Mailed November 4, 1985 For Release Upon Receipt Game #9, Wisconsin at Minnesota Saturday, November 9, 1985 H.H.H. Metrodome, Minneapolis, MN

University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455

KICKOFF: 7:00 p.m. CST ESTIMATED ATTENDANCE: 62,000 + 1985 SCHEDULES & RESULTS MINNESOTA 5-3-0 (3-2-0) WISCONSIN 4-4-0 (1-4-0) UM 28, WICHITA STATE 14 (56,094) Sept. 14 UM 62, MONTANA 17 WIS 38, NO. ILLINOIS 17 (55,700) Sept. 21 WIS 26, NEVADA-LAS VEGAS 23 UM 7, OKLAHOMA 10 (62,446) Sept.- 28 tJl.f 45, PURDUE 15 WIS 41, at Wyoming 17 (59,503) Oct. 5 WIS 6, at Michigan 33 UM 21, at N'western 10 (2!!,512) Oct. 12 WIS 13, IOWA 23 UM 22, at Indiana 7 (38,826) Oct. 19 UM 19, OHIO STATE 23 WIS 13, NORTHWESTERN 17 (64,455*) Oct. 26 WIS 25, at Illinois 38 UM 26, at Mich. State31 (63,758) Nov. 2 WIS 31, INDIANA 20 UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN Nov. 9 at Minnesota UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Nov. 16 at Ohio State at University of Iowa Nov. 23 MICHIGAN STATE * - Record Metrodome Crowd SERIES RECORD Minnesota leads the series 50-36-8. Badger teams had won six straight prior to Minnesota's upset victory in Madison last fall. LAST MEETING October 13, 1984 at Madison, WI --Minnesota 17, Wisconsin 14 (78,770) RECORDS LAST YEAR Minnesota 4-7 (3-6 in Big Ten) Wisconsin 7-4-1 (5-3-1 in Big Ten) ABOUT THE COACHES UM - (2nd year at UM) WIS - Dave McLain (8th year at WIS) Career: 115-63-5, 16th year Career: 91-65-6, 15th year at UM: 9-10-0 at WIS: 45-40-3 vs. WIS: 1-0-0 vs. UM: 6-1-0 THE BIG TEN THIS WEEK Illinois at Iowa. Michigan State at Indiana. Purdue at Michigan. Ohio State at Northwestern. UM MEN'S EVENTS ON TAP F-S, 11/8-9 - (HO) at Lowell University, 6:30 p.m. CST Fri. 11/8 - (FB) Gopher J.V. Team at Waldorf College, Forest City, IA Sat. 11/9 - (WR) at Bison Open, North Dakota State U., Fargo, ND Sat. 11/9 - (SW) VARSITY INTRASQUAD MEET 2 p.m. CST. COOKE HALL POOL (OVER) ;.;;;MI;;;,;;N~N.;;;;;ES:;;.;O:;.;;T.;;:.A ..;;;2,_;-D;;.;;E=E.._P f.Q!i WISCONStN NOVEMBER .2_, 1985 FIRST UNIT · OFFENSE SECOND UNIT 89 - Mel Anderson. (5-10 171b Jr) SE 6 - Eugene Gailord {5-11 180 Jr) 65 - Dan Rechtin (6-6 245 Jr) LT 76 - Norries Wilson (6-5 283 Jr) 73 - Jon Lilleberg (6-5 270 Sr) LG 56 - John Williams ((6-3 240 Fr) 55 - Ray Hitchcock (6-2 263 Jr) c 50 - Randy Pelphrey (6-3 245 Jr) 57 - Troy Wolkow (6-4 265 So) RG 52 - Paul Anderson (6-3 265 So) 62 - Jim Hobb.ins ( 6-6 260 Jr) RT 64 - Shawn Schultz (6-3 255 Fr). 86 - Kevin Starks (6-4 206 Sr) TE 84 - Craig Otto (6-3 210 Fr) 14 - Rickey Foggie (6-1 185 So) QB 17 - Alan Holt (6-1 198 Fr) 37 -Valdez Baylor (5-11 201 Sr) TB 33 - Pudgy Abercrombie (5-8 189 Fr) 44 - David Puk (6-4 216 Sr) FB 31 - Kevin Wilson (5-11 205 Jr) 12 - Andy Hare (6-1 195 Sr) FL 21 - Gary .Couch (5-10 172 So) DEFENSE 20 - Larry Joyner (6-1 210 Jr) LE 13 - Rich Reed (6-2 218 Sr) 96 - Steve Thompson ( 6-2 275 Jr) · LT 90 - Ross Ukkelberg (286 Fr) 46 - Doug Mueller (6-3 232 So) NG 79 - Dennis Ryan (6-3 230 Fr) 95 - Anthony Burke (6-3 250 Jr) RT 68 - Gary Hadd (6-4 255 So) --\ ll .. 59 - Mark·Dasbabelt (6-3 232 Jr) RE 47 - Don Pollard (6-1 220 Jr) ·

32 - Peter Najarian (6-2 222 Sr) LLB.;. 39 - Joe Christopherson (6··1 221 Sr) 88 - Bruce Holmes (6-3 224 Jr) RLB 93 - Terry Hrycak (6-2 229 Fr)

45 - Duane Dutrieuille (5-9 179 Jr) LCB 49 - LungenHoward ( 6-0 183 Sr) 7 -Matt Martinez (5-11 185 Jr) FS 26 - Shawn McQuillan (5-11 170 Fr) ·.·. 48 - David Williams ( 6.-0 202 So) ss 40 - Steves Franklin (5-11 195 Fr) 9 - Joel Brown (5-10 180 Fr) RCB 3 - Charles McCree (6-0 180 Fr) SPECIALISTS: PUNT--10 Adam Kelly (5-10 195 Sr), 25 Chip Lohmiller KO/PAT/FG--25 Chip Lohmiller (6-3 190 So) ' ,. HOLDER--10 Adam Kelly LONG SNAPS--58 Scott Guldin (5-11 220 So) P/RETU~N--12 Andy Hare KO/RETURN--89 Mel Anderson ---UM--- EtJR 1'HE LATEST IN GOPHER SfURTS DIAL 612-3"73-42!1. -- ~

OOLDBN GOPBIRS 1'0 HOST WI~IN SA'.ltJRDAY. e .• '• Mi~·· Go~deft·Gophera ~·~ retJouncS f~ two'·.t'r.J.~~:~-~ ... f.·~-~... :'1·~.'--t ta··r1.val Wiaeonein SatQtcJ,sy, in t1'* Hubert .JI~ B~.... > -~ ,.,.... '·~P·•· . ., . Coach Lou Holtz saw his club dip to 5-3 overall and 3-2 in the .Big Ten COnfe~ when dropping a 31'""26 ~iaion at Michigan State laat ·..un4. '·· lt ~-the ~ c:orwecative -~~irtg M~,l9r:'.::the ~·~rs ai)d, ,~. tUI&· in a_ ....., tbat · CoMtll Koltz f.alt hi• yoo~ul oontJ.pgent -. ., .going, -~ .p.U.l QUt ttte ·aect.ttcn · r19ht up Qritil the 1ut: Pl.Y. "Bven thoUgh we were down, I felt at the half that we still couid win,• Holtz said after the game. "When we scored again with two minutes to play, I reid.ly thought we were going to win ·it. ·We had our chancea, jUIIt lilat·we did the~ before ·.&CJ41nat· ·Ohio State. -. just fell short.• " .· . , · · .. . . ··•

·. ~Went tllE'ough the Michigan>State ~~~····• .gaaa8.· that--.v f:t. host · qlub .jUmp off. to a 17-o· lead anct· 31-10 halt~i• btil9e. •~ .w~t;: ~,,ewvicea · of stalwart Rickey Foggie who suffered ·a Pulled groin IIIU8Cle the week before.

Alan Bolt, rtlaehirt freshman wl1o 90~ the no4.c'l8 ~.le'a. raplaoMtent, ·.acQ~ttA!d.. :~~f vell,··~et, art4·,.,.18.~~10na ~··.3J·.pauing·at~Jl.t;U r w~tlio\i~ ...~'~lr'tet'Qeption for 275 ·~ds. 'And .tle thi;'ew fc;>r one .m. Zn aatition, • lk>l.t; ~ ·22 timlts for 51 yatde:·and two mOt'e talli•· · . . ..•. · \ ~· ,J ~. - . . •. ' ' "We just were' two different tealiUJ against Michigan State, • Holtz analyzed after the lou.. "ror the first 26 minutee we were u poor a football teaJD as I've ..n. We made every IIi~ poasible•. In the HOCIDd half .we c-. back strong.·· Our defense played eapecially well _and ,.tlut.. fl,ic:etgp St:C•··~ t.he final ~ per.ioda.·" ; · · '., . .. . .

·"\ . ' ~ · ·. ~t ~, ~~ior:defenaive •enc!J, led the.Goidan GOpiWrs• '8eocncs hal-f. . surge wittl an outstanding .effort~ finished the aftemoon with 16 total hita..... 10 solo tackles and six aaaista. Four of his tac:kles wep for 1~ of 18 yaraa, and he was credited with one quarterback sack for minus 12 yards.-: a. also had a. fUIIble .recovery • .IMa8m.t4t. J;boae . individual heroiC$, it ·• stili 'a ··.ettpack fo~ .~ ;tftd · ~·'tw ~GOJ.dtn Gophers into fifth plidt in the Big· '!eii Standing.a.

It also sets the stage for Minneabta' a final three outinga of the 1985 •aeon, gaaa which coac:h Boltz baa label.ed···~Tp; the v~ctora ~ .~~·,··~ ••....-.in yhich Minnesota. Will be playing tor~ trave~ing ~.··~;to~ Bunyan'• ~=::':!•a= ~~~~=n3f~ =r:t::_;t :!~t~tf-4~ ~::.Xt week against Michigan and Floyd· of Roaedale in the finale at Iowa one week later. "We'll find out about ourselves now," coach Holtz said. "This thing isn't over yet. We just have to go on from here." With roggie, and the rest of the Golden Gophers back in harness, Minnesota fans expect it to get interesting.

--oM- .,· ... (XJOTING_ COACH LCXJ BOLTZ ••••

. ,,. . ·,~- '. . ·:

...... · G-O-P-ft. s.,.a-& "<, j. ~ \ On the··aubject of Minneaota • a def.n.8 ·...xJ.og ·adjustments at the half.- -and then shutting Michig~ Sta,te ~- f«;,~;_;Jt,,.J. two peri:cc!e,-Lou ~lt&'_aaid •••• "!he fine. cJafW\88 we pl.eyed in the ~ ,.lf ,ia a real tribute to our.· aaaiatant coachee and tO our players." · · ' · · · · · ·

·: G-0-P~H-B-R-s

• • • • '> •• •• ' -~ •• " • ~:,:_; :, ~i;' . : . : . .,· ..J._ ~- • • .... • • ••: • ' • • On -the eUbject of 'Mic:higan stat~--~~ .o1•· to convert". .-many ~~t!~ third­ and-long situations in· the !irast ·htlf, -~,'Boltz .eaid~ ~ • .;"When' yO\r g~·-, • team into a thi~long aituati0n1 .it._is ~i.~ to· al1ew' theJi'"ti)·"cenvert a them. ·· 'rhia negates the fine plays· ._a. IJy ·the. defense .on the two. prev~~ • ~-· . . -,

., . ~ ., ..,

.. ''" :·On the subject of the pl4y of Alan Bolt, making his ·first col.J.89i•t•~atatt at quartetback, Lou Hqltz said·~··t.~• .did,very well. :se·i~ ·otilyjjolOI ,~,get better. • He got off to a shaky et~~-~ once he settled cbm he did wll:.•

:" c;...o-t-&+-E..a.;.s '· .. ' 0n. the:.aut):J~-~ thta week'e~;,,tt.,w~tn ~·~~ ~ ~$.J\9 for Paul Bunyan's Axe, Lou ~ltz Jla#.~~~-.~~in ·wt1lt$l~y- be •fJlaiDg for us. we bUtter button up our h.-! 98U• for:. J:bia one.":. : -·

. . G-0-P-8-B-R-S -

·,

_j 23_ 1t 9· 5 "0 0 lOB 71, 49 6~- 0 4' 1~'1 141 40'1 . 35(' 2061 '1424 . 16J 172 . 1898 1252 4.'1 : 3._5· '237.3 156.5' ' : 67;.l27-1 110•2()9-7 52.8 -52.6 1262 ·1286 . 9.94 ' 6 .. -tS . 18.84 1.1.69 1'57.8 ]6().8 130.2 84~9 r 3160: 2S38-· 534 563 5.92 4.51 39s.o · I, • ~ _3}.7 .;!- • L . 230 130 28.8 l6.J .. ··' .,/37 1/(). ll/132/8.3 l8/lJ/)/8.3 17/291/17 .'2 .· iJ!3i1/l'1.-3. 34/1420141.8 . ~~/16:¥/38-'~7_ .f < • 33/279/34.9 . ..~5/27'1 /34 .-6; . J.9/9 21/8 14 , 111/S.l/45.9 114/60/52.6

--.--.. ----.-.~-----~-- 09/14/85 M 28 ffJ.ch1t.a State 14 N ··lletrodQIIe .. 56,()94 09/~/85 UN· 62 Nontana u. · · 17 " .. ' llatrod0111e 55,100 09/JB/85 UN 7 u. of Okl~ - o 13 L · lletrodOIN 62,446 10/05/85 II« 45 · Purdue ·UnJ.ver1J.tg ... -1.5 ., 11etroc1oae 59,So3 10/Ji/85~ tJif :u f NartWestirn VnJv.. --~- N Btranstc:na,· n, 24,512 l0/19/85 · rllt: 22 f\·;Inc:Uina Un1v. ··· 7 ff . ~oomJ.I'III!/tOIJ; IN 38,8'26 10/~/85 It *'' 19 Ob1o .State '. 2J L lletrodOIN 64,455 11/0R/85 0'11 26 t ·lfJ.ch1gan St.- U• 31 L But Lans1ng, III 63,758 ll/(Jg/85 Ull. fiiScOiiSIN . . . lfetr~ 11/16~- " fill ·· .. U; ·· -~ 111ch1gan · Hetrodo. ll/23/JS r.ij( f Ui. ·-of IONa I011a C1tg, IA e NO'l'BS: It BOIIeCOIIJ1ng .... . IIIIINISOr'lA YOO'tBALL U. f4 ll.i.nn. INIJZVliXIAL I'OOIJ'~ S'l'AriS'liCS roR Mit G.. . ' . ~' '' ' . . . .· . . . lfJSIUNQ 1!1!'1 GAIN LSS , AVQ t'l8 UJ ~ZJIG :· .. N,r11t ~If~, .ar~;tr,APi.t'4 ------.--.- ...... 111!1 .... ----·~--.-.------...... ----·-~-- Baylor,v 11 4H I 411 f.J 45' J.Drl•• ,. 1.9 40S ll.J l 15 rowJ.e,R 93 415 JH 4.3 ,' 11.' .swim;« ·~·15 . 2'0 1.1.3 J fl l'uk,D 59 155 "0 -255 4.3 l 20 ··sqJOi~v 9 II '··t . ..1.·1.7 '. CoUQb,G 3J :lls 2M 6.8 I Z1 C01J9b,G 8 n.z 36.4 'l ,, lf11.1101J,X 3D 1.31 I' l3f 4.5 l JJ G«U_,,B 1 1.01' .Z5.4 O,;IJ ..._,. 13 H 5 f'l 4.0 1. lf Bue,A 4 1.Z J.7,4,• I.:~,_'~ ' AbezoZOitb.te 1.8 1~ 6 J.7 l u lulc,D 3 14 1.0 ;J,,:.,;)t·

Bue,.a 5 II 0 II 5.6 0 ' t 7"' ------...~1-J-·~ 1111 '• ~~- .•. •• • Alder8011,11 3 IJ 6 1.1 5.1 0 1.1 · · Kelly 1A 3D 1.110 4#'~) ' 0 fJ, , ror•,• 5 1.6 () J.6 3.1 () ,. z.obatllu,c , lSO 31.5· o -,, ' ' SJ.Dgletuy, 2 1.5 0 l5 1.5 () 1.2:,·:.. : lloe,ll 3 1. 0 1 1.3 0 4 . · w~~r U'IIIS NUll r• ~- !f'•~~IJJ .. Be.rq,Jf J l 0 l J.O l ~ ·~ ·------·-----.. ------'!'~·~·--~-~-·· ..~· lll.llor,B l J. .o 1. l.O (J :~ ·..-.,i · 6 8~ 1.4.~h;, :il:·Js.· ·'. Bz'uce,~ l l () l 1..0 (J .t, .. ~b,G I 1.1 ~~~ ·' IJ. g. R.J.cUrdiiOD, 1 1.'1 10 -o.4 1.0 · G«J.loi:d,B 8 31. J ., 0 il .. : -J 0 > • • • •• <. • • ~ ~· ' PA.SSntQ l!l'r CliP IC'l flJS Ill f'IJS ••• ~ClCD'liiS NUll rDIJ ~ "atO rrii .'QJ · . rowJ.e,R 89 48 .5Jf 964 l 5 J.fl.l .Jld.u~,ll 14 llf ~.4 on Bolt,.a J6 zg·· ~5Z8 lf8 0 .Z J.U.5 . G•IJ.~,B I J.O S.,O 0 ' ·. RJ.c:hu4en, l 0 .O()() . 0 0 0 0.0 llOttliH,L l -4 ~~9 0 _..;.4. llue,A l 0 .000 0 0 0 o.o . 1l1f' DriiS N.l1ll rDS Af/G •'nJs: UJ .. rora on. PLMS ••• 'ISS I'Of'A£ riJShL; .. .:.:.._ .....;...... ______...... ;....._ · ------~------.~l,D 2 13. Jl;1 ; 0 row1e,R 1.81 JH 964 J.JfJ 7. s ...,...... ,., 1 f ~~~ o· .i-4 &1~.1or, v 11 418 !J 411 f. J :"I.J.~:I.- ,D l 6 f iO· ., · o ..'f · Bolt,A 64 63 291 JfJ 5.6· ~4-llle 1. 2 -~~0 . 0 '·2 ··: PU,D 59 155 0 ..· 255 4.3 . ··.lf&rt~-;11 J. 0 0.0 . () )t' :;=:,~IC ~ ~ . · g .: ::~ ~· fJB XPl~A zi2•A N*A···M ·. Perin.,. IJ 91 (J . fJ 4 .o . ·------~------:-·~--·~.;."' .. ·. ._ ·· ADfe•oa,ll ) · :~. · D'f'Q · ~ o ·.. ; ... BU.,A · '0 .. q'.:.(J ·.9-.z o-Q: 0.· . G1\

s9.911 B i'f:. ·l!l.·. :at_.·.·.· lrsl. !a· !21:~· ~·.:·: ·· MinDetota ,n .Jt '-: Tiff '11' 2!J·. OppOMDtl. . 31 6!.. 7 ~ 13C) . !1ILP -~ .2;:19 20:11 ~~-» ~9 19+ . Lohlllll.- . . 0..0 -~ -5 t-3 1-1 ( att. a ._. - wdel'l1Decl ar. ;ood) ~: !1: t ~;' Jl7, •n. lJ., §, .a. lt• OPP: 6 ot 10 ,.-...... ,.• .I'OOI'JIZil, u. ot IU.lltl. ~--~ .WM'llfJtli:::IOI A££ t1M1S ,, ·,...... '' " ' ,.,.,.. -----~-~a,..~---~-~ lOS llDSI'. .., fOf. ' r.oug 'WcSof anct:hia ~~t;la~pa · amounts tQ ti"JJinl to break a three-game loss string. ·· · · ' ' ·. · At.._r,~opping the··.second or two games irl"J)uluth two Weilca ·aso, the ., Gophers lae.t cweek&nd. went down both nights at Martucci Arema 'to• a:'vastly · · improved Uni~,erait:y -o£ Denver Pioneer team. · .• , ~; · · ·. Denver defeated the Gophers 4-2 Friday after buildinl a 4-0 margin early in the final period. A pair of late Gopher. goals by Corey Mlllell and Tim . . . Bergl~,~·:tlle latte,r witb just 17 seconds .Nmainil18, •da lit'tle~ te>: .easc!Vtbe :Loss. On ~aY ~e P>ioneers again built a lead, thia ttllef 4;..1 in the i aedo&d ' period. But Minnesota simply refused to lay down md oonoeef. '• · '- -· ·· Sparked by sophomore center Paul Broten, who actuallr plflled right _win& in tl~- first app.arance of the season, the Gophers all but 1JUll'fM 'eve!). · · .ira~~ scored b,is second goal ot the same at 9:49 :of -the ttlircf 'peri~ to'·· make it .~r-2 Denver, befc>re senior wing .Wally Chapman banged m&'le in from •the : right boards at 13:05 and the Gophers were right baok in· :Jot. ·· · ·· But. Denv•r oente~ Pwight Mathiasen got was. p!"Oved to -be the winning ~1 -at 16:42 by connecting on a .rebound. Just 17 second later Jay Cates ~ £n 1a rebound of Broten's shot at 16:59 to make it 5-4. But that vas it. Even though coach Woog pulled Gopher goalie Frank Piegrangelo with 1:02 remaining, the Pioneers withstood several stro~g as8aults on goal to conclude the series sweep. ·t, Not ·~y .was Frida-y's win the first 'for a Denver teaa·on_ TWin·citie8 'ice· . since 1978, 1;)ut the sweep o( Minnesota was .their first }tf!re fQr the .Pioneart· _. since the 19i'f:..72 season. . . . . ' . '' ' . . . < i ;. The Wiria''''Yaulted Denver into a first. place tie 'in ,the ''WCHA 4Jta,pdinP ·· with'Wiscenaln·'· The Badgers also surprised· many by defeatlnc ~~t_a~Du;Lutb J' .. twiee at home, 5-3 and 4-3. Both teams are now 5-1-0 in the standings. · The ·Gophers fell into a three-way tie for third plaC)t w~th UMD and, ... North~rn Hic~;lpn at six points apiece. UM and OMQ are- 37:~;"9 and t~Mtf~a- 3.... 1-o;.. · BrOten· was the only Gopher to ·score mow than one•. goal. ~ ·'~!~: ~k$ld~,: His. assist on the final OM· gQf.l tied. him with Cates and . St.we. *oS1!18i~ ·tor.' top Gopher scor1bg honors tor . th~ weekend at three. points apleee. 'tat;es nad .1{ ge>al. , and two assists and MacSwain three assists. · · · · · · · ·· · For ttle ~cond straight year, games ~--~t HE! ~- ~U.t; in: th~. 'l!CH.A start

MI!JfBS!ll'A gYMNASTS HOST JAPANESE COU.EGIATE AIL-STARS DBCI!Q!BR 1 Coach Fred Roethliaberger's Gopher symnastic team will host the Japanese Collegiate All-Stars for the sixth consecutive year December 1, 2:00 PM, Sunday afternoon at Williams Arena. This year it will be a co-e4 dual 1118et with the men's and women' a: teams of Minnesota battlins the co-ed team of the Japanese Collegiate All-Stars. It is the second straight year of the co-ed format. The Minnesota men's team bas won seven of the last eleven .Big Ten gymnastic team titles. The Gophers were ruanerup last season in the Big Ten race and will be among the conference favorites in 1986.

Coach Roethlisoerger has three US National Teaa members on the 198~86 squad: Rob Brown (Sr. ChicaJO, IL), Collin Godk~.n (Jr~ ~1·.···.l.fkee, WI) and Da'f'1·d Menke (Sr. Bloomington, MN). Menke will be e~~iN iet;e:rnationally ·at the Cuban Invitational, November 29-30 and at the Britftlr

GOLDEN GOPHE!§ 8TH AT BIG TIN CC CJA!PIO!§!!IPS: Gl§SILQUIST. 4'l'ft ltml!P>Y6LJ.Y

Gopher cross country co-~aptain Paul Gisselquist (Jr. Ri~hfield,MN) placed fourth in the individual coapet1tion with a tiaae of 25:12 and he waa Minne~ta's a bright spot with the U placing eighth at the Bis Ten Championships last. S.titrday w in Ann Arbor, Michigan.

Favorea Wisconsin easily won the Big Ten title with a team ~tal of 26 to outdistance runnerup Purdue's 73. . Mipneaota placed eighth with 177 points. Defending champion Illinois was fifth with 139. Team scores were: Wisconsin 26, Purdue 73, Northwestern 129, Ohio State 134, Illinois 134, Michigan 142, Indiana 145, Minnesota 177, Michigan State 197, Iowa 271. WRESTLERS OPEN 1985-86 SEASOK ~ P' !QJTU PJJOTA STAI TgJJRNAMBIT ~TURDAY Minnesota will send its ~quad .JIIImbera to wre:•tle at thetson Open tourney in Fargo, North Dakota Saturday, Noventber 9. 'lbe meet annually attra~ts over 200 wrestlers from Midwest echools and will be a good test for ~he Gophers. Minnesota hosts the annual U of M~-~ase next Saturday, November 16, 3:00 PH.

GOPHD TEHHIS TEAM HOSTS IA!SAS II. MINl{&SOTA £1Wd&!iGE NOyE!1BJ! 8 AT 98th STREET Coach Jerry Noyce's Gopher tennis teambostsleneas University of the Big Eisht Conference in the annual Minnesota Challenge dual meet at the 98th Street Racquet Club, Friday night, 6:30PM • NoveJDber 8. Two Gophers played last weekend in the prestia:lous Fall Colleae All-Aaerican Volvo Tournament in Los Ang~les. Matt Grace of Minnesota beat the #4 seeded player in the first round before losing in the second round of singles. Grace and Chuck Merzbacher lost in the first round of the doubles compe,tition...... The remaining Minnesota squad aembe~s played in the Nielson Invitational in Madison, Wisconsin. Gopher Jonas Sv•nsaoil .and Dav-id Massart reached the singles semi-finals and Massart/Casey Merickel reached the doubles semi-finals. --.. --- ,.... ·-- ...... c:ae.., 3. -c · 6 2 , . 8 1I l4 l o. o o 6 2 •· 1 · 1/14 · , ~, .•• -1¥ , 6 4 4 8 liZ 2 2 0 0 6 4 . 4 ·I -: 1./2 ; ...... ,., •. '" .... 6 l 6 7 l/2 0 0 0 0 · 6 J.' f ·1· •'. llZ ·' ~~.t P. •lflf .6 1 5 6 1.0128 1 o o o • 1 ;-.. •· lD/)1 -...~.-, f.. --:~. .6. z 4 6 316 0 0 .J. 0 f 2 4-.i. ··~' 3/6 IUUet~, c. -c . 6 3 2 5 2/4. l 0 0 6 3· I 5 ··· 2/4 Q.Jf.:ll, -c· "' . ' i s. 6 2 2 4 0/0, l 0. . 1. 0 • 2 J 4 0/0 DUla, 'I!. •D 6 I l 3 4/8 l 0 () 0 6 2 J 3· · 4/1 ~ -..,C. •D 6 l 2 3 2/4 0 0 Q 0 ,. l I J 2/4 ·· .. ~~ 1'. -c l ...... __., II. •llf l 2 l 3 0/0 0 0 . () 0 l ' l 0/0 6 1 1 2 oto o o o o ., "l 1. 2 olD aeq.z.irit, f. -· 6 l l 2 l/2 0 0 0 0 6 l ·j 2'' 1/1 ~·l•,· •. ·l' 5 o 2 2 2/4 o o o o s· ~o 2· ·2· 2/4· at~,, r. -D 4 o 2 2 112. o o o · o ' ··o -1 ..,.; :11. •D z.· · J./2 5 0 l l 3/6 0 0 0 0 5 0 'l l. 3/l ..Z.., S. •D 3 o 1 1 oto o o o· o 3 o ·.. J. l oto ··,!... . ••, 3. -<: 3 0 · 0 0 0/0 0 0 0. a J : D 0 · o 0/0 CJJW4af f'. -llf 6 0 0 0 l/2 0 0 0 . 0 . ' ... ·.o ·.IJ. 0 . l/1 O.ranaLs, D. •at 6 0 0 0 l/2 0 0 0 0 6 '(7' tf 0; l/J £elpt, •• -c 5 0 0 0 2/4 0 0 0 0 s .. (J 0· ·~,, 2/4 ' ' JJ&t.r..,.Jo, l'. -G 3 o o o oto o o o o J o :··o · o •; oto SJaoptt, G. •D 6 0 0 0 5/1.0 0 0 0 0 6 . () () ~ tl ~ 5/lf} .. : OtlJeft ----I0 0 0 0 0/0,.. ____0 0 0 0 ----:'··0 0 0 ; Q' ·. 0/0.. u. ~ I(.Um. -- 6 22 4l 63 46/ JJio 1 3 2 0 . . ·• ·» 41·' fJ.; ... 46/it:lo ', ~- 6 u 21 46 40/80' s 3 o o •·J.t ~~ 41· 40/ltr'· J1CW4R I'IM$ SQM.I llr ~ . -- ...... l.tt JlltJ 3rd (6 fotC . 20 .3500 ------...... ;~ ,. ' Ull. -- 2 ll J 0 25 .3ZOO OJ),onent.s- 1 5 6 0

.v.r, QAI8S . OP_IIDI$ Gl Q.-AVC:: .ft'QJI' .ft SO ' :-~'_, --~-· ·-~ _____.' ~ -----· .... Slue, 3. 3 lSO 6 2.00 11 0.128 0 PJ.eu.,elo, r. 3 119 l2 4.00 18 0.817 0 Ull ------6 351 l8 3.00 155 0.116 0 0~ .-- 6 360' 22 3.67 liB 0.100 0

ffC1IA GAifliS . l1l'...... IUNS ---GA 0----- .AVG Sf'OIS------...... ft SO 3 l80 6 2.00 11 0.121 0 3 l19 l2 4.00 11 0.161 0 UN ------6 J59 lB 3.00 155 O.ltf 0 Op~-.. - 6 360 22 3.67 lJB 0. tOO 0 u. of Ninn. HOCKBY HOCKBf sCIIBINUI·iNJ> RJISfiills tOR'Au'GAJIBS \ I

RBCORD (N-L-r J: 3-3-0 ( 2-2~0 IIONB; l-l-0 MAr; 3-3-0 JfCBAJ \ H NL'r DMB A OPI!ON8N'r SCORB llnBND (}if GOAL G .0 .R. -$AV8$ ~------~~ ~ -~~-~--~-~------~--~~ -~~-~- ----~------~- ••••• , . 10/18/85 H HICBIGAN. 'l'BCH' 3-0 6lO~.Cbapnuin B1ue-l2 . , .. ·· ,J( 10/19/85 H HICHIGAN · 'l'BCB 1-2 6014 lt11len - PJ.etrangelo-J.J " l0/25/85A HINNBSO'PA-DUUJrH 4-2 5664.Cbapman Blue-3.~ .. ·. L 10/26/85 A IIINNBS(QA-DllP'I'B 2-5 5664. .P~etrlitJgN.p-39 L 11/0l/85 8 DBNVIIR 2•4 5969 B~ue-32 ·" . L ll/02/85 B . DBNVBR 4-5·· 6220 PJ.etrangelo-2~. 11/08/85 A· U¥BLL o-o 0 ll/09/85 A. LrMBLL o-o 0') ll/15/85 A NOifl'H DAKO'l'A o-o· 0 11/16/85 A NOR'l'H DAKO'l'A o-o 0 ll/22/85 B ILLINOIS ...CHICAGO o-o 0 ll/23/85 B ILLINOIS...CHICNJO o-o 0 ll/29/85 A NOR'l'BBRN IIICBIGAN o-o 0 1l/30/85.A liOlrrHBRN MICHIGAN o-o 0 12/06/85 H NISCONSIN o-o 0' 12/01/85 B WISCON~IN o-o 0 12/14/85 H U.S. lN'l'IIRNA'l'IONAL o-o 0 12/15/85 H U.S. IN'l'IIRNA'l'IONA.tt o-o· 0 12/20/85 A NOR!J!BBAS'l'BRN o-o · 0 12/21/85 A NOR'l'BIIAS'l'BRN o-o 0 12/29/85 A NBil HAIIPSJIIRB .. o-o o. 12/30/85 A NBff HAIIPSBIRJI o-o 0 Ol/03/86 H. IIAINB ~0 0' 01/04/86 H IIAINB o-o .o Ol/10/86.11 BOS'.PON · UNZVRsrrY , o-o 0 Ol/ll/86 B ~ON -UNIVBRSI'J.'Y o-o O· Ol/17/86 A BOS'l'ON COLUIGB o-o 0 01/18/86 A BOSrON COLLBG6 o-o 0 Ol/24/86 H PROVIDBNCB o-o 0 01/25/86 H PWJVID.Cil o-o 0 Ol/31/86 A NISCONSIN o-o 0 \ ' 02/0l/86 A NISCONSIN o-o 0 :,,, ;1 02/08/86 A +COLORA.DO COLLIIGII o-o 0 02/09/86 A +COLORADO COLLIIGB o-o 0 02/14/86 H HINNBSO'l'A-DJLU'lH o-o 0 02/15/86 H HINNIISO'l' A-DJLU'lH o-o 0 02/21/86 H NOR'l'B DAKO'PA o-o 0 02/22/86 H NORrll DAKO'l'A o-o 0 -: ',, . ----~~-.:·> 'l'otal Seaaon •· 35f94' ( 6 -ga.il, llVg. 5949) Horae Games -- 24366 ( 4 g-.!-, &Vg. 6092) + - Played at AP Academy

,· .... \ BREAKFAST WITH THE GOPHERS ON TAP SATURDAY

from the , Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455

Breakfast with the Golden Gophers on Saturday, November 16, will signal the wrap-up of pre-season preparations for Coach Jim Dutcher and his 1985-86 University of Minnesota basketball team.

Williams Arena will be the scene of that festive event, with coffee and donuts served free to fans through the concessions stands prior to the Golden Gophers' intra-squad scrimmage which is slated to begin at 9 a.m. This sequel to Midnight Madness again will feature participation by the University of Minnesota cheerleaders, Danceline and the Golden Gopher mascot.

Cormnernorative buttons will be distributed free to fans who attend what Coach Dutcher has termed "OUr final major scrimnage before we leave for Hawaii and the opening of our 1985-86 .season." For the scrimmage, Dutcher has indicated that he will divide his squad into a Gold team and Maroon team, with the Gold contingent featuring what currently is considered Minnesota's top unit. That group will include Todd Alexander and Marc Wilson at the guards, John Shasky at center and Kevin Smith and Mitchell Lee at the forwards. Terence Woods will provide backup assistance.

The Maroon squad will be made up of Mark Anderson at guard, Ray Gaffney at guard, Paul VanDenEinde at center, Dave Holmgren at center, Kelvin Smith at forward, George Williams at forward and Tim Hanson as a guard-forward swingrnan. Following Saturday's scrimmage, Minnesota will hit the road •••• or airways •••• to participate in the United Airlines Ala Moana Americana Hotel Brigham Young­ Hawaii Basketball Classic November 22, 23 and 25. In that tournament, Minnesota will take on host Brigham Young-Hawaii in the opener, Middle Tennessee University in the second game and West Virginia State College in the finale. Then the Golden Gophers will return to Williams Arena to open their 17-garne horne slate against San Francisco State on Friday, November 29. In all Minnesota will play eight non-conference games at horne during the months of November and December before beginning a nine-game Big Ten Conference home slate in January. Season tickets remain on sale for $153.00 through the Athletic Ticket Office located in the Bierman Building at 516 15th Avenue SE, Minneapolis, MN 55455 (phone 612-373-3181). --UM-- Mailed November 11, 1985 For Release Upon Receipt Game #10, Michigan at Minnesota Saturday, November 16, 1985 H.H.H. Metrodome, Minneapolis, MN

University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455

KICKOFF: 11:38 a.m. CST (Turner Net TV) ESTIMATED ATTENDANCE: 62,000 1985 SCHEDULES & RESULTS MINNES0~6-j:{}(4-2-0) UM 28, WICHITA STATE 14 (56,094) MICHIGAN 7-1-1 • (4-1-1) Sept. 14 MI 20, NOTRE DAME 12 UM 62, MONTANA 17 (55,700) Sept. 21 UM 7, OKLAHOMA 10 (62,446) MI ~4, at South Carolina 3 Sept. 28 MI 20, MARYLAND 0 UM 45, PURDUE 15 (59,503) Oct. 5 UM 21, at N'western 10 (24,512) MI 33, WISCONSIN 6 Oct. 12 MI 31, at Michigan State 0 UM 22, at Indiana 7 (38,826) Oct. 19 UM 19, OHIO STATE 23 (64,455) MI 10, at Iowa 12 Oct. 26 MI 41, INDIANA 15 UM 26, at Mich. State 31(63,758) Nov. 2 MI 3, at Illinois 3 UM 27, WISCONSIN 18 (64,571*) Nov. 9 UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN MI 47, PURDUE 0 Nov. 16 at Minnesota at University of Iowa Nov. 23 * - Record Metrodome Crowd OHIO STATE SERIES RECORD Michigan leads the series 50-22-3. Wolverine teams have won the last seven straight since the giant Gopher upset win in 1977. Michigan also leads in the "Little Brown Jug" series 45-20-2. LAST MEETING November 10, 1984 at Ann Arbor-- Michigan 31, Minnesota 7 (101,247) RECORDS LAST YEAR Minnesota 4-7 (3-6 in Big Ten) Michigan 6-6-0 (5-4-0 in Big Ten) ABOUT THE COACHES UM - Lou Holtz (2nd year at UM) MI - Bo Schembechler (17th year at MI) Career: 116-63~5, 16th year Career: 193-55-7, 24th year at UM: 10-10-0 at WIS: 153-38-4 vs. MI: 0-1-0 vs. UM: 15-1-0 THE BTG TEN THIS WEEK -Indiana at Illinois. Iowa at Purdue. Northwestern at Michigan State. Wisconsin at Ohio Stte.

