fbpx
Wikipedia

1982 Michigan Wolverines football team

The 1982 Michigan Wolverines football team was an American football team that represented the University of Michigan in the 1982 Big Ten Conference football season. In their 14th season under head coach Bo Schembechler, the Wolverines compiled an 8–4 record (8–1 against conference opponents), won the Big Ten championship, lost to UCLA in the 1983 Rose Bowl, and outscored all opponents by a total of 345 to 204.[1][2]

1982 Michigan Wolverines football
Big Ten champion
Rose Bowl, L 14–24 vs. UCLA
ConferenceBig Ten Conference
Ranking
CoachesNo. 15
Record8–4 (8–1 Big Ten)
Head coach
Defensive coordinatorGary Moeller (5th season)
MVPAnthony Carter
Captains
Home stadiumMichigan Stadium
Seasons
← 1981
1983 →
1982 Big Ten Conference football standings
Conf Overall
Team W   L   T W   L   T
Michigan $ 8 1 0 8 4 0
No. 12 Ohio State 7 1 0 9 3 0
Iowa 6 2 0 8 4 0
Illinois 6 3 0 7 5 0
Wisconsin 5 4 0 7 5 0
Indiana 4 5 0 5 6 0
Purdue 3 6 0 3 8 0
Northwestern 2 7 0 3 8 0
Michigan State 2 7 0 2 9 0
Minnesota 1 8 0 3 8 0
  • $ – Conference champion
Rankings from AP Poll

The team's statistical leaders included tailback Lawrence Ricks with 1,388 rushing yards, flanker Anthony Carter with 844 receiving yards, and quarterback Steve Smith with 1,735 passing yards and 2,124 yards of total offense, and placekicker Ali Haji-Sheikh with 77 points scored.[3]

Anthony Carter was selected as a consensus first-team All-American and won the Chicago Tribune Silver Football award as the Big Ten's most valuable player. Defensive back Keith Bostic received second-team All-America honors. Eight Michigan players (Carter, Bostic, running back Lawrence Ricks, center Tom Dixon, offensive guard Stefan Humphries, offensive tackle Rich Strenger, and linebackers Paul Girgash and Robert Thompson) received first-team honors on the 1982 All-Big Ten Conference football team.

Schedule edit

DateTimeOpponentRankSiteTVResultAttendance
September 111:00 p.m.WisconsinNo. 12W 20–9104,932
September 189:00 p.m.at No. 20 Notre Dame*No. 10ABCL 17–2359,075
September 251:00 p.m.No. 12 UCLA*No. 20
  • Michigan Stadium
  • Ann Arbor, MI
L 27–31105,413
October 21:00 p.m.Indiana
  • Michigan Stadium
  • Ann Arbor, MI
W 24–10104,385
October 91:00 p.m.Michigan State
  • Michigan Stadium
  • Ann Arbor, MI (rivalry)
W 31–17106,113
October 162:00 p.m.at IowaW 29–759,989
October 232:00 p.m.at NorthwesternW 49–1434,121
October 301:00 p.m.Minnesota No. 20
W 52–14105,619
November 612:30 p.m.at IllinoisNo. 15ABCW 16–1075,256
November 1312:30 p.m.PurdueNo. 14
  • Michigan Stadium
  • Ann Arbor, MI
CBSW 52–21105,281
November 2012:30 p.m.at Ohio StateNo. 13CBSL 14–2490,252
January 1, 19835:00 p.m.vs. No. 5 UCLA*No. 19NBCL 14–24104,991
  • *Non-conference game
  •  Homecoming
  • Rankings from AP Poll released prior to the game
  • All times are in Eastern time

Season summary edit

Wisconsin edit

Week 1: Wisconsin at Michigan
1 234Total
Wisconsin 9 000 9
Michigan 7 607 20
  • Date: September 11
  • Location: Ann Arbor, MI
  • Game attendance: 104,932
Scoring summary
18:51MICHLawrence Ricks 4-yard run (Ali Haji-Sheikh kick)MICH 7–0
12:36WISMark Doran 32-yard field goalMICH 7–3
10:37WISRandy Wright 1-yard run (kick blocked by Boren)WIS 9–7
25:28MICHRick Rogers 2-yard run (run failed)MICH 13–9
4MICHSteve Smith 1-yard run (Haji-Sheikh kick)MICH 20–9

On September 11, 1982, Michigan defeated Wisconsin, 20–9, before a crowd of 104,932 at Michigan Stadium. One year earlier, Wisconsin had defeated No. 1 Michigan in the season opener. Lawrence Ricks rushed for 153 yards on 24 carries, including a four-yard touchdown run. Quarterback Steve Smith completed 12 of 19 passes for 107 yards and threw two interceptions. Senior flanker Anthony Carter caught only one pass. Wisconsin's touchdown, scored with 37 seconds left in the first half, followed a Smith interception at Michigan's 29-yard line. Wisconsin's defense was called for five personal foul penalties, and Wisconsin coach Dave McLain stated after the game that he believed the Michigan fans had intimidated the officials.[4]

Notre Dame edit

Week 2: Michigan at Notre Dame
1 234Total
Michigan 0 0710 17
Notre Dame 3 10100 23
Scoring summary
112:38NDMike Johnston 35-yard field goalND 3–0
214:01NDLarry Moriarty 24-yard run (Johnston kick)ND 10–0
2NDJohnston 37-yard field goalND 13–0
3MICHAnthony Carter 72-yard punt return (Ali Haji-Sheikh kick)ND 10–7
37:22NDJohnston 41-yard field goalND 16–7
31:55NDGreg Bell 10-yard run (Johnston kick)ND 23–7
4MICHHaji-Sheikh 42-yard field goalND 23–10
4MICHRick Rogers 39-yard pass from Steve Smith (Haji-Sheikh kick)ND 23–17

On September 18, 1982, Michigan lost to Notre Dame, 23–17, before a crowd of 59,075 at Notre Dame Stadium in South Bend, Indiana. It was the first night game ever played at Notre Dame. Anthony Carter returned a punt 72 yards for a touchdown in the third quarter. Mike Johnston kicked three field goals for Notre Dame. Two fumbles by Steve Smith resulted in 10 Notre Dame points. He fumbled on the first play from scrimmage, leading to a Notre Dame field goal after two minutes of play.[5][6]

After starting the first two games of the season, defensive back Brad Cochran quit the football team and left school.[7] He returned to the team in 1983 and became a consensus All-American in 1985.

UCLA edit

Week 3: UCLA at Michigan
1 234Total
UCLA 0 14143 31
Michigan 7 1730 27
  • Date: September 25
  • Location: Ann Arbor, MI
  • Game attendance: 105,413
Scoring summary
1MICHLawrence Ricks 9-yard run (Ali Haji-Sheikh kick)MICH 7–0
2MICHSteve Smith 6-yard run (Haji-Sheikh kick)MICH 14–0
27:31MICHAnthony Carter 5-yard pass from Smith (Haji-Sheikh kick)MICH 21–0
212:57UCLAWilliams 46-yard pass from Tom Ramsey (John Lee kick)MICH 21–7
2UCLARamsey 1-yard run (Lee kick)MICH 21–14
2MICHHaji-Sheikh 47-yard field goalMICH 24–14
3UCLAJoJo Townsell 6-yard pass from Ramsey (Lee kick)MICH 24–21
34:32MICHHaji-Sheikh 48-yard field goalMICH 27–21
3UCLAKevin Nelson 2-yard run (Lee kick)UCLA 28–27
4UCLALee 26-yard field goalUCLA 31–27

On September 25, 1982, Michigan lost to UCLA, 31–27, before a crowd of 105,413 at Michigan Stadium. Michigan took a 21–0 lead in the second quarter, but UCLA quarterback Tom Ramsey completed 22 of 36 passes for 311 yards and two touchdowns to lead a 28-point comeback. After a slow start in the first two games of the season, Anthony Carter caught eight passes for 123 yards and a touchdown. Steve Smith completed 14 of 37 passes and was intercepted three times. Lawrence Ricks rushed for 98 yards. Michigan drove deep into UCLA territory in the final minute and had a first-and-goal from the eight-yard line, but Smith threw three incomplete passes into the end zone before time ran out.[8]

Indiana edit

Week 4: Indiana at Michigan
1 234Total
Indiana 0 037 10
Michigan 3 777 24
  • Date: October 2
  • Location: Ann Arbor, MI
  • Game attendance: 104,385
Scoring summary
1MICHAli Haji-Sheikh 50-yard field goalMICH 3–0
2MICHSteve Smith 37-yard run (Haji-Sheikh kick)MICH 10–0
3MICHDan Rice 1-yard run (Haji-Sheikh kick)MICH 17–0
3IUD. Smith 20-yard field goalMICH 17–3
4IUDuane Gunn 8-yard pass from Babe Laufenberg (D. Smith kick)MICH 17–10
4MICHLawrence Ricks 23-yard run (Haji-Sheikh kick)MICH 24–10

On October 2, 1982, Michigan defeated Lee Corso's Indiana Hoosiers by a 24–10 score before a crowd of 104,385 at Michigan Stadium. Michigan fans booed the conservative play-calling late in the first half. Michigan ran 62 times and passed only 10 times in the game. Lawrence Ricks led the Michigan backs with 124 yards and a touchdown on 22 carries. After the game, coach Schembechler said: "The booers can go to hell."[9]

Michigan State edit

Week 5: Michigan State at Michigan
1 234Total
Michigan State 0 3014 17
Michigan 7 14100 31
  • Date: October 9
  • Location: Ann Arbor, MI
  • Game attendance: 106,113
Scoring summary
1MICHSteve Smith 2-yard run (Ali Haji-Sheikh kick)MICH 7–0
2MICHLawrence Ricks 7-yard run (Haji-Sheikh kick)MICH 14–0
2MICHCraig Dunaway 7-yard pass from Smith (Haji-Sheikh kick)MICH 21–0
2MSURalf Mojsiejenko 31-yard field goalMICH 21–3
3MICHHaji-Sheikh 27-yard field goalMICH 24–3
3MICHAnthony Carter 14-yard pass from Smith (Haji-Sheikh kick)MICH 31–3
4MSUJones 7-yard pass from John Leister (pass failed)MICH 31–9
4MSUMcClelland 4-yard run (Grant pass from Leister)MICH 31–17

On October 9, 1982, Michigan defeated Michigan State, 31–17, before a crowd of 106,113 at Michigan Stadium. Michigan quarterback Steve Smith completed 10 of 20 passes for 182 yards and two touchdowns (one to Craig Dunaway and the other to Anthony Carter). Smith also rushed for a touchdown, and Lawrence Ricks tallied 95 rushing yards and a touchdown on 19 carries. Carter's touchdown set a new Big Ten record of 31 touchdown catches, breaking the prior record of 30 held by Jade Butcher. He also set a new Michigan career record with 134 receptions, breaking the previous record of 132 held by Jack Clancy. He also moved into second place among Michigan's career scoring leaders with 206 points, trailing only Tom Harmon with 237 points. The Detroit Free Press described the Spartans as "inept, disorganized, disspirited and injured both mentally and physically."[10]

