Thursday, September 9, 1999 - The Michigan Daily -- 19B * Former Nebraska B Frazier returns as Baylor coach Galloway holds out; leaves Seahawks in lurch WACO, Texas (AP) - Tommie Frazier always knew he would >ecome a football coach. But first, he had to pass a test. By choice, the former Nebraska Cornhuskers' star quarterback spent the past two years avoiding the game he once dominated. He worked in the Nebraska gover- nor's public information office for s six months. Then he landed a marketing job ,with a Lincoln, Neb., telephone com- pany. Frazier wouldn't even consider coaching until he could prove to himself that he no longer wanted to play. "I wanted to be able to sit down, enjoy a game on TV, and not feel the urge to play," he said. "I wanted to get that desire out of my system first." Now, nearly four years after lead- ing Nebraska in back-to-back perfect seasons, Frazier says he has done exactly that. He starts this season as Baylor's running backs coach. Although he still looks fit enough to suit up, Frazier said he never even thinks about playing, and he said he's a better coach because of it. w."There's a lot of 30-year-old coaches out there who still want to play, and that takes away from their poaching," Frazier said. "I think if you're going to coach, your whole ocus should be on helping the ids." Though he was widely recognized as one of the best college football players ever, NFL teams passed on Frazier because of questions about his passing ability and concern over his history of blood clots. Clots in his leg plagued him dur- ing the Cornhuskers' 1994 champi- onship run and similar problems caused him to end his Canadian Football League career after one sea- son. Frazier is at Baylor because of new Bears coach Kevin Steele, who as a Nebraska assistant recruited Frazier out of high school in Bradenton, Fla. "There's nothing he thinks he can't do, and the players react to him because they've seen him do it," Steele said. "He's mature, intelli- gent, competitive, and a winner in every sense of the word." Frazier originally was hired by Baylor as a graduate assistant and was ready to add to his communica- tions degree by enrolling in summer courses. But when a full-time coaching job came open during spring drills, Steele offered a promotion. "When I called him into my office and told him the news, he gave me that same smile he gave me when we recruited him, and that same smile he gave when he told doctors he was going to play in the (1995) Fiesta Bowl," Steele said. "He said, 'Coach, I'm going to get it done.' "I've learned that when Tommie says that, it's not just a statement. You can put it in the bank." KIRKLAND, Wash. (AP) - Mike Holmgren has some words of advice for holdout Seattle Seahawks receiver Joey Galloway: You're stuck in Seattle, so live with it. "We're not going to trade him," the first-year Seahawks coach-general manager told his weekly news confer- ence on Wednesday. "I want him here. I want him to be a part of this and he knows that" Galloway, the team's leading receiver in each of the last three seasons, missed all of the Seahawks' training camp and their four exhibition games. The Seahawks open their season on Sunday at the Kingdome against Detroit. Galloway has one season left on a five-year contract for $1.6 million. He signed the pact after Seattle made him the eighth overall pick in the 1995 NFL draft. Even if Galloway sat out this season, he would remain the property of the Seahawks. Galloway has turned down a seven- year contract offer for $35 million, including a $7 million signing bonus. He is seeking a five-year deal worth about $25 million with a $10 million signing bonus. Other teams are seeking to acquire Galloway in a trade, Holmgren told reporters. "I've been approached in casual con- versations by about 15 (teams)," he said. "I've told them all the same thing: I am not trading him. He's here. I want him here" Holmgren doesn't sound like he's ready to give an inch, or a dollar, in the stalemate. Negotiations broke off -two weeks ago. "I would hope he'd walk in the door and say, 'OK, I'm ready to play;" Holmgren said. With Galloway missing and Michael Pritchard out with a knee injury, Sean Dawkins and Charles Jordan will be Seattle's starting receivers for the Lions' game. Derrick Mayes will be the third receiver. All are new this season. Quarterback Jon Kitna will be starting his seventh NFL game. Dawkins and Jordan signed with the Seahawks as free agents and Mayes was acquired by Seattle in a trade with Green Bay. "We're thin there in this first game certainly," Holmgren said of his receiv- ing corps. Galloway and Pritchard led the team in receptions and receiving yardage last season. Galloway caught 65 passes for 1,047 yards and 10 touchdowns while Pritchard made 58 receptions for 742 yards and three TDs. Pritchard is expected back for Seattle's second game Sept. 19 in Chicago. Galloway, who is at his home in Columbus, Ohio, told KIRO Radio Tuesday night, "I would love to be there right now playing, but at the same time I can't accept playing for something hat's way below market value." Holmgren also announced that for- mer Pro Bowl offensive tackle Howard Ballard, who retired lasi Sunday after playing I1 seasons in the NFL, will remain