The Michigan Daily - Sports Monday - November 19, 1990 - Page 3 Q&4 ,4KAT4 kare Ware Mike Gill t The after l Detroit Lion Andre Ware has been part of the uncertainty Lions coach Wayne Fontes has made with the quarterback position this season. Ware has been shuffled with Rodney Peete and Bob Gagliano as the signal caller for the Silver Stretch. This is afar cry from last season, when Ware won the Heisman Trophy at the University of Houston. On Nov. 9, Ware and his agent, Leigh Steinberg, spoke at the Law School. Daily Sports Writer Andy DeKorte caught up 1 with the high-paid Lion rookie to discuss Ware's departure from the college ranks to the pros, his role with the Lions and his goals for the future. Daily: What factors influenced your early flight from college? Ware: It really wasn't one thing. One big factor that influenced me to leave was the combination of a lot jof things. The timing was right for myself to leave. I had to do what was best for myself and my family at the time and I felt like it was time for me to move on. D: What were your concerns in moving up to the professional level? Did you feel that you could step right in and contribute? W: Yes, I felt like I could, espe- cially because I was drafted by the Detroit Lions. Being familiar with the system that they're running there, I naturally felt like I could step in and contribute right away. My main concern was picking up the speed of the game. I think at this day (11/9) and time right now, I feel comfortable. D: On a more personal level, what effect did leaving college early have on your education? W: Well you know naturally, like I was telling Lee (his agent, Steinberg) coming in, you kind of miss it (the atmosphere), whether you graduated or not. I'm eighteen hours away from my degree, I'm going back in January to finish school. That played a part (in leaving early), knowing that it would only take a semester to go ' back and finish...' D: When you were selected by the Lions you knew you would be going to a team that has been less successful than most of your other teams. How did you feel about that? W: It makes you feel good when you take something that's been bro- ken for so long and you take a part in fixing it. We were at the bottom of the Southwest Conference when I got to the University of Houston. To see that program go from being on rock bottom to where it is today and knowing that you played a big " part in getting there, is a feeling in itself. I feel the same way about our situation in Detroit. We've got good players, it's just a matter of us putting it together and playing well. We can win, we showed last week we almost beat a very good Wash- ington team. We're still young, we're still learning how to win. D: During the draft last spring, a lot of discussion centered on you be- ing the perfect run-n-shoot quarter- back. Obviously you do not have a I rookie quarterback discusses life eaving college early for the pros wealth of NFL experience, but what do think are the differences in the run-n-shoot of college and of the pro's? W: There's really not any differ- ence, the speed of the game is really what makes it different in the college and the pro's. The speed is probably two times greater than in college. But I still feel like I am what I was predicted to be coming out of col- lege. It's just a matter of getting an opportunity. I have it this week and I have to make the most of it. D: Another difference in the two levels is signing. Did you expect to have to hold out to get an amicable agreement? W: I really didn't. I thought that is now for me and I have to make the most of it. D: Have you felt that you were prepared to start before this week's game (against Minnesota)? W: I felt prepared enough to start a couple of weeks ago. I actually thought I would go into the game against New Orleans two weeks ago and I didn't. I had a good feeling this past week against Washington. If I had suited for the game, I probably would have played. I had that feeling all week long. I felt like I was ready to play. D: What factors kept you from playing more or starting before this week against Washington? W: I really don't know. That's had thrown them into contention for a national championship? W: No, I'm not surprised. Coach Jenkins has surrounded (quarterback) David Klingler with a fine group of receivers, ones that I wish I had last year when I was there. We finished the season pretty much with moving S-backs to slot receivers and walk- ons. But David is surrounded with talent, and both he and the talent around him are playing well. The defense has played well at times. They deserve to be where they are. D: Do you think a team can win