16A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, October 15, 1998 'Tough' Bates returns for Wildcats Back from injury, Northwestern's star wideout seeks another bowl game By Mark Snyder Daly Sports Editor In the first game of the season, no one thinks about injury - least of all an All-America candi- date. All thoughts focus on the future and what's to come. But when Northwestern wide receiver D'Wayne Bates was helped from the field in the 1997 season opener after breaking his leg, 'what's to come' became 'what might have been.' Bates watched from the sidelines as his team- mates fell into the old ways of the Wildcats. When Bates was active during his freshman and sopho- more seasons, two straight Big Ten championships came to Evanston. But as a passive observer, a poor record just compounded his helplessness. His season totals were one-game totals: three catches, 40 yards and thousands of what-ifs. "Yeah, I was a little depressed not being able to play last year," Bates said. "But being 5-7 and missing a bowl game - that was depressing." The Northwestern bashing of the past have tem- pered with recent success, and that taste of victory keeps these Wildcats excited - especially Bates, who yearns for another bowl game. fter two consec- utive Big Ten championships, Northwestern .7 coach Gary Barnett suffered a 5-7 season last year. This year, Barnett seeks to return to his pre- vious winning ways. Photocourte oThe Daily Northwestern "It isn't the same staying at home for Christmas, watching the (bowl) games on TV," he said. "It was a learning experience." Most of the education for the fifth-year senior came while sitting out a year, though. "I just want to get back to where I was last year," Bates said. "It's been a year, and I've got a fire burning inside me to play." That internal fire vaulted him into the national limelight two seasons ago, when he took advantage of his veteran quarterback, Steve Schnur. Their rapport established Bates as an impressive target and his statistics followed suit. In 12 games, he snagged 75 balls for 1,196 yards and 12 touch- downs as the 'Cats rolled. The dozen scores set a Northwestern record for a tandem, but that was just the beginning for Bates. Already this season, he has leapt to the top of the Northwestern receiving charts in nearly every statistical category. Among career records at the school, he ranks first in yards (2,709), consecutive games with a catch (27) and 100-yard receiving games (12). But for the two-time member of the Biletnikoff "watch list," he's just happy to be back on the field. "I just want to get out and play," he said. Northwestern coach Gary Barnett realizes his job becomes much easier with No. 5 in uniform. "He makes me sleep better at night," Barnett said. "D'Wayne is one of the kind of players you want. He has overcome adversity of all sorts. It's kind of like having a coach on the field. Anyone who talks to him goes, 'wow'." By the end of the season, Bates may be among the nation's most talked-about players. Throughout the history of the Big Ten, no play- er has gained more career yards than Illinois' David Williams, who played from 1983-85. But Bates is making a charge on the mark. If he main- tains this season's torrid yardage pace - he's aver- aging 97.3 yards per game - the record will be his. When Saturday comes, Lloyd Carr will be doing everything possible to avoid adding to that infamy. Carr's focus will be on Bates' talents and how they can slice and dice Michigan's depleted defensive secondary. "He's an outstanding athlete and he's a big tar- get," Carr said. "The thing I always look for in a receiver is can he catch the ball away from his body. To make the great catches you have to be able to do that. He runs with the football after he catch- es it. He's a tough guy. He's not intimidated by con- tact." Photocourtesy ofTreoly Northwestern D'Wayne Bates, Northwestern's all-time career receiving leader, has returned to the lineup this season after a leg injury sidelined him last year. Barnett looking for respectability - again By Sharat Raju Daily Sports Editor The city of Chicago never really had a collegiate athletic program to root for. The University of Chicago - one of the founding members of the Big Ten and a producer of football pio- neers such as Amos Alonzo Stagg - dropped out of the conference in 1940, focusing primarily on acade- mics. DePaul, located in the heart of the city, had marked success in basket- ball especially in the 1980s, but is now rebuilding after the Meyer Era ended with former coach Joey Meyer's firing. Illinois is pretty far south of the city, about three hours away. The closest successful athletic program is Notre Dame, which is just about as far away as the Fighting lllini are. But one man managed to energize the City of Broad Shoulders, revital- izing college football excitement on the lakefront. Gary Barnett, Northwestern's foot- ball coach, brought big-name college football to Evanston, the old suburb nestled on Lake Michigan just north of the city. Nobody cared about Northwestern football - or anything else at Northwestern other than academics - before Barnett arrived. The Wildcats were a punchline in Chicago. Saying 'Northwestern foot- ball' was just about as funny as say- ing 'sperm whale,' So Barnett had to regain the pub- lic's respect as well as build a con- ference contender from scratch, essentially. The first step was to re- design to uniforms to include black, lessening the purple's effect. The next step was to win some ballgames. That step would take a lit- tle longer. Barnett told the student body before his first game in 1992 that he would bring the Wildcats back to the Rose Bowl, that he would make a winner out of the program. People laughed at him, especially since he had never coached a team in a major conference before. But he made that Rose Bowl promise often over the next three years, even though he finished with paltry records - 3-8, 2-9 and 3-7-1. People were really laughing then. But that one year - 1995 - that one absurd, odds-defying season, Barnett ignited the Chicagoland area with Rose Bowl fever, finishing 10-2 and winning the Big Ten champi- onship outright. "I can tell you once it was deter- mined we were going to the Rose Bowl, everything went turbo," Barnett said. Everything. The team was on the box of Wheaties. The Wildcats were in the big city papers every day. Suddenly everyone, everrone, was a Northwestern fan. Alumni who never admitted they ever attended Northwestern proudly donned purple-and-white sweat- shirts, brandishing "Wildcats" across their chests. Although the Wildcats lost to Southern Cal in Pasadena, Barnett received 18 coach of the year awards, 16 of them national ones. And the next season, Barnett did it again, sharing a co-Big Ten champi- onship with Ohio State and losing in the Citrus Bowl to Tennessee. He was named the Big Ten coach of the year for the second consecutive sea- son. "It was a mystical experience for me and our team," Barnett said. "I'll do anything ethical to go bacli the Rose Bowl." The bandwagon was full back then, but now there is a lot of space on board. Last season's 5-7 bowl-less perfor- mance left many people asking if the previous two years were a fluke, if the magic was gone from Barnett's fingertips. To that end, Barnett has been doing everything he can to p vent returning to the dismal days Evanston. "I purposely watched every playof every game" in the offseason, Barnett said. "It was like a punish- ment." Now, Barnett's motivational skili - which before was hailed as among the best in the country - is under scrutiny. "If not going to a bowl game did- n't hurt, if it didn't bother them, to can go through it again," Barnett said. FACEOFF '98 - IN TODAY'S PAPER. TIPOFF '98 - ON Nov. 12. PA ,i{ t_ ^ x5 i ri, " s ' sMy_ 5~ Fr}* . k. r j~ (not in credit cards) Introducing the New American Express Credit Card for Students. Live for today. Build for tomorrow. The New American Express Credit Card for Students is a resource you can depend on. With benefits like big airfare savings, free credit information, and no annual fee, it'll help you get the most from your student years-and help you build a solid financial foundation for the future. .. _ ,,. k a OF T-" T il