Page 4 - The Michigan Daily - Sports Monday - November 6, 1989 Scrambled legs Hunter steamrolls Blue defense in record effort by Steve Blonder Daily Football Writer At 12:59 p.m. Saturday, Eric Hunter was not a household name. But a few hours later, the Purdue frosh had made believers of many of the 105,128 inside Michigan Stadium. All Hunter did was become the first quarterback in Michigan football history to hit four touchdown passes against the Wolverine defense. Hunter also completed 27-42 passes for 344 yards. But what people will remember is Hunter scrambling around in order to buy extra time. "I think he's wild. He's quite an athlete," Michigan coach Bo Schembechler said. "He's unconventional and he dances around. And when he does, more often than not, something good happens." More than a few good things have happened since Hunter assumed his position under center. He led the Boilermakers to three touchdowns in the last six minutes of Purdue's 28-21 loss to Michigan State, and four more Saturday. "They hadn't been able to score until they put this guy in there and turned him loose," Schembechler said. "Now they've scored seven touchdowns. "He's got a good arm. He's got a gun." Purdue coach Fred Akers likes what he has seen so far from his frosh. "He might be beginning to serve notice that he is a potential star," Akers said. "There is no way we could have predicted what he has done so far. He has executed excellently and has shown great field vision." Michigan defensive back Tripp Welborne, who spent part of his afternoon chasing Hunter around the field, was impressed with Hunter. "He's going to be a great quarterback, he made some big plays on us,' Welborne said. Linebacker Erick Anderson added that Hunter's scrambling caused the Michigan defenders to "focus on him and lose sight.of where their receivers were." Hunter's scrambling caused Michigan's defensive line to miss several sacks. But Hunter was non-committal about whether he prefers to scramble or stay in the pocket. "Personally, it doesn't matter to me," he said. "But today I didn't have to scramble that much." Tell that to the Michigan defenders. The Michigan defensive unit celebrates after tackling Purdue running back Earl Coleman. Purdue had only 45 yards on the ground. The Michigan defense held its opponents to less than 100 yards rushing for the past six games. FOOTBALL NOTEBOOK by Steve Blonder and Richard Eisen Daily Football Writers Tony Boles' kick-off return for a touchdown was the first return for a touchdown by a Wolverine since Gil Chapman brought one back in 1972 against Illinois. - For the sixth straight game, the Wolverines held their opponent to less thank100 yards rushing. - Michigan's 42 points marked their highest output for the season, while the 27 points they gave up was also a season high. - Purdue has not won at Michigan Stadium since 1966, and the Wolverines now lead the series 29-10. - Representatives from the Orange, Citrus and Hall of Fame bowls were in attendance Saturday. , - Safety Vada Murray now leads the team with four interceptions, and tackle Mike Evans, who suffered a slightly sprained ankle, upped his team- leading sack total to six. The Wolverines now have 33 sacks for the season. - The Boilermakers' two blocked punts marked the sixth time this year Michigan has had a kick blocked. " Senior flanker Greg McMurtry has now caught a pass in his last six games, and 16 of his last 17. " With Saturday's victory, Michigan coach Bo Schembechler has now moved to within seven victories of former mentor Woody Hayes, who ranks fourth on the all-time win list with 238 career victories. Schembechler's Big Ten record is now 140-24-3. - Schembechler discussing his "conference" with the officials late in the fourth quarter after they called the Wolverines for illegal procedure: "You guys all say you should be nice and say nice things about them, and all that.. What the hell?... That was the dumbest call I think I've ever seen. "I told him exactly what I thought. I don't have any reservations about that." - Schembechler on Taylor's foot injury: "He hurt his foot. I can't tell you anything more than that. It's not an ankle, not a knee, it 's a foot. I don't know what that entails." " Linebacker J.J. Grant, injured during the end of the Michigan State game, is expected to begin practicing this week and should be ready for Illinois. BLONDER continued from page 1 "I apologize Fielding." For what Bo? Perhaps allowing a frosh quarterback to run around as if scrambling was the object of the game. Or maybe watching the Michigan offense being unable to sustain long drives, running up most of their 45 points on big plays and quick strikes. Better yet, the kicking game. It's not always that a Michigan punter has two kicks blocked in one game, and three in his last two. Bo certainly couldn't be referring to throwing his headset and haranguing the officials because those remain ingredients of the Michigan tradition. Schembechler adeptly summed up his thoughts after the game. "We did not do a good job on offense, we did not do a good job on defense, and we did not do a good job on the kicking game... The best thing about that game is it's over." But win number 700 should not be something you, try and forget. Earlier in the week, Schembechler said the victory total "just points to the great winning tradition of Michigan football." Most Michigan players were unaware of the victory plateau, and were somewhat downtrodden when told of the milestone. "I had no idea. That's a great accomplishment," said inside linebacker Erick Anderson. "It's too bad it had to happen in a game like this with a lot of breakdowns." Defensive back Tripp Welborne, who broke tradition and