The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - March 17, 2003 - 3B 'M' goes into spring with pieces in place STEVE JACKSON By J. Brady McCollough Daily Sports Editor Michigan coach Lloyd Carr is "fired up." While he readily admitted that his excitement regarding the 2003-04 football season is no differ- ent than in any other year, Carr has plenty to be fired up about. The Wolverines participated in the first of 15 spring practices Saturday morning, and for the first time since spring practice of 1989, they return their top passer (John Navarre), top rusher (Chris Perry) and top receiver (Braylon Edwards). The Wolverines also boast an , experienced, proven offensive 4i~ line for the first time since the graduation of Michigan's NFL- caliber line of 2000-01, as seven linemen with significant playing experience return. All-Big Ten performers Tony Pape and David Baas, along with young stalwarts Matt Lentz and Adam Stenavich, should give the Wolverines a solid base to build around. But who will be the featured back when offensive coordinator Terry Malone calls the fullback screen? Who will Navarre count on when confronted with a tough third-down conversion? Without B.J. Askew and Bennie Joppru, these are questions the Wolver- ines must begin to answer during spring practice. The incumbent at fullback entering spring prac- tice is junior Sean Sanderson, but Carr continued to be non-committal about whether Sanderson is his guy. Former blue-chip wide receiver Tim Massaquoi, who made the switch to tight end last season, should be Carr's best option at tight end. While Mas- saquoi's 6-foot-4, 220-pound frame is smaller than a traditional tight end, his speed (4.5 second 40-yard dash) and added agility will contribute to a Michi- gan offense that has the ability to stretch the field. Carr said that his first priority with Massaquoi will be helping him learn the tight end position, but once Massaquoi is comfortable, Carr would consider using him as a fullback or "H-back," much like for- mer fullback Aaron Shea. There aren't many holes in Michigan's first-string skill positions, but finding some dependable depth is a huge concern for Carr and his staff. Juniors David Underwood and Tim Bracken will have first dibs on the back-up positions behind Perry, but Carr is planning to take a long look at redshirt freshmen Pierre Rembert and Darnell Hood. Edwards has established himself as the No. 1 receiving option, and as of Saturday, he has the jer- sey to back it up. Edwards asked for the No. 1 jer- sey, and Carr rewarded the junior accordingly. But who will be Navarre's No. 2 option? Sophomore Jason Avant has a good chance at winning the start- ing role, but seniors Tyrece Butler and Calvin Bell, junior Jermaine Gonzales and redshirt freshmen Steve Breaston and Carl Tabb will all have a chance to earn playing time at receiver. A YOUTH MOVEMENT: Michigan senior linebackers Carl Diggs and Zach Kaufman will not participate in spring practice due to nagging knee injuries. Carr said that neither injuries should be career-threaten- ing and that both should be ready for fall practice. While the two returning starters from last season will sit out, sophomore Lawrence Reid and junior Roy Manning, who missed all of last season, will get a great chance to get back in the swing of things. But the main question at linebacker is how will sophomore Pierre Woods, formerly a defensive end, adjust to his move to the SAM linebacker position? Woods, one of the best athletes on the team, was one of the Wolverines' top special teamers last season. Michigan defensive coordinator Jim Hermann said after the Outback Bowl that he and his staff would have to make an effort to get Woods on the field, and it looks like Woods will have every chance to earn a starting role next season. SAFETY FIRST: The Wolverines lost three safeties (Cato June, Charles Drake and Julius Curry) to graduation, making the competition at safety one of the most important things to watch at spring practice. New defensive backs' coach Ron English will be counting on sophomore Ernest Shazor to take con- trol at one spot, while the second spot will be up for grabs between senior Jon Shaw, sophomore Jacob Stewart and redshirt freshman Willis Barringer. Carr indicated that the pecking order at safety could change once freshmen blue-chippers Ryan Mundy, who was watching practice Saturday, and Prescott Burgess arrive on campus in the fall. A jourt title tin M aryland mayI NCAA Tour; but I think al a shot this year. I will* point by connecting al mentioning Tulsa three ing this one) for no.go huge, random Kevin-B game special. Let's start with South Why? Well, for one thi Fort Wagner, S.C., whi near Wagner Universit injured Cleveland Cava Dajuan Wagner played last year, but he follow of the Cincinnati Bearcats by not grad- uating. Brigham Young graduates quite a few players that also take part in Mormon missions, which apparently take place all over the world - icy rou4 to gh the national 65 schools have won the face. Even if it were shaped like Ver- nament last year, mont, Brees would get more chicks than .165 teams have Utah's coach, Rick Majerus, who after *prove* this his most recent plate of cheese fries . 