0 S 0 0 Welcome to week three. If you saw that finish coming last Sat- urday, please raise your hand. Now put it down and stop readin this paper. You're simply too smart for us. Denard Robinson's 226-yard fourth quarter was about as unexpected as Jeremy Gallon becoming a hero by the end of the game. After two wee of extraordinary football, is this when "normal" returns? Michael Florek, Stephen J. Nesbitt, Kevin Raftery, Tim Roha TABLE OF CONTENTS Q&A: In the aftermath of the Notre Dame weekend, defensive tackle Ryan Van Bergen opened up to the media. Coach J and Co.: Why Fred Jackson, Michigan running backs coach, has stayed with the team for two decades. Preview: Still without a lead back, Michigan will give its running backs a chance to shine against Eastern Michigan. Cover illustration by Marissa McClain STAFF PICKS The Daily football writers pick against the spread to predict Michaela scores in the 2011 football season. Florek Ig 2011 Schedule Western Michigan (Sept. 3): Good thing the ks rain came. And the blitzes, too. Looked like Greg Robinson was coaching until the second quarter. an Notre Dame (Sept. 10): Nothing to see here. Michigan rallied with a 28-point fourth quarter to stun the Fighting Irish and get the victory. Eastern Michigan (Sept. 17): Another meeting with another inferior neighbor: may be Michi- gan's only shot to hang 50-plus points in a game. San Diego State (Sept. 24): Hoke said it was hard leaving his players behind at San Diego State. They were mad he didn't say goodbye. Minnesota(Oct.1):MarQueis Gray played wide receiver last year - now he's the quarterback and the only thing exciting about the Gophers. Northwestern (Oct. 8): Dan Persa - that's about it. Michigan State (Oct. 15): Edwin Baker and Le'Veon Bell ran over and through Michigan last year, and Kirk Cousins ain't too shabby either. Little Brother's growing up. Purdue (Oct. 29): Guard your ACLs! The knee injury has plagued Purdue the past two seasons. Quarterback Rob Henry was the latest victim. Iowa (Nov. 5): The faces change, but it always seems like Kirk Ferentz finds the same types of ° players. This is just another solid Iowa team. Illinois (Nov. 12): Nathan Scheelhaase-to-A.J. Jenkins and Jason Ford is the whole offense. Consider Scheelhaase a poor man's Denard. Nebraska (Nov. 19): The legendary blackshirts make their debut at the Big House. By the time Jared Crick and Co. leave, it may get ugly for 'M.' Ohio State (Nov. 26): No Tressell? No Pryor? Ohio State's still deeper than Michigan, but a lot could change by Thanksgiving. Michian(-3.5) vs EasternMichiga No.5 Oklahoma(-4)atNo.5FloridaState No.2 Aabama (-43.5) vs North Texas No 3LSU (-4) atNo. 25 Mississippi State No. 4Boise State(-20.5) atiToledo No. 6 Stanford(-8)at Arizona No7 wsconsin 4) at Northern Iinois No.91FoasA&M(-20.5)v s.Idaho No.12 South Carolinal-16.5)vs. Navsy No.17 hNebasktt-7.5Mms.Washi.)gto( No. 12 Oregon (-47.5) vs. Missouri State No 1i3Va. Tch(-27.01 vs. Aksaiat No.4 Arksa(-2.5)vs. Troy N.i15Michigan Siaieat'Notre Dame (-3.5) No. 16 Fobida rn0x)vs F. Tm nssA No. 17 Ohio State at Miami(Fla.) 0-) No. 10 Wesl Virina (-3) at Maryland No. 19Bayor NS) vs.SF Austin No. 20 Soth Floida (-441vso. Forida A&M No.21AubrnatiClmson(-3) No.22Arizona State .(-5)at Illinois No. 23TCU (-31) vs. La.-Monroe No.23Teas(-4.5) at AUCLy PenSatee(-6.atTemple owar-4)vs.Pittsburgh Purdue (-22.5)ovs.SE MissouiState Indiana (-14.5) vs. S. 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Bayior South Florida Ariaona Sste TCU UCLA PeonState Indiana Minnesota Northwestern 19-8 37-18 Eric Dudek, Business School Senior Michigan Florida State Alabama Louisiana State Boise Siate Stanford wisconsin OklahomassSiate Texas A&M South Carolina Nebraska Missousi Slain Virginia lash Troy Michigan State Florida Miami (Fla.) westVirginia Baylor Florida A&M Auburn Arizona State TCU Texa Penn Stae Pardun S. Carolina Slatn Mineota Northwestern 16-11 16-11 Hopkins's parents fell inlove with Jackson. Jackson con- vinced Hopkins to take a visit. Jackson talked to Hopkins's high school coach, Bryan