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1985 Michigan Wolverines football team

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 2601:989:4004:e59f:34ae:7eb8:f515:58bd (talk) at 04:52, 13 November 2016 (Corrected an error saying they played Wisconsin when they played Indiana). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

{{{year}}} [[{{{team}}} football]]
Ranking
CoachesNo. 2
APNo. 2
1985 Big Ten Conference football standings
Conf Overall
Team W   L   T W   L   T
No. 10 Iowa $ 7 1 0 10 2 0
No. 2 Michigan 6 1 1 10 1 1
Illinois 5 2 1 6 5 1
No. 14 Ohio State 5 3 0 9 3 0
Michigan State 5 3 0 7 5 0
Minnesota 4 4 0 7 5 0
Purdue 3 5 0 5 6 0
Wisconsin 2 6 0 5 6 0
Indiana 1 7 0 4 7 0
Northwestern 1 7 0 3 8 0
  • $ – Conference champion
Rankings from AP Poll

The 1985 Michigan Wolverines football team represented the University of Michigan in the 1985 NCAA Division I-A football season. In their 17th year under head coach was Bo Schembechler, the Wolverines compiled a 10–1–1 record, outscored all opponents by a combined total of 342 to 98,[1] defeated five ranked opponents (including three in a row to start the season), suffered its sole loss against Iowa in a game matching the #1 and #2 teams in the AP Poll, defeated Nebraska in the 1986 Fiesta Bowl, and were ranked #2 in the final AP and Coaches Polls.[1][2]

The team's offensive leaders were quarterback Jim Harbaugh,[1] who set a school record with 1,976 passing yards, and Jamie Morris, who rushed for 1,030 yards. Led by consensus first-team All-Americans Mike Hammerstein at defensive tackle and Brad Cochran at cornerback, the defense tallied three shutouts, gave up only 75 points in 11 regular season games (6.8 points per game), and led the nation in scoring defense. Four Michigan defenders were selected as first-team players on the 1985 All-Big Ten Conference football team: Hammerstein and Mark Messner from the defensive line, linebacker Mike Mallory, and Cochran from the secondary.

Schedule

September 141:30 p.m.No. 13/11 Notre Dame*

CBS[3]W 20–12 105,523 September 213:30 p.m.at No. 15/11 South Carolina*No. 19/15

ABCW 34–3 74,200 September 281:00 p.m.No. 17/15 Maryland*No. 12/9

  • Michigan Stadium
  • Ann Arbor, MI

PASSW 20–0 105,282 October 51:00 p.m.WisconsinNo. 7/5

  • Michigan Stadium
  • Ann Arbor, MI

W 33–6 105,491 October 122:30 p.m.at Michigan StateNo. 3/3

CBSW 31–0 78,235 October 193:30 p.m.at No. 1/1 IowaNo. 2/3

CBSL 10–12 66,350 October 261:00 p.m.IndianadaggerNo. 4/4

  • Michigan Stadium
  • Ann Arbor, MI

PASSW 42–15 105,629 November 22:00 p.m.at IllinoisNo. 4/4

T 3–3 76,397 November 91:00 p.m.PurdueNo. 9/9

  • Michigan Stadium
  • Ann Arbor, MI

PASSW 47–0 105,503 November 1612:30 p.m.at MinnesotaNo. 8/8

W 48–7 64,129 November 231:30 p.m.No. 12/11 Ohio StateNo. 6/6

  • Michigan Stadium
  • Ann Arbor, MI (Rivalry)

