StE Agent disc Leigh Steinberg is one of the best known sports agents. Beginning with his representation of the NFL's top draft pick in 1975, Steve Bartkowski, Steinberg has helped negotiate contracts for some of football's top players. He has been labeled as "the quarterback agent" with a list of clients that includes such NFL stars as; Warren Moon, Jeff George and Troy Aikman. Daily sports writer Chad Safran recently spoke to Steinberg about the NFL and life as an agent. Daily: The decision in the case of MpNeil v. the NFL basically said that players were being unfairly re- stricted in their efforts for free agency. How does this affect the owners and players? Steinberg: Free agency has been; a long time in coming in football. II *is already there in baseball and bas- ketball. The NFL having lost the McNeil case can basically set a Nov. 12 deadline in the Reggie White case, which is a case where all the players who's contracts expire Feb. 1 will be free agents. Management is now going to have to scramble to put together a new collective bargaining agreement that allows them at least some limitations on free agency. The draft of 1992 was the last draft agreed to under the 1982 collective bargaining agreement. With the prospects of neither a draft nor control mechanisms on those free agents, one would think they would scurry before Feb. 1 to go ahead and negotiate a new col- lective bargaining agreement. D: What is the current status of the Reggie White case? S: The players are saying that once our contracts expire on Feb. 1 we should be total free agents with- out any impediments. They are wait- ing for Judge (David) Doty to rule on that. D: The NFL had a union, per se. What kind of impact did the lack of a union have on the players in these 9 two cases? S: The decertification of the union allowed the players to argue not only was there no collective bar- gaining agreement to. give away the restrictions on free agency, there wasn't even anyone to bargain with. So, it was critical in winning The Michigan Daily - Sports Monday - November 16,1 -Page 3 , _._ einberg Leigh Steinberg usses the NFL McNeil. D: If free agency comes to the NFL, will the small market team be shut out? S: Three quick things. Number one, the major source of income in the NFL is television and it is shared equally. Green Bay gets the same amount as Detroit does even though it is a much smaller market. Second of all, the players have talked about salary cap. In that case, it would make no difference at all because each team would have the same money. Third, the big endorsement mytt of the big city is just a myth. In Los Angeles, there wasn't a single player who had his own TV or radio show for the Rams or the Raiders. In Indianapolis and Kansas City, there were tons of opportunities for these shows. So the point is that there is only a myth. There is only one ball, and a quarterback needs to be a starter to make money. It doesn't follow that you are going to have Troy Aikman, Jim Kelly and Warren Moon all try- ing to play for the same team. They need to start. It's pride, ego, fun. D: You have had to deal with many organizations in the NFL. Two of these teams, the Dallas Cowboys and Cincinnati Bengals, are known for their contract negotiations. The Cowboys sign their picks on draft day. The Bengals, on the other hand, tend to have very long negotiations. Compare the two situations. Does it get frustrating for you? S: Yes, it does because the goal of successful representation - it doesn't take a genius to hold a player out of training camp endlessly or to take the team's compensation - the trick is to maximally compen- sate a player so it does not impend on his normal progress and to try to do everything possible to make him part of the team. There are several keys to negoti- ating. The first key is to protect the ability of a player to have a normal career. The second is to be in training camp on time, if possible, participate in all the pre-training camp situa- tions. The key is to have a player walk into a city with his head held high. I understand that the average working person in this country makes $30,000 and they are not to- tally empathetic to an athlete com- plaining he is making $1.2 million compared to $1.6, which is why a number of different times our ath- letes have offered to take a cut in a complete package to the extent that the team owners would lower ticket prices; so as to sustain a younger group of fans so that more could see the game live. This is the same rea- son why I think it is important for an athlete to show their commitment to a city. The key to a successful negotia- tion is that it will not have much publicity at all. It is only when they are failing that they become news. D: Why are NFL holdouts so much more publicized? S: This was a very special sum- mer. It is because there is no free agency. The only time that the players, unfortunately, feel that they have any power to hold services is when they are rookies. The structure is set up so