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<UID>
8702250142
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
871122
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Sunday, November 22, 1987
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo Associated Press
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
college football report
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1987, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
DREAM  FINISH ELUDES SENIORS
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
ANN ARBOR -- It ended with a Michigan receiver leaping desperately into a
sandwich of Ohio State defenders, the ball out of reach, the party over. It
was not the finish the Wolverines dreamed about;  more like the nightmare they
could not escape.

  "Turnovers, fumbles, interceptions," Bo Schembechler would ramble after his
team dropped the November war with the Buckeyes, 23-20,  ending a dizzying
regular season at 7-4. "We missed a field goal, we blew a touchdown on an easy
play, we are a young team, we made young mistakes. . . . "

  On and on he would go, talking about the future, the necessary  changes:
the quarterback would have to mature; the team could not go on beating itself.
. . ..
  Down the hall, inside the U-M locker room, the senior players were dressing
slowly. They had just played  their last game at Michigan Stadium. Jamie
Morris, the star tailback, twisted his tie and stuffed it under his sweater.
John Elliott, the offensive lineman nicknamed "Jumbo," grabbed his pants off
the hook and pulled them on slowly. Allen Bishop, the defensive back, was in
the trainers' room, having his ankle taped.
  Sometimes you win and sometimes you graduate. A coach came up to Morris and
hugged  him. Reporters who covered the team all year shook hands with seniors
whom they might not see again. "It's funny," Elliott said into a TV camera's
lens "for a while there, I thought we were going to  win by a rout . . . ."
  The shame at that moment did not seem that the Wolverines fell to the
Buckeyes Saturday, or that they probably should have won this game, or that
the image that endures is  of the ball squeaking away, a fumble, an  errant
pass. Uh-uh.
  The shame at that moment seemed that the senior guys wouldn't get to try it
again.
  You know, my best memories have come out of  this series," said Elliott,
the massive All-America lineman. "Like last year, when we came back, it was
the most satisfying win in my life. And in 1985, when John Kolesar made that
catch . . . 
  "I  was just thinking about the symmetry of this game. Last year we were
losing what, 14-3, and came back to win it. This year we had them down, 13-7
and they come back . . . "
  Symmetry. It was a U-M-OSU  game that had to be considered satisfying from
an emotional point of view, if not by the final score. Here were the Buckeyes,
playing their final game for their coach, Earle Bruce, who had been fired
last Monday. He recruited these players. He guided them. Now he was unhappily
leaving them. What else could they do for him but win? 
  So quarterback Tom Tupa sliced the Michigan defense like a razor,  219
yards, 18 of 26 completed, no interceptions. And Everett Ross, the flanker,
caught the most important passes, including a go-ahead touchdown. And Matt
Frantz -- who missed the last-minute field goal  that would have won the game
in 1986 -- kicked the deciding one straight and true this time, sealing the
three-point victory. 
  "There are no sweeter wins that beating Michigan in the last game of  the
season," Bruce said in an emotional final post-game press conference.
  Isn't it true? Wouldn't it be true if the sentence was reversed? Never mind
that this game technically meant very little.  Never mind that no bowls would
be decided. Never mind that no Big Ten championship lay on the line. "I didn't
see anybody loafing out there, did you?" asked Schembechler.
  No. Who could loaf in Michigan-Ohio  State? The game was like a season,
with excellence and weakness and everything in between. There was a fake punt
and a missed extra point and a five-yard pass that turned into a 70-yard
touchdown. There  was a platoon system at quarterback and a long punt return
called back on a penalty and brilliant runs and missed receivers. You name it.
  And in the end, there was a sea of red sweaters swarming  the enemy field,
carrying off Bruce, while the Michigan players headed to the locker room
slowly.
  "What did Bo tell you  afterward?" Morris was asked.
  "He said we were a young team, and that  it was a shame that we played like
such a young team and that we've got to stop turning the ball over . . . "
  "But none of that applies to you anymore."
  "No," said Morris, "but in terms of the  team, it's the truth."
  You could not help but feel for Morris. Here is a tailback who gave his all
in his four years at Michigan, a 5-foot-7 fireball of energy who ran in the
first half Saturday  like God's needle through scarlet and gray threads. He
would finish with 130 yards, tying the U-M single season rushing mark held by
Rob Lytle. Morris' last play in this stadium would be a four- yard  gain that
was nullified by a penalty. Had there been no penalty, he would have broken
the record cleanly.
  Mistakes.
  "It's not the scenario I dreamed about, no," he said, smiling at the
understatement.  "But hey, the first half was fun."
  So the season ends the way it began, a loss, too many mistakes. College
football is as cyclical as college itself. Some years are rebuilding.
Schembechler and  his team -- who are still going to the Hall of Fame Bowl on
Jan. 2 -- can only hope this is one of them.
  And the seniors? It's over for them. "A lot of us had hoped it would turn
out different, sure,"  said Elliott.  'We wanted to go out victors.  But we
just turned the ball over too much . . . "
  "It hasn't really hit me," added Morris. "I still have that feeling that
we'll come back next year  and get 'em. It hasn't dawned on me that I won't be
with these guys next year in Columbus . . . 
  Sometimes you win, sometimes you graduate. Saturday does not take away the
three years that preceded  it. The small print says the Michigan seniors took
home a loss in the last game of their 1987 season. The truth is, when all is
said and done, they take home a lot more. An awful lot more.
CUTLINE
In  tribute to their fired coach, the Buckeyes showed up wearing headbands
bearing "Earle."
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<KEYWORDS>
U-M;COLLEGE;FOOTBALL
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