14 -The Michigan Daily -- Friday, September 12, 1997 Griese gets the call while father gives it for ABC By Nicholas J. Cotsonika Daily Sports Editor Exhausted and euphoric, Brian Griese fell into his couch last November to watch the tape. He had played the game of his life the day before, quarterbacking Michigan to an upset vic- tory over a second-ranked Ohio State team for the second straight season. He hit fast forward, and there was the big play: Behind, 9-0, early in the second half, Griese fired a quick pass to receiver Tai Streets, and Streets skipped away 69 yards for a touchdown. Ohio State was stunned. The Wolverines would score six more points to win, 13-9, so Griese turned up the volume to hear ABC Sports' analyst. His father, Bob. "He was talking about the defense and the defender and all that stuff, just trying to stay away from who threw the ball and what the sit- uation was," Griese said. "I was like, 'Geez, Dad. I just made a great play. A little excitement wouldn't hurt anyone."' But the conflict of interest has created a pleas- ant problem for the Grieses, and it will intensify Saturday, when No. 14 Michigan hosts No. 8 Colorado at noon before a national audience on ABC. Bob Griese will be in the booth along with Keith Jackson, a family friend, and the kid who Bob tries to contain emotion while announcing Brian's start used to fetch hot dogs for them during games a few years ago will be all grown up, a fifth-year senior - and starting. Not favoring him will be difficult. "I have a special kinship with quarterbacks, and I like to call them by their first names," said Bob Griese, a Hall of Fame quarterback who played for Purdue and the Miami Dolphins. "But I'll be very careful not to call Brian by his first name. It wouldn't seem fair. "But, you know, it's kind of funny. There he was against Ohio State last year, the greatest moment of his career, and his own dad's calling him 'Griese.'"' Bob Griese has never worked a game in which he knew beforehand that his son would be playing quarterback. Last year, he did Michigan games in Boulder, Colo., and Colombus, Ohio, but his son didn't play quar- terback against the Buffaloes and came off the bench against the Buckeyes. And ABC had been hesitant about allowing even that. When Brian Griese started the Wolverines' final nine games in 1995, ABC did not assign his father to cover any of them, worried that fans -s Bob and Brian Griese, both as Big Ten quar- terbacks. But which one's which? not rooting for Michigan would feel the broad- cast was biased. But that kept ABC's top team from working some of the nation's top games, and with Scott Dreisbach starting for Michigan in 1996 and Brian Griese just pooch punting, the policy changed. "We decided that the relationship shouldn't preclude our best broadcasters from doing the best games," said Tony Tortorici, coordinating producer of ABC Sports' college football cov- erage. "In a way, he can give more to the situa- tion. We trust him to be journalistic about it, and to be honest, it adds interest." ABC's new stance was solidified during the Ohio State game, in which Brian Griese made a surprise appearance to replace an injured Dreisbach. Afterward, he said his father was "harder on him than anyone," and ABC officials began to compare the situation to CBS's NASCAR coverage, in which driver Dale Jarrett's father, Ned, is an announcer. Bob Griese said there is "no reason 1 can't handle it" and said, in fact, that ABC Sports President Steve Anderson has encouraged him to show some emotion Saturday before and after the game. "We need to make it clear that, hey, it's his dad talking," Tortorici said. After all, father and son are close. Bob Griese raised his son alone in Miami after his wife, Judith, died in 1988, and his other two sons had gone off to college. Bright-eyed Brian used to follow him on the road, running errands in the press box, ordering room service at fancy hotels, watching the best games live, hanging out with Jackson and standing on the sidelines, looking up at offensive lineman he said "seemed like the biggest things alive" at the time. They kid each othernow. Dad says his-son's "bigger, but I was quicker." The son jokes that Dad's "memory is going bad in his old age, and I'm smarter, too." But last night, as