that a player can only sit out or sign a contract. He can't go in and practice while he is negotiating his contract. That is an NFL league rule. There is no salary arbitration that gives a finite result. There is simply this free system of negotiat- ing. Because players don't have the capacity to be free agents, they end up stuck. We end up with a ludicrous system where rookies make enor- mous amounts of money, whereas proven, productive starters make much less. This summer the McNeil case postponed everything. An ex- ample would be that last year we had all of our draft picks in 1991 in on time to camp. D: For the fans, it is very frustrat- ing to see these players hold out. Especially, the offensive linemen and quarterbacks who need to learn the most. S: There is no question about it that a quarterback or offensive line- man who misses a significant amount of training camp will not be very effective. That's a choice the clubs put the players in because of their structure. It is not something that I love. I consider it an unsuccessful negotia- tion when I bring in the players late and I've done unsuccessful negotia- tions. D: Do you take any of the blame upon yourself when these players are not playing? S: Oh, yes. As I said, I consider it a failure if someone cannot reach an agreement. I have had two long quarterback negotiations with David (Klingler) and Andre (Ware). I did- n't feel wonderful about the delay in either one. It happened in both cases that the team told us that the player wasn't going to start the first year whether we had him in on the first day or later, but I still didn't feel wonderful about either one. D: Why is so much of your em- phasis put on the NFL, especially quarterbacks? S: We do baseball. We have been rolemodeling quarterbacks. They have a tremendous impact, and it's a quarterback driven game. It's a bit of a misnomer (the quarterback agent label); at defensive line I have Howie Long , Russell Maryland and Ray Childress, at linebacker I have Junior Seau and Derrick Thomas. But the quarterbacks tend to have a higher profile, and that's just the way the game is structured. D: What advice would you give to a player who is thinking about leaving college early for the pros? S: I advise every player to stay in school and just tell them to go straight back. I tell them if they re- ally, really want to finish their senior year to go do it no matter what hap- pens. So I advised David Klingler to go back to school and he did. I was ironically in the situation of having Tommy Maddox, where re- porters would call and ask "Is he crazy for coming out of school early?" and then five minutes later they would ask "Is Klingler crazy to stay in school?" The reality of it is that a player needs to look into his own value system and figure out how important education is in their senior year. If it is very important to them, they should simply stay in school. If it is not and if they are playing a position where they feel they might be in- jured, then on an individual case-by- case basis, they have to look at their own interests. John Niyo -. S. Tie leaves seniors with ugly memory Corwin Brown thought he was done with this. His senior season. A fifth straight Big Ten title. National championship aspirations. And the painful, burning memory of last year's Rose Bowl defeat buried in his soul. No more shaking his head, he had told himself this summer. Enough already. But there he was Saturday, sharply dressed in a suit and tie as he sat in a metal folding chair in the media room at Crisler Arena. Hunched over with his elbows resting on his knees. Shaking his head again. He stared at the ground. He didn't want to be there, with the television cameras, the tape recorders, the notepads. At least not under those circumstances. For Brown, the emotional leader of the Michigan defense, the last postgame press conference in that building was supposed to be a nostalgiac affair. 'I leave here with a lot of great memories,' the fifth-year senior was supposed to be saying of his last run out of the tunnel in front of 100,000 fans. 'I'm sorry to see it all end.' Not, 'I'm sorry to see it all end like that.' Would that it were. "We wanted to do this at the end of the season," Brown said softly, as he looked up at a circle of reporters and held his index finger high. Number one doesn't seem very e likely anymore for Michigan after a 22-22 tie with Illinois Saturday, and Brown knew it. He knew that the offense had lost - not tied - the game. And so had the defense, especially during the final Illinois scoring drive in the fourth quarter. "I'll just have to go back and look at the film and evaluate and see what was happening," Brown said. "I mean, they were just moving the ball on us." There was a long pause. He took a deep breath. And then sighed. "You know," Brown said, "I KRISTOFFER GILLETTFDily don't know. Maybe we got tired, Hutchinson maybe we didn't. I don't know. But when you're playing to go to the Rose Bowl, trying to be No. 1, you don't