Sports Page 12 Thursday, July 23, 1981 The Michigan Doily One shot deal 4 Diggs not worried over By RON POLLACK Daily sports writer to get into business, maybe His task of "learning whe sixth in a six-part series management. That's something I'll be" is proving to be a rathe Thisis the sixth in a series of six worry about only if it turns out that "I'm playing cornerback ri articles examining the attempts of football isn't my cup of tea." I'm responsible for learn recently-graduated Michigan, foot- The fact that Diggs has planned out defensive, back spots," s ball players to make ar NFL team, what he will do if he getscut from the "They (his coaches) feel ti their thoughts about the endeavor, Bears, does not mean that he isn't to do best at the position yo and their new pro coach's analysis giving himself a fighting chance of should know what everyc making the squad. He said that his doing. The more positions of their abilities and future in the chances of making the team are "just the better." sport. The series was written by as good as the next guy. It's just a mat- The strategy that Diggsi Daily sportswriter Ron Pollack. ter of learning where to go and be." in his effort to survive the I It can be said thatGerald Diggsis face- } z< .. ° x2{ to-face with a wall that represents all of the obstacles that he will face in his at- tempts to play professional football. k . While he is on one side of the wall, a spot on the Chicago Bears' squad is on the other. If his skills can open theEm wall's locked door, Diggs thinks that would be great. But if this doesn't hap- pen, Diggs won't bang his head on the wall and try to force his way into the NFL, but rather he says that he will see the handwriting on it. "If I don't make it with the Bears, I'm going to become a working man," said Diggs who is attempting to make the professional ballclub as a free agent. "It's a one-shot deal. I got a degree at Michigan, and I'll use it. I feel that if I don't make it with the Bears, then I'm just not NFL material." WHEN DIGGS says that his tryout with the Bears is "a one-shot deal," he means that it is probably the only chan- ce he 'will have to make it into professionsl football. If he is cut, the defensive back will not seek out another chance, although he would accept another opportunity with one of the league's remaining 27 teams were it of- feredto him. "If there's an offer, I'd take it," said Diggs. "But if there isn't an offer, then I won't pursue it." The degree that Diggs said he would use should he fail to make the Bears' squad is in education, and the former Michigan gridder already has an idea of what professions he would and would FORMER MICHIGAN DEFENSIVE back Gerald Diggs (29) breaks u "I DON'T think I'll pursue a job in out for the Chicago Bears but says that if he is cut he'll just become a" teaching," said Diggs. "I think I'll try NFL tryout 4 re to go and r large one. ght now, but ing all the aid Diggs. hat in order ure at, you one else is you know, is following Bears' final cuts is to maintain a steady progression in his play while he learns Chicago's defensive system. "Right now, I'm going day by day just to improve each day and each practice," said Diggs. "If I can just do that, I can make the team. I just have to reduce my mistakes each day. I'm in a learning process right now. It's just a lot of different terminology. It's like you're a freshman in college and everything is new and different." Sp"xs'ntormnon rPoto p a pass ina game against Indiana. Diggs is trying "working man." QB UPSET OVER FINANCIAL RELATIONSHIP: Ferguson set to play out option FREDONIA, N.Y. (AP)-Buffalo Bills quarter- back Joe Ferguson says he is tired of waiting for a new contract from the National Football League team and is ready to test the free agency option of his 1975 agreement ifa new pact isn't reached soon. The key issue is not his current $230,000 annual salary, but his future financial relationship with the team, he said yesterday. He said he wants the issue settled "today, tomorrow-anytime quickly." "I'VE MADE UP my mind," Ferguson said. "If they don't want to get it settled, then they can get ready for me to go. "I hope they (management) can get everything settled, because we have everything going for us," he added. "It doesn't seem like there's been a great ef- fort on their part." One of the best-paid Bills' players, Ferguson said that before he came to Buffalo, "the guidelines for a new contract were drawn up." He said he hasn't heard from the club since. CLUB SPOKESMAN Mike Shaw said the team had no official comment on Ferguson's remarks. "He's in his option year, and we're going through the normal procedures," Shaw said. Ferguson said, "I'm shooting for five more seasons; and I want to be here," he said. "It's great because I'm in my prime and so is the team. I was worried three years ago. I was one of the guys who wanted to get out. "A couple of years ago, Willie Parker and I started crossing out guys on the 1974 team photo (the last previous Bills playoff team) and 25 or 30 were gone. We let a lot of people go and got nothing in return. "Now we have Jim Haslett and Fred Smerlas wan- ting new contracts, Joe Devlin and Mario Clark playing out their options, and myself. These are mainstays, five people with All-Pro potential. We just have to clear everything up." 4 4