Erwin. Is he tough? Does he work hard? Does he show up to practice on time? How are his grades? When the formal part was over, Erwin shut the doors. In the five years Erwin has known Jackson, Coach J always has to get on the grease board. Marcus runs the I-forma- tion. Jackson knows all about it. He got on the board and talked through plays for hours. Wherever he goes, he still teaches like a quarterback. "We've gone through a lot of grease cans," Erwin said. This is building relationships. This is recruiting. No one does it better than Coach J. Darryl Stonum, Troy Woolfolk, Brandon Herron, Carvin Johnson and Terrance Robinson, among others, are all his guys. Royce Jenkins-Stone, a linebacker in Rivals.com's Top 100 prospects, has committed to play for Michigan nextyear. He's a Jackson guy. Super-recruit Shane Morris, one of the best - if not the best quarterback - in the 2013 class, has already verbally committed to the Wolverines. He's a Jackson guy. "Recruiting is the name of the game," said Wheatley, now the running backs coach at Syracuse. "Michigan wouldn't be Michigan if you don't get the players in there to continue the Michigan man tradition, to put the butts in the seats, fill that thing up, 111, 112,(000) whatever it is. "Add up the number of backs and the yards that he's coached over the years and then the players that he's brought in over the years, I would say that's pretty much, you've got to keep that guy." Starting with Rick Leach, Jackson learned from Bo. He sells the same tradition to the kids and coaches that Bo sold to him. He builds relationships on the trail the same way Moeller built a relationship with him. He recruits the way he was recruited. The method isn't a secret. If you step into his office on a Thursday morning and ask, Jackson will give you a pre- view. "I know Ican sell this place as well as anybody," Jackson said. "I've known about this place since the '70s." The rest is right out of Boo textbook. 'This is Michigan. Whatever you put in this article you've gotto knowthatchat's what I sell kids. This is Mich- igan. This is not any other school. "Like Bo said, 'Those who stay will be champions.' You feel like you're a champion here." .He continues on. The academics, the life in Ann Arbor, the stadium, the tradition, Fielding Yost, Gary Moeller, Lloyd Carr. It's nothing new. But hearing it this time was different. Jackson looks you in the eye when he says it. His pace was steady, his words forceful but ringing of truth. You have no choice but to believe him. "My dad has got a way of talking to young men," Fred Jr. says. As a young man Fred Jr. was on the receiving end of those talks. Now 35, he coaches football at Flint Northern High School. Last year his running back, Thomas Rawls, broke 2009 Heisman Trophy winner Mark Ingram's Flint- area single-game rushingrecord. Jackson paid a visit to his old stomping grounds. He made his pitch. Word got out. "When (Iowa) found out my dad was seeing him, they were like, 'Man, I might as well lay off. Coach Jack got a hand on him, that's it,'"Fred Jr. said. But there was one recruit Jackson handleddifferently. That one provides a window into the other side of Fred Jack- son's tenure at Michigan. He's not the reason Jackson sur- vived or became indispensible. But more so than Jackson's love for Michigan, the recruit is the reason he's stayed. CHAPTER SIX Jeremy Jackson got to play the position Fred Jr. didn't. He got a lot of things Fred Jr. didn't. While Pops still worked long hours during the fall and missed football games, he came home at night. To see his son, Jackson had to drive a few miles, not across state lines. When Jeremy was growing up, Jackson began his suc- cess at Michigan. Lloyd Carr took over as head coach in the summer of 1995 and named Jackson the offensive coordi- nator in addition to running backs coach. Carr trusted him. After two seasons, Jackson lost the offensive coordina- tor job. He was named assistant head coach. During that time, more opportunities arose - Sunday football was call- ing. "I had opportunities