a w Stopping Hillman key for Blue defense explode into each dummy up and down the line with his forearm. Brady expected them to move the whole sled by themselves. Wired like Brady, from a good family but tough as nails, Jeff didn't mind. So Brady pulled Jeff close, took a liking to the kid. Knew he could push Jeff. "Jeff Barr was a miniature Brady Hoke," Tanner said. When Jeff came to practice without his helmet on, Brady would bark: "That's a Power Drill," which meant extra sui- cide sprints after practice. The next day, Jeff made sure his helmet was one. Again: "That's a Power Dill!" "What for?" Jeff asked. "I don't know, but I've got all day to think of it," Brady replied. He'd tease Jeff. But in those serious moments he taught Jeff everything he knew about playing linebacker. "That was the way my Dad was on me," Jeff says. "I guess I liked it. I liked the attention. And I have a lot of respect for Brady, so when I saw him give that back to me, that just made me try harder." Then Jeff taught Jesse Neal's oldest son everything he knew about being a linebacker. Three years ago, the kid broke all of Jeff's Yorktown tackling records that stood for 25 years. Don't forget about those Neal boys. Just ask Jay and Jesse where they'd be without Brady Hoke. Jay - the popular, big-strapping star running back - almost cried every day because he had nowhere to go. His parents divorced and living with three brothers, a sister and a single working mother, he couldn't study at home. It was chaos. There was no food in the refrigerator. Jesse, the youngest boy, was the quiet one. His older brothers thougt it was their duty to make Jesse tough, rough him up. They would all get into "rock fights," throwing stones the size of baseballs at each other. "They're a rough bunch - fighting - and they don't take no crap from nobody," Jeff says. "That whole family. All of 'em." Jay and Jesse were running backs, but meeting a line- backer in the hole? That was nothing. Brady pulled them close too. He checked in on Jay's grades, just like he did everyone else, making sure a Divi- sion-I talent didn't go to waste. Jay considered quitting his junior year. Brady went to his house and talked him out of it. Brady guided Jay to Ball State, instead of bigger schools that were farther away, where Jay would be lost in the shuf- fle. When Jay graduated, Tanner and Brady took turns taking Jesse out to breakfast every morning, and they made sure the skinny running back ate three meals a day. Just like Brady's coaches at Ball State, Tanner cared about molding the kids as people. Brady's college coaches had been like that and Brady decided he liked Tanner's world. "To me, that's what this whole thing is about," Brady said. Laura and Brady sat down at the end of the season, and it was clear Brady's calling was no longer to protect the Presi- dent, like he thought. Those Yorktown boys changed every- thing. Those two years, Brady watched how Tanner made the team a family. As Tanner put it: players play harder the more they have invested in it. Play for something pure, like the love of a family, and not out of fear of being benched or other selfish goals. Play for Dave Tanner. Play for Brady Hoke. In the week leading up to the game against Delta in 1982, Tanner had a team bonfire the night before the game. They burned a fake Delta letterman jacket of his. The guys went nuts. Tanner wanted this year to be different: Delta was heav- ily favored again, it was homecoming there and Yorktown hadn't beaten its rival in quite some time. So Tanner pulled his guys close. A booster came up with the idea of having the mothers write letters to every player and every coach rightbefore the game. Tanner handed out the envelopes. He got one from his mother. So did Brady. "I'll tell you what, there was not a dry eye in that locker room," Tanner says. "We could not say a word, could not give a pep talk, because we were all crying." Delta jumped out to a 12-0 lead by halftime. Yorktown was too emotional. Yorktown calmed down in the second half. In the fourth quarter, Jay Neal burst through the line like a bowling ball, running over defenders, legs churning. Jeff Barr, a two-way starter at guard, sprinted down field to land more blocks. The whole Delta game plan was to run away from Jeff when he was at linebacker. Jay Neal scored the game-winning touchdown. York- town 13. Delta 12. The whole town rushed the field. "Dad, I'm not one of your football players!" Kelly Hoke would shout. Brady'sfather, John, ajunior-high principal, was strict with him, so Brady is strict with his only daughter. All of Brady's favorite words - accountability, responsibility, toughness - Kelly hears them at home because Brady heard them. The problem is he also has 100 sons to take care of Laura and Kelly have adapted. The only night Brady is guaranteed to be home - or at least nine times out of 10 - is Thursday night,family night,for homemade pizza. Laura and Brady didn't even think twice about the future when Brady left York- JAY NEAL town to be a graduate RUNNING BACK assistant at Grand Val- ley State. "THE Y'REAROUGHBUNCH... Laura fol- DON'T TAKE NO CR AP FROM lowed him to DOO 'Grand Val- NOBODY" ley, Western Michigan, -JEFF BARR Toledo, Ore- JEFF BARR BRADY'S FIRST LINEBACKER "HE WASA MINIATURE BRADYHOKE" -DAVID TANNER gon State and then to Michigan. She always found a job. But children need consistency. "When your kids are young it's hard, because as adults we can talk on the phone, you know, 'How's your day going?' " Laura says. "But for a