4 - The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, December 12, 1994 1995 Holiday . The play that changed the 1994 Michigan football season Colorado quarterback Kordell Stewart spiked the ball to stop the clock, and I walked out of the press box, holding in my hand a notebook with questions for Buffalo coach Bill McCartney. How nice would it have been to come back to Michigan and get a big win? Why was the offense so great last week against Wisconsin and not in today's loss to Michigan? Do you think Michigan can win the national championship? I walked out of the press box elevator and heard the screams of 100,000 fans, thrilled that their team was about to go 3-0. The guard at the bottom of the elevator handed me a card to let me back into the press box. "Pass Out," it read. "What's the final score?" the guard asked me. MICHAEL "It's 26-21," I replied, "but ROSENBERG there's one play left." Roses are Little did I know. Two things Read would happen before the end of ihe game. Colorado: pass. Michigan: out. When they write the epitaph for the 1994 Michigan football season, all they will need is one phrase: Six seconds away from being undefeated against the toughest non-conference schedule in the country. And the Wolverines ended up 7-4. You can blame the lack of emotion. You can scream about coach Gary Moeller's point-a-minute defense. I remember Kordell Stewart's Hail Mary pass to Michael Westbrook to give Colorado a 27-26 victory over Michigan. After the play, I tried to make it through the stands down to the field. The crowd was still. The pass had frozen the stadium. It would be several weeks before anybody realized the pass had stopped the Michigan season. In the wildly loud Colorado locker room after the game, Stewart could only whisper, trying to piece together the greatest moment of his life. "The coach called this so-called play," he said. "It worked." Two days after the pass, at his weekly media luncheon, Moeller was asked how long it would take him to get over the Hail Mary. "You never get over it," Moeller said. "It's a lifetime thing." Is that really true? Do the Wolverines still think about that pass? "Every day, every night," says defensive back Chuck Winters, who tipped the ball into Westbrook's hands on the play. Michigan plays Colorado State in the Holiday Bowl Dec. 30, three months after the pass. It's hard to believe it's still the same season. These are clearly not the same Wolverines. "If we would have won that game, it would have propelled us on," Winters says. "I think we would have been like 10-1." Michigan was never the same after that play. The Wolverines did not have the confidence that they showed in the win at Notre Dame or in the first 59:54 of the Colorado game. They were a deflated team. "That was my worst experience at the University of Michigan," defensive back Ty Law says now. Two months after the pass, I stand on the 30-yard line at Michigan Stadium, stand and squint at the south end zone 70 yards away. Jeez, this is a long way, I think to myself. A real long way. A half-hour has passed since Michigan beat Minnesota in its final home game of the season. The Wolverines actually trailed the lowly Gophers at halftime before coming back to win. In 1994, even a home game against Minnesota was a chore. I look around the old building. A few yards away from me, a few little kids are throwing around a Nerf football, pretending they are stars, pretending they are making game-winning catches. Except for the children, the stadium is empty now. The season has left. I look one more time at the end zone, 70 yards away. I shake my head. Colorado's Michael Westbrook catches a Hail Mary pass from Kordell Stewart against Michigan Sept. 24. The reception, which won the game for the Buffaloes, sent Michigan plummeting toward a 7-4 season. w W L w W L w L w w1 L Michigan (7-4) BOSTON COLLEGE Notre Dame COLORADO Iowa MICHIGAN STATE Penn State Ilinois WISCONSIN Purdue MINNESOTA Ohio State 34-26 26-24 26-27 29-14 40-20 24-31 19A4 19-31 45-23 38-22 6-22 W W w w w w W L W W W Air Force UTAH STATE Brigham Young SAN DIEGO STATE New Mexico Arizona UTEP UTAH WYOMING ARKANSAS STATE Fresno State 34-21 41-16 28-21 19-17 38-31 21-16 47-9 31-45 35-24 48-3 44-42 Colorado State (104) LtAW Continued from page 1 His participation on the high school team introduced him into Aliquippa's pantheon of football greats, which includes NFL Hall of Famer Mike Ditka, a host of current Big Ten players, and Los Angeles Ram Sean Gilbert. (Fans outside California know the Ram from the Russell Athletic television commercial in which a five-year- old fan swings him, hammer style, into a chain-link fence.) Tony Dorsett - a distant cousin of Law's - graduated from nearby Hopewell High. His school's history is not lost on Law. "Any high school player would love to experience Aliquippa," he says. "We have such great tradition there, similar to Michigan. Once I achieve my goals and get to where I want to be, I want to get back to Aliquippa. "Without Aliquippa and without struggles, without the great tradition of football and basketball (there), where would Ty Law be today?" It is a sobering question. In a town in which front stoops have become illicit marketplaces, football is the saving grace. Neighbors still rally around the high school team as they would a departing Army platoon. Through the Quarterback Club, parents and friends raise money to support the costs of two gleaming weight rooms, a pristine field and a carpeted and sound system- equipped lockerroom. For a serious player, the school is an oasis. For the others, it is just another stoop. Six-year head coach Frank Marocco says that of the 20 kids who made the team as sophomores, eight stayed on through this, their senior year. "Two were kicked off for disciplinary reasons; 10 are no longer in school," he says. With that background as prologue, Law approached his selection of a college with hungry eyes. Thoughts of new clothes and new cars in tow, he set about the business of visiting schools. "I went to (a highly respected program), and the guy who hosted me was from my high school. He said he got t_. . -1 - -1 ____ ., _ . 