the national championship without being allowed to play in the post- season? W: Well, I think a lot's made out of that, more than has been neces- sary. Last year, a lot of people said I wouldn't win the Heisman (Trophy) because we were on probation. It's just another dark cloud people are trying to put over the University. A lot of things happen and it's (winning the championship) possi- ble. D: Did you feel that Houston could contend for the national cham- pionship before the season started? If so, what effect did that have on your decision to leave early? W: Well, I didn't really know. Before I left I told coach Jenkins that I never would leave him if I didn't think David was capable of doing the job. And David was capable of doing the job. We sat down and we talked about that. I felt they'd be a good football team. But I can honestly tell you I didn't really envision them be- ing in the position to win a national championship. I knew the talent was there, but you just kinda wonder, you never really think about things like that. D: What are your goals in foot- ball, and outside of football during your career? W: I really don't set individual goals for myself, just for our foot- ball team to be the best we can be. I'd like to help turn the organization, that's been down for so long, around to where it's respected. The only thing I want out of football is for people to say that he gave his all on the field as well as he did off the field; to help out in the community as much as possible. Kids look up to myself and athletes are magnified to a degree that's unbelievable. I don't ever want anyone to disrespect me, and I won't disrespect them by going out and doing something crazy. D: Lastly, what are your predic- tions for Lions reaching post-season play this year? W: We just got to learn how to win the big one. Last week we had Washington on the hook and we let them off. Its going to be a matter of us putting things together. We're getting closer and closer and closer as the day goes on. We're close to being a really good football team. People are saying we should junk our offense for something else. It's unbelievable how many critics we have, and we're close to being a good football team. Voice of Meechigan: Ufer legend lives on The sky is ominously dark, the temperature Novemberesque. The trees are barren, and what graced their limbs now lay scattered, covering the grass and the swirly roads. Football season is winding down. Forest Hills Cemetery, on Observatory and Geddes, sports some recognizable names, others merely monuments with letters and dates. But walk a little further. Farther past the sprawling, cemetery gates. And soon you can hear it. Soon the body will fill with emotion. There'is a silver-stoned tombstone with a large block M' that reads: Robert P. Ufer April 1, 1920 October 26, 1981 And somewhere in the wind, you can here a magnificent sound. Okay. Under center is Wrangler, at the 45. He goes back looking for a receiver. He Throws Downfield To Carter. Carter Has It!! Carter Is AAAAAAAHAHHHHHHHHH (Ufer horn honks in background) CAk- TER'S SCORED. BY GOD, CARTER'S SCORED.... (inaudible)... LOOK AT THOSE WOLVERINES. NINETY-FIVE WOLVERINES ARE GOING INTO THE ENDZONE.... UFER IS GOING OUT OF HIS MIND. I HAVE NEVER SEEN ANYTHING LIKE THIS IN ALL MY 40 YEARS OF COVERING MICHIGAN FOOTBALL. ANTHONY CARTER, THE HtJ- MAN TORPEDO, CAUGHT THE PASS. BO SCHEMBECHLER IS LOOKING UP, HE'S LOOKING UP TO FIELDING H. YOST IN FOOT- BALL'S VALHALLA AND BO SCHEMBECHLER SAYS, "THANK YOU FIELDING YOST, THANK YOU FIELDING YOST FOR THAT ONE." LOOK AT THE CROWD. YOU CANNOT BELIEVE IT! Meee- CHIGAN THROWS A 45 YARD TOUCHDOWN PASS. JOHNNY WRANGLER TO ANTHONY CARTER WILL BE HEARD UNTIL ANOTHER 100 YEARS OF MICHIGAN FOOTBALL IS PLAYED. And so will Bob Ufer. The man has not been with us for nine years now, yet walk to Michi- gan Stadium on a Saturday, and his voice is bound to come booming from somewhere. A plaque with his picture is attached at the west en- trancenof the stadium he sn much loveA Bt it is his voice that lives n Detroit Lions quarterback Andre Ware listens as his agent Leigh Steinberg speaks to 'M' law students a week ago Friday. Ware made his first NFL start that weekend against Minnesota, only to be pulled in favor of Bob Gagliano in the second half. things would be taken care of quicker than they did. We proposed a con- tract to Detroit way back in May and they didn't respond until six weeks later. We did everything on our part to get their early and it was just kind of stalled. D: What affect do you think your prolonged holdout has had on your readiness to play? W: Well, as time goes on, you learn