14 - e ic anDai-o ... . .. .. FE~u _ -w The man cI a r Michigan bucks Ohio S bafer 5ye back in R< the arena Carr rises above critics' questions to take Michigan back to the top By Nicholas J. Cotsonika Daily Sports Editor In front and in charge, Lloyd Carr clenched his jaw so tightly as the team buses rolled up to Beaver Stadium three weeks ago, his temples began to throb. His cold eyes stared nowhere but for- ward in football coach fashion, perhaps looking farther ahead than a critic's eyes ever could. Two hours from then, Carr's Wolverines, ranked fourth at the time, would give their most inspired perfor- mance of his three-year tenure. They would push and shove and dominate a second-ranked Nittany Lions team for a 34-8 victory, one that would restore the punch in Michigan's prestige. "What we want to do is win a championship," Carr would say afterward; The victory would give the Wolverines their first No. I ranking since 1990, and afterward, victories over Wisconsin and Ohio State would give them their first victories as the nation's top team since 1977. Beating Ohio State would put them in their first Rose Bowl since the 1992 season - with their first 11-0 record since 1971 - and would erase many memories of Michigan's four straight four-loss seasons. None of that was known to the mass- es, though, when Carr took his team into State College. The Wolverines, who most had expected to finish fourth or fifth in the Big Ten, were a hopeful 8-0, but Carr still endured the questions that have cursed him since he took the job in May 1995. So many doubters calling themselves loyalists. So many critics. So many people Carr stared straight through, looking right past them, undaunted, to a goal only he could see. And perhaps that is why Carr, whose only other head coaching experience came at Westland John Glenn High School in the mid-1970s, is now men- tioned in the same sentence with Alabama legend Bear Bryant. Vision has made him a finalist for the Bryant Coach of the Year Award. And with a chance to win Michigan's first national championship since 1948 coming up in the Rose Bowl, the only question that remains is how far Carr's vision can reach. When Carr isn't coaching, he likes to do two things: play golf and read. He loves to read, devouring almost any- thing. His favorite subjects, however, may be triumph and motivation, from which he has learned enough lessons to create his own fairy tale. On Page C22 of the Michigan foot- ball playbook, among several other moving quotes by famous achievers, Carr inserted one by Theodore Roosevelt that is titled "The Critic" Roosevelt says "it is not the critic who counts, not the man who points out where the strong man stumbled." And Carr couldn't seem to agree more. He got his job when the critics point- ed out where the strong man, his best friend Gary Moeller, stumbled. Moeller had gotten drunk at a restaurant, and after causing a disturbance, he was arrested. Tapes of his comments were plastered all over by all types of media, leading to Moeller's firing soon after- ward. At the press conference that named him interim head coach, Carr fought back emotion and said he was "excited and confident" about the upcoming sea- son. But then came the questions. Carr had never been a head coach before at the college level, everyone knew, and few gave him a chance to win the per- manent position. "Whatever the decision is," Carr said then, "I will back it 100 percent. I want what is best for Michigan." Carr won his first five games but wasn't named head coach until before his 8-2 Wolverines prepared to take on Penn State, the team against which he would establish his program three years later. But then, he suffered a 27-17 home loss to the Lions on the way to a four-loss season. The stumble drew fire from the media and fans, who called for his head often. And when his team blew a 16-0 fourth- quarter lead to lose at Northwestern and later lost at lowly Purdue, the fury only intensified. He was left with the comfort of Roosevelt's words, which told him "the credit belongs to the man actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust, sweat and blood." Carr's face was marred by the media as he stumbled to another four-loss sea- son, and he was left to defend himself and his players. When a reporter com- mented that his anger with a certain question revealed a "sore spot," Carr fired back, "THAT'S YOUR OPIN- ION!" When this season began, Carr was called paranoid for his zest with the press. He read everything, and everyone knew it. He even entered The Michigan Daily's offices on two separate occa- sions to discuss