UM MEN'S EVENTS ON TAP 11/15-16 11/16 Mankato 11/16 11/17 (OVER) .• 1 MINNESOTA 2-DEEP FOR MICHIGAN NOVEMBER !6, 1985

FIRST UNIT OFFENSE SECOND UNIT 89 - Mel Anderson (5-10 171b Jr) SE 6 - Eugene Gailord (5-11 180 Jr) 65 - Dan Rechtin (6-6 2~5 Jr) LT 76 - Norries Wilson (6-5 283 Jr) 73 - Jon Lilleberg (6-5 270 Sr) LG 56- John Williams ((6-3 240 Fr) 55 - Ray Hitchcock (6-2 263 Jr) .. c 50 - Randy Pelphrey (6-3 245 Jr) 57 - Troy (6-4 265 So) '~lko~ RG 52- Paul AndersOn (6-~265 So) 62 - Jim Hobbins (6-6 260 Jr) RT. 6~ -Shawn Schultz (6-3.?55 Fr) 86 - Kevin Starks (6-4 206 Sr) TE 84 - Crai~ Ptto (6-3 210 Fr) 14 - Rickey Foggie (6-1 185 So) QB 17 - Alan Holt (6-1 198 Fr) 37 - Valdez Baylor (5-1.1 201 Sr) TB 24 - Ed Penn (6-2 200 Fr) 44 - David Puk (6-4 216 Sr) FB 31- Kevin Wilson .. (5-11 205 Jr)· 12 - Andy Hare (6-1 195 Sr) FL 21 - Gary Couch (5-10 172 So) DEFENSE 20 - Larry Joyner (6-1 210 Jr) LE 77 - Trint TripJ'.l, ( 6-6 286 Fr) OR 79 - Dennis Ryan {6-3 230 Fr) · 96 - Steve Thompson (6-2 275 Jr) LT 90- Ross Ukkelberg (286 Fr)· 46 - Doug Mueller (6-3 232 So) NG 97 - .Steve Rhodus ( 6-2 235 So) 95 - Anthony Burke (6-3 250 Jr) RT 68 - Gary Hadd (6-4 255 So) 47 - Don Pollard (6-1 220 Jr) RE 13 - Rich Reed (6-2 218 ~r) 32 - Peter Najarian (6-2 222 Sr) LLB , ..., 39 - Joe Christopherson (6-1 221 Sr) 88 - Bruce Holmes (6-3 224 Jr) 'RLB 94 - Steve Gibbons (6-0 215 Sr) 45 - Duane Dutrieuille (5-9 179 Jr) LCB 3 - Charles McCree (6-0· 180 Fr) 35 -Donovan Small {5-11 185 Jr) FS . 9· ..,. Joel Brown (5-10 180 Fr) 48 - David Williams {6-0 202 So) ..... r . ss 40 - Steves Franklin (5-11 195 Fr) 9 - Joel Brown (5-10 180 Fr) . ·.• ' RCB · 49 - Lungen Howar~ ;(6-0. 183 Sr) . t.. . 1:'~ ' ". ; .: SPECIALISTS: PUNT--10 Adam KEj:lly (5-10 195 Sr), 25 Chip LOhmiller KO/PAT/FG--25 Chip Lohmiller (6-3 190 So) . HOLDER--10 Adam Kelly LONG SN~PS--58 Scott Guldin (5-:11 220 So) P/RETURN--12 Andy Hare KO/RETURN--23 Terry Stewart (6-1 190 Fr)

---UM--- GOLDEN GOPHERS HOST MICHIGAN IN JUG BATTLE

For the second straight week, the University of Minnesota football team will be battling for a symbolic trophy. And for the second straight week, that battle will take place in the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome. Saturday at 11:38 a.m. Coach Lou Holtz' Golden Gophers entertain the University of Michigan in a Big Ten Conference showdown, and the winner will own one year's rights to the Little Brown Jug. The invading Wolverines will bring an impressive 7-1-1 overall record into that outing and a 4-1-1 Big Ten mark. Michigan is in third place in the current standings and ranked in the nation's Top Ten. "Michigan is an outstanding team," Holtz said earlier this week. "They have an outstanding defensive team, and their defensive record against nine opponents shows it." A week ago, for example, the Wolves blanked Purdue 47-0 and it marked the third time this season that Michigan had held an opponent scoreless. In two other games, it's foes were held to single field goals, and thus far this year, Wolverine opponents have scored only 51 points •••• an average of 5.7 per game. Minnesota, meanwhile, making its final home appearance of the 1985 campaign in the Golden Dome, will risk a 6-3 overall record and a 4-2 Big Ten standard •••• a mark which puts the Golden Gophers all alone in fourth place in this week's standings. "It's now a four-team Big Ten race," Holtz told his squad after last Saturday's 27-18 victory over Wisconsin. "By beating Wisconsi~ we assured ourselves a winning season. I'm happy for the seniors, and now we will see how big a winner we can really be." Winning over Michigan •••• and Iowa a week later in Iowa City •••• will be a difficult assignment for Minnesota. Historically, the Wolverines have held the upper hand. In a series dating back to 1892, Michigan has built up a commanding 50-22-3 edge. In fact, Minnesota's most recent win in the series was 16-0 in 1977. A year ago in Ann Arbor, the Wolves posted a 31-7 triumph. But Minnesota is a better football team than it was a year ago, and while it did not play a total, complete game in last week's tune-up against Wisconsin, it did do some impressive things. "We got some big plays," Holtz pointed out, "and we do have some big play people. We had some trouble with turnovers, and our timing was off a little offensively, but our defense played well. It did a super job." Health-wise Minnesota does have some concerns, especially after losing Mark Dusbabek, junior defensive end, with a sprained knee. But Rickey Foggie, sophomore quarterback who missed all of the Michigan State game with a pulled groin muscle, returned against Wisconsin ••• and he should be 100% for the invading Wolverines Saturday. --UM-- l QUOTING LOU HOLTZ •• On the subject of winning number six last week against Wisconsin and being assured of a winning season, Lou Holtz said •••• "I'm happy for our seniors. This was our first object for the year. I hope this is the start of a long string of winning seasons for the Golden Gophers." G-0-P-H-E-R-S On the subject of Minnesota's solid kicking game against Wisconsin (despite having one clipping call on a kick and fumbling one punt) Lou Holtz said •••• "Wisconsin has a fine kicking game, and our players knew that if we were to win we would have to excel! in this area. Adam Kelly and Chip Lohrniller were outstanding. Our punt and kick coverage was as good as I have seen. Our punt and kickoff coverage is much further ahead of our punt and kickoff return, and that is what· has kept our total kicking game from being ~ good." G-0-P-H-E-R-S

On the subject ~f turnovers hampering Minnesota for the second consecutive week, Lou Holtz said •••• "We have to give credit to the opposition because they have played well. However, we have made a couple of poor decisions which is only human. Only an average person can always be at their best." G-0-P-H-E-R-S On the subject of Minnesota making the big plays against Wisconsin, Lou Holtz said •••• "We made a lot of big plays that swung the tide our way, but we can't afford to rely on them if we are to win consistently. We need to become more consistent which will allow us to control the ball and the tempo of the game." G-0-P-H-E-R-S

On the subject of Minnesota not being able to gain or maintain field position during much of the Wisconsin game, Lou Holtz said ••• "Wisconsin did a great job of giving us the ball deep in our territory. Then they did a better job of keeping us there." G-Q-P-H-E-R-S On the subject of winning Paul Bunyan's Axe and now playing for the Little Brown Jug, Lou Holtz said •••• "The Little Brown Jug is important to us, but obviously means a lot to Michigan/ too, as they have won it most of the time." G-Q-P-H-E-R-S On the subject of this week's opponent, Michigan, and the Michigan defense which Minnesota must face Saturday, Lou Holtz said ••• "Michigan has a great team. Their defense is incredible and has overshadowed the fact that it has an excellent offense and sound kicking game."

--UM-- FOR THE LATEST IN GOPHER SPORTS DIAL 612-373-4211. HINNBSO'I!TA FCJO'rBALL U. of llinn. FOOTBALL STATIS'l'ICS FOR ALL GANES

RBCORD(ff-L-T): 6-3-0 (4-2-0 BOMB; 2-1-0 »>AY; 0-0-0 NBU'I.'RAL; 4-2-0 CONF).

u. of Minn. OPPONENTS ~------TOOCHJXMNS RUSHING 25 12 PASSING 7 6 OTHBR 0 0 FIRS'! /)()fiNS RJSHING 115 PASSING. 93 54 76 PENALTY l 4 TO'I.'AL 170 173 RUSHING M''l'BMnS 448 404 • YARllS GAINBD 2252 1659 r~ LOS'!' 170 212 NB'r YARDS 2082 1447 YDS PER CARRY 4.6 3.6 YDS PBR GAllE 231.3 160.8 PASSING (CHP-111"1'-INT) 72-147-3 126-241-7' COMI?LB'l' ION PC'r 49.0 52.3 NB'l' YARnS 1504 1453 YDS PBR M!TBHP'l 10.23 6.03 YDS PBR COHPLB'l'ION 20.89 11.53 YDS PBR GAllE 167.1 161.4 RA'l'ING 146.6 82.9 '1'0'1' AL OFFBNSB 3586 2900 PLAYS 595 '645' YDS PER PLAY 6.03 4.50 YDS PER GAllE 398.4 322.2 POINTS SCORED 257 148 POIN'l'S PER GAllE 28.6 16.4 INTERCBP'I'IONS/YDS RTND 7/37 3/13 PUNTS RB'!!URNED/YDS/ AVG 19/131/6.9 21/168/8.0 KICKS RB'l'URNED/YDS/AVG 21/371/17.7 21/365/17.4 PUNTS/YDS/AVG 39/1667/42.7 50/1913/38.3 PENAL'l'IBS/YDS/YDS PER GAllE 35/291/32.3 39/312/34.7 FUMBLES/LOST 22/10 21/8 ()B SACKBD ( OFFBNSB) 17 8 THIRD IXMNS/CONV/PCT 124/56/45.2 130/65/50.0 SCBBIJ(JLB AND RBSULTS ------09/14/85 UM 28 Wichita State 14 f{ Metrodome 56,094 09/21/85 UM 62 Montana u. 17 w Metrodome 55,700 09/28/85 UM 7 U. of Oklahoma 13 L Metrodome 62,446 10/05/85 UM 45 U. of Purdue 15 w Metrodome 59,503 10/12/85 UM 21 @ Northwestern u. 10 w Evanston, IL 24,512 10/19/85 UM 22 @ Indiana u. 7 w Bloomington, IN 38,826 10/26/85 * UM 19 Ohio State u. 23 L Metrodome 64,455 ll/02/85 UM 26 @ Michigan State 31 .L Bast Lansing, MI 63,758 11/09/85 UM 27 u. of Wisconsin 18 w Metrodome 64,571 11/16/85 UM U. of Michigan Metrodome -ll/23/85 UH @ u. of Iowa Iowa City, IA NO'l'ES: * Homecoming HINNBSO't'I'A FOOTBALL U. of Minn. INDIVIIXJAL FOOTBALL S'fATIS'!ICS FOR ALL GAMBS l RUSHING AT'r GAIN LSS NB'l AVG 'l'DS W RECEIVING NUH YL\S AVG TDS W ~-----~------~------Bay1or,V 88 539 8 531 6.0 5 45 Anderson, II 20 494 24.7 2 89 Foggie,R 101 497 80 417 4.1 9 21 Starlcs,K 15 260 17.3 3 61 Puk.,D 63 296' 0 296 4.7 2 32 Couch,G 10 415 41.5 1 76 Coucb,G 34 236 9 227 6.7 2 27 Bay1or,v 10 96 9.6 1 17 Wilson,K 30 138 2 136 4.5 1 22 Gai1ord,B 7 108 15.4 0 23 Penn,B 29 136 5 131 4.5 1 17 Hare,A 4 71 17.8 0 38 Holmes,C 19 82 5 77 4.1 0 20 Pulc,D 4 39 9.8 0 15 Abercrombie 18 72 6 66 3.7 1 14 Otto,C 2 21 10.5 0 12 Holt,A 28 90 27 63 2.3 2 25 Stewa.rt,T 6 34 2 32 5.3 1 13 PUNTING NUll YDS AVG BKD W Hare,A 6 32 0 32 5.3 0 9 Anderson,M 3 23 6 17 5.7 0 17 Ke11y,A------35 1517 43.3 0 61 Fors,E 5 16 0 16 3.2 0 8 Lohmi11er,C 4 150 37.5 0 49 Singletary, 2 15 0 15 7.5 0 12 Richardson, 8 34 20 14 1.8 0 17 PUNT RBTNS NUH YDS •AVG TDS LG Moe,M 3 7 0 7 2.3 0 4 ------Cummings,P 2 2 0 2 1.0 0 2 Hare,A 8 87 10.9 0 35 Berry,W 1 1 0 1 1.0 1 1 Coucb,G 2 17 8.5 0 9 Hinor,B 1 1 0 1 1.0 0 1 Gailord,B 8 31 3.9 0 18 Bruce,J 1 1 0 1 1.0 0 l Howard,L l -4 -4.0 0 -4

PASSING ATr CHP · PCT YDS IN TDS R!rNG KICK RBTNS NUH YDS AVG 'I'DS W

Foggie,R------lOB 53 .491 1206 3 6 155.7 Anderson,M------14 286 20.4 0 27 Bo1t,A 37 19 .514 298 0 1 127.9 Stewart,'! 2 34 17.0 0 19 Richardson, l 0 .ooo 0 0 0 0.0 Hare,A l 14 14.0 0 14 Bare,A l 0 .ooo 0 0 0 o.o Garrido,G 2 27 13.5 0 17 Ga11ord,B 2 10 s.o 0 8 TO'!.'AL OFF. PLAYS RUSH PASS TOTAL YDS/PL ------INT RETNS NUM YDS AVG TDS LG Foggie,R 209 417 1206 1623 7.8 Baylor,V 88 531 0 531 6.0 Small,D 2 23 11.5 0 16 Ho1t,A 65 63 298 361 5.6 Dusbabek,M 2 6 3.0 0 4 Pulc,D 63 296 0 296 4.7 W111ia.ms,D 1 6 6.0 0 6 Couch,G 34 227 0 227 6.7 Dutrieuille l 2 2.0 0 2 Wi1son,K 30 136 0 136 4.5 Martinez,M l 0 0.0 0 0 Penn,B 29 131 0 131 4.5 SCORING TDS XPl-A XP2-A. FG-A SAF PTS Bolmes,C 19 77 0 77 4.1 Abercrombie 18 66 0 66 3.7 Lohmiller, c o 27-28 o-o 12-1s o 63 Hare,A 7 32 0 32 4.6 Foggie,R 9 o-o o-2 o-o o 54 Stewart,'! 6 32 0 32 5.3 Baylor,V 6 o-o 1-o o-o o 38 Anderson,M 3 17 0 17 5.7 Starks,K 3 o-o o-o o-o o 18 P'ors,E 5 16 0 16 3.2 Couch,G 3 o-o o-o o-o o 1s . Singletary, 2 15 0 15 7.5 Puk,D 2 o-o o-o o-o o 12 Richardson, 9 14 0 14 1.6 Anderson,M 2 o-o o-o o-o o 12 Moe,M 3 7 0 7 2.3 Holt,A 2 o~o o-1 o-o o 12 Cummings,P 2 2 0 2 1.0 Stewart,'! 1 o-o o-o o-o o 6 Berry,W 1 1 0 1 • 1.0 Wilson,K 1 o-o o-o o-o o 6 Minor,E 1 1 0 1 1.0 Abercrombie 1 o-o o-o o-o o 6 Bruce,J 1 1 0 1 1.0 Berry,W 1 o-o o-o o-o o 6 Penn,E 1 o-o o-o o~ o 6 SCORE BY Q'S lst 2nd 3rd 4th - Tot. Hare,A o o-o o-1 o-o o o Minnesota 44 99 67 47 257 FIELD GOALS: 0-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50+ Opponents 34 72 7 35 148 Lohmil1er o-o s-s 4-s 2-4 1-1 37, 2BG, 24G, 25G, 47, 41, J1G, 45G, 28G, 36G, SOG .• JOG, 32G. 22G, 47G HINNBSO'l''l'A l'OO'l'BALL U. of Minn. DEFENSIVE P'OO'l'BALL S'l'ATISTICS FOR ALL GAH.BS

------~ACKLBS------PLArBR Cll'RBK -P'UHIJLBS- BLKD -PASSBS-- POS UNAS'l'. ASSIS'l' 'l'O'l'AL UJSS SACXS CSD. RBC. KICKS BKUP IN'l'C e ~----~-~--~------~~------64. Bolmes,B LB 41 105 2 NajarJ.an,P 1 0 2 0 2 0 LB 43 57 100 3 1 0 0 Dusbabek,ll DB 0 0 0 42 30 72 6 0 0 1 0 Joyner,L DB 36 1 2 31 67 5 3 0 0 0 0 0 Sma11,D FS 39 20 59 1 0 0 0 0 2 2 BurJce,A U1' 40 14 54 3 3 0 l 0 0 0 'l'hompson,S DT 33 14 47 5 Dutrieui1le 3 0 1 0 2 0 CB 29 18 47 l 0 fili.lli.ams,D ss 0 0 0 0 1 30 16 46 2 0 0 0 0 1 Hartinez,H CB 25 1 14 39 1 0 0 0 0 8 1 Hue1ler,D NG 17 13 30 l 1 0 0 0 0 Hadd,G U1' 13 0 9 22 3 2 0 0 0 0 Christopher LB 0 13 8 21 1 1 0 0 0 1 Reed,R DB 9 0 10 19 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 P'ranlclin,s ss l3 2 15 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Hcintosh,H P'S 8 ·s 13 0 0 0 0 0 0 Pol1ard,D DB 4 0 3 7 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Hrycak.,'l' LB 3 4 7 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 Hot~ard,L CB 6 0 6 0 0 0 0 0 1 Rhodus,s NG 5 0 l 6 0 0 0 0 0 l 0 StepaneJc,J U1' 4 1 5 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 Trip,T U1' 4 1 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Ryan,D NG 3 2 5 0 Roth,R 0 0 0 0 0 0 NG 2 3 5 0 0 Ukk.e1berg,R 0 0 0 0 0 U1' 3 l 4 0 0 0 0 e HcCree,c 0 1 0 CB 3 1 4 0 0 Gibbons,s 0 0 0 l 0 LB 3 1 4 0 0 0 0 Wi1son,N O'l' 0 0 0 2 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 Berry,W ss 2 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Cummings,P P'L l 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 l 0 Brot~n,J P'S 1 1 2 1 1 0 Gailord,E 1 0 1 0 SE 1 1 2 0 0 0 0 Vanderwoude 0 0 0 DE 1 0 1 0 0 0 Ville11a,'l' ur 0 0 0 0 1 0 l 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Leverenz,J LB l 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 'l'eske,D FS 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Garrido,G ss 1 0 l 0 0 0 0 0 ·o 0 Guldin,S c l 0 l 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Lohmil1er,C K l 0 l 0 0 0 0 Hu1ligan,G DE 0 0 0 1 o. 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Chernin,A LB 0 1 l 0 0 0 0 0 0 Bond,M DE 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 ALL PURPOSE YARDAGE Player GP RUSHING PASSING RECEIVING P/RETURN KO/RETURN TC YARDS PLAY GAME Foggie 8 1011"17 53/108/1206 0 0 0 209 1623 7.7 202.9 Anderson 9 3/17 0 20/494 0 14/286 37 797 21.5 88.'" Couch 9 34/227 0 10/415 2/17 0 46 659 14.3 73.2 Baylor 9 88/531 0 10/96 0 0 98 627 6.4 69.7 Holt 7 28/63 . 37/19/298 0 0 0 65 361 ·5.6 60.2 Puk 9 63/296 0 4/39 0 0 67 335 5.0 37.2 e Starks 9 0 0 15/260 0 0 15 260 17.3 28.8 ---UM--- ....------~ ~-~

BREAKFAST WITH THE GOPHERS 00 TAP SATURDAY

from the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455

Breakfast with the Golden Gophers on Saturday, November 16, will signal the wrap-up of pre-season preparations for Coach Jim Dutcher and his 1985-86 University of Minnesota basketball team. Williams Arena will be the scene of that festive event, with coffee and donuts served free to fans through the concessions stands prior to the Golden Gophers' intra-squad scrimmage which is slated to begin at 9 a.m. This sequel to Midnight Madness again will feature participation by the University of Minnesota cheerleaders, Danceline and the Golden Gopher mascot. Commemorative buttons will be distributed free to fans who attend what Coach Dutcher has termed "OUr final major scrimnage before we leave for Hawaii and the opening of our 1985-86 season." For the scrimmage, Dutcher has indicated that he will divide his squad into a Gold team and Maroon team, with the Gold contingent featuring what currently is considered Minnesota's top unit. That group will include Todd Alexander and Marc Wilson at the guards, · John Shasky at center and Kevin Smith and Mitchell Lee at the forwards. Terence Woods will provide backup assistance. The Maroon squad will be made up of Mark Anderson at guard, Ray Gaffney at guard, Paul VanDenEinde at center, Dave Holmgren at center, Kelvin Smith at forward, George Williams at forward and Tim Hanson as a guard-forward swingman. Following Saturday's scrimmage, Minnesota will hit the road •••• or airways •••• to participate in the United Airlines Ala Moana Americana Hotel Brigham Young­ Hawaii Basketball Classic November 22, 23 and 25. In that tournament, Minnesota will take on host Brigham Young-Hawaii in the opener, Middle Tennessee University in the second game and West Virginia State College in the finale. Then the Golden Gophers will return to Williams Arena to open their 17-game home slate against San Francisco State on Friday, November 29. In all Minnesota will play eight non-conference games at home during the months of November and December before beginning a nine-game Big Ten Conference home slate in January. Season tickets remain on sale for $153.00 through the Athletic Ticket.Office located in the Bierman Building at 516 15th Avenue SE, Minneapolis, MN 55455 (phone 612-373-3181}. --UM-- 11/11/85

Minneapolis,MN---Sometimes it takes a road trip, its takes playing in foreign surroundings to produce different results for a team that may be struggling. It was a road trip to Lowell, MA, last weekend that provided the proper medicine for Minnesota's hokcey Gophers. Minnesota broke a three-game loss string by defeating the Lowell Chiefs 3-1 and 2:-.1. The wins 'lifted the,Gophers intosole possession of third place in the WCHA standings with a 5-3-0 record good for 10 points. Minnesota is only two points behind co-leaders Northern Michigan and Wisconsin, each at 6-2-0, 12. Minnesota may be seeking a second perscription this weekend, but one is considerably harder to swallow. At task are games Friday and Saturday in Grand Forks against the u. of North Dakota. The Sioux (4-4-0) last weekend cured some of its own problems by sweeping the series at New Hampshsire (4-2, 7-4). "North Dakota will be a lot hungrier than Lowell was," says first year Gopher head coach Doug Woog. "I'm certain their wins at New Hampshsire boosted their confidence in ge~ting their act together. "But our players tell me they really enjoy playing up there, so I expect to see quite a series. Minnesota and North Dakota own a long heritage of some great hockey series down through the years. I believe that spirit will be kept alive this weekend." Asked about his team's performance in 'the Lowell series, Woog replied, "Naturally we would have liked to score .more goals than we did, but looking at the positive side we were able to cut down on our goals against. "We even had three clear breakaways Saturday, but missed each try. We are starting to get more quality scoring chances and I believe the goals will come. "I also believe many of our men are concentrating much, much more now on the small butimportant components of defensive areas, and that sometimes takes away from your offense. But defensive play has come into a special meaning for our players. ' " "They really appeared proud that we could work well in our defensive areas and shut an opponent down. Protecting a slim lead by playing smart hockey is a real booster to our people. "In addition, both our goalies, John Blue Friday and Frank Pietrangelo Saturday, played soundly. Lowell's goals in each game ca~e on the power play. "And speaking of the power play, we are simply not coming through in this area. But then, we are not getting as many opportunities as our opponents, either. We do need additional work in this area to improve our scoring chances." Woog offered praise for freshman center Dave Snuggerud (Minnetonka) who played in his first games for Minnesota. Woog said Snuggerud fit in well as all four of Minnesota's lines scored at least one goal in the series. It is also hoped, says Woog, that junior defensernan Eric 'Dornfeld can return to action this weekend. Dornfeld has missed.the last three Gopher games with a shoulder injury. The coach added that freshman wing Tom Chorske could also be back in the Gopher lineup for the North Dakota series, too. 'l .. WCHA STANDINGS THRU 11/9/85 GP. w L- T PTS ·t;F 'AVG GA AVG 1-Denver (7-2-0) 8 6 2 0 12 38 4.7 27 3.4 -Wisconsin (6-4-0) 8 6 2 0 12 38 4.7 28 3.5 3-MINNESOTA (5-3-0) 8 5 3 0 10 27 3.4 20 2.5 4-Northern Michigan (5-2-1) · 6 4 2 0 8 26 4.3 '26 4.3 -North Dakota (4-4-0) 8 4 4 0 8 37 4.6 30 3.7 6-Minnesota-Duluth .(7-3-0) 6 3 3 0 6 22 3.7 19 3.2 7-Colorado College (3-6-0) .4 2 4 0 4 21 3.5 22 3.7 -Michigan Tech (2-7-1) 8 2 6 0 4 20 2.5 44 5.5 ~--UM--- ...... - U. of Hinn. HOCKBr HOCKBY STATISTICS FOR ALL GAHBS RBCORD (W-L-T): 5-3-0 (2-2-0 HOME; 3-l-0 AWAY; 5-3-0 WCBA) WCHA GANBS PLAYBR GP G A P'!S PEN/MIN PP GH SB B'f GP G A TP PBN/NIN ~------~------Cates, J. -c 8 3 6 9 7/14 l l 0 0 8 3 6 9 7/14 Chapman, W. -IH 8 5 4 9 l/2 2 2 0 0 8 5 4 9 1/2 HacSwain, -IJ( s. 8 l 7 8 1/2 0 0 0 0 8 1 7 8 l/2 Micheletti, P. -w 8 2 5 7 11/30 1 1 0 0 8 2 5 7 ll/30 Okerlund, T. -RH 8 2 5 7 5/10 0 0 l 0 8 2 5 7 5/10 Hillen, c. -c 8 4 2 6 6/12 1 1 0 0 Kellin, T. -D 8 4 2 6 6/12 8 2 2 4 4/8 l 0 0 0 8 2 2 4 4/8 Or~h, s. -c 8 2 2 4 0/0 l 0 l 0 8 2 2 4 0/0 Anderson, H. -IH 8 l 2 3 1/2 0 0 0 0 Hack, c. -D 8 1 2 3 l/2 8 l 2 3 2/4 0 0 0 0 8 1 2 3 2/4 Broten, P. -RH 3 2 1 3 0/0 0 0 0 0 3 2 1 3 0/0 Bergland, T. -w 8 1 1 2 1/2 0 0 0 0 8 1 l 2 l/2 Dornfeld, B. -D 5 0 2 2 2/4 0 0 0 0 5 0. 2 2 2/4 Grannis, D. -RH 8 1 l 2 1/2 0 0 0 0 Nelson, B. -D 8 1 1 2 1/2 5 0 2 2 2/4 0 0 0 0 5 0 2 2 2/4 Richards, T. -D 6' 0 2 2 2/4 0 0 0 0 6 0 2 2 2/4 Bspe, D. -D 5 0 1 1 3/6 0· 0 0 0 5 0 l 1 3/6 Shopek, G. -D 8 0 1 1 6/12 0 0 0 0 8 0 1 l 6/12 Snuggerud, D. -c 2 0 1 1 1/2 0 0 0 0 2 0 1 1 1/2 Blue, J. -G 4 0 0 0 0/0 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 0/0 Chorske, T. -IH 6 0 0 0 1/2 0 0 0 0 Lempe. Bric -c 6 0 ' 0 0 l/2 5 0 0 0 2/4 0 0 0 0 5 0 0 0 2/4 Pietrangelo, F. -G 4 0 0 0 0/0 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 0/0 Gersich, F. -D 2 0 0 0 0/0 0 0 0 0 Others 2 0 0 0 0/0 0 0 0 0 0/0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0/0 ======--=== u. of Minn. --- 8 27 49 76 59/126 7 5 2 0 8 27 49 76 59/126 Opponents --- 8 20 30 50 49/98 10 3 0 0 8 20 30 50 49/98

PCMER PLAYS SCORE BY PERIODS ======G OPP % 1st 2nd 3rd OT Total ------UM -- 7 27 .2592 UM -- 5 12 10 0 27 Opponents -- 10 37 .2702 Opponents -- 7 6 7 0 20

GOALIE RECORDS ======ALL GAHBS --GP MINS------GA G.AVG STOPS S% SO ·Blue, J. 4 240 7 1.75 100 0.935 0 Pietrangelo, F. 4 239 13 3.25 103 0.888 0 ======--== == UM --- 8 479 20 2.50 203 0.910 0 Opponents --- 8 480 27 3.38 257 0.905 0

WCHA GAMES GP MINS------GA G. AVG STOPS S% SO Blue, J. 4 240 7 1.75 100 0.935 0 Pietrangelo, F. 4 239 13 3.25 103 0.888 0 ======UM --- 8 479 20 2.50 203 0.910 0 Opponents --- 8 480 27 3.38 257 0.905 0 ... ' ~ U. of Minn. HOCKEY HOCICEf SCHBDJLB AND RESULTS FOR ALL GAHBS

RECORD (fi-L-'1!): 5-3-0 (2-2-0 HOME; 3-l-0 AHAY; 5-3-0 WCHA) H HL'l! DMB A OPPONEN'l' _...,______- SCORE A!l"I'END GW GOAL G.O.R.-SAVBS ____ .___ ,..______------.. ------fl 10/18/85 H IIICBIGAN 'l'BC/! 3-0 6103 Chapman w 10/19/85 H IIICHIGAN TECH Blue-12 , 7-2 6074 Hillen Pietrangelo-13 10/25/85 A IIINNESO'l' A-IXJW'l'H 4-2 L 5664 Chapman Blue-33 10/26/85 A IIINNESO'l' A-IXJW'l'H 2-5 L 11/01/85 B 5664 Pietrangelo-39 DENVER 2-4 5969 L 1l/02/85 H DBNVBR B1ue-32 fl 4-5 6220 Pietrangelo-26 11/08/85 A UMBLL 3-l N 11/09/85 A l9l3 Micheletti Blue-23 UMELL 2-l 1893 Cates 11/15/85 A . NORTH DAKOTA Pietrange1o-25 11/16/85 A o-o 0 NOifl'H DAKO'l'A o-o 0 11/22/85 H ILLINOIS-cHICAGO 11/23/85 B o-o 0 ILLINOIS-cHICAGO o-o 0 11/29/85 A NOR'I'HBRN H.ICHIGAN 11/30/85 A o-o 0 NOifl'HBRN MICHIGAN o-o 0 12/06/85 H u. of Wisconsin 12/07/85 H o-o 0· u. of Wisconsin 0~0 0 12/14/85 H U.S. IN'I'BRNATIONAL 12/15/85 H o-o 0 U.S •. IN'I'BRNA'l'IONAL o-o 0 12/20/85 A NOR'I'HBASTBRN 12/21/85 A o-o 0 NOifl'HBAS'I'ERN o-o 0 12/29/85 A NEW HAHPSHIRB 12/30/85 A o-o 0 NBN HAHPSHIRB o-o 0 Ol/03/86 H HAINB o-o 01/04/86 H HAINE 0 01/10/86 H o-o 0 BOSTON UNIVERSI'I'Y o-o 0 01/11/86 H BOSTON UNIVERSITY Ol/17/86 A o-o 0 BOSTON COLLEGE o-o 0 01/18/86 A BOSTON COLLEGE 01/24/86 H o-o 0 PROVIDENCE o-o 0 01/25/86 B PROVIDENCE 01/31/86 A o-o 0 U. of Wisconsin o-o 0 02/01/86 A U. of Wisconsin 02/08/86 A o-o 0 +COWRADO COLLEGE o-o 0 02/09/86 A +COLORADO COLLEGE 02/14/86 H o-o 0 IIINNESO'l'A-IXJLUTH o-o 0 02/15/86 H HINNESO'l'A-IXJLUTB 02/21/86 B o-o 0 NORTH DAKOTA o-o 0 02/22/86 H NORTH DAKOTA o-o ------0 Total Season -- 39500 (8 games, avg. Home Games -- 4938) 24366 (4 games, avg. 6092) + - Played at AF Academy MEN'S AND WCMN'S INTERNATlONAL GYMNASTICS

U of M Athletic Ticket Office: (612) 373-318 Sports Information: (612) 376-5259

Field Athletic Building • Room 238 • 516 15th Avenue S.E. • Minneapolis, MN

November 8, 1985 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: MINNESOTA MEN'S GYMNASTIC TEAM HOSTS JAPANESE FOR SIXTH STRAIGHT YEAR CO-ED DUAL MEET: The University of Minnesota men's and women's gymnastic teams host the Japanese Collegiate All-Stars Sunday, December 1, 2:00PM at Williams Arena. It will be the second year of the co-ed dual meet and the'sixth consecutive year the Minnesota men's team has hosted the Japanese. MINNESOTA GYMNASTICS The University of Minnesota men's gymnastic team coached by 15-year veteran coach Fred Roethlisberger has won seven of the last eleven Big Ten Conference team titles ••• The Gophers. were runnerup last season in the Big Ten and will look to regain their 1984 conference title .•• Roethlisberger has coached 29 individual Big Ten performers to championships and has seen nine of his gymnasts compete for the US National Team ••• Roethlisberger's career dual mark at the U of M is an outstanding 90-37 .(703 winning percentage). 1985-86 GOPHER STANDOUTS Minnesota returns seven of the top nine competing team members from the 1985 Big Ten ruunerup squad ••• Three US National Team members lead the Golden Gophers this season: Rob Brown (Sr. All-Around, Chicago, IL), David Menke (Sr. All-Around, Bllomington,MN) and Collin Godkin (Jr. All-Around, Milwaukee, WI) .•.• Brown competed in the 1985 World Univers:ity Games and the other two stars have international experience as well. All-American pommel horse performer Steve Braun Jr. Bloomington, MN) and senior all-arounder Pat Houde (Bloomington, MN) are two outstanding Twin Cities athletes who are important members of the 1985-86 Gopher team. 1986 BIG TEN OUTLOOK The 1986 Big Ten Conference meet will be held March 14-15 at the University of Illinois •.• Defending champion Ohio State will be tough again in 1985-86 and coach Roethlisberger likes Minnesota, Ohio State and Iowa as the favorites this year in a balanced conference race ..• Three Big Ten teams ranked in the national top ten last year and more of the same is expected this season. GOPHER SEASON OPENER Minnesota opened the season with the annual Alumni meet November 1 at Edina High School ••• The Gophers will be at the Windy City Invitational in Chicago November 23 to open the competitive 1Q85-86 season ••• The Windy .City Invite is hosted .by the University of Chicago-Circle. *****UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA***** ------~- ~~~~-~-~--- .-., ,. -

GOPHER SPORTS UPDATES

MINNESOTA TO HOST FIVE TEAM WRESTLING SHOWCASE SATURDAY AT WILLIAMS ARENA The Golden Gopher wrestling team will host its annual Minnesota Showcase wrestling tournament Saturday, November 16, 3:00PM at Williams Arena. Coach Wally Johnson's team will compete with defending Big Ten and national NCAA champion Iowa, Arizona State University, Mankato State University and Wisconsin- River Falls. -

Each team will have two 10 man squads and wrestle in a round-robin format. ThP. University of Iowa of NCAA Coach of the Year and 1984 Olympic wrestling team coach Dan Gable, return six Big Ten champions from 1985 and will be the conference and national favorite again this season. Arizona State of the Pac-Ten Conference will bring a young squad into the Minnesota Showcase. ASU will have nine transfers among ots 20 man team. Mankato State University is a NCAA II school in the tough North Central Conference wrestling league and are led by veteran coach Rummy Macias in his 36th year atMSU. Wisconsin-River Falls is in the Wisconsin State University Conference (WSUC) and has a freshman dominated lineup with 15 freshman in the top 20 wrestlers. The University of Minnesota will be led by its captain Ed Geise (SR. Wood Dale, IL). Geise won the 1984 Big Ten 118 pound championship and sat out last season with a red-shirt year. Geise will be among the league and national favorites at 118 pounds this season. The Gophers also return three Big Ten place winners at 134 pounds, Blake Bonjean (Jr. Bloomington, MN), 158 pounds, Brett Rasmussen (So. Kasson, MN) and 167 pounds, Rod Sande (Jr. St. Paul, MN). ---UM--- WALLY JOHNSON TO BE INDUCTED IN WRESTLING HALL OF FAME SATURDAY

Minnesota head wrestling coach Wally Johnson will be accorded the highest honor in amateur wrestling on Saturday being inducted into the Wrestling Hall of Fame located in Stillwater, Oklahoma. Johnson is in his 34th and final season as wrestling coach at Minnesota. He has 374-200-11 career record with the Gophers and has over 450 college victories including his stops at South Dakota State and Luther College in Iowa. Johnson will retire following the 1985-86 Minnesota wrestling season. ---UM--- GISSELQUIST TO RUN IN NCAA DISTRICT FOUR REGIONAL IN BLOONINGTON,INDIANA Minnesota's star cross country runner Paul Gisselquist (Jr. Richfield,MN) will be the Gophers lone competitor at the NCAA District Four meet in Bloomington, Indiana. Gisselquist has been Minnesota's top performer all year long and was the fourth place individual finisher at the Big Ten meet November 2. Individuals will qualify for the NCAA National Championships November 25 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. ---UM--- GYMNASTS AT WINDY CITY INVITE NOVEMBER 23: HOST JAPANESE ALL-STARS DECEMBER 1 Coach Fred Roethlisberger's Minnesota gymnastic team will open the 1985-86 season competing in the Windy City Invitational in Chicago, IL, November 23.

