The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - November 17, 1997 - Wheatley Former Michigan running back Tyrone Wheatley reflects on the 'Michigan NFL and why he did not run the Naked Mile As the Michigan football team is ",htingfor a trip to the Rose Bowl, let's remember the Wolverines' last trip to Pasadena. It was Jan 1, 1993, and *fichigan was to face the PAC-10 cham- pion Washington Huskies. Just one year tr/er the Wolverines fell to that same Huskies team, 34-14, in the Granddaddy of them all," but the '93 matchup was different. It was different because Michigan sophomore running back Tyrone Wheatley ran wild - bring- ing the roses home to Ann Arbor. Wheatley chalked up 235 rushing yards and three touchdowns, on runs of 56, 88 fad 24 yards. Wheatley left the University after his senior season as Michigan's all-time leader in rushing touchdowns. His 47 touchdowns are 13 more than the school's second-best rushing score, and his 54 total scores eclipsed the record set by Anthony Carter (1979- 1982). A first round draft pick by the New York Giants three years ago, Wheatley tffered from an injury-plagued rookie season and has not yet lived up to expectations. But with injuries to other backs, Wheatley has seen the ball more this season and capitalized on those dpportunities with several 100-yard performances. The Daily's Jordan Field recently caught up with Wheatley to talk about both the Michigan experience he had- the Rose Bowl and homework - and the experience he didn't have - throwing *zarshmallows and running the Naked -Mile. Daily: How extensively do you fol- low Michigan football? _,Wheatley: I still follow it a lot. Every ,hance I get I'll check up on the team. I still talk to a bunch of the guys. I caught a couple glances of the games this year, but sometimes I feel that I'm bad luck or something. I'll be watching and they'll be losing. But as soon as I turn .ff the game, they'll come back to win. This year the games have just been so tough. Sometimes I wonder who makes up the doggone schedules. If you look at some other Big Ten teams, they have such a weaker schedule than us, but you have to take what you are given. The *reat teams always have the toughest schedules, and I feel that Michigan will {ways prevail. That's how it's always Loss leave By Tracy Sandler Daily Sports Writer At least they're consistent. Going into the weekend's home matches against Iowa and v innesota, the Michigan volleyball team had completed five consecutive weekend splits. Well, this weekend was no different. After sweeping the Hawkeyes (2- 13 Big Ten, 9-16 overall) on Friday night, the Wolverines (10-6, 17-10) fell, 3-1, to the Golden Gophers (10- 6, 20-7) on Saturday night. The loss riot only put the Wolverines in a fourth-place tie with Michigan State nd Minnesota in the conference, ut it also put them on the NCAA tournament bubble with four match- es to play. Errors played a big part for both the Wolverines and the Golden ;gophers: the Wolverines had 20 hit- ting errors and three serving errors, compared to 16 and seven for Minnesota. "It seemed like the block was big," aid junior middle blocker Sarah Jackson, who recorded her 1,000th kill against the Hawkeyes. "Maybe that was a factor. People were trying do hit around the block and hitting out. Although, we didn't get blocked too much. It was a really disappoint- ing match. It could have been our NCAA bid." Although they did make some mis- takes, the Golden Gophers had a rIluch better match than last time against the Wolverines. When the two teams played on Sept. 26, the Wolverines beat the Golden Gophers in five games, thanks in part to Minnesota's 29 serving errors. been. D: How important is reaching the Rose Bowl every year for the Wolverines? W: It's very important. The Rose Bowl is the reason for playing the sea- son. But unfortunately, because the Big Ten isn't part of the Alliance, we don't always have a shot at the national title, so reaching the Rose Bowl is the ulti- mate goal. If we can go out to Pasadena and beat the PAC-10 school, we have to be in the picture for the national title. It feels so good to get there, and then to win it just means that you achieved the ultimate goal that is set each season by every Big Ten football team. D: If beating Washington in the Rose Bowl was your favorite on-the-field memory, what sticks out in your mind off the field at Michigan? W: Pick one. There are so many. Everything sticks out in my mind. It was the whole experience that stands out. From just being a college student, its everything. Living life as a college stu- dent is being a grown up without need- ing to be a grown up. You can do stupid college things and not be accountable for them. It was very fun - days that I definitely loved and miss. I still need to finish up a couple credits there, and I was talking to my brother about it, and I told him I want to stay in the dorms again - I'll probably be the oldest guy in the dorms, but that's how fun it was. Every experience I had, I'll never forget. D: You said you loved doing crazy college things. Did you ever run the Naked Mile? W: Naked Mile? No way. I don't think I could run a mile, let alone a naked mile. Come on now, it's always cold after finals. There was no way I was going to let females see me running naked in the cold. It's a great tradition, but not always a pretty sight. D: I know that education is very important to you. You majored in educa- tion, and recently nominated a former teacher of yours, Millie Hursin, as the NFL's teacher of the month. How has that impacted your decision-making and the fact that you stayed your senior year at Michigan rather than going pro early? W: It's