stories run in the paper. "He just cares," said quarterback Brian Griese, whose erratic play in 1995 and breaking of a bar window in 1996 earned him media attention and vigor- ous defense from Carr. "Sometimes people don't understand how much, he The Crtic It is not the critic who counts, not the man who points out where the strong man stumbled or how the - doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust, sweat and blood; who strives valiantly, who errs and comes short again and again; who knows the great enthusiasms, the great devotions, and spends himself in a worthy cause; who at best, in the end, knows the triumph of high achievement and who at worst, If he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who know neither victory nor defeat. - Theodore Roosevelt. quoted on Page C22 of Michigan football playbook does care." In between newspaper articles during last summer's soul-searching, however, Carr read the novel "Into Thin Air." He was so moved by the mountain-climb- ing story, he even invited one of the book's subjects to speak to his team and gave each player a climber's ice pick - all of which hang from the ceiling in the team meeting room -to help with their own mental climb. One dangerous step at a time, that's how Carr decided to approach this sea- son of cracks and crevices, which were named Notre Dame and Penn State and Ohio State. And now the summit is in sight. "It goes back to the past," Carr said. "One year ago, we learned a terrible les- son (in letdown losses) that may turn out to be not-so-terrible for the guys that learn from it. Weare a very mature foot- ball team." With a very mature coach. um. Perhaps the firestorm of criticism was a baptism of sorts for Carr, who now is accepted as worthy successor to Fielding H. Yost and Bo Schembechler. "It is the way the profession goes;' Carr said after the Penn State victory, which established him and his program the way Schembechler's storied 1969 victo- ry in his first season over Ohio State and his mentor, Woody Hayes, established his. Perhaps it showed he could scale the cliffs with the big boys. "Success is never final, and this is part of the climb," Carr said afterward. "I try to maintain focus on what I'm Cover photo: WARREN ZINN/Daily MARGARET MYERS/Daily Michigan's Charles Woodson breaks a tackle on his 78-yard punt return for a touchdown in the second quarter of today's game. As the hated Buckeyesg-o down, suspbia'ons and anxieties di~app ear An avid reader, Michigan coach Lloyd Carr learned lessons from Theodore Roosevelt and the novel "Into Thin Air," which helped him restore Michigan's pride. football season that can only be described as magical ended today in triumph. Down went the hated Buckeyes, along with the doubts, the suspi- cions and the anxiety. Gone are the critics who said Lloyd Carr could not coach. Those who doubted Brian Griese's ability have mysteriously disappeared, faded into the background, left with no choice but to proclaim that Michigan is, indeed, the best team in the land. There have been undefeated sea- sons and Rose Bowl berths before, but none have been won with suchf parity in college football, none since Penn State joined the Big Ten, none since the Battle for the Roses was between Michigan and Ohio State ... and nobody else.t And never before has a Michigan JOHN team been this good, this talented, LEROI this determined and this well- Out of coached. The Wolverines have suit- Bounds ed up for 119 years - and this is the best football team the school has ever fielded. Trips to Pasadena used to be commonplace for Michigan. The Wolverines used to be one of the most feared teams in the nation, year in and year out. But domination was quickly erased, replaced by mediocrity. Four-loss seasons became the norm, not because of a lack of talent or lack of intensity but just because. There is no explanation. Not even the players them- selves know. "There's just something special about this team," junior safety Marcus Ray said after the Wolverines' 23- 7 win over Michigan State. "I don't know what it is, to be honest. Ask me in a few weeks." I have a feeling a lot of people will. But Ray probably won't have any better answer than he gave in East Lansing. Something's special, something just is. A com- bination of coaching, talent and execution got the Wolverines this far, but something else put them over the top. Some combination of camaraderie, determination and love kept this team together. They just will themselves to win. They just know that Charles Woodson will return a punt 78 yards for a touchdown, even though he hasn't broken one all