CBSW 27–17 106,102 January 1, 19861:30 p.m.vs. No. 7/6 Nebraska*No. 5/5

NBCW 27–23 72,454

Template:CFB Schedule End

Season summary

Week 1: Notre Dame

1 234Total
Notre Dame 3 630 12
Michigan 0 3143 20

On September 14, 1985, Michigan opened its season unranked in the polls and playing Notre Dame (ranked #13 in the AP Poll) at Michigan Stadium in front of 105,523 spectators and a national television audience. The Irish took a 9–3 lead at halftime, but the Wolverines won by a 20–12 score. Running back Jamie Morris rushed for 119 yards on 23 carries, and quarterback Jim Harbaugh completed 7 of 17 passes for 74 yards and rushed for 60 yards on nine carries. Harbaugh and Gerald White each scored a touchdown in the third quarter, and Mike Gillette kicked field goals in the second and fourth quarters. On defense, the Wolverines held Notre Dame to four John Carney field goals, as Allen Pinkett was limited to 89 yards and quarterback Steve Beuerlein was sacked six times. Andy Moeller led the defense with 15 total tackles, including 11 solo tackles. On the second half kickoff, Notre Dame's Alonzo Jefferson fumbled, and Michigan's Dieter Heren recovered to set up a 10-yard touchdown run by Harbaugh. After the game, Michigan coach Bo Schembechler said, "It means we're decent. We're not the dog people think we are."[4] Harbaugh added, "I think the whole team proved we're back. We proved we're not a 6-6 team."[4]

Week 2: at South Carolina

1 234Total
Michigan 7 7317 34
South Carolina 0 300 3

On September 21, 1985, Michigan defeated South Carolina (ranked #15 in the AP Poll), 34–3, at Williams-Brice Stadium in Columbia, South Carolina. The victory was the second in two weeks against ranked opponents. Quarterback Jim Harbaugh completed 12 of 22 passes for 164 yards and also rushed for 45 yards and a touchdown. The Wolverines rushed for 324 yards, led by Thomas Wilcher and Jamie Morris with 104 and 95 rushing yards, respectively. Paul Jokisch caught five passes for 115 yards. Michigan's four touchdowns were scored by Harbaugh, Morris, Wilcher, and Gerald White. Mike Gillette also kicked two field goals. On defense, the Wolverines held South Carolina to its lowest point total in three seasons under coach Joe Morrison.[5]

Week 3: Maryland

1 234Total
Maryland 0 000 0
Michigan 3 773 20

On September 28, 1985, Michigan won its third consecutive game against a ranked opponent, and did not yield a touchdown in any of those games. The third game was a 20–0 shut out against Maryland, ranked #17 in the AP Poll, in front of 105,282 spectators at Michigan Stadium. It was the first meeting between Maryland and Michigan. Jim Harbaugh completed 16 of 20 passes for 196 yards, threw two touchdown passes to tight end Eric Kattus, and also rushed for 32 yards. Jamie Morris added 73 rushing yards on 15 carries, and Mike Gillette kicked two field goals. On defense, Michigan held Maryland scoreless and intercepted four of Stan Gelbaugh's passes, including a third-quarter interception by Doug Mallory after Maryland had driven to Michigan's six-yard line. The shut out was the first given up by Maryland since 1979. After the game, Maryland coach Bobby Ross said, "I don't know if I've seen a quicker defense."[6] With Michigan gaining more yards passing than rushing, columnist Mitch Albom wrote: "Twenty passes, 16 complete. More yards by air than by ground – and two, count 'em, two aerial touchdowns. Yep. Stop blinking. For the Michigan offense, Ol' Mighty Feet, has developed an arm . . ."[7]

Week 4: Wisconsin

1 234Total
Wisconsin 0 600 6
Michigan 7 10610 33

On October 5, 1985, Michigan (ranked #7 in the AP Poll) played undefeated Wisconsin in front of 105,491 spectators at Michigan Stadium. Michigan won, 33–6, as Jim Harbaugh threw three touchdown passes, and Jamie Morris rushed for 96 yards. On defense, Michigan held Wisconsin to 60 rushing yards (36 of which came on one run) and intercepted five of Mike Howard's passes. In addition to Harbaugh's three touchdown passes (two to running back Gerald White and one to tight end Eric Kattus), Michigan scored on a 28-yard interception return by cornerback Garland Rivers and two Mike Gillette field goals.[8]