one of those things that I know is important. I like to be around kids, and would like to be able to say I've taught children. I've helped raise my brother, and the reason I nominated Mrs. Hursin is because she's given me a life off the field. She's helped me out in so many things, and shown me the impact a teacher can have on a student. Most of my growing came in school, not on the football field, and I have those people to thank for me being the person I am today. D: Is it fun having the Michigan con- nection between you, Toomer and Calloway on this team? W: Oh yeah, it's great. We like to tease Calloway for being "old school" because he's been here for a while. But we really consider each other family, experience,' his life in the and do a lot of things off the field. It's great to have an old teammate here with you again. And to be able to further your friendship after leaving college. D: As a metro-Detroiter, how does it feel to come into the Silverdome and face the Lions, a team I'm assuming you and your family rooted for growing up? W: It's fun, but I know my brother is probably still rooting for the Lions even when I play. He's always hated every team I've played for. He loved Notre Dame and hated Michigan. In high school he hated my school, Robichaud High School, but loved the rival cross- town school. Now, he hates the Giants but loves the Redskins, so I've lived with this for years and years. But I enjoy it, it's still fun. D: As a former student-athlete, what are your opinions on the troubles sur- rounding the Michigan basketball pro- gram and the general problem of boost- ers reaching college athletes? W: It's tough. There are a lot of boosters out there. Many are former col- lege athletes and they know the rules, so they know how to get around them. I know a lot of guys who offered stuff to us in college. Even though I was on complete scholarship, I was one of the guys on the team who didn't have much, so it's difficult with people trying to give you stuff. It was never tempting to me though. (Former Michigan football) coach (Gary) Moeller wouldn't allow any of that, and it never crossed my mind. He put the hammer down and let you know the rules. Basically, I think that the discipline for the football team is a whole different story compared to other Michigan sports. I know that there are football players who get in trouble, but there is a strict regiment laid out by the coaches and you stick to it. D: Now that Moeller is coaching in the NFL, do you get a chance to speak with him, or other teammates from col- lege? W: Oh yes. I speak with Coach Moeller frequently. Just because we are both here and there the whole season doesn't mean we don't have the time to talk and catch up on each other's lives. Elvis (Grbac), Joe Cocozzo and I keep in touch with a lot of the guys. It always feels good to see those guys, especially if they are successful in the NFL. ALAN GOLDENBACH The Bronx Bomber Cooper, Bostonjiust haven't learned yet T here's a reason why Ohio State coach John Cooper has a problem,.per- haps even a jinx, when it comes to playing Michigan. Fans, the media, players and everyone else have been banging their heads against the wall trying to figure out why Cooper, who has won at all three of his collegiate head coaching jobs in 21 years (stints at Tulsa and Arizona State preceded his tenure at the Horseshoe), can't beat Michigan. But Cooper's problem has nothing to do with any curse of The Maize and Blue, nor is the 60-year-old Tennessee native incompetent when it comes to manipulating the playbook. Cooper simply does not know how to control his players when it comes to "The Big Game." Twice in the past three years, he has failed to keep a muzzle on his players' mouths, and he could pay for it again this year. In case you haven't heard yet, since it has been plastered all over Detroit- area television and radio in the last 24 hours, Buckeyes sophomore wide receiver David Boston said this after Ohio State's 41-6 victory over lllinoi Saturday: "If our offense and defense are clicking, we should beat (Michigan) by two or three touchdowns." He went on to say: "There's a lot riding on it for them. They're the ones that have been sitting on top of the world. We're going to go up there and upset them. I think we're better than Michigan." Earth to David, Earth to David, we know you're a youngster And weren't around a couple of years ago when some other mental midget forgot to flip the switch on his mouth in late November. But did anyone in Columbus ever tell you about a guy named Terry Glenn? No? Then see if you can remember this quote: "Michigan is nobody. We should keep Michigan down where they bepng just like the rest of the teams." Glenn, the junior All-America wide receiver said those oh-so prophetic words during the week leading up to the 1995 game in Ann Arbor. A few days later, he was promptly shut up by an equally cocky freshman cornerback, named Charles Woodson, who kept his mouth closed and his mind open that week and subsequently picked off two passes that came Glenn's way - including one in the game's final minutes - in Michigan's 31-23 upset of the second-ranked and undefeated Buckeyes. Upon hearing Boston's words, Woodson just grinned, knowing he will probably line up more than a few times opposite Boston next weekend, and said tongue-in-cheek, "Well, if our offense and defense click, we should win by two touchdowns." You would think that the story about Glenn is one that is implanted into the memory of every freshman as soon as they set foot in Columbus, whether they play football or sit in a lab 18 hours a day studying microbiol- ogy. It's as if this stupidity is planned