became the first North Carolina native to dona Wolverine uniform, looked at the situation somewhat differently. "Tradition was. We have to live for the present," Welborne said. "A 700th win has to come on a win. When we look back on it, we won." But looking back should show more than a "W." We already had 699 other ones. DA~VDLUBILIINER Purdue left defensive end Frank Kmet tries to block Eivis Grbac's fourth quarter pass. Grbac completed 5 of 10 passes for 67 yards and one TD after replacing Michael Taylor in the third quarter. Big Ten Standi ngs Minnesota 24, Wisconsin 22 MINNEAPOLIS - Gopher tailback Darrell Thompson broke his team's record for most career points with a 1-yard touchdown run, giving him 256 total points, two more than kicker Chip Lohmiller tallied from 1984-87. Thompson rushed for 143 yards on 32 carries to help Minnesota (5-3 overall, 3-2 in the Big Ten) turn back a Wisconsin (2-6, 1-4) rally. The comeback was finally thwarted when defensive back Ron Goetz returned an errant Badger pass 73 yards for the final score. Illinois 31, Iowa 7 IOWA CITY - Illinois quarterback Jeff George completed 28 of 44 passes for 302 yards, and running back Wagner Lester rushed for two touchdowns as Illinois (7-1, 5-0) remained tied with Michigan atop the Big Ten. George drove Illinois 95 yards for its first score, a Howard Griffith 1-yard touchdown run. However, it was Spartan tailback Blake Ezor who racked up 203 yards on 29 carries and four touchdowns to lead Michigan State (4-4, 3-2) past Indiana. The Hoosiers (4-4, 2-3), who fell behind, 45-13 by the end of the third quarter, handed the ball to Thompson 28 times, but he could muster only 82 yards. Ezor recorded the Spartan's longest run from scrimmage, a 79 yard touchdown gallop in the second quarter, since 1973. Quarterback Dan Enos completed 12 of 15 attempts for 205 yards and two touchdowns. He also rushed for a score. Ohio State 52, Northwestern 27 EVANSTON - First-year tailback Dante Lee rushed for 157 yards and three touchdowns, and teammates Scottie Graham (102) and Carlos Snow (100) also notched 100 ground yards or more to become Ohio State's first trio to each reach that mark in the same rtm nrnn 1 1'*7A . __. T.. W V I C'iII L Illinois Michigan Ohio St. Minnesota Michigan St. Indiana Iowa Wisconsin Northwestern Purdue 5 5 4 3 3 2 2 1 0 0 0 1 2 2 3 3 4 5 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 FOOTBALL continued from page 1 started to collapse, he just went outside." Despite all his waterbug-like manuevers, Hunter couldn't save his team from losing to Michigan, 42-27. But Hunter did make a boring game quite interesting as well as making the Michigan record books; Hunter became the first quarterback to ever throw four touchdown passes against the Wolverines. "Wild game, wasn't it? Not a whole lot I can say but, wild game," Schembechler said. Even though Hunter did make Schembechler speechless at that moment, the fifth winningest coach of all time did find some words to assess his team's performance against the Big Ten's worst. "We didn't do a good job offensively, we didn't do a good job defensively, we didn't do a good job on the kicking game," Schembechler said. "And, so, there's the game." Well. Expecting a scrambling quarterback to run all over the place, the Michigan defense became susceptible to the run. And right off the bat, Hunter handed the ball off successfully to his runners Jerome Sparkman and Tony Vinson. "The thing that they do with their offense is spread you out and make the fullback a threat," Michigan defensive coordinator Llyod Carr said. "We did not want to let them start to run the ball on us with draws. To me it's not yardage that we gave up, what we're not happy with is the (number of) points." Most of these Purdue points came long after everyone left the freezing Michigan Stadium. After -- ._ as he scrambled around every inch of the Stadium. Afte. completing a 37-yard quick pass to Robert Oglesby, 4 senior from Detroit, Hunter took a snap from the Michigan three-yard line. Hunter faded back and immediately began to run around with reckless abandon, determined defenders in tow. He then changed direction and scrambled backwards even further. Earlier in the game, in the same position, Hunter fumbled. This time, however, he found Cal Williams open in the end zone to bring his team closer, 42-21. "He's a lot like a Randall Cunningham," Michigan cornerback Lance Dottin said. "I think he is going to be a good quarterback. As a matter of fact, I think he is going to be a great quarterback in a couple of years. Today, he did a lot of things that caught us off-guard." Hunter added another touchdown pass to his stat sheet before the game ended, something that both worried and angered Michigan players. "We shouldn't have let them come back like that," safety Vada Murray said. "It was something like Miami (last year). We are an experienced ball club and we shouldn't have let that happen." "(Bo) was angry," said linebacker Alex Marshall. "Because we didn't play well offensively and defensively, not as well as we wanted to play. We have to just comeback and work that much harder to get ready for Illinois." For the second straight week, the offensive bright spot for Michigan was tailback Tony Boles. On Michigan's first possession, Boles seemed possessed, running for a 21-yard gain and a 39-yard touchdown scamner to o-ive Michig-n the lead- Saturday's games: Michigan at Illinois Northwestern at Purdue Minnesota at Michigan St. Iowa at Ohio St. Indiana at Wisconsin Last Saturday's results: Michigan 42, Purdue 27 Minnesota 24, Wisconsin 22 Illinois 31, Iowa 7 Michigan St. 51, Indiana 20 Ohio St. 52, Northwestern 27 Games of November 18: Michigan at Minnesota