w w w w qw T ...qw- _S 7r Iqlp", T T T 28 > Football Saturday - September 12, 2009 Setme S1,20 .Fobl WELCOME TO THE SEASON Before practice last week, Bon Jovi's "Living on a Prayer" came on over the loudspeaker. Freshman running back Vincent Smith and a few others trotting out to the field began belting out the tune, laughing and joking around. It was just more proof that this team is already having more fun than during last season's 3-9 debacle. Whether that will result in a better outcome remains to be seen. Even though the team keeps playing down the fact that Saturday's game is a "measuring stick", the Wolverines' performance against Notre Dame could potentially set the tone for the rest of the season. Michael Eisenstein - Ruth Lincoln Courtney Ratkowiak - Andy Reid HIGHLIGHTS Last year, the student section's attempt at a blue block'M' at the Wisconsin game was a rousing success. The 'M' is back for the Notre Dame game - find out how it's done. Martavious Odoms, Brandin Hawthorne and Vincent Smith grew up in a small sugarcane town named Pahokee. This is their story. 2009 MICHIGAN FOOTBALL SEASON Sept. 5 Western Michigan: Before this win, it had been a while since Michigan fans had anything to cheer about durisg the opening weekend. Sept.12 Notre Dame: Yeah, we've all heard that Jimmy Clausen looks like an emu. And weyse seen the ewbarrassing photos of him in that Speedo. And the ones of him at a Beer Olympics. And the ones of his ridiculous Prom limo, Wait, where were we going with this? Sept.19 Eastern Michigan: We expect former Michigan defensive coordinator Ron English, now Eastern Michigan's head coach, to get a warm cheer from Wolverine fans. The Eagles, not so much. Sept. 26 Indiana: Indiana's new-look Pistol Offense was only slightly more exciting than watching paint dry. The Hoosiers looked limp against Eastern Kentucky. Oct. 3 at Michigan State: The East Lansing Meijer is selling "Beat Michigan ... Again" T-shirts. The Spartans are really milking a win over the worst Michigan team in the program's history. Oct.10 at Iowa: The Hawkeyes needed to block not one but two field goals in the game's final seven seconds to squeak byFCS team Northern Iowa. Way to make the Big Ten look good, guys. Oct.17 Delaware State: As if Michigan students needed more motivation to skip this game, the Athletic Department scheduled it during Fall Break. But after Wolverine losses to Appalachian State and Toledo, here's to hoping third time's the easy win. Oct. 24 Penn State: The Nittany Lions looked like the team to beat in the Big Ten after Week One. W hnwhetherthatwi w ue when Michigan meets up with them halfway throughtheconference Wseason remains totbe seen. I S Oct.31 at Illinois: (Insert lame Juice-related joke here). Also, the Fighting Illini completely choked against rival Missouri last week. Nov. 7 Purdue: The Boilermakers ended Michigan's bowl hopes last season by handing the Wolverines their seventh loss. Michigan will probably be looking for payback when Purdue visits the Big House. Nov.14at Wisconsin: Nothing beats a late fall afternoon in Camp Randall, especially when the students start singing "Build Me Up, Buttercup." PAHOKEE From page 5B The way the linebacker was treated by Michigan bolstered the bond between a college football powerhouse and a small town in Florida that, even after all it has gotten from football, would never take the sport for granted. But that relationship had to start somewhere. THE PAHOKEE-MICHIGAN CONNECTION began, in many ways, almost 15 years ago, when a young Martavious Odoms dis- played all of the characteristics Michigan coach Rich Rodriguez, who first started recruiting the area while still at West Virginia, looks for in a slot receiver. As a kid, Odoms was, and still is, small for his age, shifty, strong and fast. "I used to tell him, 'You know no one can outrun you in Paho- kee,' " said his mother, Gloria. That's quite a statement when you're in Muck City, where the kids have a well-documented tra- dition of chasing and catching rab- bits with their bare hands. To this day, the sophomore wide receiver says people underesti- mate him because of his 5-foot-9 frame, but when he was little, his grade-school friends Jay, Keevie and Shorty Redhead just made fun of him. After a while, like any kid, Odoms had enough of the jeers about his height. So one day, he and Gloria devised a plan. "I used to tell him, 'Look here. When they're talking, you shut them up. When they're talking, this is all you got to do: you hit them first, and I'll be home,' " Gloria said. "I said, 'You know they can't catch you. Run. All you gotta do is make it here, and I'll be in this house.' " The next time someone made fun of him, Odoms jumped up, hit the kid square in the nose and sprinted home, panting on the safe side of the Odoms' front door. Other than punching his boyhood friends - and even that was at the request of his mother - Odoms was a "good, humble child ... like a little man," according to Gloria. But even the best can't always resist temptation. Gloria remem- bers three straight nights during Odoms's high school years when the receiver broke curfew. Gloria was afraid that her son might be hanging around the wrong people in The Projects, a neighborhood right around the corner from his home. So Gloria called Coach James, who came over immediately. "Rick James, he don't play," Gloria said. "I was like,t Oh, Lord. Don't talk to my. boy that rough,' but I left and went out the house. But after that, he didn't break cur- few no more. No more." Added Odoms: "Coach J, all the coaches pretty much love us like we're their own child, so they take care of us a little bit and try to, like, make sure we're doing the right thing." When his senior year rolled around, schools around the coun- try took note of Odoms's stellar work ethic and behavior - but what they really craved was his 4.5 40-yard time. Unfortunately for him, Odoms's dream school, Miami, thought that speed could be used on the track. "We thought they insulted him when they walked into our office with a damn track scholarship for Martavious," James said. "And the reason I say that is because they had already offered a lot of receiv- ers from Miami-Northwestern (High School) that I know can't hold Martavious's jockstrap." Michigan saw his football