Wednesday, September 2, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wolverine Sports--Page Three Wednesda~', September 2, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wolverine Sports-Page Three FROM ROOKIE TO LEGEND Bo's upsur ge rests on / personality on this and that Schembechler-'The Man' FEBRUARY 28, 1970 started out as a rather uneventful day in Michigan sports. The Wolverine cagers were playing out the tail end of their season against the Badgers of Wisconsin, in a game in which the main concern of the 7,000 Michigan partisans was not whether or not the Wolverines won, but how many points and how many rebounds superstar Rudy Tom- janovich (now playing for the San Diego Rockets) would collect. About mid-way through the first half, however, the fans were shaken out of their relative state of lethargy. At that point, during a Michigan time-out, the announcer at the scorer's table calmy clicked on his microphone and said: "We have a very special guest at today's game, seated in back of the Michigan bench. Michigan head football coach Bo Schembechler. The Michigan coach, stood up, smiled and waved his hand. Seven thousand fans stood up and gave him a warm and ex- 4 tended ovation. Everybody from the Crisler Arena security guards to the Madison sportswriters joined in the raucous, welcome. Several dozen small fans ran up to where Bo was. sitting and had him autograph everything from ticket stubs to chewing. gum wrappers. To the hard-boiled cynic, the above description probably doesn't mean too much. But to anyone who follows sports (es- pecially Michigan sports) with at least an occasional glance at the personalities involved, the description means a great deal. It means that in one short year, Bo Schembechler has moved from the status of a newly hired Big Ten football coach to be- come something of a legend. Schembechler's iaccomplishments are common knowlefige by now. An 8-2 record in his first year as head coach of the Wol- verines. A share of the Big Ten title, achieved by a climactic, emotional win over the then top-ranked Ohio State Buckeyes. A trip to the Rose Bowl in Pasadena last January. Coach-of-the- Year honors in every major poll in the country. Bo's heart attack on the morning of the Rose Bowl game against USC is also fairly commhon knowledge by now, too. Less well known is the character and personality of the men who resides behind the indefatigable smile and under the tilted baseball cap. What is this legend really like? Above everything else, what Bo Schembechler is about is football. One day last fall, I was talking to him about a student strike on campus over the issue of a student-owned, student- controlled bookstore (yes, Virginia, he's interested in that, too) when he turned to me and said:' "I guess I should know more about that. But during the football season, all I think about is football."' Football is also about all he ever has time for during the season. He has been known to put in 18 and sometimes 20 hours a day thinking and planning football strategy. He looks at game films over and over again, and his constant watching of last week's re-runs brings results. "It's amazing how much he knows about the game," Dick Caldarazzo, one of the starting guards on last year's team, said once. "You go in there thinking you know a lot, but then he'll point out something he saw in the game films you never would have thought of." Former manager Rick Kohn says pretty much the same thing. "He's incredible the way he'll pick things up from watch- ing the films," relates Kohn. "Like he'll watch a receiver pull up his shirt sleeve and say, 'There, he's the primary receiver every time he lifts his sleeve." eric siegel I typical comment about the Wolverine coach that almost all his players will attest to. A comment made last year by Henry Hill, the Wolverines' senior middle guard, is also! telling. When protests by black athletes were occurring at a number of schools last fall, an As- sociated Press writer, trying to determine if there was any latent antagonism at schools which had. been affected by the protests, asked Hill about the way players are treated at Michigan. "Bo treats everyone equally around here," Hill was quoted as saying. "Equally rough." That toughness was clearly in evidence at the Schein- bechler-run practices last fall. To put it mildly, Bo's prac- tices are a far cry from a grade school playground at recess. Still, you don't hear many complaints about Bo's toughness and his emphasis on