V S UW w ,. mr : To stop Gray, Hoke says, 'Chase the rabbit' Coach Chilcoat, is to be a father figure to these young men. Be a character guy. Teach them how to do things the right way. "Be the stability in the storm when they've got things going on and they need help." Hayden was the stability, and oftentimes, Chilcoat brought the storm. "I was the hard-ass on the staff because I'm an older person," the 61-year old Chilcoat said. "They looked to the younger assistants for guidance ... people who could under- stand their situation better than I could." Varina's football program was unlike most high school programs. "We really demanded a lot from them," Chilcoat said. "From grades to participating in an offseason program to summer programs to fundraising, we really did alot." By his senior year, Marell was a team captain. At the end of the season, he was named first-team All-State and was the Richmond Times-Dispatch Defensive Player of the Year. He was also an All-District basketball player. The kid without a father became a big brother to the underclassmen. "Marell was a full-front leader," Chilcoat said. "He stepped up, just did whatever we asked of him." It wasn't always a smooth ride - but that was part of what made Marell special. "He had some bumps along the way, butthey were always ironed out pretty easily," Chilcoat said. "You just have to like those kids that pull themselves up when you don't have much at home and don't have much of yourself, and to get out of situations that he's been in on his own has been pretty remarkable. "I just really love that trait in him." That trait was one of many that helped push Marell to do anything he could to accomplish something no one in his family had ever done. "It was important to him to get a scholarship and to have an opportunity to play at the college level," Hayden said. "He did whatever he needed to do to do that. He'd watch film with me. He would always finish every drill harder than he started. He'd study hard. He'd do the things he'd need to do in class. He improved all his grades through his high school career." Not only did he graduate - he was academically eligible to accept a scholarship to one of the best academic schools in the nation. It was August 2009, and Marell Evans had just announced his decision to leave Michigan. The soon-to-be-junior linebackerthad started just one game in his short two-year career - the 2008 season-open- er against Utah. He recorded four tackles and a half sack in that game, a 25-23 loss, but was burned deep several times. "It was fast," Marell recalled in an interview with MGoBlue.com on August 25."I didn't do too good in that game. I made a couple tackles, but I didn't play to my poten- tial:" Just as quickly as he earned the starting job, he lost it. He played almostcexclusively on special teams for the rest of theyearunderheadcoach RichRodriguez. Soon after the season ended - a season in which the Wolverines went 3-9 in Rodriguez's first year at the helm - Marell was gone. Most figured it was because he wanted more playing time. Others speculated he didn't like Rodriguez's system - Marell was recruited by former Michigan coach Lloyd Carr and had played for Carr his freshman year. And there may be some truth to both notions. But even Rodriguez wasn't completely sure of the reason for the trans- fer. "Good, young men," Rodriguez said of Marell and defensive tackle. Vince Helmuth, whoT transferred around the same time as Evans. "Sometimes that hap- pens. Guys think, 'Maybe I'm not getting a lot of reps, I'm not on the depth chart.' I try to remind the guys that the depth chart P is not going to be solid until the first week (of games.)" Marell didn't put the blame on Rodriguez, like most other transfers that year did. He never quite gave a reason for his transfer but always hinted that there was somethingR other than just football on the line. Not long before the season opene "Me and Coach Rod are was told he was ruled ineligible be on good terms," he told the Detroit Free Press on August12, 2009. "It was more than playingtime or academics or anything like that. It was a lot of things. Coach Rod is a great coach and Iwish him plenty of success. I wanted to finish my career in a different way." Originally, few people understood. "The coaches didn't understand, but I have to do what's best for my future," he told the Free Press. But it really wasn't just about his future. While Marell was in Ann Arbor living out his dream of playing college football, his mother, Valerie, and 16 year-old half-brother, Eugene, remained home in Richmond. Financially, Valerie often had troubles making ends meet. And in Michigan, there was little Marell could do to help. With his vigorous class and football schedule, he didn't have time for a job. Something had to change. "I was thinking family before anything," he said. "I got a brother who is on the right track, just making sure he's OK, before I do anything about football. I was very focused on helping my mother." Marellrand Eugene share the same