-W _ _ www w w w m 4 - The Michigan Daily -- Football Saturday - November 13, 2004 The Michigan Daily - Football Sa I Mike Hart has always wanted to be a Michigan running back. Some just never thought it would actual] By Bob Hunt " Daily Sports Editor ly happen. Mike Hart's mother says that things happen for a reason. That became as apparent as ever shortly after her son committed to play for Michigan. Sifting through things around the house, she discovered a Martin Luther King Day poem that Mike wrote when he was 7 years old. In the piece he laid out his dream - to play for the University of Michigan and break Barry Sand- ers's rushing record. Whether Hart will ever break Sanders' Single-season rushing record - an NCAA-record 2,628 yards for Okla- homa State in 1988 - remains to be seen. But Hart has transformed from high school legend to collegiate star in a span of months. In his first seven games as Michigan's feature running back, he has run for 1,145 yards. The true freshman has averaged nearly 35 yards more per game in that span than his predecessor, Heisman Trophy finalist Chris Perry, did throughout last season. The kid who friends recall growing up in Michigan gear is donning the Maize and Blue on Saturdays - and now he has 110,000 friends who will remember him. RisiNG FROM OBSCURITY Hart has always had his doubters. They said that the only reason he broke nearly every national high school rushing record was because he played against schools like his own, which had just 89 kids in his graduating class. They questioned the chances of his 5-foot-9 frame taking the pounding in major college football. So far, he's proved them all wrong. Hart's dream appeared improbable when his mother, Rory Rushlow, decided to move her daughter and three sons from the Syracuse, N.Y. suburb of Liverpool before Mike's eighth-grade year. Rushlow felt her daughter, a year older than Mike, wouldn't be best suited in a high school of more than 2,700 students; and that Mike, had already professed his love for football and had been tagged as a gifted athlete, shouldn't be treated as just another black athlete but as a person who can get good grades. She chose to move to the small town of Nedrow, located south of Syracuse with a population of just over 2,000. Her kids would go to Onondaga Central, a combined junior-senior high school that she had attended. Onondaga wasn't exactly known for its football pro- gram. The Class D (the lowest in New York) program was actually abandoned in the early 1990s because of a lack of participation. The program returned in 1998 and had been improving under the direction of coach Bill Spicer, but it was far from a state power. Rushlow spoke about her deci- sion with a friend. The friend said of Mike, "If he's as good as I think he is, he's going to be noticed wherever you take him. Don't let football be your deterrent for moving." There was another issue, as well. Rushlow, who is white, was worried over how her biracial children would be accepted in a school that was full of prejudice when she had attended it. Despite Rushlow's concerns, the family moved to Ned- row and Mike went to Onondaga. But when he went out for football in ninth grade - the school has just one team due to its enrollment - he originally was placed on the sec- ond-string defense and was left off the offense altogether despite all the praise he received in Pop Warner football. Then in the team's first scrimmage the starting running back took a big hit, and Hart happened to be standing right next to Spicer on the sidelines. Spicer asked him to fill in for one play. Hart ran for a touchdown. He would go onto rush for 204 touchdowns in his four years at Onondaga - a national record. Among his other accomplishments: - 47 consecutive 100-yard games - a national record; " 1,246 points - a national record; - 11,045 yards - just 188 shy of the half century-old national record. Hart also led the school to a 39-0 record and three con- secutive Class D state championships in his final three years. Yet Onondaga oppo- nents never seemed to believe that Hart deserved his stature, gaining respect for him after they had been beaten. "There's still going to be people that doubt him," said Carl Runge, Hart's former teammate and one of his best friends. "I don't know why." The school district, which covers vast geographical and socioeconomic boundaries, became unified over the Onon- daga Tigers. Elderly residents who were disconnected from the community came out to see Mike play. One older man, who started coming with his dog to every game and prac- tice, wrote Mike a letter say- ing that watching him play changed his life. "The joke was that if any- one wanted to rob anywhere, it was there, because everyone was at the football game on Friday night," Rushlow said. During Hart's freshman and sophomore years, he started to attract people from all over Freshman Sensations s- Michigan's Mike Hart *e art in his life. When Rushlow visited Ann Arbor, she was most impressed by the demeanor of the football program. She liked how the players she met were respectful. She appreci- ated how Carr mentioned his success in the classroom in addition to on the field. She also respected the openness of Carr and running backs coach Fred Jackson. So Rushlow gave the green light to her son, with the con- dition that he wait until after their summer vacation to announce his commitment. Soon after, in July, Spicer called Rushlow to say that they had already scheduled a 7 a.m. press conference to announce that Hart would become a Wolverine. Hart, though, had still yet to answer the question as to whether he would handle the rigors of the Big Ten as a starting tailback. Many out- side the program assumed that he would redshirt. There mate at Onondaga. "Just give me