to coach in the NFL numerous amounts of time," Jackson said. "I mean like eight, nine times and I didn't go because I wanted to coach here." In the most unstable of professions, the Jacksons found stability. They had bought a house in Ann Arbor. Jeremy, the oldest son of Jackson and his second wife, Teresa, was growing up. Josh came along. The wife was happy. The kids were happy. Jackson was at the only college he had every wanted to coach at. But the allure remained. This was the highest level, the top of the coaching ladder. Could Jackson start all over, leaving his house and family all over again to chase another objective? No. He was going to be there for Jeremy and Josh. "I think he wants to coach in the NFL," Fred Jr. said. "I think he really does, butI think he's stayingbecause of his kids." "I had the opportunities to coach in the NFL numerous times." Jackson still works long hours and misses events. That's the nature of the job. He told AnnArbor com he saw about "a fifth of what Jeremy did as an athlete in high school." But he lived under the same roof, and that was more than he could say for Fred Jr. Jeremy took Pops' advice. He became a receiver. With the help of Jackson and former Michigan coach and cur- rent tows wide receivers coach Erik Campbell, who had coached Jeremy since he was young, Jeremy developed into a Division-I prospect. Offers started rolling in. LSU coach Lea Miles, who coached with Jackson when the two were at Michigan, wanted him down in Baton Rouge. Campbell wanted him at Iowa. "That bothered me when they offered him," Jackson said. "I mean, I thought there was a chance." But this was Coach J's son. Might as well lay off. There was no pitch, no question about becoming the next great Michigan receiver. For all of his life, Jeremy had seen his dad live the moments of the Michigan program: Fred Jacksonand son Jeremy never had to sit down and talk about Michigan during Jeremy's recruitment. Biakabutuka's 313 yards, Charles Woodson and the 1997 national championship, Braylon Edwards in triple over- time against Michigan State. Having a sit-down in the liv- ing room wasn't changing anything. "I never told him a thing," Jackson says. "There wasn't much for him to really tell me," Jeremy added. "I pretty much knew." CHAPTER SEVEN Jackson's shot at the NFL is fading fast, if it's not gone entirely. He's in his fourth decade asa college coach. Now coaching with his old buddies, Hoke and defensive coor- dinator Greg Mattison, he'll remain as the running backs coach at Michigan, probably for at least the next four or eight years. Josh, now 53, is in eighth grade. Already over 6-feet tall, he may be best athlete of them all. Jackson may have the chance to see another son through Michigan. "It's funny now that I'm older, I see my little brothers and how they are and I'm like, 'oh they're getting all that hands on,' " Fred Jr. said. "If I would've got it, I would have been sweet. Real sweet." Ann Arbor and the Michigan football program have brought the Jackson family together. Jeremy's a sopho- more now. Josh will be at Huron High School next year, about four miles away from Michigan Stadium. Fred Jr., with a baby of his own, is about an hour up the road. With him, tucked away in some closet or in some box in the garage, are those quarterback playbooks Dad gave him all those years ago. In a way those books represent the old Fred Jackson: the man who loved football, wanted to be at Michigan and was willing to sacrifice his family time to get there. There's a different Fred Jackson now. There's a differ- ent relationship with Fred Jr. now. Fred Jr. comes to visit and it's an event. Jeremy and Josh have to be home. Fam- ily is here. That lost time between Fred Jr. and Dad in those early years has been found. "When I was younger, I wasn't with him every day like my mom," Fred Jr. says. "Now, it's like I've got unlimited access to him and maybe t'm livingsa childhood a little bit with him. ButI don't mind that." TheMichiganDaily - www.michigandaily.com I 7 2 1 FootballSaturday - September 17, 2011