rn a, a o v w ._ :i 7 w ,9w % w .- Floyd was drafted by the New Eng- land Patriots in the third round of the 1998 NFL draft, 81st overall, after helping lead the Wolverines to their 1997 national championship as the starting fullback. Third rounders have a decent shot at playing for a long time in the league. While they aren't expected to be stars, third rounders have more than a puncher' s chance at carving out a role for themselves, and many end up as solid veterans. This wasn't the case for Floyd. He never made it past special teams in his two-plus years with the Patriots, and first-year coach Bill Belchick cut him after a penalty-filled game in front of Floyd's family and friends in Detroit on Thanksgiving in 2000. Floyd couldn't find a permanent home in 2001, either. From there, he spent the next two years as a football vagabond, training and trying to make teams. But workouts with Detroit, Atlanta and Buffalo didn't amount to anything. He also tried out with the Chicago Rush of the Arena Football League and spent some time with the La Crosse Night Train of the National Indoor Football League, buoyed by former Michigan teammate Diallo Johnson. It was after Floyd's last NFL tryout in 2003 that the trying times, the car- ousel of short-term jobs lacking long- term prospects, began. "I think my lowest point was being turned down for jobs," Floyd said. "I'm talking about odd jobs. There's been so many jobs I've applied for." So many, in fact, that Floyd used to keep a notebook of all the rejec- tion letters he received. But it's spring 2012, and he thinks he's finally found his calling. For Floyd, it's long been an aspiration to come back to Michigan and work in the Athletic Department. The past five years have seen many applications turned in, but nothing substantial has come of them. This time, though, Floyd feels like he's made for the assistant director for alumni engagement position that is now open. From talking to his former team- mates, he says that some ex-Wolver- ines feel "used" by the program since they feel unwelcome to come back. Floyd points to one incident to illus- trate this sentiment. At the 2003 home game against Ohio State, he, former safety Eric Mays and former running back Chris Howard were watching on the sidelines despite not having tick- ets. They were eventually escorted off the field by police, while former quar- terback Drew Henson and Yankees star shortstop Derek 3oter - also tick- etless but a constan get of ABC's cameras - remaine the-ield for the whole game. Having experienced frustra- See FLOYD, Page 6 "Can one wonder that under the circumstances the relative impor- tance of work and sport is sometimes lost in the mind of a twenty-year-old undergraduate?"- Harper's Weekly, Nov.12,1892 The crowds of students huddled impatiently outside the Blue Lepre- chaun bar last spring, just as they do outside any bar in any season here. The first thing on their minds was the bouncer - getting past him. If they looked at him, it was only with a fleeting glance, maybe one moment of eye contact while their ID was in his hands. It wouldn't be enough time to rec- ognize that this bouncer started on Michigan's last national champion- ship-winning team 15 years ago, the only team to do so in the last 64 years. "They have no idea (w461 am)," said Chris Floyd;an NFL fullbacturned- bouncer. "If anything, they will mis- take me for a current player." It's about a mile and a quarter from Michigan Stadium to the Blue Lep, as the bar is affectionately known. It's a trek that takes about 20 minutes on foot, a little faster by car. For Floyd, it was a journey that last- ed 15 years, one that took him through at least six jobs, three internships and a successful stint at grad school. All of those occupations represented the 37-year-old's attempts to find a career once his football days finally expired. It's a journey that is still very much ongoing - this latest job at the Blue Lep is a mere placeholder. It keeps income flowing while Floyd awaits the opportunity that brought him back to Ann Arbor, the place where he made his name as a football star. He is not the only one to go through such travails. Countless other former athletes, at Michigan and everywhere else around the country, find them- selves unsure of what to do when they are told once and for all that they can no longer play football - the only thing they've known for most of their lives. These aren't the true stars - the Tom Bradys, the Charles Woodsons, the LaMarr Woodleys - the men who enjoy 10-to-15-year careers in the NFL, and can live off their spoils the rest of their lives. These are the more forgotten play- eris, men like Floyd. The ones who last afewyears inthe NFL, perhaps,butno longer. Fifteen years after that national championship, Chris Floyd is back in the town he still loves. It's the town where he once soaked in the cheers of 100,000. fans every Saturday, back when the future seemed limitless and the present was free of worry. He's holding a job so close to the Big House - the place where he made so many memories - that he's practically in its shadow. Yet that sadium never felt so far away.y 4 j FootballSaturday - November 10, 2012 TheBlockM -- www.theblockm.com ' S