar 2 Griddes 2 Volleyball 2 Field Hockey 2 Q&A 3 Get Rich Quick 3 'M' Football Coverage 4 Cross Country 5 Big Ten Roundup 5 ap7 The Michigan Daily - Sports Monday -October 23, 1989 M' finally beats Iowa on road Taylor runs 'M' offense to win IOWA CITY-After five games of playing at 33 rpm, the addition of fifth-year senior quarterback Michael Taylor was all it took to rev the previously vaunted Michigan offense to 78 rpm. "(Taylor is) the best athlete we've played against this season and I don't see any others coming close," said Iowa head coach Hayden Fry. "He added dimensions to that team that they hadn't seen since the Rose Bowl. We thought we were ready to play against him, but he's lust a darn good athlete." A dam Taylor's return to the lineup after sitting out most of the season gave Schrager coaches, teammates, and fans an off- ense to actually brag about. What had become a boring, conservative, sluggish offense came to life under Taylor's direction. This is not meant at all to be a criticism of redshirt frosh Elvis Grbac, who was forced into an un- enviable situation with no exper- ience. The offense understandably " .picked up with Taylor's confidence and composure back in the huddle. The easiest place to see this is in Michigan's suc- cessful third-down conversions. After converting only 36 percent of its third-downs all season, Taylor led the Wolverines to a 67 percent conversion rate (8 of 12) for the game. "We would do really well on first and second down and then Taylor would get us on third down," said i Hawkeye linebacker Brad Quast. "He was throwing well, but the key was his scrambling. We just couldn't stop him." The biggest difference between Taylor and Grbac is agility and mobility. Taylor has it, Grbac doesn't. That is not to say that Taylor plays better than Grbac, but Taylor does fit into head coach Bo Schem- bechler's current offense better. See SCHRAGER, page 4 Taylor starts and sparks Blue,2 by Steve Blonder Daily Football Writer IOWA CITY - Michigan players had been rueing this weekend's jaunt into Hawkeye country because of the brash treatment they recieved last year from the fans. But the tables were turned this year as the fifth- ranked Wolverines turned the hostile crowd into passive observers more commonly found at an art auction by running over their hosts, 26-12. "It wasn't really that noisy," said Wolverine fullback Leroy Hoard. "It was noisier here last year," Wide receiver Chris Calloway, who caught four passes for 54 yards, said the team wanted to start off quickly. "The way you can counter crowd noise is by getting off on a fast start. And that's what we tried to do." The fans might have well taken off for The Judds concert in Cedar Rapids after Michigan dominated the first quarter, putting together two drives which resulted in Michigan staking out a six-point lead. The lead would have been more had Hoard not returned to form, losing the football deep in Iowa ter- ritory. "If any place their guy could hit (the ball) and cause a fumble, that was it. I held the ball tight," Hoard said. "If it would happen to anybody, it would happen to me." Michigan, which led the nation in fewest turnovers last year, stopped itself from scoring three times by giving the ball back to Iowa. "We expected we'd move the ball if we executed, but not the turnovers," Wolverine assistant coach Jerry Hanlon said. "The problem now is getting out of the turnovers. We should have had some more points." The Hawkeyes, on the other hand, came into Saturday's game leading the Big Ten in turning the ball over, and twice had give-aways come back to haunt them. See IOWA, page 4 Iowa running back Nick Bell and Michigan safety Tripp Welborne watch the football fall safely to the tufAREZ/fa.y Icers douse Flames in weekend sweep !?.EicLemon Road by Mike Gill Daily Basketball Writer to Recovery Daily Hockey Writer CHICAGO, IL-Todd Cope- land's slapshot from just inside the blue line with just over two minutes left in the third period rocketed Michigan to a 1-0 victory over the University of Illinois at Chicago. Copeland's blast, com- bined with Friday night's 9-4 win, completed a Wolverine sweep of the weekend series. The two wins propelled Michigan to 3-0-1 on the season and into sole possession of first place in the Central Collegiate Hockey Association. UIC, which finished third in the league last year,.fell to 0-4. Both teams had numerous scoring opportunities Saturday night but were stymied by good defense and the goaltending of Michigan's Warren Sharples and UIC's Dave DePinto. Finally, at 17:34 of the third period, Mike Moes skated deep into the Flames' zone and passed back to Copeland for the game winning shot. "I snuck in behind a line change and nobody really saw me," Copeland said. "(The 5-foot-7 inch DePinto) is a little kid and I was trying to shoot high all night. I thought I might be able to overpower him on a shot like that. "It was the the biggest goal of my life so far," Copeland said. Copeland believes the goal may have