8,r .m "..r w. ,. «.; , .. . a.3 ' ; -i"'r 'w .+'c+°s.,=ea :s .... 'c. X31 a a ,st+aa"..., .,. era... .. ..e , ,. ,.:: .}"t.. -The Michigan Daily - 14-The Michigan Daily -Kickoff '95 - Thursday, September7, 1995 - Conference prepares for centennial season of play By Antoine Pitts If you thought Windows '95 re- ceived a lot of hype, you haven't seen anything yet. In celebration of its 100th year as a conference, the Big Ten has planned nu- hmerous events to remind everyone of the centennial celebration. The league will have television and radio spots as well as advertising supplements in Time and Sports Illus- trated. There is also a special centen- nial logo. "We're excited about the 100th year of the Big Ten," commissioner Jim Delany said. The league has been especially strong over the years in football. Among the credentials are 10 national titles, 11 Heisman Trophy winners and 273 con- ensus All-Americans. Numerous players and coaches have made names for themselves in the con- ference from Red Grange, Tom Harmon and Fielding H. Yost to Archie Griffin, Woody Hayes and Bo Schembechler, to name just a few. The schools look to uphold the long tradition in the 1995 season. There are several teams which hope to be in the running until late November for the Rose Bowl berth. This year's bowl marks the 50th season of the Big Ten and Pac-10 agreement with the Rose Bowl. The current contract runs through 2000. Two new coaches - Michigan's Lloyd Carr and Michigan State's Nick Saban -join the conference this year. Both are familiar with the Big Ten, being ure in the voting. There is no odds on favorite to win the league this year, but many are leaning toward Penn State to repeat as champion. Ohio State and Michigan should figure into things with Illinois just a step below those teams. "It's a heck of a league," Illinois coach Lou Tepper said. "I think it's a very competitive league. "The last two years have proven that without a doubt, we're one of the most competitive leagues in the land. There's no one in this league that you can take lightly." Wisconsin, Michigan State and Purdue will jockey for position in the middle of the pack. Fighting to stay out of the cellar are Iowa, Minnesota, Indi- ana, and Northwestern. "The Big Ten conference once again, I think, will be a really, really strong balanced conference from top to bottom," Minnesota coach Jim Wacker said. "That will make it tough for ev- eryone." The Big Ten has tie-ins to four addi- tional bowls this season: the Florida Cit- rus, Outback, Alamo and Sun Bowls. That all should make for a memo- rable centennial season of Big Ten foot- ball. Talent< aidck By Antoine Pitts The Wolverines have return men and an All-A highlight the special tear Remy Hamnilton set; field goals and kicking p and sealed a Michigan w with a late-game field go Redshirt freshman handle the kickoff duties Seniors Amani To cury Hayes are two of the most talented returners in the game, but coach Lloyd Carr cautions about overusing them. "The reality though is that be- hind those two guys at wide re- ceiver, we have nothing but inex- perience," coach Lloyd Carr said. "I'm concerned about that. I'd like to have them both back there on re- turns but I worry about injury, so you could see a lot of guys back there." : : former assistants at their respective schools. There are a few legitimate candi- dates to win the league's first Heisman Trophy since Michigan's Desmond Howard in 1992. Purdue's Mike Alstott, Illinois' Simeon Rice and Minnesota's Chris Darkins should fig- Minnesota's Bronko Nagurski, Purdue's Bob Griese and Illinois' Red Grange (clockwise from left) are among the greatest of all Big Ten players. FILE PHOTO/Daily Kicker Remy Hamilton Is a preseason All-America after a standout year kicking field goals for Michigan. Wnters regroups secondary Among those you'l turns are redshirt fre; Butterfield and true fry Williams. "This kid is really guy," Carr said of Willi going to have a lot op By Darren Everson Michigan's secondary was a belea- guered group in 1994, starting with the very first play from scrimmage. When Boston College's Mark Hartsell hit Greg Grice for a 74-yard touchdown pass, you knew the defensive backfield would be a weakness all year. But if first impressions continue to hold true with this group, the defensive backs will be a dependable bunch this season. It wasn't just that Virginia (and Illi- nois) never burned the Wolverines deep. The defensive backs - especially free safety Chuck Winters - were all over the place in the opener. Winters doesn't take all of the credit, though. "I thought we had good pressure (on the quarterback)," he said after the Virginia game. "We didn't have to cover so long." The Cavaliers did hit some passes on Michigan, including a 15-yarder on third-and-14 late in the game. "We made a mistake in a stunt up front," coach Lloyd Carr said. "It's not always the coverage." It sure looked like it was the coverage's fault last year. The Wolver- ines allowed an average of 237 yards passing per game; Boston College (344) and Minnesota (394) put on air shows at Michigan Stadium. Winters seemed to be at the epicenter of these disasters. He finished third on the team with 67 tackles but as the free safety, he was often the one to blame when opponents sprung big plays. "I'm more confident than I was last year, (both) in the unit and in myself," Ilowr+f i w said Winters, who started three games at strong safety last season. "It comes from learning from experiences last year." Winters has the most experience of the group, as he is the only player start- ing in the same spot he started in last year. Corners Ty Law and Deon Johnson are gone, and junior Clarence Thompson switches to cornerback af- ter starting at safety last year. True freshman Charles Woodson is right behind him at that short-side corner spot. "Woodson, I thought, did a very good job (against Virginia)," Carr said. Woody Hankins will push Th- ompson and Woodson for playing time. Hankins is 5-foot-9, but his sec- ondary mates are quite tall for defen- sive backs, which should come in handy. Eight of Michigan's 11 backs are 6-foot or taller. Tyrone Noble and Jean-Agnus Charles are a shade shorter at 5-foot-11. Noble is the starting weak-side cor- ner, with Charles and redshirt freshman Andre Weathers backing him up. Meanwhile, Steve King takes over Thompson's strong safety position. r Want a SNEAK PEEK at the first exam? Want to avoid the professor from FELL? CLUELE55 about course requirements? The Studen& C ounseinq Offiecan help! ow Hundreds of exams for LSA courses! sw Student evaluations of professors and courses! tw Insider's explanations of ECB, R&E, and other cryptic acronyms! Th< and C 2221 Angel Hall 763-1553 Run by students for students We welcome volunteers? K