w -1w _qw- -IF- 1p- 8F - The Michigan Daily - Football Saturday - October 23, 1999 Needing three wins in its last - =, Illinois is putting the ball... Ill the halids of a child .. .. .. . .. .. . .. ..... .. . .. ..... .. .................... .......... .......... .......... .. ....... ......... . ....... . . By Josh Kleinbaum Daily Sports Editor. ........................................ . . ............................................................... ................ ..... .... ..... .... ..... .... ..... ......................... October 23, 1999 - F After switching positions before last season, Aaron Shea I integral part of the Michigan offense. And with every bloci every defender he runs over, the senior fullback is turning the HE 'S S<+ A t }" It didn't take long for Kurt Kittner to figure out that something was wrong on Sunday. A day after suffering his third straight loss and the worst of the season, a 30- point thumping at the hands of Minnesota, the Illinois quarterback arrived to practice expecting business as usual. A day after a game, that means a light, no.- pads practice. Imagine .his surprise, then, when Illinois coach Ron Turner told him to break out the pads. "I was thinking, 'Uh-oh,"' the sophomore, quarterback said. "We didn't know what we were doing once we got out there." Kittner, along with the rest of the Illini, found out quickly: a full-pad scrimmage. "We're looking to regain some fight," Turner said. The players "were not real happy. Maybe they were mad at me for making them put on the pads, and that's fine. I've had more than a hundred people be mad at me before, so having a hundred foot- ball players mad at me is fine. But if they're mad, they'll fight, and that's all we ask." So where has the fight gone'? After winning just three games in Turner's first two seasons as the Illini coach, his team opened the season with a surprise 3-0 start, although Arkansas State, San Diego State and Louisville didn't supply the best competition. Then came the Big Ten season, and out went the fight. Michigan State, Indiana and Minnesota ran, passed, smothered, chewed and spit out the Illini, and suddenly the nation's biggest surprise crashed back to reality. So with a Sunday practice, Turner laid down a chal- lenge. "How are you going to respond?" the coach demanded. "Are you going to lie down and die, or get up and fight?" If the Illini are going to get up and fight, Kittner will have to lead the way. A backup at the start of last year, Kittner moved into the starting role for the second half of the season. He started five straight games and became the first true freshman to start at quarter- back for the Illini in more than 50 years. But he still had freshman struggles. He threw just one touchdown to seven interceptions. He completed just under 45 percent of his passes. In his five starts, he won just one game. Now, with a year under his belt, Kittner has developed into a threat, even if he is the only oyie in Illini orange. He's thrown 12 touchdowns versus two interceptions. His completion percentage is close to 55. After topping I was thinking, UIloh.' We didn't know whawe were doing once we got out there. -Illinois quarterback Kurt Kittner off at 245 yards in a single game last year, versus Ohio State, Kittner now averages 229.2. "When you talk about a sophomore who's thrown for 1200 yards and just threw his first interception this weekend," Michigan coach Lloyd Carr said, "that's pret- ty impressive." So when the Illini need some leadership, they turn to the sophomore. "You've got to motivate yourself," Kittner said. "There's a point in time when you got to say it's got to stop now, it's got to stop here. This isn't right." If Kittner sounds frustrated, it's because he is. Three weeks ago, the Illini were halfway to a bowl game - Illinois needs six wins to qualify - with close to a full season left. Now, postseason ball for the Illini seems about as likely as, well, postseason play for the Detroit Tigers. With probable wins against Iowa and Northwestern later in the season, the Illini will have to beat Michigan, Penn State or Ohio State if they want to celebrate Christmas outside of the Land of Lincoln. "I'm going to be ready to play," Kittner said. "It's a great game and a great atmosphere for football. I like playing in front of a hostile crowd. That gets me pumped up. Which is just what Turner wants. With the full-pads practice - it was the first time he's pulled that stunt on a Sunday is his three years at Illinois -- Turner said he was looking for players to take it upon themselves to get motivated. "He's not a Bobby Knight, but he gets us going, and gets his point across," Kittner said. "It was a wakeup call to get us going." By Andy Latack.Daily Sports Editor .... With the way Aaron Shea is talking about Tom Brady, you wouldn't think the two were teammates, let alone friends. "He's garbage," Shea said of his fellow senior. "And he's scared of me." Pretty harsh, especially considering that Brady is the one responsible for getting Sheathe ball every Saturday. But the full- back still lights into Brady like there's no tomorrow. So, is this the makings of a fragmenting lockerrom feud, sure to tear the team