10A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 14, 2000 After a long road back from injury, Justin Fargas marks another journey with his trip home this Saturday BY MARK FRANCESCUTTI -DAILY SPORTS EDITOR ustin Fargas wanted to ride a bike. He had seen all the other kids speeding along his street, and now it was his turn. There was just one problem --- he couldn't reach the pedals. But little things like that didn't stop Fargas. He got on that bike for the first time and pushed off the wall. He may have crashed, he may have skinned his knees, but Fargas wanted to ride, and there was no way to stop him. But the ride never quite ended for Fargas. It was a long climb to the top, especially to the pomt he is at today. Now a redshirt sophomore, Fargas' story mimics a comeback prizefighter, returning to the gridiron after a full season away from football. But it wasn't the pigskin that first snared Fargas' attention. Soccer and baseball kept him busy during his younger years, and football never really entered that reality until high school. Fargas was small. He wanted to get bigger and faster, so he gave football a try. "When he first showed up he was skinny as a rail," said Notre Dame High School coach Kevin Rooney, who coached Fargas for three years. "We all thought there was no way he would be a good football player." Fat-gas battled for position on the freshman team, eventually winning a running back spot and cruising to several 100-yard games. "He came in the house and he said to us This is the greatest!"' Fargas' stepmother Sandra said. "He's xery serious, very goal-ori- ct1itd. Once he sets his mind on something he doesn't stop until he gets it." Fargas from then on, set his mind on foot- ball and his target on the varsity tailback job. Still, he needed even more speed to play on Notre Dame's top squad. So he joined the track team, and used what his coach called "God- given ability" to fast-forward his game. "I needed to get better for football - that came from track," Fargas said. "In track, you're by yourself. There's no excuses." Notre Dame's competition was still tough. The team already had a starting tailback, and a sophomore who played football for one lone season wasn't going to come in and shake things up - or so the roaches believed. "He made varsity, but the first time he car- ried the ball, he fumbled," Rooney said. "After that, though, he did extremely well. About halfway through the season, we realized that he was the better guy." And from then on, Fargas was the starter at tailback, tallying 6,352 yards and 77 touch- downs in three seasons - all while starting on the other side of the ball at defensive back. Fargas was not afraid to try anything. In one high school game, as defenders came sprawling at him, Fargas flipped over the defense, landed on his feet, and ran another 30 yards for a touchdown. "He had some remarkable games, and some remarkable plays that just made the coaches shake their heads (in amazement)," Rooney said. "He's very determined in the way he runs. He wouldn't be tackled." After a successful high school campaign, including a 100-meter track state champi- onship, Fargas chose Michigan, shocking Southern Cal and UCLA - two hometown schools that strongly courted him. When coach John Robinson, whom Fargas says he was "very close to' left Southern Cal, Fargas was down to two. "I felt comfortable with him (Robinson)," Fargas said. "Had he stayed, well, maybe it would be different" now. And though the enormous pressure of stay- ing near his Encino, Cal., home (about 15 minutes away from UCLA) engulfed Fargas, Michigan offered the academics and football program he desired, but also the independence of living on his own. "Sometimes you have to step out of your home, so you can grow," Fargas said. "People (from California) were trying to scare me" about going to Michigan. They said that my toe was going to fall off because of the cold. But Michigan was the perfect fit." THE UPS AND DOWNS Coach Lloyd Carr snagged one of the top running backs in the country in Fargas. And immediately the freshman wanted to make an impact. But once again he was just some small kid, behind a duo of solid backs in Anthony Thomas and Clarence Williams. "We said, 'We need to get him on the t icld,"' offensive coordinator Mike DeBord told the Detroit Free Press in early 1998. "We alwavs knew he could be something special. It was just a matter of bringing it out." Carr called him a "fearless" freshman. "He wasn't afraid to run into anything," Carr said. "Not many guys can do that." Fargas finally got his chance on a rainy day at Northwestern's Ryan Field in 1998. With Anthony Thomas out suffering from a leg injury added with Clarence Williams' inability hold on to the ball, the tides changed for Fargas in one big wet puddle. Carr inserted Fargas after Williams fumbled on his third carry, and the freshman never looked back. After getting just 15 carries in the first five games, the 185-pound Fargas sloshed through the flooded field 31 times for 120 yards, including a clutch 28-yard kickoff return. "There isn't any question that we needed a guy that can run the football aggressively with- out turning it over," Carr said after the Northwestern gamie. "From the beginning, we've been trying to find a tailback that would run with authority. Based on what Justin did in that game, it looks like he may be the guy. In those conditions, that kid showed a lot." The talk around Ann Arbor became rampant - Fargas was the future - and the Northwestern game was just the beginning. But in fact, it was almost the end. Snap, crackle, pop. In the final minute of a 27-10 victory over Wisconsin on Nov. 14, 1998, Fargas broke one of the legs that gave him the gift of football. The television cameras that day showed a player wrenching in pain, as his parents watched from California in horror. "I said 'Don't put the camera on his face again!' Sandra Fargas said. "Oh! It sent shivers down your back to watch." Football, track - everything Fargas had worked for was gone in an instant - a promis- ing beginning coming to a quick end. What he set his mind to, what lie had worked for - it wasn't going to happen this time. "I had some real low times," Fargas said. "It was a really difficult time for me." Fargas went home for awhile to recover fur- ther, after he bordered on depression in Ann Arbor. "It was very difficult to try and tell him it's going to be alright, especially over the phone." Sandra said. "We just tried giving him positive thoughts. You can't hug over the telephone." If Fargas really wanted to play football again, it would be a year and a half before he could ever compete again - a lot of hours of painful rehab, but better odds than if he dislo- cated or damaged his knee, which could have sidelined his speed for his career. Did he want it? Was he going to do every- thing to get it? Throughout, Fargas thought of BRAD QUINN/Daly Michigan tailback Justin Fargas rushed for 70 yards against Bowling Green two weeks ago after sitting nut in 1999. He retunms to his native California this weekend when Michigan battles UCLA. calling it quits. "He had talked to me about (staying in California), said Rooney, who visited Fargas several tiries while he recovered. "The first thing that kids do when something happens is they want to (stay) home" When Fargas returned to Ann Arbor, his rehab continued on schedule, but so did the down times. One day, he had enough and went in to Carr's office. He said "I'm leaving." Carr responded in his fatherly way. "I said to him 'Justin, if you decide to leave, I will support you, but you're making a big mistake," Carr said. "He chose Michigan as well as football, if he could hang in there he would be able to return." But would he work for it? Simple question, simple answer. "I walked around and I saw my teammates playing the sport I love," Fargas said. "I want- ed to get back - (because of) my love for t game and the fact that I knew I could come back and do it." And finally - in just under two years, a once undersized boy with a burst of talent, became a stronger, faster man with a sudden bright future. "He kinda grew up," Rooney said. "It was tough he had to wait such a long time, butI i told him, 'If there's any person who can come back, it is you."' Now, Fargas will play in the game he ha*. circled on his calendar since the beginning o. his Michigan career. He returns home to play in front of all of relatives, friends and coaches this weekend against UCLA - out their to prove that he is back and better than ever. The new Justin Fargas rides again. And this time, it looks like lie can reach the pedals. 02000 textbooks.com 0 c- "" - r --'' v/. i'"? ..- ;. -tom a - , cX4eY e TEXTBOOKS.COM THE SURE THING FROM BARNES&NOBLE#" 0