get tired. So I just don't know." All he could do was shake his head in disappointment and disgust. Twice this season. Two times too many, he has had to do that. "Next to a loss, this is the worst thing. I wanted to go out with a win. But we clinched the Big Ten title, so I'm happy for that." It wasn't enough, though. Not for Brown, or for any of the 13 Wolverine seniors who played their last football game in the Big House. "When you play your last game in this stadium, you don't expect to have a game like this," said Chris Hutchinson, Brown's co-captain on defense, who was standing 15 feet away from Corwin, shaking his head in unison. "You can look at it and say, 'You know, it's great. We clinched the Big Ten championship and the Rose Bowl.' But then again, a tie is just kind of..." His voice trailed off. A tie just kind of leaves you searching for words. Here was Chris Hutchinson, the cornerstone of the defensive line, an all-America candidate who finally made it through an entire season without a suffering a serious injury. This was supposed to be his day to go out in a blaze of glory. Instead, he stood fielding questions, after he had finished sucking down a small bottle of cough syrup. Two of the team's leaders. One standing somewhat sheepishly, with his hands stuffed in his pocket. The other - the fiery, emotional one - in the folding chair, saying over and over again, "I don't know, I just don't know." "You could see it in their eyes," Hutchinson reflected, "when they started running the ball, that, you know, maybe they've got shot, maybe they've got a shot. We just never did a good enough job - to take the game away from them and say, 'This is ours."' And so it is shared. Even though Illinois walked up the tunnel after the final gun feeling much more content with the 3 1/2 hours that had just been spent on the frozen field. There was the silver lining to the cloud for Michigan - the Rose Bowl berth - but it wasn't enough. Hutchinson turned around and pointed to his duffel bag on the floor behind him. A single rose rested on top of it. "Whenever you have a rose in your hand," he said, "and it's your senior year and you're going to the Rose Bowl, and especially in my case, that's what you dream of - being a captain in the Rose Bowl. You know, I can't complain." Then he smiled. He knew it was only half of what he was thinking. Brown knew it, too. "We didn't just want to go back to the Rose Bowl," he said. The best laid plans... * Tankers continue winning ways versus Badgers Iy Brett Johnson Daily Sports Writer It keeps going and going and go- ing .. No, not that certain bunny from a battery commercial, but the Mich- igan men's swimming and diving program. Friday afternoon, the Wol- verines (2-0 overall) started their Big Ten season off with an im- pressive victory over Wisconsin, 153-85. Before the meet, Michigan coach Jon Urbanchek was confident that the team would have a good meet. "We always expect to win," Urbanchek said. "We've only lol three dual meets in the ten years I've been here- two to IU (Indiana) and one to Ohio State." The meet went well for the Wolverines with Royce Sharp, Eric Wunderlich, Gustavo Borges, and Eric Namesnik leading the way. In the opening event, the 400-yard medley relay, Michigan placed first and second. Namesnik, an Olympic silver- medalist, continued his success by winning the 200 individual medley and the 200 butterfly. His win in the butterfly provided the most exciting race of the day. Namesnik was able to outreach Wisconsin's Robert Pinter, an Olympian from Romania, and win the race by 0:01. Mich- igan's Brian Gunn finished third, less than 0.3 off Namesnik's pace. Wunderlich and Sharp also made great contributions to the victory. In addition to their help in the 400 medley relay victory, Wunderlich won the 200 breaststroke and placed second to Namesnik in the in the 200 IM. Sharp dominated the 200 backstroke, winning by five seconds. The diving team competed for the first time this year and came up with a good performance. Before the meet, Michigan diving coach Dick Kimball said Wisconsin, who had already dived this year, would be tough competition. "Wisconsin has two good divers, Tom Wright, and redshirt Terry Butler," Kimball said. "We want to see where the kids are at this time." Butler turned out to be Michigan's toughest competition. In the one meter, Michigan divers placed second, third, and fourth be- hind Butler and in the three meter, placed second and third, also behind Butler. Eric Lesser was Michigan's only diver to place in both events. He finished fourth in the one meter and second in the three. - m ~u ~ m w inum a ..w - .....1 1 MAJOR LEAGUE BASI STUF F. " Save on entire selection of NFL hats. " Major League Baseball wool adjustable caps up to 25% off. " Entire selection of MLB jerseys, T-shirts, ]EBAL SUMMER STUDY ABROAD hOtter than ever Join the growing number of students who make their summers count - for credit. Choose from 22 Syracuse University and shorts on sale. only at U