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<UID>
8702240819
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
871120
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Friday, November 20, 1987
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
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<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1987, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
A SCATBACK'S SWAN SONG 
IF ANYONE DESERVES A PERFECT ENDING, IT'S JAMIE MORRIS
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

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<BODY>
ANN ARBOR -- We sat in a campus coffee shop, just a few days before the
big game. Had this been a typical Wolverines season, Jamie Morris would have
had little time for breathing, much less breakfast.  Michigan-Ohio State? This
Saturday? Wait. Shouldn't there be thunder when we say that?

  "Last year," Morris admitted, taking a sip of juice, "no one spoke the
entire week of practice before this  game. The only word was when Bo called a
play in the huddle. No smiles. Nothing. Just hitting. Huddle. More hitting. It
was intense."

  That game would become the biggest win of the season, the one  that sent
Michigan to the Rose Bowl as champions of the Big Ten. It would be glory and
honor and tears and laughter. It would be singing "The Victors" in the locker
room. It would be Michigan 26, Ohio  State 24. It would be the highlight of
Jamie Morris' college football career.
  That was the upside.
  The downside was he still had a year to go.
  Here is how it all began for Jamie Morris  at Michigan. Spring practice.
Freshman year. He ran a play the wrong way. Not once. Not twice. Four times.
Guess who was watching?
  "I must have been a FOOL!" screamed coach Bo Schembechler. "Will  you
SHOOT ME the next time I look at a FIVE-FOOT-SEVEN TAILBACK? WILL YOU?"
  "Yessir," whispered Morris.
  Perfect. Every football player at Michigan starts on Schembechler's dog
list. The good  ones work their way off. The very good ones win starting jobs.
And the great ones? They try to reward the coach with a championship. Jim
Harbaugh, the star quarterback who graduated last year, saw his  fantasies
realized with the trip to Pasadena.
  And Morris, Harbaugh's backfield mate, the little tailback with the
waterbug moves, had the same dreams for this season: "I saw us winning the Big
Ten,  I saw us going to the Rose Bowl. I saw myself winning the Heisman
Trophy."
  The waitress came by with coffee. Morris crossed his arms and shrugged. He
has put in his time, endured the bangs and bruises,  and has pen-knifed out a
mountain of yardage, more than any rusher in Michigan history. He is 67 inches
of speed, rock-solid, a toy soldier gone wild in the backfield.  "A great
player," admits Schembechler.  And he's a senior. If life were fair, this
would have been his year on the mountaintop.
  It was not. The 1987 Wolverines were too inexperienced at some spots and
too injured at others. The result  is a 7-3 record going into the last
regular-season game. Morris' Rose Bowl dream is gone; so is the Big Ten title,
and any hope for the Heisman. Last year, with Harbaugh "guaranteeing" a
victory, the  Michigan-Ohio State game was larger than life. 
  But that was last year.
  "Sometimes I think I've failed," said Morris, ignoring his food, his
boyish face turning suddenly serious. "I ask myself, 'What did Jimmy do
differently? How come the team responded to him?' We made it to the Rose Bowl
with him. That was dream of mine as captain, to lead us back  . . . 
  "A lot of the guys on the team  tease me. They say, 'You know, Jamie, if
we had better leadership, we'd be in the Rose Bowl!' I know they're only
joking, but I'm serious. And I guess . . . I have failed in that respect  . .
. "
  Nothing could be more untrue. Morris has been unselfish and hard-working.
But you get four years in college, and you take what's given. If a professor
goes on leave, you study under his replacement.  And if your star quarterback
-- whose skill only makes you better -- is due to graduate, well, he goes. And
you stay. And make due with the new one. 
  In Morris' case, that was Demetrius Brown, a  promising but inexperienced
sophomore, who replaced Harbaugh (now with the Chicago Bears). Brown made his
share of learning mistakes this season, including 15 interceptions. Some cost
the Wolverines victories. 
  "Did that frustrate you?" I asked.
  "In the beginning, a lot," Morris said. "Like the first game (a loss to
Notre Dame) I was out there trying to win the game on every play. It was
like: 'GET ME THE BALL. I can do it!' When Demetrius threw an interception, I
would come to the sidelines saying, 'Why isn't he throwing it to me? There's
nobody open downfield."'
  Morris sighed.  "It's just that, Jimmy did so much for us last year. And
it felt like everybody was turning to me for this year  . . . I finally had to
accept that Jimmy played a different position from me. I can't  control things
like the quarterback. I don't determine who gets the ball."
  It was an odd dynamic -- Morris, an All-American, huddling up with Brown,
