wary 8, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY 'ur8 97 H IHIA AL w mo-vowom n -ur By ROBIN WRIGHT Associate Sports Editor One of the marvels of the Wolverines' 1969 football ieason was the absence of game in- juries.; Some attributed it to the stadium's new Tartan turf car- pet, some to the care of the new coaching staff, and others to fate. What ever the reason, it didn't prevail during the team's pre-Rose Bowl game workouts. The heart attack suffered by Coach Bo Schembechler w a s the biggest blow to the t e a m. Schembechler was hospitaliz- ed just three hours before game time. The trouble began on Tues- day - when he reported chest pains, although an electrocar- diogram showed no signs of a heart ailment. The Michigan mentor was hos- pitalized briefly, but released after doctors diagnosed the pain as an apparent muscle spasm in his esophagus., yes hu Schembechler then rejoined the team at the Passionist Fath- ers' monastery for two days of seclusion prior to the game. He led the team in a brief practice Wednesday at Brook- side Park, and then took them for their first look inside t h e Rose Bowl stadium. That was to be Schembechler's only look at the Rose Bowl. The youthful 40-year-old coach spent a restless Wednesday night at the monastery. After having breakfast with the team Thurs- day morning, he complained to the, team physicians of new chest pains and an upset stom- ach. Doctors advised hospitaliza- tion when another' electrocar- diogram revealed a change from the earlier diagnosis. Schembechler was not able to hear or listen to the game, al- though he received periodic re- ports from Athletic Director Don Canham, who listened to the game in a nearby room. rtM' Schembechler's physician, Dr. Haskell J. Weinstein reported yesterday that he is resting com- fortably in St. Luke's Hospital in Pasadena, where he was transferred Monday from t h e coronary care unit to a private room. Since his transfer, Schem- bechler has been able to s e e films of the game, and has re- ceived a visit from Southern California coach John McKay. [The Associated Press report- ed last night that Schembech- ler had talked on the phone yesterday with Michigan's As- sistant Athletic Director Bump Elliot and his top coaching aide Jim Young about the Wolverine football team.] He is not expected to return to Michigan for at least t w o weeks. The long nightmare of team injuries began on the last of four days, of practice in Ann in fowl Arbor when defensive back Bar- ry Pierson broke his arm. Pierson practiced lightly in California, using only one armn during workouts. Although he was dressed for the game, his arm was heavily bandaged and he did not start. Tailback Glenn Doughty was the next casualty, as he suffer- ed a knee injury on Christmas Eve and went into surgery on the 26th. He still has a cast and crutches. daily sports NIGHT EDITOR: ERIC SIEGEL More Sports-Page 9 The Wolverines' other star tailback, Bill Taylor, was not able to practice at full strength because of a painful muscle strain in the thigh. Fullback Garvie Craw devel- oped a charley horse, while Henry Hill and John Seyferth were also hurt during practice. During the game Taylor was injured again when he was knocked down in the first half and suffered a minor concus- sion. More seriously injured was split end Billy Harris, who made a diving attempt to catch an end zone pass from quarterb a c k Don Moorhead in the last 32 seconds of the game to s a v e Michigan from the 10-3 loss. Harris underwent surgery for knee damage at University Hos- pital last Saturday. Both he and Doughty will miss spring prac- tice. DAWSON, NAMATH MENTIONED The Mourning andy barbasfter Pro football stunned Ho's too much . .. 4 for a team to miss I T WAS HARD to get enthused at this year's Rose Bowl - es- pecially without Bo Schembechler directing the squad. Southern Cal did have a tough defense, probably the rough- est Michigan had faced all season. But it Is actually impossible to say Who had the better team since the Wolverines were play- ing without one main ingredient - a heart. Schembechler was not pnly the tactical leader of the team, caling every offensive play all season; he was their emotional leader as well. When the team rushed onto the field before a game, it was Bo who could be seen jumping the highest as the team huddled at the sidelines. When Bo first arrived in Ann Arbor, the immediate reac- tion was why did Michigan pick a coach who 1) had no national reputation and 2) was not a Michigan alumnus. But in his first year at Michigan, Schembechler answered both question-s - he was.,a.,winner. For the first time since Fielding Yost, a rookie coach took a Big Ten team to the Rose Bowl. Moreover, Bo did the near impossible feat of being voted coach of the year for his ' accomplishments. BO TOOK OVER a team which was supposed to be having a rebuilding year. Yet before the season had begun, Schembechler declared that he was going to do more with the team than just rebuild it. He went up against one of the roughest schedules Michigan has faced recently, and mastered it, culminating the season' by knocking -off his old coach's top-ranked team, Ohio State. A number of people thought that Bo's achievements were. 