by the Columbus braintrust, for what that term is worth. Both Glenn and Boston were Ohio State's, if not theBig Ten's, best receiver each year they opened up and said more than just ahhh. Both years the game was played in Ann Arbor. Both years the Buckeyes' Rose Bowl hopes depended on this game. And both years Cooper failed to do what a good coach should have. After Ohio State destroyed Illinois, in fact, probably as the Buckeyes were finishing off the Illini, talk of Michigan certainly started heating up on the Ohio State bench. Then, as soon as the Buckeyes entered their lockerroom and congratulat- ed each other, Cooper should have simply gotten up and said something; along the lines of, "Don't say anything about Michigan other than, 'We'e really excited,' or 'This is our biggest game of the year and we're looking forward to getting back at Michigan for the last two years.' Anyone who- says anything other than that is suspended for the game. Period." Ohio State players said, after they were told of Boston's comments, tit Cooper told them not to say anything about Michigan until tomorrow. In fact, that's exactly what sophomore linebacker Andy Katzenmoyer told the: media. Boston is certainly to blame for this act of sheer absence of common sense, especially since his birthplace is, of all places, Humble, Texas. (You can't make that up. He even went to a high school bearing the same name.) But Cooper's role in this mess has to be questioned. How much do you think he emphasized the importance of Michigan silence to his players if Boston went right out minutes later and blabbed away about the Wolverines? Better yet, when do you think Cooper said the part about Michigan? Probably right in between his lectures about how the Buckeyes are under- rated and that they're one game away from going back to the Rose Bowl. But not after he reminded his players how they have beaten Michigantust once in the his nine years as the Buckeyes' coach. You just have to wonder what they were thinking. - Alan Goldenbach can be reached via e-mail at agold@umic/gedu. s M' spikers onCAbubble "First, we managed to serve the ball in the court," Minnesota coach Mike Hebert said. Last time they "really felt that we didn't give our- selves a chance to win. I thought we had a much better serving match. "Secondly, we sided out with very good consistency. When you side out in volleyball, that's the defense, sid- ing out and preventing your oppo- nent from scoring. If you can side out, you give yourself a chance to win. "Then we had Nicole Branagh swinging at the ball. She had a hot night. I'd say those three things were the highlights for us." Speaking of Branagh, the fresh- man outside hitter had 25 kills and a .370 hitting percentage, helping to lead the Golden Gophers to a 62- kill, .319-hitting percentage perfor- mance. "We needed to win this game," Branagh said. "Things came together in the first, third and fourth games. The second game wasn't quite the same. We came out strong after the break and really focused on what we needed to accomplish tonight." The Golden Gophers pretty much dominated the entire match, winning the first game by a score of 15-7. The Wolverines came out in the second match with a vengeance and cruised to a 15-1 victory, but that was where the bright spots ended for Michigan. In the third game, the Wolverines were down, 12-2, when they got a sideout. They then scored on a Minnesota hitting error and were able to put together a six- point scor- ing sequence, before Minnesota got the ball back and finished the game with a 15-8 win. The fourth game ended in a 15-7 Minnesota victory. "We didn't do the little things that we normally do right," said senior setter Linnea Mendoza, who record- ed her 1,000th dig against the Golden Gophers. "Our passing was inconsistent, which makes the offense inconsistent. We weren't in a groove." Meanwhile, this loss leaves many unanswered questions in reference to the NCAA tournament. With four matches remaining, the Wolverines are hardly out of the run- ning, but the loss makes the next two weekends more difficult for Michigan. The Wolverines play on the road next weekend against Indiana and Penn State, before finishing the sea- son at home against Ohio State and Purdue. "We definitely have to go 2-2," Michigan coach Greg Giovanazzi said. "2-2 gives us 12 wins. They've never left home a 12-8 team. We'd like to get a hold of Ohio State, and we'll let Penn State take care of itself. It'll be a tough match on the road. We'll play our hardest and see how that one comes out. We're not going to waste a week of practice this week on Penn State. We're going to go after Indiana, try to pick them apart and treat them like we did last time." As far as the road ahead is con- cerned, the Wolverines have one goal, and that is to go to the NCAA tournament. Although that goal could some- times be a distraction from each indi- vidual match, the Wolverines know that without focus, there will be no tournament. "For me, the goal is fun," Mendoza said. "We have four matches left. This is it. If I don't personally play well now, I don't want to look back and regret what I could have done. There's a lot more than just the tour- nament for me. "We've never experienced it. We're hungry for it. There's so much more emotion going in. It's too bad you can't put the feeling inside other people. You have to wait until you're fourth year, four games away to real- ize the significance and importance of the whole thing." Fundraising Publicity *Sve4tSeda4uk9 leadership development Are these things your student organization is trying to accomplish? Get advice and help from the office of Student Activities & Leader-