year, and then pick off a Stanley Jackson pass in the end zone just when Ohio State is making a game of it. They just know Josh Williams will force a fumble even though Michigan's front four has been underrated all season. Yet, they don't count on those plays to happen, they make them happen. That's why this season is magical. That's why you will remember it after you graduate, when you are 40 and when you are 60. That's why Michigan has its best shot at the national championship since 1971. This season is about memories. It's about dreams. It's about Rose Bowl wins and national championships and Heisman trophies. It's about watching your team take the field I1 times and win them all. For the first time since the 1992 season, Michigan will make an appearance in the Rose Bowl. But don't count on the Wolverines to just make an appearance. If they prepare for the Rose Bowl like they have for every game this season, if they play with the same heart and intensity they have for 1 1 games, expect nothing less than success. I don't know who Michigan will play in Pasadena and I have know idea what the spread is - but I'll take the Wolverines to win. They've already proven they can. - John Leroi can he reached via e-mail at jrleroirqumich.edu. Daily Sports Editor Four consecutive four-loss seasons and a five-year absence from the Rose Bowl had many convinced that Michigan was a pro- gram stumbling into a pit of mediocrity. "Michigan is back,' was what many players had been saying for the past few weeks as the overachieving Wolverines ascended the national polls to No. I. Today, they finally proved what they had been preaching. Michigan is going back to the Rose Bowl after capping its first undefeated reg- ular season since 1971 with a 20-14 victo- ry over Ohio State in front of a record Michigan Stadium crowd of 106,982. The Rose Bowl appearance will be Michigan's 17th. %jMichigan 20 " O n e Ohi~oState 14 thing that you know when you put this much effort and this much heart in it, you've got something you'll savor for the rest of your life," said Michigan football coach Lloyd Carr. The Wolverines' opponent in the Rose Bowl is still yet to be determined. It will be either UCLA, Washington State or Arizona State. None of these teams con- trols its own destiny. "We smell the sweetest roses, baby," said senior safety Marcus Ray. "Nobody gave us a chance all season, but we came out and earned our respect. I can't even describe this feeling." Both teams started sluggishly on offense, hesistant to do anything drastic, fearing the opponent would steal the momentum and ride it to victory. Twelve and half minutes into the game, Eric Wilson hit Ohio State quarterback Stanley Jackson on a handoff, causing him to fumble. Glen Steele recovered, giving Michigan the game's first big break. But Michigan could not capitalize and punted seven plays later. Excluding the fumble, nine of the game's first 10 pos- sessions ended in punts. Midway through the second quarter, the Wolverines finally seemed to gain confidence in their offense. After starting at its own 38, Michigan's first substantial drive of the game seemed to be stalling nine yards downfield. An incomplete first-down pass and a loss of two on a sec- ond-down Anthony Thomas carry set up the game's first big play. Brian Griese dropped back, took a cou- ple of steps to his left, checked off his first receiver and hit Charles Woodson down- field as he cut across the middle in full stride. Ohio State's Antoine Winfield saved a Michigan touchdown when he dragged Woodson.down from behind at the Buckeyes' 16-yard line. But Winfield's tackle only delayed the inevitable. On the next play, Chris Floyd took a handoff and barged up the middle, rolling over a number of defenders before .l I doing and do it to the best of my abili- ty. If you can prevent yourself from being distracted, then you have a much better chance of being successful. Winning is a big part of coaching at any level, not that that is right, but that is how it is." Perhaps that was what Carr was thinking about as his bus climbed though the Nittany Mountains not long ago, up and up and up, with the critics far behind, on his way to an uncertain fate in what is now a certain place: Pasadena. Then again, it might have been Roosevelt, there on Page C22, and the words that helped Carr when he wasn't on top: The credit goes to the man "who at best, in the end, knows the triumph of high achievement; and who at worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring great- ly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who know neither victory nor defeat." -,