0 0 0 The Michigan Daily - Kickoff 200 8B - The Michigan Daily - Kickoff 2005 - Thursday, September 8, 2005 THE BIGGEST TEN Michigan has won two straight Big Ten Championships. But repeating this year looks to be a bit more challenging. After years of being deemed 'weak,' the Big Ten is shaping up as one of the nation's toughest conferences, with four teams in the top-15. Here's The Daily's look at the competition: Rolling with the Punches With a little faith and a lot of laughter, Gabe Watson has learned to I By Stephanie Wright Daily Sports Editor Ohio State What everyone's talking about: With his blazing speed and elusive style, Ted Ginn Jr. is a Heisman candidate. But redshirt junior Santonio 'Holmes and some of the other wideouts are the guys that will make the real dif- ference. And everyone wants to know which quarterback will start against Texas. Troy Smith went 5-1 last year when he got an opportunity to play at the end of the season, but Justin Zwick (4-3) was the opening day signal-caller because of Smith's suspension for ille gaily receiving money from a booster. What they should be saying: The Buckeyes' defense returns nine starters from last year. The squad is led by A.J. Hawk, who averaged 12 tackles per game in 2004. Hawk was voted preseason defensive player of the year in August. Our thoughts: The real question with this squad has nothing to do with its talent. The Buckeyes don't have an adequate running game, but the first a "three weeks of the season - when they have to play Texas and Iowa in back-to- back weeks - may be the biggest chal- lenge. If Smith isn't ready to go when he's reinstated, Ohio State will fall out of the national picture. Iowa ~ What everyone's talk- ing about: With a com- bined 229 tackles last year, senior linebackers Abdul Hodge and Chad Greenway are the studs of the defense. But last year, the duo had four senior linemen in front of them. The question will be what they can do behind the Hawkeyes' current front four. What they should be saying: Last year, the Hawkeyes lost their top four running backs to injuries. Their 72.6 rushing yards per game ranked sec- ond-lowest in the nation last year. The last time anyone saw Iowa quarterback Drew Tate, he was throwing a 56-yard touchdown bomb to win the Capital One Bowl. This year, the media voted him preseason player of the year. Tate threw to a school record 19 different players last year, so he knows how to spread the ball around. Our thoughts: We were always wor- ried about what would happen when coach Kirk Ferentz got top recruiting classes to team up with his NFL-cali- ber coaching. This is the year he's been waiting for, but he has to face both Ohio State and Purdue on the road. Purdue , What everyone's talk- ing about: Because of the scheduling arrange- ments in the Big Ten, luck helped Pur- due dodge both Michigan and Ohio State this year. And to make things even easier, the Boilermakers get Iowa at home.'Their schedule makes it difficult to imagine them losing a game. What they should be saying: Purdue returns 20 starters - all 11 on defense and nine on offense. Senior quarter- back Brandon Kirsch has had to play behind Kyle Orton for three years, but he's the new breed of quarterback, and he can beat you with both his arm and his legs. Last year, Kirsch threw for 711 yards and seven touchdowns as Orton's backup. Our thoughts: Purdue's defense is the real deal. Defensive tackle Brandon Villarreal had 17.5 tackles for loss last season. Anthony Spencer had 7.5 sacks, and that wasn't even tops on his team. The .saying is that defense wins champi- onships, and, with that schedule, we're sold on Purdue as a threat. deep. Didn't pick the best year to get good, did you, Joe Pa? K Michigan State I Aa I Penn State What everyone is talk- ing about: A defense that gave up 21 points or fewer in every game last year. Michigan State quarterback Drew Stan- ton called the Penn State defense the best he saw all last year. And of course they are also talking about Joe Paterno, who is now in his 40th year as head coach of the program. What they should be saying: The defense will be the strong suit for the Nit- tany Lions, but Paterno has some actual talent this year - such as top recruits Justin King and Derrick Williams - to go along with his always hard-work- ing team. Fifth-year senior quarterback Michael Robinson might be Paterno's most athletic QB, but he is being pushed by sophomore Anthony Morelli. And they should be talking about Paterno - he's been there for 40 years! Our thoughts: For the first time in recent memory, Penn State will be a program to worry about. Unfortunately for the Nittany Lions, they have to play both Michigan and Michigan State on the road. And the Big Ten is just too What everyone is talk- ing about: Drew Stanton, Drew Stanton, Drew Stanton. The Spar- tans' star quarterback said that he spent the offseason listening to people tell him that if he had stayed healthy, they would have beaten Michigan. He knows the Spartans' success rests in his hands. What they should be saying: Drew Stanton, Drew Stanton, Drew Stanton. State will miss DeAndra Cobb at run- ning back, leaving the 6-foot-3, 222- pound Stanton to do it all. Last year, he led the MSU offense to 460 yards per game, tops in the Big Ten. Our thoughts: Last year in the Big House, we saw what he could do. He rushed for 80 yards and a TD and threw for 95 more yards before getting injured in the first half. It's a lot of pressure