'not quite that spectacular - after all, they felt, former coach Bump Elliott had recruited all of the players. What they failed to realize was that Schembechler had taken a group of players ho had been devoted to another coach and changed them into a team so influenced by his personality that it was in tears when the members found out he wouldn't be coaching them in the Rose Bowl. He had taken a squad against what was supposed to be the top team in the country and possibly the top team in recent year; and he brought the team to such an emotional peak that they had played nearly flawless football and decisively con- quered an invlncable foe. He came out to California and endeared himself with the press. With what is supposed to be one of the most nerve- wracking experiences a coach can encounter, Bo jousted with Rose Bowl officials, handled sportswriters,. took his team to all the official distractions, and still prepared the team for the Rose Bowl Game. YET WHEN THE big moment arrived, Bo wasn't there. Instead of being on the field directing the team, Schembechler was in a hospital bed. Not even being able to watch the team on the television, he had to listen on the radio. And without Bo,.the team lost its greatest asset, the devotion for perfection It usually had. "We wanted this one more after we Y 4found out Bo was sick," 'explained quarterback Don Moorhead. "But we weren't going after people; we just weren't playing a real good game." Defensive end Cecil Pryor also felt that the team's play was hurt by Schembechler's absence. "It really affected us as a whole," he admitted. "Especially the younger players. They draw on Bo's domineering personality. When Bo was there we really had a great coach at all times, he was really behind you."' While none of the players could criticize the efforts of Bo's assistants, they were quick to admit that the diferrence was noticable. "Bo's been at it a long time," declared sophomore wlngback Preston Henry. "He knows instinctively what to call. The assistant coaches were a little indecisive; it definitely af- fected our play." MOORHEAD HAD HQPED that "maybe (the team) would be able to pull together to win it for him (Schembechler). But We were shocked. I think if it had happened earlier, we might have recovered, but finding out about it the morning of the game didn't give us time to recover." The team was unable to put Schembechler out of its mind, and as a result was unable to devote itself exclusively to the game. It seems almost inconceivable that any team would be able to overcome Southern Cal's stout defense with less than a full effort, and the Wolverines were in no condition to deliver one. The result of the Rose Bowl was inevitable. One Michigan player best summed up the situation. "He worked so hard to get us here, and then he wasn't with us. It was just too much to handle." By The Associated Press Profssional football w a s rocked yesterday with rumors and disclosures involving some of the game's top performers that threw a shadow o v e r next Sunday's Super Bowl. The name of Len Dawson vet- eran Chiefs quarterback was men- tioned along with those of three other quarterbacks among players who may be questioned in a broad federal probe of gambling now taking place in Detroit. T h e National Broadcasting Company which made the ireport based on information from an un- named federal official said the athletes were to be called in for questioning - "to f ill certain holes in the investigation a n d were not necessarily involved in any gambling activity." Besides Dawson the players named were Joe Namath of the New York Jets, Bill Munson of the Detroit Lions and Karl Sweet- an of the Los Angeles Rams. Also to be questioned the report said were Pete Lammons, Jets tight end, and Bob Devaney coach of the University of Nebraska foot- ball team. Pete Rozelle commissioner of pro football issued a statement saying that he had been advised by the Justice Department that no decision had b e e n reached on summoning any professional ath- letes before a grand jury. He said no disciplinary action was plan- ned. However, Dawson, 34, a pro quarterback for 13 years called a late Tuesday night press confer- ence at the Chiefs hotel head- quarters and admitted a casual acquaintance with Donald Daw- son of Detroit a restauranteur and no relation who was seized with gambling records and $45,000 in a raid by Internal Revenue' agents on New Years Day. "I have \k n o w n Mr. Dawson about 10 years," Dawson said in his Tuesday statement referring to his acquaintance with the De- troit restauranteur who has been charged in the investigation. "My only conversations with him in recent years concerned my knee injuries and the death of my fa- ther." Billboard Nd NBAk NHL Baltimore 