The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, October 25, 1993 - 3 Calloway The former Michigan receiver discusses the Wolverines and his life in the NFL Along with fellow wideout Greg McMurtry, Chris Callowayhelpedpro- vide the Wolverines with a strong pass- catching threat. Calloway hauled in a six-yard touchdown pass from. Demetrius Brown in the third quarter of the 1989 Rose Bowl to help Michi- gan defeat USC, 22-14. Following a solid career as a flanker for Michigan, Calloway was selected in thefourth round of the 1990 NFL Draft by the Pittsburgh Steelers with the 97th overall selection. Recently, Daily Sports Writer Tim Smith talked with Calloway about his life in the NFL as well as his career with the Wolverines. Daily: What are your general feel- ings about your NFL career to date? Calloway: I think my career has been good. This is my fourth year and I'm still feeling good. I'm relatively healthy and that's all you can ask for. Just to stay healthy and play as long as you can. D: Was it difficult to make the transition from college to the NFL? C: No, not really. It wasn't too hard. I started off there in Pittsburgh and I had some good mentors, or people in front of me, to learn from. They helped me along with it so I don't think it was too tough. D: What are the major differences between college and the pros? C: Well, the pro game is run at a much faster pace. There are bigger athletes as well. The game is a lot more complicated. D: What was it like to play under a coaching legend like Chuck Noll in Pittsburgh? C: It was pretty unique. He really didn't communicate too much with a lot of players. We kind of knew who he was and knew what he accom- plished, so we respected him. D: What is it like playing for the New York Giants, one of the most storied franchises in pro football? "C: It's nice, especially when you're winning. Then it's real nice. 'D: How do the coaching philoso- phies between Ray Handley and Dan Reeves differ? C: Dan Reeves has been around a lot longer than Ray Handley, but Ray just didn't get a chance to prove him- self. He probably would have been a good coach but he just didn't have a chance because of the fans and the press and everything. Dan, the players have a lot of re- spect for him. We know that he's been around for a long time and that he's been to the Super Bowl. He gets down to business and the players respect that and want to play well for him. D: How has the team's overall atti- tude changed since last year? C: With the new coaching staff, and with Dan coming in, we felt like we were kind of in disarray last year. We needed a little more discipline and Dan has brought that in. I think we have responded to him. D: Is the team already talking about York have on a team when it is strug- gling like the Giants were last year? C: I don't listen to the radio station or the press or what not. I try not to pay attention to all that media talk. How- ever, it definitely has an effect on the team and the coaches, but you try not to listen to it. D: What was your best game in the NFL so far? C: Probably against Kansas City last year. I made four or five catches. D: What defensive back or safety do you fear the most? C: Well, of course, Ronnie Lott. He's still tough. (Steve) Atwater from zip on them. You don't see an age factor there at all. D: What's the worst thing that's happened to you, football-wise? C: Probably last year's season. It was so difficult to get through with the losses and not making the play- offs. D: Your were a Plan B free agent when you signed with the Giants. Why did you choose to come to New York? C:I worked out with several teams, but I felt I had the best chance to really play in New York. D: What are your present goals in the NFL? What would you like to accomplish? C: First of all, I'd like to play as long as I can. Ultimately, to play in the Super Bowl, to be on a Super Bowl-type team, is another goal. Just to be the best player I can for as long as I can. Hopefully, I can go another eight or nine years. D: What do you want to do after football? Do you have any plans? C: Hopefully, to get into the com- munications field, film or television. Some of the behind-the-scenes-type work. D: On the other hand, looking back, what was it like to play for Bo Schembechler? C: It was a thrill. When I look back on playing for a legend like that, at first it was hard. When I first came from high school to college, he was on me about my grades. But I grew to like him. And I think he liked me. D: But do you wish your college offense was a little more receiver ori- ented? C: Most definitely. Sort of like it is now with the Giants. If I had gotten a lot more balls and maybe I would have gotten to a college all-star game. D: What was your fondest memory of your play at Michigan? C: Probably my touchdown my junior year in the Rose Bowl against USC. D: Have you stayed in contact with any of the players on the Michi- gan teams you played on? C: Yeah, I still talk a lot with (former Wolverine tight end) Derrick Walker. He's out in San Diego with the Chargers. And with Desmond Howard; I spoke to him when we played against the Redskins last week. KEN SUGIURA Close But No Sugiura Thompson, BCA off the mark on Prop. 42 ALstahmember of the Black Coaches Association (BCA), Georgetown