65 teams while weighs exactly 632 pounds, which is a times (count- few hundred more than Central Michi- od reason. It's a gan center Chris Kaman, who always 3acon-party- faces the flag during the national anthem. The same cannot be said for h Carolina State. Tori Smith, who goes to school on ng, it is close to Manhattan Island, which Indians (but ch is nowhere not the Fightin' Illini) traded away for y. Recently- beads. All year, she has been doing her aliers guard impression of Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf, for Memphis who went by the name Chris Jackson ed the example while playing point guard at Louisiana State. My name is also Syracuse has ifs own College Jackson, and my grand- father attended of Human Services, which Creighton. coincidentally is the major of The Bluejays join a 70 percent of the basketball strong pool of Jesuit institutions in the field, players at Troy State. including Xavier, St. Some players worried about communication GUEVARA Continued from Page 1B I am. Now if I keep telling someone to do the same thing over and over and over, and I am not getting the results, then (I say), 'Are you hearing what I am saying to you? And if you are, then show me."' But from what a second player on the team said about Guevara's negativity, it appears to be a problem no matter how the team is doing on the court. Said this player: "A teammate once asked me, 'Does Coach G ever tell you good job?' And I had to think about it for awhile and was like, 'I guess not.' " The ,player added that if she did receive posi- tive feedback, it was said under Gue- vara's breath and not in front of the team. The player said Guevara was notified by members on the team about being too critical during the season. The play- er claimed her coach was more positive after being addressed, but that there was still room for improvement. "I don't know anything about that," Guevara said, referring to the notifica- tion about being too negative. The player said the team sometimes just stopped listeningto Guevara in practice. "Some people kind of tuned her out," the player said. "There were days when I tuned her out. And then there were days when I was receptive. I'm not sure there were days we were all receptive. "Coach G is just a very emotional per- son," the player explained. "She wears her emotion on her sleeve and when we are losing and she is frustrated, she admittedly wears her emotions on her sleeve. I wish sometimes she had kept a cooler head, because I think the team feeds off that when she gets frustrated." Others agreed Guevara's emotions had a negative impact on the court. Said another player on this year's team: "When we were having our los- ing streak, instead of playing to win, we would play not to lose. Instead of stay- ing composed and weathering the run, sometimes I feel like we would get flus- tered and panic. I feel like you feed off the coaches sometimes." One of the aforementioned players also didn't approve of how much Gue- vara made the team run during the team's two bye weeks at the beginning of January, when Michigan started 0-3 in conference play. The player described this time as Guevara's "angry phase." "That's not one I would have taken," the player said about Guevara's method of making the team run more. "From a player's perspective, it wasn't condition- ing that was the problem." The player said that the running was unnecessary because everyone was upset about losing, not just Guevara. She added that the team's exhaustion during practice would carry over onto the court, saying, "It was obvious some- times we were tired." Needing a closer look Although it might have been obvious to the player, it actually could have gone unnoticed by Guevara. After all, accord- ing to some of the players, Guevara is not close with most of the team and does not know about the problems they are going through. "I can't go to her with all my prob- lems, and sometimes I wish I could have," a player on this year's team said. Said another: "I don't really have (a relationship with Guevara). I feel like if I came in there to see how her day was going, she would be like, 'What is going on with her? What is wrong?"' Guevara maintains that she tries to understand the mood of the team and not notice. I don't feel there is a great concern for the players." Guevara insists that even when she does talk to her players, they aren't open with her about their feelings. "When I sit and talk to kids one-on- one, I don't get that," Guevara said in ref- erence to the player's anonymous comments. One of the players on this year's team conceded that Guevara could not be solely blamed for the problem. "It goes. both ways," the player said. "They weren't knocking down our door, but we weren't going to them either." It should also be noted that some players declined comment on the story, some said the criticism they received did not trouble them and a couple could not be reached for comment. Disturbing trend There appears to be a history of poor interpersonal relationships on the team, as current players are not the only ones to complain about a lack of a relation- ship with Gievara. In Guevara's seven seasons, six players have left the pro- gram. Transferring is common in women's basketballZ -Michigan and Indiana both had three players transfer in the 2000-01 season. Many of the players that left cited a lack of playing time as a major factor in their decision, which is a problem at any school. But it is alarming that many of the former players also said poor communication and a lack of a relationship with Gue- vara played a big role in their decisions. "I think in (Guevara's) case, she was not a coach that every single player felt comfortable going up to on or off the court," said Michaela Leary, who played just one year at Michigan (2000- 01) before transferring to George Wash- ington. "As the season went on, I felt less and less comfortable going up to her ... There were really times when (communication) was