discipline. One reason is that the players want to win, and if toughness and hard work helps them win, they're all for it. Another reason was summed up last fall by former captain and All-American Jim Mandich. "When you see Bo out there working the way he does," Mandich commented, "it makesyou want to work a little harder, too." As a gridiron taskmaster, Bo has sometimes been compared to his former mentor, the demon of the Buckeye State, Woodrow. F. Hayes. But there are strong indications that Schembechler relies a lot more on feeling and understanding and a lot less on' fear and coercion than OSU's Woody Walrus. "Bo is definitely well-respected," Kohn told me once. "But he's also well-liked."' Nowhere was the sense of personal affection and rapport between Bo and his players more obvious than in California on the day of the Rose Bowl game. The Michigan grid mentor had suffered a heart attack a few hours before the game and was unable to be on hand to coach the Wolverines. After the game, everyone in the Michigan lockerroom was talking about how much the loss of Bo for the game meant to the team. Not strategically. Not technically. But personally and emotionally/Senior defensive end Cecil Pryor summed it up best, saying, "It really affected us as a whole. 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." In an indirect sort of way, perhaps the greatest testimonial to Schembechler's ability to get along with people is the success he had in attracting new recruits to Michigan this spring. Confined to his house for two months after his heart attack and uable to devote as much time to recruiting as he would have liked to, Bo quietly talked to players from all over the country, on the phone, in his house, in hotel lobbies in Ann Arbor. He wound up signing 36 of his top 36 players.-You can't help but be- lieve that his personality, as well as record, probably had a great deal to do with his recruiting success. There are a couple of other incidents-that are revealing, too. At the beginning of last September, when everyone was talking about the long year that Michigan had in front of it and some were even talking about a fourth place Big Ten finish for the Wolverines, Bo took a quite different view. "This is not a rebuilding year," he kept insisting. "We have as as Schembechler also has a reputation for toughness as well knowledge, and the former reputation seems as well deserved the latter. "He's tough-there's no question about it," is a 1970 M' Football Schedule No grade school recess for Bo a lot of proving to do, but we'll have a good ball club." This view showed he had a lot of faith and enthusiasm to go along with his gridiron savoir-faire. It was a faith and enthusiasm he never lost all all year. After the Wolverines dropped a 40-17 decision to the Missouri Tigers that knocked them clear out of the national ratings, you ^ould hear him yelling clear to Ypsilanti. But he also kept in- listing, "This is a good ball club. They're working hard and they'll get back on the winning track." He said basically the same thing after the Wolverines lost to Michigan State in East Lansing. There is .a much less serious side to Bo Schembechler, too, a side that comes across quite often. Last October, I was talking to Bo after practice and said something about how a lot of people were expected in the Stadium later on for a big anti-war rally. Bo thought a minute and then smiled and said he wouldn't be there. "We're planning to wage a war, not end one," he said. A few weeks later, after Michigan had walloped Wisconsin, one of the Detroit writers asked Bo about his team's chances of going to the Rose Bowl. "I really haven't thought about it," he said. "The only one who's talking about the Rose Bowl is Ohio State, and they can't go." Then there is the story about the Michigan player who was being recruited by Schembechler when he was coaching at Miami of Ohio as well as by the Wolverines.! According to the story, Schembechler told the player, "What do you watt to go to Michigan for? There's nothing up there." The player came to Michigan anyway. When Schembechler came to Michigan, so the story goes, the player saw him and said, "Hey coach, what did you come to Michigan for? There's nothing up here." Schembechler reportedly said nothing. He just smiled and then laughed. -Daily-Sara K'rulwich Spring football's quieter Bo Sept. 19-ARIZONA Sept. 26-at Washington Oct. 3-TEXAS A&M Oct. 10-at Purdue Oct. 17-MICHIGAN STATE Oct. 24-MINNESOTA Oct. 31-at Wisconsin