Iowa edit

Week 6: Michigan at Iowa
1 234Total
Michigan 0 12314 29
Iowa 0 007 7
Scoring summary
2MICHSafety, blocked punt out of end zoneMICH 2-0
24:54MICHAli Haji-Sheikh 44-yard field goalMICH 5-0
2MICHVince Bean 11-yard pass from Steve Smith (Haji-Sheikh kick)MICH 12-0
3MICHHaji-Sheikh 26-yard field goalMICH 15-0
4MICHRick Rogers 5-yard run (Haji-Sheikh kick)MICH 22-0
46:28MICHRogers 1-yard run (Haji-Sheikh kick)MICH 29-0
4IOWAMike Hufford 8-yard pass from Chuck Long (Nichol kick)MICH 29-7

On October 16, 1982, Michigan defeated Iowa, 29–7, before a crowd of 59,989 at Kinnick Stadium in Iowa City. After a scoreless first quarter, Michigan scored 12 points in the second quarter on a safety (Carlton Rose blocked an Iowa punt out of the end zone), a 44-yard field goal by Ali Haji-Sheikh, and an 11-yard touchdown pass from Steve Smith to split end Vince Bean. Haji-Sheikh added a second field goal in the third quarter, and tailback Rick Rogers scored two touchdowns in the fourth quarter. Lawrence Ricks gained 120 yards on 18 carries. Late in the fourth quarter, Iowa quarterback Chuck Long put the Hawkeyes on the scoreboard with an eight-yard touchdown pass to Mike Hufford. Long completed 19 of 32 passes for 220 yards.[11]

Northwestern edit

Week 7: Michigan at Northwestern
1 234Total
Michigan 7 3570 49
Northwestern 0 0014 14
  • Date: October 23
  • Location: Evanston, IL
  • Game attendance: 34,121
Scoring summary
1MICHLawrence Ricks 1-yard run (Ali Haji-Sheikh kick)MICH 7–0
2MICHSteve Smith 11-yard run (Haji-Sheikh kick)MICH 14–0
2MICHSmith 1-yard run (Haji-Sheikh kick)MICH 21–0
2MICHAnthony Carter 34-yard pass from Smith (Haji-Sheikh kick)MICH 28–0
2MICHCarter 29-yard pass from Smith (Haji-Sheikh kick)MICH 35–0
2MICHCraig Dunaway 12-yard pass from Smith (Haji-Sheikh kick)MICH 42–0
3MICHKeith Bostic 54-yard interception return (Haji-Sheikh kick)MICH 49–0
4NUSandy Schwab 1-yard run (Jolas kick)MICH 49–7
48:38NURicky Edwards 1-yard run (Jolas kick)MICH 49–14

On October 23, 1982, Michigan defeated Northwestern, 49–14, before a crowd of 34,121 at Dyche Stadium in Evanston, Illinois. Northwestern's freshman quarterback Sandy Schwab broke NCAA single-game records with 45 pass completions and 71 attempted passes, and also broke a Northwestern single-game record with 436 passing yards. Despite Schwab's numbers, Northwestern was unable to score until the fourth quarter. Michigan led, 42–0, at halftime. Michigan quarterback Steve Smith completed 10 of 12 passes for 203 yards and three touchdowns, while also rushing for 71 yards and two touchdowns. Anthony Carter caught three passes for 79 yards and two touchdowns.[12][13] With the two touchdowns, Carter became Michigan's all-time touchdown leader with 36, breaking the previous record of 34 held by Rick Leach.[13]

Minnesota edit

Week 8: Minnesota at Michigan
1 234Total
Minnesota 0 707 14
Michigan 7 24147 52
  • Date: October 30
  • Location: Ann Arbor, MI
  • Game attendance: 105,619
Scoring summary
1MICHAnthony Carter 29-yard pass from Steve Smith (Ali Haji-Sheikh kick)MICH 7-0
212:10MICHSteve Smith 6-yard run (Haji-Sheikh kick)MICH 14-0
27:55MICHDan Rice 1-yard pass from Smith (Haji-Sheikh kick)MICH 21-0
24:14MICHRick Rogers 10-yard run (Haji-Sheikh kick)MICH 28-0
2MINNDwayne McMullen 13-yard pass from Mike Hohensee (Jim Gallery kick)MICH 28-7
21:17MICHHaji-Sheikh 24-yard field goalMICH 31-7
39:42MICHCraig Dunaway 42-yard pass from S. Smith (Haji-Sheikh kick)MICH 38-7
3MICHKerry Smith 6-yard run (Haji-Sheikh kick)MICH 45-7
4MINNFrank Jacobs 3-yard run (Gallery kick)MICH 45-14
42:40MINNGreg Armstrong 17-yard pass from Dave Hall (Haji-Sheikh kick)MICH 52-14

On October 30, 1982, Michigan defeated Minnesota, 52–14, before a crowd of 105,619 at Michigan Stadium. In the first quarter, Steve Smith Smith completed a 29-yard touchdown pass to Anthony Carter. Michigan added 24 points in the second quarter and 14 more in the third quarter. Smith completed 10 of 16 passes for 159 yards and three touchdowns, and Lawrence Ricks rushed for 135 yards on 18 carries. With the win, the Wolverines retained the Little Brown Jug for a fifth consecutive year.[14]

Illinois edit

Week 9: Michigan at Illinois
1 234Total
Michigan 7 360 16
Illinois 3 700 10
Scoring summary
1ILLMike Bass 26-yard field goalILL 3–0
16:44MICHAnthony Carter 40-yard pass from Steve Smith (Ali Haji-Sheikh kick)MICH 7–3
27:31MICHHaji-Sheikh 30-yard field goalMICH 10–3
2ILLMartin 7-yard pass from Tony Eason (Bass kick)TIE 10–10
3MICHHaji-Sheikh 45-yard field goalMICH 13–10
34:12MICHHaji-Sheikh 47-yard field goalMICH 16–10

On November 6, 1982, Michigan defeated Illinois, 16–10, at Memorial Stadium in Champaign, Illinois. The crowd of 75,256 set a new Memorial Stadium record.[15] Illinois was led by All-Big Ten quarterback Tony Eason.

Illinois drove down the field after the opening kickoff and scored on a 26-yard field goal by Mike Bass. With 6:44 remaining in the first quarter, Michigan took the lead on a 40-yard touchdown pass from Steve Smith to Anthony Carter. Carter caught the ball on a crossing pattern at the 25-yard and, with a good block from Vince Bean, sprinted down the sideline to the end zone. After Evan Cooper intercepted an Eason pass near the end of the first quarter, Steve Smith led the Wolverines down the field, and Ali Haji-Sheikh kicked a 30-yard field goal. Later in the quarter, Eason threw a seven-yard touchdown pass to Oliver Martin, and the game was tied, 10–10, at halftime.[16][15]

In the third quarter, Haji-Sheikh kicked field goals of 45 and 47 yards to retake the lead at 16–10. Late in the fourth quarter, Eason led the Illini 90 yards from their own eight-yard line to Michigan's two-yard line. With 27 seconds remaining, Illinois had a fourth-and-goal from the two, but a wall of Michigan's defenders stopped tailback Dwight Beverly for no gain.[16][15]

Illinois out-gained Michigan, 515 yards to 354. Eason completed 28 of 47 passes for 272 yards, a touchdown, and two interceptions. Steve Smith completed six of 18 passes for 130 yards and a touchdown. Lawrence Ricks led Michigan's backs with 182 yards on 31 carries. Anthony Carter caught five passes for 125 yards and also ran for 17 yards.[16][15]

Purdue edit

Week 10: Purdue at Michigan
1 234Total
Purdue 0 7014 21
Michigan 14 17021 52
  • Date: November 13
  • Location: Ann Arbor, MI
  • Game attendance: 105,281
  • TV announcers (CBS): Verne Lundquist
Scoring summary
18:47MICHAnthony Carter 48-yard pass from Steve Smith (Ali Haji-Sheikh kick)MICH 7-0
1MICHLawrence Ricks 4-yard run (Haji-Sheikh kick)MICH 14-0
2MICHHaji-Sheikh 26-yard field goalMICH 17-0
2PURMel Gray 1-yard run (Clark kick)PUR 17-7
2MICHS. Smith 1-yard run (run failed)MICH 23-7
2MICHRicks 1-yard run (Carter pass from S. Smith)MICH 31-7
4PURCliff Benson 4-yard pass from Scott Campbell (Clark kick)MICH 31-14
4MICHKerry Smith 1-yard run (Haji-Sheikh kick)MICH 38-14
4MICHCarter 62-yard pass from S. Smith (Haji-Sheikh kick)MICH 45-14
4PURRick Brunner 12-yard pass from Campbell (Clark kick)MICH 45-21
4MichiganEddie Garrett 6-yard run (Haji-Sheikh kick)Michigan 52-21

On November 13, 1982, Michigan defeated Purdue, 52–21, before a crowd of 105,281 at Michigan Stadium. The game was broadcast nationally on CBS, and the win clinched the Big Ten title and Rose Bowl berth for Michigan. For the first time since 1971, the Michigan-Ohio State game did not determine the Big Ten championship.

In the first quarter, Michigan opened the scoring with a 48-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Steve Smith to flanker Anthony Carter. Still in the first quarter, Michigan drove down the field and scored on a four-yard run by tailback Lawrence Ricks. In the second quarter, Al Sincich recovered a Boilermaker fumble at Purdue's 25-yard line to set up a 26-yard field goal by Ali Haji-Sheikh. The field goal was his 12th of the year, setting a new Michigan single-season record.[17][18]

In the second quarter, Purdue's Mel Gray scored on a one-yard run to narrow Michigan's lead to 17–7. Michigan answered with a one-yard touchdown run by Steve Smith. On the next possession Gray fumbled, and Keith Bostic recovered the ball at Purdue's 33-yard line. Ricks scored from the one, and Michigan led, 31–7, at halftime.[17][18]

After a scoreless third quarter, the teams combined for 35 points in the fourth quarter. Purdue scored on a four-yard pass from Scott Campbell to Greg Benson. Marion Body intercepted a Boilermaker pass at the Purdue 23-yard line and returned it to the five-yard line. Reserve tailback Kerry Smith scored on a one-yard run. John Lott intercepted another Purdue pass, and Smith threw a 62-yard touchdown pass to Anthony Carter. Michigan led, 45–14. Freshman fullback Eddie Garrett scored Michigan's final touchdown.[17][18]

In his final game at Michigan Stadium, Anthony Carter caught three passes for 123 yards, two of the catches for touchdowns. Lawrence Ricks led Michigan's backs with a career-high 196 rushing yards on 31 carries. Steve Smith completed nine of 13 passes for 184 yards and was intercepted once. Purdue quarterback Scott Campbell completed 29 of 49 passes for 331 yards with two touchdowns and two interceptions. Purdue committed a total of six turnovers on four fumbles and the two interceptions.[17][18]

After the game, thousands of fans ran onto the field to tear down the newly reinforced and supposedly "fan resistant" goalposts. Ann Arbor police defended the goal posts, and one fan and one officer were injured in the melee that followed. Fans succeeded in tearing down the south goal post, though the north post remained. Fans carried the south goal post out of the stadium, down State Street, and to the doorstep of university president Harold Shapiro. Shapiro posed for pictures with students and the goalpost.[19]

Ohio State edit

Week 11: Michigan at Ohio State
1 234Total
Michigan 7 070 14
Ohio State 0 14010 24
Scoring summary
12:11MICHLawrence Ricks 1-yard run (Ali Haji-Sheikh kick)MICH 7–0
26:53OSUVaughn Broadnax 6-yard run (Rick Spangler kick)TIE 7–7
20:33OSUTim Spencer 2-yard run (Spangler kick)OSU 14–7
32:38MICHSteve Smith 4-yard run (Haji-Sheikh kick)Tie 14–14
46:27OSUSpencer 1-yard run (Spangler kick)OSU 21–14
43:27OSUSpangler 33-yard field goalOSU 24–14

On November 20, 1982, Michigan lost to Ohio State, 24–14, before a crowd of 90,252 at Ohio Stadium in Columbus, Ohio.