three or four games, and I'll be starting." It took three. Going into the season, all the rhetoric coming out of the program was that senior David Underwood was the clear starter. Underwood had never established himself as a dependable back for the Wolverines, but he had lost weight in the offseason and was in the best shape of his life. Hart received some reps in one of the first goalline scrimmages of fall practice. He got hit, stayed up and ran into the cor- ner of the endzone, showing an ability that Michigan fans would soon become familiar with. Carr said from the beginning that Hart would receive some playing time, but Underwood started the season opener against Miami (Ohio). Underwood looked tenta- tive, picking up 64 yards on 22 carries. He then got hurt the following week against Notre Dame, and Carr gave Jerome Jackson an opportunity. Jackson finished with 38 yards on 15 carries in the Michigan loss. Hart was then given his chance the following week against San Diego State when he fulfilled a role he has yet to relinquish. He received more reps in practice in the week leading up to the game, then ran for 121 yards on Saturday. All of a sudden, Michigan had found its running back, and a kid had realized his boyhood dream. Hart has already shattered the school freshman running record of 748 set in 1990 by Ricky Powers. The 18-year-old has been successful because of his abil- ity to find the hole and plow through it, breaking tackles with ease while having the stamina to carry the ball almost exclusively. Even though Hart has taken the position from older running backs, he says they have been nothing but sup- portive. "They're great," Hart said. "They don't try to put you down or anything. They tell me they're behind me 100 percent, and they are." SUPRT r FRoM HomE many of the Onond at someone's hous one in Syracuse se The crowd at Onc clothing as anythin "It's made a lo maybe weren't aro Rushlow works another at a rehab every day who fin "They'll tell me that I was a naysay said. The Onondaga the field, too. With the team will do p his theme for this 43-game winning Weedsport, but the again in the section The Tigers do, (who is 15) who who's 6-foot-1, ha older brother to th it will put too muc She had always gle parent. Mike n since he was 8 an in the family pool. his left shoulder. According to hi for his two younge sure that they are s "He's more like said. But all eyes are for the Big Ten ch the season. Last S Baas were in the tr Syracuse. Then, as Hart's legend grew, people were com- ing from all over the state. Rushlow once met a guy who drove four hours each week to catch the sensation. "There were people traveling hundreds and hundreds of miles just to come watch him play," Spicer said. TAKING IT TO THE NEXT LEVEL Despite his exploits running the football, people were skeptical as to whether his legend would ever extend beyond Onondaga. He had made tremendous strides working with former Syracuse University strength coach Cory Parker. Yet people wondered if he could excel at the next level because of his small stature and the quality of competition he would face in college ball. But Michigan was still impressed by his accomplishments. "He did everything that he was capable of doing," Michigan coach Lloyd Carr said. "He dominated the com- petition. When you turned on the film, you saw him get the football and run for a touchdown. What you like to see in a football player at this level is a player that dominates, because if he doesn't dominate, then you're trying to find guys that do." Hart would find out that he would get a shot at his Wol- verine dream while visiting schools informally during the spring break of his junior year with Spicer, his brother Chris and a teammate. Spicer got a call on his cell from someone in the Michigan recruiting office soon after the contingent left Michigan State. The caller had seen Hart's game tape, wanted to meet him and was curious as to when he could visit. Little did they know he was just 20 minutes outside of Ann Arbor. Spicer asked if they could come over now, and Michigan ended up giving him an offer on the spot. Hart wanted to commit right there. After all, this had always been his dream. He also wanted his mother to see Ann Arbor for herself. But there was one small problem. Before Mike went through the recruiting process, his mother wanted him to go to school outside the state of Michigan. Hart's father's family is from Detroit - his father still lives in Syracuse - a reason his best friends speculated as to why he always loved Michigan. Rush- low was concerned that her ex-husband's family would begin popping up after previously taking a minor role was even a rumor that he would play cornerback, as recruiting guru Tom Lemming had Hart rated as the No. 6 cornerback in the nation. Even at the barbershop in Syra- cuse, they jokingly told him that he was too small and that he was not going to play. (Hart had long, braided hair in high school, but decided to cut it since his girlfriend could no longer be there to braid it for him.) But Hart never thought he was going to sit out a year. In the June after his graduation, he went to Ann Arbor for his freshman orientation and worked out with various Wol- verines for about 10 days. Upon his return, he had a few words for one of his best friends, Felipe Diaz, his team- championship ring Hart is also receiving nothing but support from back Hart's finger, and home. Diaz and Runge talk to him almost every other day the ring and replie about how he's doing on and off the field. On gameday, Sometimes thin TONY DING/Daily Hart runs in a playoff game during his senior year of high school. Each year, the seniors at Onondaga choose their helmet design before the seasoi design. That July, Hart verbally committed to Michigan.