Monday, June 4, 2012 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com SENIORS From Page 11 senior class in a different light and understand their stories and where they're coming from. "Not only was it building us for the season, the main thing is it developed us as leaders and improved us as men." A business trip A three-day trip to California sounds more like a vacation than anything else. The players, though, can assure you it was anything but. Michigan officials told ESPN that the Big Ten had cleared the trip because of its benefits in develop- ing leadership and life skills, which under NCAA rules is permissible. The trip was funded through a spe- cial fund in the Michigan Athletic Department's operatingbudget. With one quick look at the itiner- ary, the seniors of Michigan's Team 133 knew one thing for certain: "That this was a business trip," Kovacs said. "And that's exactly what it was." Michigan strength and con- ditioning coach Aaron Wellman joined the seniors for the extent of the trip, with head coach Brady Hoke stopping in briefly on the sec- ond day. There were several senior-only meetings in which players aired their shortcomings, goals and frus- trations. The focus was on three questions: "Ho hav ou devloe ds a leader so far?" "How have you developed as a man?" "What do you still need to improve on?" "A lot of us said, 'You know, we've taken baby steps but we're still nowhere near where we want to be as leaders on this team,' " Kovacs said. for the senior class. You saw guys start to connect a bit - guys who are from completely different back- grounds but realized (they) had a common story," Kovacs said. Smelling roses for the first time On Thursday morning, the player but how you carry yourself as a person as well." With the benefit having played EA Sports' NCAA Football video game, the youngsters correctly identified a handful of Michigan players. Denard Robinson? "Oh yeah, well that's pretty easy," Kovacs said. He added: "We've been together for four years en we know each other pretty well, but there were some stories that will stay in the room that made me feel like I didn't know my teammates half as well as I thought I did." But that's all part of the process of building a senior class. esw av yu eviueuasa tmesocraou unor 00 "ow have yo developed as a I think it created a tighter bond CALLING ALL STUDENTS! Do you have what it takes to be a Google Guide? Now hiring for summer temp positions. Go to google.umich.edu to apply. Go gle' seniors boarded abus and began the hour-long trip to Pasedena to visit the Rose Bowl. It was an opportunity to visual- ize for a team that hasn't reached the Rose Bowl since 2007. "It was my first time and I was dying to see it," Kovacs said. "That's a special place. I understand now why they call it the granddaddy of 'em all." The team took a tour of the locker rooms and stepped inside the bowl to snap pictures. "It was unreal," Kovacs said. "I left that place thinking, 'I've gotta be back here in six more months, because I can't go too long away from this place. "We've had this vision of playing in the Rose Bowl, but this gave us a picture, something tangible to see to make that vision even clearer." The group went to a nearby park to conduct the youth coaches camp, splitting up into position groups and rotating the kids through. "Anytime that you get an oppor- tunity to work with kids, you under- stand that it's something they're going to remember for their life- time," Kovacs said. "It's an opportu- nity that you have to send a message to them and get to work with them to not only develop them as football playersbut also as human beings. "They're not just watching or lis- tening to what you say as a football (COURTESY OF MICHIGAN FOOTBALL TWITTER) Big Will? "He got dog-piled." Any surprises? "The kids said, 'Vince Smith ... is that No. 2? Is that the running back? Aw, he's good."' Kovacs said with a laugh. "It was really funny." Training with the SEALs On Friday, the seniors earned a trip to the beach in Coronado. But it was no picnic. That's because this beach was at the Naval Amphibious Base just outside San Diego. The Wolverines were there to meet Rob Stella, the SEALs' chief special warfare opera- tor, who ran their workout. Stella summed up the workout by explaining a common military motto: Embrace the suck. That suck was brought on by three hours of log carries, sit-ups, push-ups and grueling team-build- ing exercises. The seniors were then split up into teams to create a competition atmosphere and Stella would give orders to one person from each team. They would sprint back to explain the drill to their team. The first team to finish wins. "At timeswe were doing thecom- plete wrong thing and obviously that's where communication was a little broken down," Kovacs said. The workout emphasized con- cepts the coaches drill everyday: accountability, toughness and per- severance even through a rough set. "You were only as strong as your weakest link, really," Kovacs said. "That really hit me during that trip because I might be cranking out my 15 pushups but if my partner isn't doing it, then we're going to start right over." He laughed. "And we did that a lot, I can promise you that. If the guy next to me isn't carrying the log, I'm going to be