T_. w V t -W -w w Football Saturcla Sep tember 19,20 09 TWO TOWNS From page 5B years in me." At first, nostalgia seems to domi- nate these Pee-Wee memories. But Shaw and Roundtree's six years with the, organization were far from kid stuff. The coaches told Shaw's father, Michael, that the only way the six- year-old Shaw could start playing for them was if his parents bought him his own football equipment - the team didn't have enough money to provide for one more player. Their league games were played about an hour south, in the Cincin- nati area. They traveled to games as far away as Panama City, Fla., and Atlanta, when the team competed for national championships. Most of the kids had never seen the beach before, so Coach Carter showed them the white, sandy beaches and clear water. Home games were daylong affairs on Saturdays. Locals who had no kids or relatives on the teams would still stop by the games and pay to see the Flames play. The crowd filled both sidelines of the pot-holed field as if the people were watching a Fri- day night high school game in the next suburb over. "Around here, Pee- Wee is like religious." "Around here, Pee-Wee is like reli- gious," Michael Shaw, Mike's father, said. "Everybody takes it pretty seriously and wants to go to a Super Bowl and win a championship." "To me, they were like profession- als," said Sheila Roundtree, Roy's mother. They might as well have been, with the intensity of their seasons. Shaw and Roundtree played on sep- arate teams, since Roundtree, eight months older than Shaw, played one age group ahead. They practiced every weekday duringthe lastchalfof summer and three days a week once school started. Back then, the team played in the coveted league Super Bowl game for five straight years, twice coming away with the golden football trophy. The kids learned how to play physically and aggressively, with a tenacity that allowed even the tiny Roundtree to hit guys one-and-a- half times his size while playing offensive and defensive tackle. They learned from their coaches that tim- idness was unacceptable and tough- ness was mandatory. Shaw found that out when he was about nine years old. On a routine carry, askid from the other team ran up to Shaw, wrenched the ball out of his hands and ran to the other end zone for a touchdown. Shaw started to cry as his coach gave him an ear- ful. "Why'd you let him do that?" the coach yelled. "You owe me two touchdowns for that." The Flames were losing at the half. Shaw, done crying, suddenly marched into the halftime huddle. "They're gonna start paying for all this dirt they did to us in the first half," he angrily told his team. "They're gonna pay. They're gonna pay." And Shaw meant it. He scored four touchdowns in the second half to help the Flames win the game, leaving his parents and coaches to marvel at how he turned his anger into successful revenge. "Football is not a powderpuff sport," the 19-year-old Mike Shaw now says, "and the coaches made us tougher because they were on us. They were hard. They got us ready." TROTWOOD, OHIO -_ Listening to Maurice Douglasss talk about the high school athletes he coaches, you would almost think' they were lazy. "They live in this fake world where their parents normally have really good jobs and they have par- ents who have been to college and things like that, so they don't know how to really work," said Douglass, gesturing to his players as he stood on the sideline of the Trotwood- Madison High School practice field. "They've never had to work for any- thing." That's why Coach Doug sees it as his job to educate these kids, hold- ing "in-school suspensions" where he can teach them about issues they haven't yet run into while living in' this middle-class suburb. "We're talking about girls today," he says, switching into lecture mode as if he's talking to one of his play- ers. "You want the girl that's in the back of the classroom but she's got a four-point average. We don't want girls that have one-point aver- ages but a great body. 