Minnesota will host the Japanese Collegiate All-Stars in a co-ed dual meet, Sunday,December 1, 2:00PM at Williams Arena. For ticket information, please call the Gymnastics Office at (612) 373-4219. (More details on additional release) from the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455

GOLDEN GOPHER RECOGNITION DAY PLANNED

A special Golden Gopher Recognition Day is on tap at the Hubert H. Humphrey . Metrodome Saturday when the University of Minnesota winds up its 1985 home football season by hosting the University of Michigan at 11:30 a.m. Fourteen seniors will be introduced and paid tribute in pre-game ceremonies, and attending parents of those players will be on the field forming a cordon at the top of the band's traditional "M" to participate in those ceremonies.

The seniors are Valdez Baylor, Joe Christopherson, Steve Gibbons, Andy Hare, Lungen Howard, Adam Kelly, Jon Lilleberg, Mike Moe, Peter Najarian, Mike Pryor, David Puk, Richard Reed, Kevin Starks and Joe Stepanek. Fifty Williams Scholars from the 1984-85 season also will be honored during special halftime ceremonies, with those student-athletes from 11 sports receiving recognition for having attained and maintained a 3.0 grade point average. As a special salute to the 1985 Golden Gopher football team and its loyal fans, Eastman Kodak Company will distribute free 60,000 University of Minnesota team posters at Saturday's game. Those posters, done in full color, feature a team picture of the 1985 Golden Gophers and are expected to be cherished souvenirs from the current football season.

-UM-- Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455

November 13, 1985

TO: Members of the Twin Cities Media ON: Annual MAC Awards Banquet FROM: SID Office

Please Note---this IS NOT a request for publicity!!! This memo is is directed to you only FYI.

On Monday, November 25, the Minneapolis Athletic Club will host its 68th Annual University of Minnesota Football Awards Banquet. Guests will be the entire U. of M. football team and coaching staff.

This event IS NOT open to the public, but for MAC members and personal guests, only. Besides, it's already sold out.

Thus, this memo is only to let you know the SID staff will be releasing that evening (about 9 p.m.) winners of the various awards given to members of the 1985 Gopher football varsity team.

Please let our office know if you will 1) be there in person to cover the event, or 2) wish our office to contact your outlet that evening with the list of the award winners. We will be happy to cooperate in your coverage of this event, just as we at this time say thanks for your great coverage during the entire 1985 season. Gopher SID Staff Mailed November 18, 1985 For Release Upon Receipt Game #11, Minnesota at Iowa Saturday, November 23, 1985 Kinnick Stadium, Iowa City, IA

University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455

KICKOFF: 11~38 a.m. CST (Turner Net TV) ESTIMATED ATTENDANCE: 66,000 SRO 1985 SCHEDULES & RESULTS MINNESOTA 6-4-0 (4-3-0) IOWA 9-1-0 (6-1-0) UM 28, WICHITA STATE 14 (56,094) Sept. 14 IA 58, DRAKE 0 UM 62, MONTANA 17 (55,700) Sept. 21 IA 48, N. ILLINOIS 20 UM 7, OKLAHOMA 13 (62,446) Sept. 28 IA 57, at Iowa State 3 UM 45, PURDUE 15 (59,503) Oct. 5 · IA 35, MICHIGAN STATE 31 UM 21, at N'western 10 (24,512) Oct. 12 IA 23, at Wisconsin 13 UM 22, at Indiana 7 (38,826) ·Oct• 19 IA 12, MICHIGAN 10 UM 19, OHIO STATE 23 (64,455) Oct. 26 IA 49, at Northwestern 10 UM 26, at Mich. State 31(63,758) Nov. 2 IA 13, at Ohio State 22 UM 27, WISCONSIN 18 (64,571*) Nov. 9 IA 59, ILLINOIS 0 UM 7, MICHIGAN 48 (64,129) Nov. 16 IA 27, at Purdue 24 at University of Iowa Nov. 23 MINNESOTA * - Record Metrodome Crowd SERIES RECORD Minnesota leads this series 52-24-2. Iowa had taken the previous two meetings in 1982 and 1963 before Minnesota broke through last fall. LAST MEETING November 17, 1984 at Minneapolis-- Minnesota 23, Iowa 17 (63,479) RECORDS LAST YEAR Minnesota 4-7 (3-6 in Big Ten) Iowa 8-4-1 (5-3-1 in Big Ten) ABOUT THE COACHES UM - Lou Holtz (2nd year at UM) IA - Hayden Fry (7th year at IA) Career: 116-64-5, 16th year Career: 140-118-5, 24th year at UM: 1o -11-0 at IA: 51-29-1 vs. IA: 1-0-0 vs. UM: 2-4-0 THE BIG TEN THIS WEEK Ohio State at Michigan. Michigan State at Wisconsin. Purdue at Indiana Illinois at Northwestern. UM MEN'S EVENTS ON TAP 11/22-23 - (HO) ILLtNOIS-CHICAGO HERE 7:35 PM CST 11/22 (SW) WISCONSIN HERE 4 & 7 p.m. COOKE HALL POOL 11/24 (SW) MtDWEST RELAYS HERE 9 a.m. COOKE HALL POOL 11/23 (GY) at Windy City Invitational, Chicago, IL 11/24 (WR) at U. of Nebraska-Ohama Open Tournament, Omaha, NE • 11/24 (HO) PICTURE & SKATE WITH THE GOPHERS DAY 2-5 PM MARIUCCI ARENA (OVER) MINNESOT! 2-DEEP FOR~ NOVEMBER 23, 19~

FIRST UNIT OFFENSE SECOND UNIT 89 - Mel Anderson (5-10 171b Jr) SE 6 - Eugene Gailord (5-11 180 Jr) 65 - Dan Rechtin (6-6 245 Jr) LT 76 - Norries Wilson (6-5 283 Jr) 73 - Jon Lilleberg (6-5 270 Sr) LG 53 - Steve Peterson (6-4 245 Fr) 55 - Ray Hitchcock (6-2 263 Jr) c 50 - Randy Pelphrey (6-3 245 Jr) 57 - Troy-Wolkow (6-4 265 So) RG 52 - Paul Anderson (6-3 265 So) 62 - Jim Hobbins (6-6 260 Jr) RT 64 - Shawn Schultz (6-3 255 Fr) 86 - Kevin Starks (6-4 206 Sr) TE 84 - Craig Otto (6-3 210 Fr) 14·- Rickey Foggie (6-1 185 So) QB 17 - Alan Holt (6-~ 198 Fr) 37 -Valdez Baylor (5-11 201 Sr) TB 24 - Ed Penn (6-2 200 Fr) 44 - David Puk (6-4 216 Sr) FB 31 - Kevin Wilson (5-11 205 Jr) 12 - Andy Hare (6-1 195 Sr) FL 21 - Gary Couch (5-10 172 So) DEFENSE

20 - Larry Joyner (6-1 210 Jr) L.E 77 - Trint Tripp (6-6 286 Fr) OR ''79 - Dennis Ryan ( 6-3 230 Fr) • 96 - Steve Thompson (6-2 275 Jr) LT 90 - Ross Ukkelberg (286 Fr) . 46 - Doug Mueller (6-3 232 So) NG 97 - Steve Rhodus (6-2 235 So) 95 - Anthony Burke (6-3 250 Jr) RT 68 - Gary Hadd (6-4 255 So) 39 - Joe Christopherson (6-1 221 Sr) RE 13 - Rich Reed (6-2 218 Sr) 32 - Peter Najarian (6-2 222 Sr) LLB 93 - Terry Hrycak 6-2 228 Fr) 88 - Bruce Holmes (6-3 224 Jr) RLB 94 - Steve Gib~ons {6-0 215 Sr) 45 - Duane Dutrieuille (5-9 179 Jr) LCB 3 - Charles McCree (6-0 180 Fr) 35 -Donovan Small (5-11 185 Jr) FS 9 - Joel Brown (5-10 180 Fr) 48 - David Williams (6-0 202 So) ss 40 - Steves Franklin (5-11 195 Fr) 7 - Matt Martinez (5-11 185 Jr) RCB 49 - Lungen Howard (6-o 183 Sr) SPECIALISTS: PUNT--10 Adam Kelly (5-10 195 Sr), 25 Chip Lohmiller KO/PAT/FG--25 Chip Lohmiller (6-3. 190 So) HOLDER--10 .Adam Kelly LONG SNAPS--58 Scott Guldin (5-11 220 So) P/RETURN--12 Andy Hare • KO/RETURN--89 Mel Anderson, 23 Terry Stewart {6-1 190 Fr) ---UH--- GOLDEN GOPHERS END REGULAR SEASON PLAY AT IOOA ·Minnesota's Golden Gophers will conclude regular season play on Saturday when invading Iowa City, Iowa, for the Big Ten Conference finale with the University of Iowa.

Kickoff for that tell~tale encounter with the league's number one club is 11:38 a.m., and the outcome will determine the bowl fate for several conference football teams.

By winning, Iowa would capture the 1985 Big Ten title and represent the conference in the Rose Bowl. By winning, Minnesota could get an invitation for post season play as well. It appears that Minnesota, win or lose, will be invited to the , but a victory for the Golden Gophers might prompt other bowls to extend invites as well. Chances of Coach Lou Holtz' contingent pulling that kind of upset over the Hawkeyes logically would not be very strong. But when Minnesota and Iowa meet, logic goes out the window. · Even when considering that The.Golden Gophers were stunned by red-hot Michi9an 48-7 at the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodorne last weekend. That loss dropped Minnesota's overall record to 6-4 and 4-3 in the Big Ten. Iowa, meanwhile, slipped by Purdue 27-24 last Saturday and.in the process ran its record to 9-1. The Hawkeyes lead the Conference with a 6-1 mark. Minnesota's loss to Michigan was a stunner. "I never envisioned getting beat by that score," Coach Holtz admitted after the game, "But we must give Michigan credit. We knew they were awfully good. They play well together, and they are just a great defensive team." Even so, mistakes gave the Wolverines the upper hand. "There were three distinct keys to our lack. of success," Holtz analyzed, "our turnovers, our break­ downs in the kicking game, and our inability to stop Michigan on so many third­ and-long situations." The turnovers were costly, and an early fumble and led to Michigan scores. In the kicking game, Minnesota had one punt blocked and then let the Wolverines return another punt for a . And Michigan's third down conversions were almost too numerous to count." Holtz is hopeful, however, that his Golden Gophers can put that loss behind them. "We've got to hold up our heads," he stressed. "It's not like we have leperacy. We may be discouraged, and we may be disappointed. But I have great respect for this Minnesota team. I know they will play hard right to the end.". Over the years, Minnesota and Iowa have met 78 times, and going into Saturday's contest, the Golden Gophers lead 52-24-2. A year ago, Minnesota retained possession of Floyd of Rosedale by prevailing 23-17 at the Metrodome. They'd like to keep the."hog" with another win Saturday!

--UM-- FOR THE LATEST IN GOPHER SPORTS DIAL 612-373-4211 IIINNBSO'l"l'A l'OO'rBALL U. of llinn. l'OOTBALL STM'IS'l'ICS FOR ALL GANBS

RBCORD(PI-L-'r): 6-4·0 (4·3-0 BONB; 2-l·O ANAY; 0-o-o NEU'l'RAL; 4-3-o CONl').

u. o~ Minn. OPPONBN'l'S_,._.,.. ____ _ 'l'OUCIIJXMNS RISBING. ------25 PASSING 14 8 9 O'l'HBR 0 l'IRS'l' IXMNS lfJSBING 1 125 100 PASSING 59 · PBNALTY 87 3 4 'l'O'rAL 187 RUSHING ATTBIIPI'S 191 494 451 YARDS GAINED 2434 YARDS LOS'l 1832 197 225 NB'r YARLlS 2237 YDS PER CARRY 1607 4.5 3.6. YDS PBR GAIIB 223.7 PASSING (CIIP·A'l'T-INT) 160.7 83-173-4 140-261~7 CONPLB'riON PC'1' 48.0 NB'r YARDS 53.6 1660 1711 · YDS PBR M"l'BifP'l'; 9.60 YDS PER CONPLB'l'ION 6.56 20.0(} 12.22 YDS PBR GAHB 166.0 RATING 171.1 139.2 92.9 'l'O'r AL Ol'FBNSB 3897 PLAYS 3318 667 712 YDS PBR PLAY 5.84 YDS PER GAKB 4.66 389.7 331.8 POINTS SCORED 264 POINTS PER GAllE 196 26.4 19.6 INTBRCEP'l'IONS/YDS Rl'ND 7/37 PUNTS RE'rURNBD/YDS/AVG 4/13 19/131/6.9 26/292/11.2 KICKS RB'l'URNBD/YDS/AVG 26/446/17.2 PUN'l'S/YDS/AVG 21/365/17.4 47/1973/42.0 53/2034/38.4 PBNAL7'IBS/YDS/YDS PER GAllE 40/336/33.6 FUMBLBS/LOS'l' 44/347/34.7 24/ll .22/8 QB SACl

SCBBIXJLB AND RBSUL'l'S ------09/14/85 UM 28 Wichita State 14 if Metrodome 09/21/85 Ull 62 56,094 Montana u. 17 w Metrodonte 55,700 09/28/85 UM 7 u. o~ Oklahoma 13 l0/05/85 L Metrodome 62,446 Ulf 45 u. o~ Purdue 15 PI Metrodome 10/12/85 59,503 Ull 21 I Nortbwe•tern u. lO W Evanston, IL 10/19/85 Ull 24,512 22 1 Indiana u. 7 if Bloomington, IN 38,826 10/26/85 • Ull 19 Ohio State u. 23 L lletrodome 11/02/85 Ull 64,455 26 1 Michigan State 31 L East Lansing, III 63,758 11/09/85 UM 27 u. of Wisconsin 18 PI Metrodome ll/16/85. UM 7 64,571 u. o~ Michigan 48 L Metrodome 64,129 11/23/85 Ull 1 u. of I0t1a I0t1a City, IA NO'rBS: • Homecoming UNNESCYrfA FOOTBALL U. of Minn. INDIVIIXJAL FOOTBALL STA!I'ISTICS FOR ALL GAIIBS

RUSHING ATT GAIN LSS NP.:'l AVG 'l'DS u; RBCBIVING NUM YDS AVG 'l'DS W ------~------e Baglor,v------·-----~------89 551 8 543 6.1 5 45 Anderson,H 21 SOB 24.2 2 89 Fogg:l.~,R 114 541·· 96 445 3.9 9 21 Starks,K 16 275 17.2 3 61 Puk,D 74 344 0 344 4.6 2 32 Couch,G 14 494 35.3 l 76 Couch,G 34 236 9 227; 6.7 2 27 Baglor,v 11 105 9.5 l 17 Penn,B 32 lSB 10 148 4.6 1 17 Gai1ord,B 7 lOB 15.4 0 23 W.ilson,K 30 138 2 136 4.5 1 22 Bare,A 6 92 15.3 1 38 Bolmss,C 23 91 5 86 3.7 0 20 Puk,D 4 39 9.8 0 15 Abercrombie 22 80 6 74 3.4 1 14 Otto,C 3 32 10.7 0 12 Bolt,A 33 106 33 73 2.2 2 25 Richardson, 1 7 . 7.0 0 7 Richardson, 13 57 20 37 2.8 0 17 Stt!!tiart,'!' 6 34 2 32 5.3 113 PUN'!'~NG NUH YDS AVG BlCD LG Bare,A 6. 32 0 32 5.3 0 9 Anderson,M 3 23 6 17 5.7 0 17 Ke11g,A------43 1823 42.4 0 61 Fors,B 5 16 0 16 3.2 0 8 Lobmil1er,c 4 150 37.5 0 49 S i.ng 1etarg, 2 15 0 15 7.5 0 12 Hoe,M 3 7 0 7 2.3 0 4 PUNT RB'l'NS NUH YDS AVG '!'DS u; Cummings,P 2 2 0 2 1.0 0 2 Berrg,W 1 1 0 1 1.0 l l Hare,A------8 87 10.9 0 35 Hinor,E l 1 0 1 1.0 0 l Couch,G 2 17 8.5 0 9 Bruce,J 1 1 0 l 1.0 0 1 Gailord,B 8 31 3.9 0 18 ·Boward,L 1 -4 -4.0 0 -4 PASSING A'1'T CHP PC'l' YDS IN 'l'DS R'l'NG KICK RBTNS NUH YDS AVG 'l'DS W Foggi.e,R------128 59 .461 1301 4 7 143.3 Ho1t,A 42 24 .571 359 0 l 136.8 Anderson,H------18 356 19.8 0 27 Richardson, 2 0 .000 0 0 0 0.0 Hare,A 1 14 14.0 0 14 Hare,A 1 0 .000 0 0 0 0.0 Garrido,G 2 27 13.5 0 17 e I Stewart,T 3 39 13.0 0 19 'l'O'l'AL OFP. PLA:IS RUSH PASS TO'l'AL YDS/PL Gai1ord,E 2 10 5.0 0 8

Foggie,R------242 445 1301 1746 7.2 INT RB'l'NS NUH YDS AVG TDS u; Baglor,V 89 543 0 543 6.1 Ho1t,A 75 73 359 432 5.8 Sma11,D------2 23 11.5 0 16 Puk,D 74 344 0 344 4.6 Dusbabek,H 2 6 3.0 0 4 Couch,G 34 227 0 227 - 6.7 Wi1liams,D 1 6 6.0 0 6 Penn,E 32 148 0 148 4.6 Dutrieui1le 1 2 2.0 0 2 Wi.lson,K 30 136 0 136 4.5 Hartinez,H l 0 o.o 0 0 Holmes,C 23 86 0 86 3.7 SCORING TDS XPl-A XP2-A FG-A SAP P'!'S Abercrombie 22 74 0 74 3.4 Richardson, 15 37 0 37 2.5 ------Lobmi1ler ,c 0 28-29 o-o 12-1s 0 64 Hare,A 7 32 0 32 4.6 Foggie,R 9 o-o 0-2 o-o 0 54 Stewart,'!' 6 32 0 32 5.3 Bag1or,V 6 o-o 1-0 o-o 0 38 Anderson,M 3 17 0 17 5.7 Starks,K 3 o-o o-o o-o 0 lB l'ors,B 5 16 0 16 3.2 Couch,G 3 o-o o-o o-o 0 lB SJ..ngletarg, 2 l5 0 15 7.5 Puk,D 2 o-o o-o o-o 0 12 Hoe,N 3 7 0 7 2.3 A:nderson,H 2 o-o o-o o-o 0 12 CWIIIIIings,P 2 2 0 2 l.O Ho1t,A 2 o-o 0-1 o-o 0 12 Berry,W 1 1 0 l l.O Stewart,T l o-o o-o o-o 0 6 Hinor,E 1 l 0 1 l.O Wilson,K l o-o o-o o-o 0 6 Bruce,J l 1 0 l 1.0 Abercrombie 1 o-o o-o o-o 0 6 Berrg,W 1 o-o o-o o-o 0 6 FIELD GOALS: 0-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50+ Penn,B 1 o-o o-o o-o 0 6 Lohmi.11er o-o 5-S 4-5 2-4 1-1 Hare,A l o-o 0-1 o-o 0 6 SCORE BY Q. Is 37, 2BG, 24G, 25G, 47, 41, 3lG, 45G, 2BG, lst 2nd 3rd 4th - Tot. 36G, 50G, 30G, 32G, 22G, 47G Minnesota 44 99 67 54 264 Opponents 44 93 24 35 196 OPP: 11 01' 16 MINNBSO'I"''A P'OO'rBALL U. of llinn. DBP'BNSIVE l'()()'!BALL S'rA!fiSTICS P'OR ALL GAJIBS

I ----~~---TACKLES------(llRBK -PVIIBLES- BLKD -PASSES-- e PLAYER POS UNAST. ASSIST TOTAL WSS SACKS CSD. RBC. KICKS BKUP INTC ---~------~------Bolmes,B LB 73 46 ; 119 2 l 0 2 0 2 0 Najarian,P LB 51 67 118 4 l 0 0 0 0 0 Joyner,L DB 40 36 76 5 3 0 0 0 0 0 Dusbabek,H DB 42 30 72 6 0 0 l 0 l 2 Small,D P'S 45 25 70 l 0 0 0 0 2 2 Burke,A ur 43 16 59 4 3 0 l 0 l 0 Thompson,s ur 37 16 53 5 3 0 l 0 2 0 Dutrieuil1e CB 31 20 51 1 0 0 0 0 0 l Williams,D ss 31 16 47 2 0 0 0 0 1 1 Hartinez,H CB 27 18 45 l 0 0 0 0 8 l Hueller,D NG 21 14 35 l l 0 0 0 0, 0 Christopher DB 19 14 33 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 Badd,G ur 13 11 24 3 2 0 0 0 0 0 Reed,R . DE 10 10 20 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 Frank.lin,s ss 14 2 16 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Hcintosh,H P'S 8 5 13 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Rhodus,S NG 7 l 8 0. 0 0 0 0 1 0 Pollard,D DB 5 3 8 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Hrycak,T LB 3 4 7 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 Hottard,L CB 6 0 6 0 0 0 0 0 1. 0 Gibbons,S LB 5 1 6 O· 0 0 0 0 0 0 Ryan,D DE 4 2 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Stepanek,J ur 4 l 5 l 0 0 0 0 0 0 e Trip,T DB 4 1 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Roth,R NG 2 3 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Ukkelberg,R III' 3 1 4 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 HcCree,c CB 3 1 4 0 0 0 0 0 l 0 Wilson,N OT 3 0 3 l 0 0 0 0 0 0 Guld:J.n,s c 3 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Berry,W ss 2 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Cummings,P FL 1 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 BrOtln,J P'S l 1 2 1 1 0 1 0 1 0 Gailord,E SE l 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Vanderwoude DB 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Villella,'!' ur l 0 l 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Leverenz,J LB 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 o· 0 'l'eske,D P'S 1 0 l 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Couch,G P'L 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Garrido,G ss 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Lohmil1er, C K l 0 l 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Hulligan,G DB l 0 l 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Chernin,A LB 0 l 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Bond,M DB 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 ALL PURPOSE YARDAGE Player GP RUSHING PASSING. RECEIVING P/RETURN KO/RETURN TC YARDS PLAY GAME Foggie 9 114/445 59/12811301 0 0 0 0 242 1746 7.2 194.0 Anderson 10 3/17 0 21/~08 0 18/356 42 881 20.9 88.1 Couch 10 34/227 0 14/494 2/17 0 48 738 15~4 73.8 -Baylor 10 89/543 0 11/105 0 0 100 6!18 6.5 64.8 Holt a 33/73 42/24/359 0 0 0 75 !132 5.8 511.0 Pule 10 74/344 0 4/39 0 0 78 383 4.9 38.3 Starks 10 0 0 16/275 0 0 16 275 17.2 27.5 ---UM--- ICERS FACE ILL-CHICAGO AT HOME 11/18/85

Minneapolis,MN---After gaining a key road split at North Dakota, the Minnesota hockey Gophers take a weekend off from the WCHA wars to host the University of Illinois-Chicago Friday and Saturday at Mariucci Arena. Both games begin at 7:35 p.m. CST. Minnesota rebounded from Friday's crushing 7-4 loss to North Dakota to take a tight 3-2 win Saturday. The split dropped Minnesota into a tie for third and fourth place in the WCHA standings with Northern Michigan. The Gophers are 6-4-0 for 12 league points while Northern, which swept Maine at home, is 6-2-0. Both teams trail league-leading Denver (8-2-0, 16), and second place Wisconsin (7-3-0, 14) in the WCHA race. Illinois-Chicago comes to Mariucci Arena following five consecutive weekends in which the Flames have recorded series splits. Last weekend UIC won 6-4 at Michigan only to lose 7-4 the next night. The Flames are. 5-7-0 and in fourth place in the CCHA standings. It wasn't until the second period Saturday of the North Dakota series that Minnesota gained its first lead of the weekend. North Dakota had its own way Friday building a 7-1 lead before Todd Okerl4nd, Tom Chorske and Tim Bergland scored in the last 2:40 for the Gophers. It was freshman Chorske's first colle­ giate goal. A total of 34 penalties .were called Friday. On Saturday things started out the same way with North Dakota gaining the lone goal of the opening period, a period which saw 23 minor infractions called. Then the teams settled down to playing ice hockey and Minnesota prevailed. Steve Orth and Pat Micheletti put the Gophers ahead with second period goals before David Grannis got the game winner unassisted at 15:29 of the final stanza. Brian Williams scored for ND at 18:12, but it wasn't enough. Senior goalie Frank Pietrangelo was in the Gopher nets Saturday making 43 saves while at the other end, ND goalie Scott Brower stopped 42 chances. Pietrangelo, who has split every Gopher series this season, was sen­ sational, particularly in the final period, and held Minnesota in the game. Both he and sophomore John Blue now own 3-2-0 won-lost records. WCHA STANDINGS THRU 11/16/85

GP w L T PTS GF AVG GA AVG 1-Denver (9-2-0) 10 8 2 0 16 47 4.7 2-Wisconsin (7-5-0) 30 3.0 10 7 3 0 14 49 4.9 41 4.1 3-Northern Michigan {7-2-1) 8 6 2 0 12 4.9 -MINNESOTA (6-4-0) 39 36 4.5 10 6 4 0 12 34 3.4 29 2.9 5-Minneaota-Duluth (9-3-0) 8 5 3 0 10 31 3.9 -North Dakota (5-5-0) 25 3.1 10 5 5 0 10 46 4.6 37 3.7 ?-Colorado College (4-7-0) 6 3 5 0 6 29 3.6 -Michigan Tech (2-9-1) 31 3.9 10 2 8 0 4 23 2.3 53 5.3 WCHA SCHEDULE THIS WEEKEND -- Friday-Saturday, November 22-23 ILLINOIS-CHICAGO AT MINNESOTA (2) (nc) North Dakota at Wisconsin (2) Colorado College at Boston University (2) ~ Northeastern at Denver (2) Boston College at Northern Michigan (2) Lowell at Michigan Tech (2) Minneota-Duluth at Maine (2)

---UM--- MINNESOTA CAGERS HEAD FOR TOURNEY IN HAWAII

An ambitious three-game tournament in Hawaii will signal the tip-off of the 1985-86 basketball season for the University of Minnesota this weekend. Coach Jim Dutcher's Golden Gophers are scheduled to play in the United Airlines Ala Moana Americana Hotel Brigham Young University-Hawaii Classic on Friday, Saturday and Monday. In the opening round, Minnesota will face the host school, Brigham Young University-Hawaii at 8 p.m. on Friday. On Saturday, the GOlden Gophers will take on Middle Tennessee State University in the 6 p.m. contest, and then on Monday Minnesota will wrap up action with another 6 p.m. assignment against West Virginia State College. Dutcher could be expected to do some experimenting with his lineup in that tourney, and he's almost certain to give some of his new players a good look. Of the veterans, John Shasky, a 7-0 senior co-captain, could play extensively. at center although 7-0 sophomore Dave Holmgren also will get his chances. In the backcourt, 5-11 sophomore Todd Alexander and 6-1 senior co-captain Marc Wilson hav~ been tabbed as the starters, but newcomer 6-2 freshman Ray Gaffney also will see action. The same holds true for Terence Woods, a 6-5 junior who could swing between guard and forward. That's also the case with letterman Tim Hanson, a 6-5 sophomore. Other forwards making the trip will be Mitch Lee, 6-9 sophomore letterman; newcomer Kelvin Smith, a 6-7 freshman; and George Williams, a 6-9 sophomore letterman. "The tournament will be a good test for us," Coach Dutcher said, "but we hope people will not judge our strengths on what happens in Hawaii. I feel better about this team than any we have had since our 1982 championship squad, but we will not be at full strength for the Hawaii tournament." Upon returning to Minnesota, the Golden Gophers open their 17-game home slate at Williams Arena by entertaining San Francisco State on Fridpy, November 29. That home opener marks the start of a six-game Williams Arena stand covering only 16 days. Four more non-conference games also are on tap during December •••• two at home and two on the road •••• to make it an ambitious and demanding month for the Golden Gophers.

--UM-- ...

U. of Minn. HOCKEY HOCKEr STA!r ISTICS FOR ALL GAMES RECORD (W-L-T): 6-4-0 (2-2-0 BOMB; 4-2-0 AWAY; 6-4-0 WCHA) WCBA GAHBS PLAYER GP G A PTS PEN/MIN PP GH SH H'1' GP G A TP PEN/MIN ------cates, J. -c 10 3 6 9 8/16 l 1 0 0 10 3 Chapman, w. -IN 6 9 8/16 9 5 4 9 2/7 2 2 0 0 9 5 4 Micheletti, P. -RW 9 2/7 10 .3 6 9 15/38 l 1 0 0 10 3 Okerlund, T. -RW 6 9 15/38 10 3 6 9 6/12 l 0 1 0 10 Millen, 3 6 9 6/12 c. -c 10 4 4 8 9/18 l l 0 0 10 MacSwain, -IN 4 4 8 9/18 s. 10 l 7 8 3/6 0 0 0 Orth, 0 10 l 7 8 3/6 s. -c 10 3 3 6 0/0 l 0 l 0 10 Kellin, T. -D 3 3 6 0/0 10 2 3 5 5/10 l 0 0 0 10 2 Anderson, M. -IN 3 5 5/10 8 1 2 3 1/2 0 0 0 0 8 Bergland, T. -RW 1 2 3 l/2 10 2 l 3 3/6 0 0 0 0 10 2 Grannis, D. -RW 1 3 3/6 10 2 l 3 5/10 0 1 0 0 10 Mack, c. -D 2 l 3 5/10 10 1 2 3 4/8 0 0 0 0 10 Nelson, B. -D 1 2 3 4/8 7 0 3 3 2/4 0 0 0 0 7 0 Richards, T. -D 3 3 2/4 8 1 2 3 5/10 1 0 0 0 8 Broten, P. -RH 1 2 3 5/10 3 2 1 3 0/0 0 0 0 0 3 2 1 3 0/0 Dornfeld, E. -D 5 0 2 2 2/4 0 0 0 0 5 0 2 2 2/4 Sl'JOpek, G. -D 10 0 2 2 7/14 0 0 0 0 Bowe, R. 10 0 2 2 7/14 2 0 2 2 l/2 0 0 0 0 2 0 Chorske, T. -IN 2 2 1/2 8 1 0 1 1/2 0 0 0 0 8 1 Espe, D. -D 0 l l/2 5 0 1 1 3/6 0 0 0 0 5 0 Snuggerud, D. 1 1 3/6 -c- 4 0 1 1 3/6 0 0 0 0 4 0 l Blue, J. -G l 3/6 5 0 0 0 1/2 2 0 0 0 5 0 0 0 1/2 Pietrangelo, F. -G 5 0 0 0 . 0/0 0 0 0 0 5 0 Gersich, F. -D 0 0 0/0 4 0 0 0 5/10 0 0 0 0 4 e Others 0 0 0 5/10 0 0 0 0 0/0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0/0 ======U. of Minn. --- 10 34 59 93 91/193 11 6 2 0 10 34 59 93 91/193 Opponents --- 10 29 47 76 88/179 14 4 l 0 10 29 47 76 88/179 POWER PLAYS ======SCORE BY PERIODS G OPP ======' lst 2nd 3rd OT Total UM -- 11 41 .2682 UM -- 5 15 14 0 34 Opponents -- 14 48 .2916 Opponents 10 9 10 0 29

GOALIE RECORDS ALL GAMES GP MINS -- GA G.AVG STOPS S% so Blue, J. ------5 300 14 2.80 134 0.905 0 Pietrangelo, F. 5 299 15 3.00 146 0.907 0 ======UM --- 10 599 29 2.90 280 0.906 0 Opponents --- 10 600 34 3.40 339 0.909 0 WCHA GAMES GP-- MINS------GA G.AVG STOPS S% so Blue, J. 5 300 14 2.80 134 0.905 0 Pietrangelo, F. 5 299 15 3.00 146 0.907 0 ======·= UM --- 10 599 29 2.90 280 0.906 0 Opponents --- 10 600 34 3.40 339 0.909 0 U. of Minn. HOCKEY HOCKEY SCHBWLB AND RBSUL'I'S FOR ALL GAHBS

RECORD (W-L-T): 6-4-0 (2-2-0 HOHB; 4-2-0 AWAY; 6-4-0 WCHA) H WLT DATE A ------OP~NBN'l' SCORB ATTEND GW GOAL G.O.R.-SAVES ------~------w 10/18/85 H MICHIGAN 'I'BCH 3-0 6103 Chapman w 10/19/85 H B1ue-12 MICHIGAN 'I'BCH 7-2 6074 M1llen w 10/25/85 A HINNESOT A-IXJWTH Pietrange1o-13 4-2 5664 Chapman Blue-33 L 10/26/85 A MINNBSOTA-IXJIJJ'I'H 2-5 L 5664 Pietrangelo-39 11/0l/85 H DBNVER 2-4 5969 L 11/02/85 H DENVER .B1ue-32 w 4-5 6220 P1etrange1o-26 11/08/85 A It:MELL 3-l w 11/09/85 A 1913 Micheletti B1ue-23 LOWELL 2-l 1893 Cates L ll/15/85 A NORTH DAKOTA Pietrangelo-25 w 4-7 6100 Blue-34 ll/16/85 A NORTH DAKOTA 3-2 ll/22/85 H 6100 Grannis Pietrange1o-43 ILLINOIS-cHICAGO o-o 0 ll/23/85 H ILLINOIS-cHICAGO ll/29/85 A o-o 0 NORTHERN MICHIGAN o-o 0 ll/30/85 A NOR'1'HERN MICHIGAN 12/06/85 H o-o 0 u. of Wisconsin o-o 0 12/07/85 H u. of Wisconsin 12/14/85 H o-o 0 U.S. INTERNM'IONAL o-o 0 12/15/85 H U.S. IN'I'ERNM'IONAL o-o 12/20/85 A 0 NORTHEASTERN o-o 0 12/21/85 A NORTHEASTERN 12/29/85 A o-.o 0 NBW HAMPSHIRE o-o 0 12/30/85 A NBH HAMPSHIRE 01/03/86 H o-o 0 MAINE o-o 0 Ol/04/86 H MAINE 01/10/86 H o-o 0 BOS'I'ON UNIVERSITY o-o 0 01/11/86 H BOSTON UNIVERSITY 01/17/86 A o-o 0 BOSTON COLLEGE o-o 0 01/18/86 A BOSTON COLLEGE 01/24/86 H o-o 0 PROVIDENCE o-o 0 01/25/86 H PROVIDENCE 01/31/86 A o-o 0 · u. of Wisconsin o-o 0 02/0l/86 A u. of Wisconsin 02/08/86 A o-o 0 +COLORADO COLLEGE o-o 0 02/09/86 A +COLORADO COLLEGE 02/14/86 H o-o 0 MINNBSOT A-IXJWTH o-o 0 02/15/86 H MINNBSOT A-IXJWTH 02/21/86 H o-o 0 NORTH DAKOTA o-o 0 02/22/86 H NOifl'H DAKOTA o-o -----0 Total Season -- 51700 (10 games, avg. 5170) Home Games -- 24366 (4 games, avg. 6092) + - Played at AF Academy • GOPHER SPORTS UPDATES

WRESTLERS WIN ONE CHAMPIONSHIP AND TWO RUNNERUP PLACES AT SHOWCASE University of Minnesota captain Ed Giese (Sr. Wood Dale, IL) won the 118 pound champion$hip and remained unbeaten on the season at the U of M Wrestling Showcase last Saturday at Williams Arena. Giese is now 7-0 this season with championships in the Bison Open at North Dakota State and the Showcase title over Iowa's John Regan on a 3-1 decision. The Illinois native won the 1984 Big Ten 118 championship and red-shirted the 1985 season.

