sundoA Editor: Stephen Hersh Ass magatzine sociate Editors: Ann Marie Lipinski, Elaine Fletcher inside: page five-books Number 14 January 9, 1977 7 DidBo'sboysbowt, o did the best team win? By BILL STIEG THE MICHIGAN FANS were an- gry. They pursed their lips and shook their heads as they walked through the Pasadena dusk toward the cars and buses that would take them back to their hotels. It was a long walk, and they were already tired. Most had been up since before dawn to watch a two and a half hour parade. Many hadn't eaten since noon, and the only things that they wanted were a few drinks, dinner, a few more drinks and good night. Their 2,000-mile trip suddenly seemed foolish, pointless and (wince) really a waste of money. Their team had lost again. They had come so far, just to sit in the famed Rose Bowl and Bill Stieg is the Daily's Sports editor. watch their Wolverines show the west coast team how the game was played. Instead,'they sat and fid- geted for three hours as Michi- gan sputtered, stalled, and in the final pressurized minutes, seemed to spring crazily apart like an over- worked Rube Goldberg contrap- tion. But it wasn't just this one game that upset the fans so. This kind =of thing happened every single year, they whined. Michigan would always go stomping through the season like an uncontrollable beast until it came up against a beast just as strong but a little trickier in that inevitably disappointing final game. Michigan would then try a few tricks, too, but end up looking like a four-year-old with a whiffle ball trying to imitate Sandy Koufax. And the Wolverines would lose, and the fans would get angry be- cause they think mighty Michigan should do better, and the coach would point out that the game was close and his system was still best, and the following September stu- dents would once again camp out, waiting in line for days to get a good seat to watch the same rou- tine again. None of this made much sense to the aggrieved Michigan fans as they searched the night for a ride home. Back up in the press box on the rim of the darkened stadium sat some more angry people. They, too, were shaking their heads - and hitting the typewriter keys a lit- tle harder than usual. But they were smiling the slight grin of someone who took a stand, then backed down, only to be proved right, after all. These midwest writers had long criticized Michigan's lack of finesse hurt the Wolverines in a close con- test. But coach Bo Schembechler assured the writers (and through them, the fans) that his team could pass when it had to. And everyone believed him. But come the game, Michigan couldn't pass when it had to, and those -who listened to Bo felt at once embarrassed for believing him and vindicated for their original stand. All the frustration of the past eight years of season-ending fail- ure welled up in the reporters (they like to see the team they cover win), as well as a new-found con- fidence in their football knowledge. They couldn't wait to nail Bo to the wall for his conservative tac- tics. Why, they - wanted to know, didn't he develop a passing attack so he could 'win the big games? Did he really think his team could run through Southern Cal as it went through Wake Forest and Northwestern? How long did he think he could fool people?' Michigan running back Rob Lytle gives USC linebacker Eric Williams a bear hug. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..>:::>:.:.":::;:.:.,..****. .. specifically, in its passing game - and said this deficiency would asn*f It as'tNirvana, u there was lots of Coors By RICK BONINO4 '$ His eyes were the color of the sand and the sea And the more he talked to me, he more he reached me But I couldn't let go of L.A.: City of the fallen angels -- Joni Mitchell '.* They didn't get their chance. Oh, Schembechler didn't avoid the press as he had after some past losses. In fact, he arrived at the crowded interview room a trifle early, while winning coach John Robinson was still up before the cameras and microphones, smiling and laughing. CHEMBECHLER,lookingdrawn and drained, stood in the door- way, watching Robinson. The USC coach finished quickly and stepped off the platform to greet Schem- bechler. They smiled, shook hands, and then Schembechler faced the audience. He had barely answered the first question when an insist- ent voice caught everyone's atten- tion. "Hey Bo," called a man in the third row. "I don't have a question for you, but I just had to tell you that I think your men played a helluva game out there today and you've done a great job with the team and I felt privileged to be able to see Michigan play." Schembechler grinned and said, "Well, thank you very much. You're not from the press, are you?" "No, sir, I'm just a fan." '.That's what I thought. hank you." Somehow, that took the wind out of the reporters' sails. Schem- bechler took a couple questions and gave long, wide-reaching an- swers that touched briefly on al- most every aspect of the game, in- cluding passing. Satisfied that he had covered everything, he excused himself. Schembechler could have gone Y FRIENDS AND I sighed and surveyed our surroundings. Sixty- five degrees and some sun wasn't exactly Nirvana, but it was close enough when compared to the frosty Winter Wonderland we had just left. Yes, we had joined 4,000-odd classmates, alumni and fellow Wolverine fans flying