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<UID>
9602050685
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
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<DATE>
961122
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Friday, November 22, 1996
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
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<PAGE>
1F
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<ILLUSTRATION>

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<CAPTION>

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<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM Free Press Sports Writer
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<MEMO>

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<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1996, Detroit Free Press
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<HEADLINE>
T.G.I.FOOTBALL
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
* HUT ONE: I'm gonna miss the little fella. There. I said it and I'm not
ashamed.

  I'm talking about Lou Holtz, who announced his retirement this week --
actually, he announced the sentence "I  think this is the right thing to do"
this week, approximately 2,538 times during his news conference, which, by the
way, is still going on down in South Bend, Ind., and is being carried live by
ESPN6 -- and yes, I have to admit, I got a little misty.

  After all, whom will we have to pick on, year after year? Who's going to
whine about bad calls and evil pollsters? Who is going to say things like,
"This Rutgers team is the biggest challenge on our schedule."
  Only you, Lou. Only you.
* HUT TWO: OK, I admit Holtz was a great college coach. And he was a brilliant
offensive mind during a game,  which is pretty amazing, when you realize that,
most of the time, he was pacing the sidelines like a stockbroker in October
1987. Back and forth. Back and forth. The groundskeepers loved him. After he
was done, they didn't have to mow the grass.
* HUT THREE: Here's what I want to know: Is the guy who walked behind Holtz
holding the headphone cord retiring, too? Or did he die of exhaustion?
* HUT  FOUR: Wait. One more thing Holtz was great at: halftime adjustments.
Sometimes his team was ripe for the picking after the second quarter, but by
the start of the third quarter, it was an army. I attribute  this to Lou's
halftime speeches, which always broke the tension.
PLAYER 1: Man, we're losing.
PLAYER 2: Yeah, I'm down, man.
HOLTZ: All right men! Listen up!
PLAYER 1: (whisper) God, he sounds like  Truman Capote.
PLAYER 2: (whisper) Heh-heh. You're right.
HOLTZ: We can't let this Rutgers team beat us. How would it look?
PLAYER 1: (whisper) Get a load of coach's glasses.
PLAYER 2: (snicker)  What a dweeb.
HOLTZ: I wanna win, darn it! I wanna win!
PLAYER 1: (whisper) Oh man, I can't hold it anymore . . . HAHAHAHAHAHAAA!
PLAYER 2: HAHAHHAHHAHAHAA!
TEAM: HAHAHAAHAAHAHAHA!
HOLTZ: LET'S  GET 'EM, MEN!
TEAM: YEAH, LET'S GET 'EM . . . OHOHOHO  . . . HEEEHEEHEEE . . . HYUCK!
* HUT FIVE: Meanwhile, closer to home, we have Michigan-Ohio State. Once upon
a time -- I think it was September  -- this was projected as THE game. Two
powerhouse programs would meet with undefeated records to decide which one
went to the Rose Bowl.
  Instead, the 10-0 Buckeyes know who's going: They are. And they'll rub it
in. They might run out of the tunnel Saturday with their Pasadena plane
tickets in their mouths. 
  As for Michigan? The Wolverines know where they're not going. They might
run out of  the tunnel with train tickets to Memphis in their mouths.
* HUT SIX: I can't believe it. We've been reading about the "dirty" Detroit
Lions, and how our defensive linemen are a threat to the safety  of the NFL's
quarterbacks. OK. Here's what I want to know: If these guys are so good at
hurting the quarterbacks, how come they keep giving up four touchdowns a game?
* HUT SEVEN: I mean, I truly hope  these reports of dirty play are inaccurate.
I shudder to think what the Lions would be like if they played "clean"
football.
* HUT EIGHT: Principles are nice, but winning is better. That seems to be  the
subtle message in Green Bay, where the Packers this week picked up Andre
Rison, which is a little like picking up poison sumac. Half the league can
tell you what trouble Rison has been. And as late  as Monday, Sterling Sharpe,
the former Packers star receiver, said, on WJR radio, that Green Bay would
never sign Rison because he "comes with too much baggage. They like the
chemistry of the team right  now."
  Of course, that was before the Monday Night Massacre to Dallas. It's
amazing what a little national embarrassment will do to your chemistry.
* HUT NINE: Hmm. Another Nebraska football player  suspended for brushes with
the law. You don't suppose Tom Osborne will find a way to bring him back in
time for a bowl, do you?
 

THE HUDDLE

 * WHO'S IN THIS WEEK: Ahem. May I have your attention?  After three years of
expulsion, the ruling committee has decided to grant one last wish to Lou
Holtz before he retires: he gets into The Huddle, this week only. Come on in
here, you little palooka.
* WHO'S  OUT THIS WEEK: Once Holtz is in, what's the point?
 

THE PICKS

 * OHIO STATE 34, MICHIGAN 21: No miracles. No shockers. No upsets. No fun.
* MICHIGAN STATE 23, PENN STATE 17: The Nittany Lions are beatable, provided
you don't hand them the ball six times.
* DETROIT 20, CHICAGO 17: Relax. I'm not predicting some miracle finish. It's
just that the Bears are not very good.
* DENVER 20, MINNESOTA  19: I don't want to say we're going overboard on John
Elway, but when his face appears on TV now, I hear angels singing.
* WASHINGTON 20, SAN FRANCISCO 18: Let me get this straight. The Redskins and
the Lions met for the 1991 NFC championship. Since then the Skins have 1) won
a Super Bowl, 2) lost their coach, 3) missed the playoffs, 4) hired a new
coach, 5) built the best record in the NFC. And  the Lions have their same
coach and are one game below .500.
  OK. As long as I have that straight.
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<DISCLAIMER>
THIS ELECTRONIC VERSION MAY DIFFER SLIGHTLY FROM THE PRINTED ARTICLE.
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<KEYWORDS>
COLUMN; FOOTBALL; COLLEGE; GAME
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