0 MIKE MARTIN From Page 5B that passion out of Mike. Hattie coached Mike during his fifth-and-sixth grade years on the JV team. He saw from the start that Mike was a good kid, a sponge you fill up with information and wring out when the games started. But this big kid wasn't being physi- cal enough to put his size to good use. "When he found out that he could block or knock some kid down - and that was a good thing - he became really, really good at it," Hattie says. "He was very emotional, which actually worked to his advantage because he didn't like to make mis- takes. When he did, he got down on himself, but not to the point where he would shut down. The next play, he would go back in there and make the coach happy." While being big had its advantages, Mike also had to worry about being too big to play - his kryptonite early on. The CYO weight limit for the area was 165 pounds for a varsity player and 135 for aJV player. Mike wouldn't eat breakfast and when he was on JV, he would wear sweatpants and run laps around the track before games to make weight. He weighed 200 pounds in June before his eighth grade year. By the beginning of August, he had lost that excess 35 pounds. "He wouldn't eat because he wanted to play so bad," Theresa said. "That's when I knew he was serious." During Mike's freshman year at Catholic Central, Eugene Grewe, the track coach, found him in the weight room and approached him with a proposition. As the coach who dealt with shot putters and discuss throwers, Grewe sought big kids with good work ethic in the weight room. Mike fit the mold. The two talked about the possi- bility of Mike joining the track team that spring, but Mike told Grewe that he was just too busy that year. Mike promised him that he would throw during his sophomore year. Saying Mike was busy at that time was an understatement. The fresh- man was working on advancement in boy scouts. He was also the No. 1 junior handler for the American Ken- nel club in 2005. "Everything he does, he's good at," Theresa says. "Everything he touched turned to gold," Barry adds. The dog handling was partly his mother's doing. But he became so good that he was at one point two wins shy of making it to Westminster - the pinnacle of dog shows. Mike was a regular Johnny Col- trane, too. He picked up the alto saxophone in elementary school, and performed at school concerts. During his fresh- man year at Catholic Central, Mike marched with the band on Friday night for the varsity game after play- ing on the freshman team on Thurs- day night. Mike eventually made it to the track team, keeping his promise to Grewe. In his sophomore year, he had a slow start with the shot put. He needed to get his feet wet, just like in his debut in football. At his first meet, he threw the shot 38 feet - "Which is not horrible for a sophomore, but for someone who became what Mike became, it's a pretty meager beginning," Grewe says. ~ By the end of the season, he threw farther than 52 feet and was fifth in the state in Division I in his first year of competing. He was a state champi- on the next two years, and his senior- year throw of 63 feet, 9 niches came within three inches of breaking T.J. Duckett's all-time state record. Grewe noticed that if he saw an adjustment that would improve Mike's craft, Mike could make that adjustment in one practice. In high school, it would take most a whole season to adapt like that. "His work ethic was just unbeliev- able," Mike Rodriguez said. "I got upset with him. We work hard and then (Mike) was taking off and going in the weight room getting ready for track season doing the shot put. I fig- ured he must not be giving 100 per- cent in this room, because I worked the hell out of him. "In his mindset, he wanted to be something special. And he was. ... In anything he does, he wants to suc- ceed and to excel. In order to do that, he understands how hard he has to work." Years later, at Michigan, Mike's physique is marveled at by team- mates and coaches. Other players talk about his work ethic in the weight room, and the results are on the field. He has what football experts call a "motor" - Mike doesn't stop work- ing on the field. "Mike Martin is just an animal out there," sophomore linebacker Craig Roh said. "He's the strongest person I've ever seen in the weight room. It's really showing on the field. He's taking on double teams. (Against Massachusetts), I think the play he sacked the quarterback, he beat a double team and sacked him. Which is - stupid." Every superhero has a sidekick. Mighty Mike Martin had two - his parents. Barry and Theresa never married after having Mike. He lived with his mom and she took care of making him breakfast in the morning and getting him to school. His dad would pick him up from school to hang out or go to one of Mike's various activities. Though they weren't together, Mike saw both of his parents every day. "That's all that mattered: we were going to get this kid right, make him a gentleman," Barry says. "That's what he turned out to be." Just last month, Mike couldn't make his dad's birthday party on August 20. So he and Barry's fian- cee planned a surprise party. And because Mike couldn't make it, he made a video tribute wishing his dad a happy birthday. It almost made Barry cry. Everyone was "damn near tears." The maturation process really started when he made the jump to Catholic Central - an all-boys Cath- olic high school in Novi, Michigan. That's when everything began to click for Mike. "It teaches them how to be men," Theresa says. "Stuff that I could never teach him. "Once he hit high school, he was just so focused." "I had people that did a good job letting me know the right things and how to do them," Mike said. "I was around people I wanted to emulate: their character, how they carried themselves, just how friendly they were to me. They just taught me a lot of things that you just need someone to show you the way." At Catholic Central, he developed many relationships that are still important to him. Grewe and Babicz and the rest of his support system that he built there is still intact. Not only were they mentors, but they were Mike's friends. His varsity foot- ball coach, Tom Mack, said that Mike has the uncanny ability to relate with adults and get along with his peers. His senior year at Catholic