The Michigan Daly-Sports Monday- September 30, 1991 -Page 3 f.7+om eiere,&t A t 64 5aite 'tts 'er/ae/,Ca/ Ford The former President speaks of Jeff Sheran his days playing 'M' footba I I Gerald Ford served as the president of the United States from 1974-1976. Born in Grand Rapids, Mr. Ford attended Michigan in the early 1930's and played on the football team. IHe captained the 1934 squad, which is the only Michigan football team to have a winless season. Daily: First of all, you may know that today's Michigan fan is likely to 'tailgate' before a big game, or until recently, engage in 'marshmallow wars' in the stands. Looking back on your playing days in the 30's, I'm wondering what rituals of football Saturday come to mind? Mr. Ford: Frankly, I was so preoccupied on the playing field that I didn't notice nor have I any recollection of any such activities. When you're preparing for and participating in a game, your concentration's on the game and what happens in the stands is something you really don't notice. D: Well, people nowadays hear about things like bonfires and pep rallies; was anything like that part of your football experience back then? F: We used to have pep rallies and we used to have bonfire activities, usually the night before the ballgame. That was more or less a total campus activity and it didn't relate to anything out at the stadium. D: Players of the two eras, your's and today's, differ a great deal. As well versed as some people are about your political life, many people do not know what you sold your own blood to make ends meet while in school. Today's players, FIODOROV Continued from page 1 Fiodorov is facing, and because Berenson has yet to see Fiodorov on the ice this year, the coach is uncertain as to the impact Fiodorov might have on the Wolverines. Next Monday's official starting date for practice should help Berenson gauge Fiodorov's comparative level of play. "I really don't know what he can do until we get on the ice," Berenson said. "It is very difficult to judge him. "In general terms, he has the skills to be much better than an average Division I player," he added. "But whether that takes a week, a month, a year, or longer I don't know. He has to adjust to new teammates, new coaches, new rinks, and new experiences. That's a lot of transition that will affect his eventual success.". While Berenson is unsure about Fiodorov's abilities, Tom Wilkins is very high on Fiodorov's talents. "He's very smart and strong on the puck," Tom said. "He's a good passer; not like (Wayne) Gretzky, but the type of player that he is, the passer, the smart player." Berenson thinks Fiodorov can play any of the three forward positions, but Fiodorov has a preference. "I like center best," he said. "I ;like a clever game. I like to pass. "Russian players are a little bit cleverer because we play a different style," Fiodorov added, "In America, it is a strong game first. Boom! Boom! In Russia, you have to think, 'Why do I have to go to this corner.' All the time our coach tells us, 'Keep your head up."' Fiodorov also followed this advice during the coup in the Soviet Union during late August. Fiodorov spent these trying times deciphering American news and trying to phone his parents. However, it took him 10 days before he could finally reach them. "Those were very difficult days because I didn't know exactly what though, are given full rides to play ball quite often. Can they be getting as much from the sport as you did? F: I believe they do. The circumstances today are far different from 1931 to 1935 when I was at the University. We had no athletic scholarships whatsoever. My head coach, Harry Kipke, got me a job over at the University Hospital where I waited on tables at the interns' dining room and cleaned up at lunch after the nurses had their luncheon in the cafeteria. I got paid, as I recall, $.40 an hour and worked three or four hours a day, which was enough to pay for my own board. There was no scholarship as such as they have today, and no training table. So I ate in the community, and my freshman year I lived in a rooming house where I had a roommate and each of us paid $4 a week for our accommodations. Then I moved into my fraternity (Delta Kappa Epsilon) my sophomore year. But, yes, in order to generate cash, about every two or three months I donated blood at the University Hospital. I think for each such donation we got $25 and $25 in the 1930's was pretty good. D: And you were able to balance playing ball and school and the work all together? F: Well, I had to! I mean if you wanted to stay in school you had to work, and when I was in the fraternity I washed dishes the first two years and my senior year I was the house manager at the Deke house. All of that, plus the money I earned in the summer, carried me through my four years with some limited help from my parents, who were having a very tough time during the Depression. D: Yeah, it's amazing what happens in just the course of fifty years - that's a big change. Relating that, then, to today's situation with football, what do you feel about claims that sports scholarships for these athletes are wrongly putting academics in second place? F: I wholly support athletic scholarships, providing the student athlete meets the proper academic qualifications. They should be treated like any other student, but the fact that they spend an abnormal amount of time preparing for a football career, a basketball career, justifies in my judgement a proper athletic scholarship program. D: Well let me move then back a few years to when you played. The intensity before a game seems to have been a little bit lower due to preparation. Preparation now is very involved. Like you said, there's the training table. F: Of course, you also have to point out that tuition for each semester was $50. So the costs were less, but when you balance it out, the money to go to the university was tough to come by. D: What was an average week's preparation for you for a particular football Saturday? F: We usually started practice 3:15 or 3:30 in the afternoon and went to 5:00 or 5:30. We would have squad meetings maybe two nights a week. The team as a whole, the squad would go to the Washtenaw Country Club the night before the game where we had dinner and stayed overnight and were isolated from all of the alumni. About thirty players that would expect to play were housed out there and fed out there the night before the game. D: Then after your college career, you had your own opportunity to make a living a football, and in fact I believe the Lions were one of your pursuers. Why did you opt for law over the glamour of a professional football career? F: I had two opportunities, or two offers, to play in the NFL. I got an offer from Potse Clark who was the head coach of Detroit Lions, and an equal offer from Curly Lambeau who was the coach of the Green Bay Packers. They offered me $200 a game for, I think it was fourteen games. D: Quite a lot of money from back then, I imagine. F: You're darn right; for somebody who was broke when they graduated. But I also had an opportunity through the help of Harry Kipke, my coach, to be assistant coach at Yale University, which I took a lesser figure, $2400. But it gave me, eventually the opportunity to go to Yale Law School. I was assistant line coach and then later made head junior varsity coach, and by the time I finished the five years there, I was making $3600 a year and going to law school full time, so it worked out very well. Students show nation their middle fingers Michigan's crack at the nation's No. 1 football team Saturday made Ann Arbor the nation's No. 1 focus of attention. Along with the hordes of media that descended upon the University community came a bright spotlight that projected an image of Michigan to the entire country. I wonder how we, the students of the University of Michigan, looked. Reputed as an elitist institution, Michigan showed America its stu- dents have more than brains - they also have middle fingers. In an om- nipresent drone during Florida State's 51-31 victory, students accompa- nied their gestures of disrespect with their own interpretation of the op- posing school's chant: "F--- the Seminoles, f--- the Seminoles." By itself, this spirited slur didn't mar the University's image. In ac- tuality, it was pretty funny. And though not the most traditional greet- ing for an opponent, the cheer's vulgarity was mitigated by its repetition. However, the Wolverines' constant media appeal has illuminated much more of the University than Saturday's antics. It seems as if every weekend, Michigan is planted firmly at the center of the country's atten- tion. Two weeks ago, when Notre Dame stormed into Ann Arbor, the spot- light shone: ABC televised the matchup. Sports Illustrated wrote its cover story about the game. What did CNN do? It broadcast the South University riot. Nobody outside the University community cares how the riot started; people simply associate the incident with similar sports-related uprisings, like the 1989 basketball championship riot, or even worse, the destructive hysteria that spread throughout East Lansing after Michigan State lost to the Wolverines two years ago. The Michigan/Michigan State contest often elicits poor publicity. After the Spartans edged top-ranked Michigan last season, 28-27, Wolverine coach Gary Moeller had to face a deluge of questions about the controversial defeat. Because the major polls ranked Michigan No. 1 prior to the game, the attention given to the game was overwhelming. And in front of millions of viewers, Moeller ranted about the referee's non-call on the last- minute two-point conversion attempt. "Don't throw it, don't throw it, don't throw it," he bellowed about the official's attitude toward penalty flags. Moeller had a legitimate