S Tl- KA*.-t,*..c-- r A ~ TLf'%!.... -: t, - ,.1.t n t L. A A4 A'% - -a -- - I*I. f1- ne iigan yalg r KCKOii 9t- September W 9 11 , IE o [I3 ©©LC2 a OTheRkle r Too hot - .VLU N to 0 handle - Michigan faces a brutal schedule that some say is too for the team to contend for the Big Ten title Catch the AATA Football Ride' The best way to enjoy U of M football Saturdays. Avoid traffic congestion and parking chaos. Ride the comfortable, climate-controlled AATA shuttle bus. It's easy, convenient, and fun. Park your car at one of 22 Ann Arbor locations. Then hop on the AATA Football Ride. You'll be delivered, warm and dry, to Michigan Stadium. After the game, the Football Ride takes you back to your car. Just $1.50 ONE WAY. The Football Ride runs approximately every 20 minutes beginning two hours before Michigan coach Lloyd Carr doesn't exactly enjoy media day. He gets to stand up in front of dozens of arrogant and often crotchety reporters and defend decisions he hasn't even made yet. Bombarded by questions,.accusations and demands, Carr has nowhere to hide, save a small podium in the middle of Schembechler Hall's press room. Michigan's quarterback controversy is a year old: Reporters are almost tired of the subject. But the Wolverines' treacherous schedule? Now there's a hot topic. Since media day, Carr has grown tired of answering questions about Michigan's rough schedule. He tightens his jaw and utters some ridiculous cliche about Mt. Everest being climbable. It is now a taboo subject. TThere is no question that Michigan's schedule is tougher than week-old beef jerky. The JOHN Wolverines face seven teams LEROI ranked in the AP top 25. Of course Out of there is nothing that Carr can do to Bounds get Penn State and Ohio State off the schedule. The Big Ten is a tough confer- ence. And this year, conference cellar-dwellers Illinois and Purdue fall off the Wolverines' schedule. Replacing them are contenders Wisconsin and Iowa. But the main debate is why the Wolverines would want to face Colorado and Notre Dame in a season when the Big Ten will be so competitive. Everyone from Lee Corso to Bo Schembechler has weighed in on the subject. And almost everybody thinks the Wolverines are making a mistake of gargantuan pro- portions. "Michigan has too tough a schedule to have a great sea- son," said Corso, a college football analyst for ESPN. "They just have too little margin for error. They can have a very good team and still lose three or four games." Most other Big Ten coaches seem to agree. After all, the Wolverines never have any trouble filling Michigan Stadium. The Big Ten season is physically demanding; why subject your players to such risks when you don't have to? Ohio State will play Wyoming, Bowling Green, Arizona and Missouri. Penn State plays three cream puffs in Pittsburgh, Temple and Louisville before taking a week off before the Big Ten season commences (as if the three weeks before were really strenuous). It bangs up your players. It hurts your national title hopes. The Big Ten is tough enough. Nonsense. Michigan took a lot of heat for scheduling weaklings like Memphis and Miami (Ohio) in 1995. Michigan quar- terback Todd Collins actually said he was glad he was graduating before the '95 season because he'd be embar- rassed to play that schedule. Now the Wolverines are taking flack - literally being called stupid - for renewing rivalries with Colorado and Notre Dame. Some media members even suggest voiding Michigan's contract with the Fighting Irish to avoid play- ing them in future years. Ridiculous. The schedule's benefits far outweigh it's drawbacks. Sure, it's tough on the players, physically and emotion- ally. But this is football for god's sake. It's a tough sport. "I'm sure there's not one player who doesn't want to play our schedule," Carr said. "Pressure isn't a negative thing." And it is a stretch to say that difficult non-conference opponents hinder a bid at a national championship or a high-profile bowl game. Sure, the Wolverines could lose one or two of those games, but to be the best, you have to beat the best. Michigan lost to Purdue last year. Why don't we all focus on fixing those problems first. And, although a team's non-conference record is the second tie-breaker for a Rose Bowl berth, it is almost meaningless for every other bowl. Bowls just want a big draw, and the Wolverines fit that billing. And all three of Michigan's non-conference games are at home, so fans get to see Colorado and Notre Dame in addition to Ohio State, Iowa and Northwestern. Fans love seeing nationally ranked teams. All of Michigan's home games are sellouts. Why deprive the fans and the players of playing exciting games? And what about pride? Michigan should be one of the most feared college football teams in the country, not the other way around. Why back down from big games? The Wolverines have terrific rivalries with Notre Dame and now Colorado. Why discontinue them? These are the kinds of games that make college football exciting. Michigan used to be a huge part of that. To stop now - that seems awfully stupid. - John Leroi can be reached via e-mail at jrleroi@umich.edu. gam( The Football Ride three U-M parking structures, Michi e time. serves Ann Arbor hotels and motels, Arborland Mall, Domino's Farms, the gan Union, and downtown Ann Arbor. TheRide Ann Arbor Transportation Authority For complete route and schedule information, call: 996-0400 http://theride.org/ Michigan coach Uoyd Carr has had to answer a lot Wolverines' schedule. Some say Michigan is foolish