basically shut down, and that really bothered me. "I know Coach Guevara always has good intentions, but is hard (for the players) when you are going through a tough experience." Said another former player that left the program and preferred to remain anonymous: "I didn't really quit because I didn't get playing time. I did- n't think it was a friendly experience ... "I would walk past her in the hallway on the way to practice, and she didn't say hi. I felt like I didn't exist." Another former player that also wished to remain anonymous said Gue- vara did not even make an effort to keep the player at Michigan when Guevara discovered she was transferring. The player claims Guevara pulled her into the coach's office and handed the player her transfer papers, which were already signed before the player even talked to Guevara about transferring. "I hadn't even made up my mind," the former player said. "I was undecided." Mandy Stowe, who suddenly left the program during her sophomore year (1998-99) and later became the 2000- 01 Midwestern Collegiate Conference Newcomer of the Year at Wisconsin- Green Bay, had an even worse relation- ship with Guevara than others that left. Unlike the other players, Stowe thought Guevara cared too much about her per- sonal life. "She wouldn't like it if my pants were too tight, or I wore too much makeup," Stowe said. "One time I went to a tanning booth, and she said I was more committed to tanning than basket- ball," Stowe later added. "I really started hating basketball, going to the gym and being near the coaches." including Oregon, where they can cheer for Luke Ridnour and the Pac-10 Tournament Champion Ducks. But the work of the Mormon church can be undermined by all sorts of evil forces, including the Arizona State Sun Devils, the Duke Blue Devils and the one and only Dukie Mouth Devil - Dick Vitale, who runs a cancer foundation for the late, great North Carolina State coach Jimmy Valvano. The state of North Carolina has no motto, but it does have two other schools in the field, UNC-Wilmington and UNC-Ashville, the latter of which will face Texas Southern in the play-in game for the right to compete with No. 1-seed Texas. The Longhorns' alumni association boasts a Heisman Trophy- winning running back (Ricky Williams) just like Pittsburgh (Tony Dorsett) and Auburn (Bo Jackson). Bo knows baseball, football and a myriad of other things, but while watch- ing at home, he doesn't have the first clue who committed murder in the made-for-TV mystery movie. But the rest of us, especially those not educated in Alabama, know that the butler did it. Speaking of Butlers, Mark Butler is the director of football The Estonia operations at Tulsa, where the Golden meansan Hurricanes go to thunder-fil school thousands of - miles from the nearest Koueooaimd ocean, much like Col- consecuti orado State University, Take tha which was the first Joseph's, Marquette, Gonzaga and Holy Cross - alma mater of Bill Simmons, the self-proclaimed Sports Guy of ESPN.com's Page2. Sim- mons wrote a column this time last year about his boys' 2001 near shocker against Kentucky, which is actually the birthplace of Austin Peay IV The Blue Grass State was also the home of a teenage Tom Cruise, who is one of the leaders of the Church of Sci- entology just like Earthlink Chairman Sky Dayton, who has most likely never seen the Dayton basketball team play against Utah State given that those two teams didn't face each other this year. The Flyers also didn't play Syracuse, which has its very own College of Human Services, which coincidentally is the major of 70 percent of the basket- ball players at Troy State. The Trojans are much better known for their football team, which has a scheduled game against the Florida Gators on Sept. 8, 2007. The state of Florida is home to the Super Bowl champion Tampa Bay Buccaneers, who have absolutely noth- ing to do with the East Tennessee State Buccaneers. But then again, that last sentence has even less to do with Western Kentucky, FILE PHOTO Sue Guevara and Steve Fisher were riding high in 1996, her first year as head coach. assistant Yvette Harris, who was on staff for Guevara's first season, and stayed until she was fired after the 2000-01 season. According to Harris, Guevara said she was unhappy with recruiting. At the time, Michigan had just reached the second round of the NCAA Tournament for the second time in school history and successfully recruited current sophomore Tabitha Pool a Miss Basketball Award winner for the state of Michigan. All interviewed players coached by Harris approved of the former assistant. None foresaw her termination. "I thought Yvette was great. She was very friendly," one of the former players said. "Yvette was the only one that made me feel welcome. I was kind of surprised that Yvette got fired. I just didn't understand it at all." Said Leary: "All I saw Coach Harris contribute to that program was positive. She was a big part of me going there in the recruiting process." Leary also described Harris as a mother figure. Just months after her dismissal, Har- ris filed a $20-million lawsuit against the University for racial discrimination, age discrimination, defamation and wrongful discharge. Harris, an African American, claims in the lawsuit that she was offered the position of head coach by Oakland University in 1997. The lawsuit also claims Harris stayed at Michigan because Guevara "requested and induced (Harris) to reject the offer by giving (Harris) a raise." According to the lawsuit, Guevara also "advised and assured (Harris) repeatedly, on several occasions, that