10 - The Michigan Daily - Kickoff '97 - Sepember 11-13 FEATURE S- FEATURE an of Steele Two -way Sehteme a t13 Kickoff '97 threat Defensive end Glenn Steele has battled through injuries and losses All-Everything Charles Woodson swaggers into his junio By Danielle Rumore Daily Sports Editor t happened almost two years ago on Christmas Eve, four days prior to Michigan's game against Texas A&M in the 1995 Alamo Bowl in San Antonio, Texas. It was another injury to add to the long list. Michigan defensive end Glen Steele, then in his third year of eligibility, suf- fered from a bulging disc in his back that bothered him throughout the next season. An isolated incident? Hardly. Despite what his surname suggests, Steele had been broken down before - during high school, during a freshman campaign in which he was redshirted, and again during the Alamo Bowl. He still took the field in the Alamo Dome on game day with pain bursting through his back. From his crouched position on the line, pain shooting up his spine, he still managed three tackles and a fumble recovery. Wolverines lost, 22-20, capping off their third straight four-loss season. The pain in his back remained through 1996 - another 8-4 season -- and into this offseason. A disc the size of a donut hurt a-man used to inflicting his own pain on others. It just lingered and lingered and lingered. And the loss- es kept coming and coming and coming. "On the field, you really don't feel much pain," Steele says. "The only time you feel pain is afterward when you're laying around and your adrenaline stops flowing. Thank God I don't have to feel that again, and I don't plan on feeling it." The pain in Steele's back hurt. The loss to the Aggies hurt, too. It seemed it had always been that way. "I felt that it was something that did- n't want to go away," Steele says. "It's a matter of time for those kinds of injuries to get back to where you can play. It slowed me down for awhile." '" Throughout career, Steele has been bothered by injuries. It began during his senior sea- son at West Noble High School in Ligonier, Ind., and continued into his freshman campaign at Michigan, when he was redshirted. Then he was injured during his sophomore year, and that last- ed through the 1996 season. It seemed that Michigan football was plagued by something, too, something that just lin- gered like the pain in Steele's back. Ever since Steele arrived in Ann Arbor in 1993, the Wolverines have had what some claim to be one disappoint- ing season after another, each one since 1993 ending with four losses and culmi- nating at a bowl other than the only one that truly matters to the Big Ten and Pac-10 conferences. In fact, no current member of the 1997 Michigan football team has been to the Rose Bowl. After winning the Big Ten title five-straight years, the Wolverines have been relegated to four- straight four-loss seasons. Steele is now healthy and Michigan has players with game experience at almost every position. A healthy, focused Steele, an All- America candidate and just one of seven fifth- year players this year, looks to right the ship and return Michigan football to the level of success it achieved in the late 1980s and '90s. The Wolverines' leader, their man of Steele, claims to be healed and at "100 percent." Maybe Michigan has healed, too. "Especially for me and the fifth-year guys, it gets more extra spe- cial," Steele says. "This is it for us. This is the last we will be in a Michigan uniform, the last we will be able to play in front of our crowd and our home stadium. "I would love for this season to go the way I want it to go, but just look at our schedule. It's the toughest in the coun- try. It's not going to be an easy road. We're trying to get to where we want to be and that's the Rose Bowl and winning the Big Ten." Eu. "He is an old oak tree. Glen Steele is old, dependable, reliable," says co-cap- tain and inside linebacker Eric Mayes. "He is a cornerstone. When you think of Michigan football, you think of Glen Steele. He goes into the trenches and plays hard." An old oak tree? That sounds right. If you look at an old oak tree - stur- dy, strong, impressive - you can see similar qualities in Steele. He appears to be made of steel. Steele is a solid mass with 281 pounds chisled onto his 6-foot-5 frame. His role as a right defensive end is to tackle every- thing and everyone in sight, with special attention paid to the opposing quarter- back, and to close any holes the offen- sive line may open for the backs. Steele tries to pull quarterbacks down in a thundering heap - throw them for loss and break their morale. Steele gets to them by throwing aside left tackles, probably the most important spot on the offensive line to protect the quarterback, especially right-handed QBs. Steele gets by the offensive tackles and then races into the quarterback's blind spot. The next thing the quarter- back does is pull turf from his helmet. Steele plugs up holes like a cork, pre- vents offensive tackles from doing their job. Orlando Pace knows the feeling. Last season's highly touted left tackle and first pick in the 1997 NFL Draft out of Ohio State was taken to school by Steele. Last year, when the Wolverines topped the Buckeyes, 13-9, in Columbus, Steele dominated Pace and made him invisible. The Buckeyes couldn't run through Pace's side of the line. Arguably one of the most dominant players in college