on one guy, but he has the arm, and espe- cially the legs, to do the job. Minnesota What everyone is talk- ing about: The departure of Marion Barber III. Well, maybe not his absence in par- ticular, but rather how it will affect the mileage Laurence Maroney will be able to rack up. Maroney ran for 1,348 yards last year while splitting time with Bar- ber, so a run at 2,000 yards is possible. What they should be saying: Min- nesota has to play all four of the Big Ten's powerhouse schools: Michigan, Ohio State, Iowa and Purdue. That's a tough task for anybody. Our thoughts: The Gophers start- ed last season with five straight wins. Then, after losing to Michigan on Oct. 9, Minnesota went 1-4 over its next five games. The team will have to avoid the Michigan hangover this year if it wants a chance. Wisconsin What everyone is talk- ing about: Barry Alvarez announced his upcoming retirement two months before the start of the season. If Wis- consin was good, people might be talk- ing about the team. But everyone just wants to talk about its coach. What everyone should be saying: Replacing Anthony Davis would seem to be a difficult endeavor. But Alvarez went out and grabbed Colorado transfer Brian Calhoun. Who knows if he's as good as Alvarez thinks - or hopes. Our-thoughts: Last year the Badgers were poised to win the Big Ten title, and they stumbled to end the season. This year they have just nine starters returning. Missed your chance guys. Northwestern Ar- r Give a man a pizza and he'll eat for an hour. Give a man Papa John's and he'll make it through college. At Papa John's, we know you can get pretty hungry on a tight budget. That's why we load our pizzas with the freshest toppings and then pile on more. If there's one thing we know, it's to never skimp on the ingredients. order by phone: 734-623-7272 or order online: W HrW.papaj]ohms.Com New Laser Research For the Treatment of Acne If you have moderate to severe acne you may qualify for a research study involving new laser technology at the University of Michigan Department of Dermatology. You may also receive up to $260 for your participation. If you are interested in participating, call the University of Michigan Department of Dermatology to find out more. The number is: (734) 764-DERM What everyone is talking about: Fifth-year senior iBrett Basanez - a four- year starter in Evanston -- is pretty much guaranteed to set Northwestern's passing record. He is less than 200 yards shy of the mark. What everyone should be saying: Basanez is great, but the team still has to score more points. The Wildcats scored just 24 touchdowns on 39 trips into the red zone. Our thoughts: Who knows? North- western won three of four overtime games last year, including one at home against Ohio State. They could beat just about anybody, but they probably won't. Illinois What everyone is talk-, ing about: Ron Zook will take over as head coach, and won't have to deal with www.fireronzook.com. What everyone should be saying: Don't really know. Zook doesn't have the personnel to be able to win. Our thoughts: Illinois has had just two winning seasons in the last decade. You do the math. t was a common sentiment through- out the offseason - as Gabe Watson goes, so goes the Michigan defense. Like the defense, Watson enters the 2005 campaign with a bull's eye on the back of his jersey. While it remains to be seen whether his offseason conditioning will improve his stamina in the grueling Big Ten season, one thing is certain - if anyone can handle adversity, it's Watson. On his left bicep, just below the sleeve of his jersey, Watson has a tattoo, a scroll inscribed with a Bible verse - James 1:2-4 - whose meaning transcends his on-the-field struggles. "It's basically saying that when you're going through tough times, just be joyful and know that good things are going to come out sooner or later," Watson explains. "It's been part of my life a long time." Watson's faith is one of the values his mother LaVon instilled in him at a young age. But far too early, Watson had some- thing just as precious taken away - his mother's constant presence in his life. Along with his father and six brothers and sisters, Watson weathered the errat- ic behavior caused by LaVon's mental illness. It's the kind of childhood that could have hardened him. But as his tattoo illustrates, the Southfield native has never lost his ability to see the good - and the humor - in his life, no matter how hard his coaches push him or how much he missed his mom as a child. "You don't grow without going through adversity," Watson says. "You just have to get used to it." Trying to understand W atson's eldest brother Chuck sounds more like his father as he shares his memories of Gabe as a child. Chuck used to lift weights in the base- ment of their house. One day when Gabe was about seven or eight, he came down- stairs and started throwing shoes and socks at Chuck. He waited for his big brother to get angry and then ran up the stairs. Chuck followed him, but, when he reached the top, he slipped on the banana peel that Gabe had placed there and fell down in the middle of the hallway. Chuck looks back on that prank with a father's fondness rather than a brother's bitterness. "He always was a funny kid," Chuck said. "You had no choice but to laugh." Chuck never expected to be a third parent to his younger siblings. But with his father often holding more than one full-time job and working up to 16 hours each day, he