* 18B - The M;chigan*Ily - Kickoff '96 - Ihursd~eptember 12. 1996 Thur*y, September 12, 1996 - - . I M"Iff 4f ''18B - The Michigan9ily - Kickoff '96 - ThursdaSeptember 12, 1996 a a al 0' s i ANSAY Thury, September 12, 1996 Next in line? P om ises m Dreisbach pressured to live up to Michigan's storied past dE iei m By Barry Solenberger Scott Dreisbach knows a lot depends on him. Namely, Michigan's chances for a suc- cessful season. A Rose Bowl season. That puts a lot of pressure on the sophomore quarterback. And as if he needed any more pressure, there is the story of the teams that preceded him in Ann Arbor. From 1990-1994, the Wolverines won 44 games, appeared in five bowl games (they won four), finished in the top 10 of the final Associated Press poll three times and had 10 All- Americans. There are two people who were pri- marily responsible for this Michigan success - quarterbacks Elvis Grbac and Todd Collins. During those five years, no other Michigan signal-caller started a game. Statistically, the two rank as the best quarterbacks in school history. Grbac led Michigan to two Rose Bowls, including a victory over Washington. Collins didn't take his team to Pasadena during his two years as a starter (1993- 94), but he was hardly to blame for the Wolverines' struggles. Then came last season. For the first time since 1989, the quarterback posi- tion was not a strength of Michigan's. But coach Lloyd Carr had a young redshirt-freshman with a lot of poten- tial. Dreisbach took over and directed the Wolverines to a 4-0 start before being lost for the season with an injured thumb. This season, the sophomore is back and the leader of a youthful Michigan offensive attack. He says his right thumb has completely healed, which is good news for Michigan fans. For this fall, Dreisbach must be healthy and display poise beyond his years if the Wolverines are to make it to Pasadena for the first time in four years. He must, in fact, become as good as Grbac and Collins were. Of course, no one is saying that directly. Those types of comparisons only add unwanted pressure. "I didn't really follow them when they were (at Michigan)," Dreisbach says. "The level they played at was a top level. I don't have the experience to be at their level - or even close to their level." Dreisbach is a level-headed guy. He's not interested in comparisons. He only wants to lead the Wolverines to victory each Saturday, and if individ- ual accolades follow, so be it. But the point is clear. Dreisbach knows he must be better this season. And the pressure is there. You don't go to Pasadena with a mediocre quarter- back. You need a star leading your offense, like the ones the Wolverines had from 1990-94. "I think I will feel pressure," Dreisbach says. "I'm in more of a lead- ership role. But it's pressure that comes with everything. I don't really feel it, but I know it's there." And while it may be asking a lot for prom S Si bro Have the Wolverines fallen from their own sta loyd Carr believes in The Michigan Tradition. He knows it; he talks about it; he revels in it. But he is also haunted y it. No matter what Lloyd Carr does while he is the head coach at Michigan, he knows it will be held up to standards set by Yost and Crisler. And he is reminded every day of the success of a man known simply as Bo. Carr's office is in Schembechler Hall. Still, Carr embraces the expectations, if not the scrutiny placed on his team, because of them. There is one tradition more daunting than the rest, however. One that brings with it more pressure than most. One which started with Schembechler and RYAN has since become the motto of the WHITE Michigan football program: White on "Those who stay will be champions." Target Schembechler put that sign above the ._.._.__.... lockerroom door shortly after he arrived in Ann Arbor. It told those Wolverines that if they worked, if they did what was asked of them - play hard and study hard - Bo would get them to the Rose Bowl. And he did. In 1970, '72, '77, '78, '79, '81, '83, Those .a shirted. He didn't play a down. As far as Irons is concerned, that doesn't count. So Michigan is focused on winning its first Big Ten champi- onship since 1992. This is not the most talented team since that '92 squad, and this team isn't favored to win the confer- ence as some of its predecessors have been. But these Wolverines may be the most determined of the past four. Determined not to let another Michigan tradition fall by the wayside. The Wolverines have suffered three straight four-loss seasons. They haven't been dominating the Big Ten, and they haven't been winning championships. They don't even have the nation's biggest stadium any- more. If the Michigan mystique hasn't faded in the past three sea- sons, it certainly has flickered. And these seniors don't want to see it burn out on their watch. They see Bo's sign every day in the lockerroom, just over the doors to the practice field. "Those who stay will be champions." Irons, for one, didn't have to stay. As one of the top line- backers in the country last year, he could have gone pro. But he came back. He came back for a ring. He stayed to be a champion. - There are five teams that have a legitimate shot to win the Big Ten this year and claim the bowl trip Michigan covets like a birth right. who Stay The key will most likely be injuries. Whichever team has the fewest is the one ampions. who will be in Pasadena the first day of 1997. Schembechler It could be Michigan. It could very rmer Michigan well be somebody else. football coach "It would hurt a lot," said senior nose tackle Will Carr about the prospects of not going to the Rose