Week 5: at Michigan State

1 234Total
Michigan 14 3014 31
Michigan State 0 000 0

On October 12, 1985, Michigan defeated Michigan State, 31–0, in front of a crowd of 78,235 at Spartan Stadium in East Lansing, Michigan. The victory was regarded at the time as revenge for the Spartans' 19–7 upset of the Wolverines in 1984. Michigan struck early after Michigan State quarterback Bobby McAllister fumbled the snap on the second play of the game, Andy Moeller recovered the ball on the Spartans' 16-yard line, and Jim Harbaugh threw a touchdown pass to tight end Eric Kattus. Less than two minutes after Michigan's first score, Dieter Heren blocked a Greg Montgomery punt, and Ed Hood recovered the ball in the end zone for Michigan's second touchdown. Harbaugh completed 13 of 23 passes, threw two touchdown passes to Kattus and gave up three interceptions. Jamie Morris rushed for 84 yards on 19 carries. Mike Gillette also kicked a field goal. On defense, Michigan held Lorenzo White (who set a Big Ten record with 2,066 yards in 1985) to a season-low 47 yards on 18 carries. The Wolverines' defense also sacked Bobby McAllister three times, intercepted him once, and held him to 83 passing yards.[9]

Week 6: at Iowa

1 234Total
Michigan 0 703 10
• Iowa 3 306 12

On October 19, 1985, Michigan faced Iowa in a game matching the #1 and #2 teams in the AP Poll. A writer in the Detroit Free Press described the wide interest in the game: "They called it a mid-season bowl game, the 'Poll Bowl' between No. 1-ranked Iowa and No. 2 Michigan . . . watched by more than 60,000 fans at Kinnick Stadium, millions more on network television and heard by the men and women in all the ships at sea."[10] Iowa won, 12–10, as the lead changed five times and Rob Houghtlin kicked a game-winning, 29-yard field goal as time ran out. Iowa quarterback Chuck Long passed for 268 yards, but Michigan's defense held in the red zone, limiting the Hawkeyes to four field goals. Michigan quarterback Jim Harbaugh completed 8 of 13 passes for 55 yards, including a six-yard pass to Gerald White in the second quarter for Michigan's only touchdown. Mike Gillette kicked a field goal to give Michigan a 10–9 lead with 10:55 remaining. Houghton missed a 44-yard field goal with 7:33 remaining but converted on his final attempt as time ran out.[11] One week later, Jim Harbaugh noted that, when Houghton's field goal went through the goalposts, "it felt like someone reached in and pulled everything out."[12]

Week 7: Indiana

1 234Total
Indiana 9 600 15
Michigan 7 81017 42

On October 26, 1985, Michigan defeated Indiana, 42–15, in front of a homecoming crowd of 105,629 spectators at Michigan Stadium. Indiana led 9–7 at the end of the first quarter, and the game was tied, 15–15, at halftime, but Michigan outscored the Hoosiers, 27–0, in the second half. Jim Harbaugh completed 17 of 23 passes for 283 yards and two touchdowns, and Jamie Morris rushed for 179 yards and two touchdowns on 24 carries. Harbaugh's 283 passing yards broke Michigan's single-game record of 259 yards set by Chris Zurbrugg in 1984. Tight end Eric Kattus was Harbaugh's favorite receiver with five catches for 123 yards, including a 34-yard touchdown reception. Paul Jokisch also caught four passes for 91 yards.[12] After the game, Harbaugh was asked for his reaction to setting the school's passing record and responded, "Records are nice, but everything we do here is team oriented. Everyone's telling me about the record, but they should tell it to Paul Jokisch and Eric Kattus and John Kolesar. They caught the passes."[12]

Week 8: at Illinois

1 234Total
Michigan 0 030 3
Illinois 0 030 3

On November 2, 1985, Michigan played Illinois to a 3-3 tie before a crowd of 76,397 persons at Memorial Stadium in Champaign, Illinois. Each team kicked a field goal in the third quarter. Jamie Morris sustained a bruised shoulder and carried the ball only nine times for 31 yards. In the fourth quarter, Michigan drove the length of the field, but fullback Gerald White fumbled at the Illinois 12-yard line, with the Illini recovering at the nine-yard line. Illinois then drove the length of the field and, with time running out, Chris White (son of Illinois head coach Mike White) lined up for what would have been a game-winning, 37-yard field goal. Dieter Heren tipped the ball, which hit the cross-bar and bounced back, and the game ended in a tie. After the game, Illinois coach White said, "I don't remember feeling worse after a game. . . . I'm devastated."[13]