a newcomer, a young kid looking for confidence. But Brown was quarterback. He
had the reins. And while he was not the only reason for Michigan defeats this
year, when he drove off the road, the other Wolverines had to go with him.
  Seniors included.
  You may remember some stories about Morris' childhood in Ayre, Mass. -- how
his military father would inspect the children's rooms, bounce quarters on the
beds, wake up Jamie and his brother Joe (who  now stars for the New York
Giants) at 5 in the morning, just to tell them there was a spot on the floor
they forgot to mop, and they'd better get down there and do it now. "He
brought the army home to  us," Jamie said. "I wasn't crazy about it then. But
I appreciate it now."
  Sure. Compared to sweeping, painting, raking and mowing, scotch-taping
your dreams back together is relatively easy. So it was that Morris and the
other Michigan seniors, who obviously weren't going to win them all, decided
to win all they could. "We had a meeting after the loss to Indiana (U-M's
second Big Ten defeat),"  Morris said. "We could have folded right then. But
we dedicated ourselves to a strong finish."
  Since then, the Wolverines have beaten Northwestern and Minnesota and
Illinois. And Morris? Well.  He may not control the scoreboard. But he has a
way with numbers. He is averaging over 130 yards a game, has 1,339 yards this
season (the single- season mark is within reach Saturday: 1,469, held by Rob
Lytle, 1976.) Two weeks ago, against Minnesota, he became Michigan's all-time
leading rusher. In another time, another season, he might have been swamped
with reporters. But most observers were following  the progress of Michigan's
arch-rival, Michigan State, which was cruising toward its first Big Ten title
in over two decades.
  "It didn't bother me," said Morris, of the small group of reporters  that
stopped by his locker in Minnesota. "At the beginning of the year, when I
dreamed about breaking the record, I thought there would be microphones
everywhere. But then I started thinking: 'Why am  I breaking this record?' I
realized it's the blockers, the guys up front. I've been with some of these
guys a long time. And when I broke the record, they recognized it, they
congratulated me. That  was enough."
  He smiled, his fingers tapping against one another. "I don't know if I
would have realized that had we been winning big and me getting all that
attention."  A lot of fans fell in love with Morris during his time at
Michigan. He was one of those "cute" rushers, too small to be doing what he
was doing but -- whoops! -- there he goes, slamming into big bodies and
bouncing off like a  pinball. He was big in big games (witness last year's
Ohio State showdown, and the 1986 Fiesta Bowl). And his attitude? Take Mr.
Sunshine and Mr. Effort and let them marry Mr. Energy.
  During that  Minnesota game, there was a play where the Gophers came with
a linebacker blitz. Morris picked it up, blocked the defender, and allowed
Brown time to throw a touchdown pass. When Morris came off the  field,
Schembechler slapped his helmet, grabbed him and said: "That's why you're one
of the best players in the nation!"
  Morris beams at the memory. "At that moment," he said, "I could have ran
through a wall."
  So he's got that in his memory box. And last year's championship, if not
this year's. College, by nature, will always be tied to a calendar. You
accomplish what you can in the time  given.
  And the time is about to end. Morris would like to play pro football. His
brother has proven it can be done. Or else, maybe communications.
Behind-the-scenes TV stuff. "Keith Jackson of ABC  is my favorite college
football announcer," he said. "He's doing the game Saturday."
  "What would you like him to say about you?" I asked.
  Morris seemed embarrassed. Then he flashed that laughing smile. "Well,
like, if he said: 'That little scatback really hit that hole!'" He laughed at
his imitation. "Oh man! I'd be going cra-zy!"
  Time was late. Morris had a meeting. We grabbed our coats.
  "What else?" I asked him finally. "If you could draw the perfect scene
for Saturday, what would it be?"
  He thought for a second. "First of all, we'd win.  Second, I'd have a big
game. I'm thinking  220 yards, maybe 29 carries . . . I see the fans going
crazy.  I see us all singing 'The Victors' in the locker room afterwards, and
Bo getting up on the chair and making one of his speeches like (he  lowers his
voice) 'What a wonderful game it was  . . . ' and me just standing right
beside him, kinda looking up, just soaking it all in . . . "
  "How about a final bow? Would you like to be taken  out with a minute
left, so you can be acknowledged with a big ovation?"
  "No," he said. "I'd rather be on the field when the clock runs out."
  "Why?"
  "Because at Michigan, for four years  they tell you it's the team and not
the individual." He grinned. "I want to show them I've learned that." 
  We shook hands, he slipped on his coat and headed out the door. Jamie
Morris, who finishes  Saturday, may not have everything he wanted. 
  But he has everything he needs.
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