Nov. 7--ILLINOIS Nov. 14-IOWA Nov. 21-at Ohio State GROUND RULES: S Student football tickets go, on sale Students this year may charge their football tickets on their Student Account. The charge for the Home Season is $14. During Registration, Aug. 31, Sept. 1, and Sept. 2, they should go to the Student Football Tick- et windows in Barbour Gym- nasium and have their Football * Coupon validated. If this is not done, it will be necessary for the Student to come to the I.M. (Sports Build- inag) during their regular prior- ity day, pay $14 and have their Football Coupon validated and then get in line for their tickets. The seating preferences for students are determined by the number of years in attendance at the University. Your proper priority group will be indicated by your I.D. Card as follows: Group No. 4 - I.D. shows imprints F, G, P, A, J, K and J or the number 6 or less to the right of your name. Group No. 3 - I.D. shows, imprints P, A, J, K and Q. Group No.- 2 - I.D. shows imprints J, K and Q. Group No. 1 - shows a Q Imprint If the I.D. does not indicate proper priority please bring transcript at time to correct dis- tribution day. Group No. 4 - tickets be- gin: at the fifty yard line. Group No. 3 - begins at the end of No. 4. Group No. 2 - begins at the end of No. 3, etc." Exchange or distribution will be at the I.M. (Sports) Build- ing as follows from 8:30 a.m. take them to a special group window and the sbats will be assigned in the estimated mid- dle of their Priority Area. Pri- ority No. 4 groups will be issued in Sections 25 and 26. The pri- ority assigned to a group will be determined by the lowest priority of the group. All stu- dents should pick up on their regular day of priority distribu- tion to obtain proper seating. The Athletic Department will not be responsible for lost cou- pons or tickets. 4.sAthletic Cards for Student's Spouse may be purchased at designated w ind o ws in the Sports Building. Students pur- chasing tickets for their spouse will receive both tickets in the next lower priority area. He should, however, pick up the tickets on the regular distribu- tion day of his priority. The price is $18 and please make checks payable to the Michigan Ticket Department. ,_.__ ... _ __.. . . _.__.. . l after this date. Hours will be 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. 2. A Student may present his validated Football coupon with I.D. and three other validated Football coupons with I.D.'s to receive tickets at the regular dis- tribution windows. No more than four tickets may be picked' up at the regular distribution windows.' 3. Grouping of more than four will be permitted. A Stu- dent may bring as many vali- dated Football coupons and I.D.'ss as he wishes. He should 1 I I~~ ...~ Student Headquarters for MICHIGAN CAMPUS WEAR. SWEAT SHIRTS (including special orders for fraternities, sororities, dorms and clubs) JACKETS 'M' BLANKETS FOR SMALL FRY-Sweat shirts, Suits, Sweaters Ii. _~ tgan WOMEN'S GYM ATTIRE tK SHORTS BLOUSES SHOES ARROWS 34aitp BADMINTON BIRDS SWIM APPAREL :MS FIELD HOCKEY SHOES PHYSICAL EDUCATION MAJORS' UNIFOR ALL GOLF and TENNIS SUPPLIES. 4:30 p.m. Group No.. Sept. 3. Group No. 4 - Thursday, 3, Friday, Sep,. 4. Group No. 2 - Tuesday, Sept. 8. Group No. 1 - Wednesday, Sept. 9. The following rules will be strictly adhered to: 1. Students in all four priori- ties should pick up their tickets on the day of their priority group -distribution, if not, they will be issued tickets in the area being distributed on the day of pick-up. After Sept. 9, tickets will be. distributed at the Foot- ball Ticket Office, corner of Hoover and South State rSt., IS INTER VIEWING ON CAMPUS SEPTEMBER 3-10 1-4 P.M. WE NEED SALESMEN The nationally renown Michigan Daily is one of the few financially independent college newspapers in the nation. We have achieved this status by selling thousands of dollars worth of advertising annually, but we are not satisfied. The growth of the city of Ann Arbor offers us an unlimited oppor- tunity for our own growth, and offers you on-the-job experience MEN'S ATHLETIC SUPPLIES SHORTS, REVERSIBLE T-SHIRTS, WARM-UP SUITS SHOES for ALL SPORTS, EXERCISERS, PADDLE BALL PADDLES HAND BALL GLOVES, SQUASH RACKETS, TEAM UNIFORMS Complete Line of TENNIS and GOLF SUPPLIES FENCING EQUIPMENT WINTER SPORTS FUN ISO-KITS SKI JACKETS and PARKAS S SWISS SKI SWEATERS SKIS an ICE SKATES-MEN and WOMEN'S TRETCH SKI PANTS d BINDINGS SW . A + 1~- i.- VISS SKI BQOTS SKI RENTALS When YOU think of FUN-