0 9 C- 0 i Hayes while Moeller was a player. Then, he became Schembechler's assistant at Miami, Ohio and moved with Bo to Michigan in 1%9. Finally in 1977, Moeller made his move and got out from under Bo's wings. After the Wolverines led the NCAA in scoring defense in 1974 and 1976 with Moeller as their defensive coordinator, Illinois hired him as their head coach. Mo at Illinois was a disaster. The tally: six wins, 24 losses, three lousy ties. Mo was dumped. To this day he insists it bothers him, and if he could have had five full years to develop a program, it would have become successful. There is a security factor with the job at Michigan that could never have been achieved at Illinois. "I was excited at that time (starting at Illinois) as I am excited now," Moeller said. "Part of the excitement now is that I feel a lot more comfortable here - you know where the pencil sharpener is, you know where your locker is, there's a lot of things that you know. You know the kids. That's a big thing. When you first go to a job, you don't know the players or how they will react when a game starts. Some guys fall apart." With the Illinois failure fresh in his mind, Mo went back to Bo in 1980 and waited in the wings. There have been splashes of success. His gutsy call to pass on fourth down late in the 1988 Hall of Fame Bowl - which gave Michigan a 28-24 win over Alabama - serves as the highlight of his head coaching career. But that was still Bo's team. Mo only filled in temporarily because Schembechler watched from home , recuperating from a second heart bypass operation. "A win for Bo, made by Mo," as the saying went. But now there's no Bo, just Mo, and the program is his to run as he sees fit. "Gary Moeller is the right man to lead this football program into the 1990's," said Schembechler the day he announced his replacement. It's 1990. The time's here. * "0"' PREVIEW Continued from page 17 line has to be one of our strengths. I challenge them to be one of the top in the country as I challenge our secondary. If they don't come close to the accomplishing that goal, as does our secondary, we aren't going to win the Big Ten ti tle." Which leads to the defense. Everything starts with Tripp Welbourne. The All-American safety has helped the Michigan backfield become rated among the nation's best. A Jim Thorpe Award finalist in '89, Welbourne was the second leading tackler with 80. "I'd like to think (I'm the top defensive back in the country)," Welbourne said. "When I was small I used to try to be number one. If you can go out and give your best, the individual accolades will come. I feel if they come, they come." 0 The tdefensive backfield remains intact for 1990 listing five regulars at the four starting positions. Welbourne, Vada Murray, and cornerback David Key have started each game for the past two seasons. At the other cornerback slot, the Wolverines count on senior Todd Plate and junior Lance Dottin. Brian Townsend, Mike Evans, T.J. Osman, Chris Hutchinson, Alex Marshall, John Milligan, and Erick Anderson should round out the defense. Place kicker J.D. Carlson returns after a successful year and Chris Stapleton will hold down the kicking chores as soon as he is able to return from his injury. Eduardo Azcona, who punted against Notre Dame last year, will probably kick against them this season. In addition to the tough Big Ten competition, Moeller knows there is another thing he must guard against in the Wolverines bid for a three-peat: the complacency of a champion. "The reason that it's not been done before, and why it hasn't been done before is because it's darn hard to do," Moeller said. BIG TEN Continued from page 11 named second team all-Big Ten in 1989. The Gophers have had three consecutive .500 seasons and two bowl appearances since 1985, but have to visit Ann Arbor and Columbus and will be without Thompson. WISCONSIN The Badgers have a new look this year. Former Notre Dame assistant Barry Alvarez takes over a team that returns 17 starters from last season's 2-9 (1-7, 9th) team. Leading the offense will be quarterback Tony Lowery. Lowery missed last season after having problems with the coaching staff. He started as a rookie in 1988 and seems ready to return. Senior defensive tackle Don Davey leads a defense that includes seven other retunees. Davey has been selected to the 1st team academic all-America the past three~seasonE. Though Wisconsin can not match up player for player with the top teams, the Badgers welcome Illinois, Michigan and Ohio State to