apart'? Can we expect Brady to throw more pass- es to the referee than to Shea for the rest of the season'? Not so fast. Shea isn't assessing his friend's gridiron skills. Rather, he is lampooning Brady's inadequacy on another sort of football field the electronically-rendered variety that is locat- ed in the living room of Shea's apartment. If the game is Madden 2000 for the Sony Playstation, Shea reigns supreme over his quar- terback. It has gotten so bad that Brady avoids Shea's place like an oncoming linebacker if video games are on the agenda. "Brady won't come over and play me in video games any- 3-ore," Shea said. "Hale's a little intimidated to come out to the Shea Dome." But as much as Shea is a pain in the neck for Brady and any- one else he squares off with in Playstation, he has been even more of a handful for Michigan's opponents this year. In just his second full season at fullback, Shea has developed into a bruising runner, a solid blocker, an adept receiver and one of the focal points of the Michigan offense. After scoring just two touchdowns in his first three years, Shea already has three scores this season. And his 193 receiving yards place him third on the team, just behind wide receivers David Terrell and Marquise Walker. In having such a standout year, Shea has turned some heads. A few weeks ago, Purdue coach Joe Tiller called Shea the best full- back he has faced since arriving at the school. Pretty high praise, considering all the fullbacks that pass through the ground-oriented Big Ten, where the straightforward style of play hinges on having a tank-like fullback. Really high praise when you consider that, coming into last season, Shea was a third-string tight end with a grand total of 14 career receptions. - "It was definitely hard, because I'd go out and get the job done in practice," Shea said of his first two years of eligibility. "But I never got the opportunity in games." That's because Shea was playing the waiting game, stuck behind future NFL players Jerame Tuman (Pittsburgh) and Mark' Campbell (Cleveland) at the tight end slot. But in fall practice last year, Michigan coach Lloyd Carr came up with a way Shea could play immediately, rather than waiting behind the pair for his entire junior year. By moving him to fullback to replace the grad- uated Chris Floyd, Shea could return to the position at which he was recruited before he converted to tight end during his redshirt season in 1995. Interestingly, Tuman was both one of Shea's closest friends and, by virtue of being first on Michigan's depth chart, -also the reason why Shea was stuck on the sideline. But the competition for the starting spot never got in the way of the two players' friendship. "The great thing about it was that we were really good friends," Shea said of Tuman, who he still talks with by tele- phone three or four times a week. "We always helped each other out and never kept anything from each other. If one of us saw that, 'Hey, when this guy lines up in a stance, he might go here,' we'd tell each other." But the switch to fullback gave Shea the opportunuty to start at the same time as Tuman and wide receiver Tai Streets, one of his other close friends on the team-last sea- son. And after serving as Tuman's understudy for three years, Shea was prepared to thrive at his new position. iHe did so with the help of running backs coach Fred Jackson, who had the brief period between fall practices and the season-opener at Notre Dame to mold Shea back into a fullback. "Coach Jackson did a great job of getting me ready in a short period of time," Shea said. "Ile really only had two-and-a-half weeks to get me ready, but he had confidence in me that I knew what I was doing." And Shea is making Carr, Jackson and the rest of the Michigan coaching staff look pretty astute for suggesting the switch. He is excelling in his role at fullback and has emerged as one of the primary targets in this year's offensive scheme. "I like finding ways to get him the ball because he can run very well," Carr said, "If you make a mistake on him, he can hurt you big." Despite gaining notiriety this season as one of the nation's best fullbacks, Shea doesn't let any of it go to his head. "The recognition feels good, but one thing I'm big on is not reading your own press clips," Shea said. "I know how much bet- ter I can be, and I don't feel I've reached that yet. Not even close." But while Shea remains humble about his work on the field, he has a tougher time. being modest about his Playstation ability Altog o might get an objection about that from Brady or wide receiver Marcus Knight, another fre- quent opponent of Shea's. Shea always plays the game as the Oakland Raiders, or "Michigan West," as he calls them, because of the many former Wolverines on the team. Shea mranuevers the digital - likenesses of Char Sam Sword - al NFL - around th( snares passes in i And with the kii see himself on M y fj . , lot iniiI t of c Opporl"'8i! L p ,i t$ s l:i ~i em P'd' ] F i1nq Sdn D ?i ld, 16 i fNy. 0 WA810 mirn State 30 I L2710 L,31-7 I know how much better I can be, and I don't feel I've reached that yet Not even close. - Mk~higan lullack Aaron Shea ,ei:e4 ti '9 45 4122 180 114t