they doxt ned pizza on the couch, they kept the bond they had years ago, alone, when neither could cook and they ordered delivery every night. "We've bec through a lot together," Bob Griese said. Knowing that, Colorado defensive coordinator A.J. Christoff probably will get a "little squirrely eyed," Bob Griese said. when the father of the opposing quarterback asks him about strategy in pregame interviews. But Christoff said he's "comfortable talking to Bob. He's professional. And in his situation, you want your kid to do well, but you wouldn't tell him anything. It'd be bad for your career and your reputation." But there is temptation. Father and son talk two or three times per week. And though Be* Griese said he doesn't critique his son, his son said he always has questions, like "who's hurt, or who's starting? I'll say, 'Dad, are you being a father or a reporter?' I know where to draw the line." And so does Dad. "When I do a game he plays, if he throws an interception, that was his doing," Griese said. "But if he plays well, I taught him all he knows." I LEROI Continued from Page 13 and a starter on the defensive line, Griese and ... that's about it. To even think about contending for any kind of title, three things have to happen: Somebody in the defensive front seven will have to step up. The sec- ondary is stellar with Charles Woodson, Marcus Ray and Daydrion Taylor returning. But filling the shoes of Jarrett Irons, William Carr, David Bowens and Ben Huff will be difficult. 0 Griese will have to be better than he has been in the past (remember, if All-America cornerback Shawn Springs hadn't slipped, Tai Streets never would have taken a five-yard pass, 69-yards for a touchdown, Griese would never have started the Outback Bowl, and very likely would have left school). 0 And somebody on this team has to step up and be the offensive star Michigan has been missing. Running backs Clarence Williams and Chris Howard have been mediocre at best. Tai Streets is a Biletnikoff Award finalist, but so is Woodson, and he only caught 13 passes last year. BUFFALOES Continued from Page 13 And perhaps that's why Michigan coach Lloyd Carr was comfortable enough to say last Saturday that he wouldn't mind being ahead at the end again, on defense, with the Buffaloes trying desperately to complete one last long-range pass. His chances would And even if Streets is the real deal, Griese has to get him the ball. Jerame Tuman might be Michigan's best offen- sive player, but when was the last time a tight end led a team to the Big Ten title? If the quarterback isn't the star, its got to be the backs behind him. Nobody can say for sure if Howard or Williams, can assume that role, but the chances are, if anyone can do it, it'll be true freshma Anthony Thomas, a 6-foot-I 225-poun, high school All-American from Louisiana. It's impossible to say whether Thomas will blossom into a star this year, but he has the best chance to. I have reservations about whether the Michigan coaches would let him assume that role. But Sedrick Irvin and Ron Dayne did it last year. And Thomas is supposed to be even better. That's a lot of pressure to put on an 18-year-old kid. I have no idea if he can do it or not. Carr says Thomas will be a "phenomenal running back someday." If the Wolverines are to improve over the last four seasons, that day might have to be sooner than later. - John Leroi can be reached via e- mail at jr/eroi@umich.edu. probably be pretty good. But the Buffaloes feel the same waO Defensive coordinator A.J. Christoff said this week that another Rocket Jet Right play would suit him just fine - as long as Michigan runs it. "It'd be nice if it happened again," Christoff said. "But it would onlyr if we won, 7-0. Hey, I'm a defensive coach." Congregation Seed of Abraham Zera Avraham A Messianic Jewish Congregation Believing that Yeshua (Jesus) is The Promised Messiah r, Shabbat Services -Saturday 10 am Meeting at University Reformed Church 1001 E. Huron St., Ann Arbor Dr. Mark Kinzer, Congregational Leader For more information contact: Congregation Zera Avraham PO Box 2025, Ann Arbor, MI 48106 313-663-3573- 0 r We Won't Card YOU! .:<,; : ,i1:Self-serve copiers: >:;:.... ::i.." :: :rAutomatic - high speed eTwo-sided copies *Reduce/Enlarge -Sort/Staple '1 , a ik l 4, B #