HE'S A third-team
All-America safety and an electrifying punt returner, and he certainly puts
some fight into the Irish. Notre Dame senior Tom Zbikowski was once a fearsome
Golden Gloves boxer, going 75--15 before winning his pro debut at Madison
Square Garden last year with a 49-second KO. So, if the Irish find themselves
at an especially low point (they lost to Georgia Tech 33--3 last week, and this
Saturday face No. 17 Penn State), the 6-foot, 207-pound Zbikowski may be the
man to get them up off the canvas.
On the difference
between landing a knockout punch and a big football hit
A knockout, that's
the end of the fight. You've won. A big hit, you've got to get up for the next
play. That receiver might come back and try to score on you.
On how he became a
Notre Dame fan
I grew up near
Chicago [in Arlington Heights, Ill.] and the first college game I watched was
Florida State--Notre Dame in '93. My older brother [E.J.] was a Florida State
fan—I don't know why. I had to cheer against him. I didn't follow college
football, that was the first time I found out what Notre Dame was and what the
program was about. I just cheered against my brother, knowing he'd beat me up
later.
On his charity,
Tommy Z9 Foundation Inc.
My mom and I
started it after the Madison Square Garden fight. E.J. has had brain-tumor
surgery, so I wanted to give money for research. He [benefitted from] the
cutting edge of technology when he had surgery—at age six and then at nine—and
that's why he's alive today. When things like that happen, you want to give
back.
On getting his
first tattoo this spring
It's on my left
rib cage. I had a brother, Steve, who died [at one-week old on Oct. 6, 1980, of
transposed arteries]. It happened before I was born. The tattoo is the number
six and has my mom's rosary wrapped around it. We're Catholic. We go to church
every Sunday as a family.
On how he got
started as a boxer