Michigan turned the ball over six times on three interceptions and three fumbles. The most costly turnover occurred in the fourth quarter with the score tied at 14–14. Michigan quarterback Steve Smith ran an option play and pitched to Anthony Carter; Carter was hit hard by two Buckeye defenders and the ball popped loose and was recovered at Michigan's 14-yard line. After the Carter fumble, Ohio State ran three plays culminating with the game-winning touchdown on a one-yard run by Tim Spencer. Michigan coach Bo Schembechler defended Carter after the game: "We pitched the ball late, poor damn kid. That's a bad deal. One of those things. Ah, shoot."[20]

An earlier fumble was the result of what Schembechler called Ohio State cheating. Ohio State linebacker Marcus Marek shouted signals, mocking the cadence of Michigan's quarterback, and causing Michigan center Tom Dixon to snap too soon. Schembechler said his staff had seen Ohio State utilize the illegal technique on film and had read about it in a Columbus newspaper story. Schembechler said he alerted the officials to the tactic before the game, but no violation was called.[20]

Smith completed 12 of 28 passes for 127 yards and was intercepted three times, while Ohio State quarterback Mike Tomczak completed 10 of 17 passes for 159 yards. Michigan running back Lawrence Ricks rushed for 110 yards and a touchdown on 27 carries, while Tim Spencer gained 124 yards and scored two touchdowns on 27 carries.[20]

1983 Rose Bowl edit

1983 Rose Bowl
1 234Total
Michigan 0 077 14
UCLA 7 377 24
Scoring summary
13:27UCLATom Ramsey 1-yard run (John Lee kick)UCLA 7–0
2UCLALee 39-yard field goalUCLA 10–0
35:16MICHEddie Garrett, one-yard pass from Dave Hall (Ali Haji-Sheikh kick)UCLA 10–7
30:12UCLADanny Andrews 9-yard run (Lee kick)UCLA 17–7
48:08UCLABlanchard Montgomery 11-yard interception return (Lee kick)UCLA 24–7
45:20MICHDan Rice, 4-yard pass from HallUCLA 24–14

On January 1, 1983, Michigan, ranked No. 19 by the AP, lost to No. 5 UCLA, 24–14, before a crowd of 104,991 at the 1983 Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California.

On Michigan's third play from scrimmage, All-Big Ten offensive tackle Rich Strenger sustained an injury to his knee and ankle and did not return to the game. After the game, Michigan coach Bo Schembechler said: "If there's one guy we couldn't lose, it was Strenger, and we lost him on the third play of the game. . . But I'm not trying to alibi, because if you're a good team, you adjust to your losses."[21]

Late in the first quarter, UCLA drove 80 yards, aided by a pass interference penalty that resulted in a first-and-goal. Tom Ramsey ran for the touchdown on a quarterback sneak from the one-yard line.

Early in the second quarter, Michigan quarterback Steve Smith led a drive to the UCLA 19-yard line, but a Smith pass was tipped up in the air and intercepted. On the next possession by Michigan, Smith suffered a separated shoulder when he was hit hard by Don Rogers after an eight-yard gain. Smith did not return to the game and was replaced at quarterback by Dave Hall. Prior to the Rose Bowl, Hall had completed seven of 14 passes, principally appearing in games where Michigan was well ahead. Hall also lacked the mobility to lead Michigan's option offense.[22]

Later in the second quarter, Michigan forced UCLA to punt from deep in its own territory, but Anthony Carter fumbled trying to grab the bouncing punt. The Bruins recovered at midfield and, seven plays later, John Lee kicked a 39-yard field goal with less than 30 seconds left in the half.[23][21]

In the third quarter, Michigan drove 47 yards, capped by a one-yard touchdown pass from Hall to fullback Eddie Garrett on fourth down. Michigan trailed by only three points with 5:15 remaining in the third quarter. UCLA then responded with an 80-yard, 13-play drive during which Ramsey completed two third-down passes. The drive ended with a nine-yard touchdown run by tailback Danny Andrews.[23][21]

Early in the fourth quarter, UCLA threatened to put the game out of reach, driving 65 yards, but the Wolverine defense held on fourth-and-goal from the one-yard line. However, when Michigan took over, Dave Hall was intercepted by Blanchard Montgomery who returned Hall's pass 11 yards for a touchdown. At that point, UCLA led by 17 points with eight minutes remaining in the game. After Montgomery's interception, Anthony Carter returned the kickoff to the 45-yard line. Hall then led the Wolverines down the field, completing a long throw to Craig Dunaway at the four-yard line, and then completing a touchdown pass to freshman fullback Dan Rice with 5:20 remaining in the game. Haji-Sheikh's attempted onside kick was grabbed by UCLA, and the Bruins ran the clock under two minutes before punting. Hall led the Wolverines to the UCLA 18-yard line, but time ran out before Michigan could advance further.[23][21]

Tom Ramsey completed 18 of 25 passes for 162 yards. For Michigan, Dave Hall completed 13 of 24 passes for 155 yards, Lawrence Ricks rushed for 88 yards on 23 carries, and Craig Dunaway caught five passes for 110 yards.[21][24]

Award season edit

Wide receiver Anthony Carter was a consensus All-American,[25] having received first-team honors from American Football Coaches Association (AFCA), Associated Press (AP), Football Writers Association of America, United Press International, Gannett News Service (GNS), Newspaper Enterprise Association (NEA), The Sporting News, and the Walter Camp Football Foundation (WCFF).

Carter also won the Chicago Tribune Silver Football award as the most valuable player in the Big Ten Conference. Carter edged out Illinois quarterback Tony Eason in close voting. Votes were cast by Big Ten coaches and officials and three representatives of the Chicago Tribune. Carter received 11 first-place votes to 10 for Eason.[26] During his career, Carter set an NCAA record with an average of 17.4 yards per touch (including receptions, rushing carries, and kick returns). He also set Big Ten records with 3,017 receiving yards, 37 touchdown receptions, and 1,548 yards on kickoff returns.[26]

Defensive back Keith Bostic was selected by both the AP and UPI as a second-team All-American.

Eight Michigan players were selected by the AP (media) and/or UPI (Big Ten coaches) as first or second-team players on the 1981 All-Big Ten Conference football team. They were: Anthony Carter (AP-1, UPI-1), Keith Bostic (AP-1, UPI-1), running back Lawrence Ricks (AP-1, UPI-1), offensive guard Stefan Humphries (AP-1, UPI-1), center Tom Dixon (AP-1, UPI-1), offensive tackle Rich Strenger (AP-1), linebacker Robert Thompson (AP-1, UPI-1), and linebacker Paul Girgash (AP-1, UPI-1). Four additional players received second-team honors: quarterback Steve Smith (AP-2), defensive lineman Winfred Carraway (UPI-2), linebacker Mike Boren (AP-2, UPI-2), and placekicker Ali Haji-Sheikh (AP-2, UPI-2).[27][28]

Team awards were presented as follows:[1]

  • Most Valuable Player: Anthony Carter
  • Meyer Morton Award: Stefan Humphries
  • John Maulbetsch Award: Mark Hammerstein
  • Frederick Matthei Award: Steve Smith
  • Arthur Robinson Scholarship Award: Craig Dunaway
  • Dick Katcher Award: Robert Thompson
  • Robert P. Ufer Award: Jerry Burgei

Personnel edit

Full roster edit

1982 Michigan Wolverines football team roster
Players Coaches
Offense
Pos. # Name Class
WR 5 Earl Allen So
FB 34 Greg Armstrong Jr
C 59 Art Balourdos So
SE 25 Vincent Bean Jr
OT 74 Bruce Brown So
FL 1 Anthony Carter (C) Sr
TE 83 Milt Carthens Jr
TB 26 Nate Davis Sr
WR 82 Ricky Davis Sr
QB 9 Dan Decker Fr
G 64 Jerry Diorio Jr
C 69 Tom Dixon Jr
TE 88 Craig Dunaway Sr
OL 72 Rick Frazer Fr
FB 32 Eddie Garrett Fr
OT 54 Tom Garrity Sr
G 58 John Ghindia So
QB 7 David Hall Jr
OL 78 Mark Hammerstein Fr
WR 22 Mickey Hanlon Sr
QB 4 Jim Harbaugh Fr
FB 33 Gary Haynes
G 76 Stefan Humphries Jr
FB 35 Jerald Ingram Sr
G 73 Doug James Jr
WR 26 Gilvanni Johnson Fr
TE 81 Eric Kattus So
C 52 Eric Kempthorn Jr
G 67 Tom Knoebel So
OL 51 Mike Krauss So
RB 38 Ben Logue Fr
WR 18 Triando Markray Fr
FB 45 Riley McPhee So
TB 41 Brian Mercer So
OL 65 John Mihic Fr
OT 79 Clay Miller So
FB 38 Joe Mosketti
OT 71 Mike Odioso So
QB 14 John Paciorek So
RB 37 Bob Perryman Fr
SE 8 Greg Powell Jr
OT 70 Ron Prusa Jr
OT 75 Jerry Quaerna Fr
RB 33 Dan Rice Fr
TB 46 Lawrence Ricks Sr
TE 92 Scott Roberts Sr
RB 20 Rick Rogers So
TE 82 Paul Schmerge Fr
C 56 Dave Simon So
RB 23 Kerry Smith Jr
QB 16 Steve Smith Jr
OT 68 Rich Strenger Sr
C 55 Larry Sweeney Jr
G 77 Bob Tabachino So
TB 27 Thomas Wilcher Fr
TE 84 Mike Wilson Jr
G 62 Dan Yarano Sr
Defense
Pos. # Name Class
ILB 33 Jeff Akers So
ILB 57 Tim Anderson Jr
DB 3 Marion Brody Sr
ILB 40 Mike Boren Jr
SS 12 Keith Bostic Sr
DT 52 Kevin Brooks So
DB 15 Jerry Burgei Sr
DB 12 Fritz Burgess Jr
DT 63 Winfred Carraway Sr
DB 30 Brad Cochran So
DB 10 Jeff Cohen Sr
DB 21 Evan Cooper Jr
DT 56 Robert Dana Jr
DT 90 Vince DeFelice Jr
DB 17 John Ferens Jr
DB 14 Tony Gant Fr
ILB 50 Paul Girgash (C) Sr
DB 9 Harry Gosier Jr
LB 62 Joe Gray So
DT 66 Mike Hammerstein So
OLB 48 Tom Hassel Jr
DB 19 Dieter Heren Fr
ILB 94 Jim Herrmann Sr
DB 2 Rich Hewlett Sr
DB 17 Ivan Hicks Fr
DB 24 Steve Johnson Fr
DB 23 Lou Kovacs Sr
OLB 93 Mike Lemirande Sr
ILB 43 Phil Lewandowski So
DB 44 John Lott Sr
OLB 80 Rodney Lyles Jr
ILB 42 Mike Mallory So
OLB 92 Jim McConville Fr
DT 96 Dave Meredith Jr
ILB 49 Andy Moeller Fr
OLB 95 Sim Nelson So
DB 22 Greg Randall Fr
ILB 45 Mike Reinhold Fr
MG 61 Nate Rogers Jr
OLB 89 Carlton Rose Jr
DT 85 Jim Scarcelli So
OLB, DT 97 Marty Shimko Fr
MG 53 Al Sincich So
OLB 99 Robert Thompson (C) Sr
OLB 91 Todd Triplett Sr
OLB 86 Greg Washington So
DB 29 Derek Woodmore Fr
Special teams
Pos. # Name Class
PK 19 Bob Bergeron Jr
P 28 Don Bracken Jr
PK 6 Ali Haji-Sheikh Sr
PK 39 Mike Melnyk Jr
PK 8 Pat Moons Fr
PK 99 Todd Schlopy Jr
Head coach
Coordinators/assistant coaches

