14A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, November 6, 1997 T 'No superstars' on this crew By Peter Romer-Friedman For the Daily There's no 'I' in team. Coaches spit out this cliche as fast as a crew team runs over smooth waters. But the women of the Michigan crew team do not need to be reminded of this cliche. Crew requires certain elements as a sport: Eight row- ers, a coxswain, a boat and fiberglass boat and eight oars, all integral parts of the team. Rhythm, balance, strength and teamwork characterize the sport. "Everybody knows in rowing that everyone is not out there for themselves," Michigan rower Alison Hickey said. "There are no individuals. In order to make a boat move quickly and win races, everyone has to work together. There are no superstars in crew. "If the boat doesn't have a good practice, it's the whole boat's fault. The coach won't single out one play- er and say 'you didn't try hard enough."' The Wolverines will put their teamwork to use at the Princeton Chase Regatta in Princeton, N.J., this Sunday. Before the season began, there were eight individu- als. Now there is one team. At each race the team learns and improves as a unit. Even the freshmen feel includ- ed. Alison Hickey is one of the three freshman rowers on the Varsity open-8 boat, the best squad the Wolverines have. Kate Johnson and Melanie Duncan, both freshmen, knew they would race in the varsity-8 boat since September, but Hickey rowed her way onto the boat dur- ing mid-season. "I was really surprised because I came in here not expecting to be in the Varsity-8," Hickey said. "The girls have been really great, accepting freshmen into the first boat." Michigan has enjoyed great success in its second year as a varsity sport. The Wolverines finished second to open the season at the Head of the Ohio, 13th in the Head of the Charles - the largest two-day regatta in the world - and recently defeated Ohio State in the inaugural Wolverine Classic. This weekend the Wolverines will dock their boats on the nearby shores of Princeton University, in their last event of the fall season, the Princeton Chase. It is a three-mile head race, in which teams start at different times. "I think this is our last time to prove ourselves for the fall," Duncan said. "Everyone will have a good attitude going into it. We should have the best row of the sea- son." The women of the crew team have endured 5 a.m. practices, team bus drivers who have been arrested and racing in sub-freezing temperatures without gloves. They've been to the edge and back, and quite possibly they'll be first to the finish line this Sunday. "As a team, technically we've improved," Duncan said. "We've learned a lot and have come together. We have more rhythm and row more the same with each other. That will help us out this weekend." FOOTBALL Continued from Page IIA his Air Force father around the world, made it hard for Nelson to be anything but shy. lie lived every- where from California to England, though his parents were both from Pennsylvania, and settled in enough at his high school to become a prep All-American. Playing at Penn State, known as "Linebacker U," was his dream, but he never thought he'd end up like he has. Saturday, barring injury, will mark his 33rd consecutive start at outside linebacker. "He's earned everyone's respect," Penn State wide receiver Joe Jurevicius said. "A person that dedi- cated, it's no wonder. He's really a well-liked guy." This season, Nelson leads the Lions in tackles with 60, which is 23 more than the Lions' next best, Aaron Collins. His biggest perfor- mance came in his biggest game thus far, against a previously unbeated Ohio State team Oct. 11, when he made 11 tackles and helped limit the Buckeyes to 106 yards rushing. But even more impressive to Johnson has been Nelson's new- found willingness to take risks, as a player and a person. Nelson still is an introvert, living alone. and said "I pretty much stay in my room if '1m not in class or playing foot- ball." But his only class this semester is ball- w room dancing, and he never would have taken that a cou- pie of years ago. Here is this Nelson big, hulking line- backer ... waltz- ing across the floor? In public? "I make fun of him all the time, like 'Do these guys whose heads you're knocking off know you're a dancer?"' Johnson laughed. "My girlfriend is in the class, and I didn't have a girlfriend two years ago," Johnson explained. "I don't know if I've opened up or anything. I just know that I've tried to take more of a leadership role (on the team). When you play and have played for awhile, you earn the right to speak and the responsibility (to lead). I've just tried to be myself." And with that - talk of being true to oneself- we come back to Dhani Jones. No one does it better. No one does it more. Jones is no ordinary Jones. If you