JFIFC    $ &%# #"(-90(*6+"#2D26;=@@@&0FKE>J9?@=C  =)#)==================================================" }!1AQa"q2#BR$3br %&'()*456789:CDEFGHIJSTUVWXYZcdefghijstuvwxyz w!1AQaq"2B #3Rbr $4%&'()*56789:CDEFGHIJSTUVWXYZcdefghijstuvwxyz ?ࡻ'c\\}TԞ!/gDaS\̷>P%_y̹d@֧S3{drpӌUk|n#t(Ոis7h` { -ۡ<'5x[͐ ǿ48`BZ7Ue,5%P;W3@dB<ۓ(^HTO^''eSHV%`?>MmQo#++lEGOր!|ѰrO1+Bs 46Dd?\j\xk]m:sô2ov?ZғNӧHJ/`I\Pe쥼QAӟ~*&A9,38b @eGLG0Үij0Tz_cqe;>@V^\Ơwɠx^6l2\İbRG#ܡIx9 vZx4; K`|ǿZ'Vi-䁘e`1Q-ռLLbPA cI|G@m ?h7"[fycx 9 E!u M-bB'r}뱒^_ϫFO榙s >߮%G^kgD>yaiyuTB*Gz3Z.BM%}\/FM1\Y[Q;lqOΪ}5eiZ!bt=x(9a^ÙeEs%]:~96ڥꚤJ?碉?i3S ڹ"n?Z?c?6;63]ς4ͥU @6uv@r?Zhr܃ 7) ;O#봭EMDz1kҵu,Lk|9Ct+K*xb4V1OJgiE$clƯ6ņ77Qxr 0 ЫPʛ5co<;1 $P7?݌U ꚪsDg28<9`}u<ZKA>яW67";<ҡ9klEZtqKsJH|vX|-`:-rN1X>0Նovs +^[[3 Esǵj^Zl#H@_/^tV;.z=toyQvn $ #s^{FK26ndU>4%ޕCN6xfm2"**噎vZ/F2Ԯ_  [۹#Gky@YS@[7^qe1e*њiB$bzdӦ7"K(MSd~UWÒHJ)s!ˬ Le9^]Ht~wJ|'c+Oѕ\jL1}ؽ(Ͼ%O-qOJOM_[|y{sX}{%Dd>XǭOal܏#@^җT4*|\9J` R)HXgN([|܏~N}>~Nq4'@GV0D^1E+WP#4h#ZzBy:$t1ݼjXڴ7Z2z}㊭Z*s~$DpCmaiO\]?<5g%;O;w-r> 2I|AJЃC)ˠM=;A/`ee{h8ʽ_ÞBӮd<ȕ#^1stDRFhYn(|>GmAioA0p9?G4)p, =OҚs# i`M2TJ$z]No&L J+;y:&yh >z$`ߚb/&8ʲj#]$q/ȠTc!`rjϗC 'sP]jیEc\\3EhjÐ9<'bxjl֖ZDM!ڪ;s[j e`JӞŬn?4)'d-$7l28KT,'Ѧ7w~D,@1׮6Sۀ;8hmITnX>i6 +U#קiƧ$lC 2ho+!ol;s]ƩZ`H#f<89_Ku*@܉pJ/_ڷE֝l!lmsv@ 6q &|; n4 dF?|Z[&w<<==]"qsER"j[a-hM92{Wg˦5hϗ8q N x<+ Kk2ܸqk4#nq@Xg[ oyyȆ1BfִpUOA})eZ\>qt8=<ҐLZᾀv dcZEcz4dn灞P#&T3pO2W*ˌ4ˌ'@BxnnL:'QY<4` 3G@)e89p *\G]l NGP8#m !pG@S34ʚ1oր%/6@O]oGua cliA>a! 0Xr9=:-w֚w e `HkebB0{Wwuo䫶|'h ;wPE3#C7TI%S#U>r8hma3}{{tXg2 0zzs@ڠ7-e-kfM8RTxnO"6>iU8޽G>ty t{=zPrM1$LvA,bkK#+h-MG!uWԞ4Q@/Z SOZVӮ`K.X^P#o4a_m'%Tz( ;*$m'Ӡc1cqh:m&--yVpy(ROFxQEFjaۜ~Q@cg5$'tHY(players on Division I scholarships and two more to Division I-AA schools.&nbsp; The Spartans finished 18th in the final USA Today National Football Rankings.</P> <P>Head Coach Rick Gorzynski, who was picked as the Missouri Coach of the Year, stated, "We were looking for something to take us to the next level.&nbsp; The BFS clinic and Jim Brown gave us the "Winning Edge".&nbsp; I thought the plyometrics helped us tremendously.&nbsp; Our kids shifted from emphasizing the Bench to the legs and hips by doing the Power Clean and Squat.&nbsp; It just became a much better atmosphere."</P>sive football team you have to have linebackers who are making a lot of tackles. When your secondary is making too many tackles, or when your defensive linemen are making too many tackles, you re in trouble. <br>To make those tackles, linebackers have to be among your best athletes and best players.  Gizzi s got a tremendous work ethic year round, not just during football season, says McCombs.  He is a better player due to his weight training because he s become bigger, he s become faster and he s become stronger, says McCombs.  He s what I call  a student of the game. Gizzi studies football he s football smart. You tell him you want him to look for something, or you want him to play someone a certain way, and he locks in and studies the film until he makes sure he knows what s going to happen to him on every single play. <br>The fact that Gizzi listens and learns from his coaches should come as no surprise. He s been doing it his entire life. His father, Alfred Gizzi, is on the coaching staff at Baldwin Wallace College, a Division III school in Ohio.<br>Gizzi s also mentally tough. During preseason practice he got a cut on the bridge of the nose.  It s been a mess, says Gizzi.  It was just a little cut that started the second week of August, the first day of hitting, and from then on it was kind of dormant for a while, then it exploded and it s been bleeding all over me during the game. Right now there are 20 internal and external stitches; my total is getting close to 80. <br>Jim Conboy has been the head athletic trainer of the Academy since 1955, and he explained why the cut has been such a problem.  It s hard to stop these cuts when you get them under the helmet, says Conboy.  The trouble is you can t put anything over the cut without affecting the vision we ve tried many things, and we re still trying. Of course, if he didn t play against CSU we could have taken tforced to focus primarily on track. Engineering is a very difficult ajor, so my first thought was to find an engineering program that suited me, and then make my final choice based on the school s athletic program. Another important consideration was that my parents have always encouraged Brenda and me to pursue an academic career above all else, so when the opportunity to attend an Ivy League school presented itself, I couldn t even consider another alternative. During my visit to Brown I fell in love with the campus and the people I met. It was the most wonderful environment I had ever been in---I felt so at home there. On my recruiting trip a student said,  Brown is a microcosm of what the world could be like if we could all just get along.