Legend
  • (C) Team captain
  • (S) Suspended
  • (I) Ineligible
  •   Injured
  •   Redshirt

Roster

Letter winners, offense edit

Letter winners, defense edit

Letter winners, special teams edit

Professional football edit

The following players were claimed in the 1983 NFL Draft.

Player Position Round Pick NFL club
Rich Strenger Tackle 4 104 Detroit Lions
Keith Bostic Defensive back 4 109 Houston Oilers
Robert Thompson Linebacker 5 126 Houston Oilers
Craig Dunaway Tight end 5 129 Pittsburgh Steelers
Lawrence Ricks Back 9 252 Dallas Cowboys
Ali Haji-Sheikh Kicker 10 268 New York Giants
Anthony Carter Wide receiver 13 364 Miami Dolphins

[29]

Statistics edit

Rushing edit

Player Att Net Yards Yds/Att TD
Lawrence Ricks 266 1388 5.2 8
Steve Smith 83 387 4.7 9
Kerry Smith 45 368 8.2 2
Rick Rogers 65 285 4.4 4
Dan Rice 40 152 3.8 1
Brian Mercer 33 143 4.3 0

[3]

Passing edit

Player Att Comp Int Comp % Yds Yds/Comp TD
Steve Smith 227 118 13 52.0 1735 14.7 14
David Hall 38 20 3 52.6 213 10.7 3

[3]

Receiving edit

Player Recp Yds Yds/Recp TD
Anthony Carter 43 844 19.6 8
Craig Dunaway 35 488 13.9 3
Vince Bean 19 321 16.9 1
Dan Rice 14 74 5.3 2
Rick Rogers 5 57 11.4 1

[3]

Scoring edit

Player TDs XPM FGM Points
Ali Haji-Sheikh 0 41 12 77
Anthony Carter 9 0 0 54
Steve Smith 9 0 0 54
Lawrence Ricks 8 0 0 48
Rick Rogers 5 0 0 30

[3]

References edit

  1. ^ a b "1982 Football Team". Bentley Historical Library, University of Michigan. Retrieved January 13, 2020.
  2. ^ "1982 Michigan Wolverines Schedule and Results". SR/College Football. Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved January 13, 2020.
  3. ^ a b c d e "1982 Michigan Wolverines Stats". SR/College Football. Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved January 13, 2020.
  4. ^ Joe Lapointe (September 12, 1982). "U-M grinds down Wisconsin". Detroit Free Press. pp. 1H, 6H – via Newspapers.com.
  5. ^ Joe Lapointe (September 19, 1982). "Irish power jolts Michigan: Wolverines make glaring errors under the lights, 23-7". Detroit Free Press. pp. 12E – via Newspapers.com.
  6. ^ Bob Wojonowski (September 19, 1982). "Blue drive stalls; Irish wins, 23-17". The Michigan Daily. pp. 1, 10 – via Bentley Historical Library.
  7. ^ "Cochran quits". The Michigan Daily. September 26, 1982. p. 8 – via Bentley Historical Library.
  8. ^ Joe Lapointe (September 26, 1982). "U-M loses in 31-27 thriller". Detroit Free Press. p. 1H – via Newspapers.com.
  9. ^ Joe Lapointe (October 3, 1982). "U-M runs down Hoosiers: Land-based offense subdues IU, 24-10". Detroit Free Press. pp. 1H, 7H – via Newspapers.com.
  10. ^ Joe Lapointe (October 10, 1982). "Wolverines devour MSU: Carter catches a flock of U-M records in 31-17 romp". Detroit Free Press. pp. 1E, 5E – via Newspapers.com.
  11. ^ Joe Lapointe (October 17, 1982). "U-M thrashes Iowa, 29-7". Detroit Free Press. pp. 1E, 2E – via Newspapers.com.
  12. ^ Roy Damer (October 24, 1982). "45-for-71! NU quarterback has a big day – but Michigan's is even bigger". Chicago Tribune. pp. IV-1, IV-13 – via Newspapers.com.
  13. ^ a b Joe Lapointe (October 24, 1982). "U-M whips Wildcats". Detroit Free Press. pp. 1E, 6E – via Newspapers.com.
  14. ^ Joe Lapointe (October 31, 1982). "U-M smells roses, buries Gophers". Detroit Free Press. pp. 1D, 7D – via Newspapers.com.
  15. ^ a b c d Ron Pollack (November 7, 1982). "Michigan downs Illinois, 16-10: Blue halts late Illini drive before record-setting crowd". The Michigan Daily. pp. 1, 8 – via Bentley Historical Library.
  16. ^ a b c Joe Lapointe (November 7, 1982). "U-M survives by stopping last Illinois try". Detroit Free Press. pp. 1D, 9D – via Newspapers.com.
  17. ^ a b c d Joe Lapointe (November 14, 1982). "Michigan runs to the Roses: Easy victory over Purdue clinches title". Detroit Free Press. pp. 1E, 7E – via Newspapers.com.
  18. ^ a b c d Barb Barker (November 14, 1982). "Pasadena Express: 'M' clinches title with 52-21 win". The Michigan Daily. pp. 1, 9 – via Bentley Historical Library.
  19. ^ Scott Kashkin (November 14, 1982). "Thousands of jubilant fans down goalposts". The Michigan Daily. pp. 1, 2 – via Bentley Historical Library.
  20. ^ a b c Joe Lapointe (November 21, 1982). "U-M fumbles, Buckeyes win: Ohio State uses Wolverine errors in 24-14 victory". Detroit Free Press. pp. 1E, 7E – via Newspapers.com.
  21. ^ a b c d e Tracy Dodds (January 2, 1983). "A New Year... but an Old Story: UCLA Repeats Itself Against Michigan, 24-14, With Ramsey Showing the Way". Los Angeles Times – via Newspapers.com.
  22. ^ Mike Downey (January 2, 1983). "Rough-riding Rogers plants Smith, and roses, for UCLA". Detroit Free Press. p. 1C – via Newspapers.com.
  23. ^ a b c Joe Lapointe (January 2, 1983). "Wolverines take mauling from Bruins, 24-14". Detroit Free Press. pp. 1C, 6C – via Newspapers.com.
  24. ^ 1983 Rose Bowl – Michigan Bowl history. University of Michigan Athletic Department
  25. ^ "Football Award Winners" (PDF). National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). 2016. pp. 3, 12. Retrieved March 18, 2017.
  26. ^ a b Roy Damer (December 25, 1982). "Michigan's Carter wins Tribune's Silver Football". Chicago Tribune. p. III-1, III-2 – via Newspapers.com.
  27. ^ Joe Mooshil (November 30, 1982). "Carter, Bostic, Lukens Top All-Big Ten Football Team". The Blade, Toledo, Ohio (AP story). p. 26.(AP)
  28. ^ Randy Minkoff (November 23, 1982). "Michigan dominates all-Big Ten squad". Telegraph-Forum. p. Sports 9.(UPI)
  29. ^ . Pro-Football-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on December 21, 2007. Retrieved March 28, 2018.

External links edit

  • 1982 Football Team -- Bentley Historical Library, University of Michigan Athletics History