'Cause she just going to take your money in the end, you know? So we want the girl who doesn't look like the diamond right now. She looks like a lump of coal. But if we fine-tune her, she'll turn into a diamond." He's seenenoughofthereal world to tell his kids how off-the-field issues like girls, drugs or alcohol can influence a young athlete. After graduating from Trotwood High School in 1982, Douglass played defensive back at Kentucky and then went on to play 11 NFL seasons with the Chicago Bears and New York Giants. And when that was all over, They live in this fake world where their parents normally have really good jobs and they have parents who have been to college and things like that, so they don't know how to really work." he came back to where he started. When Douglass began coaching at Trotwood in 2001, he made it a priority to transform the football program. He worked for hours after the team's practices so that he could painstakingly patch together and send out highlight tapes of his play- ers, answer stacks of mail from col- lege recruiters and take his athletes on college tours. The offers started rolling in, and so did the transfer students - Trotwood-Madison had one of the highest incomingtransfer rates in the state as athletes flocked him to play ball. The results were obvious. Doug- lass estimates Trotwood sent 97 kids to play college football in sevenyears, 35 of them to Division-1 schools. It was general knowledge around Trotwood that if the kids took care of their grades, Coach Doug would help them get into college. Meanwhile, Shaw was enrolled in Archbishop Alter High School, the private Catholic school that his father, aunts and uncles had attend- ed. It was big on tradition, and its coaching was more by-the-book and regimented than Douglass's laid- back mentoring style. Shaw was a star on the football team, and Alter lost in the Ohio state championship game by just one point when Shaw was a junior. But as Shaw faced his last high school season, he had yet to receive even one college scholar- ship offer. He felt like he was being sold short. Roundtree was attending Bel- montHighSchool inthe city. During the 2004-05 school year, when he was a freshman, Belmont was classi- fied as an "academic emergency" by the state of Ohio. Over a quarter of the students were considered to be "students with disabilities", and the school average on standardized tests was over 50 percent lower than the state benchmarks. The academics were dismal and the football team was just mediocre. Both started looking around for a better place to play ball. Roundtree reached out, naturally, to his old quarterback from the Flames - one of his best friends, Domonick Britt, the Trotwood-Madison quarter- back who was already ge ting atten- tion from Cincinnati and Jackson State. Douglass was also interested in Roundtree's ability, so the wide receiver decided to make the jump. Shaw looked at two other schools besides Trotwood-Madison but ultimately joined Roundtree and Britt a few months later, in the sec- ond semester of his junior year. The Flames were together again, and the scholarships started coming in almost too fast to be true. Within a month and a half of transferring, Shaw had already received offers from schools like Clemson and Nebraska. "To this day, I don'tget it," Shaw's father, Michael,said. "I'mlike,'What the - ? You haven't even stepped on the field yet!' I don't know what the difference is. I couldn't tell you. But it's like night and day." Shaw verbally committed to Penn State and Roundtree to Purdue. But on Signing Day, both had second thoughts. While Shaw and his par- ents were inside Douglass's office late that morning, agonizing over signing with the tradition-rich, Joe Paterno-led Nittany Lions or a Michigan team with a new, excit- ing coach but an uncertain future, Roundtree sidled past the office wearing a maize-and-blue hat. "Roy's going to Michigan!" Shaw told his parents, shocked. He chose the Wolverines a few hours later. The two joined their Trotwood- Madison teammate Brandon Moore, who had never wavered from his original commitment to Michigan a year before he signed. Roundtree likes to joke now that he played a big part in Shaw's last-second decision, but the wide receiver's own last-minute college switch ended up generating the largest buzz. It prompted slighted Purdue coach Joe Tiller to infa- mously comment that Rodriguez was a "guy in a wizard hat sell- ing snake oil," luring players like Roundtree from places they had originally committed. But Coach Douglass was con- victed of peddling some snake oil of his own just as the boys were poised to graduate from high school. Neighboring high school players and coaches accused Trot- wood-Madison of illegally recruit- ing their best athletes. The Dayton Meadowdale High School coach accused Douglass of improperly recruiting Shaw in particular, tell- ing the Dayton Daily News in 2007 that the idea that Shaw would have decided on his own to leave the suc- cessful