Medicine Men Aspiring doctors helped lead the Birmingham Groves football team to its first league championship since 1980. STEVE STEIN STAFF WRITER icah Heilbrun and Jeremy Walker want to pursue careers in medicine. They're off to a good start. This fall, the Birmingham Groves High School seniors helped resus- citate their school's football team. The Falcons ended two long droughts this season. For the first time since 1980, they won a league championship and they finished with a winning record. Groves captured the Division IV title in the new Oakland Activities Association, winning all four of its division games. The Falcons went 5-4 overall, but the four teams which beat them had a combined 29-7 record and includ- ed fellow OAA division champions Troy, Lake Orion and Royal Oak Kimball. Heilbrun, one of Groves' four cap- tains, rushed for 812 yards and 10 touchdowns from his fullback post despite being slowed by a leg injury during the second half of the sea- son. The 6-foot, 210-pounder also was a starting inside linebacker. Coach Jim MacDougall said Walker was the team's "Mr. Inspi- ration." Despite being 5-3 and 118 pounds, the speedy two-way back didn't retreat from any challenges. He made several starts in the de- fensive backfield. Off the field, Heilbrun, 18, is a 3.78 grade-point average student who is co-president of his senior class. He scored an impressive 30 on his ACT test. Walker, 18, who has a 3.85 GPA, is a National Merit Scholarship semi-finalist. He is a tutor for the Groves football players who are tak- ing part in a daily 6 am. study table at school. "Micah is a physical, tough, all- business kind of player," Coach MacDougall said. "He isn't a glam- orous ball-carrier, and he doesn't pretend to be one. In fact, he de- scribes himself as a guard who plays fullback." Heilbrun has many college op- tions, some of which include play- ing football. He may opt to play football at a Above: Micah Heilbrun and Jeremy Walker are ready for the snap. Left: Jeremy Lewin has a bright future on the gridiron. Division HI school "because even though he loves the sport, he doesn't want it to be his entire life," Mac- Dougall said. "He has his priorities straight." The Division III institu- tions which have the inside track for Heilbrun are Kalamazoo, Hope and Denison (Ohio). Walker said he enjoyed playing football in high school because of the op- After Groves lost Its season finale to Birmingham Seaholm at the Pontiac Silverdome, Micah Heilbrun (23) consoled a teammate. portunity to go one-on-one with an opponent while at the same time counting on his teammates for sup- port. "Football also gave me a sense of focus which I'll be able to use the rest of my life," he said. "You had to do your job at practices and games and you had to make the best use of your limited free time." Michigan and Brown are Walk- er's top college choices. "Hopefully, Micah, Jeremy and our other seniors have started a legacy at Groves," MacDougall said. "I know they've helped bring respect to our team." This was MacDougall's second year as coach at Groves following a long career at Royal Oak Shrine. Both Heilbrun and Walker played for him as juniors, when the Fal- cons went 3-6. MacDougall is optimistic Groves' improvement will continue next fall and one of the big reasons is Jere- my Lewin. Lewin, a 6-3, 260-pound junior, was a two-way starter at tackle this season. "Jeremy has the potential to be one of the finest linemen I've ever coached," MacDougall said. "He's a quiet kid. You can hardly tell he's in a room with you. But on the field, he's ferocious. He'll definitely be a Division I prospect next year." Lewin said he'd love to be a Di- vision I football player, especially a defensive lineman. "I prefer defense to offense be- cause you can be more aggressive," he said. "On the offensive line, you basically just push people around." Lewin, who will be 17 on Nov. 30, said the underclassmen on Groves' team this fall looked up to Heilbrun and Walker. "Micah didn't let anybody get down and Jeremy, well, everybody loves him," Lewin said. "He's.a nice kid, he's smart, and he's a guy who never quits." Barry Fishman is another Groves player to watch next year. The 6-1, 200-pound junior two-way tackle is expected to be a candidate for a starting spot in 1995.111 105