1982, michigan, wolverines, football, team, american, football, team, that, represented, university, michigan, 1982, conference, football, season, their, 14th, season, under, head, coach, schembechler, wolverines, compiled, record, against, conference, opponen. The 1982 Michigan Wolverines football team was an American football team that represented the University of Michigan in the 1982 Big Ten Conference football season In their 14th season under head coach Bo Schembechler the Wolverines compiled an 8 4 record 8 1 against conference opponents won the Big Ten championship lost to UCLA in the 1983 Rose Bowl and outscored all opponents by a total of 345 to 204 1 2 1982 Michigan Wolverines footballBig Ten championRose Bowl L 14 24 vs UCLAConferenceBig Ten ConferenceRankingCoachesNo 15Record8 4 8 1 Big Ten Head coachBo Schembechler 14th season Defensive coordinatorGary Moeller 5th season MVPAnthony CarterCaptainsAnthony Carter American football Paul Girgash Robert ThompsonHome stadiumMichigan StadiumSeasons 19811983 1982 Big Ten Conference football standings vte Conf Overall Team W L T W L T Michigan 8 1 0 8 4 0 No 12 Ohio State 7 1 0 9 3 0 Iowa 6 2 0 8 4 0 Illinois 6 3 0 7 5 0 Wisconsin 5 4 0 7 5 0 Indiana 4 5 0 5 6 0 Purdue 3 6 0 3 8 0 Northwestern 2 7 0 3 8 0 Michigan State 2 7 0 2 9 0 Minnesota 1 8 0 3 8 0 Conference championRankings from AP Poll The team s statistical leaders included tailback Lawrence Ricks with 1 388 rushing yards flanker Anthony Carter with 844 receiving yards and quarterback Steve Smith with 1 735 passing yards and 2 124 yards of total offense and placekicker Ali Haji Sheikh with 77 points scored 3 Anthony Carter was selected as a consensus first team All American and won the Chicago Tribune Silver Football award as the Big Ten s most valuable player Defensive back Keith Bostic received second team All America honors Eight Michigan players Carter Bostic running back Lawrence Ricks center Tom Dixon offensive guard Stefan Humphries offensive tackle Rich Strenger and linebackers Paul Girgash and Robert Thompson received first team honors on the 1982 All Big Ten Conference football team Contents 1 Schedule 2 Season summary 2 1 Wisconsin 2 2 Notre Dame 2 3 UCLA 2 4 Indiana 2 5 Michigan State 2 6 Iowa 2 7 Northwestern 2 8 Minnesota 2 9 Illinois 2 10 Purdue 2 11 Ohio State 2 12 1983 Rose Bowl 2 13 Award season 3 Personnel 3 1 Full roster 3 2 Letter winners offense 3 3 Letter winners defense 3 4 Letter winners special teams 3 5 Professional football 4 Statistics 4 1 Rushing 4 2 Passing 4 3 Receiving 4 4 Scoring 5 References 6 External linksSchedule editDateTimeOpponentRankSiteTVResultAttendanceSeptember 111 00 p m WisconsinNo 12Michigan StadiumAnn Arbor MIW 20 9104 932 September 189 00 p m at No 20 Notre Dame No 10Notre Dame Stadium Notre Dame IN rivalry ABCL 17 2359 075 September 251 00 p m No 12 UCLA No 20Michigan StadiumAnn Arbor MIL 27 31105 413 October 21 00 p m IndianaMichigan StadiumAnn Arbor MIW 24 10104 385 October 91 00 p m Michigan StateMichigan StadiumAnn Arbor MI rivalry W 31 17106 113 October 162 00 p m at IowaKinnick StadiumIowa City IAW 29 759 989 October 232 00 p m at NorthwesternDyche StadiumEvanston IL rivalry W 49 1434 121 October 301 00 p m Minnesota nbsp No 20Michigan StadiumAnn Arbor MI Little Brown Jug W 52 14105 619 November 612 30 p m at IllinoisNo 15Memorial StadiumChampaign IL series ABCW 16 1075 256 November 1312 30 p m PurdueNo 14Michigan StadiumAnn Arbor MICBSW 52 21105 281 November 2012 30 p m at Ohio StateNo 13Ohio StadiumColumbus OH rivalry CBSL 14 2490 252 January 1 19835 00 p m vs No 5 UCLA No 19Rose BowlPasadena CA Rose Bowl NBCL 14 24104 991 Non conference game nbsp HomecomingRankings from AP Poll released prior to the gameAll times are in Eastern timeSeason summary editWisconsin edit Week 1 Wisconsin at Michigan 1 234TotalWisconsin 9 000 9 Michigan 7 607 20 Date September 11Location Ann Arbor MIGame attendance 104 932Scoring summary18 51MICHLawrence Ricks 4 yard run Ali Haji Sheikh kick MICH 7 0 12 36WISMark Doran 32 yard field goalMICH 7 3 10 37WISRandy Wright 1 yard run kick blocked by Boren WIS 9 7 25 28MICHRick Rogers 2 yard run run failed MICH 13 9 4MICHSteve Smith 1 yard run Haji Sheikh kick MICH 20 9 On September 11 1982 Michigan defeated Wisconsin 20 9 before a crowd of 104 932 at Michigan Stadium One year earlier Wisconsin had defeated No 1 Michigan in the season opener Lawrence Ricks rushed for 153 yards on 24 carries including a four yard touchdown run Quarterback Steve Smith completed 12 of 19 passes for 107 yards and threw two interceptions Senior flanker Anthony Carter caught only one pass Wisconsin s touchdown scored with 37 seconds left in the first half followed a Smith interception at Michigan s 29 yard line Wisconsin s defense was called for five personal foul penalties and Wisconsin coach Dave McLain stated after the game that he believed the Michigan fans had intimidated the officials 4 Notre Dame edit Week 2 Michigan at Notre Dame 1 234TotalMichigan 0 0710 17 Notre Dame 3 10100 23 Date September 18Location South Bend INGame attendance 59 075Scoring summary112 38NDMike Johnston 35 yard field goalND 3 0 214 01NDLarry Moriarty 24 yard run Johnston kick ND 10 0 2NDJohnston 37 yard field goalND 13 0 3MICHAnthony Carter 72 yard punt return Ali Haji Sheikh kick ND 10 7 37 22NDJohnston 41 yard field goalND 16 7 31 55NDGreg Bell 10 yard run Johnston kick ND 23 7 4MICHHaji Sheikh 42 yard field goalND 23 10 4MICHRick Rogers 39 yard pass from Steve Smith Haji Sheikh kick ND 23 17 On September 18 1982 Michigan lost to Notre Dame 23 17 before a crowd of 59 075 at Notre Dame Stadium in South Bend Indiana It was the first night game ever played at Notre Dame Anthony Carter returned a punt 72 yards for a touchdown in the third quarter Mike Johnston kicked three field goals for Notre Dame Two fumbles by Steve Smith resulted in 10 Notre Dame points He fumbled on the first play from scrimmage leading to a Notre Dame field goal after two minutes of play 5 6 After starting the first two games of the season defensive back Brad Cochran quit the football team and left school 7 He returned to the team in 1983 and became a consensus All American in 1985 UCLA edit Week 3 UCLA at Michigan 1 234Total UCLA 0 14143 31Michigan 7 1730 27 Date September 25Location Ann Arbor MIGame attendance 105 413Scoring summary1MICHLawrence Ricks 9 yard run Ali Haji Sheikh kick MICH 7 0 2MICHSteve Smith 6 yard run Haji Sheikh kick MICH 14 0 27 31MICHAnthony Carter 5 yard pass from Smith Haji Sheikh kick MICH 21 0 212 57UCLAWilliams 46 yard pass from Tom Ramsey John Lee kick MICH 21 7 2UCLARamsey 1 yard run Lee kick MICH 21 14 2MICHHaji Sheikh 47 yard field goalMICH 24 14 3UCLAJoJo Townsell 6 yard pass from Ramsey Lee kick MICH 24 21 34 32MICHHaji Sheikh 48 yard field goalMICH 27 21 3UCLAKevin Nelson 2 yard run Lee kick UCLA 28 27 4UCLALee 26 yard field goalUCLA 31 27 On September 25 1982 Michigan lost to UCLA 31 27 before a crowd of 105 413 at Michigan Stadium Michigan took a 21 0 lead in the second quarter but UCLA quarterback Tom Ramsey completed 22 of 36 passes for 311 yards and two touchdowns to lead a 28 point comeback After a slow start in the first two games of the season Anthony Carter caught eight passes for 123 yards and a touchdown Steve Smith completed 14 of 37 passes and was intercepted three times Lawrence Ricks rushed for 98 yards Michigan drove deep into UCLA territory in the final minute and had a first and goal from the eight yard line but Smith threw three incomplete passes into the end zone before time ran out 8 Indiana edit Week 4 Indiana at Michigan 1 234TotalIndiana 0 037 10 Michigan 3 777 24 Date October 2Location Ann Arbor MIGame attendance 104 385Scoring summary1MICHAli Haji Sheikh 50 yard field goalMICH 3 0 2MICHSteve Smith 37 yard run Haji Sheikh kick MICH 10 0 3MICHDan Rice 1 yard run Haji Sheikh kick MICH 17 0 3IUD Smith 20 yard field goalMICH 17 3 4IUDuane Gunn 8 yard pass from Babe Laufenberg D Smith kick MICH 17 10 4MICHLawrence Ricks 23 yard run Haji Sheikh kick MICH 24 10 On October 2 1982 Michigan defeated Lee Corso s Indiana Hoosiers by a 24 10 score before a crowd of 104 385 at Michigan Stadium Michigan fans booed the conservative play calling late in the first half Michigan ran 62 times and passed only 10 times in the game Lawrence Ricks led the Michigan backs with 124 yards and a touchdown on 22 carries After the game coach Schembechler said The booers can go to hell 9 Michigan State edit Week 5 Michigan State at Michigan 1 234TotalMichigan State 0 3014 17 Michigan 7 14100 31 Date October 9Location Ann Arbor MIGame attendance 106 113Scoring summary1MICHSteve Smith 2 yard run Ali Haji Sheikh kick MICH 7 0 2MICHLawrence Ricks 7 yard run Haji Sheikh kick MICH 14 0 2MICHCraig Dunaway 7 yard pass from Smith Haji Sheikh kick MICH 21 0 2MSURalf Mojsiejenko 31 yard field goalMICH 21 3 3MICHHaji Sheikh 27 yard field goalMICH 24 3 3MICHAnthony Carter 14 yard pass from Smith Haji Sheikh kick MICH 31 3 4MSUJones 7 yard pass from John Leister pass failed MICH 31 9 4MSUMcClelland 4 yard run Grant pass from Leister MICH 31 17 On October 9 1982 Michigan defeated Michigan State 31 17 before a crowd of 106 113 at Michigan Stadium Michigan quarterback Steve Smith completed 10 of 20 passes for 182 yards and two touchdowns one to Craig Dunaway and the other to Anthony Carter Smith also rushed for a touchdown and Lawrence Ricks tallied 95 rushing yards and a touchdown on 19 carries Carter s touchdown set a new Big Ten record of 31 touchdown catches breaking the prior record of 30 held by Jade Butcher He also set a new Michigan career record with 134 receptions breaking the previous record of 132 held by Jack Clancy He also moved into second place among Michigan s career scoring leaders with 206 points trailing only Tom Harmon with 237 points The Detroit Free Press described the Spartans as inept disorganized disspirited and injured both mentally and physically 10 Iowa edit Week 6 Michigan at Iowa 1 234Total Michigan 0 12314 29Iowa 0 007 7 Date October 16Location Iowa City IAGame attendance 59 989Scoring