her employment with the University was secure, and as long as (Guevara) was head coach, (Harris) would be employed as the Assistant Coach Recruiting Coordinator." Harris claims Eileen Shea-Hilliard - who is younger and white - took over many of Harris' duties. Ironically, Shea-Hilliard became the head coach of Oakland University earlier this year. Harris is now the head coach at Cen- tral Connecticut State. Harris maintains she is happy at her new school, but described the firing as a "setback." "I am 43 years old, and I have worked in this business for 18 years, and I'm not sure I can outlive the dam- age done to my reputation," said Harris, who also said being called a bad recruiter is "the kiss of death." Guevara declined comment on the lawsuit because it is still in litigation. The future Despite the six transfers and the law- suit, Athletic Director Bill Martin has continued to openly support Guevara - who does not have a contract - because Guevara's players have consistently won in the classroom, in the community and on the court during her career. Martin said that he will sit down with Guevara and others in the athletic department to discuss the team's prob- lems, adding that he will know more about the players' complaints in a month. In the coming weeks, the ath- letic department will conduct exit interviews with the seniors and have the rest of the team fill out written evaluations, as it does with all pro- grams. Martin did say, though, that interpersonal relationships are impor- tant in athletics. Martin isn't the only one planning on getting feedback from the players. Gue- vara plans on sitting down one-on-one with her players this week to give them a "clear vision of what they have to do to make us better," adding that she has already decided to approach this offsea- son differently than last year's. "This year, I didn't want to talk about last year. That was over and done with. Well, you know what? I am certainly going to talk about (this season) and address it now." The success of Guevara's program not only depends on how the players react to their coach this offseason, but also how Guevara reacts to her players. an word that ticipation of led night," us, has eight ve vowels. at IUPUI! which is south and east of the Madison and Mil- waukee campuses of the University of Wisconsin. PETA is trying to change the state bever- age of Wisconsin from milk to beer, which N% school in the world to offer an MBA degree over cable television. One of cable TV's most visible redheaded hip- pies, Bill Walton, has a son that plays for Lute Olsen at Arizona, a state with a pro football team called the Cardinals. The Cardinals of Louisville may or may not set up a nest in the Wake For- - est, but either way, the Demon Deacons rely on Lithuanian forward Vytautas Danelius. Another former Soviet state, Estonia, boasts no players in Division I basketball. However, the Estonian word that means "anticipation of thunder- filled night," Koue65aimdus, has eight consecutive vowels. Take that IUPUI! Ron Hunter, who coaches this Indi- anapolis-based acronym of a school, once broke his leg while celebrating a win over Youngstown State, which Ohio State football coach Jim Tressel once led to four Division I-AA national championships. Daily Sports Writer Jim Weber hails from Columbus, and he never thought of attending Weber State. Neither did Southern Illinois coach Bruce Weber, whose Saluki mascots (ancient Egypt- ian dogs) can be seen in their natural element in a zoo in San Diego. The San Diego Chargers' star quar- terback, Drew Brees, excelled at Purdue despite the fact that he had a mole shaped like the state of California on his doesn't make sense because America's oldest brewery is actually in Pennsylvania, which houses an Ivy League school that was also named for William Penn. Mr. Penn was born in London just like Connecticut guard Ben Gordon, whose team never won a game against a Big 12 opponent this year in part because it is the best conference in college basketball thanks to Kansas, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, Colorado, and Missouri. That conference is now home to for- mer Indiana coaching legend Bobby Knight, whose first loss at Texas Tech came against lowly Sam Houston State, whose coach has a degree from Missis- sippi State. The other MSU in the field of 65 wishes it had Marcus Taylor, who chose to play with former Tulsa stand- out Eric Cooley and the Sioux Falls Skyforce rather than Izzo and the clan. Former Spartan football player Tyrone Willingham made a name for himself this year at Notre Dame, beat- ing his alma mater, as well as Stanford and Maryland, which - as I said at the beginning - was the last one dancing in 2002. Steve Jackson would like to thank David Den Herder for the idea and Google for the content. He can be reached at sjack- so@umich.edu. The Most Important Exam You'll Ever Take At U of M AnE b)~I ex~elent job 12\ ; terest9a fe b~ Quicken Loans and Rock Financial are"AlI of the above." As the leading online provider of home loans, we're revolutionizing the mortgage industry with quick and easy home financing. We work hard. We play hard. And, we're looking for energetic, creative people to fill sales, operations, technology and marketing positions. With our advanced technology, mind-blowing benefits and perks, unlimited earning potential, empowering company philosophy, intensive and ongoing training, fast-paced, professional and exciting work environment, there's really no better place to work. 0 E T ROI T'S Take your career to a higher level. Apply today. Gntoww~iarannn ,,,n toa ,ov