'l The cga Uaily - Kickoff -riay, beptember , '% -a A- 0 The Michiga'n baily Law enforces 'no fly' rule in Blue secondary When Boston College quarterback Mark Hartsell took the first snap in Saturday's game, the Michigan sec- ondary was prepared to make a strong statement that would carry it through the season. But Eagle split end Greg Grice hauled in Hartsell's pass at the Michi- gan 25 yard line over the outstretched hands of free safety Chuck Winters and ran in for a 74-yard score. This was not what Wolverine de- fensive backs had in mind. "You cannot let people throw be- hind you," Michigan coach Gary Moeller said after the game. That would be the point of having players such as junior All-America candidate Ty Law at the cornerback position. Law earned Sports Illustrated's Defensive Player of the Week honors after his two-intercep- tion performance against Ohio State last November. "We're playing against five All- American (receivers) this year," Law says. "It's a way to gain respect for the Michigan secondary. It's a chance to show the talent we have back there." Joining Law on the other corner is senior Deon Johnson, replacing the departed Alfie Burch. Sophomores Woody Hankins and Tyrone Noble provide backup for Johnson. Winters, who started every game in '93, will be spelled by sophomore Clarence Thompson at free safety. Sophomore Deollo Anderson starts at strong safety and will be backed up by redshirt freshman Ear- nest Sanders. Law is head and shoulders above his fellow Wolverine defensive backs. He stands as one of the top cornerbacks in the nation and a preseason favorite for the Jim Thorpe Award, given to college football's best defensive back. "I look forward to (defensive co- ordinatorLloyd) Carr telling me, 'You got him,"'Law says, betraying his lust for one-on-one coverage. However, beyond Law and the rest of the starters, few Michigan defensive backs have the experience to be shoved into single coverage confrontations. - Brett Forrest Law Go DEEP GB&os ® G~cu T go8Lf) 14? 617VacKat 'I' L p: 6 3441 basketball player," Baker says. "I said, 'If you want to drive to community college or to a Division II or III school, you can do that. But if you want to fly out of here, it's going to be for football." In a play during the last game of Dyson's junior year, he offered evidence to Baker's argument. "He came across the field and I thought he killed the kid," Baker says. "The kid's helmet came off, his shoes popped up straight in the air. "At that point, he realized, 'Ooh, I like doing that."' The scouts liked it, too. Dyson was pursued by Alabama, North Carolina, Ohio State, Miami, Michigan State and Notre Dame. But Dyson, a Catholic, snubbed the Irish. Why? "Basically, (Notre Dame coach Lou) Holtz just lied to me," he says. Dyson says Holtz told him the team had only four outside linebackers, two of whom were seniors, so he'd be able to play early in college. "I went there (to visit)," Dyson says, "and I was hanging out with the guys. One of the linebackers (and I), we were talking, and I said, 'So what do you guys do in practice?' And he was like, 'Well, the 10 of us go over and...' and I was like 'The 10 of you?"' He could be angry; he isn't. Instead, he's reclining on his couch, chewing, sloth-like, on a piece of pizza. He tells the Notre Dame story in the same chuckling tone that he tells the one about his first day on Michigan's team. Several pounds heavier and a few steps slower, Dyson took two laps around the field and threw up. It happened, in part, because three bowls of cereal sloshed in his lactose-sensitive stomach. But even Dyson acknowledges he had to elevate his game when he arrived in Ann Arbor. And he has. In Saturday's game, Dyson impressed his coaches and teammates alike on the first play of the game. "The (Boston College) receiver caught the ball at the 20 or 25-yard line," says middle guard Tony Henderson, who roomed with Dyson their first year at school. "By the time that guy got to the end zone, Dyson was at the five, right behind him. He trucked 250 pounds a good 45, 50 yards on the fly past two 180-pound defensive backs (Chuck Winters and Ty Law), trying to stop a guy from scoring on us. "That's how much he cares about the team." Henderson said Dyson stressed to the defense how important this year is to him. He also showed it last spring. "Last year, coaches emphasized that he was too heavy, and that may be why he was getting hurt," says linebacker coach Bobby Morrison. Dyson lost a dozen pounds between the '93 season and this one, so that doesn't explain why he injured his foot Saturday. The injury means he will sit out his last-ever matchup with ... Notre Dame. That hurt stings more than the surgery he endured to repair his foot. It also means his list of ills grows longer. As of now, it includes three arthroscopic surgeries on his knee, a torn calf muscle, and a shoulder injury that forced him into redshirt status his freshman year. Missing one of college football's great grudge matches will not ruin him; it means he will be a coach to Kerwin Waldroup and Trevor Pryce - who will replace him - instead of a player. But even if it did, you wouldn't hear it from the man. Expressing his feelings is a challenge. "My biggest flaw is that I don't demonstrate to people that I care about them enough," Dyson says. Alison Glendening, his girlfriend of four years, says he just doesn't want to burden people with his emotions. "You've got to ask a specific question to get something out of him," says the Michigan alumnae, now a first-year medical student at Indiana. "He can talk your ear off and you won't get an idea of what he's like." Just as he likes celebrating other people's birthdays but not his own, Dyson prefers showing to telling. He was smiling and laughing during two-a-day August football practices, which involve the kind of workouts you'd decline in favor of elaborate dental work. His giddiness elicited grunts of "Why are you always so damn happy?" from his teammates. He is happy because he knows he has a good thing at Michigan. Growing up, he and his two brothers and two sisters shared a three- bedroom rental house. His father Matt Sr., now retired, for 32 years was an explosives tester for the Navy; his mother Barbara cleans offices. Dyson does not name the numerous things he went without as a child. It was not hard, he asserts, to get by with shoes one size when his feet needed another. A pair a year had to suffice. Dyson does not speak in detail about his childhood, preferring to tell how in high school, sports pulled him out of a shy silence. They also gave him confidence he took to Ann Arbor. His first year in college, Dyson and his current roommate, Jaison Smith, were in a South Quad lounge with two friends. Smith says the discussion turned to past accomplishments, and Dyson proclaimed there was nothing he couldn't do if he put his mind to it. Skeptical, one of the women in the group ventured that he couldn't throw her out the window. "So," Smith says, grinning devilishly, "Matt proceeded to hang this 6-foot-3 woman (a former Michigan basketball player) outside, the fifth floor lounge. "She stopped daring him to do stuff." Dyson has mellowed since then. After games, he chooses babying his a because they're on TV ... bute person's a role model because person's always being looked a In class, the communication sports management double ma { f Lenses, Frame & Extras! Compare At $1001 Show your card & save patagonia®w SYNCHILLA CLASSICS he Synchilla Snap T-Neck has seen most of the k"own world. It could well be the ultimate multi- purpose utility garment. 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