Bowl. "Coming up h MARK FRIEDMAN/Daily Scott Dreisbach must read defenses all season the way he did in the fourth quarter of the Virginia game last year if Michigan is to have any chance at making the Rose Bowl. The shadows of Elvis Grbac and Todd Collins will follow him every rush, every pass and every play. Dreisbach to be a Grbac or a Collins, it's not a pipe dream. Because at 6- foot-4 and 209 pounds, Dreisbach is potentially the next great Michigan quarterback. "I like Scott as a quarterback because of his athletic ability," says Michigan offensive tackle Thomas Guynes. "I know that if I get in trouble, he can scramble around, and I can get back on the block so I don't look too bad:" Dreisbach certainly has the talent, but can he keep off of the operating table? His thumb has healed, but he recently had another injury befall him. Back in early August, Dreisbach banged his right foot into a wall, injur- ing his fourth toe pretty badly. When Dreisbach went to tell Michigan coach Lloyd Carr about the mishap, Carr rid- dled the 20-year-old with a response that cannot be printed here. "He had a few choice words," Dreisbach said. "He told me that if I missed a snap, I could transfer. In a joking way." Joking, indeed. Because if Dreisbach were to leave, it would like- ly put Carr in exactly the same position he was in a year ago when the then- redshirt freshman went down - up a creek. Fortunately for Michigan, Dreisbach's toe healed quicker than his thumb. After a 4-0 start last fall, the Wolverines limped to a 5-4 finish with the inexperienced Brian Griese at quarterback. It was evident rather quickly that Griese did not have what it would take to lead Michigan to Pasadena. But that is not to say that Michigan would have ended its season in the Rose Bowl if Dreisbach had not gotten hurt. When in action, he was hardly everybody's All-American. His first game mirrored his next three. At times, he couldn't hit anybody (see the first three quarters of the Virginia game) and at others, he was brilliant (see the fourth quarter of the Virginia game). "I think he's still a young quarter- back and is going to make some mis- takes," Carr says. "But I think that in terms of throwing the ball, he's right where he was before he got injured." But the Wolverines need him to be better than he was before the injury. They need him to be better than he was two weeks ago against Illinois. Dreisbach led the Wolverines to victo- ry, but he was just 11-of-23 for 117 yards and a touchdown. "I thought he was very hesitant in the first three series," Carr said. "I thought he played well in the last series, hitting some of his passes. Remember, he's still a young guy." If Michigan doesn't make it to the Granddaddy of them all this season, the first graduating class since 1975 will leave Ann Arbor without smelling roses. This puts a lot of pressure on a player who only has five career starts. But that's the way it is. "He's only played four games," Michigan quarterbacks coach Stan Parrish said before the season. "But people don't want excuses about how he's inexperienced. He has to be ready to play." And much improved. Elvis Grbac and Todd Collins are gone to the NFL, and the Wolverines are now Dreisbach's team. In a league in which no team is dominant, the Wolverines can get back to the Rose Bowl. But will they? Who knows? That depends on a lot of things. It depends, in part, on luck. It depends on how healthy Michigan can remain. And it depends on the running game. But above all, whether or not the Wolverines go to Pasadena depends on one player. It depends on Scott Dreisbach. * '87 ... Michigan got to know Pasadena real will be C well. Only once during Schembechler's 20 - B years did Michigan go four years, 1973- F 76, without making a trip to Pasadena. But Michigan tied Ohio State for the Big Ten title in 1972, '73 and '74. Those players didn't go to the Rose Bowl, Ohio State did, but they were champions. Still, each player knew that if he came to Michigan, he would likely win a Big Ten championship and one day play in a Rose Bowl. The game which Michigan helped usher into existence in 1902 quickly became the benchmark for excellence. When Schembechler left, Gary Moeller took over, and nothing seemed to change. Moeller took the Wolverines to the Mih a promised land in 1992 and '93. But Michigan hasn't been back since, Year dppoi and this year's seniors could become the 1969 South second group since 1969 not to play in a' 1971 Stan" Rose Bowl. 1972 none Will those who stay be champions? 1973 nine That's what this year's players are asking 1974 none themselves. 1976 South Can those who stay be champions? 1977 Wash That's what everyone else is wondering. 1978 SautU "We've stressed it' said co-captain 1980 Wash Jarrett Irons. "All we've talked about is 1982 UCLA winning the Big Ten and going to the Rose 198 Ao Bowl.1989 $outt Irons has been to the Rose Bowl before. 19t He was a freshman the last time the 1992 Wash Wolverines'made the trip, but he was red-W h of ,or through high school I was never a considered a loser. "I always had some kind of championship." And so has every senior to play for the Wolverines since 1969. Irons, Carr and the rest of the seniors don't plan on letting that change. Will those who stay be champions? Michigan hopes so. The rest of us are waiting to see. This is not a laughing matter for Michig such importance, coach Uoyd Carr and at referees, opponents and even each o and win the Big Ten championship, two time. Above the doors that lead to the stay will be champions," a phrase intro Schembechler. Carr's senior class couli reign began not to at least share a coi