It isn't hard to detect Shady Salamon's favorite part about playing defense for the Gophers. After one jarring collision with Eric Lair that knocked the tight end out of bounds Friday, Salamon's third or fourth punishing hit of the day, his position coach had to remind him:
Shady, these are your teammates out here.
"He told me to pull back a little bit, but when you get going, it's hard to let up sometimes," the senior safety said. "When you play offense, you get hit a lot. So when I come to the defense, I want to make some hits."
Can't blame him for that, especially given the false-start nature of his career. He has spent two years mostly playing special teams -- more hitting, naturally -- but little else. Now that he's a senior, he's anxious to make a bigger impact.
"It's gone by so fast, but it's my last year, and I'm going to give it everything I have," Salamon said. "I'm going to work as hard as I possibly can to keep getting better."
Three years ago, he didn't need to be much better. Salamon gained 19 yards the first time he ever touched the ball for the Gophers. His collegiate career was a couple of hours old when he scored his first touchdown. And his freshman season ended with the former Cretin-Derham Hall standout ranked third on the team in rushing.
But the former all-metro halfback never got to carry the ball again, and before the 2010 season, with the Gophers backfield loaded with candidates, he approached coaches with a request: Let me play defense instead.
Tough decision, since he knew it meant going to the back of the depth chart while he learned his new job. But "I never second-guess anything I do," Salamon said. "I made a choice and I stuck with it. It meant a lot of extra work, studying, watching extra film, but I knew I had to do it."