feelingthe brunt of it. There were highs and lows. Some teammates yelled, others helped. The trip was designed that way. "We showed our true colors in the SEALs workout, whether we liked it or not - a snapshot of who we are," Kovacs said. "Some of it wasn't pretty, but some of it was." The seniors finished drenched in sweat and covered in sand. They posed for a team picture on the beach and then collapsed once they got back on the bus. "It wasn't the most relaxing trip to the beach, but it might have been the most rewarding," Kovacs said. "We slept good that night, I promise you that." Hoke, whose relationship with the SEALs is well-documented, has worked closely with them as head coach at San Diego State, and he had three SEALs visit before the Nebraska game on Nov. 19. The SEALs gave three tridents to the team, which stay with the team to this day. Last week, with the seniors visit- ing just days before Memorial Day, the Wolverines were quick to point out that they aren't comparing foot- ball to what the SEALs do. "Coach Wellman the first night told us, 'What we do is nothing is nothing compared to what they do,' " Kovacs said. "If they go out there and lose, they lose men. If we lose, we just lose a game and we've got to come back on Sunday and get those corrections. "But there are some parallels with the training, as there are with many team sports, and we learned how to control ourselves when we're not comfortable, how to stay mentally strong and how to over- come adversity and how to commu- nicate better." Now a week removed from the trip, Kovacs said it has already paid dividends. The seniors met this week to set goals and benchmarks for their final season at Michigan. "This senior group is tighter than any group I've ever been a part of, and I'm excited to see how far we can take it," Kovacs said. ' to start sports loyalty program Students to get rewarded for attending sporting events. SEEPAGE3 O P N O N Bridging the gap High-speed transportation should connect Ann Arbor to Detroit. >> SEEPAGE 4 ARTS An author's story Local author Natalie Bako- poulos draws on personal history in debut novel. >> SEEPAGE 9 SPORTS Q & A with Mark Pieper Michigan alum and MLB agent talks with the Daily. Higher ed. budget passed Budget passed in state House, awaits vote in state Senate By ANDREW SCHULMAN Daily StaffReporter On Friday, the state House of Representatives approved a $1.4 billion higher education budget, ending weeks of disagreement about how to distribute $36 mil- lion in additional higher education funding. The budget plan, which is expected to be passed by the state Senate and signed next week, outlines a 1.6 percent increase in funding for the University. The increases under the plan would be tied to performance metrics such as holding tuition hikes below 4 percent per year, offer- ing degrees in "critical skill areas" and reporting on embryonic stem cell research - with the Universi- ty being the only public university in the state to conduct such work. University officials, including Cynthia Wilbanks and President Mary Sue Coleman, as well as state lawmakers have clashed over per- formance metrics in the months since Republican Gov. Rick Sny- der introduced his budget for the 2012-13 fiscal year on Feb. 9. In testimony to a House sub- committee in March, Coleman said she would prefer the Carne- See BUDGET, Page 7 Ann Arbor, MI UN E-H U N IDREDJ-T W EN T Y T WU Y EARS UF EDITOUUIAL FRE EDUM Weekly Summer Edition Monnav Tune 4 2012 OI N1 Ot NI W co State, 'U' leaders signify importance of higher ed. > SEEPAGE 11J INDEX Vl. I, No 1*71 *2012The Michigan Daily NEW S ............................... 2 OPINION.....................4 CLASSIFIEDS....................6 CROSSWORD........................6 SPO RTS.................................8 Sports ...................................10 h al By J MAt Republi Fareed affairs editor- versity man an Ford M At t e auto industry Conference, they all said higher .t p education is crucial to turning so hot topic at Michigan's economic fortunes around. Snyder said there are nearly 80,000 open jobs in the state that employers are having OSEPH LICHTERMAN trouble filling because they can't Editor in Chief find enough educated people to hire. CKINAC ISLAND - Coleman, alongwith other Uni- ican Gov. Rick Snyder and versity officials who attended the Zakaria, CNN foreign three-day conference at the posh host and Time magazine Grand Hotel, said the annual event at-large, agreed with Uni- hosted by the Detroit Regional President Mary Sue Cole- Chamber was an apt opportunity d Bill Ford Jr., chairman of for them to discuss ways to make [otor Company. higher education more accessible he 2012 Mackinac Policy and to build relationships with the business and political leaders gathered on the island. "The time up here is a way that we can talk even more about (the University's accomplishments) and celebrate what's happening in the state," Coleman said. But noticeably absent from the conference were state lawmakers who stayed in Lansing to wrap up the state budget by the June 1 deadline Snyder imposed. One of the major sticking points that the Michigan Legislature was work- ing to iron out was the state's high- er education appropriation. The state House ultimately See HIGHER ED., Page 2