121, Detroit 116 St. Louis 2, Philadelphia 2, tie Chicago 7, Detroit 0 Milwaukee 138, Cincinnati 119 Nei York 5, Pittsburgh 3 Atlanta 112, Boston 106 Minnesota 3, Toronto 3, tie New York at San Francisco, inc. Boston at Oakland, inc. U Be a Counselor. * IF you are in the School -of Education or working towards a Teaching Certificate ® IF you have an hour or more a week to spend helping others * IF you would like to meet some interest- ing people and have a nice time while you're at it " IF you'd like a cup of coffee or a bottle soda (pop) THEN, STOP BY TH E Educational Students' Advising Office (Room 2009 U..H.S.) OR Call 763-3503 -THANKS 1 -Daly-hoas R Cp The Wolverines' Wild Bunch moves in Fate strikes wolverines inRose Bowl traged THE U-M TAE KWON DO ASSOCIATION ANN ARBOR RECREATION DEPARTMENT Present EVERY DAY, ALL YEAR TFKwON " ITDO KOREAN KARATE The Ultimate in Self-Defense and Physical Fitness -Spectators Are Welcome During Class Hours- (Continued from Page 1) the entire Rose Bowl trip was per- vaded by the eerie feeling that the Trojans had invoked one of their oracles to turn the gods against their foes from far off Michigan. The Wolverine lockerroom scene after the game was indicative of this. First, defensive coordinat- or Jim Young, Schembechder's temporary replacement as, h e a d coach, got up and told the writ- ers what Schembechler's absence had meant to the team and him- self. Then he introduced the t e a m doctors, Gerald O'Connor a n d Robert Anderson, who gave their own press conference on ScIlem- bechler's medical status. It could have been a scene out of The Doctors, Medical Center, or some other bedpan drama. But it wasn't. It was real life. I never made" it over to t h e Southern Cal dressing room. From what I heard it was par for the course for a victorious lockerroom after a bowl game: a lot of "tre- mendous efforts" and "fine per- formances" quoted by coach and player alike. Sort of similar to the a'ka-seltzer commercial about the "Great" game. Besides, the USC people were talking about football strategy, the "Wild Bunch", and who was num- ber one; all of which were petty and 'unreal for the Wolverines, whose main concern was not the game gone past b'ut the C o a c h they wanted back. Young, like his boss Schem- bechler and the rest of the Mich- igan coaching staff, is a man who thinks football every minute of every waking hour of his day. But at that moment in the lockerroom he broke his pattern. "I h a v e nothing in my mind about foot- ball now," he told the gathered throng. "I can only think about Bo." The Wolverines weren't think- ing about Bo's absence in terms of post-game rationalizations. Their feelings were feelings of remorse, of sadness for their coach's plight. "After all the hard work he (Schembechler) did to get us to the Rose Bowl, he could't behhere to reap the rewards of his ef- forts," stated Captain Jim Man- dich. Quarterback Don Moorhead ech- oed similar sentiments, "I'm so sorry for Bo. He worked so hard for us all season and now this has to happen." The tragedy which happened in the Pasadena spectacular will long be discussed by Michigan follow- ers. Had Schembechler been pre- sent on the sidelines when his teah was twice driving deep into Trojan territory in the f o u r t h qurter, the outcome might have been different. Mandich aptly pointed out in the lockerroom that Schembechler called every single play during the regular season. Brian Healy's missed tackle also will be remembered for some time to come,. even though it is an un- fair appraisal of Healy's value to the team as a starter three years in a row. It wasn't defense, but rather offense which statistically killed the Wolverines' chances. As manager Rik Kohn lamented the night of the game, "You're not going to win too many ball games with three points on the score- board." In the end, I wouldn't pin the loss on any worldly cause like a missed tackle or stalled offense. Instead, I turn around, look up into the clouds, and shake my hand at Mount Olympus and that damn Trojan deity. Scores Duke 78, Wake Forest 72, o.t. North Carolina 78, N.C. State 69 LaSalle 108, Syracuse 101 St. Bonaventure 96, Loyola, Balt. 52 Villanova 87, Fairfield 59 Air Force 74, Concordia, Minn. 59 Georgia Tech 96, Clemson 84 There will be a organizational meeting of Residence Hall Ath- letic Managers in the Boxing Room of the IM Bldg. today at 4:30 p.m. There also will be on organ- izational meeting for Social Fraternity Athletic Managers in in the Wrestling Room of the IM Bldg. at 8:00 p.m. tonight. JOIN ANY TIME CO-EDUCATIONAL HOURS: Week Days 7-9 P.M., Saturday 10-12 Noon PLACE: Angell School on South University at Oxford HEAD INSTRUCTOR: James B.C. Yu, Korean Black Belt INFORMATION: Cal 665-8822 or 769-4619 'A, is ULRICH'S Ann Arbor's busiest bookstore ? THERE must be a GOOD Reason- I TRY FOLLETT'S FIRST! Aup to 331/3%, From 'N. FUN WORKING IN EUROPE iawni has come to Paul's Rathskeller 35% E. Front St., Monroe ... i.: y :. :;:;; 14 I I