football last season, Pace was a nonfactor in the loss. That is Steele's role. The little disc in his back took its toll, though. It affected his performance on the field. It took him down like he takes down quarterbacks. But being strong means battling adversity Despite the injury, Steele started all 12 games for the Wolverines last season and had a good year by most standards. He recorded four sacks and 13 tackles- for-loss, culminating in being mamed an All-Big Ten honorable mention by both the coaches and media. Steele says business is business on the field - pain must be ignored. But pain creeps back during the long walk through the tunnel leading to the locker- room. And four-loss seasons brings pain, too. And his pain seemed to reflect on the rest of the team. The Wolverines won the Big Ten title seven times from 1982- 92, including five straight from 1988- 92. The same 10-year span included six trips to the coveted Rose Bowl in Pasadena, Calif. None of that has hap- pened since the 1992 season. "The 8-4 seasons, it was a matter of us making mistakes that we shouldn't have made," Steele says. "I don't feel any disappointment in what this team has done. Sure, we lost some games we should have won, but we're striving to look at the mistakes we made." This season, the defensive line was expected to be one of the more solid positions on the team. With holes to fill on the offensive line and the starting quarterback still unannounced, the defensive line was supposed to be filled with veterans and experienced reserves. But during the summer, starting left defensive end David Bowens was released from the team due to academic problems. Bowens, a junior, led the team last year in sacks with 12. The line took an even greater hit last week when start- ing tackle Ben Huff, another fifth-year senior, was lost for the season with an anterior cruciate ligament injury in his left knee. "I know Huff was a great man and a damn good player," Steele says. "Losing him is something that the older guys feel kind of like someone has left our family." Huff's injury forces Steele to assume an even greater role for the line and defense as a whole, if not by choice, but default - Steele is the oldest player on the team. "Glen is a guy who will have a tremendous impact on the work ethic of the younger players," Michigan coach Lloyd Carr said. "Glen has an extremely important role on this team. With the loss of Ben Huff, his (Glen's) leadership (will increase)." Like an old oak tree, Steele has sur- vived the test of time. He was recruited as a tight end after starting four years at West Noble. He was projected as a top- 40 tight end and in the top-60 players in the midwest coming out of high school. Steele was converted to defensive end after his redshirt season. He says that former Michigan coach Gary Moeller saw a defensive player in him after he laid a hit on a player during spring ball in 1994. He has been on defense ever since. Steele wants to go to the Rose Bowl and win a Big Ten title, two things that elude every player on the current roster. It is something that drew him to Michigan in the first place. "I cam from a small, small town," Steele says. "You always hear about Michigan and going to the Rose Bowl, all the great teams they had in the past and all the tradition. That's the one thing that really led me this way. I felt the tra- dition, I felt the love of the players, coaches and how they become one, as a family. I'm thankful for the shot that I got to come here." They say time heals all wounds. It has been over four years for Steele and Michigan. For once, Steele is healthy, strong and ready to guide the Wolverines back to the top. "Being a senior, I'm going to have to lead," Steele says. "That's something I'm going to take pride in. By Alan Goldenbach Daily Sports Editor rry Glenn embodied the antithe- Fis of Charles Woodson that late November afternoon in 1995. Glenn, the Ohio State receiver, who was subsequently crowned the Biletnikoff Award-winner as the nation's best wide out, was clad in the scarlet and gray of the arch-rival Buckeyes, trying to elude Woodson's coverage and snag each ball thrown his way, and sported four years' worth of big-game experience on his collegiate resume. Woodson, who today calls himself the best cornerback in college football, had yet to reach that level two years ago. Unlike Glenn on that day, Woodson donned the Michigan maize and blue, was committed to keeping Glenn's hands off the ball, and was a rookie thrust into the fire of perhaps college football's most vicious rivalry. But lest we.forget, Glenn had some- thing else on Woodson that made the precocious freshman seethe. In the days leading up to the game, Glenn was doing the trash-talking, aiming most of it at the man who would be covering him. "Michigan is nobody. Vk should keep Michigan down where they belong just like the rest of the teams" That brought the kettle inside Woodson's head to a rapid boil. Nobody utters an ounce of trash to him or threatens his self-confidence and gets away with it. "He said some things at me that fired me up," said Woodson recalling the greatest motivational tool he had ever been given. "For a young player like myself to play against a receiver of that magnitude was enough for me to get motivated. "But then for him to come out and say the things he said, that's a chal- lenge that I must step up to" After 