summary2MICHSafety blocked punt out of end zoneMICH 2 0 24 54MICHAli Haji Sheikh 44 yard field goalMICH 5 0 2MICHVince Bean 11 yard pass from Steve Smith Haji Sheikh kick MICH 12 0 3MICHHaji Sheikh 26 yard field goalMICH 15 0 4MICHRick Rogers 5 yard run Haji Sheikh kick MICH 22 0 46 28MICHRogers 1 yard run Haji Sheikh kick MICH 29 0 4IOWAMike Hufford 8 yard pass from Chuck Long Nichol kick MICH 29 7 On October 16 1982 Michigan defeated Iowa 29 7 before a crowd of 59 989 at Kinnick Stadium in Iowa City After a scoreless first quarter Michigan scored 12 points in the second quarter on a safety Carlton Rose blocked an Iowa punt out of the end zone a 44 yard field goal by Ali Haji Sheikh and an 11 yard touchdown pass from Steve Smith to split end Vince Bean Haji Sheikh added a second field goal in the third quarter and tailback Rick Rogers scored two touchdowns in the fourth quarter Lawrence Ricks gained 120 yards on 18 carries Late in the fourth quarter Iowa quarterback Chuck Long put the Hawkeyes on the scoreboard with an eight yard touchdown pass to Mike Hufford Long completed 19 of 32 passes for 220 yards 11 Northwestern edit Week 7 Michigan at Northwestern 1 234Total Michigan 7 3570 49Northwestern 0 0014 14 Date October 23Location Evanston ILGame attendance 34 121Scoring summary1MICHLawrence Ricks 1 yard run Ali Haji Sheikh kick MICH 7 0 2MICHSteve Smith 11 yard run Haji Sheikh kick MICH 14 0 2MICHSmith 1 yard run Haji Sheikh kick MICH 21 0 2MICHAnthony Carter 34 yard pass from Smith Haji Sheikh kick MICH 28 0 2MICHCarter 29 yard pass from Smith Haji Sheikh kick MICH 35 0 2MICHCraig Dunaway 12 yard pass from Smith Haji Sheikh kick MICH 42 0 3MICHKeith Bostic 54 yard interception return Haji Sheikh kick MICH 49 0 4NUSandy Schwab 1 yard run Jolas kick MICH 49 7 48 38NURicky Edwards 1 yard run Jolas kick MICH 49 14 On October 23 1982 Michigan defeated Northwestern 49 14 before a crowd of 34 121 at Dyche Stadium in Evanston Illinois Northwestern s freshman quarterback Sandy Schwab broke NCAA single game records with 45 pass completions and 71 attempted passes and also broke a Northwestern single game record with 436 passing yards Despite Schwab s numbers Northwestern was unable to score until the fourth quarter Michigan led 42 0 at halftime Michigan quarterback Steve Smith completed 10 of 12 passes for 203 yards and three touchdowns while also rushing for 71 yards and two touchdowns Anthony Carter caught three passes for 79 yards and two touchdowns 12 13 With the two touchdowns Carter became Michigan s all time touchdown leader with 36 breaking the previous record of 34 held by Rick Leach 13 Minnesota edit Week 8 Minnesota at Michigan 1 234TotalMinnesota 0 707 14 Michigan 7 24147 52 Date October 30Location Ann Arbor MIGame attendance 105 619Scoring summary1MICHAnthony Carter 29 yard pass from Steve Smith Ali Haji Sheikh kick MICH 7 0 212 10MICHSteve Smith 6 yard run Haji Sheikh kick MICH 14 0 27 55MICHDan Rice 1 yard pass from Smith Haji Sheikh kick MICH 21 0 24 14MICHRick Rogers 10 yard run Haji Sheikh kick MICH 28 0 2MINNDwayne McMullen 13 yard pass from Mike Hohensee Jim Gallery kick MICH 28 7 21 17MICHHaji Sheikh 24 yard field goalMICH 31 7 39 42MICHCraig Dunaway 42 yard pass from S Smith Haji Sheikh kick MICH 38 7 3MICHKerry Smith 6 yard run Haji Sheikh kick MICH 45 7 4MINNFrank Jacobs 3 yard run Gallery kick MICH 45 14 42 40MINNGreg Armstrong 17 yard pass from Dave Hall Haji Sheikh kick MICH 52 14 On October 30 1982 Michigan defeated Minnesota 52 14 before a crowd of 105 619 at Michigan Stadium In the first quarter Steve Smith Smith completed a 29 yard touchdown pass to Anthony Carter Michigan added 24 points in the second quarter and 14 more in the third quarter Smith completed 10 of 16 passes for 159 yards and three touchdowns and Lawrence Ricks rushed for 135 yards on 18 carries With the win the Wolverines retained the Little Brown Jug for a fifth consecutive year 14 Illinois edit Week 9 Michigan at Illinois 1 234Total Michigan 7 360 16Illinois 3 700 10 Date November 6Location Champaign ILGame attendance 75 256TV announcers ABC Keith Jackson Frank BroylesScoring summary1ILLMike Bass 26 yard field goalILL 3 0 16 44MICHAnthony Carter 40 yard pass from Steve Smith Ali Haji Sheikh kick MICH 7 3 27 31MICHHaji Sheikh 30 yard field goalMICH 10 3 2ILLMartin 7 yard pass from Tony Eason Bass kick TIE 10 10 3MICHHaji Sheikh 45 yard field goalMICH 13 10 34 12MICHHaji Sheikh 47 yard field goalMICH 16 10 On November 6 1982 Michigan defeated Illinois 16 10 at Memorial Stadium in Champaign Illinois The crowd of 75 256 set a new Memorial Stadium record 15 Illinois was led by All Big Ten quarterback Tony Eason Illinois drove down the field after the opening kickoff and scored on a 26 yard field goal by Mike Bass With 6 44 remaining in the first quarter Michigan took the lead on a 40 yard touchdown pass from Steve Smith to Anthony Carter Carter caught the ball on a crossing pattern at the 25 yard and with a good block from Vince Bean sprinted down the sideline to the end zone After Evan Cooper intercepted an Eason pass near the end of the first quarter Steve Smith led the Wolverines down the field and Ali Haji Sheikh kicked a 30 yard field goal Later in the quarter Eason threw a seven yard touchdown pass to Oliver Martin and the game was tied 10 10 at halftime 16 15 In the third quarter Haji Sheikh kicked field goals of 45 and 47 yards to retake the lead at 16 10 Late in the fourth quarter Eason led the Illini 90 yards from their own eight yard line to Michigan s two yard line With 27 seconds remaining Illinois had a fourth and goal from the two but a wall of Michigan s defenders stopped tailback Dwight Beverly for no gain 16 15 Illinois out gained Michigan 515 yards to 354 Eason completed 28 of 47 passes for 272 yards a touchdown and two interceptions Steve Smith completed six of 18 passes for 130 yards and a touchdown Lawrence Ricks led Michigan s backs with 182 yards on 31 carries Anthony Carter caught five passes for 125 yards and also ran for 17 yards 16 15 Purdue edit Week 10 Purdue at Michigan 1 234TotalPurdue 0 7014 21 Michigan 14 17021 52 Date November 13Location Ann Arbor MIGame attendance 105 281TV announcers CBS Verne LundquistScoring summary18 47MICHAnthony Carter 48 yard pass from Steve Smith Ali Haji Sheikh kick MICH 7 0 1MICHLawrence Ricks 4 yard run Haji Sheikh kick MICH 14 0 2MICHHaji Sheikh 26 yard field goalMICH 17 0 2PURMel Gray 1 yard run Clark kick PUR 17 7 2MICHS Smith 1 yard run run failed MICH 23 7 2MICHRicks 1 yard run Carter pass from S Smith MICH 31 7 4PURCliff Benson 4 yard pass from Scott Campbell Clark kick MICH 31 14 4MICHKerry Smith 1 yard run Haji Sheikh kick MICH 38 14 4MICHCarter 62 yard pass from S Smith Haji Sheikh kick MICH 45 14 4PURRick Brunner 12 yard pass from Campbell Clark kick MICH 45 21 4MichiganEddie Garrett 6 yard run Haji Sheikh kick Michigan 52 21 On November 13 1982 Michigan defeated Purdue 52 21 before a crowd of 105 281 at Michigan Stadium The game was broadcast nationally on CBS and the win clinched the Big Ten title and Rose Bowl berth for Michigan For the first time since 1971 the Michigan Ohio State game did not determine the Big Ten championship In the first quarter Michigan opened the scoring with a 48 yard touchdown pass from quarterback Steve Smith to flanker Anthony Carter Still in the first quarter Michigan drove down the field and scored on a four yard run by tailback Lawrence Ricks In the second quarter Al Sincich recovered a Boilermaker fumble at Purdue s 25 yard line to set up a 26 yard field goal by Ali Haji Sheikh The field goal was his 12th of the year setting a new Michigan single season record 17 18 In the second quarter Purdue s Mel Gray scored on a one yard run to narrow Michigan s lead to 17 7 Michigan answered with a one yard touchdown run by Steve Smith On the next possession Gray fumbled and Keith Bostic recovered the ball at Purdue s 33 yard line Ricks scored from the one and Michigan led 31 7 at halftime 17 18 After a scoreless third quarter the teams combined for 35 points in the fourth quarter Purdue scored on a four yard pass from Scott Campbell to Greg Benson Marion Body intercepted a Boilermaker pass at the Purdue 23 yard line and returned it to the five yard line Reserve tailback Kerry Smith scored on a one yard run John Lott intercepted another Purdue pass and Smith threw a 62 yard touchdown pass to Anthony Carter Michigan led 45 14 Freshman fullback Eddie Garrett scored Michigan s final touchdown 17 18 In his final game at Michigan Stadium Anthony Carter caught three passes for 123 yards two of the catches for touchdowns Lawrence Ricks led Michigan s backs with a career high 196 rushing yards on 31 carries Steve Smith completed nine of 13 passes for 184 yards and was intercepted once Purdue quarterback Scott Campbell completed 29 of 49 passes for 331 yards with two touchdowns and two interceptions Purdue committed a total of six turnovers on four fumbles and the two interceptions 17 18 After the game thousands of fans ran onto the field to tear down the newly reinforced and supposedly fan resistant goalposts Ann Arbor police defended the goal posts and one fan and one officer were injured in the melee that followed Fans succeeded in tearing down the south goal post though the north post remained Fans carried the south goal post out of the stadium down State Street and to the doorstep of university president Harold Shapiro Shapiro posed for pictures with students and the goalpost 19 Ohio State edit Week 11 Michigan at Ohio State 1 234TotalMichigan 7 070 14 Ohio State 0 14010 24 Date November 20Location Columbus OHGame start 12 30 p m ESTGame attendance 90 252Game weather Rain 65 F 18 C Referee Tom QuinnTV announcers CBS Gary Bender Pat HadenScoring summary12 11MICHLawrence Ricks 1 yard run Ali Haji Sheikh kick MICH 7 0 26 53OSUVaughn Broadnax 6 yard run Rick Spangler kick TIE 7 7 20 33OSUTim Spencer 2 yard run Spangler kick OSU 14 7 32 38MICHSteve Smith 4 yard run Haji Sheikh kick Tie 14 14 46 27OSUSpencer 1 yard run Spangler kick OSU 21 14 43 27OSUSpangler 33 yard