-~ '~ IF w w wi Cs . Bo Schembechler, the winningest active coach in Division 1-A football, has been unable to match his regular season success in Bowl games. Is he jinxed, or just a victim of circumstances? By Adam Martin T HREE WINS, 10 LOSSES. The record stands alone like a pariah. It fits Bo Schembechler and Michigan football about as well as a tie- dyed T-shirt fits a 1980s yuppie. But no matter how awful the record looks, it is Bo's to keep, the product of three glorious New Year's Days and 10 hellish nightmares. Glenn E. "Bo" Schembechler, the heart and brains of Michigan football for the last 18 years, has one, or make that 10, noticeable blemishes on his 166-39-4 career record at Michigan. Bo has seen unparalleled success in his 24 years of coaching, but after 10 post-season losses, he may forever go down in history as the victim of The Bowl Jinx. The whole thing is kind of ironic. Six times Schembechler has traveled to Pasadena to meet the best of the PAC-10 in the Granddaddy of 'em all, but only once has everything come up roses. In six other Bowls - The Orange, Gator, Bluebonnet, Sugar, Holiday, and Fiesta - Bo has done better, but only by one; his Wolverines won the Bluebonnet Bowl in 1981, a 33-14 victory over UCLA, and last year's Fiesta Bowl, a 27-23 come-from-behind win over Nebraska. Meanwhile, Schembechler became the winningest active coach in Division 1-A football. Explaining Bo's Bowl losses is like explaining the origin of life on earth. No one knows exactly why Schembechler has lost so often on Jan. 1, but the defeats are facts. The Bowl Jinx, on the other hand, is the creation of self-professed sports experts. It is a man-made product of losses so painful that Schembechler will live with it until he stops coaching. "It's there, it's been established," Schembechler said with a chuckle, accepting the fated hex as if he were a witch doctor's kewpie doll. "We're doing everything we can. We upped the record to .300 last year. Maybe we can do a little better and improve that percentage of victories this year." Michigan will have a decided advantage compared to past Rose Bowls when it meets Arizona State in a neutral site Jan. 1. No Trojans or Bruins will fill the Rose Bowl with 80,000 faithful breathing hatred for the animal from the East. Not this time. This time the Sun Devils (the Sun Devils?), are the foe. In the past the Wolverines were not so lucky. The home- field, grass-field advantage was not the deciding factor in Michigan's six Rose Bowl defeats, but it did not make the Wolverines' task any easier. In 1977, after losing to Southern Cal 14-6, Schembechler reportedly barked: "I'd like to see them come out here for two weeks to prepare to play us in Michigan Stadium. That was a home game for them. Maybe playing on natural turf made a difference." Because of the Rose Bowl's proximity to PAC-10 schools, the Granddad of New Year's Day will never be a home game for Michigan. But that's hardly an excuse because Michigan had a decent chance to win every Bowl game it has played during Schembechler's tenure, with the exception of the 1983 Rose Bowl when an injury to starting quarterback Steve Smith forced the untested, inexperienced Dave Hall into the post-season fire. Expecting Hall to win the game for Michigan was like "Expecting Luke Skywalker to conquer the Empire with a paper clip," quipped Michigan Daily columnist Barb Barker. Michigan lost 24-14 to UCLA that year. The Wolverines had little chance to capture Schembechler's second Rose Bowl victory when, after Michigan made it 10-7, the Bruins jumped to a 24-7 lead in the fourth quarter thanks to the quarterbacking of Tom Ramsey and a Blanchard Montgomery interception. OS ANGELES HOUSES two perennial football powers, and although UCLA is Michigan's most recent nemesis, its most hated is Southern Cal. The year was 1970. In his first season at the Wolverine helm, a young Schembechler muzzled his detractors by beating his former mentor Woodie Hayes and earning a trip to Pasadena. Then tragedy struck. New Year's morning the Wolverines were informed that their beloved coach, the emotional backbone of their team, had suffered a heart attack. There wasn't time to recover and win it for Schembechler. USC's "Wild Bunch" defense, perhaps the toughest unit Michigan had faced all season, stifled the Wolverines, and the Trojans came away with a 10-3 win. Michigan held tough, but seemed indecisive without its captain running the ship. "On New Year's Day 1970, the Wolverines lost their first Rose Bowl game ever... and truly proved themselves to be the Champions of the West," wrote Daily columnist Bill Cusumano. The "Victors" returned to Pasadena in 1972 to face not USC nor UCLA, but the Stanford Indians, who then Daily Sports Editor Mort Noveck called "the West Coast intellectual playboys." Schembechler left Pasadena with an 0-2 Rose Bowl mark after Stanford kicker Rod Garcia booted a 31-yard field goal which lifted the Indians to a 13-12 triumph. Many called the loss intolerable because Stanford, which ranked football below intellectual pursuits, had upset the 11-0 Wolverines. In the end, however, Stanford, without a centerfold, had beaten Michigan at Michigan's game - football. Schembechler