The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, September 27, 1993 - 3 L&A; IElEY N SUGIUR UTLEY The former Detroit offensive lineman discusses his life after football Ever since Mike Utley was seven years old, he dreamed ofplaying foot- ballfor the rest of his life. Following a standout career at Washington State in which he was named All-American following the 1988 season, Utley went on to become one of the Detroit Lions' steadiest offensive lineman. Little did he know that his dreams would be shattered on an autumn afternoon in 1991 when he became paralyzed as a result of a freak accident in a game * against the Los Angeles Rams. Since that time, Utley has undergone much physical therapy in his attempt to walk again. Daily reporter Tim Smith re- cently spoke with Utley about his life after football. Daily: How has your rehabilita- tion been going? Utley: I'm still in the wheelchair, but actually I've been great. I have my hands back, and my lower back 0 muscles are all in now. I can hold my legs up and lower them down, and I can see the muscle fibers working. This has happened within the last month or so. I'm in the weight room at least four times a week. For exercise, I'm able to strap my legs together and move around on-crutches. I can move my left foot pretty good, and my right foot * OK. I have some feelings through my leg, so I can tell light touch and the difference between hot and cold. D: Tell me a little about the Mike Utley Foundation. U: The No. 1 goal of the founda- tion is to raise money for spinal cord research. I've been hurt before, but they've always been able to fix me up and put me back on the football field. Now they're struggling to get me back up. My priority is spinal cord research. Hopefully, God willing, the founda- tion gets big enough so that a cure does come. Then we will be able to help the individual who needs help- who needs the wheelchair and needs other things he can't afford. D: What else have you been doing to keep busy? U Ijustgotback from Phoenix (the foundation's headquarters) last week. I was doing some work for the foun- dation. I'm heading back to Detroit for the week. I'm going to the Lion's game and I'm also going to speak at a couple of schools and do an autograph signing. I really am keeping busy. D: Do you keep in touch with any of the Lions? U: I talk to some of them every once in a while. We'll ramble about different things. D: What has it been like without football in your life? U: It's a bitch. I'll tell you what. I've been playing ever since I was seven years old, and I really miss it. It's a rough time this time of year. Time to ache, time to get sore. I miss that part of it. I miss bumming around with the guys. I don't care what anybody else says, but you bond with these guys pretty well. When they suffer you suffer, when they hurt you hurt. You get some unity being together. D: Ignoring the physical aspect, how else has the accident changed your life? U: I still go all out like I used to. It hasn't slowed me down. Sometimes physically I'm limited, but mentally I go to the wild. I go to the weight room and do a tough two hour workout. I go to the hospital to do my gaiting (swing legs while moving crutches). I try to keep myself as motivated as I can. If you don't stay motivated, somebody's going to pass you by. I don't want to be passed by anybody. D: Do you have any intention of coming back to football as a coach or front office person? U: One day, once the rehab for the spinal cord injury is done with, I would like to get back into some kind of coaching. It would most likely be as an offensive line coach on the college level. Right now I'm focused on re- hab, and that's all I do. D: What kind of public reception do you get when you go out? U: Real good. Everybody says thumbs up man. Keep it up- you're a hell of an inspiration to me and my family. It's not that I've got the spinal cord injury that people see, it's the fact that I haven't quit. I won't quit. Lpush as far as I can as hard as I can. People see that. It's amazing how far I've come. I tell people that there is so much more that I want to do. I'm trying to get people motivated - children and adults. I want people to know the whole story, not just that the injury is still there. D: What were your initial feelings when you heard about the Dennis Byrd injury? U: I just said shoot, here we go again. I'll tell you what. He's doing excellent. I've told people before, thank God he's walking. His injury is completely different. People have got to remember one thing- all injuries are not the same. His was nowhere as severe as mine. He could have moved his legs two hours after the initial hit. He was much further along then me from the begin- ning. D: How come Byrd made such a quick recovery? U: People can say it was the drug, (an experimental one which Byrd was given) but you don't know. The No.1 thing you can say is that his injuryjust wasn't as severe. The key is whathe should be doing now - promoting spinal cord re- search. He's not doing that as much. It's kind of sad. We need to gdt the people out there aware about spinal cord injuries. To get the public focused- that's my goal. I'm retired from football, promoting spinal cord research now is my job. D: What would you say to people who have injuries or problems, and are just sitting back feeling sorry for themselves? U: The No. 1 thing people should realize is that life is too damn short. Do the things you want to do. If you are faced with a challenge you've got to face the challenge, suck it up and go on. If you would like more informa- tion