had to take on some of the day-to-day tasks, like cooking and clean- ing and making sure all seven kids got to school on time with only one bathroom to get ready in. And as his mother's condition worsened, his responsibilities contin- ued to grow. LaVon was at her worst in the mid- 1980s. She heard noises and at times went days without eating or sleeping. She often walked around the house late at night, and on the warmest days of the summer she would wear three or four layers of clothes, unaware of the heat. Gabe was just four years old when doctors diagnosed his mother's mental illness. It's still hard for him to under- stand it now, but as a preschooler, trying to comprehend her "crazy" behavior was almost impossible. "There's a lot of things you look at like why is she doing this or why is she doing that," Watson said. "You try to under- stand it, but you just can't understand some parts of it." "All we got is us" For much of Gabe's childhood, his mother was in and out of the hospital. "Sometimes we would see her for two years, and then she would disap- pear for 11 months," Watson said. "Then we'd see her again, and then 11 police cars would come up to our house and take her away." Chuck didn't want to call the police at first; he felt disloyal to his mother. He eventually realized that in her mental state, LaVon needed more help than he could give her. The image of police officers taking his mother away still breaks Gabe's heart. "It was tough growing up and seeing your brothers and sisters - looking in their eyes and seeing them cry, so hurt from the things that were going on," Watson said. "It was tough. You don't want your family, your loved ones, going through that." The first time LaVon came home, she gave Chuck the responsibility of making sure she took her pills every night at 9 p.m. Chuck said that no matter where he was or what he did earlier in the day, he always got back to give LaVon her medicine. Sometimes she would refuse to take it; ('%.:s MIK AssULSEpU. An All-Big Ten first-team selection last year, Watson believes he still hasn't reached his full potential as a football player. eventually she would relapse and have to leave again. "We spent a lot of time without her," Gabe said. "It brought us a lot closer." Said Chuck: "We all did things together. This wasn't exactly how it was, but sometimes we felt like all we got is us. We were pretty much all there for each other." Nothing could take away the pain of missing their mom, but they knew they couldn't dwell on her absence. So they made each other laugh - Gabe more than anyone. When he was around nine or 10, Gabe stood up in the living room and started performing spinning roundhouse kicks. He executed a dozen or so perfectly before he landed funny and claimed he twisted his ankle. His siblings' laughter changed to con- cern as Gabe collapsed on the couch and held his leg. Then he confessed he was faking the injury. And as frustrated as Chuck is sure he was, he only remembers laughing. LaVon says Gabe always stood out as the funniest of her children. And he's car- ried that humor with him to Michigan. Everyone from co-captain Pat Massey to coach Lloyd Carr smiles when asked about Watson's sense of humor. Massey says Watson lightens the mood when practice is tense, and Carr calls his "won- derful personality" one of the main rea- sons his teammates respect him. LaMarr Woodley - one of Watson's friends off the field as well - agrees. It might be hard to picture the 6-foot- 4, 333-pound lineman quacking, but Woodley claims Watson's Daffy Duck impression is one of the notorious jokester's best. "That's the one that sticks out for me," Woodley says with a big smile. "Gabe is the biggest comedian." Learning from the past W atson is no stranger to high expe tations - he came to Michigan 2002 as one of the most highly regarde freshman linemen in the nation. But he struggled to live up to the hyp earning no more than limited playir time in each game that year. Watson began this season in much th same way. He was named to the watc list for five major postseason honors. B this time, Watson said he understand how to handle the pressure. "Some guys get preseason honors ar then they relax and get complacent Watson said. "Coach Carr knows how 1 keep his foot in your butt and keep yc motivated." Watson would know. In spite of h accolades and talent - or perhaps becaus of them - Watson incurred his share < Carr's wrath in his first three seasons. And after a lackluster performance i the season opener last Saturday, there a chance Carr may sit Watson again Notre Dame this weekend. At first, it seems as if the All-Big Te if' Indiana 'AA'. - 2..w. p 4 Better Ingredients, Better P izza 401 E. Huron Street, Ann Arbor, MI ±v ecuum 3-Topping Pizza $899 Add a 2nd Medium Pizza for $5.00 Code: 0G0977 - Expires;October 31,2005 Valid at Ann Arbor location only. customer paps all applicable taxes. Additional toppings extra. R va e a What everyone is talk- r ing about: Why new head coach Terry Hoeppner would leave Miami (Ohio) for a team that will always play second fiddle to a basketball -program. What they should be saying: Hoeppner was one of the best MAC coaches, and, while there, he molded Ben Roethlisberger into one of the NFL's best young QBs. Our thoughts: It's going to be inter- esting to see what Indiana will look like with a spread offense. - He at i gIp n IRBMED#: 2005-0117 The Great Open Vi C 4'. x. : # i : " 1 _ ... - - _ _ s T II.. x