field goalOSU 24 14 On November 20 1982 Michigan lost to Ohio State 24 14 before a crowd of 90 252 at Ohio Stadium in Columbus Ohio Michigan turned the ball over six times on three interceptions and three fumbles The most costly turnover occurred in the fourth quarter with the score tied at 14 14 Michigan quarterback Steve Smith ran an option play and pitched to Anthony Carter Carter was hit hard by two Buckeye defenders and the ball popped loose and was recovered at Michigan s 14 yard line After the Carter fumble Ohio State ran three plays culminating with the game winning touchdown on a one yard run by Tim Spencer Michigan coach Bo Schembechler defended Carter after the game We pitched the ball late poor damn kid That s a bad deal One of those things Ah shoot 20 An earlier fumble was the result of what Schembechler called Ohio State cheating Ohio State linebacker Marcus Marek shouted signals mocking the cadence of Michigan s quarterback and causing Michigan center Tom Dixon to snap too soon Schembechler said his staff had seen Ohio State utilize the illegal technique on film and had read about it in a Columbus newspaper story Schembechler said he alerted the officials to the tactic before the game but no violation was called 20 Smith completed 12 of 28 passes for 127 yards and was intercepted three times while Ohio State quarterback Mike Tomczak completed 10 of 17 passes for 159 yards Michigan running back Lawrence Ricks rushed for 110 yards and a touchdown on 27 carries while Tim Spencer gained 124 yards and scored two touchdowns on 27 carries 20 1983 Rose Bowl edit Main article 1983 Rose Bowl 1983 Rose Bowl 1 234TotalMichigan 0 077 14 UCLA 7 377 24 Date January 1Location Pasadena CAGame attendance 104 991Game weather Sunny 79 F 26 C TV announcers NBC Dick Enberg Merlin Olsen Bill MacateeScoring summary13 27UCLATom Ramsey 1 yard run John Lee kick UCLA 7 0 2UCLALee 39 yard field goalUCLA 10 0 35 16MICHEddie Garrett one yard pass from Dave Hall Ali Haji Sheikh kick UCLA 10 7 30 12UCLADanny Andrews 9 yard run Lee kick UCLA 17 7 48 08UCLABlanchard Montgomery 11 yard interception return Lee kick UCLA 24 7 45 20MICHDan Rice 4 yard pass from HallUCLA 24 14 On January 1 1983 Michigan ranked No 19 by the AP lost to No 5 UCLA 24 14 before a crowd of 104 991 at the 1983 Rose Bowl in Pasadena California On Michigan s third play from scrimmage All Big Ten offensive tackle Rich Strenger sustained an injury to his knee and ankle and did not return to the game After the game Michigan coach Bo Schembechler said If there s one guy we couldn t lose it was Strenger and we lost him on the third play of the game But I m not trying to alibi because if you re a good team you adjust to your losses 21 Late in the first quarter UCLA drove 80 yards aided by a pass interference penalty that resulted in a first and goal Tom Ramsey ran for the touchdown on a quarterback sneak from the one yard line Early in the second quarter Michigan quarterback Steve Smith led a drive to the UCLA 19 yard line but a Smith pass was tipped up in the air and intercepted On the next possession by Michigan Smith suffered a separated shoulder when he was hit hard by Don Rogers after an eight yard gain Smith did not return to the game and was replaced at quarterback by Dave Hall Prior to the Rose Bowl Hall had completed seven of 14 passes principally appearing in games where Michigan was well ahead Hall also lacked the mobility to lead Michigan s option offense 22 Later in the second quarter Michigan forced UCLA to punt from deep in its own territory but Anthony Carter fumbled trying to grab the bouncing punt The Bruins recovered at midfield and seven plays later John Lee kicked a 39 yard field goal with less than 30 seconds left in the half 23 21 In the third quarter Michigan drove 47 yards capped by a one yard touchdown pass from Hall to fullback Eddie Garrett on fourth down Michigan trailed by only three points with 5 15 remaining in the third quarter UCLA then responded with an 80 yard 13 play drive during which Ramsey completed two third down passes The drive ended with a nine yard touchdown run by tailback Danny Andrews 23 21 Early in the fourth quarter UCLA threatened to put the game out of reach driving 65 yards but the Wolverine defense held on fourth and goal from the one yard line However when Michigan took over Dave Hall was intercepted by Blanchard Montgomery who returned Hall s pass 11 yards for a touchdown At that point UCLA led by 17 points with eight minutes remaining in the game After Montgomery s interception Anthony Carter returned the kickoff to the 45 yard line Hall then led the Wolverines down the field completing a long throw to Craig Dunaway at the four yard line and then completing a touchdown pass to freshman fullback Dan Rice with 5 20 remaining in the game Haji Sheikh s attempted onside kick was grabbed by UCLA and the Bruins ran the clock under two minutes before punting Hall led the Wolverines to the UCLA 18 yard line but time ran out before Michigan could advance further 23 21 Tom Ramsey completed 18 of 25 passes for 162 yards For Michigan Dave Hall completed 13 of 24 passes for 155 yards Lawrence Ricks rushed for 88 yards on 23 carries and Craig Dunaway caught five passes for 110 yards 21 24 Award season edit Wide receiver Anthony Carter was a consensus All American 25 having received first team honors from American Football Coaches Association AFCA Associated Press AP Football Writers Association of America United Press International Gannett News Service GNS Newspaper Enterprise Association NEA The Sporting News and the Walter Camp Football Foundation WCFF Carter also won the Chicago Tribune Silver Football award as the most valuable player in the Big Ten Conference Carter edged out Illinois quarterback Tony Eason in close voting Votes were cast by Big Ten coaches and officials and three representatives of the Chicago Tribune Carter received 11 first place votes to 10 for Eason 26 During his career Carter set an NCAA record with an average of 17 4 yards per touch including receptions rushing carries and kick returns He also set Big Ten records with 3 017 receiving yards 37 touchdown receptions and 1 548 yards on kickoff returns 26 Defensive back Keith Bostic was selected by both the AP and UPI as a second team All American Eight Michigan players were selected by the AP media and or UPI Big Ten coaches as first or second team players on the 1981 All Big Ten Conference football team They were Anthony Carter AP 1 UPI 1 Keith Bostic AP 1 UPI 1 running back Lawrence Ricks AP 1 UPI 1 offensive guard Stefan Humphries AP 1 UPI 1 center Tom Dixon AP 1 UPI 1 offensive tackle Rich Strenger AP 1 linebacker Robert Thompson AP 1 UPI 1 and linebacker Paul Girgash AP 1 UPI 1 Four additional players received second team honors quarterback Steve Smith AP 2 defensive lineman Winfred Carraway UPI 2 linebacker Mike Boren AP 2 UPI 2 and placekicker Ali Haji Sheikh AP 2 UPI 2 27 28 Team awards were presented as follows 1 Most Valuable Player Anthony Carter Meyer Morton Award Stefan Humphries John Maulbetsch Award Mark Hammerstein Frederick Matthei Award Steve Smith Arthur Robinson Scholarship Award Craig Dunaway Dick Katcher Award Robert Thompson Robert P Ufer Award Jerry BurgeiPersonnel editFull roster edit 1982 Michigan Wolverines football team roster Players Coaches Offense Pos Name Class WR 5 Earl Allen So FB 34 Greg Armstrong Jr C 59 Art Balourdos So SE 25 Vincent Bean Jr OT 74 Bruce Brown So FL 1 Anthony Carter C Sr TE 83 Milt Carthens Jr TB 26 Nate Davis Sr WR 82 Ricky Davis Sr QB 9 Dan Decker Fr G 64 Jerry Diorio Jr C 69 Tom Dixon Jr TE 88 Craig Dunaway Sr OL 72 Rick Frazer Fr FB 32 Eddie Garrett Fr OT 54 Tom Garrity Sr G 58 John Ghindia So QB 7 David Hall Jr OL 78 Mark Hammerstein Fr WR 22 Mickey Hanlon Sr QB 4 Jim Harbaugh Fr FB 33 Gary Haynes G 76 Stefan Humphries Jr FB 35 Jerald Ingram Sr G 73 Doug James Jr WR 26 Gilvanni Johnson Fr TE 81 Eric Kattus So C 52 Eric Kempthorn Jr G 67 Tom Knoebel So OL 51 Mike Krauss So RB 38 Ben Logue Fr WR 18 Triando Markray Fr FB 45 Riley McPhee So TB 41 Brian Mercer So OL 65 John Mihic Fr OT 79 Clay Miller So FB 38 Joe Mosketti OT 71 Mike Odioso So QB 14 John Paciorek So RB 37 Bob Perryman Fr SE 8 Greg Powell Jr OT 70 Ron Prusa Jr OT 75 Jerry Quaerna Fr RB 33 Dan Rice Fr TB 46 Lawrence Ricks Sr TE 92 Scott Roberts Sr RB 20 Rick Rogers So TE 82 Paul Schmerge Fr C 56 Dave Simon So RB 23 Kerry Smith Jr QB 16 Steve Smith Jr OT 68 Rich Strenger Sr C 55 Larry Sweeney Jr G 77 Bob Tabachino So TB 27 Thomas Wilcher Fr TE 84 Mike Wilson Jr G 62 Dan Yarano Sr Defense Pos Name Class ILB 33 Jeff Akers So ILB 57 Tim Anderson Jr DB 3 Marion Brody Sr ILB 40 Mike Boren Jr SS 12 Keith Bostic Sr DT 52 Kevin Brooks So DB 15 Jerry Burgei Sr DB 12 Fritz Burgess Jr DT 63 Winfred Carraway Sr DB 30 Brad Cochran So DB 10 Jeff Cohen Sr DB 21 Evan Cooper Jr DT 56 Robert Dana Jr DT 90 Vince DeFelice Jr DB 17 John Ferens Jr DB 14 Tony Gant Fr ILB 50 Paul Girgash C Sr DB 9 Harry Gosier Jr LB 62 Joe Gray So DT 66 Mike Hammerstein So OLB 48 Tom Hassel Jr DB 19 Dieter Heren Fr ILB 94 Jim Herrmann Sr DB 2 Rich Hewlett Sr DB 17 Ivan Hicks Fr DB 24 Steve Johnson Fr DB 23 Lou Kovacs Sr OLB 93 Mike Lemirande Sr ILB 43 Phil Lewandowski So DB 44 John Lott Sr OLB 80 Rodney Lyles Jr ILB 42 Mike Mallory So OLB 92 Jim McConville Fr DT 96 Dave Meredith Jr ILB 49 Andy Moeller Fr OLB 95 Sim Nelson So DB 22 Greg Randall Fr ILB 45 Mike Reinhold Fr MG 61 Nate Rogers Jr OLB 89 Carlton Rose Jr DT 85 Jim Scarcelli So OLB DT 97 Marty Shimko Fr MG 53 Al Sincich So OLB 99 Robert Thompson C Sr OLB 91 Todd Triplett Sr OLB 86 Greg Washington So DB 29 Derek Woodmore Fr Special teams Pos Name Class PK 19 Bob Bergeron Jr P 28 Don Bracken Jr PK 6 Ali Haji Sheikh Sr PK 39 Mike Melnyk Jr PK 8 Pat Moons Fr PK 99 Todd Schlopy Jr Head coach Bo Schembechler Coordinators assistant coaches Tirrel Burton Lloyd Carr Bob Chmiel Jerry Hanlon Jerry Meter Gary Moeller Paul Schudel Bob Thornbladh Elliot Uzelac Milan Vooletich Legend C Team captain S Suspended I Ineligible nbsp Injured nbsp Redshirt Roster Letter winners