w The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, December 10, 2003 - 17 PERRY Continued from Page 14 and asked, "Did you see the game Sat- urday?" He referred to Sproles' 235- yard performance in his team's Big 12 title-game win over Oklahoma. "I'm begging for votes," Perry joked. "I've decided I'm going to be scenery at every event. If I go to New York, I'm just the guy to shake the hand of the lucky guy who wins." It's been Perry's style all season to downplay the Heisman hype. Even at this crucial final juncture, Perry isn't going to begin stumping; he'll let his teammates do it for him. "I don't watch every game every year, but if I had a vote, I would vote for him," defensive tackle Grant Bow- man said. "I have never seen somebody be able to make so many plays for his team to create so much out of nothing. I think he is the quintessential college football player."~ Center Dave Pearson has opened plenty of holes for Perry, but he's also benefited from Perry's ability to make something out of nothing. "I just watched the film from the Ohio State game, and he made some unbelievable cuts in that game - even some big plays where there wasn't great blocking up front," Pearson said. "But I think the thing that impresses me the most is how unselfish he is when he pass protects for John (Navarre)." Receiver Braylon Edwards, who enjoys Perry's "silly" personality, cred- its him with some of his own touch- down grabs. "Chris does not care about if he got the ball," Edwards said. "His pass pro- tection was unbelievable this year. A lot of the touchdowns I had were credit to him saving John from being sacked. Chris is a guy you want on your team, because he is going to do the little things it takes to win ballgames. "(Voters) should look at everything, not just at statistics." Perry would take offense to that last comment by Edwards. "I mean, if you look at my stats, my stats aren't too bad," Perry said. Aren't too bad? Perry led the Big Ten in rush- ing this season with , 1,589 yards, nearly 400 yards more than the closest competitor. He is third on the Wolverines in pass receptions with 42 for 366 yards and two touchdowns. Bar- ring a stalwart per- formance by the Trojan r . . defense in the Rose R Perry will finish the s e a s o ' with more than 2,000 total yards - a zenith to which all running backs aspire. Perry's Heisman candidacy received a boost when a leading candidate, Oklahoma quarterback Jason White, threw two costly interceptions in the Sooners' drubbing at the hands of Kansas State on Saturday. Pittsburgh wide receiver Larry Fitzgerald, who is viewed by many as a frontrunner, made just three catches for 26 yards and one score in a losing effort Nov. 29 against Miami. Still, while the frontrunners have taken some hits, voters will likely look at Perry's numbers in Michigan's loss- es at Oregon (11 carries, 26 yards) and at Iowa (24 carries, 87 yards, one score). "My performance in those two games was sub-par, I know that," Perry said. "If (the voters) want to nit- pick, and they want to look at those losses, more power to them. But I'm looking at the whole picture of each loss." The whole picture in Ore- gon shows a Michigan team down by 15 at halftime n.that abandoned the run- ning game for the entire second half. In Iowa, the whole picture of Perry's game would show his spec- tacular run in the final minutes that was brought back by a sus- pect holding penalty. Perry's scamper would have put Michigan inside the Iowa 20-yard line with a chance for a game-tying field goal. "You can nit- ;-, pick a lot of stuff," Perry said. "You can nitpick about that holding call at Iowa if you want to nitpick." There's nothing to nitpick about the way Perry has played during his team's current six-game winning streak that began in Minnesota. Against the Gophers, Perry rushed for 85 yards and a score and led the team in receiving with 122 yards and a score. His per- formances against Michigan State and Ohio State, the game which clinched the Big Ten title for Michigan, will go down as legendary. Who could forget Perry willing himself up from the turf against the Spartans as his carries mounted all the way to an all-time Michigan record of51? "The (memories from those two games) stick with me a lot," Perry said. "Fifty-one carries, I didn't think it was that big of a deal. You guys, the media, made it a big deal. I feel like with 51 carries, I should have had 300 yards (instead of 219)." And who could forget Perry limping to the sideline in the second quarter with an injured right hamstring against Ohio State, only to punish the Buck- eyes for 154 yards and two touchdowns in the end? Perry won't soon forget the reaction of his fans as he grimaced on the turf in pain. "The 'Perry! Perry!' (chant by the fans) against Ohio State, that was a big deal. It was such a big deal that I didn't want to focus on it during the game because it would distract me. It was a great feeling, and I do not know when I'll have another feeling like that" Perry certainly did not have that feel- ing walking off the Big House field two years ago after losing to Ohio State. The feeling he had then was painful enough that he even had a transfer school picked out in his mind soon after. "(Which school I considered) is going to stay in my mind," Perry said, laughing. Looking back on it now, Perry does- n't fault Carr for giving him tough love. "I don't know if I'm glad he did that, but I appreciate it," Perry said. "It's something they do to every sophomore. They always say that your sophomore year is your worst year." Perry still remembers the conversa- tions he had with Thomas after his dis- appointing sophomore campaign. The "A-Train" told him, 'Don't let them break you.' " Perry listened. Golder 'excited' for Saturday's intrasquad By Ian Herbert Daily Sports Writer There are a lot of young faces in the lineup of the Michigan men's gymnastics team. The team has no seniors, and many young gymnasts are competing in events that are new to them. Even though Michigan coach Kurt Golder has to learn a lot of new faces and styles, he is not worried about it affecting his team at crunch time. Michigan returns national vault champion Andrew DiGiore, and the coach believes that Luke Bottke could be national floor champ by the end of the year if his ailing wrist improves. Even though the two are sophomores, Golder believes they can help lead this team to its first national champi- onship since 1999. "Some years you have teams that develop," Golder said. "And I think this one has a real good shot at developing and shocking the gym- nastic world." The quest to shock the world begins this week- end for No. 4 Michigan. The team will divide into two squads on Saturday and compete against each other in the Maize and Blue Intrasquad scrimmage at Cliff Keen Arena. Golder is espe- cially excited this year because he thinks that this team is well-prepared and will keep getting stronger throughout. "I'm excited," Golder said. "This could be a really good year for us. It's the kind of year where it's just going to build from start to finish. Barring any unforeseen problems, we should come out strong. Our focus is really geared toward the NCAAs." It may be a little early in the season to start wor- rying about April's NCAA Championships, but every meet is important to Golder for evaluating the Wolverines' progress. He explained that the Maize and Blue scrimmage is important for both the young and veteran gymnasts. The new guys use it as a benchmark to see where they stand in relation to their teammates, and the returners use it to compare themselves to where they were at the end of last season. It also allows younger gym- nasts who are currently not on the traveling roster to strut their stuff in front of the coaches in the first competitive setting of the year. "This is kind of a report card," Golder said. "It's a report card for the freshmen. And for them to go through just one meet will give us tremendous insight as to how they work. And it will be a wake- up call for some people if they look at it seriously. But the main thing is that they need to look very carefully at themselves and analyze." "This is going to be a team that is going to have a little bit of a slow start," Golder said. "Some years you can start out, and you have a team that, right out of the gate, looks like it is going to win the NCAA championship. This team is not one that's going to come out and just blow the doors off from the get-go, but it will be exciting to watch them build over the year and particularly, to see the finish. I think at the end of the year we'll start to put the frosting on, and at the NCAAs we'll put the cherry on top." U___________________________ - Sell Your 13 We Want All Via. -_- -^ - - & L hooks Now! Your Books!! .+ vrr Top Dollar For Your Used Books! I Spin the Wheelfor Extra Cash & Prizes! Shop at Ulrich's and Michigan Book & Supply for all your Holiday gifts... or visit us online at www.ulrichs.com or www.michbook.com!! I ~Bring this coupon in and receive