with the team as an assistant coach this season. He will help offen- sive line coach Tom Lovat. AP PHOTO Nebraska's Eric Crouch has a lot to live up to as a Nebraska quarterback. One of his predecessors, Tommie Frazier, won national titles in 1994 and 1995. .Small QB Hamilton underdog for Heisman Washington Post oe Hamilton doesn't have a com- puer. So the little quarterback has no neod for the mouse pad bearing his henic portrait above the words, "Hanilton for Heisman." Nor does he vatch a CD-Rom suggesting he migit be the first Georgia Tech play- er t win the award named for the first Georgia Tech coach, John Heisnan, a hard man famous for man, things, among them the night he vent to the Tech chapel and annoinced, "Gentleman, we are des- titute of people. If you weigh 150 pounts or more, please come out for foothill." Yet Hamilton has the Heisman kroply on his mind. "In my room, by myself, I think about it. But I don't ay anything to my teammates becaue it can be a distraction, defi- nitely, T joke around about it. But you don't want to portray to your team- mates that you're really thinking aboutit. We all have to do our jobs, offen,, defense, special teams. The Heisnan, it's definitely a team thing.' Wods fail: For a true sense of the Hamilon persona, it's necessary to read lis quotes again. Read' them aloud, in a chirpy voice, and read them 4o quickly the words allrunto- gethedikethis. The magic of Joe H.nilton is that he skitters around a football field almost as quickly as wards leap from his lips. Can he win the Heisman9 Doibtful. He did decent work in three quarters of Georgia Tech's 49- # 14 fictory at Navy: 12 of 17 passes for 139 yards and two touchdowns, I l tarries for 39 yards and another touchdown. Tlat won't lose the Heisman. But you win it in games such as Satuday's, when Georgia Tech and its litle big man go against the big, big nen of Florida State. "W'll be looking at Florida State film, studying them, putting in our game:,lan all week," Hamilton says. *"We kiow what we have to do. We'll show ip. Definitely, we'll show up." Fastasterfastest, those words leap from Joe Hamilton's lips so quickly a sportsvriter taking notes sprains his right wist. Doctors list him as ques- tionable for next week's interviews. Before he injury, though, the sports- writer nakes several notes, including these fom a conversation with Tech's rTensive coordinator, Ralph *Friedgen.. COR 1E AND WRITE tOI THE DAILY! W;'R; fLOOKING "Joe's better than ever at reading defenses, looking off defenders, making decisions quickly. And he's confident in what he's doing. He's like Boomer that way (meaning Boomer Esiason, Friedgen's quarter- back in the early '80s at Maryland). At a bowl one year, Boomer told the press, 'Ben Bennett can't carry my jock.' I asked him, Why say that about the other team's quarterback?' Boomer said, 'Coach, the game needs some ink; they're not selling any tickets.' Joe'll challenge you, too." We stood in Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium, one of the beau- tiful places in college football. It's small, maybe 30,000 seats. People bring blankets and sit on an end zone's grassy incline. Get high enough in the ballpark, you can see the Chesapeake Bay Bridge standing tall outside Annapolis. Before kickoff, the brigade of Midshipmen marches onto the field, 5,000 strong, every man and woman in dress whites, stirring no matter how many times you've seen them, standing tall as we read on the stadi- um walls a listing of battles: PEARL HARBOR ... MIDWAY ... IWO JIMA ... NORMANDY ... INCHON MEKONG DELTA ... "Tough schedule," the with Beano Cook once said. "And all on the road." The stadium's one elevator came scavenged from a battleship, the USS Enterprise. It carries six people, maybe seven if they haven't eaten recently. It carries them ever so slow- ly. "When Tech played here in 1977," says Tom Bates, a Navy assistant A.D., "President Carter came over because he attended both Tech and the academy. He's in that elevator going upstairs and it's taking its usual 47 seconds to go one level, and the Secret Service up top is going crazy, 'Where is he? Where IS HE?' By this day's end, David Ryno, Navy's nose guard, might have asked the same thing about Joe Hamilton. Harassed by Navy's blitzing defens- es, the little man -he's 5-10, 190 - dumped off quick passes or sprinted away from trouble. He did the good work that wins games you should win but none of the sensational work that wins games you should lose. Hamilton called it an OK day, maybe a 7 on a scale of 10, though pointing out, kindly, that Navy foot- ball, a wonderful thing, is not Florida State football, an NFL thing. "You can beat Florida State, but you gotta really beat 'em. They won't help you beat 'em; you gotta do it yourself." Hamilton's resume suggests he can do that. Four times last season, he created fourth-quarter touchdown drives to win games seemingly lost. "We didn't play today at the level we can play," says Jon Carman, Tech's 335-pound right tackle. "And what Joe did is nowhere near all he can do." As to what more Joe Hamilton must do against Florida State, Friedgen smiles and says, "A lot"' THE BEDSHEET MADE FOR STUDENTS NO MORE BEDMAKING! 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