far from Angell Hall on the University's one and only Official Rose Bowl Tour. Guaranteed lodging .. . guranteed game and parade tickets and transportation .. , and, if you believe Bob Ufer and his ilk, a guaranteed national football championship for Michigan. How many angels can dance on the head of a pin? We felt the hotel management had. designed our room as an experimental mock-up to aid in answering that question. Wall to wall beds greet ed me, my two friends and an unexpected new friend someone'had decided we had to meet. A charming brick wall and a breathtaking view of a neighboring section of our hotel sealed the scenario. Not all our tour compatriots felt so cramped, but many en- countered a few similar surprises. Many color televisions produced only shades of black and white. The showers featured hot and cold< running water-alternatingly. See BEER, Page 4 into more detail, but most of the writers had enough to work with. They had their story and hustled back to the press box to start typ- ing: "Bo's stubborn, he won't pass, he blew another big game ... when will he learn?" But not once in all of that fren- zied analysis, questioning and criti- cizing did it occur to'the Michigan fans and reporters that maybe - just maybe - the other team was simply too good for the Wolverines; that perhaps Michigan's showing was admirable; that to come 'with- in one pass of tying USC was a remarkable feat, something to be proud of. But such resignation to defeat - no matter how hard-fought the game - doesn't sit well with the spoiled Michiganders who feel that any loss is a gross distortion of the natural scheme of things. How can anyone be better than Michi- gan? There's some kind of undercur- rernt that supports the view that TSC was too much to handle in this year's Rose Bowl. There was something about the way the Mich- imapn coaches would talk about the Trojans that suggested trouble. Thev'd shake their heads slightly and sound a bit in awe and more than a bit envious of the Southern Cal team. Pro teams had their eyes on no less than 15 of the USC players. But Bo and his assistants cer- tainly weren't going to send the wek before the game oohing and ahhine over the Trojans. Away from the microphones and note- books, however, they conceded a definite edge in personnel. Michi- gan would have to play a great game to win. Most telling'of all, though, was the behavior of the players after the gram'e. Tbhere, were no grim fares, no slowly shaking heads, no ma,1+eririg, cursing~ or kicking. They ,'mTpd for the TV cameras, spoke slowly and clearly for reporters, and nolitely thanked the well- wi ,hers gathered around. No one ran away or hung his head. They were proud of their per- formance - a lot prouder, it seem- ed, than their fans. They took the loss as well as can be expected, and seemed to hold the afternoon's events - indeed, the whole sea- son and football itself - in proper persnective. Still, Detroit sportswriter Joe Falls felt betrayed by Schemibech- ler: "He put an entire nation to sleen, and did indeed embarrass everyone connected with - his school." Schembechler felt otherwise: "These kids played hard and gave everything 'they had. You can't fault the way we tried ... Southern Cal is a great, great team. They're the best in the country." These two statements are flat- ly contradictory. One of them is wrong. A proud-and rightfully so-Trojan fan. The Pageant:Foats.ike'abutter By RICH LERNER WITH THE DAWN of every new year, Pasadena, California be- comes the nation's sixth largest city - but only for a few short hours. Nearly 1.4 million people, or more than twice the popula- tion of Boston, line the streets of this quiet suburb just to watch a parade pass by. Of course the parade's founders never had such grandiose visions in mind when they originated the annual event 86 years ago. In 1890 a few members of Pasadena's Val- ley Hunt Club (a group of locals that gathered each week for a fox chase) decorated their buggies, pa- raded them around, and took a few pictures to show friends back east that they could celebrate New Year's in the sun. Maybe, they rea- soned, they could even sell some land to their Eastern chums. But the parade quickly became a yearly event, and an excellent tourist attraction. In fact it grew chariot races after Fielding Yost's Michigan team so thoroughly over- whelmed Stanford that the game had to be called after only three quarters. But chariot races went out of vogue and the Association returned football to the Pasadena scene in 1916. Consisting of prominent Pasa- dena area residents, the Tourna- ment of Roses Association still di- rects and produces the parade and game. The typical Association member is a well-heeled Southern Califor- nia Republican attorney - a USC grad who may still be donating money to Rabbi Korff for the Nixon defense fund. When an As- sociation member tells a colleague a funny joke or story, an appropri- ate response is, "I haven't laughed so hard since Roosevelt died." Their favorite USC football play- er is Marvin Powell, the 6-5, 265- pound tackle from Fayetteville, North Carolina, whose own hero is William F. Buckley. Camping out for parade pomp and circumstance. sion begins to increase in Septem- ber, with the start of the football seannon.nd the selection of the ishing touches. Keeping things under . control alonn with the nolice are snme