. A DERSO ,Jr. �nCItlz.n D - In 1987 omething w m in from th Detroit Public School Le gu (PSL) Football Pro­ gram; it om thing th t w n important piece for the development of young men who w nted to play v rsity foot 11; it w the junior var- ity football program for ninth and tenth graders. There were many re ons for discontinuing the pro­ gram: Lac of interest, lac of funds and the problem of cheduling games. But oflast year that all changed. According to a few co ches in the Detroit PSL, the junior varsity pro­ gram is able ing and is helping many football program in the city' high chool . "I'm very happy they've brought back the program," aid Denby var- ity coach Don Stuckey. "It has doubled my program from 35 to 70 kids. I feel that bringing back N football is a tep in the right direc­ tion." "The program at our school has been pretty good," explained James "Butch" Lepard, the head N football coach at Southwe tern. "We had to make a lot of changes th e past two easons. In fact, schools in general throughout the ci ty made a lot of chang ." I'M GlAD THE P L brought it back," responded Benny Moore, the head JV coach at m. "It's helping the varsity, but most of all it' getting our kids off the street." All three coaches point out that the ninth and tenth graders bad no place to play except the varsity and the Detroit Police Athletic League, but still even they had their disad­ vantages for orne, if not many young men. "PAL was good for some kids," Moore explained. "But PAL didn't help tho e kids who were over 1&0 pounds. They can't even play, that's when N comes in and helps out." • d veloped concentration in the cl room which m tter grad . "The young ters who weren't into nything ere fin lly gettin into om thing," Lep rd ide "Thi pro­ gram keep the e kid off th treet, e pecially h re in Southwest Detroit where we have a erio an prob­ lem. Any kid who participat in our program i too tired to run round in th treets, believe m . You have to have a 2.00 minimum OP A to play or you don't play trs simple that. The major ide i grade and th major incentive i to wor hard so th kids can graduate from high chool." Lepard, whose team fini hed with a 3-1 record thi pa t � on and ranked fourth in the city behind powerhouses Ford, King, and Cass Tech, feel that teaching th kid how to play and giving them chance to play is more important than wins, los es and ties. "Nobody like to 10 e," Lepard ex­ plained. "You can't blame the kids or the coaches for that, but my preference is to get a bunch of ninth and tenth graders from nothing and start from scratch and work with them until they become a team." "OUR GOAL AT Southwestern C is determination and dedication and working hard as you can. I run my program on these five fine points: "This level of football introduces Fundamentals, the game of football, kids to a certain level of football," explain and teach at the arne time so explained Stuckey. "A kid who's the kids can understand what they're f hrrtan will have more of a feeling doing, no pre-ttl donna and the of uccess which keep them from the teach them that the linemen are the direction of the treets. heart of the game, Without linemen "Our record in the past two eason you can't win. (2-2) is .500, but it helps develop Kids come and thing that running players for our program." backs, . quarterbacks, tight ends, comer backs, and linebackers are the "THERE WERE A LOT of kids most important people on the team because of what sports shows, com­ mentators and announcers say on T.V. Football is won on the line, because linemen are in on every play. They must know well the plays; they're the brains of the operations. If you don't have a line you can't win." But there are still some problems. hooting for winning Coach James Lepard (center, in yellow sweater) chats,with the team on the sidelines. "Some chools like ours were fall­ ing behind," Lepard explained. "Unlike some schools like King, HelU')' Ford and " who Q PAL teams to fall back on and feed on, some schools didn't even have these advantages. The overall quality of orne PSL teams was so bad, it made the entire league look ridiculous." "Many kids who would've played JV football went to other sports be­ cause there wasn't a JV football pro­ 'gram to get into. You had a 9th grader who would join a varsity team in high school, but he wouldn't get in to play because he wasn't big enough or tough enough to play or didn't know what was going on." "THE YOUNG FRESHMAN or even sophomore had no equal to play against and if he did play in a varsity e, be ould t killed. Very fe kids in our area had the funds or the access to PAL team to play on." "If you didn't have enough ex­ perience to play-you had to ride the bench," Stuckey said. "As a fresh­ man you had to learn the skills as you went on because most of the em­ phasis was on varsity." Stuckey, Moore and Lepard all agree that the emphasis of JV football is to develop kids for. the varsity and to develop the player as a whole and to turn them away from the streets which are far more influential and dangerous than just a few years ago. itan roundballer By HARRY M. ANDERSON, JR. As his fifth year at the reins on the University of Detroit Men's Basket­ ball Team, head coach Ricky Byrdsong is looking with COnfidence, optimism and hope about this year in improving last season's 12-17 and 1-9 Midwestern City Conference (MCC) record. ' "This squad has the bes t talent I've seen during the past five seasons," Byrdsong aid. "We're optimistic for a great year. Tony Tolbert (St. Mar­ tin DePorres) will give us a great deal of coring for us." Last season the Titans were 11-7 against non-MCC opponents. How­ ever, against their competition in the MCCthe results were a disappointing effort. "When we get into conference play the size factor caught up with ," Byrdsong said. "It was difficult for us to match up with guy who are 6'9" to 6'10". Non-conference wise we didn't have any difficulty, but in the MCC the towering height of our opponents were wearing us down