tal- ent, and the tight-knit Pahokee football community respected the school for giving him a chance. But it's about more than just football. When Rodriguez came to Pahokee to visit with fresh- man Vincent Smith's family, the running back's cousin, Tyrone, stopped by the house to meet the coach. His son'Tyrone Jr., tagged along, and when Rodriguez met him, he ruffled Tyrone Jr.'s hair a little, smiled and joked, "Is he the next Vincent Smith? We might as well give him a scholarship already." It was a small gesture, but in Pahokee - where the high school principal banned Tennessee coach Lane Kiffin from school grounds after Kiffin made some unkind comments about the town - but it means a lot to see a coach who genuinely cares about the kids. The bond is there - and it seems to be there to stay. When the Odoms family visited last Sat- urday for the home opener against Western Michigan, friends and Pahokee football fans gave them money so they could bring back Michigan T-shirts and hats. "I can almost all but guaran- tee you that Michigan is going to land some more of our kids," James said. "Martavious has set the tone. Michigan, on the other hand, has given them a justified chance to get out there and play, to turn that program around." IT'S A WARM SPRING AFTERNOON in the local Rec Center, and students, most of them athletes, are already start- ing to trickle in. By 8 p.m., the brand-new computer lab will be full to capacity; the library, which currently holds just a few shelves of books, will house kids studying for finals; and a group of Pahokee football players will pack into a small recording studio to cut rap songs to be used as study guides. The gym will be full of kids who would rather play basketball or lift weights in the infamous "House of Pain" with the solid Rec Center support staff than go outdoors. But for now, the building is dominated by a group of senior citizens, almost all of whom have grandsons playing either college or professional football, enjoy- ing a game of Bingo in the back room. Here on the shore of Lake Okeechobee, a winning card in the ladies' game seems more out- of-the-ordinary than a full-ride scholarship to play football. James says hello to all the women. This is his haven - after nearly 15 years, he can't count the number of kids he has helped escape the streets of Palm Beach County. He realizes that he can't help them all, but, in spite of everything surrounding him, he remains optimistic about the city's future. In fact, Pahokee's success on the football field in the last 10 years seems to be having a positive effect on the youth community. "The kids that don't play football now see the kids that play football and are getting the opportunity to get out of Pahokee," James said. "It's like a domino effect. Kids that don't play football are trying to get their education so they can get up outta here." He even says one of the kids he helped tutor at the Rec Center Pahokee high schoolers lift weights and study at the local Rec Center. has earned a full-ride scholarship to the University of Florida this year - not for athletics, but for academics. But as much pride as James takes in the Rec Center's edu- cational guidance programs, his heart will always be in Pahokee football. Last January, Pahokee native Janoris Jenkins, then a starting freshman cornerback at Florida, invited James to the BCS National Championship game, all expenses paid. For Jenkins, one of Odoms's best friends growing up, and every other player that's ever donned the blue-and-red, it's not about foot- ball. It's about life, death and suit- ing up for a town that doesn't have anything but football to cling to. But mostly, it's about earning a future - at Michigan or other- wise. "Sitting there with Janoris's dad and mom and first cousin, watching him come out of that tunnel, hearing them introduce him, seeing him play on that level, I got teary-eyed," James said. "It brings back memories of all the hard work, just trying to make sure these kids stay in line, to the point where they put themselves in position to be on that grand stage. And to see one of the ones that I coached from a baby, to see him in this grand finale, it just - tears of joy. I mean, National Champi- onship. Janoris Jenkins, from the good ole town of Pahokee." 223 North Main Street Ann Arbor, Michigan 665-5340 The last time the Michigan-Notre Dame rivalry had this much hype, the Wolverines walked away with an easy 38-0 victory. What will happen this year? Nov. 21 Ohio State: According to Buckeyes quarterback Terrelle Pryor, "Everyone does ... kills people, murders people, steals from you, steals from me." YIKES. ----I Who Owns Your Genes? Intellectual Property, Innovation Policy, and the Future of Genetic Medicine Date: Monday, September 14 Location: Forum Hall, 4th floor of Palmer Commons Time: 4:00-5:30, with a panelist and student reception immediately following e For more event information, please visit www.eisi.umich.edu "The Ethical, Legal, and Social Implications (ELSI) of Personal Genomics" is a yearlong, university-wide series that seeks to engage U-M faculty and students in consideration of ELSI issues raised by the rapid expansion of genomic services and research. Our kickoff event addresses the controversy over patents on the breast and ovarian cancer (BRCA) genes, which led to a current ACLU class-action lawsuit against the US Patent and Trademark Office and Myriad Genetics. Panelists include: Shobita Parthasarathy, U-M Assistant Professor at the School of Public Policy, author of "Building Genetic Medicine: Breast Cancer, Technology, and the Comparative Politics of Health Care;" Sofia Merajver, U-M Professor of Internal Medicine, Director of the Breast and Ovarian Cancer Risk and Evaluation Program; and Rebecca Eisenberg, U-M Professor at the Law School, author and lecturer about the role of intellectual property in biopharmaceutical research I FOLLOW US ON TWITTER! @michdailysports *AS FINEST& FASTEST SINCE 973J ST -SHI RT PRINTERY -Expert Screenprinting M Embroidery TEES, SWEATS, SHORTS CAPS, TOTES, APRONS Muti-Color We Turn Printing SYo5'ur-Sketeh Our Speciality Into T-Shirt Art EMAIL DESIGN FOR PROMPT QUOTE - CATALOGUE, &EMAILIJNKAT d " & MIM.FROMCAMPUS 1002 PONTIAC TR 994-1367 .. u.E. E u. ' v -7- . Weekdays 7am-3pm Sundays 8am-3pm