Week 9: Purdue

1 234Total
Purdue 0 000 0
Michigan 7 21910 47

On November 9, 1985, Michigan defeated Purdue, 47–0, before a crowd of 105,503 spectators at Michigan Stadium. The shutout came against a Purdue squad that had been averaging 482 yards of total offense and was led by quarterback Jim Everett who led the nation in total offense (3,589 yards) for the 1985 season. The Wolverines held Everett to 12 of 22 passing for 96 yards. Purdue as a whole was held to 104 yards of total offense and did not advance past its own 44-yard line. On offense, Michigan totaled 551 yards. Jim Harbaugh completed 12 of 13 passes for 233 yards and three touchdowns. The Wolverines also rushed for 275 yards, led by Phil Webb (97 yards) and Jamie Morris (73 yards). After the game, head coach Bo Schembechler praised the defense: "This defense scares me. It's not realistic. If you had bet everything you had that we'd play (Jack) Trudeau, (Chuck) Long and Everett and they'd not get into the end zone . . . it would be 1,000-to-1."[14]

Week 10: at Minnesota

1 234Total
• Michigan 10 21170 48
Illinois 0 007 7

On November 16, 1985, Michigan defeated Minnesota, 48-7, at the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome in Minneapolis. Prior to playing Michigan, Minnesota led the conference with 231.8 rushing yards per game behind running quarterback Rickey Foggie, but the Wolverines held the Golden Gophers scoreless through the first three quarters, led 48-0 at the start of the fourth quarter, and limited Foggie to 28 rushing yards. Minnesota's touchdown, the second allowed by Michigan during the season, came with 4:42 left in the game and with Michigan's second-string defense on the field.[15] Chip Lohmiller's extra point was the first allowed by Michigan during the 1985 season.[16]

Michigan jumped to an early lead capitalizing on three Minnesota mistakes in the first 18 minutes - a fumble recovery by Andy Moeller at the Minnesota 28-yard line, an interception by Ivan Hicks at Minnesota's 39-yard line, and a blocked punt by David Arnold. Jim Harbaugh completed 13 of 18 passes for 243 yards and three touchdowns, and fullback Gerald White rushed 19 times for 92 yards. Paul Jokisch caught five passes for 119 yards and two touchdowns. After the game, Harbaugh praised the offensive line, noting, "I've never had more time to throw in my life - junior high, high school."[15] Gilvanni Johnson also returned a punt 84 yards for a touchdown. Mike Gillette also kicked two field goals to break Bob Bergeron's school record for field goals in a season. Harbaugh's 13 completions against Minnesota gave him 123 for the season, breaking the school record of 118 set by Steve Smith in 1982.[17]

After the game, Minnesota head coach Lou Holtz called it "a near-flawless performance by Michigan."[15]

Week 11: Ohio State

1 234Total
Ohio State 0 1007 17
Michigan 3 7107 27

On November 23, 1985, Michigan defeated Ohio State, 27–17, before a crowd of 106,102 at Michigan Stadium. The game was tied at 10–10 at halftime, but the Wolverines dominated the third quarter, possessing the ball for almost 12 of the 15 minutes and scoring 10 points to take a 20–10 lead. In the fourth quarter, Ohio State closed the gap to three points on a fourth-down, 36-yard touchdown pass to All-Big Ten receiver, Cris Carter. Less than a minute later, Jim Harbaugh completed a 77-yard touchdown pass to freshman John Kolesar, giving Michigan a 10-point lead with nine minutes remaining in the game. Coach Schembechler said after the game that the 77-yard touchdown was "a play that took the starch right out of their sales."[18] Columnist wrote after the game that Harbaugh's pass to Kolesar was an image that would last: "The image that repeats will be that of Jim Harbaugh dropping back in the fourth quarter and uncorking a soaring spiral that rose high and long as flanker John Kolesar ran underneath it, his steps seemingly in sync with the revolutions of the ball, so when it fell, it fell right into his arms, almost gently . . ."[19] Harbaugh completed 16 of 19 passes for 230 yards and three touchdowns, and fullback Gerald White rushed for 110 yards on 29 carries. After the game, Harbaugh said, "I know it sounds a little cocky, but I think we're the best team in the country."[18]