The University of Iowa dominated the competition at the Showcase with seven team titles. Arizona State University had the other two individual winners in the five-team field. Minnesota's Chuck Heise (Fr. Mosinee,WI) at 134 pounds and Rod Sande (Jr. St. Paul,MN) at 167 were runnerups at their weights. Seven Gopher wrestlers had 2-1 records and wrestled back in the loser's bracket after losing in the opening round.

The Gophers will compete this weekend at the University of Nebraska-Omaha Open Tournament in Omaha, Nebraska. Minnesota will open its home dual season December 7 against the University of Missouri, 7:00 PM,in the PEIK Gym.

---UM--~

GYMNASTIC TEAM OPENS SEASON AT WINDY CITY INVITE SATURDAY: HOST JAPANESE DECEMBER 1 Coach Fred Roethlisberger's Gopher. gymnastic team will open the 1985-86 season competing at the Windy City Invit~ionalhosted by the University of Chicago-Circle.

Minnesota has won seven of the last eleven Big Ten team titles and were runnerup in the conference last season. The Gophers will be among the team favorites again in 1985-86.

For the sixth consecutive year, Minnesota will host the Japanese Collegiate All-Stars. The co-ed meet will be held Sunday, December 1, 2:00 PM at Williams Arena. For ticket details, please call the U of M gymnastics office at (612) 373-4219

---UM--- GOPHERS MATT GRACE, JONAS SVENSSON, CASEY MERICKEL QUALIFY FOR ITC TENNIS NATIONALS Matt Grace (Sr. Milton, MA) and Jonas Svensson (Fr. Vetlanda,·Sweden) teamed up to win the Intercollegiate Tennis Coaches Midwest Regional doubles title last Sunday in Indianapolis, IN. The win qualifies the team for the ITC Nationals in Houston next February. Casey Merickel (So, Verndale, MN) was the singles runnerup and will qualify for the ITC Nationals. Merickel played outstanding to reach the finals and he lost the final match 6-2, 7-6 to Ohio State's Roger Smith.

~ SWIMMERS OPEN SEASON HOSTING WISCONSIN FRIDAY AND MIDWEST RELAYS SATURDAY First-year University of Minnesota head swimming coach Dennis Dale will·open 4lthis college coaching career leading the Gopher swim team against the University of Wisconsin Friday, November 22 at Cooke Hall.

The Midwest Relays (Co-ed ) meet will have a four team field: Minnesota, University of Wisconsin, Iowa State University and the UW-Eau Claire Blugolds. That event starts Saturday morning, 9:00 AM at Cooke Hall. ------~~~-- ---

GOPHER FOOTBALL AWARDS BANQUET SET NOVEMBER 25 AT DOWNTOWN ATHLETIC CLUB

The 68th annual University of Minnesota football awards banquet will be held Monday, November 25, at the Downtown Minneapolis Athletic Club. A hospitality gathering will begin at 5:30 PM with dinner to follow at 7:00 PM.

Former Gopher football starBilly Bye will be the Master of Ceremonies and the awards program will begin at 7:55 PM. Six awards will be announced and presented to the Minnesota football players.

The Minnesota football awards are: Butch Nash Award, for competiveness on and off the field; Paul Giel Award, for total unselfishness and and concerned attitude for the University of Minnesota; Bronco Nagurski Award, the Gopher team MVP winner; Carl Eller Award for the outstanding defensive player; Bruce Smith Award for the outstanding offensive player and the Bobby Bell Award for the outstanding special teams player.

The awards will be voted on by the Minnesota football team players following the final game at Iowa November 23. ----UM----

DAVID PUK NAMED DISTRICT FIVE ACADEMIC ALL-AMERICAN: WILL BE ON NATIONAL BALLOT

University ofMinnesota fullback David Puk (Sr., Cedar Rapids, Iowa) has been named a District Five All-American academic team selection. The award was announced by District Coordinator Ed Alsene of Illinois Wesleyan University.

Puk has a 3.58 cummulative GPA in Pre-Med at Minnesota and has been a four­ year competitor in the Gopher offense. This season, Puk is the third ranked U of M rusher with 296 yards on 63 carries for a 4.7 average and 2 TDs. The Washington High School graduate has 953 career rushing yards at Minnesota with seven .

The District and National Academic All-Americans must maintain a 3.2 or above GPA for inclusion on the ballots. The national All-American academic team will be announced later in the year.

---uM-­ GISSELQUIST QUALIFIES FOR CROSS COUNTRY NATIONALS Minnesota co-captain Paul Gisselquist (Jr. Richfield, MN) finished eighth in last week's District Regionals in Bloomington, IN with a 10,000 meter time of 32:14. The finish qualifies the Gopher star for a spot at the national CC meet as an individual performer. The NCAA Cross Country Nationals will be November 25 in Milwauk,.e, WI. Gisselquist was the fourth place individual finisher at the Big Ten Championships November 2 in Ann Arbor, MI.

Minnesota finished its season with an eighth place Big Ten standing and did not qualify for the regionals as a team entry.

---UM--- ,-

1 ~

11 Lou Holtz and I have met several times and have reached the mutual conclusion that Lou be relieved of his duties as Head Football Coach at Minnesota immediately, so that he can devote full time to his new position at Notre Dame.

I have met with Lou's current coaching staff and despite the void left by his departure they have indicated they are going ahead with preparations for the Independence Bowl game with Clemson with every intention of winning.

Meanwhile, the search for a new football coach continues with excellent candidates from both within and outside our program. We feel confident that a new coach will be named before the Independence Bowl. If that person comes from outside our current program, we would hope that he would be present or the sidelines that day. If the coach comes from inside the program, we would expect little disruption as we prepare for the game.

We know that the Independence Bowl committee was counting on Lou Holtz, but we remain very excited about the Independence Bowl, and we look forward to Shreveport with great enthusiasm, and the expectation our team will make an outstanding showing.

We are extremely grateful to Lou Holtz for the fine job he has done here these past two years, and we wish him every success at Notre Dame.

-- Mailed November 26, 1985 For Release Upon Receipt

from the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455

* * * * I * * * * * * * * HAPPY THANKSGIVING HOLIDAY * * * * * * * * * * * * * GOPHER HAPPENINGS ON TAP -- All Times Local, CST Fri. No~~ 29 (BB) SAN.FRANCICSO ST. HERE 8:05 (WCCO-AM)

- (HO) at Northern Michigan, Marquette, MI 7:05 (KMFY-AM)

Sat. Nov. 30 - (EB) U. OF SOUTH DAKOTA HERE 8:05 (WCCO-AM) - (HO) a{ Northern Mich~gan, Marquette, MI 6:35 (KMFY-AM) e - (WR) at Northern Open Tournament, Madison, WI Sun, Dec. 1 - (GY) JAPANESE ALL-STARS (CO-ED) HERE 2:00 WILLIAMS ARENA

Mon. Dec. 2 - (BB) EASTERN ILLINOIS HERE 8:05 (WCCO-AM) Wed. Dec. 4 - (BB) U. OF DETROIT HERE 8:05 {WCCO-AM) FrL Dec. 6 - {HO) WISCONSIN HERE 7:35 (KMFY-AM, WCCO-AM, KSTP-TV ch. 9) (GY) at Wisconsin Open, Madison, WI Sat. Dec. 7 - (HO) WISCONSIN HERE 2:05 (KMFY-AM)

- (BB) ARKANSAS HERE 8:05 (WCCO-AM)

- (WR) MISSOURI HERE 7:00 PIEK GYM - (GY) at Wisconsin Open, Madison, WI (NOTE: Dec. 8-13, all UM teams off for Fall Quarter exam break) ICERS AT RED HOT NMU Minneapolis,MN---After taking a week off from the rugged WCHA race, the Minnesota hockey Gophers this weekend travel to Marquette, MI, to meet the second place Northern Michigan University Wildcats •. ~ Last weekend· Northern surprised more than one hockey follower by sweeping ~e No. 1 team from the Hockey East Association, Boston College. NMU took the Eagles 4-3 and 8-5. (OVER) While the Wildcats (8-2-0, 16) staved hot on the 'crail of league-leading Denver ( 10-2-0, 20), Minnesota 6l''Of'PE'd fron' fcu!"th to fifth place in the WCHA standings even though the Gophers defeated lJJ inois-Chicago 5-3 and 7-2 at home in non-confe.rence action. Besides trailing Denver and Northern Michigan, Minnesota is also in back • of Wisconsin and Minnesota-Duluth, teams who also scored league sweeps. The Gopher again re~eived solid goal tending from sophomore John Blue Friday, and senior Frank Pietrangelo Saturday. This sturdy duo has split every series for Minnesota this seasodn, and is expected to do the same this weekend at Northern Michigan. Both are 4-2-0 on the season and sport identical 2.83 goals allowed averages. rlhile Blue and Pietrangelo were doing their thing, Gopher skaters finally broke from their scoring slump. The 12 goals against Illinois-Chicago marked UM's highest series output of the season. Winger Steve MacSwain powered the Gopher offense Friday by scoring his first collegiate hat trick. His final goal went into a vacant net as the Flames pulled their goalie with a minute remaining attempting to forge a 4-4 tie. MacSwain's center, Corey Millen, got the other two Gophe·r goals with both coming on the power play. On Saturday freshman defenseman Todd Richards stole the show by scoring two goals and added a pair of assists. His first goal in the opening period put Minnesota ahead to stay. · MacSwain also scored a goal Saturday giving him a team high four on the weekend. Pat I-licheletti led all scorers.with a goal and five assists while another winger. Wally Chapman, had a goal and three assists and Millen added two assists to his pair of goals. · Last season Minnesota met Northern Michigan four times in Mariucci Arena, the latter pair in the first round WCHA playoffs. UM won the regular season series by scores of 7-1 and 3-0. In the playoffs NMU took the opener 4-3 with Minnesota coming back to wtn 6-4 the next day and take the two-game, total-goal series 9 goals to 8. rvThere was nothing negative for us about playing non-conference games last weekend, Gopher head coach Doug Woog said Monday. "Our men had the chance to play two more games and any kind of wins never hurt. · naut going to Northern Michigan is something else. They are playing excellent hockey and really have a super line leading their offense. "Northern's rink is not an easy splace to play. Ask Boston College. The Eagles went into Marquette last weekend ranked number one in the nation. You know what happened. "Northern Michigan came into this season expecting to be good. So their performance is really no surprise. I believe last year was a season of adjust­ ment for Northern coming into the WCHA the first time. It's also evident they have made that adjustment and are a team to be watched. "One thing we have to start doing is coming out of the chute better. We have been getting off to slow starts in recent series and that has hurt us. "Our goals for and against show a negative balance in the first period this season. At the same time it appears we are certainly in good shape as we are outscoring our opponents in both the second and third periods." l~he Gophers return home next weekend to host Wisconsin. WCHA STANDINGS THRU 11/26/85 GP w L T PTS GF AVG GA AVG 1-Denver (11-2~0) . 12 10 2 0 20 6o 5.0 35 2.9 2-Wisconsin (9-5-0) 12 9 3 0 18 63 5.3 44 3.7 3-Northern Michigan (9-2-1) 10 8 2 0 16 51 5.1 44 4.4 4-Minnesota-Duluth (11-3-0) 10 7 3 0 14 44 4.4 30 3.0 5-MlNNESOTA ( 6-lt-0) 10 6 lj. 0 12 3ll 3.4 29 2.9 6-North Dakota (5-7-0) 12 5 7 0 10 49 l~. 1 51 4.3 7-Colorado College (4-8-1) 10 3 6 1 7 32 3.2 39 3.9 8-Michigan Tech (2-10-2) 12 2 9 1 5 29 2.4 60 5.0 ---UM--- U. of Minn. HOCKEY HOCKEY SCHBWLB AND RESULTS FOR ALL GAMEs

RECORD (W-L-T): 8-4-0 ( 4-·1-0 HOME; H 4-2-0 AWAY; 6-4-0 WCHA) e WLT DATE A OPPONENT ------SCORE ATTEND GW GOAL G.O.R.-SAVBS ------~------w 10/18/85 H MICHIGAN TECH w 10/19/85 H 3-0 6103 Chapman Blue-12 MICHIGAN TECH 7-2 6074 Millen w 10/25/85 A MINNESO'I'A-DUWTH Pietrange1o-13 L 10/26/85 A 4-2 5664 Chapman Blue-33 MINNESO'l'A-IXJWTH 2-5 5664 L 11/01/85 H DENVER Pietrangelo-39 L ll/02/85 H 2-4 5969 Blue-32 DENVER 4-5 w ll/08/85 A 6220 · Pietrangelo-26 liMELL 3-1 w 11/09/85 A 1913 Micheletti Blue-23 LOWELL 2-1 L 11/15/85 A 1893 Cates Pietrange1o-25 NORTH DAKOTA 4-7 w 11/16/85 A 6100 Blue-34 NORTH DAKOTA 3-2 w 11/22/85 H 6100 Grannis Pietrange1o-43 ILLINOIS-CHICAGO 5-3 w 11/23/85 H 5596 MacSwain Blue-27 ILLINOIS-cHICAGO 7-2 5790 Cates ll/29/85 A NORTHERN MICHIGAN Pietrange1o-18 11/30/85 A o-o 0 NORTHERN· MICHIGAN o-o 0 12/06/85 H u. of Wisconsin 12/07/85 H 0-0 ,o u. of Wisconsin o-o 0 12/14/85 H U.S. INTERNATIONAL 12/15/85 H. o-o 0 U.S. INTERNATIONAL o-o 0 12/20/85 A NORTHEASTERN 12/21/85 A o-o 0 NORTHEASTERN o-o 0 12/29/85 A NEW HAMPSHIRE 12/30/85 A o-o 0 NEW HAMPSHIRE o-o 0 01/03/86 H MAINE 01/04/86 H o-o 0 MAINE o-o 0 01/10/86 H BOSTON UNIVERSITY 01/11/86 H o-o 0 BOSTON UNIVERSITY o-o 0 01/17/86 A B:JSTON COLLEGE 01/18/86 A o-o 0 BOSTON COLLEGE o-o 0 01/24/86 H PROVIDENCE 01/25/86 H o-o 0 PROVIDENCE o-o 0 01/31/86 A u. of Wisconsin o-o 02/01/86 A 0 u. of Wisconsin o-o 0 02/08/86 A +COLORADO COLLEGE 02/09/86 A o-o 0 +COLORAIXJ COLLEGE o-o 0 02/14/86 H M.INNESOTA-IXJW2'H 02/15/86 H o-o 0 MINNESOTA-DULUTH o-o 0 02/21/86 H NORTH DAKOTA o-o 0 02/22/86 H NORTH DAKOTA o-o ------0 Total Season -- 63086 (12 games, avg. 5257) Home Games -- 35752 (6 games, avg. 5959) + - Played at AF Academy U. of Minn. HOCKEY HOCKEY S'rATIS'I'ICS FOR ALL GAMES RBCORD (W-L-'r): 8-4-0 (4-2-0 BOMB; 4-2-0 AHAY; 6-4-0 WCBA) WCBA GANES PLAYER GP G A P'rS PEN/MIN PP GH SH H'r GP G A 'rP PEN /HIN ------e Micheletti, P. -RW 12 4 11 15 17/42 l l 0 0 10 3 6 9 15/38 Chapman, w. -Ill .11 6 7 13 3/9 2 2 0 0 9 5 4 9 2/7 Cates, J. -c 12 4 8 12 9/18 2 2 0 0 10 3 6 9 8/16 Millen, c. -c 12 6 6 12 10/20 3 1 0 0 10 4 4 8 9/18 MacSwain, S. -IN 12 5 7 12 4/16 0 l 0 l 10 l 7 8 3/6 Okerlund, T. -RW 12 3 8 11 8/16 l 0 1 0 10 3 6 9 6/12 Kellin, T. -D 12 2 6 8 6/12 1 0 0 0 10 2 3 5 5/10 Richards, T. -D 10 3 4 7 5/10 l 0 0 0 8 1 2 3 5/10 Orth, s. -c 11 3 3 6 0/0· l 0 1 0 10 3 3 6 0/0 Anderson, M. -IN 9 1 3 4 2/4 0 0 0 0 8 1 2 3 l/2 Broten, P. -RH 5 2 2 4 0/0 0 0 0 0 3 2 1 3 0/0 Bergland, 'r. -RW ll 2 l 3 3/6 0 0 0 0 J.O 2 l 3 3/6 Grannis, D. -RH 12 2 l 3 5/10 0 l 0 0 10 2 l 3 5/10 Mack, c. -D 12 l 2 3 4/8 0 0 0 0 10 l 2 3 4/8 Nelson, B. -D 9 0 3 3 3/6 0 0 0 0 7 0 3 3 2/4 Shopek, G. -D ll l 2 3 7/14 0 0 0 0 10 0 2 2 7/14 Dornfeld, E. -D 7 0 2 2 2/4 0 0 0 0 5 0 2 2 2/4 Snuggerud, D. -c 6 0 2. 2. 3/6 0 0 0 0 4 0 l l 3/6 Bowe, R. -IM 2 0 2 2 l/2 0 0 0 0 2 0 2 2 l/2 Blue, J. -G 6 0 l l l/2 0 0 0 0 s 0 0 0 l/2 Chorske, T. -IN 9 l 0 l l/2 0 0 0 0 8 l 0 l l/2 Bspe, D. -D 5 0 l l 3/6 0 0 0 0 5 0 l 1 3/6 Labatt, J. -IH l 0 0 0 0/0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0/0 Pietrangelo, F. -G 6 0 0 0 0/0 0 0 0 0 s 0 0 0 0/0 Gersich, F. -D 5 0 0 0 5/10 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 5/10 Others 0 0 0 0 0/0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0/0 ======:a======u. of Minn. --- 12 46 82 128 102/223 12 8 2 1 10 34 59 93 91/193 Oooonents --- 12 34 54 88 106/215 16 4 l 0 10 29 47 76 88/179 PCMER PLAYS SCORE BY PERIODS ======... -- ======G OPP % lst 2nd 3rd OT Total

UM -- 12 55 .2181 UM -- 9 18 19 0 46 Opponents -- 16 54 .2962 Opponents 12 ll ll 0 34

GOALIE RECORDS ALL GAMES GP MINS GA G.AVG STOPS S% so

Blue, J. 6 360 17 2.83 161 0.904 0 Pietrangelo, F. 6 359 17 2.83 164 0.906 0 ======-= UM --- 12 719 34 2.83 325 0.905 0 Opponents --- 12 719 46 3.83 397 0.896 0 WCHA GAMES GP MINS GA G.AVG STOPS -----S% so Blue, J. 5 300 14 2.80 134 0.905 0 Pietrangelo, F. 5 299 15 3.00 146 0.907 0 ======UM --- 10 599 29 2.90 280 0.906 0 Opponents --- 10 600 34 3.40 339 0.909 0 GOLDEN GOPHERS ro PLAY IN INDEPSND.ENCE BCNlL The University of Minnesota will make its first post season bowl appearance since 1977 when taking on Clemson in the Independence Bowl at Shreveport, LA, on Saturday, December 21. Coach Lou Holtz' Golden Gophers finished regular-season play with an overall record of 6-5. They were 4-4 in the Big Ten Conference and wound up in a tie with Michigan State for fifth place. It was the best record for a U of M contingent since 1981 even though it dropped the regular-season finale 31-9 at the University of Iowa last weekend. Holtz indicated that. despite losing to Michigan and Iowa in its two most recent assignments, it was a plus for Minnesota to be invited to participate in a bowl game. "I'm happy for the seniors," Holtz said, "and I feel that going to a bowl is a step in the right qirection. It gives us additional practice time and will be the best thing for the future of our football program at the Univet·sity of Minnesota. n

The Golden Gophers had jumped off to an extremely impressive start, going 5-l through their first six games. But then injuries and a lack of depth caught up with Minnesota. "We were a tired and worn out football team the last few weeks." Holtz admitted, but a short break over the Thanksgiving weekend should help mend those wounds and enable Minnesota to begin preparations for their post-season assignment. Pitted as the U of M opponent in the Independence Bowl will be Clemson of the Atlantic Coast Conference which finished 6-5 overall after nudging South carolina 24-17 in the regular-season finale last weekend. In Minnesota's final-game loss at Iowa, Coach Holtz' contingent had some chances early to make a battle out of it, but eventually the Hawkeyes wore down the under-manned visitors. "We just got beat by a good solid football team," Holtz admitted. "I thought our offensive line played pretty well, and I certainly could ·not fault our effort. We just needed some big plays, and when opportunities presented themselves, we simply were not able to take advantage of them."

Individually, David Puk led Minnesota's rushers with 61 yards in 13 carries. Rickey Foggie was six of 13 through the air for 69 yards and Rocky Gailord was the top Golden Gopher receiver with three grabs for 57 yards.

But .the Iowa game now is history, and a 11 thoughts are on December 21 and the Independence Bowl where the Golden Gophers will take on the Tigers.

"We're proud to be going to a bowl game, .. Holtz emphasized. "I think we are a good football team, and we are promising to take a good football team to Shreveport." {MORE) GOPHER TALES--This will mAr.:-k tire= fc:n.:..;:;\:_h time in hLstory that tte University of Minnesota has participated in post seaeon play. The C..olde:n Gc~hsrs fell 17-7 to Washington in the l96l Rose Bowl, but a year later avenged that loss with a 21-3 win over UCLA. Then in 1977, Minnesota lost to Maryland 17-7 in the Hall of Fame (now All-American) Bowl. Valdez Baylor finished the season as Minnesota's leading rusher. He netted 582 yards in 99 carries for an average of 5.9 per try. He scored five touchdowns, and his longest run was 45 yards. Foggie capped off his sophomore season with 65 completions in 141 attempts for a .461 mark and 1,370 yards. He threw for seven touchdowns, and he had four intercepted. Mel Anderson wound up as the top Golden Gopher receiver. He had 22 catches for 520 yards and an average of 23.6 per grab. He had two TO's, and his longest gain was 89 yards. Adam Kelly turned in another solid punting season for Minnesota. He had 48 boots, and he averaged 41.8 per kick. His longest was 61 yards. Chip Lohmiller led Minnesota in scoring during regular season play. He booted 28 of 29 conversion attempts and connected on 13 of 16 field goal tries to wind up with 67 total points. Final defensive stats showed Peter Najarian topping Minnesota for the third ... straight year. He had 58 unassisted tackles and 75 assists for a total of ,., 133 hits. At Monday night's U of M awards banquet, Foggie was tabbed as Minnesota's Most Valuable Player and the Bronko Nagurski Award winner. Najarian won the Carl Eller Award as the best defensive player while Ray Hitchcock copped the Bruce Smith Award as Minnesota's top offensive player. Andy Hare was named the Butch Nash Award winner as the Golden Gophers' most competitive player, Lohmiller the Bobby Bell Award as the best special teams player and Puk the Paul Giel Award winner as the most unselfish player.

Puk also was honored recently for being named to the first offensive team as a runningback on the 1985 District Five University Division All­ Academic Team. As such a selection, Puk becomes a candidate for similar honors on the All-America level.

-UM--

FOR THE LATEST IN GOPHER SPORTS DIAL 612-373-4211. MINNESOTTA FOOTBALL U. of Minn. F()()TBALL STATISTICS FOR ALL GANES

RBCORD(W-L-T): 6-5-0 (4-3-0 HOME; 2-2-0 AWAY; 0-0-0 NEUTRAL; 4-4-0 CONF). FINAL 1985 TOTALS u. of l

TOUCHDOWNS RUSHING 25 17 PASSING 9 10 OTHER 0 l FIRST DOWNS RUSHING 135 114 PASSING 67 97 PENALTY 3" 4 TOTAL 205 215 RUSHING ATTEMPTS 543 494 YARDS GAINED 2629 2019 YARDS LOST 238 235 NET YARDS 2391 1784 YDS PER CARRY 4.4 3.6 YDS PER GAME 217.4 162.2 PASSING (CMP-ATT-INT) 92-191-4 161-292-8 COMPLETION PCT 48.2 55.1 NET YARDS 1778 1979 YDS PER ATTEMPT 9.31 6.78 YDS PER COMPLETION 19.33 12.29 YDS PER GAME ~61.6 179.9 RATING 137.7 94.3 TOTAL OFFENSE 4169 3763 PLAYS 734 786 YDS PER PLAY 5.68 4.79 YDS PER GAME 379.0 342.1 POINTS SCORED 273 227 POINTS PER GAME 24.8 20.6 /YDS RTND 8/37 4/13 PUNTS RETURNBD/YDS/ AVG 20/134/6.7 26/292/11.2 KICKS Rl!JI'URNBD/YDS/AVG 29/514/17.7 23/408/17.7 PUNTS/YDS/ AVG 53/2170/40.9 55/2113/38.4 PENALTIES/YDS/YDS PER GAME 41/341/31.0 50/377/34.3 FUMBLBS/UJST 28/13 24/9 QB SACKED (OFFENSE) 19 12 THIRD IXMNS/CONV/PCT 153/71/46.4 160/81/50.6 SCHEWLE AND RBSULTS ------09/14/85 UM 28 Wichita State 14 w Metrodome 56,094 09/21/85 UM 62 Montana u. 17 w Metrodome 55,700 09/28/85 UM 7 U. of Oklahoma 13 L Metrodome 62,446 10/05/85 UM 45 u. of Purdue 15 w Metrodome 59,503 10/12/85 UM 21 @ Northwestern u. 10 w Evanston, IL 24,512 10/19/85 UM 22 @ Indiana u. 7 w Bloomington, IN 38,826 10/26/85 * UM 19 Ohio State u. 23 L Metrodome 64,455 ll/02/85 UM 26 @ Michigan State 31 L Bast Lansing, MI 63,758 11/09/85 UM 27 u. of Wisconsin 18 w Metrodome 64,571 11/16/85 UM 7- U. of Michigan 48 L Metrodome 64,129 11/23/85 UM 9 @ u. of Iowa 31 L Iowa City, IA 66,020 e NOTES: * Homecoming (OVER) MINNBSOT'I'A FOOTBALL U. of Minn. INDIVII:(J.;U, FOO'fBALL STA'I'ISTICS FOR ALL GANES FINAL 1985 TOTALS RUSHING A'I'T GAIN LSS NE'r AVG TDS W RBCBIVING NUH YDS AVG TDS LG ------~------~-~------~------~------Ba.y1or,V 99. 594 12 582 5.9 s 45 Anderson,M 22 520 23.6 2 89 Foggi.e,R 127 576 125 451 3.6 9 21 Starks,K 16 275 17.2 3 61 e Puk,D 87 405 0 405 4.7 2 32 Couch,G 14 494 35.3 1 76 Couch,G 34 236 9 227 6.7 2 27 Bay1or,V 13 129 9.9 1 17 Penn,B 35 169 10 159 i 4.5 1 17 Gai1ord,B 10 165 16.5 1 30 Wilson,K 30 138 2 136 4.5 1 22 Hare,A 8 106 13.3 1 38 Holmes,c 23 91 5 86 3.7 0 20 Puk,D 4 39 9.8 0 15 Abercrombie 22 80 6 74 3.4 1 14 Otto~C 3 32 10.7 0 12 Ho1t,A 34 106 38 68 2.0 2 25 Richardson, 2 18 9.0 Oll Richardson, 18 86 20 66 3.7 0 17 Hare,A 9 48 0 48 5.3 0 9 PUNTING NUM YllS AVG BKD J,t; Stewart,T 6 34 2 32 5.3 113 Fors,E s 16 0 16 3.2 0 8 Ke11y,A------48 2004 41.8 0 61 Singletary, 2 15 0 15 7.5 0 12 Lohmiller,C 5 166 33.2 0 49 Anderson,M 4 23 9 14 3.5 0 17 Hoe,M 3 7 0 7 2.3 0 4 PUNT RBTNS NUM YDS AVG TDS LG Cumrnings,P 2 2 0 2 1.0 0 2 Berry,W l 1 0 •1 1.0 1 1 Hare,A------9 90 10.0 0 35 Minor,B l l 0 l 1.0 0 1 Coucb,G 2 17 8.5 0 9 Bruce,J 1 l 0 1 1.0 0 1 Gai1ord,E 8 31 3.9 0 18 Howa.rd,L 1 -4 -4.0 0 -4 PASSING ATTCMP P.CT YllS IN TDS RTNG KICK RE'I'NS NUM YDS AVG TDS u; Ho1t,A------47 27 .574 408 0 2 144.4 ------~------Foggie,R 141 65 .461 1370 4 7 138.4 Anderson,M 18 356 19.8 0 27 Richardson, 2 0 .000 0 0 0 0.0 Ga.i1ord,E 5 78 15.6 0 24 Bare,A 1 0 .000 0 0 0 0.0 Hare,A .1 14 14.0 0 14 Garrido,G .2 27 13.5 0 17 TOTAL OFF. PLAYS RUSH PASS TOTAL YDS/PL Stewart,T 3 39 13.0 0 19 ------Foggie,R 268 451 1370 1821 6.8 INT RETNS NUM YDS AVG TDS u; Baylor,v 99 582 0 582 5.9 Bolt,A 81 68 408 476 5.9 Sma1l,D------2 23 11.5 0 16 Puk,D 87 405 0 405 4,7 Dusba.bek,M 2 6 3.0 0 4 Couch,G 34 227 0 227 6.7 Martinez,M 2 0 0.0 0 0 Penn,B 35 159 0 159 4.5 Wil1iarns,D 1 6 6.0 0 6 Wi1son,K 30 136 0 136 4.5 Dutrieui11e 1 2 2.0 0 2 Bolmes,C 23 86 0 86 3.7 SCORING 'l'DS XPl-A ·xP2-A FG-A SAF PTS Abercrombie 22 74 0 74 3.4 ------Richardson, 20 66 0 66 3.3 Lohmi11er,C 0 28-29 o-o 13-16 0 67 Hare,A 10 48 0 48 4.8 Foggie,R 9 o-o 0-2 o-o 0 54 Stewart,T 6 32 0 32 5.3 Baylor,v 6 o-o 1-0 o-o 0 38 Fors,E 5 16 0 16 3.2 Sta.rks,K 3 o-o o-o o-o 0 18 Singletary, 2 15 0 15 7.5 Couch,G 3 o-o o-o o-o 0 18 Andcrson,N. 4 14 0 14 3.5 Puk,D 2 o-o o-o o-o 0 12 N.oe,M 3 7 0 7 2.3 Anderson,M 2 o-o o-o o-o 0 12 Cummings,P 2 2 0 2 1.0 Ho1t,A 2 o-o 0-1 0 12 Berry,W o-o l l 0 l 1.0 Stewart,'!' 1 o-o o-o o-o 0 6 Minor,B 1 l 0 1 1.0 Wilson,K 1 o-o o-o 0 Bruce,J o-o 6 l 1 0 1 1.0 Abercrombie 1 o-o o-o o-o 0 6 FIELD GOALS: 0-19 20-£9 30-39 40-49 50+ Berry,W 1 o-o o-o o-o 0 6 Lohmi11er o-o s-s S-6 2-4 1-l Penn,E 1 o-o o-o o-o 0 6 Gailord,E l o-o o-o o-o 0 6 e 37, 28G, 240, 25G, 47, 41, 31G, 45G, 28G, Hare,A 1 o-o 0-1 o-o 0 6 36G, SOG, 30G, 32G, 22G, 47G, 35G Kel1y,A 0 o-o 0-l o-o 0 0 SCORB BY S2'S 1st 2nd OPP: 12 or 18. 3rd 4th - Tot. Minnesota 47 99 67 60 273 Opponents 51 103 31 42 227 M.INNESOT'l'A FOOTBALL U. of Minn. DEFENSIVE FOOTBALL STM'IST1CS FOR ALL Gl'.. 'lBS e FINAL 1985 TOTALS ------TACK!~------QTRBK -FUMBLES- ELAD -PASSES-- PLAYER POS UNAST. ASSIST TOTAL IA)SS SACKS CSD. RBC. KICKS BKUP INTC ------Najarian,P LB 58 75 133 5 1 0 0 0 0 0 Holrnes,B LB 75 50 125 2 1 0 2 0 2 0 Jogner,L DE 44 39 83 6 4 1 0 0 0 0 Small,D FS 51 29 80 2 l 0 0 0 5 2 Dusbabek,M DB 42 30 72 6 0 0 l 0 1 2 Burke,A ur 46 18 64 4 3 0 l 0 l 0 Thompson,s ur 42 17 59 5 3 0 l 0 2 0 Dutrieui11e CB 35 21 56 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 Martinez,M CB 34 21 55 1 0 0 0 0 8 2 Williams,D ss 31 17 48 2 0 0 0 0 l 1 Mue1ler,D NG 23 17 40 l 1 0 0 0 ,0 0 Christopher DE 19 15 34 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 Hadd,G ur 13 11 24 3 2 0 1 0 0 0 Reed,R DB 10 13 23 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 Frank.lin,s ss 14 2 16 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Po1lard,D DE 10 3 13 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Mcintosh,M FS 8 5 13 .0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Brown,J FS 7 3 10 1 1 0 1 0 l 0 Rhodus,S NG 7 l 8 0 0 0 0 0 l 0 Stepanek,J DT 6 l 7 l 0 0 0 0 0 0 Hrgcak,T LB 3 4 7 0 0 0 1 0 l 0 HCMard,L CB 6 0 6 0 0 0 0 0 l 0 e Trip,T DE 5 l 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Gibbons,S LB 5 l 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Rgan,D DB 4 2 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 HcCree,c CB 4 l 5 0 0 0 0 0 l 0 Rotb,R NG 2 3 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Ukkelberg,R DT 3 l 4 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 Wilson,N OT 3 0 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 Guldin,S c 3 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Berry,W ss 2 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Strong,P FS 1 l 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Cumrnings,P FL l 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 Gai.lord,B SE 1 l 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Vanderwoude DB 1 0 l 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Villella,T DT 1 0 l 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Leverenz,J LB l 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Teske,D FS l 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Coucb,G FL 1 0 l 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Garrido,G ss l 0 l 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Lobmiller ,c K 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Hul1igan,G NG l 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Chernin,A LB 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Bond,M DE 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 ALL PURPOSE YARDAGE Player GP RUSHING PASSING RECEIVING P/RETURN KO/RETURN TC YARDS PLAY GAME Foggie 10 127/451 65/141/1370 0 0 0 268 1821 .6.8 182.1 Anderson 11 4/14 0 22/5;>0 0 18/356 44 890 20.2 80.9 e Couch 11 34/227 0 14/494 2/17 0 48 738 15.4 67.1 Baylor 11 99/582 0 13/129 0 0 112 711 6.3 64.6 Holt 9 34/68 27/47/408 0 0 0 81 476 5.9 52.9 Puk 11 87/405 0 4/39 0 0 91 444 4.9 40.4 ---UM--- U OF M CAGERS OPEN HOME SEASON THIS WEEKEND

Coach Jim Dutcher bd:1gs his 2-1 University of !4innesota basketball team horne from Hawaii this week to pen its 1985-86 Williams Arena slate against San Francisco State on Friday and South Dakota on .Saturday.

