<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8502160098
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
851113
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Wednesday, November 13, 1985
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1985, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
U-M LINEMAN NEVER BENT, 
BUT STEEL ROD IN HIS LEG DID
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
ANN ARBOR -- Football is full of symbols. The penalty flag. The goalposts.
 For Mike Reinhold, it's a stainless steel rod, 21 inches long. That's what
doctors inserted into his right  leg two years  ago, after a hit from a
Minnesota lineman shattered his femur into three pieces, and left him twisted
like a rag doll on the field.

  For nearly a year, Reinhold and the rod shared the same flesh.  He could
press on his thigh and feel the object inside him. How strange. But then, all
sorts of strange changes were taking place. He had remained in a Minneapolis
hospital weeks after his Michigan teammates  had flown home. Thanksgiving came
and went, and he passed it in a  hospital bed, flat on his back, eating
lukewarm turkey that some alumni had brought him.

  The leg had suffered a terrible break.  But the break from the team was
harder to take. As Reinhold said,  "College football is like a big machine.
When a cog is damaged, it's replaced."
  And even as he lay in bed, he knew it was happening  to him. His place had
been taken.
  He had never been hurt before. Never been too injured to play. Just as
some young men are musicians, and some are scholars, he had always been a
football player.  And now he wasn't.
  It was as if someone had stolen his last name.
They called him 'Iron Leg'  No one expected to see Reinhold in a Michigan
uniform again. Most would have been happy to see him  off his crutches,  which
he had to use for eight months. "He was one player," Bo Schembechler said,
"that I figured would never come back. No way. The injury was just too
severe."
  The rod remained  inside him. Iron Leg, they called him. It even brought a
few laughs -- like when Reinhold passed through the metal detector at an
airport and the alarm went haywire. But more often, he could feel the  piece
rubbing against his hip bone, a reminder that he was still part-hardware,
still not quite normal.
  His weight had dropped from 225 to 185 in four weeks. He felt weak. One
day, around Christmas  of '83, he hobbled into an empty weight room and tried
a bench press. He had been lifting 330 pounds before the operation. He set the
bar at "a joke" weight of 135. Eight repetitions and he was exhausted.  "I was
back to nothing," he said.
  All during this time, he was still living with other players, other
healthy players, and when they would leave for practice, there was the
loneliness you feel  as a child when the door slams and you are suddenly alone
in the house. Your inclination is to run out after your loved ones, to catch
them before they leave you behind.
  In a way, that's what  makes  an injured player like Reinhold want to come
back so desperately. "As a football player you feel special," he said. "But
when you're out, not playing, you just feel like, I don't know . . . normal.
And  alone."
  One night the following summer, Reinhold attended a wedding in his
hometown of Muskegon  -- where he'd been a high school star -- and the
questions were all about when he'd return for U- M.  They echoed inside. That
night, at 3 a.m., he put on sweats and pushed himself through a grueling
neighborhood run, "touching every mailbox and telephone pole along the way." 
  From then on, if the  trainers told him one mile, he ran three. If they
told him a half-dozen weight lifts, it was a dozen. He did hours of work that
he wasn't supposed to, swimming, running,  jumping rope, too eager  to  let
common sense be heard. He did it alone, except for the 21 inches of cold steel
inside him. And when he returned to the hospital, it took the doctors more
than two hours to remove the implement. Reinhold  had put himself through a
private hell that would astound even Schembechler in an effort to get back.
  When the doctors removed the rod, it was bent.
Feeling a sense of belonging  Reinhold is  back now -- as a middle guard,
instead of a linebacker -- on a Michigan defense that is the finest in the
nation. This weekend, he returns to the haunted house in Minneapolis (the
Metrodome) where the injury took place.
  "It'd be lying to say I'm not a little nervous," he admitted. "I went
through hell up there."
  What brings college players like Reinhold back? Mostly, it's the sense of
belonging.  Of feeling special. And in that way, they are no different than
most of us at college age. They cling to the team as others cling to their
friends, their fraternity brothers, their bands, their student  government.
Being injured is like a child being forced to watch a family picnic through a
window.
  "The whole time I was hurt, I just kept visualizing coming through the
tunnel with the other guys,"  Reinhold said.  "When I finally got to do it
again, it was like coming home."
  He still has the rod from his leg. He says he may make something out of it.
No need. The curve in the object is testament  enough to his will.
  The steel bent. He didn't.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
INJURY;MIKE REINHOLD
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