Fiesta Bowl: vs. Nebraska

1 234Total
Nebraska 0 1409 23
Michigan 3 0240 27

On January 1, 1986, Michigan defeated Nebraska (ranked #7 in the AP Poll), 27-23, in the 1986 Fiesta Bowl. Nebraska led 14-3 at halftime, but Michigan scored 24 unanswered points in the third quarter, fueled by two Nebraska fumbles and a blocked punt recovered at Nebraska's six-yard line. Asked about his halftime speech that led to the third-quarter turnaround, Coach Schembechler said, "I'm not Knute Rockne. I don't have to yell all the time at halftime. I simply told 'em we had to stop their first drive, get the ball and score."[20] Michigan running back Jamie Morris rushed for 156 yards on 22 carries and was named the game's offensive MVP. Quarterback Jim Harbaugh completed only 6 of 15 passes for 63 yards, but scored two touchdowns on runs of one and two yards. Nebraska outgained Michigan 370 yards to 234.[20]

Post-season

After Michigan's victory in the Fiesta Bowl, Michigan jumped from #5 to #2 in the final AP and Coaches Polls.[2]

Roster

Offense

  • Eric Campbell - started 1 game at flanker
  • Jumbo Elliott - started 11 games at left tackle
  • Mark Hammerstein - started 3 games at left guard
  • Jim Harbaugh - started all 12 games at quarterback
  • Mike Husar - started 6 games at right guard
  • Gilvanni Johnson - started 1 game at flanker
  • Paul Jokisch - started all 12 games at split end
  • Eric Kattus - started all 12 games at tight end
  • John Kolesar - started 10 games at flanker
  • Mike Krauss - started 4 games at right guard
  • Clay Miller - started 10 games at right tackle, 2 games at right guard
  • Jamie Morris - started 11 games at tailback
  • Jerry Quaerna - started 1 game at left tackle, 1 game at right tackle
  • Bob Tabachino - started all 12 games at center
  • John Vitale - started 9 games at left guard
  • Gerald White - started all 12 games at fullback
  • Thomas Wilcher - started 1 game at tailback

Defense

  • Jeff Akers - started 11 games at outside linebacker
  • Brad Cochran - started all 12 games at weak-side cornerback
  • Tony Gant - started all 12 games at free safety
  • Mike Hammerstein - started all 12 games at defensive tackle
  • Dieter Heren - started 1 game at outside linebacker
  • Billy Harris - started all 12 games at middle guard
  • Ivan Hicks - started all 12 games at strong safety
  • Mike Mallory - started 10 games at inside linebacker
  • Mark Messner - started all 12 games at defensive tackle
  • Andy Moeller - started all 12 games at inside linebacker
  • Garland Rivers - started all 12 games at strong-side cornerback
  • Jim Scarcelli - started 11 games at outside linebacker
  • Todd Schulte - started 2 games at inside linebacker
  • Steve Thibert - started 1 game at outside linebacker

Professional football

Sixteen (16) members of the 1985 Michigan football team went on to play professional football. They are: Bobby Abrams (New York Giants, 1990–92; Cleveland Browns, 1992; Dallas Cowboys, 1992–1993; Minnesota Vikings, 1993–1994; New England Patriots, 1995), David Arnold (Pittsburgh Steelers, 1989); Jumbo Elliott (New York Giants, 1988–95, New York Jets, 1996–2000, 2002); Mike Hammerstein (Cincinnati Bengals,1986-1990); Jim Harbaugh (Chicago Bears, 1987–93, Indianapolis Colts, 1994–97; Baltimore Ravens, 1998; San Diego Chargers, 1999–2000; Detroit Lions, 2001; Carolina Panthers, 2001); Ivan Hicks (Detroit Lions, 1987); Gilvanni Johnson (Detroit Lions, 1987); Eric Kattus (Cincinnati Bengals, 1986–91; New York Jets, 1992); Mark Messner (Los Angeles Rams, 1989); Clay Miller (Houston Oilers, 1987); Jamie Morris (Washington Redskins, 1988–89; New England Patriots, 1990; Hamilton Tiger-Cats, 1991); Bob Perryman (New England Patriots, 1987–90, Denver Broncos, 1991-92); Jerry Quaerna (Detroit Lions, 1987); Garland Rivers (Chicago Bears, 1987, Albany Firebirds, 1990–91, Arizona Rattlers, 1992–93); John Vitale (San Antonio Riders, 1991, Detroit Drive, 1993–94); and Gerald White (Dallas Cowboys, 1987).