Cen- tral, Mike could have easily quit the track team as the season extended deep into the spring. He even missed a spring break trip with his friends because of track. He stayed commit- ted. With great power came great responsibility. Now, people are already question- ing whether Mike will stay all four years at Michigan. They speculate that he'll leave early for the NFL Draft - but they don't know Mighty Mike Martin very well. Breakdown: After last week's scare, Blue looks 'for Big Ten tune-up against Falcons By RYAN KARTJE Daily SportsEditor After a serious hiccup last week against Massachusetts, the Wolverines know their defense will have to be sig- nificantly better with Big Ten season just on the horizon. With Bowling Green coming to the Big House this weekend, Michigan gets another test game before the Big Ten conference season starts next weekend against Indiana. Luckily for the Wolverines, Fal- cons' quarterback Matt Schilz will miss the game with a shoulder inju- ry. In addition, speedy running back Willie Geter has struggled in Bowl- ing Green's first three games. But these Michigan players, especially those on defense, won't be gettingtoo ahead of themselves when it comes to a lesser opponent. MICHIGAN RUN OFFENSE VS. BOWLING GREEN RUN DEFENSE Junior running back Mike Shaw had his breakout performance last week, scampering to a career high in touch- downs and yards. And you can bet that Shaw will get plenty of chances to improve on that this weekend. The coaching staff said they hoped to integrate freshman Stephen Hop- kins and redshirt sophomore Mike Cox, at the very least, at some point against Massachusetts but never got the chance to do so. They may get the call this week, and we should still see sophomore Vincent Smith as well. So it should be a true committee showing this week. The Falcons are nothing to write home about on the defensive interior, and the Wolverines should be able to run with relative ease. Plus, there's that Denard Robinson fellow who tends to run the ball quite a bit. EDGE: MICHIGAN MICHIGAN PASS OFFENSE VS. BOWLING GREEN PASS DEFENSE In all the doom and gloom from last weekend, the good news was that sophomore quarterback Denard Robinson got a chance to display his passing skills Robinson passed for 241 yards and two touchdowns against the Minutemen on just 10 completions. The Falcons have allowed more than 30 points per game and have been even worse than the Wolverines on the other side of the ball this season. On paper, Michigan should be able to carve the Bowling Green secondary like a jack-o-lantern, but the Wolver- ines are a young team that esuld be inconsistent, as we saw last weekend against Massachusetts. That being said, I fully expect Rob- inson to improve on his passing yards from last weekend. But who knows, he may not even be in the game that long. EDGE: MICHIGAN BOWLING GREEN RUN OFFENSE VS. MICHIGAN RUN DEFENSE Bowling Green's running back, Wil- lie Geter, has an interesting combina- tion of tools, but so far this season, he hasn't been able toput them all togeth- er in one game. Geter leads one of the worst rushing attacks in the nation into Ann Arbor. But the Wolverines have been pret- ty bad defending the run this year, letting Massachusetts pair of backs dominate their linebackers all game. Senior Jonas Mouton has been a bright spot and sophomore Craig Roh should bounce back after being one of the most visibly upset players after last week's close win. That intensity should allow the Michigan rush defense to recover from by far it's worst performance of the year. EDGE: MICHIGAN BOWLING GREEN PASS OFFENSE VS. MICHIGAN PASS DEFENSE ARIEL BOND/Daily Junior running back Mike Shaw and redshirt junior wideout Junior Hemingway celebrate during Michigan's win over Massachusetts. Another week, another hold-your- breath game for the Michigan sec- ondary. The Falcons won't have their starter, but Aaron Pankratz, the back- up, should have an interesting match- up with an underachieving, yet ornery secondary. Pankratz will probably be the least skilled quarterback the Wolverines have seen this year (Kyle Havens looked good last weekend), but you can't expect Michigan to compete very often this year in this category. Plus, with the likes of Kirk Cousins, Ricky Stanzi and even Terrelle Pryor on teh docket, it's looking pretty grim for Michiga. If there is a week the Wolverines win this battle, it's this week though after underachieving against the Min- utemen. Regardless, this should be a Sore subj After a week, Seth for his job well maylog dent To BeI The Fal tion is an it former Wol and kicks fo Wrighti returning tc But it's that of losin EDGE: BOWLING GREEN After a rough, rough week last week, the Wolverines are definitely hoping to SPECIAL TEAMS come out and clear the bench against the Falcons. There's a whole lot of pent ject for the Wolverines. up anger from last weekend, and none terrible performance last of the defensive players will let this one Broekhuizen likely fights slip by the wayside. this week, which he very Robinson, meanwhile, should con- se to Random Walk-On Stu- tinue a blistering pace in front of a Named Later. home crowd, perfect for a tune-up cons' special teams situa- before Big Ten season. He's getting nteresting one, however, as geared up for the conference season, verine Bryan Wright punts and he's not one to skip weeks. So if you r Bowling Green now. don't see the Wolverines come out may feel the pressure of fast, then you can worry. But don't o the Big House. expect that to happen. no pressure compared to EDGE: MICHIGAN close battle with the Falcons just pull- INTANGIBLES ing it out. o r omd, pn-Arbor lyr- 0 1. R s"flop g your job to an unknown. EDGE: BOWLING GREEN FINAL SCORE: 48-17 irr B H-alo NEED UPDATES DURING THE GAME? Want to read your favorite Daily content from your smartphone? CHECK OUT M.MICHIGANDAILY.COM Happy Hours IHAM:Mon-Fri BAR &GRILL 3:00 -5:00 Thurs - Sat Nights 0:00.1-00 316 S. c.' StrtR £: Nort U $2 botled beer 734-994-401453pmntsofbeer 1/2 off all cocktails& glasses of wine TheMichiganDaily, www.michigandaily.com 3B MAX COLLINS/Dail Junior nose guard Mike Martin has one of the Wolverines' two sacks this season. Michigan coach Rich Rodriguez called Martin the team's "most consistent defender." 6B FootballSaturday, September 25, 2010