mother. Eugene lost his father when he was young, too. Marell didn't want Eugene to have to grow up without a father, like he did. So he didn't let him. "I was a father figure to him," Marell said. "When things go wrong in my life, I feel like I let him down. I do every- thingsI can to show him the rightsway, sodsI want to help pay for his college. That's my goal." He couldn't do that from Ann Arbor. Once he left the team, Marell spent the next five months at home with his family trying to figure out what his next move would be. He picked up a job at a nearby warehouse, working eight-hour days. "It was very humbling," he said. "Understanding what I had (at Michigan) and anywhere I could be, it's as humbling as it could get." During the 2010 winter semester, Marell decided to The flapped ing out1 sprinted option f the sho his tai day lon ing wits ing yar touchdo 171 yar ground win tw ago. No Denard son. This caller's were lo took or 6-foot-4 receiver the best And MarQu, fear-ind nesota t one gan By TIM ROHAN another to New Mexico State. Daily Sports Editor Michigan defensive coordinator Greg Mattison is on notice. Recent quarterback's dreadlocks history says the Wolverines can't against his jersey, hang- stop mobile quarterbacks - there the back of his helmet as he was Appalciahian State's Armanti d down field. He ran the read Edwards, Texas's Vince Young, play out of Oregon's Dennis Dixon, Illinois's tgun with Minnesota Juice Williams and Ohio State's ilback all Terrelle Pryor. This will be Matti- ng, finish- at Michigan son's first true test. h 163 pass- Matchup: "Gray is a very dangerous quar- ds with a Minnesota 1-3; terback," Mattison said. "I'm not iwn and Michigan 4-0 going to say he's Denard, but the ds on the When: Satur- guy has the same kind of mentality in a 29-23 day 12 P.M. where he's going to run the foot- co weeks Where: Michi- ball. He's a big strong kid as well , it wasn't gan Stadium as having pretty good speed. If Robin- TV/Radio: there's nothing open, and if there's BTN a rushing lane, he's goingto take off signal scrambling. That always puts pres- strides sure on a defense." nger. He galloped. And he For two seasons, Gray was stuck n contact full steam. The behind former Minnesota quarter- 1, 240-pound former wide back Adam Weber, so the coaches r proved he could run with decided to best utilize his talent at of them. wide receiver. In 2010, Gray caught now junior quarterback 42 passes for nearly 600 yards. eis Gray may be the only Once Jerry Kill was hired as the lucing member of a 1-3 Min- new coach, Weber had graduated eam, which has already lost and Gray ascended to become the me to a FCS opponent and centerpiece of the offense. Still, Gray hasn't lit the world onfire with his passingnumbers early on. In the season opener against USC, Gray couldn't exceed the 100-yard pass- ing mark in three quarters before he left the game due to cramps. Freshman quarterback Max Short- ell entered the game and nearly orchestrated an upset over the Tro- jans. A week ago in Minnesota's loss to North Dakota State, both Short- ell, the pocket. passer, and Gray rotated and the Golden Gophers threw for just 124 yards. So what's Kill to do? Perhaps fol- low Michigan's formula and rely on the legs of your dynamic quarter- back: Gray's 351 rushing yards are 40th bestlin the country and fourth- best among quarterbacks. Already this season, Mattison's defense has had trouble maintaining running lanes for quarterbacks and late- developing running plays. On mul- tiple occasions, Western Michigan's Alex Carder found a hole in the Wolverines' containment. "We can't allow those kinds of runs," Mattison said. "But at the same time you can't sit back either. We can't play a defense of what-ifs. We want to be the attacker, and then some of those things we can tweak and we can help ourselves to make sure that doesn't happen." Mattison's playerss have experi- enced most of their success this sea- son when dialing up blitzes at the right time, forcing key turnovers - a whole 13 of them in four games - because they are the aggressor, and they don't sit back. At first, his defensive line couldn't generate enough pressure by itself. But in the past two games, junior defensive end Craig Roh - Mattison's rush end - has recorded three tackles for losses, including two sacks and a forced fumble. Defensive tackles Mike Martin and Ryan Van Bergen have also worked well - Martin disrupting the pocket, and Van Ber- gen taking on double teams to free up Roh and Martin. Those three, as well as a handful of other linemen rotating in, will have to maintain their gaps while rushing Gray, Mat- tison said. Because if Roh or Martin or Van Bergen leave a void, Gray can sprint right through it. In the first four games, Mattison's defense has been caught not playing every gap tight and teams have burned the defense on it, especially when r against Western Michigan, fifth-year senior linebacker Marell Evans cause of complications with his transfer status. enroll at Hampton University - a small