Awards

All-America honors

Several Michigan players received honors on the 1985 College Football All-America Team. They were:

All-Big Ten honors

Several Michigan players also received honors on the 1985 All-Big Ten Conference football team. They were: Mike Mallory (AP-1, UPI-1), Brad Cochran (AP-1, UP-1), Mike Hammerstein (AP-1, UPI-1), Eric Kattus (AP-1), Mark Messner (AP-1), Clay Miller (AP-1), Andy Moeller (AP-2), and Garland Rivers (AP-2).[26][27]

Team honors

On November 26, 1985, Michigan announced team honors. With 75 total tackles and 22 tackles for loss, senior defensive tackle Mike Hammerstein received the team's most valuable player award.[1][28] Other team awards went to:

Statistical leaders

Offense

Rushing

Player Att Net Yards Yds/Att TD Long
Jamie Morris 197 1054 5.2 3 26
Gerald White 133 564 4.2 7 19
Thomas Wilcher 71 355 5.0 2 41
Bob Perryman 65 239 3.7 0 17
Phil Webb 19 142 7.5 3 65
Jim Harbaugh 79 139 1.8 4 24

Passing

Player Att Comp Int Comp % Yds Yds/Comp TD Long
Jim Harbaugh 227 145 6 63.9 1976 13.6 18 77
Chris Zurbrugg 14 5 0 35.7 100 20.0 0 30

Receiving

Player Recp Yds Yds/Recp TD Long
Paul Jokisch 37 681 18.4 2 41
Eric Kattus 38 582 15.3 8 40
John Kolesar 12 336 28.0 3 77
Jamie Morris 33 216 6.5 1 35
Gerald White 18 123 6.8 4 15

Defense

Player Tackles Assists Total Interceptions
Andy Moeller 68 46 114 0
Mike Mallory 62 39 101 0
Garland Rivers 50 27 77 3
Mark Messner 42 30 72 0
Mike Hammerstein 44 22 66 1
Ivan Hicks 37 17 54 3
Jeff Akers 38 14 52 0
Brad Cochran 38 8 46 1
Tony Gant 31 14 45 1
Doug Mallory 23 18 51 3

Special teams

Kickoff returns

Player Returns Yds Yds/Rtrn TD Long
Jamie Morris 12 253 21.1 0 60
John Kolesar 3 26 8.7 0 13

Punt returns

Player Returns Yds Yds/Rtrn TD Long
Gilvanni Johnson 12 169 14.1 1 84
Erik Campbell 14 120 8.6 0 28
Tony Gant 5 35 7.0 0 15

