The Michigan Daily - Sports Monday - April 20,1992 - Page 3 &4taler Stabler Jeff Sheran "The Snake" shares his thoughts about the Raider mystique Ken Stabler was the admiral of the Oakland Raiders' intimidation cruiser for ten years. He personified the Raiders' mottos of "A Commit- ment to Excellence" and "Pride and Poise." Clad in silver and black, Stabler took part in some of the most memorable games in NFL history during his 15-year career. In Super Bowl XI he quarterbacked the Raiders to a victory over the Minnesota Vikings. After a stint with the New Orleans Saints and his retirement in 1984, among other projects, Stabler has worked for CBS television as a color commentator on NFL telecasts. Daily Sports Writer Brett Forrest spoke with "The Snake" recently about the NFL, Al Davis and the Raiders. Daily: Do you feel the Raiders' move from Oakland to Los Angeles . changed the image of or hurt the team in any way? Stabler: I don't think it hurt the team at all. As far as the image is concerned, I think, naturally, a dif- ferent image playing in Los Angeles as compared to Oakland. I think they will always have that reputation of being a very physical, intimidating team as long as Al Davis has any- thing to do with it. That's the style of play he enjoys, and the image he enjoys, and the im- age he would like that team to enjoy. Of course, wearing the color black doesn't hurt anything, either. But I think when you go to Los Angeles, as spread out as it is, as big as it is, you are going to carry a little bit of a different image as compared to Oakland. But it's hard to com- ment without being in the middle of the team and seeing how it maybe affected the team. D: Why does Al Davis continu- ally toy with the people of Oakland by hinting that the Raiders might return? S: I don't know if he is toying with them or not. That would be speculation. Maybe he legitimately feels like he may go back there. But who knows why? When you look at it from an economic standpoint, you can understand why he left. If NFL football ever goes to pay-per-view TV and the teams take a percentage of those pay-per-view revenues, then there are a hell of a lot more TV sets in Los Angeles than in Oakland. So you can see from that standpoint. There is also something about the atmosphere you play in and the home-field advantage. I don't know how much of a home-field advantage they have playing in the (Los Angeles) Coliseum. But I guarantee you that playing in the Oakland Coliseum, there is a home-field ad- vantage, because I was a part of that for 10 years. D: What is it like playing for Al Davis and being a part of the Raider LEARN BARTENDING 40 Hours- Weekends Low tuition/Job placement 557-7757 Professional Bartenders School family? S: I can't think of another situa- tion that I would rather be in. I like the image of that ball club. Playing for Mr. Davis, you are always going to be compensated. Not that that is the most important thing, but it is sometimes. He has always been in the top five in payroll. He has always supplied the team with the caliber of players and the talent that it takes to win. He has al- ways had a knack of getting a guy from another situation who didn't perform very well, or didn't live up to their potential, and getting good years out of them - John Matuzak, Willie Hall, Carl Garrett and Dave Rowe - people of that nature, and he got great years out of them. To answer your question, every- thing was always first class and you were playing with a team that was very committed to winning and do- ing whatever was necessary to win, get the players that were necessary to win, and had a great tradition of winning. You knew that it was going to be a very competitive team. It was a good situation to work and play in. D: You speak of Davis' penchant for getting players from other situa- tions that did not quite work out. In the case of Todd Marinovich, he came from a controversy-riddled ca- reer at USC and the Raiders give him your number. He is a left- handed quarterback. What do you think of him? Is he the second- coming of "The Snake?" S: I don't know. I think he has the ability. I talked to Art Shell (current Raiders head coach) and Freddie Bilitnikoff (receivers coach) and they like his attitude. He has that 'Everything was always first class (with the Raiders), and you were playing with a team that was very committed to winning and doing whatever was necessary to win.' gunslinger mentality - that be doesn't really give a damn. Just keep throwing the ball until you make something happen. I think that's the mindset you need occasionally. I think it's just a matter of him getting a little bit stronger physically and a little bit stronger mentally and learning all the ropes of being a quarterback, going through the learn- ing process and paying his dues. If they surround him with the same cal- iber players they surrounded me with, I think he can probably do the same thing. D: How do you explain the mys- tique and success the Raiders have enjoyed on Monday Night Football? S: I don't know what it would be. We had a lot of success on Monday night and I'm not so sure that we all really cared all that much about playing on Monday night. You waste all day on Monday waiting around to. play and everybody else has finished '(Steroids) is a problem in our society ... just like every other medical crisis of drugs in our society and AIDS in our society. It's just a part of that. I don't think you can single out the NFL.' up. I guess with the fact that every- body is watching you, you always want to perform. We were a talented team. I'm thinking of the 10 years I was there, we were a very talented team. We had a great offensive line, great re- ceivers, a tough defense and a great kicking game. We were an exciting team that threw the ball a lot. We were fun to watch and had a bunch of characters doing it. Maybe play- ing at night brought out the best in everybody. But I don't know if you can say any particular reason why. D: You mention a great offensive line and one guy who has done a great job since his playing days is Art Shell. What is your opinion of the job he has done at the helm of the Raiders? S: Well, he's turning out to be the same kind of coach as he was a player - a damn good one, a Hall- of-Fame type. As a player, he's in the Hall of Fame. He's an All-Pro player and a great guy. He's a real credit to the coaching profession. He has always known what he wanted to do. He had a great deal to do with my success. I don't think we can expect but one thing from him, and that's to win. I think he will win. I think he'd be an awful lot of fun to play for. I think he'd be a lot of fun to even work for. He's just a really quality guy. It doesn't surprise me that he's already had a great deal of success. D: When I spoke with Bruce