60 minutes of sheer savagery between the two teams, Glenn emerged with the quietest four-reception, 72- yard game in football history. Woodson, the lopsided victor with his two interceptions and a 31-23 victory in his back pocket, firmly stood up to Glenn's challenge and refused to be bullied by the veteran loudmouth. His interceptions were as dramatic and as timely as they come; the latter came with just more than a minute to play when the 6-foot-1 Woodson came from behind Glenn and out-jumped his 6-4 counterpart at the Michigan 13-yard line, thwarting Ohio State's last chance for a tie and a Rose-Bowl berth. "It was a challenge that he put out there and I stepped up to it," Woodson said. "I had to go out there and take my respect.". SEu Charles Woodson loves challenges for one reason and one reason only: meeting them allows him the opportu- "At my position, I'm the best player in the game of college football" - Charles Woodson Michigan cornerback nity to talk himself up as only he can. The multi-talented, multi-positional, all-everything, Heisman trophy hopeful is not one for beating around the bush. He will come out and tell you exactly how good he is. "At my position, I'm the best player in the game of college football," he said. "As a freshman I was pretty good. My sophomore year, I got better. This year, I'm the best at what I do. That's what I'm going out to prove this year." That challenge may be three-fold this year as Woodson will figure more prominently in two roles in which he saw only spot duty last year - wide receiver and punt returner - in addi- tion to his full-time job as Michigan's weak side cornerback. But he isn't let- ting his increased workload bring down the more established part of his game. "I don't want to overdo it to the point where I'm out there so much that I'm no longer going to be effective on defense," l said. "I want to be out there, so it's not like they're forcing me to (play multiple positions)." But Woodson's greatest challenge doesn't come from playing more posi- tions (three) than his uniform number (two). Instead, his tallest hurdle is talk- ing his talk as loudly as he can while not having anyone question the audaci- ty of his hot-dog ego by backing up every word of it. "If something is a challenge for me, that means I have to work hard at it," he says. "If I meet that challenge and get to be the best at something by working hard at it, that makes it worth- while." Which entirely explains why Woodson chose to play cornerback - quite possibly the most athletic spot on the field - as his primary position. Although he played tailback in high school as well as in the secondary, scoring touchdowns and racking up school rushing records, he found lining up on the opposite side of the ball to be a more attractive option. "The best athletes on the field are definitely on defense," Woodson said. "It's a challange for me to be the best athlete, the best player on the field." Woodson's domination of Glenn, as well as Michigan's over Ohio State, met not two, but three challenges, since Woodson is a native of Fremont, Ohio - a town about 40 miles south- east of Toledo - where the locals breed future Buckeyes. "Where I'm from," he said, "there's a lot of Ohio State fans who don't like Michigan asking me, 'Why are you going there? You should be staying home.' "So beating Ohio State was like bragging rights for me the way it is for these guys from Michigan when we beat Michigan State. When I go home, I can hold my head high, stick out my chest and say we beat the team that everyone had been pumping up all sea- son." "We" is a word often conspicuous- ly absent from the vocabulary of a brag- gadocio like Woodson. Upon examining Woodson's vital traits - a speedy cornerback who also sees time as a receiver and punt returner who is able to move his mouth almost as fast as his legs - compar- isons are immediate- ly drawn to Deion Sanders - the NFL's best cover man. Making the resemblance even more striking is that Sanders also wore the uni- form number two while play- ing collegiately at Florida State. But unlike Sanders, whose flair for the glitz is often criti- cized for out- weighing his dedication to his team, Woodson would most like his chat- ter to revolve around Michigan, which is also what sets him apart from oth- ers possessing similar swagger. "I want to win, that's the bottom line," Woodson said. "That's the reason I play offense too; I feel I can help the team in another way besides just play- ing on defense. "I've never been the type of person who accepts losing or who leaves the game saying, 'We tried our best.' That's not good enough for me." What will be good enough for Woodson is if he sees a similar distaste for losing visible in his younger team- mates now that he is an upperclassman and expected to take more of a leader- ship role. "When I'm out there on the field, I'm out there to win, and if you're a player around me, then I expect you to want to win too," he says. "Your first two years, you're a young guy, you go out there and listen to the older guys. But now I'm an older guy and I expect the younger guys to lis- ten to me. "Now it's time for me dence is But is with whi Opponer all critici - too c( It's justa prove the extremel "Cock somethir said. "I' and then them up sider my son. "I'm a myself a on the fi me." Appar constitut day two prisingly that day would ha the sam "If toda 0