and getting us tired." TO COUNTERACT THIS PROBLEM the U of 0 went out and added depth to strengthen their in­ side game. The Titans signed 6'8" Patrick Lacy (King), a junior college tran fer from Indian Hill Communi ty Colleg in Iowa. He averaged 20 points and 12 rebounds per game for Indian Hill. Another player in Byrdsong' possession is 6'7" Marte Smith, a junior college transfer from WestOPalm Beach (Fla.) Community College. Smith averaged 16 points and six rebounds as a freshman and 16 points and eight rebounds as a sophomore. "We would be able to beat our opponent with these two new player ." Byrdsong said. "With Tony's (Tolbert) presence on the perimeter will give us the opportunity to open up the middle." One �dvan�ge that Byrdsong has is the amount of local talent from Detroit's Public and Catholic Schools. fie aid that the signing of Michael Lovelace (Southwestern) and Dwayne Kelley (Bishop Bor­ gess) have helped spur the interest among talented kids who play basket­ ball in the PSL and the Catholic League. "We are loaded with the talent from the PSL and the Catholic League," Byrdsong said. "The first group of kids we. signed were Lovelace and Kelley. Things worked out so well that other PSL and Catholic League kids took notice and started to come into our program. Lovelace (13.7 ppg, 5.3 rpg, 44 steals, 22 blocks and 44 assists) and Kelley (14.0 ppg, 54 steals, 77 as­ sists,) have started since they've been here." "WE BEGAN TO ATTRACT talent like Michael Hamilton (South­ western), Emanuel Bibb (Denby), Kareern Hailey (Ca Tech) and Her­ man Jenkins (U of D High). Most of our roster have been kids from the PSL and the Catholic Schools in the City." One of the opponent on this year's Titan schedule is Wayne State, the team' old cro -town rival from years past. Byrdsong i looking for­ ward to it. "The players from our squad and WSU developed friendships with each other," Byrdsong said. "So the kids decided they wanted to pay a 'scheduled game this year. I got together with Ron Hammye (WSU Coach) and decided to play this game." til believe that the WSU-U of D game will be a competitive contest. They did lose a couple of players to graduation and another to eligibility, but it will be a hard fought inner-ctty game. It will get the people of Detroit enthused about what's out there for our two chools because most people have forgotten how competitive a good inner-city game can be in a col­ lege environment." Byrdsong explained that most fans know li ttle or anything about the Midwestern City Conference which is compromised of schools from Ohio, Indiana, Illinois and Pennsyl­ vania. He said that the MCC is a lot . better than most people think. "THE MCC IS VERY competi­ tive and a lot better than people think it is," Byrdsong explained. "La t year the top two teams in our con­ ference, Xavier (Ohio) and Evansville (Indiana), went to the NCAA National Tournament while Butler (Indiana) got back on track and made it to the National Invita­ tional Tournament I t year. The University of Dayton (Ohio) wins an average of 20 games a year and ell out all their home games every season." As for the Titans outlook? "We were picked to finish ixth place out of eight teams this eason, " Byrdsong said. "I believe we can who were hanging around on the . street comers," Moore aid. "This program has turned a lot of kids around; it's helped in the classroom and helped them gain focus on whether they want to play football or just go to school. It also develop concentration, but not just on the football. The kids have also "Th re o motiv ted to win, they nea ome varsity kids into the g m to et the win, instead of putting kid in who needs the experience. This kil the whole objective, Lepard explained. " ot only they taught the ld that' it' 0 ay to che r, but th y're depriv­ ing a kid who n d to play to get the experience befor he reache the var- ity level." As for the future of junior varsity football in th Detroit Public Schools, there' a chance that more g me will be added to the chedule and good possibility for post-season play for om of the teams. "WE'VE ONLY PLAYED five gam a year," Stuckey aid. "We may chedule even game next year which is great for kids at this ge who needs much experience as they can get. As for playoffs, I hope this doe n't motivate some coaches to cheat then develop players." "We were supposed to have even games this year," Lepard said. "But because of the teachers' trike we were only able to get in four games. Roy Allen and his staff did an in­ credible job to make sure we had some game in this year." "Next year Downtown is talking about a seven game chedule wi th top four teams having a playoff cham­ pionship series. This would be good for the PSL and the city as long as you don't have any programs who think winning is more important than ldds bo need to pi y� Pl'OIIl)eCton will be ready." "When the IV program gets off the ground with theestablisbment of the study halls and workout periods for conditioning, the junior varsity foot­ ball program is going to be a better one. It's not going to happen over­ night." " A lot of us coaches and the league have invested a lot of money into junior varsity," Stuckey concluded. "We must keep this program if we want to get our dollars worth." Rickey Byrdsong finish higher than that. The top two favorites (Xavier and'Evansville) are clearly in front, beyond that, it's hard to find a third-place team right now. Kelley made the MCC's Second Team for being the team's leading corer. Tolbert will probably be our leading scorer while Ramsey Nicbols (Benton Harbor) will be a force on the court." "To be able to be in the running of the MCC Title we want to gerout and run. Conditioning will be our strategy because most teams don't condition well. If the teams we face don't push conditioning it will give us the advantage 'because fatigue makes cowards of us all. We want to run motion and take solid shots and play good defense. We want defense to be the key of our program here at the u of D."