Alter team for Trotwood- Madison was "off-the-wall stuff". The Ohio High School Athletic Association investigated the alle- gations and found that Douglass and his staff had persuaded stu- dents to switch teams, and that some of the transferred students had never actually moved into the district. Douglass was suspended from coaching for three weeks in 2008, and his offensive coordina- tor stepped down. The program received two years' probation. But by then, Roundtree and Shaw were gone, preparing with Moore for a new life in Ann Arbor. It didn't take long for their new team to have problems, too. Com- pared to their past football families, the Wolverines were more imper- sonal and their flaws much more exposed. Some of Shaw, Roundtree and Moore's new teammates didn't buy into Rich Rodriguez's vision of the brand-new spread offense. Roundtree and Moore were red- shirted. Shaw scored the Wolver- ines' first touchdown in their first game of the year, but struggled with the rest of the team during the remainder of the 3-9 season. As the Michigan "family" started to fall apart, Coach Douglass called the three every couple of weeks to tell them to keep their heads up - and, in typical big-brother fashion, to makesure they didn't get mixed up in things they shouldn't. "'How's school going? How are you dealing with being a scout team guy?' " Douglass said, recounting a typical conversation."That freshman year, that redshirt year was a tough year for those guys. And then Mike, him getting a chance to play and him fumbling the ball a couple times, his self-esteem was getting low." In that unfamiliar situation, play- ing for a losingteam in a town three and a half hours north of home, high school teammates Shaw, Roundtree and Moore stuck with what they knew - each other. They signed an apartment lease together for sophomore year because they knew exactly what they were getting themselves into. The night before this year's spring game, the first chance for Round- tree to showcase his talent in front of a large audience in Ann Arbor, he told Shaw that he really wanted to come out strong the next day. Shaw told him, "You can doit. We've been doing it since first grade." Thenextday,infrontoftheo,000 spring-game watchers, Roundtree scored two touchdowns. Sure, it was only the spring game. But one of those routes he ran was the exact same he had run in Trotwood-Mad- ison's spread offense. Coach Doug was in attendance and immediately recognized Roundtree's play. A juke to the inside, past the safe- ty, running in the end zone to catch a 50-yard bomb.. He had been taught well. Breakdown: Blue just too powerful for EMU By RUTH LINCOLN and ANDY REID Daily Sports Editors It may be easy to overlook East- ern Michigan. But if the last two weeks have taught us anything, it's tough to bounce back from an early-season marquee matchup. After a close loss to Miami, Flor- ida State limped to a 19-9 snoozer against an FCS school last week- end. Oklahoma State beat Georgia in one of the Pokes' biggest wins ever - only to be embarrassed by high-powered Houston the next week. And Colorado, after a heart- breaking loss to rival Colorado State, was run out of Toledo by the Rockets. Now, it's Michigan's turn. Following the biggest win of the Rich Rodriguez era, the Wolver- ines have to refocus this weekend to hold off an Eastern Michigan squad led by former Michigan defensive coordinator Ron Eng- lish. With a young roster and depth concerns at some key areas, let's see if the Wolverines have itin them to avoid an upset and build on their early-season momentum. MICHIGAN PASSING OFFENSE VS. EASTERN MICHIGAN PASSING DEFENSE A quick look at the Eagles' sea- son stat sheet raises a huge red flag for freshman quarterback Tate Forcier. Washtenaw County's other Division-I football team is giving up just 83 yards a game through the air, good for fifth in the NCAA. Wait - hold your horses. First off, Eastern's first game was against the triple-option attack of Army, who compiled a dismal eight yards passing. Not because the Eagles were such defensive stalwarts, but because the Academy attempted just five throws. And last week, the Eagles faced Northwestern quarterback Mike Kafka, who relies much more on his dangerous legs than his subpar arm. Forcier can use his legs to manipulate the passing attack, and his collection of lightning-fast, talented receivers will present a whole new ballgame. Expect the Eagles' overrated passing 'D' stats to be exposed ina big way. Edge: Michigan MICHIGAN RUSHING