Page 10-The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, November 7, 1990 FOOTBALL NOTEBOOK. League coaches find Big Ten ver offensive by Eric Lemont Daily Football Writer So whatever happened to... ...the rough and tumble, knock 'em down, drag it out type football bat- tles that bore the fans and lead to 5-3 games won on safeties? Who knows. They sure haven't been seen lately in the Big Ten. Michi- gan may have pounded Purdue last Saturday, but its 38 points were mediocre at best - at least by league standards. In fact, of the five winning teams last weekend, Michigan was only the fourth highest scoring team. Consider the following scores: Iowa 54, Illinois 28 Ohio State 48, Northwestern 7 Michigan State 45, Indiana 20 Michigan 38, Purdue 13 Minnesota 21, Wisconsin 3 Are these football scores or Rosanne Barr measurements? "You're seeing more points scored than you ever have," Michigan coach Gary Moeller said. "I think maybe skill players are better than they've been in the past. Due to the wide open offenses, they're stretching things out." Said Minnesota coach John Guttekunst: "I think they (coaches) are sur- prised in the way that you now see the Big Ten teams able to run the ball, and throw the ball with excellent receivers. "Teams that can run the ball and play-action when they want to can see tremendous seams down the field." EYEING IOWA: The only trend rising as fast as football scores seems to be the respect for Iowa in the eyes of Big Ten coaches. They point to ev- erything from unity to revenge to the ability to win on the road as sources for Iowa's 5-0 Big Ten record (7-1 overall). Illinois coach John Mackovic made a point of opening his teleconference yesterday by lauding the Hawkeyes. "I just want to start by congratulating (Iowa coach) Hayden Fry and the job he did. I just want him to know and his team to know how much I re- spect the job they did. "They've played great games on the road this year. If you beat three top contenders (Illinois, MSU and Michigan) on the road you've got to be something special." Earlier in the teleconference, John Cooper, whose Ohio State team faces Iowa this weekend, also had nothing but superlatives for Iowa, comparing them with Washington as one of the two hottest teams in the nation. Fry, however, listened with a deaf ear. "The first thing I did Saturday was show the team a newspaper clipping of the top ten teams and how four of the top five lost. And then I explained why." i Tension sparks Iq I not.amm, nlt. , - nn~xrIuIL spikers in upset - - - - w u - Iowa's Matt Rodgers has propelled the Hawkeyes to first place in the Big Ten C -.01oi a to ..s ,:* .90yr~ ~t iw l ~ y E