Both of those non-conference assignerntr.s show 8:05 p.m. tip-offs and mark the beginning of a six game horne stand. Next Monday Minnesota entertains Eastern Illinois and next Wednesday hosts Detroit. The Golden Gophers scored two big wins in its tournament in Hawaii last week. First Minnesota drilled West Virginia State 120-106 and then downed host Brigham Young-Hawaii 87-80 in the finale. In between, the Golden Gophers fell 92-79· to Middle Tennessee. Prior to heading to that tourney, Coach Dutcher said he hoped Minnesota fans would not judge the Golden Gophers on their record there. "We won't be at full strength," he pointed out, "and the opposition will be much stronger and the environment much more difficult than people realize. 11

Consequently, Dutcher has to be satisfied that his youthful club was able to come out of Hawaii with a pair of impressive victories while using a number of players. · ·

In the opening round of the tourney, Terence Woods scored 29 in his first assignment to lead Minnesota. John Shasky was next in line with 28. Mitch Lee paced the Golden Gophers in their loss to Middle Tennessee with 21 points and 10 rebounds. Despite tJhose efforts, Minnesota was out-rebounded 42-34, and it caused Dutcher some concern. "Rebounding is our major concern," Dutcher was quoted as saying after the loss. "It's the same old bug-aboo we had last season. We couldn't even out­ rebound a team where we had a height advantage." After that chastisement, Minnesota carne back in the tourney's final game to dump the host club behind it's 1985-86 co-captains, Shasky and Marc Wilson who scored career highs of 33 and 29 points respectively. Now the friendly confines of Williams Arena will welcome its travel-weary cagers horne, and the stage becomes set for a hectic 1nonth of non-conference play before Big Ten action opens in January. Dutcher figures to open with his veterans this weekend, and that means that Kevin Smith, who did not make the trip to Hawaii, will team with Lee at forward.

Shasky is a fixture at center for the Golden Gophers while Wilson will draw Todd Alexander as his running-mate at guard for invading San Francisco and South Dakota.

--UM-- U. of Minn. BASKETBALL BASKETBALL SCHEIXJLB AND RESULTS DATE OPPONENT SCORE ATTEND HIGH SCORER{S) HlGH REBOUNDBR{S) # ------11/22 N W. Virginia St. ~120-106 1000 Woods-29 ~Shasky-14 11/23 # N Middle Tennessee Sc. 79-92 950 Lee-21 11/25 # N Prigham Young-B. Lee-10 87-BO 845 ~Shaskg-33 11/29 San Francisto St. Shasky-12 11/30 u. of s. Dakoca 12/02 Eastern Illinois 12/04 U. of Detroit 12/07 u. of Arkansas 12/14 Colorado State 12/17 @ Marquette u. 12/23 BKB 12/28 Alcorn State 01/02 @ u. of Illinois 01/04 @ u. of Purdue 01/11 @ u. of Iowa 01/16 u. of Michigan 01/18 Michigan State 01/23 @ U. of Wisconsin 01/26 @ Northwestern u. 01/30 Ohio State U. 02/01 Indiana u. 02/09 U. of Iowa 02/13 @ u. of Michigan 02/15 @ Michigan State 02/20 Northwestern U. 02/22 U. of Wisconsin 02/27 @ Indiana u. 03/02 @Ohio State u. 03/06 u. of Purdue 03/08 u. of Illinois

NOTES: Js SEASON HIGH, II N'tl. Airlines Trn.

e e e Minn. BASKETBALL BASKKJ.'B.J.LL li.VVIVIW;'lJ., STATISTICS FOR ALL GAH.BS.

R8CORD (W-L): 2-1 (2-1 NEUTRAL; 0-0 BIG 10).

NO PLAYER GP-GS MIN/AV FGH-FGA FG% FTM-FTA FT% REB/ AVG BI A.9T STL BLK TO PF-DQ PTS/AVG HI ------44 Shasky,J 3-3 105/35 25-42 .595 16-28 .571 32/10.7 14 6 2 11 7 13-2 66/22,0 33

24 Wi1son,M 3-3 100/33 18-30 .600 29-36 .806 18/ 6.0 7 22 6 1 9 9-o 65/21.7 29

00 Lee,M 2-2 69/23 8-16 .500 12-17 .706 15/ 7.5 10 1 2 2 8 8-1 28/14.0 21

21 Woods,T 3-3 82/27 17-31 .548 6-9 .667 15/ 5.0 7 8 3 0 8 8-1 40/13.3 29

11 Alexander ,T 2-2 59/20 12-21 .571 o-o .000 3/ 1.5 2 12 0 0 10 10-2 24/12.0 12

34 Anderson,M 3-0 81/27 12-29 .414 9-14 .643 11/ 3.7 5 15 5 1 12 9-0 33/11.0 13

42 Smith,K 2-0 32/11 3-6 .500 6-7 .857 3/ 1.5 3 ·1 2 1 4 s-o 12/ 6.0 8

13 H?..."J.Son,T 3-1 32/11 4-6 .667 1-2 .500 5/ 1.7 4 ·3 0 0 0 5-0 9/ 3.0 5

32 Wi11iams,G 2-1 23/8 2-7 .286 1-4 .250 3/ 1.5 2 1 0 0 1 8-1 5/ 2.5 3

55 Ho1mgren,D 2-0 3/1 1-1 1.000 o-o .000 1/ 0.5 1 0 0 0 0 o-o 2/ 1.0 2

30 Gaffney,R 3-0 14/5 1-5 .200 o-o .000 0/ 0.0 0 1 0 0 0 o-o 2/ 0.7 2 ------U. of MirJil. 600 103-194 .531 80-117 .684 117/39.0 70 20 16 59 75-7 286/95.3 OPPONENTS 600 107-221 .484 64-91 .703 126/42.0 49 39 11 43 77-6 278/92.7 ------TEAM REBOUNDS: ALL GAMES ( UH-11, OPP-9) DBAD BALL REBOUNDS: ALL GAMBS(UM-14, OPP-12)

e e e .. .. < ' GOPHER SPORTS UPDATES GYMNASTS HOST JAPANESE ALL-STARS SUNDAY: PLACE 7th AT WINDY CITY INVITE LAST WEEKEND

A The University of Minnesota .. men's snd -,,;omen.. 's gymnastic squads host the Japanese WCollegiate All-Stars. Sunday, JJt:'CCmbcr 1, 2:00PM at Williams Arena. It will be the sixth year of competition bet,,reen Minnesota and the Japanese men Is teams and the second year of the co-ed meet. The Japanese will have seven of its best collegiate perfovmers and have beaten the Minnesota team all five years of the meet.

Coach Fred Roethlisberger's team placed seventh at the Windy City Invitational last weekend in Chicgao, Illinois. The University of Iowa showed its tremendous promise with a first place finish and a team score of 274.45. "Iowa won easily and are definitely the team to beat in the Big Ten Conference," said Roethlisberger.

"I was enco~raged with the young guys at the Windy City meet, once we get healthy we will have a real good team." Senior David Menke (Bloomington, MN) had the Gophers top individual all-.. around finish with a seventh place showing. Rob Brown (Sr. Chicago,IL) was eighth all-around.

In the individual events Rob Brown had a third place finish in the rings and a sixth place in the horizontal bar. Collin Godkin (Jr. Milwaukee, WI) placed fifth in the pommel horse competition to round out Minnesota's top finishers. Minnesota has a team score of 261.90 for its seventh place showing. ----UM----- GIESE REMAINS UNBEATEN WITH NEBRASKA-OMAHA CHAMPIONSHIP: FOUR WRESTLERS PLACE AT OMAHA AT WISCONSIN NOTHERN OPEN THIS WEEKEND·

A Senior captain Ed Giese (Wood Dale, IL) ran his season record to 12-0 while ~apturing the 118 pound title at the Nebraska-Omaha tourney last Saturday. Giese won all five of his matches enroute to his third straight tournament win. Giese also has won championships at the Bison Open and the Minnesota Showcase. He won the 1984 Big Ten title at 118 and sat out the 1985 season as a red-shirt. He will be among the conference favorites at 118 this season.

Gopher Rod Sande (So. St. Paul, MN) won five of his seven matches at 167 pounds to finish fourth at his weight. Sande was 14-15-1 last year at 158 pounds and his move up to 167 will be beneficial for Minnesota. Freshman John Miller (Sacred Heart, MN) and Brett Rasmussen (So. Kasson, MN) also placed well for the Gophers in the Nebraska-Omaha tourney. This weekend Minnesota will travel to Madison, WI for the Northern Open and wrestling against the top teams in the Midwest.(Iowa, Wisconsin, Nebraska,Oklahoma St.). ----UM---- SWIMMERS OPEN SEASON WITH BIG TEN LOSS TO WISCONSIN: SPEND HOLIDAYS IN PUERTO RICO Coach Dennis Dale and his Minnesota men's swimming team opened the 1985-86 season losing 63-49 to Wisconsin in a Big Ten dual swim meet last Fridav ~light at Cooke Hall.

The Gophers placed third in the Hidwest Relays hosted by Minnesota. "We were very pleased with both meets," said Coach Dale. "A nu.uber· of people swam very well and responded to the meet competition which is encouraging this early in the year." The men's swim team will be off Jnt.Ll the winter 1Jreak training trip to Puerto eico December 15-30. Minnesota will com;ete in a dual meet with Brown University December 29, in Puerto Rico.

----UM---- Mailed December 3, 1985 For Release Upon Receipt

~--from the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455

GOPHER HAPPENINGS ON TAP -- All Times Local, CST Wed. Dec. 4 - (BB) U. OF DETROIT HERE 8:05 (WCCO-AM) Fri. Dec. 6 - (HO) WISCONSIN HERE 7:35 (KMFY-AM, WCCO-AM, KSTP-TV ch. 9) - (GY) at Wisconsin Open, Madison, WI - (GY) JAPANESE ALL-STARS (CO-ED) HERE 8:00 WILLIAMS ARENA (re-scheduled from Sunday, Dec. 1)

~ Sat. Dec. 7 - (HO) WISCONSIN HERE 2:05 (KMFY-AM) - (BB) ARKANSAS HERE 8:05 (WCCO-AM) - (WR) MISSOURI HERE 7:00 PIEK GYM - (GY) at Wisconsin Open, Madison, WI (NOTE: Dec. 8-13, all UM teams off for Fall Quarter exam break)

GOLDEN GOPHER CAGERS HOST ARKANSAS SATURDAY After entertaining Detroit on Wednesday, the University of Minnesota will complete a busy week of basketball by playing host to Arkansas of the Southwest Conference at Williams Arena on Saturday night. Tip-off for that inter-sectional, non-conference shootout is 8:05 p.m. Coach Jim Dutcher's contingent, in the midst of an ambitious six-game home stand, came back from its' Hawaii tournament at 2-1 and then polished off San Francisco State 95-63 and South Dakota 66-57 last weekend. Then Monday evening Minnesota blistered Eastern Illinois 87-69 to set the stage for Wednesdays' confrontation with Detroit and Saturday's game with the razorbacks. Dutcher seemed to think that his cagers were making progress, that they were playing better as the season moved into high gear. ·Hopefully that will be the case, ~since each opponent also seems to be of better quality •••• and Saturday's Arkansas foe is a classic example. (MORE) ..

A year ago Arkansas whipPed the traveling Golden Gophers 56-46 in ~itt~e R~ at a time when Minnesota was completing a strenuous four-game road sw1ng 1nvolv1ng Indiana State, Oregon, Arizona and the Razorbacks. That was the only previous meeting in history between the Golden Gophers and Arkansas, and Dutcher would like to see his club even the series with the home court advantage Saturday. No changes are anticipated in Minnesota's starting lineup, and that means Co-Captain John Shasky will open at center, Mitch Lee and Kevin Smith will get the call at forward and Todd Alexander will team with Co-Captain Marc Wilson at guard. But several other Golden Gophers could see action •••• as they have in those most­ recent non-conference assignments at Williams Arena. George Williams, Tim Hanson, Terence Woods and_Kelvin smith all have done time at forward. Mark Anderson and Ray Gaffney have giveri Dutcher help at guard and could so so again against the Razorbacks. And Dav~ Holmgren has given Shasky some rest at center. ' All of those cagers have shown progress ••••• just like the Minnesota delegation has shown progress as a team. Dutcher hopes that will continue this week. "We got a better tempo of things established in the second half of our game against San Francisco," Dutcher1 sald,. "and against Eastern Illinois it was even better. We were able to control the tempo from start to finish." Rebounding has been a concern of Dutcher's through the early going, but Minnesota seemed to show signs of corning alive in that department ~ well. during its' horne stand. · "We got on the boards a little stronger against San Francisco," Dutcher pointed out, and even against a team with good size ~ike Eastern Illinois the Golden Gophers were able to hold their own. Dutcher also liked Minnesota's scoring effort against Eastern Illinois. "Offensively we did a much better job," he said. "It all has to do with tempo, but overall I felt it was a good effort on our part." · ··

Shasky led the way in that most-recent. win with 22 points, ·arid Wilson followed closely with 19. Two other Golden Gophers finished in double ·figures in that game •••• Kevin Smith with 13 and Anderson with 11. ·

But now it's the invading Razorb~cks •••• and then a week off for final exams before Minnesota entertains Colorado State on December 28. After that the Golden r Gophers hit the road for non-conference assignments at Marquette and Connecticut before returning to Williams Arena to close the December slate against Oklahoma State and.Alcorn State during the Christmas holidays.

--OM--

FOR THE LATEST IN GOPHER SPORTS DIAL 612-373-4.211 ~ U. of Minn. BASKETBALL BASKETBALL INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS FOR ALL OAMES.

RECORD (W-L): 5-1 (3-0 HDr1E• 2-1 NEUTRAL; o-o BIO 10).

NO PLAYER QP-OS MIN/AV FQM-FQA FOX FTM-FTA FTX REB/ AVQ HI AST STL BLK TO PF-DG PTS/AVO HI ------~------44 Shaskv• .J 6-6 ------197/33 49-80 . 600 26-46 . 565 55/ 9. 2 14 6 5 16 12 16-2 122/20.3 33

24 Wilson. H 6-6 199/32 .. 39-71 . 549 36-46 . 793 32/ 5. 3 7 30 11 2 14 16-0 114/19.0 29

34 Andet-son,M 6-1 139/23 23-51 .451 15-23 .652 15/ 2. 55 19 9 1 17 13-0 61/10.2 13

33 Smith, KI!V. 3-3 75/13 11-27 . 407 6-7 . 857 13/ 4. 3 6 6 2 4 6 2-0 28/ 9.3 13

00 L•e,M 5-5 144/24 14-33 .424 21-30 . 700 41/ 8.2 13 4 5 4 16 14-1 49/ 9.8 21

21 Woods,T 6-3 115/19 23-40 .575 6-10 .600 26/ 4.3 8 10 5 0 11 13-1 52/ 8.7 29

11 Alexand•t-•T 5-5 135/23 20-39 .513 4-4 1.000 12/ 2.4 5 19 5 1 12 17-2 44/ 8.8 12

42 Smith, K4L. 5-0 57/10 7-16 . 438 8-9 . 889 6/ 1. 2 3 1 2 1 5 9-0 22/ 4.4 B

32 Wi 11 iams, Q 5-1 64/11 8-14 .571 2~6 .333 10/.2.0 3 2 1 0 3 12-1 18/ 3.6 8

13 Hanson,T 5-o 42/7 4-6 . 667 1-2 . 500 71 1. 4 4 3 0 0 0 4-0 9/ 1.8 5

30 Qaffn•U·R 5-0 25/4 4-9 . 444 1-3 . 333 3/ 0. 6 2 1 1 0 1 2~0 9/ 1.9 5

5~ Holmgt-en,D 4-0 19/3 1-5 .200 4-5 .BOO 51 1.3 4 0 0 2 1 3-o 6/ 1.5 4

------U. of Minn. 1200 202-391 .517 130-191 .681 240/40.0 101 46 31 98 121-7 534/89.0 OPPONENTS. 1200 183-404 .453· 101-146 .692 232/38.7 72 52 21 95 131-7 .467/77.8 TEAM------REBOUNDS: ALL OAMES

,• e e e U. of Minn. BASKETBALL BASKETBALL SCHEDULE AND RESULTS DATE OPPONENT SCORE ATTEND HIGH SCORERt2o-t06------~------11/23 • N 1000 Woods-29 >Shaslry-14 Middle Tennessee St. 79-92 950 Lee-21 11/25 • N Brigham Young-H. Lee-10 11/29 87-90 845 >Shaskv-33 San Francisto St. 95-63 Shaskv-12 11/30 12.059 Wilson-16 Lee-13 U. of S. Dakota 66-57 12/02 11.868 Shasky-19 Shasky-11 Eastern Illinois 87-69 11,650 12/04 U. of Dtttroit Shaskv-22 Shasky-6 12/07 U. of Arkansas 12/14 Colorado State 12/17 @ Marquette U. 12/23 BKB 12/28 Alcorn State 01/02 @ U. of Illinois 01/04 @ U. of Purdue 01/11 @ U. of Iowa 01/16 U. of Michigan 01/18 Michigan State 01/23 @ U. of Wisconsin 01/26 @ No~thwestern U. 01/30 Dh i o State U. 02/01 Indiana U. 02/09 U. of Iowa 02/13 @ U. of Michigan 02/15 • Michigan State 02/20 No'rthwestern U. 02/22 U. of Wisconsin 02/27 41 Indiana U.

03/02 @ Ohio State U. II 03/06 :U. of P-u'rdue 03/0B U. of Illinois NOTES: > SEASON HIQH, * N'tl. Airlines T'rn.

e e - ICERS HOME TO 1ST PLACE WISCONSIN 12/2/85 Minneapolis,MN--•After storming to a pair of surprise road wins at Northern Michigan last weekend, all the U. of Minnesota hockey Gophers have to look for­ ward to this weekend is hosting Wisconsin Friday and Saturday at Mariucci Arena. Friday's 7:35 p.m. CST game will be aired by KMFY-980 AM and WCC0-830 AM, plus KMSP-TV, Ch. g. Saturday's 2:05 p.m. game will only be on KMFY Radio. The Gophers, as stated, raised more than one hockey eyebrow by sweeping the Wildcats in Marquette. Minnesota broke from a 4-4 third period tie with four goals in the last five ninutes to win 8-4 Friday, and then came from a 6-3 second period deficit to win 10-9 in overtime Saturday. Actually, the Gophers Saturday fell behind again by one goal three times in the final period only to see co-captain Wally Chapman forge a 9-9 tie with 3:30 remaining in regulation time. It only took junior center Corey Millen, who scored the t~ird period game winner Friday, 0:09 to score the overtime winner Saturday. Not only was gaining two upset road wins a surprise, but the fact that Minnesota scored 18 goals in the process was an even bigger jolt. The Gophers went into last week averaging only 3.4 goals.per WCHA outing, third lowest offensive average in the league. On top of that, Minnesota had ~he least productive power play offense in the WCHA, too. So what happened? No less than half (9) of UM's 18 goals came on man advantage situations. Besides scoring both game winning goals, Millen turned in the highest point production of any Minnesota player this year by scoring nine points in the series. He cashed in another goal Friday, and added six assists in the two games. However, his production was overshadowed by NMU forward Gary Emmons who set a new WCHA record Saturday by scoring six goals. The former league record was five in one game, a mark held by several players. Emmons also totaled nine weekend points and was named WCHA Player of the Week. Millen was certainly a close second in the decision. "What that pair of wins means to us is that we are still in the hunt," Gopher head coach Doug Woog said Monday. "All the numbers remain positive. "I must give a good portion of credit for last weekend to senior co-captains Wally Chapman and Tony Kellin. They held some team meetings to stresss to their teammates the importance of this series, and I guess it worked. "We had been working hard on our power play all season, but I believe the little extra work we gave our men last week in practice paid off. We allaowed only three even-up goals in each game, so seven of their 13 goals came on power plays. The fact that half our goals came on the power play didn1 t hurt, either. "But more important, in team scoring only five or six players are contri­ buting a majority of our scores. Several other players, however, know where their contributions to the team can best be made and are doing those things in an unselfish manner. "It was great to see our players not panic, maintain their poise when we fell behind Saturday. or were tied 4-4 Friday. They just kept on playing their game." As to meeting Wisconsin this weekend, Woog offered, "They simply have an offensive. powerhouse to go with a pair of fine, experienced goal tenders. "They have reached first place and are not about to fall back in the pack without someone paying a heavy price. Wisconsin has some great players and that's a good enough reason why they are winning and winning big. "Both Wisconsin and ourselves have the capacity to explode offensively, so I believe we could be viewing some kind of skating series this weekend." (MORE) WCHA STANDINGS THRU 12/1/85 GP w L T PTS GF AVG GA AVG 1-Wisconsin (11-5-0) 14 11 3 0 22 77 5.5 52 3.7 2-Denver (11-3-0) 13 10 3 0 20 63 4.8 39 3.0 3-Minnesota-Duluth (12-3-J) 12 8 3 1 17 54 4.5 38 3.2 4-Minnesota (10-4-0) 12 8 4 0 16 52 4.3 42 3.5 -Northern Michigan {9-4-1) 12 8 4 0 16 64 5.3 62 5.2 6-North Dakota (7-7-0) 14 7 7 0 14 60 4.3 58 4.1 7-Colorado College {6-8-1) 12 5 6 1 11 45 3.8 50 . 4.2 8-Miohigan Tech (2-11-3) 14 2 10 2 6 42 3·0 70. 5.0 (NOTE: Denver played at Boston College 12/3 .after these standings were totaled) ---UM--- fJ. of Hinn. HOCKEY BOCUY S'! NtiST ICS I'OR ALL GAHBS RBCORD (PI-L•'l'): l0-4-0 (4-2-0 BOHr; 6-2-0 AWAY; 8•4-D JICHA) WCBA GAIIBS PIMBR GP G A P'!'S PBN/IIIN PP GH SB Irr GP G A 'lP PBN/IIIN ~---~-~-----~-~------~ ~- ~~ ------~ ------Micheletti, P. -ar 14 6 15 21 19/46 3 l 0 0 12 5 10 15 17/42 Hillen, c. -c 14 9 12 21 ll/22 4 3 0 0 12 7 10 17 l0/20 CateJJ, J. -c 14 8 10 18 ll/22 5 2 0 0 12 7 8 15 10/20 HacSwain, S. -Uf 14 6 12 18 5/18 l l 0 l 12 2 12 14 4/8 Cbal»ff411, PI. -Uf 13 8 9 17 3/9 3 2 0 0 ll 7 6 13 2/7 Okerlund, T. -RN 14 6 9 15 10/20 l 0 l 0 12 6 7 13 8/16 Kellin, T. -D 14 3 8 ll 9/18 2 o· 0 0 12 3 s 8 8/16 Richards, T. -D 12 3 6 9 6/12 1 0 0 0 10 1 4 s 6/12 Sbopek, G. -D 13 1 6 7 8/16 0 0 0 0 12 0 6 6 8/16 Orth, s. -c 13 3 3 6 l/2 l 0 1 0 12 3 3 6 l/2 Hack, c. •D 14 l 4 5 7/14 0 0 0 0 12 l 4 5 7/14 Nelson, B. -D ll l 4 5 4/8 0 0 0 0 9 l 4 5 3/6 Anderson, H. -Uf 9 l 3 4 214 0 0 0 0 8 1 2 3 l/2 Bergland, T. -w 12 2 2 4 418 0 0 0 0 11 2 2 4 4/8 Broten, P. -w 7 2 2 4 214 0 0 0 0 5 2 l 3 2/4 Dornfeld, B. -D 9 0 3 3 4/8 0 0 0 0 7 0 3 3 4/8 Grannis, D. -IW 14 2 1 3 7/14 0 l 0 0 12 2 l 3 7/14. Snuggerud, D. -c 8 1 2 3 5113 0 0 0 0 6 l l 2 5/13 '• BOPte, R. -»1 2 0 2 2 l/2 0 0 0 0 2 0 2 2 l/2 Blue, J. -G 8 0 l 1 112 0 0 0 0 7 0 0 (J l/2 ChorsJce, T. -Uf 9 l 0 1 l/2 0 0 0 0 8 l 0 l 112 Bspe, D. -D 5 0 l ·l 316 0 0 0 0 s 0 l l 3/6 Labatt, J. -Uf 1 0 0 0 OIO 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 OIO Pietrangelo, F. -G 7 0 0 0 010 0 0 0 0 6 0 0 0 OIO Gersich, F. -D 5 0 0 0 SilO 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 SilO Others 0 0 0 0 OIO 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 OIO ======- :=~======-- u. of Minn. 14 64115 179 1291280 21 10 2 1 =- 12 52 92144 1181250 Opponents --- 14 47 77 124 1361275 23 4 l 1 12 42 70112 118/239 POPIBR PLAYS SCORE BY PERIODS =--:z--= ==~======~==--- G OPP ------" lst 2nd 3rd O'I' Total UH -- 21 71 .2957 UH -- 15 21 27 1 64 Opponents -- 23 63 .3650 Opponents -- 15 16 16 0 47

GOALIB RECORDS ALL GAMES GP HINS GA G, AVG S'l'OPS s• so ------Blue, J. 8 429 22 2.75 194 0.898 0 Pietrangelo, F. 7 410 25 3.57 193 0.885 0 == ·- =- ===-=- ===== ...... == UH --- 14 839 47 3.36 387 0.892 0 Opponents --- 14 839 64 4.57 454 0.876 0 WCHA GAMES GP HINS GA G.AVG STOPS s• so ------~- --~------Blue, J. 7 369 19 2.71 167 0.898 0 Pietrangelo, F. 6 350 23 3.83 175 0.884 0 UN --- ==·------12 719 42 3.50 342 0.891 0 Opponents --- l2 720 52 4.33 396 0.884 0 . . .. ,

U. of Minn. HOCKEY HOCKEY SCHBDJLE AND RESULTS FOR ALL GAMBS

RECORD {W-L-T h 10-4-0 ( 4-2-0 HOME; 6-2-0 AWAY; 8-4-Q WCHA) H WLT DATE A OPPONENT SCORE ATTEND GW GOAL G.O.R.-SAVBS ------~------w 10/18/85 H MICHIGAN TECH 3-0 6103 Chapman B1ue-12 w 10/19/85 H MICHIGAN TECH 7-2 6074 Millen Pietrange1o-13 w 10/25/85 A N.INNESOTA-IXJWTH 4-2 5664 Chapman Blue-33 L 10/26/85 A MINNESOTA-IXJLUTH 2-5 5664 Pietrangelo-39 L 11/01/85 H DENVER 2-4 5969 Blue-32 L 11/02/85 H DENVER 4-5 6220 Pietrangelo-26 w ll/08/85 A UMBLL 3-1 1913 Micheletti Blue-23 N 11/09/85 A LOWELL 2-l 1893 Cates Pietrangelo-25 L ll/15/85 A NORTH DAKOTA 4-7 6100 B1ue-34 w 11/16/85 A NORTH DAKOTA 3-2 6100 Grannis w Pi~trangelo-43 ll/22/85 H ILLINOIS-cHICAGO 5-3 5596 Macswain Blue-27 N 11/23/85 H ILLINOIS-cHICAGO 7-2 5790 Cates Pietrangelo-18 N 11/29/85 A NORTHERN ·MICHIGAN 8-4 3824 Millen B1ue-26 w 11/30/85 A NORTHERN MICHIGAN 10-9 ( ot )37 39 Millen Blue-7++ 12/06/85 H u. of Wisconsin o-o 0 12/07/85 H U. of Wisconsin 0:-0 0 12/14/85 H U.S~ INTERNATIONAL o-o 0 12/15/85 H U.S. INTERNATIONAL o-o 0 12/20/85 A NORTHEASTERN o-o 0 12/21/85 A NORTHEASTERN o-o 0 12/29/85 A NBH HAMPSHIRE o-o 0 12/30/85 A NEH HAMPSHIRE o-o 0 Ol/03/86 H MAINE o-o 0 01/04/86 H MAINE o-o 0 01/10/86 H BOSTON UNIVERSITY o-o 0 01/11/86 H BOSTON UNIVERSITY o-o 0 01/17/86 A BOSTON COLLEGE o-o 0 01/18/86 A BOSTON COLLEGE o-o 0 Ol/24/86 H PROVIDENCE o-o 0 Ol/25/86 H PROVIDENCE o-o 0 01/31/86 A u. of Wisconsin o-o 0 02/0l/86 A U. of Wisconsin o-o 0 02/08/86 A +COLORADO COLLEGE o-o 0 02/09/86 A +COLORADO COLLEGE o-o 0 02/14/86 H N.INNBSOT A-IXJLUTH o-o 0 02/15/86 H MINNESOT A-IXJWTH o-o 0 02/21/86 H NOirrH DAKOTA o-o 0 02/22/86 H NORTH DAJCOTA o-o 0 ------Total Season-- 70649 (14 games, avg. 5046) Home Games -- 35752 (6 games, avg. 5959) + - Played at AF Academy ++ - played last 9 minutes of OT game )'- . GOPHER SPORTS UPDATES

**GYMNASTICS**

MINNESOTA vs. JAPANESE MEET RESCHEDULED FOR FRIDAY NIGHT DECEMBER 6, 8:00 PM The first major snowstorm of 1985-86 hit the Midwest during the Thanksgiving weekend and postponed the Minnesota vs. Japanese Collegiate All-Stars co-ed meet. The Japanese will continue with its five-stop tour of the nations top collegiate gymnastic squads then come back to Minneapolis to face off against the Minnesota men's and women's teams. The meet has been reset for Friday, December 6, 8:00 PM at Williams Arena.

Minnesota gymnastic coach Fred Roethlisberger and his team opened the 1985-86 season competing at the Windy City Invitational November 23. The Gophers placed seventh in a highly competitive field at the Invite and should continue their improvement this weekend against the Japanese.

The Gophers are the defending Big Ten runnerup and have won seven of the last eleven conference gymnastic titles. Minnesota's Collin Godkin (Jr. Milwaukee,WI) was the Big Ten all-around runnerup last year and will team with Rob Brown (Sr. Chicago, IL) and David Menke (Sr. Bloomington, MN) to form an excellent trio of top-flight gymnasts.

---UM--- ***WRESTLING*** GOPHERS HOST MISSOURI IN DUAL MATCH DECEMBER 7, 7:00PM AT PEIK GYM PROBABLE STARTING LINEUP -(Minnesota 0-0 in duals) 118- Ed Giese (SR. Wood Dale, IL) ...... 16-1 overall record 126- John Miller (FR. Sacred Heart, MN) ..... 11-7 overall 134- Blake Bonjean (JR. Bloomington, MN) .... 12-5 overall 142- Bruce Gebhart (JR. Menomonie, WI) ...... 6-6 overall 150- Tim Manning (FR. Vermillion, SD) ...... 10-4 overall 158- Brett Rasmussen (SO. Kasson, MN) ...... 12-6 overall 167- Rod Sande (JR. St. Paul, MN) ...•...•... 11-6 overall 177- Eric Lehrke (SR. Rothschild,WI) ...... 8-4 overall or Brian Flygare (SO. Minot, ND) ..•....•.. 7-8 overall 190- Dave Dean (SO. Montrose,MI) ...... 3-2 overall HWT-

Coach Wally Johnson's Gopher wrestling team has been involved in four tourneys in preparation for the dual match season. The match with the University of Missouri opens the dual season. Minnesota will be at Northern Illinois December 17 in the other pre-Christmas dual before the annual Hawaii trip December 26 - January 2. Senior co-captain Ed Giese continues his outstanding record with a 16-1 mark and three tournament titles (MN Showcase, Bison Open, Nebraska-Omaha Open). Giese placed 3rd at theNorthern Open last weekend in Madison, WI with a 4-1 record and the 118 pounder will look to regain his 1984 Big Ten title. Giese red-shirted the 1984-85 season and will be among the national and conference favorites in 86'. Junior Blake Bonjean placed 3rd in the Northern Open 134 class and has an excellent 12-5 overall mark heading into the dual Saturday. Sophomore Dave Dean placed fourth in the 190 class at the Northern Open and is back from an injury suffered in the pre-season. ----UM---- Mailed December 9, 1985 • For Release Upon Receipt

~--from the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455

GOPHER HAPPENINGS ON TAP -- All Times Local, CST Sat. Dec. 14 - (HO) U.S .• INTERNATIONAL HERE 2:05 (KMFY-980AM) - (BB) COLORADO STATE HERE 8:05'(WCC0-8JOAM) - (HO) J.V. VS. AUGSBURG HERE 6:15 MARIUCCI ARENA Sun. Dec. 15 - (HO) u.s. INTERNATIONAL HERE 2:05 (KMFY-980AM)

Tue. Dec. 17 - (BB) at Marquette U., Milwaukee, WI 7:30 (WCC0-830AM, KMSP-TV) - (WR) at Northern Illinois, Dekalb, IL e - (HO) J.V. at North Dakota State, Fargo, ND Thu. Dec. 19 - (HO) J.V. VS. NOTRE DAME HERE 2:30 MARIUCCI ARENA Fri. Dec. 20- (HO) at Northeastern u., Boston, MA 6:30 (KMFY-980AM) Sat. Dec. 21 - (BB) at U. of Connecticut, Hartford, CT 12 Noon (WCC0-830AM, KMSP-TV) - (HO) at Northeastern U., Boston, MA 6:30 (KMFY-980AM) Mon. Dec. 23 - (BB) OKLAHOMA STATE HERE 8:05 (WCC0-830AM) GOLDEN GOPHER CAGERS TO CLOSE HOME STAND SATURDAY Minnesota's Golden Gopher basketball team will wind up its ol3ix-game home stanc Saturday when playing host'to colorado State at 8:05p.m. in Williams Arena.

That non-conference assignn~nt will find Coach Jim Dutcher's contingent shooting for its seventh straight triumph while attempting to improve upon its current record of 7-1. - Most recent'victim that fell to the improving Golden Gophers was Arkansas from the Southwest Conference. Minnesota beat the Razorbacks 71-64 last weekend. "It was .a nice win for us," Dutcher said. "OVerall it was a good effort on our· part. We felt it was a win over a very good basketball team that beat us a year ago. 11 • co-captain Marc Wilson a senior who has been playing the best ball of his career in recent outings, led the Golden Gophers with 21 points, but he had a lot of help. Kevin Smith and Mitch Lee got the job done at forwards with 15 and 10 points · respectively while Todd Alexander, Wilson's running-mate at guard, had 17. Only eo-captain and center John Shasky failed to finish in double figures. He .sccr..:;d e only six, but did have seven rebounds.

"We rebounded the defensive board pretty well, Dutcher analyzed, "and con3s·::;::c:·:"':~.!y · 'we did not give Arkansas many second shots. We also were able to score some transition baskets, and that was a factor in the outcome of the game." But now Minnesota must look at Colorado State •••• and concentrating on Saturday's game this week becomes a part-time task since the Golden Gophers are involved in ·final quarter exams, and their practice schedule becomes a little altered. "Forget about basketball," Dutcher told his squad after the Arkansas win. "Take some time off for studies, for a couple of days." He'll get h~s charges back into the routine of things later in the week. Following this Saturday's game against Colorado State, Minnesota takes to the road for games at Marquette on December 17 af;i.d at Connecticut December 21. Last week found Minnesota three wins. In addition to that seven-point triumph over Arkansas, th~ Golden Gophers aiso Polished off Eastern Illinois 87-69 and Detroit 83-71. Against Eastern, Shasky was the big man as he dropped in 22 points. Wilsor1 had 19. Then against Detroit, another club that topped Minnesota a year ago, Wilson had 20, Alexander 16 and Shasky 14~' Minnesota's co-captains head into the Colorado State contest as the team leaders in more ways than one. Wilson is the top Golden Gopher scorer with 155 points in eight games for an average of 19.3 per start. Shasky is next in line with 142 points and a 17.8 average. He also tops Minnesota.in rebounds with 64 and an eight-per-game average, and Wilson leads his mates in steals with 15.

Alexander is third in teaau scoring with 77 ·poirits in seven gat~s and an average of 11.0 per contest, while Lee is second in rebounds with 54 in seven games. Saturday's contest will mark the first time in history that Minnesota and Colorado State have met in basketball.

