Monday, July 28, 2008 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 11l Cursed up a storm RODRIGO GAYA/Daily Fifth-year senior cornerback Morgan Trent is one of Michigan's about 20 "apostles," or team leaders. Apostles' are team's new leaders CHICAGO - The Michigan foot- ball team's captains have tradition- ally been announced before the regular season. But Wolverine coach Rich Rodri- guez will appoint captains on a 0 game-by-game basis. The players will select the year's captains after the season. He elaborated on Michigan's plan for leadership Thursday. "Apostles," a group of players from each class, were selected by their teammates as leaders and mentors, a system he brought from West Virginia. Rodriguez met with the apostles for a barbecue atchis home in Saline on Wednesday before leaving for Big Ten Media Days. At West Virginia, about10 to 12 of Rodriguez's athletes were apostles each year. There are about 20 Wol- verines in this year's group, includ- ing fifth-year senior tight end Mike Massey, fifth-year senior defensive end Tim Jamison, fifth-year senior cornerback Morgan Trent and red- shirt freshman quarterback Steven Threet. "A freshman or sophomore might see something I don't see, and he can pull one guy to the side and encourage him and get on him hard," Jamison said. "If it was only two, you wouldn't see everything on the team. I feel like it's going to be great." - Courtney Ratkowiak For an expanded version of this article, see www.michigandaily.com. CHICAGO - Michigan football coach Rich Rodriguez stood completely surround- ed by reporters in the hallway out- side the interview room at Big Ten Media Days on Thursday with his back against the wall - lter- ally and figu- ratively. After Jus- tin Boren left DAN the Wolver- FELDMAN ines in March and said the program's "family val- ues" had eroded, many questioned the new coachingstaff's language during practice. But just as that discussionbegan to die down locally, Rodriguez went to Big Ten Media Days, where reporters from around the Midwest and the rest of the nation asked about the foul language in practice. "I think that's overrated," Rodriguez said. "I don't know where all that came from. Sure, when there are times they're upset, when coaches are upset sometimes there's some salty lan- guage. But some of them don't do it, use it at all. Some of them doing it occasionally, but it's not like a tirade all the time. So I don't know what y'all think, hear or believe, but it's not like that." I don't know why Rodriguez gave that response. Maybe his def- inition of what a large amount of screaming and swearing is differs from most. Maybe he got defen- sive because most the media's questions were abouthis lawsuit or family values. Whatever his reason, itwas a mistake to downplay how much screaming and swearing goes on at his practices for one simple reason. It's not true. Rodriguez, who not only prides himself on being very honest with the media, rightly or wrongly has an image problem. And a slip-up like this, while minor if it remains isolated (especially if it's due to a difference in perception), further undermines his credibility. I'm not saying the coaching staff's swearing is a problem. In fact, I don't think it's a big deal at all. But Rodriguez misleading the public about it is. The local media was introduced to the new language by offensive line coach Greg Frey's "fuck"- laced tirade at redshirt junior David Moosman after the center snapped the ball over the quar- terback's head during the Wolver- ines' first spring practice. And that was duringthe first 30 minutes of the practice the media got to watch. I can't imagine the coaches got any friendlier after that. The same controversy hap- pened at West Virginia in 2001 when Rodriguez took over for Don Nehlen, who would "kill them with kindness," according to Dennis Brown, an assistant under Nehlen. "The coaches we hadbefore them, they swear and all that, but it wasn't an all-day, consistent thing," said Corey McIntyre, who was a senior runningback at West Virginia in 2001 and now plays for the Atlanta Falcons. "Just going and just yell, yell, yell, yell." In that firstyear at West Vir- ginia, the Mountaineers were 3-7 on their way to finishing 3-8, and the coaching staff had come under fire for their language. "I talked to the coaches - and looked at myself - in the area of language," Rodriguez told the Charleston Gazette at the time. "Sometimes our language has not been the best. But it's been better since I talked to the staff. And it's been better from me inthe last six or seven weeks. But we're still going to coach hard." And it happened at Clemson in 2000 when Rodriguez was the offensive coordinator there. Tiger coach Tommy Bowden tried to limit his assistants' swearing, and Rodriguez said he had trouble finding replacement words. At both West Virginia and Clemson, Rodriguez admitted to swearing a lot. He didn't down- play it, and that's fine. This is foot- ball. Yelling and swearing aren't foreign concepts. He doesn't have to hide it. Tim Jamison, a fifth-year senior defensive end for the Wol- verines, said all of the assistants yell a lot. He also said Rodriguez doesn't try to identify which play- ers would be more motivatedby positive encouragement than harsh yelling. The coach makes the players adjust to his style. "That's how you want it," Jamison said. "You don't want a coach babying one person more than the other person. So I like it." Me, too. So why didn't your coach admit it? - Dan Feldman can be reached at danfeld@umich.edu. no Hoyer: Hart wouldn't have made little brother' comments if he was returning CHICAGO - Holding a 10-point lead, the Michigan State football team was seven minutes away from snapping a seven-game losing streak against arch-rival Michigan last year. But the Wolverines came back to win 28-24, leaving the Spartans heartbroken yet again. Then senior Michigan running back Mike Hart piled on, comparing the Spartans to his little brother. The two teams play again Oct. 25, and Hart's com- ments are still fresh in some Michi- gan State players' minds. "I think you kind of do have to take it personally because, obvi- ously, he's not back," Michigan State quarterback Brian Hoyer said. "I mean, it's good for him. He can make those comments because he was leaving. There was no need for him to say something like that, so you have to take it personally. "I wouldn't say something like that if I was going to have to play those guys next year because you don't want people gunning for you." Hoyer said he wouldn't be think- ing about the comments during the game, but would use them as moti- vation beforehand in practices and workouts. Before Hart's comments, Michi- gan State coach Mark Dantonio installed a countdown clock in the Spartans' facility, a move that drew a lot of attention. But he said he thought the attention was mis- placed. He said it didn't always count down to just the Michigan game. Sometimes it counted down to other key dates. He plans to use it in a similar manner again this year. "It'll be a Michigan thing at times," Dantonio said. - Dan Feldman For an expanded version of this article, see www.michigandaily.com. x