had a chance to redeem himself and his team in 1976 when Michigan met Oklahoma in the Orange Bowl. Earlier in the day the Wolverines had watched UCLA upset first-ranked Ohio State, so when kickoff came around that evening in Miami, Michigan and Oklahoma were playing for the national championship. By midnight the Sooners were the best team in the country. At the time Schembechler said the Wolverines were not good enough to beat a team the caliber of Oklahoma, but that didn't make the 14-6 loss any easier. "We had been very good in '72, '73, and '74 but never went to a Bowl game," remembers Jack Harbaugh, father of current Michigan quarterback Jim Harbaugh and former defensive back coach under Schembechler from 1973-79. "Finally (in 1976), we went to a Bowl game, and except for a play or two, we could have won." Excepting a play or two, Michigan could have won many more than three its last 13 Bowl games, but as Harbaugh put it, "The problem was we didn't do the things we needed to do." One of those things was pass effectively. In the 1970s Schembechler's teams relied on a well-developed running attack. Yet each successive Bowl loss left fans and writers clamoring for a passing game that could overcome defenses which stopped the Wolverines on the ground. Against Oklahoma Michigan completed 10 percent of its passing plays, two of 20 to be exact. Freshman quarterback Rick Leach led the Wolverines that year, and four Bowls later Leach was still engineering the Michigan offense but he left Ann Arbor without a Bowl victory. In 1977, 1978, and 1979 Michigan made three consecutive trips to the Rose Bowl, and Schembechler extended his Bowl record to 0-6 after sandwiching a loss to Washington between two losses to Southern Cal. Harbaugh recalls the first USC defeat in 1977 as the most painful. "We had been on such a high, everybody, after beating Ohio State 22-0," he said. "Then we came in and we lost, and I don't remember ever going from such a high to such a low." Just like the year before, Michigan lost 14-6, only this time to their fated rivals the Trojans. A year later the Wolverines found themselves in a 24-0 hole against Washington, and it was this game Harbaugh felt Michigan should have won above all others. In 19 minutes Bo's boys scored three touchdowns and nearly won. But a dropped Leach pass and a Leach interception ended it for Michigan, and once again Schembechler flew home without a Bowl victory. The gutwrenching pain of injustice singed the Wolverines in 1979 when Charles White's Phantom Touchdown lifted USC to a 14-3 lead in the second quarter, and proved to be the winning score. Though everyone connected with Michigan football dicounted the defeat, White's apparent fumble at the two-yard line did not faze Schembechler. "The misconception is that we would have won if White had not fumbled," he said. "We would have had the ball at the one or two-yard line and we hadn't been killing USC that day." What White's fumble-non-fumble did was add to notions of Bo's Bowl Jinx, a spell he temporarily broke in 1981 with a 23-6 victory over Washington in the Rose Bowl after an injury-marred Gator Bowl loss to North Carolina the year before. "The best one was the one we won," Bo recalled. "All those years of losing and we finally got one." Schembechler made it two before the end of the year, trouncing UCLA 33-14 in the 1981 Bluebonnet Bowl, but his winning ways came to screeching halt the*next year against UCLA when Smith hurt his shoulder in the Rose Bowl. The Jinx had returned. Bo's next two Bowl games, the Sugar vs. Auburn and the Holiday vs. Brigham Young, were winnable, but in both games Michigan could not hold its lead nor prevent game-winning, final-drive scores by the opposition. Auburn, despite a stalwart Michigan defense, managed a 19-yard Al Del Greco field goal with 0:23 left on the clock to insure a 9-7 win. Brigham Young, powered by Robbie Bosco's passing, sent Bo home with a 2-10 Bowl record after successive drives of 80 and 83 yards gave the Cougars a 24-17 victory. NEW YEAR'S DAY Schembechler can increase his post-season winning percentage to .400 with his second career Rose Bowl victory. A win against Arizona State would detract from the ill-fated Bowl Jinx, at least until next year. Some, including Jack Harbaugh, deny a jinx exists. Harbaugh considers each of Michigan's Bowl losses as just one game at one particular time in history. "That we got there" was enough, he said. But Harbaugh admits that earning a Bowl berth doesn't really suit Schembechler, a man, a myth, who wants to win above everything else. "There has never been a game that he hasn't competed every time out. Never mind if it's the Rose Bowl or a game of touch football out back with the kids," Harbaugh said. With such a competitive edge, is there a chance Bo will ever raise his Bowl record to a respectable .500? "The answer to that is no," Schembechler said. "I'll go down as a losing coach. How in the hell in would you make up all those losses?"UN Schembechler (al Fiesta Bowl Victo Bowl record: 'It's there. (The B established. We'n can. We upped tI year. Maybe we ( improve that per( year.' Martin is a Daily Associ PAGE 8 WEEKEND/DECEMBER 5, 1986 WEEKEND/DECEMBER 5, 1986