Women's Tennis at ITA Midwest Regional Thursday, all day East Lansing S Men's Golf at FAV/PGA Fall Invitational Today, all day Palm Beach, Fla. FOOTBALL NOTEBOOK: Moeller promises a shakeup By BRETT FORREST Daily Football Writer Michigan football coach Gary Moeller is angry. Don't misunderstand him, he is extremely peeved. At his weekly press conference yesterday Moeller ex- pressed deep concern over his team's performance during its 31-19 loss to Wisconsin last Saturday. "We got to get tougher," he said. "You know that, I know that." The then-No. 10 Wolverines were widely criticized for an emotionless outing against the unranked Badgers. Moeller said personnel changes should be expected for Michigan's game at Purdue Saturday. "There are some things that have to be looked at. You got to give (other) people chances," Moeller said. "We always want the toughest players out there playing. But sometimes if it isn't consistent, maybe you do owe some other people an opportunity. I want guys who want to win for Michi- gan." If there was ever a week not to be a Wolverine, it has to be this one. Moeller predicts tough practices, a weeding-out process of sorts. "You'll find out now who's going to pay the price to play," he said. "The guys who pay the price to play in practice are going to play in the games." This line certainly sounds famil- iar. Last year, after high hopes pro- pelledthepreseason, Michigan found itself mired in despair after losing to Wisconsin and falling to 4-4. Now the Wolverines are 5-3. 'We used to play teams who came to play like this and still slop out a victory. Those days aren't around here anymore.' - Gary Moeller Michigan football coach This year's team looks eerily simi- lar to last year's squad. "I think this team stubbed their toe a little bit," Moeller said in conpar- ing the two teams. "I think the cir- cumstances are completely different with the opponents we played and how we played the games. I like this team better." The Wolverines are currently 3-2 in Big Ten-play and are tied with Ohio State and Illinois for second place in the conference standings. Top-ranked Penn State leads the Big Ten by two games after beating Michigan and waxing the Buckeyes, 63-14, and has all but locked up a birth in the Rose Bowl. With a minor bowl game likely on the horizon for Michigan, Moeller hearkened back to a more glorious past. "We used to play teams who came to play like this and still slop out a victory," he said. "Those days aren't around here anymore." TOUCHDOWN TIM A QUESTION MARK: Tailback Tshimanga Biakabutuka, sidelined against Wis- consin, is still not scheduled for a return. "Tim's a day-by-day thing," Moeller said. "He's going to try (to practice) today, but if he comes out there and he isn't good by tomorrow, I'm not going to plan on him much (against Purdue)." His backup, Ed Davis, gained 24 yards on six carries against the Bad- gers. SMITH'S ACCOLADES: Seth Smith was named Big Ten special teams Player of the Week for his 100-yard kickoff return for atouchdown against Wisconsin. His return, the longest in Michi- gan history, also garnered Smith the AT&T Long Distance Award. ;:; ::.. vN"i DOUGLAS KANTER/Daly Saturday. Michigan quarterback Todd Collins was sacked three times in Michigan's 31-19 loss to Wisconsin ........ . Former Spartan: 'The whole progra EAST LANSING (AP)-Michi- gan State coach George Perles said Monday he's run a "superclean" football program for the past 12 years, but a university probe is nec- essary into allegations raised by a former player. "People make allegations and it's our job and our duty to investigate them," Perles said. "I feel very, very strongly, very, very confident that we run a superclean football team. "I have no knowledge of anything that's been printed," he added, em- phasizing each word. The Lansing State Journal re- ported Sunday and Monday that a former player, Roosevelt Wagner, raised allegations of possible NCAA infractions. Those included regular payments to players from boosters and agents and changes to athletes' grades to keep them eligible to play. "The whole program is dirty," Wagner told the Journal in a copy- right story Monday. University President Peter McPherson has ordered the univer- sity to appoint an independent co- investigator to look into the charges. It will be the third in-house probe of alleged athletic infractions at Michi- gan State in four years. Perles, already under fire for the Spartans' record of 3-5 overall and 2- 3 in the Big Ten, said he doubts Wagner's allegations. "What happened was, I threw him off the team," Perles said Sunday night, after he met with McPherson and Athletic Director Merrily Dean Baker. Wagner, who attended Michi- gan State from 1988-91, said he and Perles had a stormy relationship that ended when he left to enter the NFL draft with college eligibility remain- ing. Wagner started 13 games as a sophomore and junior in 1990-91 before leaving school. He said he spoke with McPherson about the alle- gations early Sunday and plans to cooperate with NCAA and indepen- dent probes. Wagner told the Journal he de- cided to come forward after hearing that ahigh-profile prep running back had decided to attend Michigan State. "He's in the same position I was coming out of high school," said the former psychology major."Ijust don't want the same thing to happen to another kid that happened to me." Wagner said he first contacted Senior Associate Athletic Director Clarence Underwood on Sept. 7 and spoke with Underwood again last Fri- day. Terry Denbow, Michigan State's vice president for university relations, refused to identify the player involved, but said he'd spoken to university officials in September and then again late last week. He said Underwood was checking out the allegations from September, but the effort gained new emphasis after the player "called back with sig- nificantly broadened allegations" late last week. Denbow said all the university officials agreed that it would be best to seek an outside investigator. He added that the National Collegiate Athletic Association had been noti- fied of the probe. "We aren't working on any time- table. The mandate given by the presi- dent is that this investigation be thor- ough, complete, and credible and in- volve everybody it takes to get to the truth," he said. McPherson learned of the allega- tions on Oct. 14, just before leaving for a two-week trip to Asia, and in- structed Underwood to look into the charges. Wagner has detailed 68 allega- tions against the football program. Among them: ® Academic abuses, including grade changes, foreligibility purposes. m is dirty' - i Cash handouts from booste including one $700 payoff. Car and truck loans through area banks with alumni-laundered payments and faculty-staff coopera- tion. ® Student-loan repayment exten sions and waivers available only to athletes. Handling of student-athletes' traffic and parking tickets. * The use of a $150-a-night luxur hotel suite. Free food and drinks for signing autographs. Illegal contact with agents, in- cluding payments as large as $100,000 and free automobiles. Three years ago, an internal inves tigation uncovered no basis for charges of cash payments raised in., book, "Behind the Green Curtain and the NCAA accepted the results of the university probe. WING IT!. AT 0RS A A *SAUUANT 0 SPOR? ." IS Wings $3.25/Pitcher Any Bud Family 1220 S. University 665-7777 F *1 Nn enuer t. New!! Exnanded!! Renovated!! 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