OFFENSE VS. EASTERN MICHIGAN RUSHING DEFENSE The Eagles have allowed almost 500 yards rushing through two games. Now they're lining up against Brandon Minor. And Car- los Brown. And Mike Shaw. And Vincent Smith, Denard Robinson and Forcier. Freshman Tate Forcier has surprised everyone - except himself, apparently - with his quick 2-0 start as Michigan's starting quarterback. That's a bundle of rushingweap- ons to handle for s team that hasn't shown the slightest ability to slow down the ground game thus far this season. What makes things worse for the Eagles is that they were completely baffled by Army's option attack, letting the Knights accumulate 300 rushing yards. Although there are a lot of big dif- ferences between a triple option like Army's and the spread option that Rodriguez employs, the basic concepts are the same. Michigan is going to score a lot For cornerbacks Donovan War- ren and Boubacar Cissoko, the thought of covering Eagles' wide receiver Jacory Stone should bring a sign of relief. Sure, Stone has been Schmitt's favorite target for the good portion of their four years together. And 15 catches for 158 yards through two contests isn't bad either. But after covering Michael Floyd and Golden Tate last week, Stone and company will seem like gravy for Warren and Cissoko. Edge: Michigan of points - throug the ground. MICHIGAN PASS VS. EASTERN PASSINGC He's not the ferc er Jimmy Clausen quarterback Andy carry a similar "I sign. The senior has a set the national re for single-game p when he put up 58c igan. His 2,644 yar downs last season think Eastern woi better team. h the air and on MICHIGAN RUSHING DEFENSE VS. EASTERN MICHIGAN Edge: Michigan RUSHING OFFENSE Junior running back Dwayne SING DEFENSE Priest put up a career-bestl127 rush- MICHIGAN ing yards on 17 carries last week DFFENSE in Evanston. Priest might take off ocious Rottweil- once or twice, but don't expect any was, but Eagles' breakout, jaw-dropping Eastern Schmitt could Michigan runs. Beware of Dog" .The Michigan defense needs to redeem itself after allowing 154 tireless arm and rushingyards onthe ground against 'cord last season Notre Dame last week. The Eagles ass completions look like the perfect rebound team. on Central Mich- Despite returning four full-time 'ds and 15 touch- starters, the Eagles' offensive line would make you leaves much to be desired. Want uld have been a proof? Against Air Force, Schmitt was sacked six times. And that was to a Falcons team' Jack Paulson, who< last season. Defensive end B must -be livid he anyone yet. This week. SPECIAL' Yeah, Zoltan N punted by Tate Fo Yeah, Michigan mi goal (from a toughe might expect, I mi But the special t fold better than la despite one bad p Irish, is still one of in the country. Ar competition in the the placekicker sit itself out. It's the return g such dramatic lea transforming from gest weakness to a1 "Last year, we catch the kick from ber," Rodriguez s happy to catch a kic it seemed like." Darryl Stonum just catch the ball against Notre- Dar 93-yard kick retut randon Graham INTANGIBLES: hasn't flattened The Wolverines have a chance to should be his match their win total from a season ago. And in a year when so many Edge: Michigan expected them to be "down," isn't that enough to play for? TEAMS Last week's win against Notre Aesko was out- Dame redeemed the Wolverines in ircier last week. ways, but to match last year's win ssed a short field total just 14 days into the 2009 sea- er angle than you son would be numerically satisfy- ght add). ing. eams unit is ten- The Eagles are coming off a tight st year's. Mesko, three-point loss in Evanston, which unt against the could be deemed as some sort of the best punters moral victory given their dreadful nd with healthy past. But can the Eagles play that e kicking game, well for two straight games? For uation will work a mediocre MAC team to nearly upset two Big Ten ' contenders, sie that's made there has to be something funny ps and bounds, in the Washtenaw County water the team's big- supply. huge strength. Play-by-play man Matt Shep- couldn't even herd is in the booth for the Eagles what I remem- this fall. You may remember Shep- aid. ."We were herd's deep baritone as the voice of ck and fall down, Michigan basketball. Advantage? Only if you're lame enough to go to definitely didn't tomorrow's game. 1 and fall down Edge: Michigan which graduated added nine sacks down in the second quarter. Edge: Michigan me, racing to a rn for a touch- Score: Michigan wins 34-7