been foreshadowed earlier in the day. While taking a walk along Lake Michigan, head coach Red Berenson told Copeland "to worry more about playing solid defense and the other things will take care of themselves." The prophet Berenson described the game as one "that neither team Michigan goals in 46 seconds at the end of the first period. Kramer tied the game at 16:25 and then put Michigan ahead 3-2 at 16:44. Center Denny Felsner completed the onslaught when he flipped a shot past DePinto at 17:11. The timing of Kramer's goals appeared to deflate the spirit of a UIC team that had been playing Michigan closely until that point. UIC left the first period down 5-1 and did not challenge the Wolverines for the rest of the game. "We took it to them up until the 15:00 mark of the first period," said UIC coach Val Belmonte, "and then all of a sudden the Pavilion ceiling fell in." Berenson said "Kramer's goals were big goals. They gave us the lift we needed." Kramer, who finished the game with his first collegiate hat trick, credited the Michigan front line for the Wolverines offensive success. "(The UIC defense) let us make plays from behind the net and, the way hockey works, there is always going to be a guy open in front of the net," the sophomore winger said. At least it seemed that way. In addition to Kramer's trick, Rob Brown and Felsner had two goals each while David Roberts tallied four assists. "I thought we forechecked them pretty good at times," Berenson said. "All of Kramer's goals were close in goals." "Their play away from the net was very good," UIC coach Val Belmonte said. "The Michigan forwards made things happen to- night." The game got sloppy near the ....., .. T .,........ It's a move Kirk Taylor could make in his sleep. It's a move Taylor would make on the playgrounds of Ohio, while playing with his older brothers. It's a move which seemed so routine, so simple, that no thought was given to making it. And this one February evening, when Michigan visited Minnesota, it seemed like the old days - there Taylor dribbled the ball up court, and there, his old high school buddy, Ray Gaffney, stood guarding him - watching his every move, hoping to gain a chance at springing the basketball out of his ex-teammate's hand. But on that trip up the court, fate intervened - and that simple move became possibly the last one Kirk Taylor would ever make. Gaffney guarded Taylor along his left side while Taylor dribbled with his right. Taylor stopped. Pivoted. And collapsed at the knee with a heap of pain. The season was over. After arthroscopic surgery two days later, it was determined that Taylor had a torn anterior cruciate, and further surgery would be needed. Now, think of the images that ran through Kirk Taylor's mind during his rehabilitation process. -In North Carolina, Taylor watches Sean Higgins explode, and land all types of praise. -In Ann Arbor, Taylor looks down and tries to walk. -In Seattle, Taylor watches Rum- eal Robinson sink two free throws and Michigan wins the national championship. "That hurt me," Taylor admits. "It really hurt me to see my teammates out there playing and I wasnQf't nh1P to hi-_ no rof tha4ti,. After a career-threatening injury, Kirk Taylor has done some soul searching r The adjustment took Taylor a while to grasp. At times during the latter part of spring and early summer,'Taylor would skip his rehabilitation workouts. "One of the things that is hard to get through to someone with that serious a surgery is that the knee is not the same," trainer Dan Minert said. "It is a tremendous adjustment to make. It took Kirk a while." Depression had surrounded Kirk - and he wondered if he would ever play again. "Rehab was going slow," Taylor recalls. "Every time I worked out I'd see no progress. I just couldn't see my leg getting back into shape and it was real depressing. "I went through a couple real depressive states." Taylor sits calmly in the Michigan lockerroom after completing his two to three hour daily rehab describing the torture this injury has caused him. He is open and forthright. But when he is asked how to describe the mental anguish that went with such an injury, he comes up short. "Wait one second... How do I describe it?...I really can't describe it." Finally he says, "It seems like you are helpless and no matter what you do, you cannot make it change." Get the feeling? Try driving without brakes and head for a semi. The injury also helped Taylor sort out who he could really consider as confidants. "You find out who your true friends are - whether they like you just because you're an athlete or not. A lot of people were just hanging around me. I now know who my true friends are. It's only a couple people. There weren't a lot." But enough on the negative. Right now Taylor is dwelling on the nositive. And for a go'v thait icall N I " , s - :, it realy hur me t see mytamae>u thet....5yi...ands .... --- .. ............ .......... .. w a ......... ..... ........... . ........ ............ ............ I