Punts

Player Punts Yds Yds/Punt Long
Monte Robbins 48 1937 40.4 59

Field goals

Player Made Attempts
Mike Gillette 16 23
Pat Moons 4 5

Coaching staff

  • Defensive assistants:
  • Other assistants

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "1985 Football Team". University of Michigan, Bentley Historical Library. Retrieved January 23, 2016.
  2. ^ a b "Final AP and UPI polls". Detroit Free Press. January 3, 1986. p. D1.
  3. ^ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zLsBcC5d2Aw
  4. ^ a b Tommy George (September 15, 1985). "U-M defense bogs down Irish, 20–12". Detroit Free Press. p. D1.
  5. ^ "U-M crushes South Carolina". Detroit Free Press. September 22, 1985. p. D1, D13.
  6. ^ "U-M's D dominates, 20-0". Detroit Free Press. September 29, 1985. p. D1.
  7. ^ Mitch Albom (September 29, 1985). "Bo's new offense? Why, it's like dancing on air". Detroit Free Press. p. D1.
  8. ^ "Wolverines wallop bungling Badgers". Detroit Free Press. October 6, 1985. p. D1, D14.
  9. ^ Jack Saylor (October 13, 1985). "Wolverines get revenge: U-M defense manhandles MSU, 31–0". Detroit Free Press. p. G1.
  10. ^ Joe Lapointe (October 20, 1985). "Focus is on the Michigan-Iowa 'Poll Bowl'". Detroit Free Press. p. D11.
  11. ^ Tommy George (October 20, 1985). "FG at 0:00 noses out Wolverines: Hawkeyes clip U-M, 12–10". Detroit Free Press. p. D1.
  12. ^ a b c Tommy George (October 27, 1985). "U-M overwhelms Indiana, 42–15". Detroit Free Press. pp. D1, D12.
  13. ^ "U-M, Illinois fit to be tied". Detroit Free Press. November 3, 1985. p. D1.
  14. ^ Tommy George (November 10, 1985). "U-M pooh-poohs Purdue". Detroit Free Press. p. D1.
  15. ^ a b c Tommy George (November 17, 1985). "Wolverines near-perfect in 48-7 win". Detroit Free Press. p. C1.
  16. ^ "U-M finally allows a PAT". Detroit Free Press. November 17, 1985. p. C11.
  17. ^ "U-M adds 3 names to record book". Detroit Free Press. November 17, 1985. p. C11.
  18. ^ a b Tommy George (November 24, 1985). "Harbaugh harasses OSU: Three TD passes lift Michigan, 27-17". Detroit Free Press. p. C1.
  19. ^ Mitch Albom (November 24, 1985). "This image will last; Harbaugh back to pass". Detroit Free Press. p. C1.
  20. ^ a b "From siesta to Fiesta: Slow start, fast finish beats Huskers, 27-23". Detroit Free Press. January 2, 1986. p. D1.
  21. ^ a b "2014 NCAA Football Records: Consensus All-America Selections" (PDF). National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). 2014. p. 10. Retrieved February 10, 2015.
  22. ^ "All-Americas". The Pantagraph. December 10, 1985. p. B2.
  23. ^ "UPI All-America football team". Detroit Free Press. December 12, 1985. p. 8E.
  24. ^ "Kodak All-America football team". Detroit Free Press. November 27, 1985. p. D5.
  25. ^ Ted Gangi (ed.). "FWAA All-America Since 1944: The All-Time Team" (PDF). Retrieved February 8, 2015.
  26. ^ "Soph White, Station, Unanimous Choices". Toledo Blade (AP story). December 3, 1985. p. 33.
  27. ^ "Long Nips Everett For Spot On All-Big Ten First Team". Logansport Pharos-Tribune. November 26, 1985. p. 10.
  28. ^ a b "U-M notebook". Detroit Free Press. November 27, 1985.
  29. ^ "Michigan is well grounded". Detroit Free Press. September 24, 1985. p. 3D.
  30. ^ "Harbaugh: Play says plenty". Detroit Free Press. October 11, 1985. p. 9F.
  31. ^ "The line at Michigan keeps beating odds". Detroit Free Press. October 29, 1985. p. 3D.
  32. ^ "Illinois gets nod from AP". Southern Illinoisan. September 20, 1985. p. 17.
  33. ^ "At last, U-M's vengeance counter hits zero". Detroit Free Press. October 13, 1985. p. 11G.
  34. ^ "The signing: High school stars choose their college". Detroit Free Press. February 21, 1985. p. 1B.
  35. ^ "Gillette gives U-M plenty to kick about". Detroit Free Press. October 1, 1985. p. 1D.
  36. ^ a b "University of Michigan Football Assistant Coaching Staffs (Through 2004 Season)". Mgoblue.com. University of Michigan. Retrieved January 23, 2016.
  37. ^ "Cam Cameron". Pro-Football-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved January 23, 2016.
  38. ^ "Detroit Lions — Bill Sheridan a good fit with teaching background". The Oakland Press. October 22, 2014.
  39. ^ "Mike Trgovac". Pro-Football-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved January 23, 2016.