not to really ask any questions. In the back of your mind you wonder if things had gotten handled quicker what kind of position I'd be in. I feel comfortable right now with the situ- ation and the way things have turned out. I wouldn't have done it any dif- ferently. If I had it to do over, I'd it the exact same way. The opportunity really out of my hands. Coach (Wayne) Fontes really makes those decisions. He's told me that when he felt like I was ready, he would put me in the game. I guess he feels that way now and now's the time I'll start. D: How is interacting with the other quarterbacks - Bob Gagliano and Rodney Peete? W: It's been a little testy since the major announcement (to start Andre) a couple of days ago. All I've asked is that those guys support me as I've supported them. We talk and we joke around. Nothing's really changed. D: Are you surprised by the out- standing play of your alma mater (University of Houston, 9-1) that Harry Carey may be a homer, but no one came close to the energy dis- played by a Michigan man who couldn't help spout his own Maize and Blue philosophies to thousands on the radio each football Saturday. In 1945, Ufer began broadcasting Michigan football on WPAG, before moving to WJR in the mid-1970's. For 37 years, Ufer called every Michigan game. In 1981, cancer caught hold of the Ufer body, but not the spirit. Fans all around knew the stranglehold it placed on Ufer. He could only do the pregame shows, his body would not let him pound out the en- thusiasm needed for an entire game. As he sat at halftime in the radio booth against Iowa on October Iq, 1981 watching the Michigan Marching Band, a warm hand of gratitude reached out to Ufer. His son, Tom, who spotted for WJR in Ufer's final years, remembels his dad turning to him in disbelief. The band was spelling out their name. Ufer went to the public address announcer's booth and spoke to the capac- ity crowd. I want you to know that what I've done through the years has been a labor of love and right now, I would like to God Bless each and every one of you cotton-pickin Maize and Blue Meeechigan fans. You're*,a great Michigan family and I want to ask you two questions. Number one, down deep in your heart, what school has the finest football traditionin the country today?" "Meeechigan," the crowd answered. And the second question - whose the number one football coach in the country today? "BO!" the crowd replied. Right you are, 100 percent.... Alright. And now that I have you an your feet I want every cotton-pickin one of you to join in and let's sing one chorus of the greatest college fight song ever written. The Meechi- gan Victors. He then led 105,000 in the tune. Ten days later, Bob Ufer was dead. "We were choked up," Tom Ufer said of the halftime salute. Tom sells insurance at Ufer and Sons in town. "He was not in good health then, fiut courage is an amazing thing. When he was on the PA, we have a wine angle shot from the booth, shooting down from the crowd. If you lookat that picture, 99.5 percent of all the people are turned up to see dad." - Tapes of Ufer and his famous Uferisms are still available in Ann Ar- bor, and are sold at most souvenir shops. The sales of the tapes are still strong - 35,000 have been sold since his death. Proceeds from the tapes are placed in a scholarship fund. Each year, four one-year scholarships worth $2,500 each are handed out. Two are given to incoming Michigan students graduating from Ann Arbor Pioneer and Huron High School. Two more are bestowed upon Michigan undr- graduates who go on to graduate school at Michigan. On the tapes, Ufer still comes across loud and clear. Throughout a game, Ufer became a show himself, honking a horn from General Geoi-e Patton's Jeep - three times for a Michigan touchdown, two for a field goal, one for an extra point. In describing plays like none other, Ufer could always place things in a proper perspective. In 1978, MSU coach Darryl Rogers called Michigan "arrogant asses." After the Wolverings defeated the Spartans the following year, Ufer coined this gem. You know it wasn't only the loss (to MSU) that upset the Michigan football family in 1978. It was a statement made by the head Spartan him- self, the head honcho, when in December he entered the now famous phrase, "They truly are arrogant asses in Ann Arbor, Michigan." 'o with that statement still ringing in our ears, old Robert Frost Ufer could only think of one fitting thing to say right now. That today, October 6of 1979, is the day that 22 Michigan arrogant asses put on the gloves of green and as Richter played the Victors, they picked Darryl Rogers clean." fit, s.. .h ' 'r;., .. ;" x rev, f.