a' 0 S 9. 7w -- Andrew Copp: Off the Gridiron, onto thef rIce by Greg Garno, Daily Staff Sports Writer Andrew Copp sat at the Ann Arbor Ice Cube three years ago, facing one of the defining moments of his young athletic career. He had waited so long for this occasion - essentially his entire life. At the end of August, before his junior year at Skyline High School in Ann Arbor even began, Andrew sat with his father, Andy, listening to coaches from the U.S. U-18 National Team Development Program. They presented Andrew with an opportunity, one that had fallen into place in just a short time: the chance to play hockey while rep- resenting his country. The privilege is afforded to less than 25 young men each year. The group travels the country to play against the best college talent and garners the attention of college coaches and most importantly, National Hockey League scouts. Andrew had tried out for the team in March, but didn't make it. Now, he sat staring down his second chance at fulfilling "a dream," as his father would later say. But there was one caveat. "You'll have to quit football," they would tell the starting quarterback. Quit? Surely, there must be a way to do both. They wouldn't leave him with that ultimatum, would they? "I can't. I can't quit on my team. I can't let those people down. I can't walk odt on these people now," Andrew would recall. So he didn't. Now there's no hesitation in his voice when he speaks. He glances back up and continues his story. Andrew's gotten used to repeating it, now. "I guess looking back on it, it was kind of dumb," Andrew said with a laugh. "I wasn't 100-percent excited about the decision," his father added. Yet behind the disappoint- ment and the frustration, Andrew's life fell into place five months later, putting him on his path to Michigan. Three years after that fate- ful day, Andrew is an alternate captain for the Michigan hockey team as a sophomore forward, - waiting for his time to join the Winnipeg Jets organization. Once again in his life, Andrew finds himself at the center of an organization. And at the center of Andrew is his character. "I think that's what really defines his character level," his father said. "That he was willing to turn down his dream, because of his responsibility to his foot- ball team." Andrew's character level. has come to define his work ethic. His work ethic has come to define how he performs in a game. And his performance could be what defines the Wol- verines this year. Andrew Copp grew up in a hockey family. Like so many of his teammates, he has played since he was young and hasn't stopped. "Since he could walk," Andy said. His father has been a hockey coach for nearly all of Andrew's life for the Compuware teams a short drive away in Plymouth, Mich. Andrew's mother was a figure skating coach for the Wolver- ines, making her living on the ice. His brother, meanwhile, is also a hockey player. Andrew's father wasn't a standout NHL player or a col- lege star, but he loved the game - something his son has picked up as well. When he wasn't on the ice, Andrew spent his time watch- ing more hockey, idolizing play- ers like Michigan's first Hobey Baker winner and Vancouver Canuck, Brendan Morrison. And when he wasn't watching it on the TV or playing on the ice, Andrew travelled the 15 minutes to campus to watch Michigan play at Yost. "Hockey was always his first, and his second, commitment," Andy said. Andrew's family owned sea- son tickets for much of his child- hood, where he witnessed the great players like Morrison and goaltender Marty Turco on the ice. Andrew, though, had his chance to follow his childhood dream by accepting the position on the U.S. NTDP - which regu- larly fed players into Michigan. He turned down that future. Andrew Copp was a natural, even though organized tackle football was never a reality until"' he was 14 years old and a fresh- man in high school. At Emerson School, a K-8 school 20 minutes west of Ann Arbor, Andrew didn't have the opportunities to compete in anything outside of basketball or track, so he competed in flag football on weekends in the fall and baseball in the summer. Hockey was always his No. 1 priority, though. After eighth grade, Andrew sat down with his parents at home and dis- cussed his future. Andrew wasn't keen on going to a private school in Ann Arbor. And with a new public school opening nearby to relieve the overcrowded Ann Arbor Pioneer and Huron High Schools, there was one likely choice. Plus, Sky- line offered football, something his parents supported in the summer and hoped would act as an important social aspect. "I encouraged him to play football, because I thought it was a really good experience for him," Andy said. "I thought the physicality would definitely help him in hockey. That was one of the things that Michigan and other schools had said, they wanted to see him be a little bit more physical." Andrew wasn't quite ready for the next stage in hockey, but football helped prepare him?'%- With football, he could improve his physicality for hockey. Everything was done for hockey. From the start, Andrew was a natural fit to be a quarter- See COPP, Page 6L DESIGN BY NICK CRUZ