offense edit Greg Armstrong fullback junior Middletown Ohio started 2 games at fullback Art Balourdos center sophomore Chicago Illinois started 1 game at right offensive guard Vincent Bean split end junior Southfield Michigan started all 12 games at split end Anthony Carter flanker senior Riviera Beach Florida started all 12 games at flanker Milt Carthens tight end junior Pontiac Michigan J Nathaniel Davis tailback senior Jamestown New York Rickey Davis wide receiver senior Detroit Michigan Jerry Diorio offensive guard junior Youngstown Ohio started 6 games at right offensive guard Tom Dixon center junior Fort Wayne Indiana started all 12 games at center Craig Dunaway tight end senior Pittsburgh Pennsylvania started all 12 games at tight end Joseph English Detroit Michigan Eddie Garrett fullback freshman Milwaukee Wisconsin started 1 game at fullback Tom Garrity offensive tackle senior Grafton Wisconsin started 5 games at right offensive tackle David Hall quarterback junior Livonia Michigan Mark Hammerstein offensive line freshman Wapakoneta Ohio Mickey Hanlon wide receiver senior Ann Arbor Michigan Gary Duke Haymes fullback Bellevue Ohio Stefan Humphries offensive guard junior Broward Florida started all 12 games at left offensive guard Jerald Ingram fullback junior Beaver Pennsylvania Doug James offensive guard junior Louisville Kentucky started 6 games at right offensive tackle 5 games at right offensive guard Eric Kattus tight end sophomore Cincinnati Ohio John Lott defensive back senior Masury Ohio started 3 games at weak side cornerback 1 game at strong side cornerback Brian Mercer tailback sophomore Cincinnati Ohio Clay Miller offensive tackle sophomore Norman Oklahoma started 1 game at right offensive tackle Joseph S Mosketti fullback Hamilton Ohio Dan Rice running back freshman Roxbury Massachusetts started 9 games at fullback Lawrence Ricks tailback senior Barberton Ohio started all 12 games at tailback Scott Roberts tight end senior Miami Florida Rick Rogers running back sophomore Inkster Michigan Kerry Smith running back junior Grand Rapids Michigan Steve Smith quarterback junior Grand Blanc Michigan started all 12 games at quarterback Rich Strenger offensive tackle senior Grafton Wisconsin started all 12 games at left offensive tackle Larry Sweeney center junior Alma Michigan Letter winners defense edit Timothy Anderson inside linebacker junior Ann Arbor Michigan Marion Body defensive back senior Detroit Michigan started 5 games at weak side cornerback Mike Boren inside linebacker junior Columbus Ohio started all 12 games at inside linebacker Keith Bostic strong safety senior Ann Arbor Michigan started all 12 games at strong safety Kevin Brooks defensive tackle sophomore Detroit Michigan started 7 games at defensive tackle Jerry Burgei defensive back senior Ottawa Ohio started all 12 games 11 at strong side cornerback 1 at weak side cornerback Fritz Burgess defensive back junior Pasadena California Winfred Carraway defensive tackle senior Detroit Michigan started all 12 games at defensive tackle Brad Cochran defensive back sophomore Royal Oak Michigan started 2 games at weak side cornerback Jeff Cohen defensive back senior Farmington Hills Michigan Evan Cooper defensive back junior Miami Florida started all 12 games at free safety Vincent DeFelice defensive tackle junior Trenton Michigan John Ferens defensive back junior Toledo Ohio Tony Gant linebacker freshman Fremont Ohio started 1 game at weak side cornerback Paul Girgash linebacker senior Lakewood Ohio started all 12 games at inside linebacker Joe Gray linebacker sophomore Detroit Michigan Mike Hammerstein defensive tackle sophomore Wapakoneta Ohio started 1 game at defensive tackle Thomas J Hassel outside linebacker junior Cincinnati Ohio started 1 game at outside linebacker Dieter Heren defensive back freshman Fort Wayne Indiana Jim Herrmann inside linebacker senior Dearborn Heights Michigan Rich Hewlett defensive back senior Plymouth Michigan Louis Kovacs defensive back senior Toledo Ohio father of 2012 team co captain Jordan Kovacs Mike Lemirande outside linebacker senior Grafton Wisconsin John Lott defensive back senior Masury Ohio started 3 games at weak side cornerback 1 game at strong side cornerback Rodney Lyles outside linebacker junior Miami Florida Mike Mallory inside linebacker sophomore DeKalb Illinois Dave Meredith defensive tackle junior Sterling Heights Michigan started 4 games at defensive tackle Andy Moeller inside linebacker freshman Ann Arbor Michigan Sim Nelson outside linebacker sophomore Fort Wayne Indiana Nathaniel Rodgers middle guard junior Warren Ohio Carlton Rose outside linebacker junior Ft Lauderdale Florida started 11 games at outside linebacker Alan Sincich middle guard sophomore Cleveland Ohio started all 12 games at middle guard Robert Thompson outside linebacker senior Blue Island Illinois started all 12 games at outside linebacker Todd Triplett outside linebacker senior Detroit Michigan Letter winners special teams edit Don Bracken punter junior Thermopolis Wyoming Ali Haji Sheikh place kicker senior Arlington Texas Professional football edit The following players were claimed in the 1983 NFL Draft Player Position Round Pick NFL club Rich Strenger Tackle 4 104 Detroit Lions Keith Bostic Defensive back 4 109 Houston Oilers Robert Thompson Linebacker 5 126 Houston Oilers Craig Dunaway Tight end 5 129 Pittsburgh Steelers Lawrence Ricks Back 9 252 Dallas Cowboys Ali Haji Sheikh Kicker 10 268 New York Giants Anthony Carter Wide receiver 13 364 Miami Dolphins 29 Statistics editRushing edit Player Att Net Yards Yds Att TD Lawrence Ricks 266 1388 5 2 8 Steve Smith 83 387 4 7 9 Kerry Smith 45 368 8 2 2 Rick Rogers 65 285 4 4 4 Dan Rice 40 152 3 8 1 Brian Mercer 33 143 4 3 0 3 Passing edit Player Att Comp Int Comp Yds Yds Comp TD Steve Smith 227 118 13 52 0 1735 14 7 14 David Hall 38 20 3 52 6 213 10 7 3 3 Receiving edit Player Recp Yds Yds Recp TD Anthony Carter 43 844 19 6 8 Craig Dunaway 35 488 13 9 3 Vince Bean 19 321 16 9 1 Dan Rice 14 74 5 3 2 Rick Rogers 5 57 11 4 1 3 Scoring edit Player TDs XPM FGM Points Ali Haji Sheikh 0 41 12 77 Anthony Carter 9 0 0 54 Steve Smith 9 0 0 54 Lawrence Ricks 8 0 0 48 Rick Rogers 5 0 0 30 3 References edit a b 1982 Football Team Bentley Historical Library University of Michigan Retrieved January 13 2020 1982 Michigan Wolverines Schedule and Results SR College Football Sports Reference LLC Retrieved January 13 2020 a b c d e 1982 Michigan Wolverines Stats SR College Football Sports Reference LLC Retrieved January 13 2020 Joe Lapointe September 12 1982 U M grinds down Wisconsin Detroit Free Press pp 1H 6H via Newspapers com Joe Lapointe September 19 1982 Irish power jolts Michigan Wolverines make glaring errors under the lights 23 7 Detroit Free Press pp 12E via Newspapers com Bob Wojonowski September 19 1982 Blue drive stalls Irish wins 23 17 The Michigan Daily pp 1 10 via Bentley Historical Library Cochran quits The Michigan Daily September 26 1982 p 8 via Bentley Historical Library Joe Lapointe September 26 1982 U M loses in 31 27 thriller Detroit Free Press p 1H via Newspapers com Joe Lapointe October 3 1982 U M runs down Hoosiers Land based offense subdues IU 24 10 Detroit Free Press pp 1H 7H via Newspapers com Joe Lapointe October 10 1982 Wolverines devour MSU Carter catches a flock of U M records in 31 17 romp Detroit Free Press pp 1E 5E via Newspapers com Joe Lapointe October 17 1982 U M thrashes Iowa 29 7 Detroit Free Press pp 1E 2E via Newspapers com Roy Damer October 24 1982 45 for 71 NU quarterback has a big day but Michigan s is even bigger Chicago Tribune pp IV 1 IV 13 via Newspapers com a b Joe Lapointe October 24 1982 U M whips Wildcats Detroit Free Press pp 1E 6E via Newspapers com Joe Lapointe October 31 1982 U M smells roses buries Gophers Detroit Free Press pp 1D 7D via Newspapers com a b c d Ron Pollack November 7 1982 Michigan downs Illinois 16 10 Blue halts late Illini drive before record setting crowd The Michigan Daily pp 1 8 via Bentley Historical Library a b c Joe Lapointe November 7 1982 U M survives by stopping last Illinois try Detroit Free Press pp 1D 9D via Newspapers com a b c d Joe Lapointe November 14 1982 Michigan runs to the Roses Easy victory over Purdue clinches title Detroit Free Press pp 1E 7E via Newspapers com a b c d Barb Barker November 14 1982 Pasadena Express M clinches title with 52 21 win The Michigan Daily pp 1 9 via Bentley Historical Library Scott Kashkin November 14 1982 Thousands of jubilant fans down goalposts The Michigan Daily pp 1 2 via Bentley Historical Library a b c Joe Lapointe November 21 1982 U M fumbles Buckeyes win Ohio State uses Wolverine errors in 24 14 victory Detroit Free Press pp 1E 7E via Newspapers com a b c d e Tracy Dodds January 2 1983 A New Year but an Old Story UCLA Repeats Itself Against Michigan 24 14 With Ramsey Showing the Way Los Angeles Times via Newspapers com Mike Downey January 2 1983 Rough riding Rogers plants Smith and roses for UCLA Detroit Free Press p 1C via Newspapers com a b c Joe Lapointe January 2 1983 Wolverines take mauling from Bruins 24 14 Detroit Free Press pp 1C 6C via Newspapers com 1983 Rose Bowl Michigan Bowl history University of Michigan Athletic Department Football Award Winners PDF National Collegiate Athletic Association NCAA 2016 pp 3 12 Retrieved March 18 2017 a b Roy Damer December 25 1982 Michigan s Carter wins Tribune s Silver Football Chicago Tribune p III 1 III 2 via Newspapers com Joe Mooshil November 30 1982 Carter Bostic Lukens Top All Big Ten Football Team The Blade Toledo Ohio AP story p 26 AP Randy Minkoff November 23 1982 Michigan dominates all Big Ten squad Telegraph Forum p Sports 9 UPI 1983 NFL Draft Pro Football Reference com Sports Reference LLC Archived from the original on December 21 2007 Retrieved March 28 2018 External links edit1982 Football Team Bentley Historical Library University of Michigan Athletics History Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1982 Michigan Wolverines football team amp oldid 1204273973, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.