Unbeaten Alabama Wishbone lacks experience Alabama's Wishbone-T offense is not as perfected as the Wishbone of Oklahoma. The underlying principle of the Wishbone supplies the reasoning. " To be effective, the Wishbone has to be run with perfection. It takes experience to run the formation properly. OK L AHOMA first experimented with the Wishbone during the middle of the 1970 season. Alabama waited until the opening of the 1971 campaign to run the formation. The Crimson Tide, however, lined up. in the powerhouse backfield formation in its opening game against Southern California and scored a 17-10 victory. Although not as explosive as Oklahoma, Alabama's Wishbone hasn't been beaten in 1 1 appearances. "It's natural that Alabama doesn't run the offense with the same perfection as Oklahoma," said Nebraska defensive line coach Monte Kiffin, "but it's not really a fair comparison because Alabama runs a different type of Wishbone." OKLAHOMA'S Wishbone concentrates on the outside attack. Alabama thinks in terms of running up the middle. "Oklahoma has the quickest set of backs in the country," says Alabama coach Bear Bryant. "It's only normal for them to take advantage of their talent and run wide. Our runners aren't as fast, but I think that they're harder runners and get better yardage up the middle." The best of the 'Bama backs is senior halfback Johnny Musso. Musso, who was fourth f I rnrnhnckorc Take the Palmetto Expressway direct to Tropical w V. V WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER in the voting for the Heisman Trophy this year, is a punishing runner and has gained 1,103 yards in 191 carries this season. "HE'S A LOT like Jeff Kinney," said Nebraska coach Bob Devaney of Musso. "He does a good . job of reading blocks and is always fighting for the extra yard." Musso's yardage has come from the Wishbone formation, but he's also gained several yards when the Crimson Tide lines up in an I formation like Nebraska. Alabama sometimes lines up in the Wishbone and then switches to the I formation. Joe LaBue, Alabama's right halfback, moves to a wide receiver on the right side and Musso, the left halfback, shifts behind the fullback to form the I-formation. . "THEY'RE just trying to shake up your defense," says Husker linebacker coach John Melton. "They don't let you adjust to just playing the Wishbone." While in the I formation, Alabama has two wide receivers which makes the Crimson Tide more of a passing threat than Oklahoma is. And although Alabama quarterback Terry Davis has thrown just 66 passes this season, his accuracy ranks as one of the best in the nation. Davis has completed 42 of 66 passes for a 63 per cent completion average. Those 42 completions have been good for 452 yards and eight touchdowns. DAVIS, a junior who was red-shirted two years ago, isn't considered a master of the Wishbone like Oklahoma's Jack Mildren. Nonetheless, Davis has been credited with much of welcome 15, 1971 Alabama's success this year because of his ability to direct the Tide's attack. Davis has carried the ball 138 times this season for 543 yards. . . .a 3.3 yards per carry average. Sophomore Ellis Beck and junior Steve Bisceglia fill the fullback slot. BISCEGLIA, the probable starter in the Orange Bowl, has gained 473 yards on only 80 carries. Beck has rolled for 558 yards in 1 10 carries. The .'71 'Bama team isn't like the teams of five or six Huskers defend Classic crown The Husker Classic opens at the Nebraska Coliseum Friday with LaSalle, Baylor and Idaho joining host Nebraska for the second annual event. The Cornhuskers, defending champions after stopping Colorado State, 69-65, in the title game of last year's inaugural Classic, will open defense of their crown at 9 p.m. Friday against Idaho. The tourney opener pits Baylor against LaSalle at 7 p.m. Friday, with the consolation game Saturday starting at 7:00 and the tourney finals following at 9:00. Student basketball tickets will be honored" for both session of the tournament. Nebraska takes a 2-3 record into the opening round meeting with Idaho. The Huskers had a 5-1 mark before last year's tourney opener against Miami of Florida. Idaho, the team Cipriano coached for three years before coming to Nebraska in 1963, will bring an inexperienced club to Lincoln. wmum in miami featuring the trifecta Just pick 1, 2, 3 in the last race of the day. If you're right, you win big. Trifecta payoffs can hit five figures. So spend an afternoon at the friendly track: Tropical. . . PSSi 'KSffi 7-5 admission: GRANDSTAND $2.00 CLUBHOUSE $4.00 Sorry, no minors. THE DAILY NEBRASKAN years ago in the Southeastern Conference. Alabama's linemen are big. . .bigger than Oklahoma's offensive line. And, although folks forget about defense when a team runs an effective Wishbone, Alabama's defense has actually been the backbone to the Tide's success. ALABAMA is seventh in the nation in total defense giving up just 219.7 yards per game. Nebraska is fifth allowing only 202.9 total yards per game. The Tide ranks second in defense against scoring with a The Vandals lost their top six players from last year's 14-12 squad to graduation. Coach Wayne Anderson, in his fifth year as head coach at Idaho, is counting on 6-2 senior guard Don Beane and 6-7 junior forward Paul Hardt, both of whom saw action in all 26 games last year, to form the backbone of his squad. Additional help should come from junior college transfers Carlos Perkins, Carl Robinson and Chris Clark. Anderson has a reputation as one of the finest defensive coaches in the Pacific Northwest and likes to run a controlled offense. Baylor, under Coach Bill Menefee, was 18-8 last year and finished second in the Southwest Conference, but nft& THE MSd s 7.6 average. Nebraska is No. 3, giving up 8.2 po. .ts per "me. Sports fans must 's speak in terms of compare . when talking about upcoming athletic events. That's the same case in the 1972 Orange B' game. NEBRASKA stopped what Oklahoma's Wishbone does best. . .run outside. Now the Cornhuskers are faced with stopping what Alabama's Wishbone does the best. . .run up the middle. That's one comparison you can't make. they lost All American center William Chatmon (23 points and 14 rebounds per game) through graduation. Filling his spot this year is 6-7 senior Pat Fees, who led the SWC in field goal percentage as a junior with a .667 mark. LaSalle, 29-7 last year in a season which included wins over NCAA semi-finalists Villanova and Western Kentucky, is also searching for replacements for key loses. Gone are All-American Ken Durrett (27 points and 12 rebounds per game) and Bob Fields (22.4 points per game). The Explorers have found one replacement in 6-4 forward Jim Crawford, who had a sensational sophomore year last season and is leading the team in scoring this year. frf ic J PAGE 13