--OM-

FOR THE LATEST IN GOPHER SPORTS DIAL 612-373-4211. 'I 'i U. of Minn. BASKETBALL BASKETBALL INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS FOR ALL QAMES. RECORD : 7-1 C5-0 ~; 2-1 NEUTRAL; 0-0 BIQ 10). NO PLAYER OP-QS I'IIN/AV FQM-FOA FOX FTtt-FTA FTX REB/ AVO HI AST STL BLK TO PF-DG. PTS/AVQ HI 24-- Wilson,------1'1 -----8-8 ------252/32 ------55-93 . 591 ------45-60 . 750.------43/ 5. 4 7 ---36 ~--15 ---2 ---17 ------21-0 -----~----155/19.4 29 44 Shasky, ..J 8-8 271/34 55-94 . 585 32-55 . 582 64/ 8. 0 14 7 6 18 14 21-2 142/17.8 33 11 Alexander.T 7-7 207/26 31-61 . :508 15-15 1. 000 19/ 2. 7 5 26 5 1 18 21-2 77/11.0 17 33 Smith, K ev. 5-5 138/17 - 20-48 .417' ·t1-13 .846 27/ 5.4 10 8 3 4 11 3-0 51/10.2 15 00 Lee,M 7-7·· 201/25 22-49 . 449 22-33 . 667 54/ 7. 7 13 5 9 5 18 19-2 66/ 9.4 21 I 34 Anderson,M 8-1 164/21 25-61 . 410 18-28 . 643 20/ 2. 5 5 23 9 1 20 15-0 68/8:5 13 21 Woods,T 8-3 132/17 25-47 . 532 9-13 .692 271 3.4 8 10 5 0 12 13-1 59/ 7.4 29 42 Smith, Kel. 6-o 62/8 B-18 . 444 8-9 . 889 71 1. 2 3 1 2 1 6 9-o 24/ 4. 0 8 32 Willi•ms,Q 7-1 82/10 10-20 .500 2-6 .333 15/ 2.1 4 2 1 0 5 17-1 22/ 3.1 8

13 Hanson, T ~ 42/5 4-6 - . 667 1-2 . 500 7/ 1. 4 4 3 0 0 0 4-o 9/ 1. 8 5 30 Qaf'lnev, R 5-0 25/3 4-9 . 444 1-3 . 333 3/ 0. 6 2 1 1 0 1 2-o 9/ 1. B 5 55 Holmgren, D 6-o 24/3 1-5 . 200 4-7 . 571 7/ 1. 2 4 1 0 3 2 3-0 6/ 1. 0 4 0.------of Minn. 1600 26G-511 .509 168-244 .689 319/39.9 123 56 35 124 148-8 688/86.0 OPPONENTS 1600 245-531 .461 112-168 .667 290/36.3 95 58 32 120 172-8 602/75.3 TEAM------~------~----- REBOUNDS: ALL QAMES DEAD BALL REBOUNDS: ALL QAHES

• e e e U. of Minn. BASKETBALL BASKETBALL SCHEDULE AND RESULTS DATE OPPONENT SCORE ATTEND HIGH SCORER HIOH REBOUNDER120-106------1000 Woods-29------~------~------~------11/23 • N Middle Tennessee St. 79-'!;1 >Shasky-14 11/25 • N Brigham Young-H. 950 Lee-21 Lee-to 11/29 87-80 . 945 >Shasky-33 Shasky-12 San Francisco St. 95-63 12,059 Wilson~t6 11/30 u. of s. Dak.ota 66-57 Lee-13 12/02 Eastern Illinois 11,869 Shastv-19 Shasky-11 12/04 87-69 11.650 Shasky-22 U. of Detroit 83-71 11,777 Wilson-20 Shastcv-6 U. of Arkansas 71-64 Satith-10 ~~~?~ Colorado State 13,401 Wilson-21 Lee,Shasky-7 12/17 ct Marquette U. 12/23 OklahOIN State 12/29 Alcorn State 01/02 @ U. of Illinois 01/04 ct U. of Purdue 01/11 @ U. of Iot~~a 01/16 U. of Mi-chigan 01/19 Michigan State 01/23 @ U. of Wisconsin 01/26 @ Northwestern U. 01/30 Ohio State U. 02/01 Indiana U. 02/09 U. of Io~~ta 02/13 @ U. of Michigan 02/15 @ Michigan State 02/20 North.-estern U. 02/22 U. of Wisconsin 02/27 4t Indiana U. 03/02. @ Ohio State U. 03/06 U. of Purdue 03/09 U. of Illinois NOTES: > SEASON HIOH, # N'tl. Airlines Trn.

e - e ICERS TAKE WCHA BRE~K, HOST USIU 12/9/AS

Minneapolis,MN---After winning its sixth and seventh straight games by sweeping Wisconsin at home last weekend, the Minnesota hockey Gophers take a WCHA holiday by playing'a non-conference series against u.s. International Saturday and Sunday in Mariucci Arena. Both games boast 2:05 p.m. starting times and will be aired by KMFY-980 AM Radio in the Twin Cities. Besides this being an intersectional series, it also provides the opportunity for Gopher fans to welcome back USIU head coach Brad Buetow who was boss of the Gopher ice program from 1979-80 through last season. Buetow was given the job of building the Gull program into a major power last summer. By winning 5-4 in overtime and 6-2 against Wisconsin, Minneaota has helped throw the WCHA standings into a tight squeeze among the leaders. Wisconsin came into the series tied with Denver for first place. But the Pioneers split at Providence and now own a 2-point margin over the Badgers, 24-22. Minnesota jumped .over Minnesota-Duluth into third place with 20 league points, but has played two games less (14) than the leaders (16). The Gophers could, however, could end up in fifth place aafter this weekend as UM-Duluth, with 19 points, and fifth place Northern Michigan with 18, both play WCHA series this weekend. Both UM~D and NMU have also played only 14 league contests. · Corey Millen was again the man in the right place at the right time for Minnesota last weekend. With 10 seconds remaining in overtime Friday, Millen jammed in a controversial goal providing the Gophers with his third straight game winner. The next day Wally Chapman hit a 'pair of power play goals in the first period and the Gophers never trailed. Goalie John Blue, who was out Friday with the flu, lost his bid for a shut out when Wisconsin scored at 11:51 of the final period Saturday after the Gophers had built a 4-0 margin. Minnesota outshot the Badgers 46-20 in Saturday's contest converting three of seven power play chances while the Badgers were blanked in six tries. Freshman defenseman Todd Richards was one of Minnesota's top performers against Wisconsin. He led UM scorers with a goal and four assists and pulled all kinds of ice time due to the absence of senior defenseman Tony Kellin who, like Blue, was out with the same flu bug. Asked about the timing of this non-conference weekend, Gopher head coach Doug Woog said, "I really would rather have it somewhere down the road. But considering this week is final exam period and with last week's outbreak of the. flu, I guess this comes at a p~etty good time. "Due to exams we will not be able to practice at all this week as a team. But I'm certain our varsity players will get over to the arena every day and at least do some skating. "We also plan to use this series to get a couple of men like center Chris May and defenseman Mike Luckraft into action for the first time. But for the most part we will stay with our regular lineup. "I'm of course very proud and happy that our team the past few weeks has really seemed to come together. Each man is accepting his own role, even though some of those roles are not glamorous. But it takes a 20-man effort to win in this league, and that's exactly what we are receiving. I hope it continues." WCHA STANDINGS THRU 12/7/85 GP w L T PTS GF AVG GA AVG 1-Denver (13-4-0) 16 12 4 0 24 81 5.1 51 3.2 2-Wisconsin (11-7-0) 16 11 5 0 22 82 5.2 62 3.9 3-Minnesota (12-4-0) 14 10 4 0 20 63 4.5 48 3.4 4-Minnesota-Duluth (13-4-1) 14 9 4 1 19 67 4.8 43 3.1 5-Northern Michigan(10-5-1) 14 9 5 0 18 70 5.0 70 5.0 6-North Dakota (8-8-0) 16 8 8 0 16 64 4.0 63 3.9 7-Colorado College (7-9-1) 14 6 7 1 13 53 3.8 56 4.0 8-Michigan Tech (2-12-4) 16 2 11 3 7 49 3.1 80 5.0 • ---UM--- GOPHER SPORTS UPDATES MINNESOTA WINS WRESTLING DUAL OPENER: BREAK FOR EXAMS THIS WEEK The Golden Gopher_wrestling team opened the 1985-86 dual wrestling .season with a 22-13 win over the University of Missouri of the Big Eight Conference last Saturday. The dual win gave veteran Minnesota coach Wally Johnson his 375th career win as head of the Gopher wrestling program. · Minnesota will be idle until December 17 with a dual at Northern Illinois in preparation for the December 26- January 2 Hawaii InvitationalTournament in Honolulu. Here are the current Gopher records:(starters only) 118- Ed Giese ·(Sr. Wood Dale, IL) .••••••...... •. (17-1, 1-0 duals) 126- John Miller (Fr. Sacred Heart,MN) •••..•••.•• (l2-7, 1-0) 134- Blake Bonjean (Jr. Bloomington, MN) .•••.••.• (13-5, 1-0) 142- Bruce Gebhart (Jr. Menomonie, WI) .•.•...••.. (6-7, 0-1) 150 - Tim Manning (Fr. Vermillion, SD) .•.•.•... ·: •. (11-4, 1-0) 158- Brett Rasmussen (SO. Kasson, MN) .•.•...••••• (13-6, 1-0) 167- Rod Sande (Jr. St. Paul, MN) ..• :~ •• ;· •••••••. (12-6, 1-0) 177- Eric Lehrke (Sr. Rothschild, WI) .•••..•.•.•• (8-5, 0-1) 190- Dave Dean (So. Montrose, MI) .•..•••.•..• ; •.• (4-2, 1-0) HWT- Mark Hellecksen (So. Lake Crystal, MN) •••.•• (4-4, 0-1) ----UM---- GYMNASTS LOSE TO JAPANESE ALL-STARS: THREE COMPETING INTERNATIONALLY IN DECEMBER The powerful Japanese All-Stars defeated the. University of Minnesota for the sixth consecutive year with a 279.45 - 271.90 win over the Gophers last Friday. According to Gopher Coach Fred ~oethlisberger the meet was a success. "It was a good turnout despite the postponement. We had an enthusiastic crowd and they really enjoyed the competition. Steve Braun winning the pommel horse was the highlight for us. The Japanese were so good as we expected and they can do things the way gymnastics is suppose to be. After a slow start, we began to hit our routines. David Menke did a good job in the all-around." Minnesota will be off for the Christmas break and will resume action January 18-19 with a swing into Michigan to take on Big Ten foes Michigan State and the Univer.sity of Michigan. The Gophers will also face Illinois on the trip. Coach Roethlisberger will have two of his current Gopher gymnasts and Assistant coach Joey Ray competing in international meets this month. Ray (former Gopher and Big Ten all-around champion) wil~ be at the Tawain Nationals December 12-14 and will compete against the top gynasts in the world. Current Gophers' Collin Godkin (Jr. Milwaukee,WI) and David Menke (SR. Chicago,IL) are entered in prestigious international meets later in December. Godkin willbe at • the Barcelonia, Spain 'invitational December 14-15. Me~ke will be at the London, England meet December 21-22.

Minnesota is the defending Big Ten runnerup and has won seven of the last eleven Big Ten gymnastic titles Roethl' b • 1 S erger has a 91-36 career dual record at the U of M. U. of "inn. HOCKEY HOCKEY STATISTICS FOR ALL OAMES

RECORD : 12-4-o C6-2-0 HOME; 6..;2-0 AWAV1 10-4-o WCHA) ..,..,_....______WCHA'~ PLAYER OP 0 A PTS PEN/MIN PP QW SH HT QP Q A TP PEN/MIN -- _._... ------Mtc~•lettt, P. -RW MUl•n, C. -c 16 7 17 24 20/48 4 1 00 0 14 a' 12 ta 1a144 Cates, .J. -c 16 10 13 23 15/30 4 4 0 14 11 19 14/28 . C~ac:n, W. -LW 16 9 12 21 11/22 t i 0 0 14 a 10 1a 10120 Mac tn, s. -LW 15 10 10 20 5/21 ~ - 0 0 13 9 7 16 4/19 01r•1'1und, T. -RW 16 7 12 19 7/22 1 1 0 1 14 3 12 15 6/12 Rtc~.1'ds, T. -D 16 6 10 16 14/28 1 0 01 0 1 K•lltn, T. -D 14 4 10 14 6/12 1 0 0 1 taa ~Ya Sh.op•tr, Q. -D 14 3 ! 11 9/18 2 000 o. 12ta &3 ~ a/16 le,.aland, T. -RW 1, 2 7 11 11/22 1 0 0' 14 1 9 10 11/22 01't;fi, s. -c 14 4 3 7 5/10 0 1 0 0 13 4 3 7 5/10 Snulge1'ud, D. -c 6 1 14 3 3 6 2/4 M.c , c. -D t8 ~ ~ ~~17 6- 8 8 a 1 4 ' 7/17 Nelson, 8. -D 16 1 4 ~ 8/16 0 0 8 0 14 1 4 , 8/16 And•1'son. M. -LW 13 1 4 5 4/8 0 0 0 0 11 1 4 , 3/6 01'annis, D. -RW 9 1 3 4 2/4 0 0 0 0 a 1 ·2 3 112 11'oten, P. -RW 16 3 1 4 7/14 0 1 0 0 14 3 1 4 7/14 Do1'nfeld, E.. -o 9 2 2 4 4/S 0 0 0 0 7 2 1 3 4/8 lowe, R. '-RW 11 0 3 3 4/S 0 0 0 0 9· 0 3 3 4/B Blue, .J. -o 2 00 2 2 1/2 Cho1'slr•; T. -LW i 8 i ~ f~~ 8 8 8 8 a o o 112. Espe, D. -D 11 1 0 1 1/2 0 0 0 0 10 1 0 1 1/2 Labatt, .J. -LW , 0 1 1 3/6· 0 0 0 0 5 0 1 1 3/6 Piet1'ang•lo, F. -Q 1 0 0 0 010 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 010 0•1'tich, F. -D a o o o o1o o o o .o ·- 7 00 00 ' 0/0 Othe1's 7 0 0 "0 6/12 0 0 0 0 6 8 6/12 0 0 0 0 010 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 010 U. af Minn...... -- ...... Oppon•nts 16 75133 209 153/336 26 12 2 1 . 14'63110173 142/306 16 53 ee 141 160/339 26 4 1 1 14 48 a1129 142/303

POWER PLAYS SCORE BV PERIODS ······-···0 OPP ~ ------1st·······-···--·· 2nd 3rd OT Tot•l UM 26 84 .3095 UM ---17 ---25 ---31 2 ----·75 Opponents 26 75 . 3466 Opponents 17 17 19 0 53

OOAL. IE RECORDS ··-··------ALL OAMES QP MINS QA Q.AVQ STOPS SY. SO ----~ Blue. .J. --9 ----489 24 -----2.67 -----212 0.898 0 Pietrangelo. F. e 480 29 3.63 224 o.se, o UM ·-16.969------53 ---··3.31 .....436 ·····0.892 ..0 Opponents 16 969 75 4.69 325 0.875 0 WCHA QAI'IES Qp MINS QA Q.AVQ STOPS SX SO Blu•• .J. 21 -----2.63 -----185 0.898 ----- 0 Pi•t1'angelo, F...... 27 ...•.3.96 .....206 .....0.894 ..0 UM --- 14 849 48 3.43 391 0.891 0 Oppon•nts --- 14 sso 63 4.50 467 o.ae1 o U. of "inn. HOCI'EY HOCKEY SCHEDULE AND RESULTS FOR ALL ONES

RECORD CW-L-T): 12-4-o (6-2-0 HOME1 6-2-o AWAY1 10-4-o WCHA) H .._T DATE A OPPONENT SCORE ATTEND OW OOAL 0. 0. R. -SAVES --~ --~----- ~ -----~~-~~~~--~- ~------~------~ ~---~-~------~- "ICHIOAN TECH 3-o 6103 Chap ..n u 18~1-~11 ~ "ICHJOAN TECH 7-2 6074 "illen W 10/25/85 A =~==-18TA-DULUTH 4-2 5664 Chap••n I. 10/26/85 A 2-5 5664 I. 11/01/15 H - TA-DULUTH 2-4 5969 L U/02/ 5 H 4-5 6220 W 11/08/ 5 A 3-1 1913 "tchel•--i W 11/09/ 5 A LlttlL L 2-1 1893 Cates NOR . DAKOTA WL 4-7 6100 H~t2~11 : NOR DMOTA 3-2 6100 o~annis W 11/ZZ/85 H ILLINOIB-CHICAQO 5-3 '5596 MacSwatn W 11123/85 H lLLINOIS-cHlCAQO 7-2 5790 Catee W 11/29/85 A NORTHERN MICHIOAN 8-4 3824 Millen W 11/30/85 A NORTHERN I'UCHIOAN 10-9 (OT) 3739 f'fill•n W 12/06/85 H U. of Wiaconsin 5-4 (OT) 7625 "ill•n W 12/07/85 H ·U. of Wisconsin 12/14/85 H U.S. INTERNATIONAL o-o6-2 7'555o Be~gland 12115/85 H U.S. INTERNATIONAL o-o o 12/20/85 A NORTHEASTERN o-o o 12/21/85 A NORTHEASTERN o-o o 12/:29/8'5 A NEW HAI1PSHIRE o-o o 12/30/85 A NEW HNIPSHI RE o-o o 01/03/86 H MAINE . o-o o 01/04/86 H MAINE o-o o 01/10/86 H BOSTON UNIVERSITY o-o o 01/ll/86 H BOSTON UNIVERSITY o-o o 01/17/86 A BOSTON COU.EQE o-o o 01/18/86 A BOSTON COL&..EOE o-o o 01/24/86 H PROVIDENCE o-o o 01/25/86 H PROVIDENCE ·o-o o 01/31/86 A U. of Wisconsin o-o o 02/01/86 A U. of Wi•consin · o-o o 02/08/86 A +COLORADO COLLEOE o-o o 02/09/86 A +COLORADO COLLEOE o-o o 02/14/86 H MINNESOTA-DULUTH o-o o Oi2115/86 H MINNESOTA-DULUTH o-o o 02/21/86 H NORTH DMOTA o-o o 02/22/86 H NORTH DAKOTA o-o o ·Total S•ason Hom• Oa~~t•• MINNESOTA PREPARES FOR INDEPENDENCE BCML Preparations for the Independence Bowl were expected to tnove into high gear at the University of Minnesota this week under newly-appointed Head Football Coach John Gutekunst. Gutekunst ran his Golden Gophers through drills last Friday, saturday and Sunday, and he is expected to follow the same pattern this weekend. Next week Minnesota again will work out in its new indoor practice facility before heading for Shreveport, LA, and its' December 21st assignment in the Independence Bowl against Clemson. Fall-quarter final exams took most of the time •••• and concentration •••• of the Golden Gophers this week before Gutekunst stepped up the practice tempo for his squad. ' "We h:ldthree good days of practice last weekend," Gutekunst said. "I was pleased with the players' retention and their mental execution. We accomplished what we wanted to." Those three days of drills, Minnesota's first since the final week of regular season play when it was preparing for the Iowa game, also permitted Gutekunst to get. his squad into the routine schemes and provide an opportunity to drills against the basic Clemson offense and defense. Following workouts at home next week, ·Minnesota will fly to Shreveport Wednesday afternoon, and tentative plans call for one practice session there on Thursday. But firm plans along those lines have not as yet been made. The time off since the Iowa finale should help the Golden Gophers mend physically for their bowl game against Clemson •••• and that includes junior defensive end Mark Dusbabek who missed the last couple of regular-season games with a strained knee. Regular season statistics show that senior tailback Valdez Baylor wound up as Minnesota's leading rusher with a 5.9 average. He had 582 yards in 99 carries. Rickey Foggie, sophoroore quarterback, was second with 451 in 127 carries. Senior fullback ~d Puk was third with 405 in 87, and he was not charged with ANY minus yardage this season. Peter Najarian; senior linebacker, finished, for the third straight season, as Minn~sota' s top tackler. He had 133 total tackles including 58 unassisted tackles and 75 assists. The Independence Bowl will mark Minnesota's fourth post-season football appearance. The Golden Gophers split in Rose Bowl assignments against Washington and UCLA, and they lost to Maryland in the Hall of Fame Bowl in their most recent try•••• l977. Tickets, anq space on charters, still are available through the U of M athletic ticket office. For complete information, phone (612) 373-3181. --UM-- -- MINNESOTA 2-DEEP FOR INDEPENDENCE BOWL 12/21/85 FIRST UNIT OFFENSE SECOND UNIT 89 - Mel Anderson (5-10 171b Jr) SE 6 -Eugene Gailord (5-11 180 Jr) 65 - Dan Rechtin (6-6 2~5 Jr) LT 76 - Norries Wilson (6-5 263 ,;:!~) 73 - Jon Lilleberg (6-5 270 Sr) LG 53 - Steve Peterson (6-4 245 ~~) 55 - Ray Hitchcock (6-2 263 Jr) c 50 - Randy Pelphrey (6-3 2~5 J~) 52 - Paul Anderson (6-3 265 So) RG 51- Troy·WOlkow (6 .. 4 265 So) 62 - Jim Hobbins (6-6 260 Jr) RT 64 - Shawn Schultz (6-3 255 Fr) 86 - Kevin Starks (6-4 206 Sr) TE 8~ - Craig Otto (6-3 210 Fr) 14 - Rickey Foggie (6-1 185 So) OR QB 17- Alan Holt.(6-1 198 Fr) 37 - Valdez Baylor (5-11. 201 Sr) TB 24 - Ed Penn (6-2 200 Fr) 44 - David Puk (6-4 216 Sr) FB 31 - Kecin wilson (5-11 205 Jr)· 12 - Andy Hare (6-1 195 Sr) FL 38 - Jason Bruce (6-2 205 Fr) DEFENSE 20 - Larry Joyner (6-1 210 Jr) LE 79 - Dennis Ryan (6-3 230 Fr) 96 -Steve Thompson (6-2,275 Jr) LT 68 - Gary Hadd (6-4 255 So) 46 - Doug Mueller (6-3 232 So) NG 97 - Steve Rhodus (6-2 235 So) 95 - Anthony Burke (6-3 250 Jr) RT 71 - Joe Stepanek (6-4 258 Sr) 59 - Mark Dusbabek (6-3 232 Jr) ~E 47 - Don Pollard (6-1 220 Jr) 32 - Peter Najarian (6-2 222 Sr) LLB 39 - Joe Christopherson (6-1 221 Sr) 88 - Bruce Holmes (6-3 224 Jr) RLB 93 - Terry Hrycak (6-2 228 Fr) 45 - Duane Dutrieuille (5-9 179 Jr) LCB 3 - Charles McCree (6-0 180 Fr) 35 - Donovan Small {5-11 185 Jr) FS 43 - Marcus Mcintosh (6-0 196 So) 48 - David Williams {6-0 202, So) ss 9 - Joel Brown (5-10 180 Fr) 1 - Matt Martinez (5-11 185 Jr) RCB 49 - Lungen How~rd (6-0 183 Sr) SPECIALISTS: PUNT--10 Adam Kelly (5-10 195 Sr), 25 Chip Lohmiller KO/PAT/FG--25 Chip Lohmiller (6-3 190 So) HOLDER--10 Adam Kelly LONG SNAPS--58 Scott Guldin (5-11 220 So) P/RETURN--12 Andy Hare KO/RETURN-- 6 Eugene Gailord --·UM--.. Mailed December 11, 1985 For Use Upon Receipt

of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455

GOPHER DECEMBER ITINERARY FOR FOOTBALL/BASKETBALL/HOCKEY (Includes practice times, travel plans, game sites and times, etc.) --Thursday, --Dec. 12 (FB) Practice - 7-9 p.m., Indoor Practice F~cility (BKB) Practice - 4-6 p.m., Williams Arena (HO) Pract~~ - 1-3 p.m_._, Mariucci Arena Friday, Dec. 13

(FB) Practice - 3:45-5:30 p.m., Ind.oor Practice Facility (BKB) Practice- 3:30-5:30p.• m., Williams Arena (HO) · Practic~ - 1-3 p.m., Mariucci Arena

Saturd~y 1 Dec. _!4

(FB) Practice - 2-4 p.m., Indoor Practice Facility (HO) Q~ - U.S. INTERNATIONAL 2:05 p.m. MARIUCCI ARENA (BKB) ~ - COLORADO STATE 8:05 p.m. WILLIAMS ARENA Sunday_,_ Dec. 15

(HO) GAME - U.S. INTERNATIONAL 2:05 p.m. MARIUCCI ARENA (FB) PraCtice - 2-4 p.m., Indoor Practice Facility (BB) Practice - 3-5 p.m., Williams Arena

~qnday, Dec. 16

(BKB) Travel - leave for Milwaukee, team practices there {FB) Practice - 2-4 p.m., Indoor Practice Facility (HO) Practi'C'e - 1-3 p.m., Mariucci Arena Tuesday, Dec. 17

(FB) Practice - 2-ll o m., Indoor Practice Facility (HO) Practice- 1-3 p.m., Mariucci Arena (BKB) Q!ME- at Marquette U., Milwaukee, WI 7:30 p.m. (WCCO-AM, KMSP-TV)

(MORR) December '85 FB/BKB/HO ·Itin~rary continued - page 2

~edl!.e~day, Dec. 18

(FB) Travel - Five (5) busses leave Bierman Building at 12 noon for Twin Cities Airport. The official team party flies to Shrieveport, LA, via Northwest Airlines Charter leaving at 1:00 p.m. from main terminal. Team arrives Shrieveport approximately 3:30 p.m. and goes directly to team headquarters at the LeBossier Hotel, 4000 tndustrial Drive, Bossier City, LA 71111. Telephone 318-747-3000. Kathy Redfe~ , Director of Sales, is top contact at the LeBossier Hotel.

(FB) In Shrieveport -- 6-10 p.m., "Taste Of Louisiana" Awards Party, Municipal Aurtitorium (teams, coaches, athletic staff, Bowl.Officials) (BKB) Practice - 3:30-5:30 p.m., WilliamS Arena ·· (HO) Practice - 1-3 p.m., Mariucci Arena .

Thursday, Dec~ 19

(FB) tn Shrieveport - 9-11 a.m. tour Barksdale AFB (FB) Practic~ - 3-4:30 p.m. at local high school field- (FB) In $hrieveport- 7-9 p.m., Team Reception, Barksdale AFB Officers' Club (HO) Trayel- leave for Boston, MA.(practice there) (BKB) Pr~ctice - ~:30-5:30 p.m., Williams Arena Friday, Dec. 20

(FB) In Shr.ieveport - 7:30 a.m., FCA Breakfast (optional) (FB) ·Practice - no practice, just afternoon walk through football stadium (FB) In Shrieveport - 7-11 p.m., Pep Rally/Fish Fry, Exposition Hall (HO) GAME- 6:30 (CST) at Northeastern u., Boston, MA (KMFY-AM) (BKB Trave! - leave for Hartford, CT (practice ther-.e)

Saturday, Dec. 21

(FB) ~ - 7 p.m. (CST) vs. Clemson at the INDEPENDENCE BOWL (WCCO-AM, KITN-TV) (HO) GAME- 6:30 p.m. (CST) at Northeastern U., Boston, MA (KMFY-AM) (BKB) Q~ - 12 noon (CST) vs. u. of Connec.ticut at Hartford (WCCO-AM, KMSP-TV)

~u_!!day ,__ Dec • 22

(FB) B,eturn Flight - Northwest Airlines Charter, leave Shrieveport 11 a.m., arrives Twin Cities Aiorport main terminal approximately 1 p.m. (BKB) Practice - 2-4 p.m., Williams Arena , (HO) Travel-: Returns from Boston, no p~actice.

,t!~n

Thur14ay, Deo.!..j!

(BD) -'EUY.9' • 7-9 p.m., Williams Arena (80) Praotioe - Ctenatively sometime in evenina at Mariuooi Arena) ~1..! Ilea •Jl · (ID) f:::tn!O! - 3·5 p.m., Will:l.ama Arena (110) 5it14! • 1-3 p.m., Mariuooi .Arena SatyrcJv, Deo._?f!

(HO) !r.a.ve! - J.4ta•ea tor Durhaa, HH (practice there) (BD) 911!1 - ALCORI STA~ BUI 8:05 p.m. (WCCO.AM)

SWUS.y.~, Deo. Q

(80) iMI - 6:30 p.m. (CST) at New 11upahire, Durham (KMPY-.AM) (BD) CiOpraotioe.)