about the Mike Utley Foundation or would just like to send a donation, write to: The Mike Utley Foundation 5050 North 40th Street Suite 201 Phoenix, Arizona 85018 (602) 955-8225 f~~~Close But No Sugiura Cleveland Stadium has charm all its own CLEVELAND - Character is how Rick Marc-Aurele described it to me. "There's character to this ballpark," he said, sitting in his box seat at Cleveland Stadium, a place that probably was involved somewhere with the etymology of the word "cavernous." A season ticket holder for the past three seasons, he said he has missed only 10 home games in that span. "I go to so many games, I know everybody here," said Marc-Aurele as a grounds crew member discreetly slipped him a plastic bag filled with dirt scooped up from the playing field. It will go on his mantel. Friday, September 24, three friends and I joined Marc-Aurele and 33,528 other fans to watch the Cleveland Indians - in the middle of a 39- year rebuilding process - lose, 11-8, to the Milwaukee Brewers in their sixth-to-last game in Cleveland Stadium, a ballpark once described as The Mistake by the Lake. Next season, the Indians will move into the brand-new Gateway Park in downtown Cleveland. This coming weekend, the Indians and their fans will say good-bye to their home since 1932 with three games that are already sold out. Ticket buyers had to purchase tickets for all three.Apparently, nostalgia comes at a price. The final series will put the Indi- ans over the 2-million mark for fans for the first time since 1954, which, not so coincidentally, was the last time Cleveland made the postseason. Much blame for the team's de- cades-long failure has fallen on the ballyard bordering Lake Erie. "Players like to see the stands full of people," points out Marc-Aurele, who bears an uncanny resemblance to Cliff Clavin. "They're showoffs. They like to perform before a crowd." If that is the case, it is a wonder the Indians have won at all. The sta- dium is an 80,000-seat monolith which has taken its share of abuse. The only way the Indians could sell out was if abuse could buy tick- ets. Ever the investigative journalist, I made the trip to see if all the horror stories were true. And in all truth, it wasn't that bad. Belle Yes, it has some problems that fans won't miss. The stadium parking lot doubles as aloading dock for ships. Incidentally, the parking lot/loading dock includes a warehouse with a sign that pro- claims, "THIS IS HARD HAT COUNTRY." It is good warning to fans, because in order to park your car, you need a hard hat. You have to maneuver around these huge stacks of iron rails that look like they've been there a long, long time. I surmise that long ago, Indians management said to themselves, "We'll get rid of those things with the money we get the next time we make the playoffs." The stadium itself does show its 61 years of age. There is probably the same agreement about the butt-unfriendly seats as there is about the rails. In this information-crazed age, the centerfield scoreboard offers about as much information as John Gotti does on trial. If you want to hear the music over the speaker system, I hope you enjoy the view from the bleachers. It isn't audible anywhere else. The bunting along the upper deck facing is red, gray and blue. See CLEVELAND, Page 6 Ware leads Lions past visiting Cardinals, 26-20 PONTIAC, Mich. (AP) - A switch in quarterbacks got the Detroit Lions' offense untracked Sunday. With Andre Ware starting in place of Rodney Peete, the Lions scored their first touchdowns since opening day and defeated the Phoenix Cardi- nals 26-20. Ware, the 1989 Heisman Trophy winner making only his fifth career start, completed 11 of 24 passes for 194 yards, including a 9-yard touch- down pass to Brett Perriman. Derrick Moore scored on a 1-yard run and Jason Hanson kicked field goals of 44, 22, 33 and 38 yards for Detroit (3-1). Steve Beuerlein completed 23 of 31 passes for 288 yards and two TDs for the Cardinals (1-3). He hooked up with Ricky Proehl for a 51-yard score and with Walter Reeves on a 2-yarder. Greg Davis kicked field goals of 54 and 30 yards for Phoenix. The Lions defense recovered three Phoenix fumbles. Moore's TD at the 6:17 mark of the second quarter ended a stretch of 11 quarters, plus an overtime period, in which the Lions went without a touch- down. It also was first time Detroit had scored a touchdown from inside the 20 in eight previous tries this sea- son. The Cardinals went ahead 7-6 just 2:01 into the second quarter when Beuerlein found Proehl far ahead of Kevin Scott. But the Lions reclaimed the lead on Hanson's third field goal on their next possession. With Phoenix trailing by six, Beuerlein fumbled with 1:56 remain- ing on his own 29. Hanson's 43-yard attempt was blocked with nine sec- onds left, but Beuerlein's last-ditch pass fell incomplete. AP PHOTO Phoenix Cardinals' running back Garrison Hearst tries to avoid tackle attempt of Detroit Lions' defensive back William White in the Lions' 26-20 victory yesterday . TH PLICE i jjl A Complete Exhaust System Is One Low Price At Speedy. Compact Cars,. Alliance, Aries. Cavalier, Charger. Chevette, Cimarron, Citation, Escort, EXP. Firenza. Horizon. Hyundai Excel, LN7, Lynx Omni, Phoenix, Reliant: Skyhawk. Skylark, Sunbird. Tempo, Topaz* Certain model years require a resonator-add $30. Mid-Size Cars$ 9 Bonnevile (midsize), Calais, Camaro. Capri. Celebrity. Century, Ciera. Concord. Cougar Cutlass. Eagle Premier. Fairmont E Granada. Grand Am, Grand Prix. LeBaron" LTD (midsize). Malibu. Monte Carlo. 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