i 0. '00 0p 4t Gard]r's 111a nill1 ball field is a power grid full of generators, a mechanic's garage and a strip club. But for a while, the alma mater of current Michi- gan football players Devin Gardner and Cam Gor- don was a factory for kids who needed second and third chances, like Gard- ner. It was where Greg Carter - the athletic direc- tor and football coach - had a mural on his wall of all the players he sent to college, most of whom wouldn't have had a fight- ing chance without Inkster. Most importantly, it was the pride of a community that needed something to believe in. Now, its doors are glued shut and the handprints are on the wrong side of the windows. "It's kind of odd saying this with me being on the team, but..." On the phone, Nathan Lindsey's voice trails off before he starts laughing. Lindsey, along with his brother Daniel, played alongside Gardner and Gordon at Inkster but now live in Kansas, playing for Fort Hayes State Uni- versity. "Man, it really was like Devin and then the Ink- ster Vikings," he said. "It was. There's no other way to put it. If Devin wasn't playing, the chances of us going to a state championship that year would have been so slim. Especially going to a state championship. ... Our team was good, but Devin was a very, very key part to that. He took us to that next level." bevin and the Vikings played every game of their season on the road in 2009, his senior year. Thirteen in all. Trying to match his quarterback's talent, Carter scheduled games anywhere from Muskegon, Mich., to Cleveland. Entering the last week of the regular season, the Vikings were 4-3 and had to win their last game to make the Michigan~ state playoffs. All Inkster had to do was win in one of the toughest road environments in all of high-school football: Steu- benville, Ohio,- which was riding a 68-game winning streak. Steubenville is like no place you've ever been. The stands are less than 10 feet from the sidelines, and vis- iting fans aren't allowed to sit in between the 30-yard lines. Behind one end zone is a massive, 200-person band. Behind the other is a cemetery. The fog was rolling in. Carter says that the first and only time he believed in ghosts happened on that field. It was a preview of The Game for Devin - the opposing fans knew of his commitment to Michigan and treated him like he was already in Ann Arbor. Late in the game and up by a touchdown, Inkster had the ball in its own red zone when Steubenville fired up the band. Gard- ner and the offensive line couldn't . hear anything. False starts and illegal pro- cedures pushed the offense deep into its own territory. Gardner finally got a clean play off. He saw a defender cuted so manytimes before, the one where he heaves it back across the middle of the field after rolling out right - never left. It was his welcome-to-the-show moment last year, the one that made him famous in his first collegiate start as a quarterback against Min- nesota. If he rolled left, he'd still be running. Instead, he took a safety. Steubenville wasted no time scoring again. Ink- ster got the ball back with a minute left, downa point, needing a win against a team that hadn't lost in more than six years. on third down, Gardner took the snap out of the shotgun, looking left before firing a high, spiraling rain- bow downthe rightsideline for a 64-yard touchdown pass, bringing home a win in a place where teams sim- ply don't. He finished the game with 275 yards pass- ing, 55 yards rushing and four touchdowns. Four years later at Michigan Stadium, Gard- ner takes the snap and rolls right, again, getting a glimpse of the Notre Dame band behind him before retreating farther and fast- er back toward his own end zone. He keeps rolling back until he's being tackled in his own end zone, but he Steubenville, he wasn't goingto take that safety, so he heaved the ball away as he was going down, right into the hands of a Notre Dame defensive lineman. After the game, Carter saw his former quirterback in the tunnel. "Steubenville?" Carter asked. Gardner looked down and shook his head. "Yeah, coach. Steubenville." "He's a riverboat gam- bler," Carter said. "He's going to try to do it. He'll learn with experience when to do it and when not to do it. That's really hard for' a kid that can do just about anything, who is a super talent. It's either career, Gardner picked himself up, ran back to the sideline and led Michigan on another touchdown drive to win the game. At this point, the prob- lem with Gardner is that his problems haven't changed. That roll-right, across-the- body heave that Michigan is so familiar with? Carter was trying to get him to change that four years ago. It's not cockiness, exact- ly. It's more like the smart kid who overcommits on a group project but takes on too much work and ends up hurting the end result. If' he didn't try to do as much, the final product would turn out smoother. It's not because he thinks he's bet- ter, just that he knows how good he is, individually. But that's just who he is. It's the same reason he stuck with his com- mit- C r F z e i F t r E coming wouldn't let it be 'Wow' or 'Why and rolled Still, even aft right, worst plan-. Wing on execut- ng the play hat he's exe-..... ?" ter oneofthe plays of his / DETROIT - The doors where Devin Gardner became Devin Gardner have super glue in the locks. Keys don't work here any- more, not-at Inkster, where budget cuts have taken a once-proud community and turned it into a block- ade of buildings waiting for demolition. There are handprints on the windows at the front of the school - bigger than a child's but smaller than an adult's. Teenagers were peering in through the dusty windows, trying to get a glimpse of what used to be Inkster High School in metro Detroit. Officially, the school has been shut down for three months, but it looks like it's been abandoned for years,. as if one day Inkster was operating, and the next everyone picked up and left. Gatorade bottles litter the ground by the baseball 'field, which is now more of an overgrown swamp than a diamond. Next to the cesspool is the football field, which still has pylons, scorebooks and yard markers in the press box. The red, rubber surface of the track is slow- ly disintegrating and the grass is dying. Soon, it will be an overgrown field sur- rounded by a cement oval. On the chain-link fence surrounding the field, a sign remains from last foot- ball season: Adults, $5. Stu- dents, $3. Even in its prime, Inkster was never glamorous or flashy. Bordering the foot- 4 1 FootballSaturday - October 4, 2013 TheMichiganDaily - www.michigandaily.com15