Jenner, he said something which I adamantly disputed. He said that 95 percent of NFL players were taking steroids. What do you say to that? S: What qualifies Bruce Jenner? I would want to know what qualifies Bruce Jenner to say that. I wonder how many NFL lockerrooms he has been in over the course of a 10-year period. I would bet very few. D: But do you feel steroid usage is a big problem in the NFL? S: I don't know how big of a problem it is. It's a problem, but I don't know how big of a problem without being on the inside of the lockerrooms to see what's going on. It's a problem in our society, not only in the NFL. It's already filtered down to high school kids. It's a problem in general, just like every other medical crisis of drugs in our society and AIDS in our society. It's just a part of that. I don't think you can single out the NFL. D: Do you enjoy broadcasting? Do you miss the competition on Sundays? S: I enjoy it. It keeps me around it. It's something I've enjoyed and liked an awful lot. It's a good way for me to stay close to the game. It was very good for me. I enjoy the broadcasting end of it. I think we all miss the competi- tive aspect of it. You can't be a competitive athlete from the time that you're 7, 8, 9 years old until you're 35 or 38 and playing organized sports and compete for that long and then say, "I don't miss it." I think everybody does. "' D: What kind of coach was John Madden to play for? S: Oh, fun. It was like playing for a good friend, like playing for a buddy. Not really a father-figure, it was like playing for a good friend, a good buddy. He gave us a lot of room to be the individuals we were. He gave me a lot of room to be the kind of quarterback that I wanted, let me run the game the way that I wanted to. He had a lot of confi- dence in me. That motivated me about him because he believed I could get it done and he let me go do it the way I wanted to. That was the motivating factor for me. D: Was he the same type of per- son as he is in the booth today? S: Very similar, real animated, real funny. He's a frustrated stand- up comic. D: How did you get your nick- name "The Snake?" S: It goes back to the eighth grade in junior high school. I was running back the football, running back a punt, zig-zagging across the field three or four times. The junior high school coach was a guy by the name of Denzel Hollis. Coach Hollis said, 'He runs like a snake,' and the kids kind of picked up on it. D: And it just stuck? S: I'll say. The memories will last forever ... Emotional basketball fans filled the vast blacktop lot outside Rupp Arena within minutes. Some danced across the pavement in jubilation; others trudged with disappointment. Those clad in maize and blue, the jubilant ones, shouted with an arro- gance understood only by their fellow celebrants. They screamed things like, "It's good to be the best," and "This is why we're elitist." I was one of the celebrants, and I understood. Long scorned for our cockiness, Michigan students think the sun is maize and the sky is blue. Well, we're right. And when Michigan beat Ohio State that afternoon in Lexington, Ky., cut down the nets, and advanced to the Final Four, it was just one more reason why students here think like we do. A lot of students measure the quality of a semester by how successful our athletic teams were. Winter 1989 blows away all other competition by these standards. It's probably not the ideal way to evaluate an academic career, but it works better than the grade-point average. And we will forget our grades eventually - some of us over time, others as soon as possible. But we will never forget Rumeal's two free throws or Desmond's Notre Dame catch. I will leave Michigan stocked with countless memories: A handful of classes. George Bush speaking at graduation last year. The Daily. Preacher Mike in the Diag on a sunny afternoon (both of them). Shakey Jake's streetcorner cacophony. Be Bim Bop at Steve's Lunch. And above all that, the freedom, the idealism and the friends. But the sports will occupy a separate place in my heart. I don't mean the rushes up the middle or the inbounds passes, the actual playing of games. I mean the emotions - the spirit of Michigan athletics that invades the souls of students. When a horizontal Desmond Howard rescued that spiraling, 25-yard, fourth-and-1 prayer centimeters above the rear chalkline of the Notre Dame endzone, one of the most powerful surges of excitement I've ever felt shot through me. God, I love writing about that catch. And consider the effect of Rumeal Robinson sinking that fateful second free throw in overtime against Seton Hall. So many people's happiness or sadness hinged on a common instance. Robinson made the shot, and people were happy. Only then does the power of sports really become evident. The sadness is a part of it, too. Both my first and last major Wolverine sporting events as a student were defeats. The last one was a basketball loss to Duke, bearable, and the first was the 31-30 last-second football loss to Miami in September 1988. Unbearable. But the bitter disappointment results from caring, a deep caring which a precious few things elicit from us. It's not just the sports, as evidenced by the difference in response to pro sports. It's the whole package - the school, the colors, the songs, the tradition, the participation, the immediacy. And the success. Michigan gave us all of that, especially the success. Two NCAA Basketball Championship games, one title. Four Big Ten Football Championships, three Rose Bowls, one Rose Bowl trophy. An NCAA Hockey Final Four. Big Ten swimming titles that date back to before we came here. And when we include the individual athletes - the Mike Barrowmans, the Desmond Howards, the Glen Rices - the list of successes becomes in- finite. This is my last column, the last opportunity for me to get my ideas on paper. I've always cherished this space every Monday as an outlet for com- mentary, a reason to talk to interesting subjects, and a medium for personal expression. Now this block of print at the top of Page 3 becomes a log for some ex- traordinary memories. Thanks for sharing. } A WHAT'S HAPPENING YOU CAN MAKE A DIFFERENCE Camp Algonquin is a unique multi-cultural residential camp, 50 miles NW of Chicago, offering challenging opportu- nities workingwith low income families and senior adults, ages 1-90. OPENINGS: Unit Directors, Camp Social Worker; Nature, Campcraft & Arts-N-Craft Instructors; Wa- torfront Staff, Cabin Counselors & Food Service. Competitive Salaries + Room/Board. (708) 658-8212. TILL FALL AT WILLOWTREE RECREATIONAL SPORTS intramural Sports Program THANKS TO ALL THOSE PEOPLE WHO PARTICIPATED IN THE INTRAMURAL SPORTS PROGRAM DURING THE WINTER TERM!!! 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