complaint. In fact, the official later apolo- gized for contributing to Michigan's demise. But Moeller, at that point Michigan's most prominent representative, projected a lowly image of his university. It's not that our behavior is worse than students' at other schools. However, Michigan attracts a perpetual eye, and if that eye sees negative images, limelight becomes scrutiny. Students generally covet the hype surrounding the Wolverines. But we often fail to realize that we, just like the athletes we root for, con- tribute to our university's national perception. was happening," Fiodorov said. "Some people tell it this way, other people that way. Then I went to the Slavic Department and listened to Russian news from Russia, but sometimes it was not true. It was very difficult days for me. I was afraid for my family and friends. Nobody knows; nobody knows what will happen..." Fiodorov's voice trailed off, his thoughts seemingly drifting back to the Soviet Union. But his spirits seemed to rise as he talked about a brighter future for his country. "Now is good, I think," he said. "Maybe this coup is good because the time goes faster. Without the coup, maybe time goes slow, but now that there is no Communist party, a lot of Communist newspapers close. That makes time go faster." Fiodorov also hopes time will move faster here, anxiously awaiting the official start of hockey practice. "I can't wait to get on the ice again," Fiodorov said. "I want to see how I am against the other guys. You can't tell how good someone is until you see him on the ice." But compared to practices in Leningrad, Michigan practices will seem like a relief for Fiodorov. Since joining the Red Army team, Fiodorov has started each hockey season in early July with three-a-day practices throughout the summer. At the age of 14, Fiodorov achieved his "dream," surviving a 100-person tryout for the Leningrad squad of the Junior Red Army team.j Since then, he has traveled throughout the Soviet Union, playing a full schedule of games. Fiodorov started playing hockey when he was eight years old, but he had already been an avid follower of the sport for five years. "When I was three, I knew (about) every player in Russia," Fiodorov said. "Hockey has always been my favorite. My mother, my father and my grandmother all love hockey. I learned the game from them." childhood playing hockey, these few months of idle time foreshadowed Fiodorov's future life without ' hockey.1 "Hockey is a great game. I love it, it is my life. I can't live without hockey," Fiodorov said. "Sometimes when I think about my future when I'm 30 or 40 years old, I realize I will not be able to play hockey anymore," he said. "Oh my gosh! That will be difficult. For some people it is literature or soccer or American football, but for me, hockey is my life." Fiodorov is hoping to extend his hockey life past his stay at Michigan. He dreams of one day playing professionally. "Probably all hockey players who can skate a little bit hope they will play in a professional league," Fiodoro" said. "So of course I hope." Fiodorov wants to follow the path of his fellow Soviet players who have played professional hockey in North America. "I probably would want to play here," he said. "The NHL is the best professional league, but I am not good enough yet. I hope. I hope. " Fiodorov also has dreams for this year's Michigan squad. During his February visit, Fiodorov saw Michigan defeat Michigan State, 6- 5, at Joe Louis Arena and is optimistic about this year's team. "I hope that it is a very good team," he said. "Last year, they were (ranked) fourth (in the country), now we hope we will be first. It's a very strong team with Denny Felsner, Roberts, Wiseman, the big guy Tamer, and Ward. "We work hard, and sometimes it will be difficult," he added. "But if everybody works hard - this is very important now, because if we are not strong, we cannot play the long season." Fiodorov has realized several of his dreams so far - the end of communism in the Soviet Union, and coming to Michigan. But he looks forward to more - a championship season and a chance to play in the NHL. And he will always keep his head up, whether looking for an open teammate on the ice or reaching for his dreams. - I HEY WOLVERINES! COME CLEAN4 Cam IN UP I 1(11 YOUR ACTI(f u WITH US!! 1 I LAUND~f I 1 regular washer FREE!! value $1.00 mit 1 per coupon) 10% off student drop off laundry services. ($.80/lb) ach coupon cannot be combined with any other offer. Expires 10/6/91 Wolverine fans had a unique way of rooting for Michigan Saturday. \ 2750 Jackson Ave. A2 Hours: 7am-11pm Daily 761-1889 Super Suds 11 nSL hdI AV-~ I E I After spending so much of his _f I m o '$. . U All Interested Men are Invited to Attend Open Rush At: U W WHAT'S j eL HAPPENING RECREATIONAL SPORTS Intramural Sports Program FLAG FOOTBALL Entries Close: Tomorrow Tuesday October 1, 1991 I I I I i