Thursday, September 9, 1999 - The Michigan Daily - 58 rormer QB Dreisbach finds his way with Raiders DREISBACH Continued from Page 1A Nov. 16 Penn State game, Dreisbach s replaced by Brian Griese. Although he started the following week against Ohio State, he was once again replaced by Griese due to injury. After that game, Dreisbach never started another game at quarterback. "I had strong support from my fam- ily, my friends and my teammates," Dreisbach said. "There were a lot of calls to my mother, and a lot of calls from my grandfather and my uncle. It was hard, but I had to make the dci- don that if football was something I wanted to do, I had to roll with the punches and stay positive. I had to make it through anything that came my way." The following year, Carr named Griese as the team's starter, and the Wolverines won the national champi- onship in the Rose Bowl. "I think at that point, Scott had some injuries that really impacted his rformance," Carr said. Dreisbach watched Michigan suc- ceed without him, spending most of his time on the sideline. Yet, he never mouthed off to the media or moped aound in practice, Carr said. "Anyone who played with Scott, who was on the coaching staff, who was close to the team or who followed the team, gained tremendous respect for the way he dealt with one of the st difficult things a player could al with," Carr said. "He showed outstanding class and leadership. Even though he wasn't the starting quarterback, he provided good leadership for our team." That class trickled down to other members of the team. They all learned how to stay composed when things didn't go as planned. "I've learned an awful lot from kott - not just football," Michigan carterback Tom Brady said. "I've learned ways to handle myself in tough situations. Scott was always doing and saying the right thing ... I've certainly learned a lot from Scott in that respect." Even with the adversity he was fac- ing, Dreisbach managed to keep a strong sense of humor and managed to keep his teammates and his coach ghing, Brady said. Scott's got a great sense of humor," Brady said. "He could always lighten up situations with Coach Carr. He knew when things were important, and he knew when he could be himself and laugh. "He would always have the quarter- backs laughing, especially when Brian was around. He and Scott would go back-.and forth with each other. We d to have some fun times in that rterback room." Dreisbach's sense of humor went beyond the quarterback room. It went onto the field and onto the sideline. "He's competitive, but at the same time, he knows how to have fun," Swett said. "That is so easily lost sight of. It becomes a job and becomes so intense at that level that sometimes you lose focus and forget it's a game. When you have fun, nine out of 10 4 s you play better." reisbach looked out for the younger quarterbacks in the way older quarterbacks had done for him at Michigan, and in the way they are doing now for him in Oakland. "I helped them out in the ways that a coach would, but we were friends," Dreisbach said. "As quarterbacks, we were a tight-knit group. We all respected each other. We knew only one guy was going to be on the field, but we supported each other fully." Bitterness and an attitude problem were not options for Dreisbach. "If I wasn't going to be on the field, I was going to support the person who was," Dreisbach said. "I couldn't con- trol getting hurt, and I couldn't control a lot of circumstances. So I went to practice with a smile. I was excited to go to practice, but I wasn't through my career. After I changed and decided that I had to give football my all, it was all uphill from there." Losing a starting job is not easy. It would have been easy to get angry and to start blaming people, but that's not the route Dreisbach took. "He could have been a negative fac- tor for the team, and he could have said that it wasn't fair," Swett said. "Instead, he would get the younger quarterbacks into the film room, and he would sit down with Brian to go over the game plan. "He was like a coach on the field for the offense. He was able to see things from a player's perspective, and he could relay that to the coaches. It's a real testament to his character, his attitude and his love for his team- mates." Everyone on the team learned that adversity does not necessarily mean a negative demeanor. "He taught us to make the best out of your situation, whatever it may be," said Michigan senior fullback Aaron Shea. "Not everything's going to go your way. You've got to fight and stay positive." Carr saw it too. "He was an outstanding role model in that respect," Carr said. "If the younger players see an older guy han- dle adversity in a positive way, then it's an example of how maybe they can do the same thing at some point if they're faced with the same issue." In 1998, Dreisbach decided that one way or another, he was going to be on the playing field, helping his team in any way possible. He started playing special teams. "During the national championship season, I spent most of my time on the bench, giving plays and calling sig- nals" Dreisbach said. "I didn't feel as much a part of the Rose Bowl as I wanted to. "In the off-season, I made up my mind that I was going to help on the field somehow. I wasn't given any special treatment. I had to work just as hard as everybody else for my spot on special teams." That work earned him a spot in Michigan fans hearts, too. In the wan- ing minutes of Dreisbach's final home game - last year against Wisconsin - Carr put the senior in for the last time at quarterback. In the waning minutes, Carr called upon to Dreisbach to play in his final home game. As he ran onto the field, the fans went crazy. They hadn't for- gotten the man who brought his team back to beat Virginia. Hard work and a positive attitude have paid off. He was invited to the NFL draft combine in February, where prospective NFL players audition for the upcoming draft. "It was an incredible feeling, and I'm still riding that wave," Dreisbach said. "To be invited, to perform well and to have somebody else to notice what I knew I could do, was great. It's just been one thing after another that has put a big old smile on my face." In April, Dreisbach signed as a rookie free agent with the Raiders, where he continued to lead come- backs. In his first pre-season game, Dreisbach engineered two scoring dri- ves in the final 7:04 of the game, and the Raiders won. "Scott was faced with a lot of situa- tions that make you stronger as a per- son," Brady said. "He went from a younger player who had all the fame and glamour to a player who had a lot of setbacks. He never held his head, and he never complained, which I'm sure contributes to why he has been successful in the NFL" The Raiders liked what they saw and brought him in to play earlier in their next game. Once again, he engi- neered the winning touchdown, but he was not around to see the actual score. While attempting to run for a touch- down, Dreisbach suffered a cracked fibula. Even with the injury, Dreisbach made the Raiders final roster. His cast came off Aug. 31, and he has began running. He will probably be able to practice in two weeks. Meanwhile, he has learned a lot from the Raiders vet- eran quarterbacks, Rich Gannon, Wade Wilson and Bobby Hoying, who went to Ohio State. "They're very positive, and they give me constructive criticism," Dreisbach said. "They want me to suc- ceed. Rich told me that I could play for 10 years in this league. He told me that I have the skills and what it takes to be a NFL quarterback. He's seen a lot of things in his career, and to hear that from him means a lot. It's incred- ible." Dreisbach will be joined in Oakland by these fellow Wolverines: Safety Marcus Ray, linebacker Sam Sword, cornerback Charles Woodson and run- ning back Tyrone Wheatley. All the maize and blue has helped ease the transition from college to the NFL. "It's great," Dreisbach said. "When we beat Notre Dame, we all got together and strutted around in our Michigan paraphernalia." Dreisbach's Michigan football experience may not have been an easy one, but it was not a bad one either. Support from those close to him helped him stay upbeat, but in the end, it was his own discipline and attitude that got him through the tough times. "Once I decide to do something, I'm done," Dreisbach said. "When I make-up my mind, there's no turning back. It goes back to football. I'm not going to let anything stop me." And if something tries, he can always lead another comeback. FILE PHOTO Former Michigan quarterback Scott Dreisbach currently plays with four former Wolverines on the NFL's Oakland Raiders. We didn't become Fortune magazine's America's Most Admired Company* by accepting the status quo. We got there by hiring and training graduates with the confidence and courage to think in innovative and revolutionary ways. No other corporation can match the diversity Please Visit GE's Career Information Day Sent 1 5th - 1 0-Om - 4-OOnm ;' __ .'- I