x 0 : .. t Sure, Michigan wants to win the Big Ten. But now, the team is setting its sights on- the national title. EYE OF THE STORM Continued from page 13 academic record wasn't strong enough, so he spent a year at prep school. Recognizing his strong desire to go to college, the faculty at Gushing Academy assisted him academically. Minnesota talked about offering him a scholarship, but he met with then-coach Bo Schem- bechler two days before a planned visit. Evans felt the Gophers wouldn't help him enough academically, and sent the plane tickets back to Minneapolis. It was a huge risk because the Wolverines didn't have a scholar- ship available for Evans. He would have to find grants and loans, and then make the team as a walk-on. Making the decision tougher was the fact that his mother was still working nights at a nursing home. But Michigan was what he wanted, even if it meant taking the gamble. Though a linebacker in high school, Evans showed the Wolver- ine coaches more potential as a defensive lineman. Reed was the first to look over the new prospect. "The one thing I'll always remember about Michael is that he just bugged me to death, wanting to know everything he could learn about his position," Reed said. "And at the time, I was coaching some other kids and here was this walk-on who had been moved from inside linebacker to defensive tackle asking all these questions. I said finally, 'Hey, Michael, just go out there and play the best you can and we'll worry about the the other things later."' Evans made the team. The next year he concentrated on conditioning, bulking up 40 pounds. But as tough as Evans was, he was careful in dealing with a tougher man, Schembechler. "I stayed away from that man," Evans said. "If I had a reason to go to him, I didn't go to him." However, Evans had a lot of respect for Schembechler, partially stemming from an incident during his sophomore year. Evans said his boss at the University golf course had a problem with his attitude. But instead of talking about it with Evans, his boss went to Schembechler. When Schem- bechler called him into his office, Evans was furious. "Bo was telling me what the guy had been saying and I told him straight out what the whole problem was," Evans said. "And you'd think Bo would get on you, but he just talked to me and said, 'I understand.' And I said, 'Thanks."' Evans has never needed-extra- motivation from coaches; his teammates know how to motivate him. Every time Evans steps into the Center of Champions weight room, fellow linemen Alex Marshall and Buster Stanley, along with some of the first-year stu- dents, test Evans' label as the defense's strongest player. "In a way it helps me, because the more they challenge me in the weight room, I can be tired and I can get it," Evans said. "And at the same time, I'm helping them move up." In December, Evans will receive a Bachelor of General Studies degree, with a concentra- tion in communications and Afro- American studies. The academic strides Evans has made please Moeller. "He's a better student today then he was in high school," Moeller said. "Academics is something that is very important to us." Evans is just as proud of his accomplishments, because even after football, he will have a career. This summer he took an internship with the Detroit Police Cadet Program as a Junior Job Development Specialist, supervis- ing teenagers and offering advice on how to obtain a college degree. "Most of those kids are poor and their hopes are contained," Evans said. "They don't see themselves making it in college. Some of their excuses are financial problems, which I can understand. Some of the kids had academic problems. I tried to talk with them and tell them there is a way. If you work real hard and you show somebody you want to work hard, somebody is going to help you out.,, Though he enjoyed the internship, Evans remains uncer- tain about his career plans, including professional football; the NFL is not something Evans likes to talk about now. -0 GR Co fiel still gras offe beca a din ond exce and slop] becc in t6 suct back too tract Ath Wei to t sysi TE Co alsc imp: swi two wer bec of t cov Wo may unt the "People keep talking about the league and stuff like that, and I'm getting superstitious, and I don't want to think about it too much now," Evans said. "I figure when I came to Michigan, I only had one option; now people are telling me I have two options. It's kind of nice to have two options, but the way I see it is I'm going to be level-headed about it." Right now, Evans is more concerned with winning a national championship. "We're playing for the No. 1 title. Along with the No. 1 title, we have to win the whole thing, in other words, win the Big Ten, win the Rose Bowl," Evans said. Does anyone want to challenge him? 4 A MICHIGAN TRADITION SINCE 1 fme Sfori The Choice for 6& * Reverse Weave Sweatshirts Jackets * Ann Arbor's Largest Selectic and Gifts " Complete Line of Rackets an Desmond Howard and Burnie Legette hope to be celebrating~the national title in Pasadena this season. To find the last time America expected Michigan to win the national championship, one needn't look back very far in Wolverine football history. Just last season, Michigan carried the No. I ranking into its fifth game. However, as any Wolverine fan will assert through gritted teeth, Michigan hasn't parlayed high public opinion into the national title since 1948. And fans have learned over the past 43 years that preseason.rankings offer nothing more than a source of later disappointment. But this year, the prospect of topping the polls on New Year's Day seems as real as it does on Labor Day. Michigan seems to have adopted a new priority scale, a renewed commitment to winning everything there is to win. In the past, Wolverine teams have set as their goal the compulsory rhetoric - the Big Ten and Rose Bowl Championships. But now, with an (almost) new coach, a new offense, a new playing surface, and a new attitude, the quest for the title has become an acceptable, nay, mandatory mission. "When Bo (Schembechler) was here, the title wasn't the focus," quarterback Elvis Grbac said. "But we're national championship- caliber. A lot of players and coaches really think we can win it. Grbac played, and won, under Schembechler. But back then, Grbac would have thought twice before admitting sinful and impure thoughts like a desire for the title. Really, the team goal hasn't changed. Even Grbac states matter-of-factly, "We want to get to the Rose Bowl and go undefeated." The drive to win each game exists like it always has, only now, the Wolverines recog- nize that the Rose Bowl Champi- onship just doesn't satisfy a hungry football team's appetite. "We're going for the whole thing - the title," defensive tackle Mike Evans said. "Along with that comes the Big Ten title and the Rose Bowl." Evans, a fifth-year senior, seems to have abandoned the old- school Schembechler athletespeak. However, fellow fifth-year senior Matt Elliott hasn't. "If we win the Big Ten and Rose Bowl, we have a very good chance at getting the title," Elliott said. "It's too bad players play for the title rather than the pride of their conference or their school." But the Matt Elliotts have become increasingly rare on this OUR 18th YEAR! No tricks, No gimmicks, Just Quality Merchandise. Used CDs, Records & Cassettes bought & sold! 336 1/2 S.. State St. * 761-8686 Tennis Squash Racketball Bad Pad Pin " Men's and Women's Athletic Our Main Store: 711 N. University Mon-Sat., 9 am-6 pm Sun, 11 am-5 pm (313) 668-6915 (313) 668-1823 FAX I t . D .zSeptember 6, 1991