need proof, just call him when he's not home. His answering machine greeting will give you a sense of the man behind it: "Don't have a closed mind when you leave a message for Dhani Jones," it says. "Remember what Morgan Freeman said (in the film 'The Shawshank Redemption'): 'Some birds aren't meant to be caged; their feathers are just too bright."' A closed mind won't get you far with Jones, nor will dullness. Jones is a student in the Residential College, a haven for the eccentric on an already eclectic campus. He is the only football player in the program, just as he is the only football player to paint his fingernails blue, wear a puffy afro-like hairdo and admit a love for abstract expressionism. "Hey, Dhani," Michigan coach Lloyd Carr often chides him. "What color are your nails going to be this week? Why don't we get a hair cut?" Undeterred by the same criticism and joking he's endured most of his life, Jones thought about being an artist for a living. But he said since "artists only make money when they die, I thought I'd find a way to be creative and make money while I'm alive." So he's hoping to be a pedi- atric plastic neurosurgeon and prac- tices working with children, signing autographs after a recent game in ostentatious lohn I.ennon sunglasses and a mai e-and-blue Snoopy tie. "oach ('arr and my teamma@ joke with me sometimes. but I know who I am and they respect me for that," JIones said. "l''.e never been one to limit mysel I' to one group or one thinl, anyway. Thats why I like East Quad so much. It's diverse. You can talk to anyone about anything, and everybody's different. "As far as my teammates, I do m1y job on the field, and they appreci and support me." It's not as though Jones is a Dennis Rodman, eccentric for the sake of it and a glutton for attention. In fact, Jones has sat quietly by while excelling, watching corner- back Charles Woodson - and line- backer Sam Sword, to a lesser extent -- handle the press. "I don't want to be a distraction," he said. lie hardly has distracted from any- thing but opponents' glory, rack* up 57 tackles. good for second on the team despite his limited starting sta- tus. And all this has come a year after he was stuck on special teams and two years after he was lucky to be playing football at all. On Aug. 28 of his senior high school season, he had back surgery to repair a herniated disk. The injury was caused by pressure applied over time, not a sudden shock. "I doing too much," he said. Jones's athletic interests are as varied as his intellectual ones; he let- tered in wrestling and track in high school as well as football, and he loves to snowboard and race moun- tain bikes. He even worked in a bike shop over the summer. But the determination he gained from playing all those sports helped in rehab, and he was back in act Oct. 28. "It was nothing short oa miracle," said Jones, who played that season's final seven games and.still wound up with 106 tackles. "That was the toughest thing 1\e ever had to go through - that and this semester," said Jones, whose parents both attended Michigan. "I've got four tough classes (eco- nomics, chemistry, Spanish and women's studies) and the pressur f -being a starter, and now we hav a huge game Saturday. "Now it's all about focus and cut- ting out everything but football. That's my inspiration." And if he's able to seize the day this weekend along with the rest of the Wolverines, that inspiration may become a line jotted down in some future meeting, tucked away some- where on the binding of his playb k or between X's and O's - an ode the Rose Bowl, a poem of Pasadena. MARGARET MYERS/Daily Dhani Jones's emergence as one of Michigan's top linebackers hasn't prevented him from keeping up with his poetry or his artwork - as the only football player in the University's Residential College. Fife to be a Hoosier The Associated Press Clarkston High School standout Dane Fife will be playing basketball at Indiana, the two-sport athlete announced yesterday. Fife, who averaged 26.8 points, 8.5 rebounds and four steals a game last season, turned down bids from other schools, including Michigan and Michigan State, to attend Indiana.. "Calling them and telling them this morning that I wasn't going to come to their college was probably the toughest thing I've ever done," Fife tnld renorters. Fife may also play football for Indiana, when he's not playing bas- ketball for coach Bobby Knight, Fife's father, Dan, is coach at the high school and had talked with Michigan Athletic Director Tom Goss about succeeding Steve Fisher as the Wolverines' basketball co@. Dan Fife was a Michigan assistant coach in the early 1970s But, Goss named assistant Brian Ellerbe as interim coach last month to a one-year term. Goss has said he candidates again at season. will interview the end of the m 71 n Fl - =m --M= -W - N f,