*1 Page 20 -The Michigan Daily - Friday, September 11, 1992 ,rW. ~7 A FROM DETROIT TO SOUTH BEND: ND's Bettis is a by Mike Scrudato Notre Dame Observer It is hard to imagine Jerome Bettis being the smallest person on the football field, but when he was growing up on Aurora Street on Detroit's West Side, this was the case. "Back home, I was always the lit- tle guy. My older brother (Johnnie) never gave me a chance to play," the Irish fullback explained. "Whenever I got to play, I'd end up getting knocked in the head. So I had to toughen up." Football was not the only area where Bettis had to be tough. "You were bound to know some- one that was into the drug game, and you could be easily influenced if you weren't strong. Fortunately, my par- ents kept me out of that, and my brother (who is now working for a maintenance company) went the right way. He had a big influence on me," Bettis commented. Former Detroit MacKenzie star Jerome Bettis, who spurned Michigan to attend Notre Dame, is now the feature back of the Irish offense. 'The only problem we have with Jerome is that he's always running uphill because the field tilts his way.' - Lou Holtz Notre Dame coach This past summer, Bettis returned the favor to a group of Detroit chil- dren, spending his four weeks at home working in a police cadet pro- gram which helps underprivileged youths. "I worked with a group of about 20 kids and served as a mentor to them," Bettis said. "It gives the kids a chance to get involved in some fun things and lets them see they can have a successful future." Despite his kindness and person- able disposition off the field, the toughness which Bettis learned from his Motor City upbringing is evident in his running style. "I feel it's important to inflict pain. If I don't do that, I don't play aggressive," said the 247-pound fullback about his attitude toward would-be tacklers. "I need to hit someone to get my adrenaline going," he added. "Without that, I'm no longer a bruising fullback I'm just another fullback trying to be a tailback." Though he is not trying to be a tailback, the Heisman candidate has seen some time there, teaming with Dean Lytle, a 221-pound former linebacker to form one of the largest backfields in the nation. "Tailback requires a lot more lat- eral things, and coach (Lou) Holtz says that's not my best fortd. I can't jump from point A to point B quickly, like (starting Irish tailback) Reggie (Brooks) can. It takes a little more for me to get over there," Bettis said of his new part-time role. "But, it's a good feeling. Usually, I don't run behind anyone." Holtz, who "didn't expect Jerome to be a great one," has nothing but good things to say about the man he now refers to as "Coach Bettis." bruiser "Jerome is one of the great lead- ers on this team," the seventh-year Irish coach said. "It's incredible how much (he) helps the others. He's taken Lytle and (Ray) Zellars under his wing. "He is an excellent competitor, and off the field, he is one of the happiest, most personable guys on the team. "The only problem we have with Jerome is that he's always running uphill because the field tilts his way," Holtz joked. Whether Bettis is at fullback or tailback, when he takes the field to- morrow against sixth-ranked Mich- igan he will be trying to prove some- thing. Not to the national television audience, but to his friends dressed in maize and blue. "(Michigan flanker) Walter Smith has given me a lot of prob- lems," Bettis said. "All year I've had to hear, 'What happened to that great offense?"' "At the end of the year, we came on, but it was too late." Smith, a sophomore wideout, and Bettis were teammates at MacKenzie High School in Detroit, where they paired up in the backfield. "He always had the open field moves, and I would put my shoulder down and get in there," Bettis re- called. The two friends almost continued their careers together in Ann Arbor, as Bettis came "very close" to being a Wolverine. During his senior year, Bettis narrowed his choices to Mich- igan and Notre Dame, but did not make his final decision until the morning he announced it. "Both schools thought I was coming because I did nothing to dis- courage either one," he said. "The night before the press conference, my dad bought me two hats - a Notre Dame one and a Michigan one. I woke up and put the Notre Dame one on," Bettis said. And to this day, he still is not positive why he did so. "Maybe it was divine interven- tion," Bettis guessed. "The Lady on the Dome said it was in my best in- terests to come here." Irish fans are certainly glad he did. 'M'takes, on Holtz, luck of the Irish by Josh Dubow Daily Football Writer A 1 ilk v "r 0 N -0 1 When the Michigan football team travels to Notre Dame this weekend; the Wolverines will face two oppo- nents - the Irish football team and the Notre Dame mystique. However the Michigan coaches and players do not believe in the second opponent. "Once the game's started, you block the crowd out," senior tight end Tony McGee said. "You don't think about the luck of the Irish. You just go out and play hard. You throw all your chips out there and hope td come out victorious." While Michigan coach Gary Moeller does not buy into the mys tique, he thinks it can enter the play- ers' minds. "I don't believe in it," Moeller said. "I guess everybody thinks about it, talks about the Golden Dome and all that. It always crosses your mind. But you have to go down, and just play your best. It's funny how things happen, but I don't worry about it a lot." In Moeller's first trip to Notrev Dame as Michigan's coach, a lot of funny things did happen. With Michigan ahead late in the game, the Irish were faced with a third-and-15 situation from their own 15-yard line. Rick Mirer fired a bomb down field to Raghib Ismail. The ball bounced off his hands, over two Michigan defenders and into the waiting hands of freshman wide re- ceiver Lake Dawson. That catch sparked Notre Dame's 28-24 win. "I don't know yet how we won the game," Notre Dame coach Lou Holtz said after the contest. "I con- tribute it to competitiveness, the luck of the Irish and the Lady on the Dome." Despite the ill fated luck twb years ago, Moeller and his team arb enthusiastic about a return trip tb Notre Dame. "I think the players are getting excited about going down there tb play," Moeller said. "It's just like how teams get excited about coming to Ann Arbor. You have 100,000 people in the stands ... That's great motivation. Our players look at it the same way." 5TH AVE. 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