1 .A _ 9, . .. . . _.. After all, it wasn't Law's fault that at age 10 he and his mother almost died when their duplex caught fire. Their exit was blocked by the back door, bolted because of a recent robbery. "What if we would've bolted the front door too?" he asks. It is a wonder he ended up in college at all. Law survived that near-tragedy the way he does all setbacks: by gathering strength from his family. Diane, 38, had Ty (born Tajuan) while still in high school. His father, who Ty considers more pal than parent, was largely absent while Ty was growing up. Much of his rearing was done by Diane's father, Ray. Nearly 11 years retired from LTV, Ray is the oxygen in Ty's existence. In essence, Ty Law is a momma's boy. He may be a generation and a gender removed - a grandfather's boy - but the effect is the same. To hear him speak of Ray Law, you'd think Ty was building a shrine. "It's like a God looking over me when I know he's there," the 20-year-old Law says. "I feel like I have a halo around my head." Ray's four daughters were the only children in the family, so when a grandson came along, Ray doted on him. He went to every one of Law's football games since age Name: Ty Law Team: Football Height: 6 feet W1eight: 190 seven. He worked on the high school team's booster club selling raffle tickets to raise money for operating expenses. At every stage, every down of Ty's young life, Ray was there. Once, when Ty didn't like the condiments offered with his school lunch, he called Ray at home with a request: ketchup. "They had some kind of off-brand," Ray says. "He's a stickler for Hunt's and Heinz." Calling home for ketchup? "Well," Ray says, a twinkle in his voice, "Maybe I did baby him a little bit." But if Ty has Ray on a short rope, Ty willingly tethers himself to his grandfather. So it was only fitting that he be present when Ty, sitting in Aliquippa High's principal's office, signed his letter of intent. It's a 70-year-old man fans have to thank for the Michigan football team's star cornerback. It is Ray who lived closer to Ann Arbor than to Miami, Gainsville and Clemson; he whose streak of games attended would end if Ty ventured too far from western Pennsylvania. "Academics, football, tradition .. I really didn't know anything about the Michigan program. All I knew about was Ray Law." Ray was there when it happened. September 24, 1994. Colorado vs. Michigan. Six seconds on the clock. 26-21, Wolverines. He saw Buffalo quarterback Kordell Stewart drop back, the line of his shoulders slanting toward his own end zone, and heave a last pass. For five full seconds the ball spun toward the Michigan goal, brushed and dabbed at least three Wolverine defenders, and came to rest in the hands of receiver Michael Westbrook. 27-26, Colorado. Silence. "I jumped," he says for the thousandth time. "I tried to hit the ball. Why should I be remembered for losing the game when I put forth my best effort?" Coaches didn't blame him for the play, but that didn't make its aftermath any easier. "I walk in a store," he says. "First time ever on the cover of Sports Illustrated, it looks like Ty Law's getting beat man-to-man." That night, Law sat in his darkened bedroom, thinking "Could I have jumped a little higher?" Today, he's beginning to make peace with himself. "I realize that one play didn't get me to the University of Michigan, one play didn't make me All-Big Ten, one play didn't make me (a Walter Camp) All-American, and one play's not going to break me. I know I can play. Half the people who might blame that play on me would probably love to have been in my shoes." Then, as if making a resolution, he adds, "I'm blessed to be a part of such a great play. I can say I'm part of history." Still, enhanced by the SI cover, and the inside photo of Law kneeling on the turf, Muslim prayer-style, his story will remain entrenched in sports lore. "Every time I want to forget it, I get a call from somebody who wants an interview," he says. "They talk about all the good things, then that play comes up." If the tendency to highlight the negative is true for journalists, it is even more so for Law. "I will always remember that play before I remember anything good that I did, because I was in on that play. I thought it was going to ruin all my individual accolades." "0** Ironically, perhaps the best play Law ever made will be remembered as his biggest mistake. It was the first start of his college career - he was a true freshman - and it was in South Bend. With Michigan up, 17-7, early in the fourth quarter, Notre Dame found itself in a third-and- seven situation 12 yards from the goal line. Fighting Irish quarterback Rick Mirer faked a handoff then threw to Lake Dawson. Law was there, and swatted the ball away. The ruling came up: pass interference. With touchdown hv Law's tenacity also allowed him to intercept six passes for 79 yards in '93 and make 56 tackles this season. His six passes broken up - 17th in the Big Ten - is more impressive when one considers the fact that quarterbacks threw away from him. Their respect explains part of why, despite making only one interception this season, Law still made all-everything. "He's come in here as a great player and he's only gotten better," defensive backs coach Bill Harris says. "He doesn't have a big weakness." And now, Law realizes how much football means to him. "There are so many guys who were all-this and all-that in high school who can't even step on the field in college," he says. "I was blessed, and didn't appreciate it as much as I do now. I'll never take my ability for granted again. I know that I'm the best cornerback in the country. That's what keeps my heart pumping." Says safety Chuck Winters, "He's the type of person who knows he's good." So do the pros. Currently, Law is grappling with the prospect of entering the NFL draft. And with Law, as with many escapees of teenage poverty, appeals to team loyalty and academic conscience have grown obsolete. He has other issues to consider. "I know that if I went, I'd probably feel more comfortable about myself, and about my family situation," he says. "I've got to do what's best for my family. I don't want to seem selfish. I don't want to let the team down. But it's something I have to consider." Whether he stays or goes, Law already has triumphed over past demons. "There were a lot of guys who made it to a Division I program, but they were home after the first year," he says. Seeing the pattern, Law says he vowed "to make it through college, make it to ?- the next level, to try to heli my mother and my grandfather live a better life." Reflecting on his past, Law says he might have done a few things differently - for one, steering clear of dns. But he has learned from . . 0.,