. ~x. Deo. 32

. (80) ·i!.H:I. • 6:30 p.m. (CST) at law BUIP8hire, Durbaa (ICMFY-AM) (BO) l~ti~ - 3:30-5:30 p.m., Williams Arena e TU!fd!Y, »41!0.•-1! (80) T!'!vtl - return home tf'Oil lew Baapabire (no practice) (BD) Lraotioe - 3:30-5:30 p.m., W1111au Arena ·

~~~· Jaa~ 1 (BD) .ttavel - L•vea tor Cbupa!&D, IL (practice there) (80) !r.e~~.G.! - 1·3 p.m., Mariuooi Arena Il!!t$Yr Jap • 2

(BD) .91!11 - 7:05 p.a. at Illinoia, CbupataD (VCCO..AM, KMSP·TY) (BO) !_ragtiot - 1-3 p.a., Mariuooi Arena Pridafr J!D. 3

(80) OAMB - MA- JfDB 7:35 p.m. MARIUCCI ARD.I. (IMJ'Y-AM, liCCO..AM) (BD) !~.!!! • FrO. Cbaapaian, IL, to Weat Lafayette, 111 '"aturdp. ill!• If I • (HO) .!Y!I, • M&lll 8BU 7:35 p.m. MARIUCCI ARIIA (KMPI-AM) , (BD) CWII "" at Purdue, Weat Latayette 1 p.m. (CST) (WCCO-AM, DISP•TY) ---UM----

. I MINNESOTA 2-DEEP FOR L~DEPENDENCE BOWL 12/21/85 . - ---- ~IRST UNIT OFFENSE SECOND UNIT 89 - Mel And.erson ( 5-10 171 b Jr) SE 6 - Eugene Gailord (5-11 180 Jr) 65 - Dan Rechtin (6-6 245 Jr) LT 76 - Norries Wilson (6-5 283 Jr) 73 - Jon Lilleberg (6-5 270 Sr) LG 53 - Steve Peterson (6-4 245 Fr) 55 - Ray Hitchcock (6-2 263 Jr) c 50 - Randy Pelphrey (6-3 245 Jr) 52 - Paul A~~~raon (6-3 265 So) RG 57 - Troy Wolkow (6-4 265 So) 62 - Jim Hobbins (6-6 260 Jr) RT 64 - Shawn Schultz (6-3 255 Fr) 86 - Kevin Starks (6-4 206 Sr) TE 84 - Craig Otto (6-3 210 Fr) 14 - Rickey Foggie (6-1 185 So) OR QB 17 - Alan Holt (6-1 198 Fr) 37 - Valdez Baylor (5-1.1 201 Sr) TB 24 - Ed Penn (6-2 200 Fr)

44 - David Puk (6-4 216 Sr) FB 31 - Kevin Wilson (5-11 205 Jr) 12 - Andy Hare (6-1 195 Sr) FL 21 - Gary Couch 5-10 172 So) DEFENSE

20 - Larry Joyner (6-1 210 Jr) LE 79 - Dennis Ryan (6-3 230 Fr) 96 - Steve Thompson (6-2 275 Jr) LT 68 - Gary Hadd (6-4 255 So)

46 - Doug Mueller (6-3 232 So) NG 97 - Steve Rhodus (6-2 235 So) 95 - Anthony Burke (6-3 250 Jr) RT 71 - Joe Stepanek (6-4 258 Sr) 59 - Mark Dusbabek (6-3 232 Jr) 47 - Don Pollard (6-1 220 Jr) 32 ·- Peter Najarian (6-2 222 Sr) LLB 39 - Joe r.hristopherson (6-1 221 Sr)

88 - Bruce Holmes (6-3 224 Jr) RLB 93 - Terry Hrycak (6-2 228 Fr)

45 - Duane Dutrieuille (5-9 179 Jr) LCB 3 - Charles McCree (6-0 180 Fr) 35 -Donovan Small (5-11 185 Jr) FS 43 - Marcus Mcintosh (6-0 196 So) 48 - David Williams (6-0 202 So) ss 40 -Steve Franklin (5-11 195 Fr)

7- Matt Martinez (5-11 185 Jr) ""CB 49 - Lungen Howard (6-0 183 Sr) SPECIALISTS: PUNT--10 Adam Kelly (5-10 195 Sr), 25 Chip Lohmiller KO/PAT/FG--25 Chip Lohmiller (6-3 190 So) ROLDER--10 Adam Kelly LONG SNAPS--58 Scott Guldin (5-11 220 So) P/RETURN--12 Andy Hare KO/RETURN-- 6 Eugene Gailord ---UM---

MINNESOT'l'A FOOTBALL U. of Minn. FOOTBALL STATISTICS FOR ALL GANES

RBCORD(W-L-T): 6-5-0 (4-3-0 HOME; 2-2-0 AWAY; 0-0-0 NEUTRAL; 4-4-0 CONF). FINAL 1985 TOTALS u. of Ifinn, OPPONENTS e ------TOUCHDONNS RUSHING 25 ------17 PASSING 9 10 OTHER 0 1 FIRST IJOWNS RUSHING 135 114 PASSING 67 97 PENALTY 3 4 TOTAL 205 215 RUSHING ATTEMPTS 543 494 YARDS GAINED 2629 2019 YARDS LOST 238 235 NET YARDS 2391 1784 YDS PER CARRY 4.4 3.6 YDS PER GAME 217.4 162.2 PASSING (CMP-ATT-INT) 92-191-4 161-292-8 COKPLBTION PCT 48.2 55.1 NET YARDS 1778 1979 YDS PER ATTEMPT 9.31 ·. 6.78 YDS PER COMPLETION 19.33 12.29 YDS PER GAME 1,61.6 179.9 RATING 137.7 94.3 TOTAL OFFENSE 4169 3763 PLAYS 734 786 YDS PER PLAY 5.68 4.79 YDS PER GAME 379.0 342.1 e POINTS SCORED 273 227 POINTS PER GAME 24.8 20.6 INTERCEPTIONS/YDS RTND 8/37 4/13 PUNTS RE'I'URNED/YDS/AVG 20/134/6.7 26/292/11.2 KICKS RBTURNED/YDS/AVG 29/514/17.7 23/408/17.7 PUNTS/YDS/ AVG 53/2170/40.9 55/2113/38.4 PENALTIES/YDS/YDS PBR GAME 41/341/31.0 50/377/34.3 FUMBLES/LOST 28/13 24/9 QB SACKED (OFFENSE) 19 12 'I'HIRD DOWNS/CONV/PCT 153/71/46.4 160/81/50.6 SCHEWLB AND RESULTS ------09/14/85 UN 28 Wic~ita State 14 w Metrodome 56,094 09/21/85 UN 62 Montarla U. 17 w Metrodome 55,700 09/28/85 UM 7 u. cf Oklahoma 13 L Metrodome 62,446 10/05/85 UM 45 u. o.f Purdue 15 w Metrodome 59,503 10/12/85 UM 21 @ Nor.;bwestern U. 10 w Evanston, IL 24,512 10/19/85 UM 22 @ Indlc:.oa U. 7 w Bloomington, IN 38,826 10/26/85 * UM 19 Ohic State U. 23 L Metrodome 64,455 ll/02/85 UM 26 @ Mich.:gan State 31 L Bast Lansing, MI 63,758 ll/09/85 UM 27 u. o: Visconsin 18 w Metrodome 64,571 ll/16/85 UM 7· u. cf Michigan 48 L Metrodome 64,129 11/23/85 UM 9 @ u. c,f Iow~ 31 L Iowa City, IA 66,020 I e NOTES: * Homecoming (OVER) MINNESO'I'TA FOOTBALL U. of Minn. INDIVIUJ'AL FOOTBALL STATISTICS POR ALL GAMES FINAL 1985 TOTALS RUSHING AT'l GAIN LSS NET AVG TDS LG RECEIVING NUH YDS AVG 'lllS LG ------~------Baylor,V 99 594 12 582 5.9 5 45 Anderson,M 22 520 23.6 2 89 Foggie,R 127 576 125 451 3.6 9 21 Stark.s,K 16 275 17.2 3 61 Puk,D 87 405 0 405 4.7 2 32 Couch,G 14 494 35.3 1 76 Couch,G 34 236 9 227 6.7 2 27 Baylor,V 13 129 9.9 1 17 Penn,B 35 169 10 159 ; 4.5 1 17 Gailord,E 10 165 16.5 1 30 Wi1son,K 30 138 2 136 4.5 1 22 Hare,A 8 106 13.3 1 38 Holmes,c 23 91 5 86 3.7 0 20 Puk,D 4 39 9.8 0 15 Abercrombie 22 80 6 74 3.4 1 14 Otto,c 3 32 10.7 0 12 Ho1t,A 34 106 38 68 2.0 2 25 Richardson, 2 18 9.0 011 Richardson, 18 86 20 66 3.7 0 17 Hare,A 9 48 0 48 5.3 0 9 PUNTING NUN YDS AVG BKD LG Stewart,T 6 34 2 32 5.3 1 13 ------Fors,B 5 16 0 16 3.2 0 8 Ke1ly 1 A 48 2004 41.8 0 61 Singletary, 2 15 0 15 7 .s 0 12 Lohmiller,C 5 166 33.2 0 49 Anderson,H 4 23 9 14 3.5 0 17 Moe 1M 3 7 0 7 2.3 0 4 PUNT RETNS NUM YDS AVG TDS LG cummings, P 2 2 0 2 1.0 0 2 Berry,W l 1 0 . l 1.0 1 1 Hare,A 9 90 10.0 0 35 Minor,B 1 1 0 l 1.0 0 1 Coucb,G 2 17 8.5 0 9 Bruce,J 1 1 0 1 1.0 0 1 Gailord,E 8 31 3.9 0 18 Howard,L l -4 -4.0 0 -4 PASSING A:rT CMP P.CT Y.llS IN TDS I(I'NG ------KICK RETNS NUM YDS AVG TDS LG Holt,A 47 27 .574 408 0 2 144.4 Foggie,R 141 65 .461 1370 4 7 138.4 Anderson,M 18 356 19.8 0 27 Richardson, 2 0 .000 0 0 0 0.0 Gai1ord,E 5 78 15.6 0 24 Hare,A l 0 .000 0 0 0 0.0 Hare,A 1 14 14.0 0 14 Garrido,G 2 27 13.5 0 17 TOTAL OFF. PLAYS RUSH PASS TOTAL YDS/PL Stewart,T 3 39 13.0 0 19 ------Foggie,R 268 451 1370 1821 6.8 INT RBTNS NUN YDS AVG TDS LG Bay1or,v 99 582 0 582 5.9 Bolt,A 81 68 408 476 5.9 Sma11,D------2 23 11.5 0 16 Puk,D 87 405 0 405 4~7 Dusbabek,M 2 6 3.0 0 4 Couah,G 34 227 0 227 6.7 Martinez,M 2 0 0.0 0 0 Penn,B 35 159 0 159 4.5 Wi11iams,D 1 6 6.0 0 6 Wilson,K 30 136 0 136 4.5 ~Jtrieuille l 2 2.0 0 2 Holmes,C 23 86 0 86 3.7 SCORING TDS XP1-A ·xP2-A FG-A SAF P'lS Abercrombie 22 74 0 74 3.4 ------~- Richardson, 20 66 0 66 3.3 Lohmiller,C 0 28-29 o-o 13-16 0 67 Hare,A 10 48 0 48 4.8 Foggie,R 9 o-o o-2 o-o 0 54 Stewart, 'l 6 32 0 32 5.3 Baylor,v 6 o-o 1-o o-o 0 38 Fors,B 5 16 0 16 3.2 Stark.s,K 3 o-o o-o o-o 0 18 Singletary, 2 15 0 15 7.5 Couch,G 3 o-o o-o o-o 0 18 Anderson,M 4 14 0 14 3.5 Puk,D 2 o-o . o-o o-o 0 12 Moe,M 3 7 0 7 2.3 Anderson,M 2 o-o o-o o-o 0 12 Cummings,P 2 2 0 2 1.0 Ho1t,A 2 o-o o-1 o-o 0 12 Berry,W 1 l 0 l 1.0 Stewart,T 1 o-o o-o o-o 0 6 Minor,E 1 1 0 1 1.0 Wilson,K 1 o-o o-o o-o 0 6 Bruce,J 1 1 0 1 1.0 Abercrombie 1 o-o o-o o-o 0 6 FIELD GOALS: 0-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 SO+ Berry,w 1 o-o o-o o-o 0 6 Lohmi1ler o-o s-s S-6 2-4 1-1 Penn,E 1 o-o o-o o-o 0 6 Gai.lord,E 1 o-o o-o o-o 0 6 37, 28G, 24G, 2SG, 47, 41, 31G, 450, 28G, Hare,A 1 o-o o-1 o-o 0 6 36G, SOG, JOG, 32G, 22G, 47G, 35G Kelly,A o o-o o-1 o-o 0 0 SCORE BY Q'S ~st 2nd 3rd 4th - Tot. OPP: 12 of 18, Minnesota 47 99 67 60 273 Opponents 51 103 31 42 227 LNNBSOT2'A FOOTBALL U. of Minn. DEFENSIVE FOOTBALL STATISTiCS FOR ALL GAMES FINAL 1985 TOTALS ------TACKLES------(!l'RBK -FUMBLES- BLKD -PASSES-- PLAYER POS UNAST. ASSIST TOTAL LOSS SACKS CSD. REC. KICKS BKUP INTC -----~~------Najarian,P LB 58 75 133 5 1 0 0 0 0 0 Holmes,B LB 75 so 125 2 1 0 2 0 2 0 Jogner,L DE 44 39 83 6 4 l 0 0 0 0 small,D FS 51 29 80 2 1 0 0 0 5 2 Dll~babek,M DE 42 30 72 6 0 0 1 0 1 2 Burke,A ur 46 18 64 4 3 0 1 0 1 0 Tholflpson,s ur 42 17 59 5 3 0 1 0 2 0 Dutrieuille CB 35 21 56 l 0 0 0 0 0 l Mart:inez,M CB 34 21 55 1 0 0 0 0 8 2 Williams,D ss 31 17 48 2 0 0 0 0 1 1 Mue1ler,D NG 23 17 40 1 1 0 0 0 .o 0 Christopher DE 19 15 34 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 Hadd,G ur 13 11 24 3 2 0 1 0 0 0 Reed,R DE 10 l3 23 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 Frankli.n,S ss 14 2 16 0 0. 0 0 0 0 0 Pollard,D DE 10 3 13 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Mcintosb,M FS 8 5 13 .0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Brown,J FS 7. 3 10 1 1 0 1 0 l 0 Rhodus,S NG 7 l 8 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 Stepanek,J ur 6 1 7 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 ~rgcak,T LB 3 4 7 0 0 0 l 0 l 0 ward,L CB 6 0 6 0 0 0 0 0 l 0 Trip,T DE 5 l 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Gibbons,s LB 5 1 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Rgan,D DE 4 2 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 McCree,c CB 4 1 5 0 0 0 0 0 l 0 Roth,R NG 2 3 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Ukkelberg,R ur 3 l 4 0 0 0 0 0 l 0 Wilson,N OT 3 0 3 l 0 0 0 0 0 0 Guldin,S c 3 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Berrg,W ss 2 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Strong,P PS l 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Cummings,P FL l 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 l 0 Gai1ord,B SE l 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Vande.rwoude DE 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Villella,T ur 1 0 l 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Leverenz,J LB l 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Teske,D FS l 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Coucb,G FL 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Garrido,G ss l 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Lohmiller ,c K 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Mulligan,G NG l 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Chernin,A LB 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Bond,M DE 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 ALL PURPOSE YARDAGE err GP RUSHING PASSING RECEIVING P/RETURN KO/RETURN TC YARDS PLAY GAME oggie 10 127/451 65/141/1370 0 0 0 268 1821 .6.8 182.1 Anderson 11 4/14 0 22/5;:>0 0 18/356 44 890 20.2 80.9 Couch 11 34/227 0 14/494 2/17 0 48 738 15.4 67.1 Baylor 11 99/582 0 13/129 0 0 112 711 6.3 64.6 Holt 9 34/68 27/47/408 0 0 0 81 476 5.9 52.9 Puk 1, 87/405 0 4/39 0 0 91 444 4.9 40.4 ---UM--- 1985 Cl-.on Football St:Ats (6-5 Oftra.ll, 4-3 itt ACe)

'I'EM S'I'A1'IS"r''CS £!!!!! ~ 'lDM SCORI!tG am OPP 1'0I'AL OFFENSE 3910 3951 'Total Poinu -m -202 Total Plays 783 810 Points Per ca.e 21.0 18.4 A Yards Per Pay s.o 4. 9 Touchdowns 26 23 W Yar3 Per GaM 355.5 359.2 By Rushinq 20 10 S'f NET 'i1UU)$ RUSHDIG 2477 2910 Puainq 5 ll Attezapts 555 Sl3 By Recovery 0 1 Yards Per G.­ 225.2 113.6 By Return l l Yards Per Rush 4.5 l.7 Field Goala 15-23 1 ..20 safeties 1 0 PASSIMC 'iAJmS 1433 2.041 PA1'-Jtick 24-24 2l-23 AttesDpts 248 297 PAT-Run o-o o-o Ca~plations 115 111 PAT-Pass 2-l o-o Had Intercepted 9 ll Completion Percent. • 504 • S76 Yards Per Attempt 6.3 6.9 Flowers, TB-FB ll-3 200 1074 22 1052 5.3 13 52 Yaras Per Completion 12.5 ll. 9 or i ver , 'I'B 10-8 168 819 24 794 4.7 2 29 Flagler, TB Yards Per Galle 130.3 1.85. s 9-0 52 258 26 232 4.3 2 4i T. Johnson, F'B 8-2 38 193 l 192 5.1 1 22 PUNTING YAAOS 2110 2012 Rod Wi lliaas,QB ll-8 51 164 49 115 2.3 0 23 Number of Punts 53 54 Ray Williams,WR ll-10 4 so 9 41 10.3 l 2~ i\veraqe Punt 39.8 :3'8.4 Roulhac, WR ll-10 2 35 C JS l7.S 1 26~ Had Blccked 0 3 SUti th, P'B 11-4 8 27 0 21 3.4 0 € Net Punting 36.2 l6.~ Lancaster, FB 7-4 8 19 0 19 2.4 0 ~ Quick, FB Pt.'NT RETURN YARDS lOO lg(l 11-0 3 ll 0 ll 3. 7 0 s Anderson, \>8 9-3 21 3o 11 -41 -2.0 o a. I of RetU-'"'"l"tS 18 24 Averaqe Return 5.6 7.9 CLEMSON 11 555 2679 202 2477 4.5 20 52 opponents 11 513 2174 264 1910 3.7 10 ~ :r:n'Dto:PTION RETURN YARt6 86 70 ?A.SSlllC GP-S O!P-ATT INT YDS A f of Interceptions ll 9 Rod Williams ll-8 47-99 4 6l3 1 Sl .475 94.7 W Average Return 7 .s 1.8 Anderson ~3 63-121 S 703 2 46 • 521 98.1 TOTAL R.ETUR."'J "fAADS 186 260 Driver ·"' 4-7 0 88 l 57 .571 209.8 KIOOIT RE'l'T~"'RN YARDS 825 523 Ra\' Willia"'nS :1 1-1 0 29 l 29 l.OO 673.6 " of 'Returns l<.J 23 ~~N ll 115-228 9 1433 s 57 .504 102.5 Average Return 21.2 12.1 apponen~s ll 171-297 11 2041 ll 54 .516 120.4

~L FIRST VOW1~5 217 228 REC YDS AVG TO LG 3C By Rushing 135 110 Roulhac, ;..""R ll-10 29 ·PO 16.2 3 57 6 Sy Passing 66 1<:>4 'Ray ih: ~iams, '..tt< ll-lC 13 342 18.0 l 51 E_, By ?enalty lf> 14 !h gg s , "r'E ll-11 .i.B 203 ll. 3 l 43 PENALTIES fNc-Yds) 91-762 Sl-5:56 Q'.;ick. rB ll-IJ 11 73 6.6 0 l2 4 FT:MBU:S (~~-LOst.) 27-20 26-16 Flagler, TB 9-Q 10 S4 5.4 0 15 ' TCTAL TURNCVEP.S 29 27 Driver, TB lO-S i 71 lO.l 0 41 QS SAOCS BY 22-140 lQ-91 Flowers, 7B-F'8 ll-3 5 26 5.2 0 12 l 3rd Down Conversions 83-17<} 11-lE-5 Boyer, W'R 11-0 4 58 u.s 0 20 2 Percenta9e .464 .410 Jennings, ft"R ll-1 4 62 lS.S 0 l9 ~ T!ME/Of POSSESSION 320:02 JJ4: sa G. Smith, FB 11-4 4 26 6.5 0 10 ~ Per Galae 29:05 30:55 T. Johnson, FB S-2 2 24 12.0 0 12 c Charleston, ~ ll-0 1 15 lS.O 0 15 c :K!CX!NG Q-29 30-39 4o-49 50+ Cooper, w:R ~-l 1 9 9.0 0 9 0 T!'@advell 3-5 7-7 S-8 o-2 15-21 49 cu:KSON 11 115 1433 12.5 5 57 JS otorubio o-l o-1 Opponents 11 l7l 2041 11.9 ll ~ 42 J-s .,_., s-a 0-3 15-23 ~9 ~~te~ Otoribio i~ 27-48 in non-returnable ~iO 3I.X 'roS AVG -20 +50 RE'l' T..2 l£T kickoffs, Gettys is 2-4. Newell 53 0 2110 39.8 9 5 24-109·59 36.2 Opponents S4 3 2072 38.4 lS 9 l8-l00 58 36.5 --cORI'NG BY QV.AR're'RS W Clemson Sl 67 Sl 62 23l ·Opponents 27 70 33 72------2·01 ~- l98S Cl-.ca Fcotball Sc:o.reboard OATE lf-L CU-oPP '1'Z3UI ~ N! ~!1\ 'fOP PASSER 'rOP JIIWityp. S.l4 w 2o-l7 at Virq. 'l'eeh n.ooa Driver (17-70) ~er.cn {17-Jo-220) Ray Willi rrr l-7'7 S.2l L ll-20 GEOaGa 80,473 1'~. (16--85) Anderson (14-33-183) J~ 1\:ifiS l-83 S.2B L 3-14 GECilGIA TttH 79,309 Plowers ( l4-4el Anderson (16-26-125) Quick 6-27 o. 5 t. 7-26 at lelltuc:ky 58#110 Flown (lo-ftll Anderson {6-15-46) Ray Will~ 3-2 0.12 w 27-24 VDGDIIA 79,110' Drift%' (25-121) Williams (7-12-101} Roulhac 3-44 0.19 w 21-9 at Duke 31,800 Flowers (16-121) VUliau (5-lC>-53) Ray Willt..s 2·15 0.26 w 39-10 N.c. STMZ 12,316 Dx'iwr (21-125) Williaas {5-~68) Roulbac 4-66 N. 2 lf 26-10 WAD FOREST 71,.11~ Flc'lfers (23-141) Williaas {lo-19-147) Ray Willi... 5-78 N. 9 L 2o-21 at OHC so.ooo Plowers (2~101) Villi.- (8-17-107) Roulhac 4-100 N.l6 L ll-34 IWMAHD 75.000 Flowers (22-120) Williuur (3-ll-45} .Jia Ri9C)S 2-29 H .. 23 w 24-17 at s. carol. 1S. 0.26 Flowers (26-136) Will.iDS {3-lo-31) Roulbsc 4-42 Punta Jtickoff Intercept No-Yda-LG Ho-Yds-LG *>-Yds-LG DlfiUUI nan Ray Williams 26-502-45 l'l..ltU 1 P2S ~ .!2! U!!!!! Tt. .. fDS "'=IS PIUe l'oulh.Jc 11-272-35 olalla. L.t ll.-i uo 11 59 ) ... ;& -,:-r,--,- Flowers o- 4o-40 tUlHa•a •'·I ~,- t, f25 7T S.16 l•Zl 1 '· J01111100 • n 1 t-1 i 110 IT &J•• 5 T. Johnson 1- ...~il, s-s '· .... \0•9 ;? '2 ss s-ao 2•1) a Quick o- 6-6 "••4owa, ~f U-10 69 •o 29 3·6 1-1 l .Jennif\9• l- o-o ll•ll • 11-U u l' ll u i!l•r~tn ~·• O>T a-a 61 21 t-It :! Brady 16-45-13 '1 1-l~ £•,.1•. ... 1\-j u z• 31 l-S ~ teo•r ,,.G. Griffin 1-ll-ll ,.,. 11-u i9 .JO 29 Z·J I .fHihaa,'":& ll-11 S6 l2 ]t ~ l Woolford 1-1,-14 l-34-34 ;:Jaetorth.SS 2-, S-1 H l3 .so ).t j Per Williams o-3o-Jo 2- 9-9 JlU t4a. 1.1 l ~-l .... 32 If walls J.- S-6 ~~a •O"a • O'T 11-j "''i 21 21 ·-12 1.5... u ~ 43 25 11 Danforth 2-24-14 ... : ·-1 ft.-at ~.s~• ftC) , ... ellll.,'"" '1·0 3" 13 16 l-a 2•15 Raber l-14-14 •·••l•?, ""ss 5-J ll .L6 u 1-f , Milton 1-o-o !r ;H!SOD, ,0( :-2 3' '3 ,, z-r 1.-6 2 -;.,,.u.a, ;)£ ,. Hall l--3-3 7-2 26 IZ 1·S ~~~~":II :i,i i:llol&h , ;)1' 6·1 26 Ht 9 Mack 1- o-o P•rr-;. ;)[ !1-5 26 1) 13 ,_,, 2-S CLEMSON 18-lD0-30 39-825-45 11-86-34 .oioolro.-t.-::a 11·0 2l \2 9 llofad4•"•Zii !0..0 20 & 1 Oppouents 24-190-57 23-523-l~ g-ro-z4 'Z Z:a•aca. s.s •-o a 7 u L iP" acs'. FS ;o-~ u u 7 SCORING '!'DS fR-P-'Re) PAT !"C-?t:A P'!'S -l ••ol "'"" , Dl !-1 H 1 I Fl~rs 13 13-0-0 7S .If. 11.,!, s;; 7-1 15 4 n Tread..,.ll 24-24 l S-22 69 :l•vlon. ;.r ''J•O 10 6 l-5 S.i \.ll, ~!I I. s-~ lQ "~ 5 aou.lhac 4 l-3-0 24 !' a... ton. '-8 S-.) ~ 5 FlAqleJ: ~ 2-o-o 1 pass 14 .:;ran••r,~T ~-a 'r "3 1·1 1·7 "'., ~rl.ff1n1o ~i ~l-0 Ray Williams ... l-1-0 l2 s J "2 !1. Hare•t, ss ,~ ... o ... ' ., s J "'J 2-0-0 ·~i.~~ Drive-r ...... "' 1'• t ... ,,;;. j-~r l :J l Jia Riggs 1 0-l-0 6 :iU3t"'a~', .; ... ~ 5-o < 0 2 ·~t:'ll•r-.;:,':'! Johnson l 1-0-0 6 a-o l ) :t•r ill!'~,. cr 3-:l Per William$ 1 ;}-0-l 6 l.~ " ,.. ; ,) i '.,.- 2-~ ..... smith .' pass 2 frtl.Qr, ;_~ 2 -,J J" r•z•~,.' !:.! 1··) . l ~ Team 1 saf•ty 2 Tot•l.s -,-, 13E• 70~ ~1'7 ~1-215 u-uo 'r2 CI.EMSai 26 2o-S-l 26-26 15-:B 231 Opponents 23 10-ll-2 22-23 14-20 202 Q8 'I'C'l'AL OFFENSE Play Yds Yds/P 1'tlt Yds/P An ------1 Page. Kenneth SE 5-10 17~ 18 FR FR Aurora, IL 3 McCree, Ch•rles CB 6-0 180 18 FR FR Bolingbrook, IL 4 McGee, C•rlos SE 6-0 158 18 FR FR St. Louis, MO CC. B. C. > 5 Werden, M•rty • SE 5-8 160 20 ~R ~R Winona, MN 6 Gailord, Eugene • SE 5-11 180 19 JR ~R San Diego. CA 7 Martinez, Matt • CB 5-11 185 20 JR JR Glendale. AZ 8 Stolski, ~on GB 6-0 185 18 SO SO Brainerd, MN 10 * Kelly, Adam p 5-10 195 22 SR SR Excelsior. MN 11 Richardson, Roselle FB 6-2 214 18 FR FR Warren, OH 12 *** Hare. Andy FL 6-1 195 22 SR SR Appleton. WI 13 ** Reed, Rich DE 6-2 218 21 SR SR Toledo, OH 14 * Foggie, Rickey GB 6-1 185 19 SO SO Waterloo, S.C. 15 Armstrong, Ray SE 6-2 180 20 SO FR ~acksonville, AR 16 Baker, Michael GB 6-0 175 19 SO FR St. Louis, MO 17 Holt, Alan GB 6-1 198 19 SO FR Miami, FL 18 Strong, Paul FS 6-0 165 20 SO FR Pompano Beach, FL 19 Moe, Mike GB 6-2 195 23 SR SR Edina, MN 20 ** ~oyner, Larry DE 6-1 210 21 SR JR Memphis. TN 21 Couch, Gary FL 5-10 172 19 SO SO Davenport, IA 22 * Holmes. Courtney FB 6-3 228 19 SO SO Ambler, PA 23 * Stewart, Terry TB 6-1 190 19 SO FR Memphis, TN 24 Penn. Ed TB 6-2 200 18 FR FR Tampa, FL Lohmiller, Chip K 6-3 190 19 SO SO Woodbury, MN * Suess, Bryan LB 6-2 235 18 FR FR Kasson, MN 27 Berry, Warren ss 5-11 195 19 SO FR Willingboro. N~ •28 Garrido, Gaston ss 5-10 188 21 SR SR Wilton, CT 29 Carter, Dennis SE 6-0 180 19 SO FR Miami. FL 30 Conant, Dale FB 6-2 219 19 FR FR Apple Valley, MN 31 ** Wilson, Kevin FB 5-11 205 20 JR JR Aurora, IL 32 *** NaJarian. Peter LB 6-2 222 21 SR SR Minneapolis, MN (Central> 33 Abercrombie, Pudgy TB 5-8 189 18 FR FR Alquippa, PA 34 Singletary, Bobby FB 5-10 215 18 FR FR Pittsburgh, PA 39 *** Christopherson. ~oe DE 6-1 221 22 SR SR Austin, MN 40 Franklin, Steve ss 5-11 195 19 FR FR Groveland, FL 41 Fors, Erik FB 6-1 200 20 JR SO Rosemount, MN 42 Cummings, Pat FL 6-2 200 18 FR FR Madison, WI 43 Mcintosh, Marcus • FS 6-0 196 19 JR SO St. Paul, MN 44 *** Puk, David FB 6-4 216 21 SR SR Cedar Rapids, IA 45 ** Dutrieuille, Duane CB 5-9 179 21 JR JR Homestead, PA 46 * Mueller. Doug NQ 6-3 232 20 JR SO St. Louis, MO CLuth. South> 47 Pollard, Don • DE 6-1 220 20 JR JR Oakland, CA 48 Williams. David ss 6-0 202 19 SO SO Waukesha, WI 49 ** Howard, Lungen CB 6-0 183 21 SR SR Detroit, MI CM.L. King> Pelphrey, Randy c 6-3 245 21 SR JR Minford, OH Martin, Douglas c 6-4 250 21 JR SO Williams Bay, WI a**52 Anderson, Paul OG 6-3 265 20 JR SO Osseo. WI 53 Peterson. Steve OG 6-4 245 19 SO FR Marshalltown. IA 55 ** Hitchcock, Ray c 6-2 263 20 JR JR St. Paul, MN (Johnson> 56 Leverenz, ~on LB 6-3 205 18 FR FR AnkentJ, IA 57 Wo 1 k ow, Trotj. OG 6-4 265 19 SO SO Lakeville, MN (OVL::R) U. ol Minn. 10 DEC 1985 NUMERIC FOOTBALL ROSTER PAGE 2

• LTRS PLAYER NAME POS HGT WGT AGE CL EL HOME TOWN ~ ------58 * Guldin, Scott c 5-11 220 19 so so Ir~in, PA 59 ** Dusbabek, Mal'k DE 6-3 232 21 ..JR ..JR Faribault, MN 60 Fill'l'• El'ic OT 6-4 285 20 ..JR .JR Eau Clail'e, WI 61 Pihlstl'om, Mike DT 6-5 241 19 so so St. Paul, MN 62 ** Hobbins, ..Jim OT 6-6 260 21 SR .JR Gl'een Bay, WI 63 Rau, Mike OQ 6-2 225 19 so so Blaine, MN 64 Schultz. Shawn OT 6-3 255 19 SO FR Neenah, WI 65 * Rechtin, Dan OT 6-6 265 20 ..JR SO St. Louis, MO 67 ** Zuba.,., Ivan OT 6-4 260 21 SR .JR Richfield, MN 68 * Hadd, Qary DT 6-4 255 19 so so Burnsville, MN 69 McCabe, Martin OG 6-4 245 19 SO FR Villanova, PA 70 Turgeon, Mike LB 6-3 220 19 FR FR Warren, MN 71 Stepanek, ..Joe DT 6-4 258 21 SR SR Cedar Rapids, IA 73 * Lilleberg, ..Jon *** OG 6-5 270 23 SR SR At~ater, MN 74 ..Jones, Dan OT 6-4 260 19 SO FR White Bear Lake, MN 75 Lennon, ..James ( ..J . ..J. > OG 6-2 254 18 FR FR St. Paul, MN 76 Wilson, Norries * OT 6-5 283 20 .JR .JR Markham, IL 77 Trip, Trint DE 6-6 286 18 FR FR Mondovi, WI 78 Hagert, Landan OG 6-5 285 18 FR FR Bloomington, MN 79 Ryan, Dennis DE 6-3 230 18 FR FR St. Paul, MN 80 Clausen, Kurt DE 6-4 220 19 SO FR O~atonna, MN 81 Bahr, Ed TE 6-4 220 19 so so Intern ' l . Fa 11 s, MN I 86 Starks, Kevin ** TE 6-4 225 22 SR SR Robbins, IL 187 * Mulligan, Greg NG 6-4 233 21 SR SR Richfield, MN 88 ** Holmes, Bruce LB 6-3 224 21 SR .JR Detroit, MI • 89 Anderson, Mel SE 5-10 171 20 .JR .JR Homestead, PA I 90 ** Ukkelberg, Ross DT 6-5 248 19 SO FR C1 i t h era 1 I. MN 91 Sunvold, .Jeff NG 6-2 235 19 FR FR Br o o k 1 y n Cen t e r, MN ( Co o p e r > • 92 Roth, Rick NG 6-0 245 19 so so .Junction City, WI 94 * Gibbons, Steve LB 6-0 215 22 SR SR Youngstown. OH 95 ** Burke, Anthony DT 6-3 250 20 .JR .JR Minnetonka, MN 96 ** Thompson, Steve DT 6-2 275 20 .JR .JR Aurora, IL 97 Rhodus, Steve NG 6-2 235 19 so so Rice Lake, WI 98 Melander, ..Jon DE 6-7 245 18 FR FR Fridley, MN 99 Kaplan, LaTTy NG 6-1 235 21 SR .JR Minneapolis, MN

* - varsity letters CL - year b school · ~=L - eligibil: ty ~.-ec..::: ---. ..,. --- ~·;· .... 1 ,~',. LTRS PLAYII ... POl HOT .., ME CI.IL ... TOWN CHJOH 8Ctea.> --~--- ..,..._ -~---.-..~------~-~· -~---~ ...... -- ...... ---~----'· ··-. - ··--- ...... -- ... .. -- 33 Me1'C1'_.,., P.Utllt T8 5-11 189 18 J!lt PR A14tu:ippa, .. P4 1-10 171 JIO ~. ~ ...._•••••l:;tp~. CS.t••l Yall•tJ > ..sa .. Aft··~····_.,.,. ••lt~ .••...ul •Ot 6-3 21dtf ao .Jilt 10 O.••• Wl ·tJI'•t•clailtU 11 ,.,...... ' .••, 6-2 lW" ao 10 Pit ,Jeck•onvill•# M 81 ...... , •• •TE 6-4 DO 19 10 • l11.Wft'J.. 1'4tllt{ ,.. 16 ....,., ·· IU,c•••l 6-0 171 19 t0 F'R lt. 'Levis• fiD•fUrii¥e1"aitV) 37 *** ...lo*P.~ Yalll•z ••T8 1-11 201 . 11 • lit *"Pi,slt.,...fe PA C.... P1'is) 27 ...... ,, ...,.,..." 88 1-11 191 19 so Fit WillintiJ•"••:MJ CK..Wedv> 38 ltruc•• ,Jason IE 6-2 aoe ,., so ,. ..,_., •. t~tl'svtll•, 91 ** 8u1't•• Mt:Jtonv DT 6-3 .250 20 .....·"" Nlan•tonk•t 1111· Utwpktns> 29 e....••'~"• htlnis IE 6-o 180 19 10 FR Mia_., Ft.' <••ttt Ki.,.i > 39 *'"' Cft1't stop:e.•?son. .Joe DE 6-!"t 221 u • 11t Austin, ..., .u•ace'llt > 80 Clau•-.n• lluPt DE 6-4 220 19 • "" ...... ".~ ... 30 Conant. Dal• ;·r ~ ~:~n 6-2 219 19 FR FR ~,1. Yallev, • 21 * Couclt• Oa1't FL .s-_!o ~."".' 19 so SO D•vettpopt, lA cCeftt•al> 42 C.,_int•• Pat FL 6 • •vv 18 f'R fiR' ...... 011• WJ C'W.st) ·t1a1'k DE 6-3 232 21 ~ .JR Fal"l•avltl MN "41 ..** ,Pv••••••·DUnt•uille, Duan• ea 5-9 179 21 .JR .JR Ho¥•l~d' Pll cs·t••l V.allev) bO F•'"'"' IE'Ptc OT 6-4 281 20 .JI JR ..u Clai••• Wl <,.._o-riel> 14 • Fogti•• Rtctcev G8 6"""1 181 19 SO SO Nat•'l'lao, B.C. 41 FoPs. · E'Ptlr F8 6-1 200 20 JR tao RostHIOunt.• · ,... 40 F'l'"anlcltn. Steve 5-11 1CJI 19 FR FR OrovelaJ\11',: Ft. ..SE 5-11 180 19 ·.JR JR S.n Dt•go, CA (Point Loma> .t ·'hi 1 a1'cf, Cut•ne • • Ga:r'l'"idO• O.ston ss 1-10 taa 21 sa SR Wilton. CT ·tWavaAite •. fiN) ·94 : • Giltltons. Stev• L8 6-0 215 22 SR SR Yount statim; OM · 18 • Ouldin, SCott c 1-11 220 t• SO SO l1"Wilh PA CH..,fiel4:l· 68 • Had4, ia1"9 DT 6-4 255 . 19 80 SO IUN'liVill.••' ... · 78 Hat•"t' Landan 00 6-5 281 18 FR FR Bloottinf:ton. fiiN 12 *** "-"•• Andv FL 6-1 191 22 SR SR Alpla.Olh WI (West> 11 •• Hi tchcoct.. RatJ c 6-2 263 20 ,JR JR St. Paul, MN C'-lohnson>. 62 ** ttoiJtins. .Jill OT 6-6 260· 21 SR JR. O•e•n Bav. wt S8 ** HolM••• BT'uc• L.l 6-3 224 ~21 SA JR Detroit,. t11 17 Halt, Alan G8 6-1 198 19 SO FR Mta•i• F;l.' 49 ** HoW.1'dr Lung•n Cl 6-0 183. 21 SR SR Detroit, Ht U1. L.. King> 93 H'l'tJcalc, T•""" L.8 6-2 28 19 SO<.FR Newa1'fc, DE 74 .Jon••· o..n OT 6•4 2110 ·19 $:J.FR wttite B•a" L..•fc•, MN 20 ** Jovn•"' La""" DE 6-1 210 21 $R JR ,.._pttis, TN 99 ~afl•n•. La1'1'tJ NO 6-1 231 21 SR .JR Minneapolis .. I1N 10 * K•lltJ~· Ad.. . p s~to 191 a2 SR SR Exc•lsio1'. MN 71 Leftnon • .Jaa•s <.J . .J. > 00 6-2 214 .. 18 FR FR St. Paul, .,. . ·as Mavl•• ltev•n TIE 6-6 225 18 Fit FR C•n~on •. QH •. Mc0.e• . Ca1' 1 OS 6-o UMI 18 Ftl II'R St. Lo.uts, MO 43 · "clwtosa. Ma•cu• • FS 6-0 196 t9 .JR sa St. P•vl, M 9fJ M•laiHie1'• -Jon -DE 6-7 241 . 18 Fll .. ,.,.,.,,.,,...... 19 "••· Mite GB 6-2 1;95 23 • lit: CIIU..-, ... C"iftnet;ontrlt> 6-3 a311 ao Jl 10 at~ Lou.t •• MD n.. fl-.,_:. ·Scruth > 46 • Mu•ll•'~'• Doug ... (OV~) • 10 DEC 1985 2 . • LTRS PLAYER NNE ------..-.------...... ~ ------" -- 411!'1'-. ...,..- ...... _...... ______•_ 87 • Mulligan, e-t-•1 NO .~ ... ' 21( •• fJJ,Ih,l•111• fiW 32 *** "-l•~ian, Pet•~ Ll ~~ 'zar .. ·:·t··:lft.M'~"ltt«'•apolts, f1N !2Jt.".~:.tf1.illf1W"•aj·f/Riv••·· ,.., 1 Pa1e, Kennetft · S ~lO ,!tlli ·. II ~' PR ·-~.,..•· IL 'o ** P•lptt~••·· Randv c ~· · •••.: ~J. ~ltt:.. ,JRJC~ftfo•fl• ON . . . · 24 Penn, Ed Tl 6-4. aot 1•. : li.t"A 'l'ppa, FL CH,il1sllo~4JU1b) '3 Pete~son. Steve 01 .-4 ••• 2'';-II'J~'t·.-~se.•ttt.._. •.r~.:··. ··. · 61 Pihlst?~' Mille Df 6-t ;41 .. ·19 ·:10 10 ··~ ·p•ul, fiiN CSt. Thoa. Autd. ) 47 Poll•~•· Don • Dl 6~l U0 .••. .;M:_;Jft~. fljll.ftd• CA 66 ** P~vo~. Mille aT fr'"".,.. 26(), -.:Wtrllt;flt.. tth•l•; TN.~.Ctia•iJt(Jn.) 44 *** Pull, David . Fl 63 Ra~, Mille 00 •~•·~. •.~-. . ._a_·JaJ.. ~. ••. ·.... ;t~~.. •.·.··· ... •.. ·l··.'_·.·.·<··"'.· . : , to..· .. ····.·.·.·.c.•_··.ll•&ne••.. tl.•.>·"·. •.. _.•.•.ttrf let_•. •.. ·. .1. A. .. c:·w.··· _... ,_.·ngton> 65 • Recfttin. Dan OT ... l6t' ·a ... '.:·.to ••. Lout•, tD. CCfl~il:. l'l'o•. ) 13 ** Re•fl• Rich Dl •~a 21fl;· ••:ljlfll ... SR .T:•ledo, OH t.,.t, •• .,., 97 Rhedus; Steve NO .-a 235 'l. ·:• tQ lt•c• L*klt• WI 11 IUcha~dson. Ros·elle Fl •~a · 2l4 ·1•, f9t J'ft-WI.•~'•n• QH: CW.I-t:•?l\ fitt••.,.v• ) 92 Roth, Rick ,.. 6-Q 24$, 19 to· $0. "un4,ti:4ft Cll'li·· .WI CStvns. Pt. l 79 Ryan. Dennis DE 6""'3 . ISO 18 h·FR Bt> .·· Paij1, .,_ 35 •• a.a11, Donovan Fl 5-11 185 .' a•·· ~ ;.1ft,: Wl,i~·li.ftt• IL . · 96 ** Sta~ll•• Kevin TE 6-4· · Qt· · aR "': - 23 st... ~t. T•~~v Tl 6•1 190 19 • l"~(;t'J••phi'SI .. · TN .CRidP•v) 8 Stolsll i, ~on Cll •-o sa~ ta.. tp ·.ap ...•.t•ln•~•,. MN 18 St~ong. Paul Fl 6-G l61. 20.. ·8c.. ~~.PcNIIP.•no-,I••~Jt,_ FL . 91 Sunvold, ~eff NO •~a ·· 235 · t4J, ~·I:,_: lt,~·otc ltft Cente,.; JIIN 96 ** TbMP•on •. Steve DT 6-.a ·.· ;r1$. :;.1()'<4fi .. Jit·.· ~if'01"4il• . 'IL <--•t) 77 TT'ip, T~int DE ~~~ :aiNf·::·lll·~ttfttFR filonlovt, · wr· 70 Tu~t•on, Mike L8 r-3 ;aot t9::fi1t··~ta ·· wa,.~•n~ rw 90 UklleliJeT't• Ross DT 6~5 2 ...8 lfJ ·to Fft Clitb•~•ll, :MN Clattle Latre) 36 Vande~woude. Ma~k • DIE 6-3 211.. 2( ~' \JR·; IV~"·"'' i 1•, . MN . 5 We~den, MaT'tV • 81 1-l t60. cCf ~· Jtt; Winona' JltN 48 Willi•••• David SS 6~ ·· ~··:··.ufl(l SO·W•uke~tw~h WI cMv.-~qn,•go> 82 Wtlli•••• ..John Ta 6~~ 240 ·.·· I'' 10. FR. lloomll'f,ton.' MN {"~tfferson > 31 ** Wilson, Kevin F8 1-tl. 201 . 20 ..ilt """ ~u~o't'a, Jt.:

* - varsity letters CL - yea;r in school EL ... Jt-ligibility :~ear

----tJ~~:-·~"' POR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

COtn'ACT: Dave Mona or Dave Jarzyna Mona ' McGrath Public Relations (612) 831-8515

MINNESOTA/METRODOME FINALISTS

TO HOST 1991 NCAA BASKETBALL PINAL POOR

MINNEAPOLIS, Decembe~ 10, 1985 -- The University of

Minnesota and officials of the Humphrey .Metrodome announced today that Minneapolis is one of two finalists to host the Final