Madison and can tighten the conference race with an upset. NORTHWESTERN Coming off a season without winning a game (0-11,.0-8, 10th), the Wildcats appear headed for another season in the cellar. But Northwestern lost three games by a total of 16 points, excelling on offense while sputtering on defense. Split end Richard Buchanan returns after being named first- team all-Big Ten. The senior _ receiver hauled in 94 receptions for 1,115 yards and nine touchdowns last season for coach Francis Peay. "Why? Because the mind of the i champion isn't correct. And I c always jokingly tell them, that I r hope they watch the Rocky movies because I think Rocky n Balboa is a great example of that. a' dartrdlto do" oele sid. Babairagetexml f ht Rnn drbor Ch~ic Theatre Eager e 0*\e s DH e yLDEsRs {RSST *Free Pregnancy Testing S e.e-ner ZuI-October 6, ' Free Counseling ; "e6 Gynecology Th sa~S-aturda"s at 8 P e Birth Control Tickets $6-Tvwo-for-one ' Abortion on Thursdays . *Aoto Ann Abor Civic Theatre, Health Care C] 103s South .iain Street Ann Arbc .,For tT:c:es cr ,-o.^a.:on. - of Ann Arbo ca .A : a scffe 6S2-232 30 12Packard Road* There is no way Gary Moeller can sidestep this, even if he had the blazing speed of a Jamie Morris. The question has been coming for a long time. Same question. Usually the same answer. Moeller is sick of it, but he's forced to continue answering it. The question: "What's it like replacing Bo?" The answer from Moeller in December when he received the appointment "I know it's hard when you're going to follow Bo Schembechler, and I expect that everybody associated with the program, and all of you know, that that's going to be a tough act to follow, but we're up to the work." The answer this fall: "Following Bo Schembechler will be hard to do. I'm very excited at the same time. But I'm nervous. I am going to try to outdo him because that's the American way and that's the competitive way. What I want to do is improve on that record. Now, I don't want to read in the damn headlines tomorrow that Mo is going to blow Bo Schembechler's record out of the water. That's one of the goals I have set for myself." Gary Moeller has heard that question so many times he probably wakes up screaming it. Yes, it's true, Gary-Moeller is replacing a legend. Let's face it, when Bo's name was announced over the public address system at Michigan Stadium, it would cause fans to raise their hands, bow reverently and chant the name. Yes, Gary Moeller is replacing a man who won 194 games while at Michigan, and who sits in fifth place on the all-time list of victories among Division I-A coaching leaders. It might be tough. It might be hard. But Gary Moeller wants to say one thing: "Hey guys, let's get on with the show." Now it's the Mo Show at Michigan. And for one, Gary Moeller is excited. "It's going to be a Gary Moeller program," Mo said. "But it's going to have a lot of Bo Schembechler in it. If I can have a program with the kind of players that represent this university now, play hard, and are well respected throughout the country, I'm going to be a happy man. The wins and losses will fall into place. That's the way Bo did it here." And that's how Mo learned it here. Moeller appears to be the tag-along little brother to Bo. He played under Woody Hayes, just like Bo. In fact, Schembechler was an assistant coach under GILL Continued from page 14 "Hey, didn't it take Bo a couple of months before he could come back," Elvis asks Tripp Welbourne. "YUP," comes the answer. A surge of energy rides through the team. They begin to hum "Battle Hymn of the Republic," "The Star Spangled Banner," "O Canada," "The Theme From Hoosiers," and "The Theme from Rocky" during their final timeout. They are overcome with emotion. Here is their coach, returning from a supposed heart attack, yet risking his life to get back on the field. "Hey guys, we can win," Elvis tells his troops, sounding much like a kid in the Bad News Bears. And then it happened. Elvis - 80-yard touchdown pass. Perfect onside kick. Time running down. But there's a fumble. Huge lineman Greg Skrepenak recovers, and scampers 50 yards for the touchdown. Then he falls down too. The two point conversion is good. Michigan wins. They head to the Rose Bowl. What a story. "A piece of cake," says Moeller, who complains only of a headache. JANUARY 1: THE ROSE BOWL Hey, I said this all was true. I see it all too clearly. So what do you expect at the Rose Bowl? Of course - they lose. W1comne to reality. ;, text by Mike Gill y WEEEND .3L