basketball coach John Thompson has been a spokesperson for many of the race-related issues central to college basketball. Most of them are definitely on the mark. He feels that there are not enough Blacks in the collegiate coaching ranks, and he is right. The percentage of Black athletes dwarfs the percentage of Black coaches in the game. Most teams have at most one Black coach; often a token assistant who can provide Black recruits the appearance - based in truth or not - of a racially-harmonious club. Thompson also correctly believes that NCAA cost-cutting measures currently on the board to reduce the scholarships from 15 to 13 and eliminate graduate assistant positions are counterproductive. While athletic departments are in financial straits, the way to save money is to reduce the administrative bureaucracy, not take away opportunities from students. Another contention is that at a time when coaches are often one of the only positive influences on players, NCAA restrictions are also limiting contact with both recruits and players. This is no way to compete as an influence against the evils of society, not when drug dealers and other malevolent forces can have immediate access to the kids without repercussion. Last Tuesday, Thompson and 44 other BCA members met with the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) in Washington D.C., to discuss these issues and hopefully affect change in college basketball. In meeting with the CBC, the roughly 3,000-member BCA boycotted last week's National Association of Basketball Coaches (NABC) issues forum in Charlotte, N.C., and threatened further action, such as a "Black Saturday," in which Black basketball players and coaches would be encouraged to sit out one Saturday of the basketball season in protest. Thompson and others voiced their frustration with the lack of progress the NABC had previously made in responding to the Black coaches. "We'd rather go to Congress to find a way to get this thing changed," Thompson said. Almost all of these proposed changes merit the support of every college basketball fan. One does not. He and the BCA, whose membership includes former Michigan assistant and now Detroit-Mercy head coach Perry Watson and Minnesota head coach Clem Haskins, believe that future NCAA academic requirements for incoming freshmen will severely penalize disadvantaged minorities like the inner-city Black youths that have proved a fertile recruiting ground for basketball coaches. The new rule, Proposition 42, requires that incoming freshmen who fail to earn a 2.5 GPA in high school core classes and fall short of preset test scores sit out one year and pay their own way. The BCA says that tighter measures will eliminate inner-city kids' chances for scholarships and, without a coach to be a positive influence, will leave them vulnerable to the harms of the city. The new rule should be rescinded, and maybe even lowered, the BCA contends. This does not deserve support. Philosophically, it is wrong. By complaining that the tighter measures will hurt inner-city kids, and then pushing for the current or lower standards, the same troubled message that those kids have been pinning their dreams on all this time is reinforced - that basketball, not books, is the ticket out. The same argument of racial bias was made with Proposition 48 - which sent students who could not surpass a certain SAT or ACT score to the sidelines for a season and took away a year of eligibility. True, the percentage of Black athletes fell, but it has since returned to the previous standard. Borderline student-athletes put books before basketball and managed to buckle down enough in class to pick up the extra test score points. There shouldn't be any reason why the new standards won't do the same. And if coaches are so interested in maintaining current rules to rescue these future all-stars, why aren't they going to bat for the players' friends, the ones who can't dunk or hit three-pointers? Until John Thompson heads over to the Georgetown admissions office and demands that it admit every applicant, his plea will appear very self-serving. And along those lines, why is it that Thompson, Haskins and his Division I coaching brethren need to be the guiding influence? Proposition 42, scheduled to take effect in the fall of 1995, will apply only to Division I schools. What is so wrong with spending a year at a Division II or III school or a junior college and then transferring? Is the BCA worried that See SUGIURA, Page 7 I.v going to the playoffs or even the Super Bowl? C: Well, it's still early. We're just taking it one game at a time and we'll wait and see what happens. D: Why have the Giants played so well this season? C: We had a very good offseason. With the new system coming in the defense is playing well. They don't have to think as much, they can just react. The offense has also quick- ened. I think it's a combination of all those things. D: What effect does a 24-hour sports station such as WFAN in New FILE PHOTO Denver. He's a hard hitting safety. D: Who is the best quarterback you've ever played with and/or against? C: Probably played against, gee, there are so many -- probably either Dan Marino or John Elway. But I've played with some good quarterbacks, notably (Jeff) Hostetler and (Phil) Simms. D: How does Simms look to you this season? Does it look like he's 37 years old to you? C: He's done very well. You don't see a 37-year old throwing the ball to you. The balls are there and they have THE SPORTING Views: With no one in their path, Jays the team of '90s By RAVI GOPAL FOR THE DAILY The Toronto Blue Jays' vanquish- ing of the Philadelphia Phillies in six games to win their second consecutive World Series brought to mind an inter- esting thought. Could the Blue Jays be the major league baseball dynasty of the '90s? This year, the Jays were involved in a dogfight in the American League East, with New York, Baltimore and Detroit all vying for the chance to play ball in late October. Toronto prevailed, primarily because of its incredible hit- ting. Led by the triumvirate of John Olerud, Paul Molitor and Roberto Alomar, the Jays swatted their way to the division crown. Early in the year, the buzz around sports circles was of the Detroit Tigers, and of their Murderers' Row lineup - but as the year wore on, Cecil Fielder, Kirk Gibson and Co. were nowhere to 0 be seen. Anearly-seasonfluke?Likely, giyen the incredible competitive na- ture of Gibson. He fired up the teamin theearly going, butcouldn'tdoitallby himself. Meanwhile, BlueJays general man- ager Pat Gillick was busy adding new elements to his already powerful for- mula - acquiring Rickey Henderson from the Oakland Athletics for the stretch run strengthened an already for- midable lineup. On the mound, the Jays are led by Juan Guzman and Dave Stewart. Guzman had an incredible year, going 14-3 with a 3.99 ERA. Stewart, at the ripe old age of 36, had a subpar year, sporting a12-8recordwith a 4.44ERA but was till tough in the playoffs. Speaking of the Giants, what hap- pened to them? How do the words "one-man team" sound? Barry Bonds, Mr. Everything in Pittsburgh in his years there, came to San Francisco with a mucho contract and supplied mucho energy to a franchise that was almost playing in St. Petersburg, Fla. this year. Bill Swiftand John Burkett compiled great seasons after years of mediocrity. Bonds carried the team the entire season, but eventually ran out of gas. The team that overtook the Giants in oneofthenostmemorablecomebacksin major league baseball history -the At- lanta Braves - was rejuvenated by the acquisition of 1992 home-run king Fred McGriff fromthe San Diego Padres. Ron Gant and Dave Justice also contributed to the Atlanta effort. Much was made about the "five aces" of the Braves' pitching staff: Greg Maddux, Tom Glavine, Steve Avery, John Smoltz, and Pete Smith. Where were they in the Philadelphia series? Where was "Crime Dog?" The Phillies shutdown Atlantain six games, and the Braves will have to consider this season disappointing, after all the preseason expectations. The Phillies will not return to the Series next year. Full of atypical base- ball players like John Kruk and Mitch Williams, the Phillies remind me of a sideshow at a circus - full of novel- ties, but it will never be the same the second time around. They somehow managed to win the pennant. Call it luck; I will. With rivals like these, manager Cito Gaston and the Blue Jays are sitting pretty. Their only major obstacles in the future will be to somehow keep all their talent under the same roof, since their payroll approaches $50 million. But if Pat Gillick hands out the cash, then AL President Bobby Brown will be handing him the World Series tro- phy in October, 1994. r m GO BLUE!! from all of us at DASCOLA STYLISTS, Opposite Jacobson's 668-9329 I I MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL SPECIAL AT RESTAURANT SPORTS $A' Featuring. Any Roast Beef Sandwich and Fries...$3.89 2 for 1 MIxed Drinks (131 Competition- Coors Ught Pitchers...$3.25 1220 S. University Call 665-7777 for deliveries 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 irdr Tempo Topaz* Certain model years require a resonator-add $30 Mid-Size Cars$ 95 Bonneville (midsize),Calais, Camaro.Capri,.Celebrity. Century, Ciera. Concord. Cougar. Cutlass. Eagle Premier. Fairmont. Granada. Grand Am, Grand Prix. LeBaron; LTD (midsize}, Malibu. Monte Carlo, New Yorker (midsize). Pontiac 6000, * r Regal. Sable:7 Somerset. T -Bird, Taurus; Zephyr. Light trucks and vans: Aerostar. Astro, Caravan, Cherokee, F-Series. Ranger. Safari. 'Certain model years require a resonator-add $30. Full-Size Cars 9 ,Caprice. Crown Victoria. Delta 88. Electra. Impala. LeSabre. Lincoln Town Car. Marquis. Olds 98. Parisienne. Light trucks and vans: Blazer S-10. Bronco I, jimmy S-IS. Certain model years require a resonator-add $30.AV U T 4r 1975 through 1990 models. For standard 4-. 6-aMl cWlinder engines. single exhaust systems. No high peromance engines. If you doni need a complete exhaust $ 95 system, our lifetime muiers start at just - 7.800777.0g 12 I THE WORLD'S LARGEST STUDENT & YOUTH TRAVEL ORGANIZATION. STA TRAVEL V. - w Student Discounts Sounds like you need a new muffler. No big deal. if you head to Speed y \utiler King. We wont just fix your car. We'll give you an honest assessment of what your car needs. And then weil fix it for an honest price. ou're cven welcome to use 1OU phone it you need to call home for approval. My staff and I look forw\ard to helping you r WINTER SUN SALE ! n! 100 II at the