Monday August 7, 2006 sports.michigandaily.com sports@michigandaily.com S Re Sidtigrotm O 13 - Walker left lasting impact on coaches CHICAGO - fuzzy image flashed onto the two giant screens in the ban- quet room. Those seated at the 190-odd tables turned their atten- tion to the man projected on the screens. There stood a smiling Randy Walker at a press confer- ence, excited about the opportunity to coach at Northwestern in 1999. Not only did the trib- KEV ute to the coach, husband WRIt and father who died ear- lier this summer affect The S those in the audience, Ma but also the 11 men sitting at the head table. Those chosen 11 annually make the trip to Chicago for Big Ten Media Day in early August for two days filled with questions and expectations. This year was no different. Penn State coach Joe Paterno had to remind the media he can't put a number on the years he will continue to coach. But he did confess the doctor gave him a clean bill of health to coach at least 10 more years, much to the chagrin of his coaching staff. Michigan coach Lloyd Carr had to entertain inquires into the unheard of five-loss season at Michigan. Indiana coach Terry Hoeppner and Illinois coach Ron Zook donned the suits of used-car salesmen in an attempt to sell their teams as pos- sible Big Ten title contenders. But for one coach, Big Ten Media Day took on an entirely different meaning. Northwestern's Pat Fitzgerald (G Si became the youngest D1 coach at the age of 31 when Randy Walker died suddenly of a heart attack in early July. Fitzgerald finds himself in the tough spot of replacing the man who brought a Big Ten Cham- pionship back to Evanston. Still, he stood tall, embrac- ing questions concerning Walker and the current state of Wildcat football. "Coach Walker played IN such a key role in our lives," ,HT Fitzgerald said. "We're trying to deal with it as a team. As xth one family we are coming 7z together to get through this." Even though Fitzgerald gets his chance under inopportune circumstances, he has his fellow members in the coaching fraternity and Walker's example to help him. He talked to Paterno, a coach who won his first game before Fitzgerald was even born. The Penn State coach told him to write "you're the boss" on the mirror. Having served under the optimistic Walker, Fitzgerald can take the field with the reassur- ance that through the tough and good times he has to take the forward- thinking attitude of his former tutor. Walker's death made me think of the term "coaching fraternity". I've often heard it used when new coaches join the ranks, but the phrase didn't come alive to me until the Big Ten Kickoff Luncheon on the last day of Big Ten Media Day. During the season, the 11 Big Ten ,. See WALKER, Page 16 Antonio Bass is making progress after injuring his knee in the spring, but the injury may be career threatening. Young receiver'sfuture at Michi gan rests on test By Scott Boll Daily Sports Editor CHICAGO - When someone says there's good news and there's bad news, chances are that the bad news trumps the good. Last Tuesday was no different. That afternoon, Michigan coach Lloyd Carr casually met with reporters 0 before his press con- ference at Big Ten Media Day in Chi- cago. The topic of Antonio Bass came up, and the 12-year coach responded optimistically. "He's doing extremely well," Carr said of the sophomore wide receiver. "The knee is coming along really well. Rehab's gone extremely well." But the upbeat tone of his previ- ous response was trumped by what followed. "There is a test that they're going to take in the next couple of weeks involving another issue," Carr said. The "other issue" Carr referred to is believed to still be knee-related. "It's an important test in terms of his future as an athlete," Carr said. "The test is going to clarify that issue." Carr went on to say that regard- less of the results of the pending test, Bass has no intention on playing this season. Last spring, Carr said that he could not rule out the possibility of Bass's return. The Jackson native originally injured his knee in a conditioning drill prior to spring practice. He had showed signs of explosiveness as a true freshman last season, displaying great open-field speed and awareness. Carr had said that he hoped to give Bass some snaps at quarterback in an attempt toopen up the Michigan offense. But instead of "when will he return," the new question Carr keeps hearing has become, "will he return?" Eye am innocent: Carr broke his silence on the pending lawsuit between a former Big Ten official and the conference. The complaint filed by the former official claimed that a member of the media alerted Carr that there was an official in the Big Ten who was legally blind in one eye and was still officiating. Even though Carr did admit that he made a call to commissioner Jim Delaney, he said that was basically the only truthful part of the complaint. "Somewhere, following the 2004 season, I received a call from a Big Ten official who asked me if I was aware, or if the coaches were aware, of that issue," Carr said, saying it was another official that alerted him of the situation, not a member of the media. "He proceeded to tell me that there were some major issues regard- ing this. His comment to me was to the effect that if the media got a hold of it, it was going to become a major embarrassment to the conference, if it occurred where a call was made that might impact a game. "So following that conversation, I called the commissioner. I called him because I felt I had an obliga- tion as a member of this conference to call him." Carr went on to say that when he talked to Delaney, he did so in a man- ner that was intended only to alert him of the situation, and that he did not tell him what he thought of the issue at all. Carr said the perception that he cost the official his job couldn't be further from the truth. Delaney declined to comment at the press conference Tuesday, citing pending legal proceedings as the rea- son for his silence. He did go on to say that the fired official was offered different jobs on the same pay scale after he was let go as an official, but declined those jobs. Freshmen surprises: Carr shed some light on a few position battles, too. When it came to the backup quar- terback position, Carr discussed David Cone's arrival this summer and work- ing out with the team. See BASS, Page 14 Doys I Nuse