Division-I school about an hour away from his hometown. Leaving Ann Arbor was a difficult decision - and to Chil- coat, it was a mistake. "I don't think he got all the right people talking to him, or he just didn't listen to them," Chilcoat said. "But he knew when he got home that he had made a big mistake. I saw him that Christmas I think. He was getting ready to go to Hamp- ton, but you could tell he was just sick (that he was) not get- ting readyto go back to Michigan." And it truly may have been a mistake at the time. There's no telling what could have happened if he stayed at Michi- gan. But the decision had been made. Marell was determined to go to school somewhere, regardless of whether football was in the equation. "Academics was something I wanted to do because I am the first person to graduate high school in my family," he said."So coming to college is a bigger thing. It's a blessing, a privilege." When he enrolled at Hampton, he originally planned on playing football there too, but a nagging injury sidelined him well before the season started. Hampton coach Dono- van Rose said he never really got a chance to know Marell, but said he was "respectful" the few times he was able to talk to him. In a matter of a couple months, Marell Evans hadagone from a Michigan linebacker to a Hampton student and a warehouse employee. His job used to be to play his favorite sport in front of almost 110,000 people at Michigan Stadium. Now, his job was to move boxes in and out of a lonely building in Rich- mond Marell attended Hampton for two semesters. He earned enough credits so that he would onlyneed a couplemore semesters to graduate. And by the end of his tenure there, he had achieved one of his many goals. "(My mom) is doing great," he said in August of this year. "She's working; financially everything is good. Grandma is STAFF PICKS The Daily football writers pick against the spread to predict Michael scores in the 2011 football season. Florek No.19 Michigan (-19.5) vs. Minnesota Michiga Mattison sends extra defenders on "overload" blitzes from either side. With Gray, Mattison won't stop sending extra defenders to get after him, he'll just make sure they know to take the right angles, leaving lit- tle space to improvise. "That's where this kind of quar- terback makes it harder on you," Mattison said. "If a guy's not mobile, then you just say, 'Go get him. We'll run him down.' This guy here's like Denard in a way where, all of a sudden, ifa guy rushes too high up the field he's going to break it up the inside." But just how fast is Gray? At Big Ten Media days in August, Gray made a comparison: "I can say I'm nowhere as fast as Shoelace," he said. "But I've got a good amount of speed to me." But he may be a bit hobbled. A foot injury kept Gray from practic- ing early in the week, and his status was still uncertain as of Thursday evening. Michigan coach Brady Hoke wouldn't tell his linemen to play Gray any differently than any other quarterback. As Hoke said, they just have to, "chase the rabbit." Sam Sedlecky, Maize Rage President Michigan Louisiana State Bll 5Sate Alabama Nevada Stanford South Carolina Clemsen TexasA&M Saylor South Florida Texas TCU Goragia Tech West Virginia flinals Arizona State Penn Slate Notre Dame 17-7-1 17-7-1 No.1 LSU (-27.5)vs Kentucky No.2 Oklahoma (-39) vsBall State No.3 Alabama (-6) at No.12 Florida No.4 Boise State (-29) vs Nevada No. 6Stanford (-22.5 NseCLA No. 7 Wsconsin (-7) vs. No.8 Nebraska No.10 South Carolina (-10.5) vs Auburn No. 11Virginia Tech (-7)vs. No. 13Clemson No.14 Texas A&M(-3)vsNo.18Arkansas No. 15Bayor (-3) atKansas Sat No.16 South Florida at Pittsburgh (-3) No.17Texas(-9)at Iowa State No. 20TCUJ (-9.5)uvs.SMU Nao.2 iae cht(-6)atNC Sate No. 22 WVU (-21) vs. Bowling Green No.24 Ilinois(-7)vs. Northwestern No. 25 ASU (17.S)vs.Oregon State Michgaa StalthiouStalt-3) Penn State (-16.5) at Indiana Purdue vs. Notre Dame (-14.5) Last Week Overall Lousiana State Ball State Alabama Boise State Stanford Wisconsin South Carolina Virginia Tech Arkansas South lorida aas Texas TCU Georgia Tech West Virginia Illnois Arizona Stats AOhio State Penn State Purdue 14-10-1 63-44-3 Louisiana State BallState Alabama Boise State Stanford Wisconsi South Carolina Clemson Texas A&M South Florida TCU Goragia Tech West Virginia Northwestern Arizona State Michigan State Penn State Notre Dame 15-9-1 65-42-3a Louisiana State Ball State Florida Boise State UCLA Nebrasha South Carolina Arkansas Baylor Pittsburgh West Virgia Northwestern higan State Penn State Notre Dame 10-14-1 64-43-3 Louisiana State Oklahoma Alabama Boise State Stanford Auburn VirsianTe h taylor South Florida Tiexas TCU Goargia Tech Watt Virginia Ariaona State PesnState Notre Dame 16-8-1 70-37-3 6 1 FootballSaturday - October 1, 2011 To apply to be a guest picker, e-mail trohan@umich.edu. If you're chosen and can beat at least two of us, you'll stay on for another week. The longest-tenured guest picker will get a prize at the end of the season. TheMichiganDaily - www.michigandaily.com 3