child to talk to their dad on the phone, it's different. "They need to see him and touch him." Brady taught Kelly how to ride a bike, not how to shed blocks. He took her trick-or-treating. Dad was there, but he wanted to be therefor her all-the-timefor his actual daughter like he was for his recruited sons. "There's things," Brady says, sitting in his office at Schem- bechler Hall, "that you'd always want to take back. "I think we all live ourlives with some regret." '/5 o og /S e csAj ct 6 1 It's 1995 and Brady's office isn't as large yet as he'd like it to be. For now, it's simple, just a desk and two chairs, with photographs around the room of former players he helped, people he wants to remember. He's coachingthe defensive ends at Michigan, the school he'd always dreamed of coaching at, and a troubled soul is sitting across from him. MarcusRay's name is hanging in the balance. Brady's the only one Marcus can turn to. He can't talk to Lloyd Carr. Marcus lied to Lloyd's face after he and two teammates used someone else's credit card at the mall in April1995. Lloyd suspended him seven games. Marcus was a "handful" by this point, having problems with other guys on the team, over women, playing time and status. Brady's the new guy. This is a fresh face, one without a negative opinion of Marcus. A face he can trust. And Marcus wants to change. How can I be a better teammate? Am I as selfish asI've come off? What does Lloyd think of me? Marcus opens up to Brady as much as he can with a coach. MICHAEL FLOREK Daily Sports Editor Michigan coach Brady Hoke is downplaying the fact that he's fac- inghis oldcteam, San Diego State, on Saturday. But he broke up via mass text. The Aztecs have every incen- tive to rub their rebound season San Diego in his face. And they're trying to State at do it with a bet- Michigan ter looking form of Brady Hoke's Matchup: ideal offense. San Diego It starts with Stale 3-0; running back Michigan 3-0 Ronnie Hillman, When: Satur- San Diego State's dat 12 P.M. 1,500-yard rush- Where: Michi- er from a year gan Stadium ago. In three TV/Radio: games this sea- BTN son, he's rushed for just under 500 yards and eight touchdowns. "They say he's a Heisman candi- date," defensive coordinator Greg Mattison said. "When I watch the film I see it. I'm not voting. This is a guy that can be physical, can be really quick and make you miss tackles, and has and will run away from you if he gets in the open field. He's got all of those things. This will be the toughest back we've played, without a doubt." For No. 22 Michigan's defense, one aspect of Hillman's game sticks out above all the others: his speed, which makes him especial- ly dangerous when he gets to the outside. The Wolverines' chances of success will likely rely on the defensive line's ability to keep con- tain and funnel Hillman towards the linebackers. Luckily for Michigan, the defense practices against a similar type of talent daily. He may not be a running back, but junior quarter- back Denard Robinson has been known to break a long run or two. "Denard's such a fast running back, and if you blink your eye he'll get outside," fifth-year senior Troy Woolfolk said. "So I think going against Denard every day allows us to help our defense contain and put a cap on long runs." But the practice hasn't helped the rush defense recently. Despite the defensive line ostensibly being one of the strengths of the team entering the season, Notre Dame and Eastern Michigan ran over the Wolverines for an average of 202.5 yards per game. Since the NCAA doesn't count the Wolverines' lightning-short- ened game in its official statis- tics, Western Michigan's 96-yard performance doesn't count when ranking the rush defense. The other two games have Michigan 103rd in the country. Hillman is second nationally in rushing yards, 37 yards behind South Carolina's Marcus Lattimore. If Michigan can stop Hillman, it'll move on to the passing game, led by San Diego State quarterback and NFL prospect Ryan Lind- ley. Contain him as well, and all the offense has to do is figure out Aztecs coach Rocky Long's compli- cated 3-3-5 defense. "He's taken a 3-3 concept and created a lot of looks from the 3-3 that makes it hardly recognizable as a 3-3," said offensive coordinator Al Borges, who coached with Long at San Diego State. "What seems to be very helter-skelter is not at all. It's a very disciplined style. Every guy's in a gap. Everyone has a responsibility. Coverage is sound. "But it's not what you see every week, and that requires a little more preparation. It's almost like facing a wishbone team when you've never seen a wishbone team." Robinson will be faced with cracking it as he tries to find a rhythm in the passing game. He's completing just 49.1 per- cent of his passes, attributing most of his failure to happy feet. But he continues to beat teams with his feet. Hoke said this week that oppo- nents run different defenses than Michigan studies on tape because they vastly change their gameplan for Robinson. And if there's any- body who can cook up a unique defense, it's Long. "Oh man," Robinson said. "They're defensive coordinator is probably a genius at the defense they're running, they throw a lot of stuff at you. ... It's kind of crazy defense." While Hoke's never coached against a Long defense, he's seen nearly everybody on San Diego State before. cHRIS PARK/AP an Diego State running back Ronnie Hillman is second in the nation in rushing. 6 1 FootballSaturday - September 24, 2011 TheMichiganDaily - www.michigandaily.com 3