Four of the 1991 NCAA Division I Men•s Basketball Championship. Paul Giel, director of the men•s intercollegiate athletics depart.ent at the University of Minnesota, said he learned from NCNh officials Monday that Minneapolis and Indianapolis were the only remaining candidates to host the 1.99~ Final Pour, March

30-April 1, 1991. Official confirmation is expected fr0111 the

NCAA today.

A final determination will be made by tr..e NCAA's basketball

site selectioc committee in July, Giel said. Jerry Bell, executive director of the .Metropolita:u Spo.rts .t Facilities C~:ission* said that. NCAA officials were •very impressed• with the Met.rodome and the downtown Minneapolis area when they visited here last month. -more- -2-

That positive attitude toward Minneapolis 1 continued last

week in New Orleans, Bell said, when the selection committee convened to examine bids from six u.s. cities and their local

host institutions~ Minnesota's bid was based upon a new basketball seating arrangement which provides for more than 36,000 seats when the

Metrodome is set up for basketball. •We showed them absolutely the worst seat we could find,• Bell said, •and even from that seat, they were very impressed

with the view of the floor. We looked all through the facility and even picked locations for post-game news conferences and

pre-game buffets. They liked all the space we had to offer for both the fans and the national news media.•

~t a news conference, Bell unveiled a drawing, used in the Minnesota bid, which shows the basketball floor running along the first base line toward right field on the south end of the

Metrodome. Bell also showed members of the news media new cushioned

seats the Commission has purchased for the basketball setup~ The 6,600 new seats will debut March 14 and 16, 1986, when the University of Minnesota hosts the first and second rounds of the 1986 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Championship at the Metrodome. -more- -3-

Tickets for those games officially go on sale tomorrow,

December 11. Approximately 60,000 ticket brochures beqan qoing out today to University of Minnesota and Minnesota Viking season ticket holders. Gopher basketball season ticket holders will have a seating priority on seats ordered before December 31. There will be a total of six games played in three two-game sessions: afternoon and evening sessions Friday, March 14; and an afternoon session Sunday, March 16. Ticket prices are $15 and $12 per session, and must be purchased in blocks for each of the three sessions. Per qame or per session tickets are not available. Teams competing in the first and second rounds will be announced by the NCAA on sunday, March 9 • Non-priority requests will be filled on a first-come, first-served basis. Persons desiring ticket information should call Midwest Ticket Corporation at 333-5577 to charge by phone locally (charge to DonaldsonsF American Express, Master Card or VISA), or call 1-800-556-0033 within the state of Minnesota. Mail orders are also being taken by Midwest Ticket at P.O. Box

2205, Loop Station, Minneapolis, Minn. 55402. Mail orders should include $2 for postage and handling. Ron Gornick, chairman of the Metropolitan Sports Facilities Commission, said that brinqing an NCAA Final Four to Minneapolis is •a top priority.• -more- -4-

•We learned from our experience with the Major League Baseball All-Star game this summer that we can handle the largest sporting events without a flaw. The beauty of the Final Pour is that it focuses national attention on your area for three full days. The most recent estimates by communities that have hosted a Final Four show that it brings no less than $60 million into the host community,• Gornick said. University of Minnesota Basketball Coach Jim Dutcher said, •rn terms of bringinq attention to a community for an extended period of time, there is nothing like the NCAA Pinal Four. The Super Bowl is a great event, but it all happens on a single day. With the Pinal Four you have two days of basketball spread over three days. The host city also hosts the national convention of the National Association of Basketball Coaches at the same time, and Minneapolis is a very attractive place with its skyways, shoppinq convenience, first-class hotels and a facility less than five minutes away from the hotels.•

-30- Wednesday, December 11, 1985

I Donaldsons MIDWEft WICKEY CORPORAWIO. 601 Nicollet Mall Minneapolis, MN 55402 N.C.A.A. FIRST & SECOND ROUND DIVISION I BASKETBALL TICKET INFORMATION

TICKET PRICES: $45.00 for floor and lower level seating (3 sessions/ 6 games) $36.00 for upper level seating (3 sessions/6 games)

HOW TO ORDER: U of M SEASON BASKETBALL TICKET HOLDERS will be given a priority on tickets. Special order forms are being sent to them today. The priority deadline is December 31, 1985.

GENERAL PUBLIC TICKETS will be available beginning today (Wednesday, December 11) and will be filled after the priority holders according to the date the order is received, in the case of mail orders and according to the date and time the order is received by charge-by-phone. MAIL ORDERS: Mail your order to: MIDWEST TICKET; P.O. Box 2205; Loop Station; Minneapolis, MN 55415. Make checks payable to: Midwest Ticket and add $2. per order for handling. CHARGE-BY-PHONE: In the Twin Cities Metro area, call 333-5577. Outside the metro area, in Minnesota, call toll free at 1-800-556-0033. Donaldsons, AMX, Visa or Master Card charges will be accepted. WALK IN SALES are expected to begin on or around February 10, 1986. Tickets will be available at the twelve Twin Cities Donaldsons ticket offices and the U of M ticket office.

PAIRINGS:* Friday, March 14, 1986

FIRST SESSION: 12:07 p.m. ______vs. ______2:37 p.m. vs. ______

SECOND SESSION: 7 : 0 7 p.m. ______vs . ------9:37 p.m. vs ·------Sunday, March 16, 1986

THIRD SESSION: ____ am/pm ______vs. ______p.m. ______vs. ______

*Participating schodsare expected to be announced on Sunday, March 9.

1'\ ·~::;:,~; ;i,~>NI ~

---~------~~

Mailed December 16, 1985 For Release Upon Receipt

University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455

1111111 1 FROM THE GOPHER SID STAFF A MERRY CHRISTMAS TO ONE AND ALL * ------· -- --- _...:;..~~'-=...;;..;;;;=;..;:;.....====·....;;...;;....;;;=....;;,;;;..;.;;;._=;;;;. ******'** GOPHER ~PPENINGS ON TAP -- All Times Local, CST Tue. Dec. 17- (BB) at Marquette U., Milwaukee, WI 7:30 (WCC0-830AM, KMSP-TV Ch. g) - (WR) at Northern Illinois, Dekalb, IL - (HO) J.V. at North Dakota State, Fargo, ND Thu. Dec. 19 - (HO) J.V. VS. NOTRE DAME HERE 2:30 MARIUCCI ARENA (no charge) Fri. ·Dec. 20- (HO) at Northeastern U., Boston, MA 6:30 (KMFY-980AM) Sat. Dec. 21 - (FB) at Independence Bowl, Shrieveport, LA, vs. Clemson 7:00 p.m. (WCC0-830AM, KITN-TV Ch. 29) (BB) at U. of Connecticut, Hartford, CT 12 Noon (WCC0-830AM, KMSP-TV, Ch. 9) - (HO) at Northeastern U., Boston MA 6:30 (KMFY-980AM) - (HO) J.V. VS. BUCKS 10:30 A.M. MARIUCCI ARENA (no charge) Mon. Dec. 23 - (BB) OKLAHOMA STATE HERE 8:05 (WCC0-830AM) WED. DEC. 25- FB, BKB, HO, WR, GY, TR, SW ALL SAY MERRY CHRISTMAS!f!ll Thu. Dec. 26 Through Thu. Jan. 2 - (WR) at Hawaii Invitational Tournament Sat. Dec. 28 - (BB) ALCORN S'l'ATE HERE 8:05 (WCC0-830AM}

Sun. Dec. 29 - (HO) at New Hampshire, Durham, NH 6:30 (KMFY-980AM) Mon. Dec. 30 - (HO) at New Hampshire, Durham, NH 6:30 (KMFY-980AM) ICERS ON ROAD TO NORTHEASTERN Minneapolis,MN---Minnesota's hockey Gophers won twice last weekend, but in the process dropped from third to fifth place in this week's WCHA standings. While the Gophers scored a home sweep over n.s. International, ~-1 and 9-1, Northern Michigan and Minnesota-Duluth moved past Minnesota in the standings. (OVER) Northern Michigan took two from Michigan Tech while Minnesota-Duluth split ~ a home series with Colorado College to move into third and fourth places, .., respectively. The Gophers are now in fifth place with a 10-4-0 league record, but have four games in hand over league-leading Denver (14-4-0), plus two games in hand over Wisconsin (11-5-0), Northern (11-5-0) and Duluth (10-5-1). This weekend the Gophers place their 9-game winning streak and 14-4-0 overall record on the line with games Friday and Saturday in Boston against the Northeastern University Huskies. Both games will aired in the Twin Cities by KMFY-980AM radio. Minnes .. ':.a has not lost since dropping the first of two games at North Dakota back ~n November 15. In the nine games, Minnesota has come alive offen­ sively scoring 57 goals. However, four wins and 25 of goals came in non­ 1 conference play against Illinois-Chicago and U.S. International. • Last Saturday's contest-was Minnesota's first after exam week, <;t. period when practice was, for the most part, optional for those whose could'make it. "We did not play all that well Saturday, and that was expected," says Gopher coach Doug Woog. "But you have to give credit to u~s~·International and coach Brad Buetow. They formed a solid game plan and stayed with it. "Naturally, I was.happy to see us return to form in winning by a larger margin Sunday. It was interesting the way ou.r players accepted men seeing their first action of the year in_ Sunday's game.~ · "It was somewhat like; these new men had been in the lin_eup all season. It's also a credit to the play.,ers qn our team that it doesn't really matter who is skating where. It'' s just get the job done, or business as usual." Going east for the se.cond time this year, Minnesota this weekend faces one of the stronger teams from that region. "Northeastern is a good, solid team that plays a ·physical game," Woog continued. "They are awfully tough to bea~ on their own ice. Our performance out there will have to be very sharp if we intend to make any kind of move." Asked how he felt about having games in hand on the teams above Minnesota in the standings, Woog said, "Games in hand are one thing. But to me, being solid in the loss column is more important. "We have the same number of losse~ as Denver .( 4) , and.: that's· the lowest in the league. But to' nibve up it ·'doesn' t mean anything how many games you have. It's how many you win regardless of when you play. That's what ·counts in the end.n Woog added that he ·will probably go with the same lineup used tnat last few aeries, but hinted there could also be a twist or two. Freshman center Dave Snuggerud (Minnetonka) and senior wing Pat Micheletti (Hibbing) got in the Gopher record book last Sunday v.s. usiu. Snuggerud scored Minnesota's first threegoals of the 9-1 victory for his first hat trick. But it was the time span, 3:56, that put Snuggerud in the 'book. The previous record for· the fastest :three goals by a Gopher skater was ij:56 by All~Ame.rican .. John Mayasich against Michigan Tech pack in 1953. Oh, Snuggerud added a fourth goal in the third period, too. Micheletti tieg a school mark held by four former• tJM players when he totaled five assists in Sunday's victory. WCHA STANDINGS THRU 12/15/85 GP w L T PTS GF AVG GA AVG 1-Denver (15-4-0) 18' 14 4 0 28 90 5.0 56 3.1 2-Wisconsin (1J-7-0) 16 11 5 0 22 82 5.2.' 62 3.9 -Northern Michigan(12-5-1) 16 11 5 0 2_2 84 5.3 76 4.8 4-Minnesota-Duluth. ( 14-5-1 ). -16 10 5 1 2-1 73 4.6 50 3 .·1 5-Minnesota (14-4-0) 14 10 4 0 20 63 4.5 48 3.4 6-North Dakota (10-8-0') 16 8 8 0 16 64 4.0 63 3.9 7-Colorado College (8-10-1) 16 7 8 15 59 3.7 62 3.9 8-Michigan Tech (2-14-4) 18 2 13 3 7 53 2.9 96 5.3 ---UM--- ~ ~ - . u. of l'tinn. HOCKEY HOCKEY STATISTICS FOR ALL QAI'IES RECORD : 14-4-0 WCHA QAt£9 PLAYER GP Q A PTS PEN/I'IIN pp QW SH HT QP Q A TP PEN/I'II e Mich•l•tti, P. 18 722 29 20/49 4 1 0 0 14 6 12 18 18/44 Mill•n, c. 1a 11 1:5 26 15/30 5 4 0 0 14 a 11 19 14/28 Cat••• ~. 18 10 13 23 12/24 6 2 0 0 14 a 10 18 10/20 Chapman, w. 17 10 11 21 5/21 5 2 0 0 13 9 7 16 4/19 11ac&w.in, s. 19 .a 13 21 8/24 1 1 0 1 14 3 12 15 6/12 Olcel' 1 und, T. 18 7 12 19 14/2a 1 1 1 0 14 6 a 14 12/24 Richal'ds, T. 16 4 11 15 6/12 1 0 0 0 12 2 8 10 6/12 Shop•k· Q. 17 3 11 14 11/22 1 0 1 0 14 1 9 10 11/22 K•lltn, T. 16 3 9 12 9/18 2 0 0 0 12 3 5 8 a/16 Snuggerud, D. 12 5 7 12 9/21 0 1 0 1 .· 8 1 4 7/17 Grannis, D. 18 4 4 a 7/14 0 1 0 0 14 3 1 4 7/14 B•rgland, T. 16 4 3 7 5/10 0 1 0 0 13 4 3 ' 7 5/10 01'th. s. 16 3 3 6 2/4 1 0 1 0 14 3 3 6 2/4 Mack, c. 17 1 4 5 8/16 0 0 0 0 14 1 4 B/16 Nelson, B. 14 1 4 5 4/8 0 0 0 0 11 1 4 '5 3/6 And•T'son, H. 9 1 3 4 2/4 0 0 0 0 8 1 2 3 1/2 Do1"nfel d, E. 13 1 3 4 5/10 0 0 0 0 9 0 3 3 4/8 BT'oten, P. 10 2 2 4 4/8 0 0 0 0 7 2 1 3 4/8 ChOT'sk•• T. 13 1 1 2 1/2 0 0 0 0 10 1 0 1 1/2 Nann•, M. 1 1 1 2 010 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 010 Bot~~•, R. 2 0 2 2 1/2 0 0 0 0 2 0 2 2 1/2 Blue, ~. 10 0 1 1 t/2 0 0 0 0 8 0 0 0 1/2 Esp•, D. 5 0 1 1 3/6 0 0 0 0 5 0 1 1 3/6 Mav, c. 1 1 0 1 010 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0/0 BT'•k ken, ~. 1 0 0 o. 010 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0/0 Labatt. ~. 1 0 0 0 010 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0/0 LutkT'aft, M. 1 0 0 0 010 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0/0 e Pi•t,..angelo, F. 9 0 0 0 010 0 0 0 0 7 0 0 0 0/0 G•T's ic h, F. 8 0 0 0 6/12 0 0 0 0 6 0 0 0 6/12 OtheT's 0 0 0 0 010 0 0 0 0 ·0 0 0 0 0/0 ======·· ======•• u. of Minn. 18 88156 244 158/346 27 14 3 =·2 --14 --63110173·- ----··=142/30l Opponents 18 55 92 147 166/351 26 4 1 1 14 48 81129 142/302 POWER PLAYS SCORE BY PERl.ODS ==·======·--- G OPP -----X 1st 2nd 3rd OT Total----- UM -- 27 89 . 3033 UM -- 22 29 3, 2 88 Opponents -- 26 79 . 3291 Opponents -- 17 19 19 0 55 GOALIE RECORDS ALL GAMES GP MINS GA G.AVG STOPS sx so ·=·-======·== ------Blue, ~. 10 549 25 2. so 233 0. 903 0 BT'ek k•n• ...J. 1 20 0 0.00 7 1. 000 0 Pietl'angelo. F. 9 520 30 3.33 234 0.886 0 ======· == UM 18 1089 55 3.06 474 0.896 0 Opponents 18 1089 88 4.89 573 0.867 0

WCHA GAMES GP MINS GA G.AVG STOPS sx so ------' Blu•, .,J. 8 429 21 2.63 185 0.898 0 BT'ekk•n, ~. 0 0 0 0.00 0 0.000 0 - Pietrangelo, F. 7 420 27 3.86 206 0.884 0 ======·= == UM 14 849 48 3.43 391 =····0.891 0 -,Opponents 14 850 63 4.50 467 0.881 0 U. of Minn. HOCKEY HOCKEY SCHEDULE AND RESULTS FOR ALL OAHES

RECORD CW-L-T): · 14-4-0 C8-2-0 HOME; 6-2-0 AWAY; 10-4-0 WCHA) H WLT DATE A OPPONENT SCORE ATTEND QW QOAL Q.O.R.-SAVES ------~----~------~------w 10/18/85 H MICHIQAN TECH 3-0 6103 Chapman Blue-12 w 10/19/85 H MICHIQAN TECH 7-2 6074 Millen Pietrangelo-13 w 10/25/85 #, MINNESOTA-DULUTH 4-2 5664 Chapman Blue-33 L 10/26/85 A MINNESOTA-DULUTH 2-5 5664 Pietrangelo-39 L 11/01/85 H DENVER 2-4 5969 Blue-32 L 11/02/85 H DENVER 4-5 6220 Pietrangelo-26 w 11/08/85 A. LOWELL 3-1 1913 Micheletti Blue-23 w 11/09/85 A LOWELL 2-1 1893 Cates Pietrangelo-25 L 11/15/85 A NORTH DAKOTA 4-7 6100 Blue-34 w 11/16/85 A NORTH DAKOTA 3-2 6100 Grannis Pietrangelo-43 w 11/22/85 H ILLINOIS-CHICAGO 5-3 5596 MacSwain Blue-27 w 11/23/85 H ILLINOIS-CHICAGO 7-2 5790 Cates Pietrangelo-18 w 11/29/85 A NORTHERN MICHIGAN 8-4 3824 Hillen Blue-26 w 11/30/85 A NORTHERN MICHIGAN 10-9 3739 Hillen Blue-7++ w 12/06/85 H U. of Wisconsin 5-4 7625 Millen Pietrangelo-31 w 12/07/85 H U. of Wisconsin 6-2 7555 Bergland Blue-18 w 12/14/85 H U.S. INTERNATIONAL 4-1 5694 Okerlund Blue-21 w 12/15/85 H U.S. INTERNATIONAL 9-1 5432 Snuggerud Pietrangelo-10 e 12/20/85 A NORTHEASTERN 0-0 0 ' 12/21/85 A .NORTHEASTERN o-o 0 12/29/85 A NEW HAMPSHIRE o-o 0 12/30/85 A NEW HAMPSHIRE o-o 0 01/03/Sb H MAINE o-o 0 01/04/86 H MAINE 0-0 0 01/10/86 H BOSTON UNIVERSITY o-o 0 01/11/86 H BOSTON UNIVERSITY o-o 0 01/17/86 A BOSTON COLLEGE o-o 0 01/18/86 A BOSTON COLLEGE o-o 0 01/24/86 H PROVIDENCE o-o 0 01/25/86 H PROVIDENCE o-o 0 01/31/86 A U. of Wisconsin o-o 0 02/01/86 A U. of Wisconsin o-o 0 OiiZ/08/86 A +COLORADO COLLEGE o-o 0 02/09/86 A +COLORADO COLLEGE o-o 0 02/14/86 H MINNESOTA-DULUTH o-o 0 02/15/86 H MINNESOTA-DULUTH o-o 0 02/21/86 H NORTH DAio(OTA o-o 0 02/22/86 H NORTH DAKOTA o-o 0 Total Season 96955 <18 games, avg. 5386> Home Games -- 62058 <10 games, avg. 6206>

~ - Played at AF Academy GOLDEN GOPHER CAGERS AT CONNEC'riCUT SATURDAY

Coach Jim Dutcher's University of Minnesota basketball team has its show on the road again this week for two more non-conference assignments including Saturday's 1:00 p.m. shootout with the University of Connecticut in Hartford. That duel follows Tuesday's encounter against Marquette in Milwaukee and sets the stage for next week's final two non-conference games of the current campaign against Oklat&, '1\c"" State and Alcorn State in Williams Arena. The Golden Gophers came into this week's competition with an overall record of 8-1 after posting their seventh straight triumph while completing a six-game home stand in beating Colorado State 62-59 at Williams Arena last Saturday night. It was neither a picturesque nor impressive triumph for Minnesota which seemed to have turned the corner when whipping Arkansas in an earlier encounter.

"That was a step back. for us," Coach Dutcher admitted. "But we should not be surprised. We had a poor week of practice, and we played like we practiced. We simply did not generate anything." · Because of that below-par effort, 'it took something extra from Mitch Lee, 6-9 sophomore forward, to bring Minnesota a winner. Lee had 18 points and seven rebounds to pace the Golden Gophers in both departments. Co-captain Marc Wilson was next in line with 14 and five, but even the 6-1 senior was not at his best. "Wilson gave us some good spurts," Dutcher pointed out, "but not a total game at the level he's been playing." Obviously Dutcher was distressed with the fact that Minnesota shot only 43% from the field, failed again to shoot well from the free throw line and was outrebounded 31-29 by a smaller club. "We just did not prepare well, did not get ready for Colorado State," he analyzed, "but the important thing for us to realize is that we were able to win when we were not playing well." So now it's the road, and Dutcher •••• as well as his charges •••• realize it will take something better to come home as winners with the calibre of competition· getting better and better. "We must get back to a better level of concentration than we had last week," Dutcher stressed. "Part of it was being involved in final exams, but it is more than than. We simply need a better effort this week. And it starts in practice." Dutcher has always maintained that you can't look back, and he holds to that belief this week. "We can't grieve over our poor performance against Colorado State," he said. "We can only hope that we learned from it and go on from there." And that means Hartford and UCONN. FOR THE LATEST IN GOPHER SPORTS DIAL 612-373-4211. GOPHER SPORTS UPDATES

PUK NAMED SECOND TEAM ACADEMIC ALL-A~ffiRICAN University of Minnesota senior fullback David Puk (Cedar Rapids, Iowa) was named to the GTE second team academic All-American offensive team as voted by the CoSIDA (College Sports Information Directors). Puk has a 3.58 GPA in pre-medicine at Minnesota and is a two-time All-Big Ten Conference academic honoree.

The Cedar £. p-ids native is a three-year starter at fullback for the Gophers and was the third leading rusher on the 1985 Minnesota team. Puk had 405 yards rushing on 87 carries for a 4.7 avg. and two TDs this season. His career rushing stats total 1062 yards and 7 TDs.

WRESTLERS AT NORTHERN ILLINOIS TOURNAMENT TUESDAY Minnesota's Golden Goph~r wrestling team will be back in action this week after an idle week for final exams. Coach Wally Johnson will have his team at the Northern Illinois tourney in DeKalb, IL, Tuesday, December 17. The Gophers will have four dual matches in one day at the NIU meet. Here is the schedule for Minnesota on Tuesday, December 17:

10:00 AM vs. Chicago State 1:00 PM vs. Illinois-Edwardsville (Defending NCAA II Champion) 4:00 PM vs. Northern Illinois 7:00 PM vs. Ohio University Minnesota is 1-0 in duals entering the NIU meet with a 22-13 win December 7 over the University of Missouri. The Gophers will leave for the Hawaii Invite in Honolulu December 26th.

~urrent Gopher wrestling records: (starters only) 118- Ed Giese (Sr. Wood Dale, IL) .•.•....•.••....•.•. (17-1 overall, 1-0 duals) 126- John Miller (Fr. Sacred Heart,MN) .•....••.•..... (l2-7, 1-0) 134- Blake Bonjean (Jr. Bloomington, MN) ...... ••.••.• (13-5, 1-0) 142- Bruce Gebhart (Jr. Menomonie, WI) .•.....••..•..• (6-7, 0-1) 150- Tim Manning (Fr. Vermillion, SD) .••••.••••..•••• (ll-4, 1-0) 158- Brett Rasmussen (SO. Kasson, MN) •..•.•.•.•.•.•.• (13-6, 1-0) 167- Rod Sande (Jr. St. Paul, MN) ...... (12-6, 1-0) 177- Eric Lehrke (Sr. Rothschild, WI) ..•••...•..••••• (8-5, 0-1)

190- Dave Dean (S~. Montrose, MI) ...•.••....•.••••.•. (4-2, 1-0) qwr- Mark Hellecksen(So. Lake Crystal, MN) •.....•...• ~4-4, 0-1)

Gopher captain Ed Giese has been the top performer this season with a 17-1 ;verall record and three tournament wins. Giese won the 1984 Big Ten 118 pound ':.itle and sat out the 1985 season with a red-shirt year. He has won titles at the ~ison Open, Minnesota Showcase and Nebraska-Omaha tourneys in 1985. U. of Minn. BAS~ETBALL BAS~ETBALL INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS FOR ALL GAMES. RECORD : 8-1 C6-0 HOME; 2-1 NEUTRAL; 0-0 BIG 10). NO PLAYER GP-GS MIN/AV FGM-FGA FGX FTM-FTA FT'Y. REB/ AVG HI AST STL BLK TO PF-DS P.TS/AVG HI 24 Wilson,M------9-9 ------282/31 60-106 .566 49-65 . 754 48/ 5.3 7 38 15 2 18 ------22-0 ------169/18.8 29 44 Shasky,J 9-9 298/33 57-99 .576 34-57 . 596 69/ 7. 7 14 8 6 19 17 25-2 148/16. 4 33 11 Alexander.T 8-8 243/27 35-71 .493 15-16 .938 23/ 2.9 5 29 6 1 23 22-2 85/10. 6 17 00 Lee.M 8-8 235/26 30-61 .492 24-37 .649 61/ 7.6 13 5 11 7 20 22-2 84/10. 5 21 33 Sm i t h • K e. 6-6 167/19 23-55 .418 11-14 .786' 29/ 4.8 10 9 3 4 11 5-0 57/ 9. 5 15 34 Anderson1M 9-1 175/19 27-66 .409 18-29 .621 21/ 2.3 5 24 10 1 21 18-0 72/ 8.0 13 21 Woods.T 9-3 145/16 25-50 . 500 13-18 . 722 28/ 3. 1·8 12 5 0 12 13-1 63/ 7.0 29 42 Smith, K 1. 6-0 62/7 8-18 . 444 8-9 . 889 7/ 1. 2 3 1 2 1 6 9-0 24/ 4. 0 8 32 Williams,G 8-1 98/11 11-22 . 500 2-6 .333 18/ 2.3 4 2 1 0 6 18-1 24/ 3.0 8 13 Hanson.T 5-0 42/5 4-6 .667 1-2 .500 7/ 1.4 4 3 0 0 0 4-0 9/ 1.8 5 30 Gaffney,R 6-0 29/3 4-10 .400 1-3 .333 3/ 0. 52 1 1 0 1 3-0 9/ 1. 55 55 Holmgren,D 6-0 24/3 1-5 . 200 4-7 . 571 7/ 1. 2 4 1 0 3 2 3-0 6/ 1. 0 4 U.------of Minn. OPPONENTS 1800 285-569 . 501 180-263 .684 348/38.7 133 60 38 137 164-8 750/83.3 1800 268-573 .468 125-184 .679 321/35.7 99 63 34 140 190-B 661/73.4 '' TEAM------REBOUNDS: ALL GAMES< UM-27, OPP-23 > DEAD BALL REBOUNDS: ALL GAMES ,. • • U. of Minn. BASKETBALL BASKETBALL SCHEDULE AND RESULTS

DATE OPPONENT SCORE ATTEND HIGH SCORER HIGH REBOUNDER ------11/22 • N W. Virginia St. >120-106 1000 Woods-29 >Shasky-14 11/23 # N Middle Tennessee St. 79-92 950 Lee-21 Lee-10 11/25 # N Brigham Young-H. 87-80 845 >Shasky-33 Shasky-12 11/29 San Francisco St. 95-63 12.059 Wilson-16 Lee-13 11/30 U. of S. Dakota 66-57 11,868 Shasky-19 Shasky-11 12/02 Eastern Illinois 87-69 11.650 Shasky-22 Shasky-6 12/04 U. of Detroit 83-71 11.777 Wilson-20 Smith-10 12/07 U. of Arkansas 71-64 13,401 Wilson-21 Lee,Shasky-7 12/14 Colorado State 62-59 12,263 Lee-18 Lee-7 12/17

NOTES: > SEASON HIGH, # N'tl. Airlines Trn. • e e, 1985-86 PRESS RELEASE SUMMARY

Date Contents Size Mailed To Number • 7/11/85 Laurie Kaiser letter Wkly, Miscwkly 175 7/15/85 VB Guide oversize Wkly, Miscwkly, VB Opp 200 7/31/85 Donna Olson letter Wkly, Miscwkly 175 7/31/85 VB letter Wkly, Miscwkly 175 8/27/85 VB, GO letter Wkly, Miscwkly, GO & 475 VB Home & Spec.

8/28/85 VB Brochure oversize Wkly, Miscwkly, VB Home, 265 Opp, Spec & Parent

9/6/85 GO Guide oversize Wkly, Miscwkly, GO Home, 300 Spec & Parent

9/9/86 CC Guide oversize Wkly Mi scwkly, CC Opp, 300 Home & Spec

9/9/85 VB, cc t GO letter Wkly, Miscwkly, VB, CC & 300 GO Opp & Spec e 9/16/85 VB, TN, cc, GO letter Wkly, Mi scwkly, Fall Opp 300 & Fall Spec

9/23/85 VB, TN, cc letter Wkly, Miscwkly, Fall Opp 300 & Fall Spec, VB Home

9/30/85 VB, TN, cc letter Wkly, Miscwkly, Fall Opp 300 & Fall Spec, VB Home 10/7/85 VB, TN, CC, GO letter Wkly, Miscwkly, Fall Opp 300 & Fall Spec, VB Home 10/14/85 VB, cc letter Wkly, Mi scwkly, Fall Opp 300 & Fall Spec, VB Home 10/21/85 VB, TN, CC, GO 1 etter Wkly, Miscwkly, Fall Opp 300 & Fall Spec, VB Home 10/28/85 VB, cc, GO 1 etter Wkly, Mi scwkly, Fall Opp 300 & Fall Spec, VB Home

11/4/85 VB, CC, sw 1 etter Wkly, Miscwkly, Fall Opp 300 SW Opp, Home & Spec 11/11/85 VB, cc, TN letter Wkly, Miscwkly, Fall Opp 300 • VB Spec & Home l

1985-86 PRESS RELEASE SUMMARY--Page Two e Date Contents Size Mailed To Number 11/18/85 VB, BB, GM, cc' sw letter Wkly, Miscwkly, BB & VB 500 Opp, Home & Spec 11/25/85 BB, VB, GM, sw letter Wkly, Miscwkly, BB & VB 500 Opp , Home & Spec 12/3/85 BB, CC, GM letter Wkly, Miscwkly, BB, CC & 450 GM Opp, Home & Spec 12/6/85 VB (Season) letter Wkly, Miscwkly, VB Opp, 300 Home, Spec & Parent 12/11/85 BB, GM 1etter Wkly, Miscwkly, BB & GM 400 Opp, Home & Spec 12/23/85 BB letter Wkly, Mi scwkly, BB Opp, 425 Home & Spec 1/6/86 BB, GM, SW letter Wkly, Miscwkly, BB, GM & 500 SW Opp, Home & Spec 1/8/86 GM Guide oversize Wkly, Miscwkly, GM Opp, 300 Home & Spec e 1/9/86 SW Guide oversize Wkly, Mi scwkly, SW Opp 300 Home 1/13/86 BB, GM, SW letter Wkly, Miscwkly, BB, GM & 500 SW Opp, Home & Spec 1/21/86 BB, GM, SW, TR letter Wkly, Miscwkly, Winter 550 Opp, Home & Spec 1/27/86 BB, GM, sw, TN, TR letter Wkly, Miscwkly, Winter 550 Opp, Home & Spec, IA Media 2/3/86 BB, GM, SW, TN, TR letter Wkly, Miscwkly, Winter 550 Opp, Home & Spec, IA Media 2/10/86 BB, GM, sw, TN, TR 1etter Wkly, Miscwkly, Winter 600 Opp, Home & Spec, MI & MS Media

2/17/86 BB, GM, SW, TN, TR letter Wkly, Miscwkly, Winter 525 Opp, Home & Spec, WI Media

2/18/86 VB Recruits letter Wkly, Mi scwkly, VB Opp, 300 Home & Spec e 1985-86 PRESS RELEASE SUMMARY--Page Three e Date Contents Size Mailed To Number 2/18/86 sw letter Wk l y, Mi scwk l y, SW Opp, 300 Home, WI Media 2/24/86 BB, GM, TN, TR letter Wkly, Miscwkly, Winter 500 Opp, Home & Spec 2/26/86 SB letter Wkly, Mi scwkly, SB Opp, 400 Home & Spec 2/28/86 GM 1etter Wkly, Mi scwkly, GM Opp, 300 Home & Spec 3/3/86 BB, GM, SW, TN, TR letter Wkly, Miscwkly, Winter 550 Opp, Home & Spec, IA Media 3/6/86 sw letter Wkly, Mi scwkly, SW Opp 300 & Home 3/10/86 BB, GM, SB letter Wkly, Miscwkly, BB, GM & 450 SB Opp, Home & Spec 3/11/86 GM letter Wkly, Mi scwkly, GM Opp, 300 Home & Spec e 3/17/86 GM, sw letter Wkly, Miscwkly, GM & SW 350 Opp, Home & Spec 3/21/86 GO, TN, TR Guides oversize Wkly, Miscwkly, GO, TN & 300 TR Opp, Home & Spec 3/21/86 SB Release & Guide oversize Wkly, Mi scwkly, SB Opp, 250 Home & Spec

3/24/86 GM, SW 1etter Wkly, Miscwkly, GM & SW 250 Opp, Home & Spec

3/31/86 GM, GO, TN, TR, SB letter Wkly, Miscwkly, GM & Spring 375 Opp, Home & Spec

4/7/86 GO, TN, TR, SB 1etter Wkly, Miscwkly, Spring 350 Opp, Home & Spec

4/14/86 GO, TN, TR, SB letter Wkly, Miscwkly, Spring 350 Opp, Home & Spec

4/15/86 BB, TR, GM Recruits letter Wkly, Miscwkly, BB, TR & 450 GM Opp, Home & Spec 1985-86 PRESS RELEASE SUMMARY--Page Four

Date Contents Size Mailed To Number • 4/21/86 GO, TN, TR, SB letter Wkly, Miscwkly, Spring 350 Opp, Home & Spec

4/28/86 GO, TN, TR, SB letter Wkly, Miscwkly, Spring 350 Opp, Home & Spec 5/5/86 GO, TN, TR, SB letter Wkly, Miscwkly, Spring 350 Opp, Home & Spec 5/15/86 SB, GO letter Wkly, Miscwkly, SB & GO 300 Opp, Home & Spec 5/16/86 TR letter Wkly, Mi scwkly, TR Opp, 250 Home & Spec 5/27/86 TR, SB letter Wkly, Miscwkly, TR & SB 300 Opp, Home & Spec 6/9/86 LaRue Fields ( BB) letter Wkly, Mi scwkly, BB Spec 400 6/9/86 Awards Banquet letter Wkly, Miscwkly 200 6/18/86 SW Recruits letter Wkly, Mi scwkly, SW Opp 250 e & Home 6/18/86 TR Recruits letter Wkly, Mi scwkly, TR Opp, 250 Home & Spec 6/18/86 SB Recruits 1etter Wkly, Miscwkly, SB Opp, 250 Home & Spec