I Page 10 -The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, November 18, 1987 Coaches blast Bucks N for booting bruised t Bruce; Bo bitter i ..~ ~ .9 ' + Jk - ,i It-' A. -rl By SCOTT G. MILLER While fired Ohio State football coach Earle Bruce staunchly defended himself yesterday, a long list of coaches expressed outrage at the firing. "I didn't win as much as Earle (lid, and I lasted 10 years," said former Buckeye basketball coach Eldon Miller. "So I feel pretty good today." Ohio State dismissed Miller two years ago despite only one losing season in 10 years. Miller attributes Bruce's firing to poor leadership at Ohio State. "Bruce's departure speaks to specific leadership. In this case, that leadership stands for nothing. I don't know who made that decision. "historically, Ohio State has operated with a good perspective on intercollegiate athletics a n d education." O T H E R Big Ten football coaches arc worried Bruce's firing reveals a bad perspective in college athletics. In his nine years as Buckeye head coach, Bruce is second to Michigan head coach B o Scheinbechler in conference victories and possesses a 80-26-1 overall mark. "I think we may have sent a message to all of college football that winning is, in effect, the only thing, and to win at all cost and at all times," said Northwestern head coach Francis Peay. "Bruce's record is impeccable," said Wisconsin head coach Don Morton, "so you just start to wonder. You begin to realize there is no coach in America who can stand up to the expectations of a naive public." "(Bruce has) done everything in NIICHIGAN 1987,w88 BASKETBALL PREVIEW*... ...FRIDAY IN WEEKEND MAGAZINE my judgment that a top football coach ought to do," s a i d Schembechler. "I think this has done irreparable damage, particularly to the profession." Schembechler feels coaches are becoming front men for t h e i r programs. He added that coaches, like politicians, must be too concerned with their image and television ability. "Most of us would just like to coach football and our kids," Schembechler said. Unfortunately for Bruce, he lacked strong public relations skills. Fans and alumni who did not like his personality, or lack thereof, waited for his team to slip before expressing their displeasure. Even with his team's 5-4-1 record this season, Bruce still cannot understand his firing. "I'm an Ohio State Buckeye. I have a great record. I've coached with integrity. I'm proud with the job I've done at OSU," said Bruce. "Other coaches have had one bad year and seemed to make it through. I don't know why we couldn't make it through one bad year." BRUCE'S affiliation with Ohio State spans four decades. He was a student, assistant coach, and then head coach. Bruce injured his knee in his freshman season, and then Buckeye mentor Woody Hayes convinced him to enter coaching. He has been a coach for the last 33 years and a head coach for 25 of those years. Despite Bruce's bad experience, his plans to continue coaching. "I'm a doggone fine football coach," he said. "I love to coach, and I'm going to coach some time, some place." Some time soon Ohio State will hire a new coach. And as Schern- bechler said, "The uproar will die in a month. The new coach will come in, and the process will start all over again." But the memory will linger for Bruce and other coaches who have similar experiences. "I've been through that personally at SMU many years ago," said Iowa head coach Haden Fry. "It's very frustrating. "I don't want to say anything (about Bruce's situation), or I'll have to clean my language up." Associated Press Ohio State football coach Earl Bruce walks off the Ohio Stadium field for the last time after Saturday's loss to Iowa. On Monday, Bruce was fired, effective after Saturday's game against Michigan. -CCHA Scorecard e Darren to be Different 'a4 BY DARREN JASEY OSU administers death blow to Bruce, football program Head coach Earle Bruce declared last Oct. 10 Ohio State football's darkest day. His Buckeyes lost to Indiana, 31-10, for the first time since 1951, dropping their record to 3-1-1. He was wrong. Monday was the darkest day for Buckeye football. In fact, it was the darkest day for Ohio State University. The Buckeyes not only lost their football coach, and athletic director Rick Bay, but, most importantly, they lost respect as an educational institution in the process. The dismissal of Bruce was shocking mainly because of its poor timing, and the absurd manner in which the University's upper brass fired him. The Buckeye coach was probably expecting a fond farewell some time after the football season anyway. As a Woody Hayes disciple and an Ohio State graduate he deserved to be treated with honor and respect. Instead, the Buckeyes slung mud in his face. School president Edward H. Jennings, under pressure from the school's board of trustees, fired Bruce two-and-a-half hours after Bruce told the press that he would be back to turn the Buckeye program around next season. The dismissal occurred after athletic director Rick Bay said Ohio State would honor the final year of Bruce's three-year contract next season. Jennings also ignored Bay's disapproval of the decision, forcing the athletic director's subsequent resignation. Incredible. The president of the largest University in Ohio - a man who supposedly maintains the educational well-being of the University - fires the football coach against the wishes of his athletic director. Something is wrong deep in the state of Ohio. Furthermore, the coach in question boasts an 80-26-1 record while maintaining a clean program over nine years, is the second winningest coach in the Big Ten, and has coached the Buckeyes to four conference championships. In fact, Bruce and Nebraska's Tom Osborne were the only coaches in the country to win at least nine games in the eight seasons prior to this one. In his first campaign, Bruce led Ohio State to an 11-1 record and was one point away from a national championship. In six subsequent Bay seasons he finished 9-3, followed by a 10-3 record in 1986. resigned This year the Buckeyes are 5-4-1 heading into the season finale in Ann Arbor. But Jennings said he fired Bruce for personnel reasons and not because of his poor record this year. Bruce doesn't buy either reason. "My boss Rick Bay didn't say anything about personnel reasons," Bruce said. "I don't think I was fired because of personnel reasons. Check my personnel records. That would be most interesting." Said Iowa head coach Hayden Fry: "I have no idea what motivated the decision to fire Earle. Power structure today leads to decision making. Decisions are not made by one man. Jennings probably was the figurehead." Most likely it was Bruce's lack of charisma that led an overwhelming amount of Ohio State fans and alumni to call for his release. Woody Hayes and Bo Schembechler, Bruce is not. But it is disgusting to think that fans, alumni, and members of the University's board of trustees must have been privately rooting for the Buckeyes to lose to give them a reason to let "old 9 and 3" go. Those within the Buckeye athletic program, andthe rest of the Big Ten, will not soon forget this ridiculous move. Jennings, the figurehead, may take more heat for this move than Bruce ever received. "As a guy who worries about the profession and where we are going, this is a problem," said Michigan head coach Bo Schembechler. Bay's classy resignation as Ohio State's athletic director may enable him to take over for Don Canham at Michigan, but if Jennings ever becomes available, Michigan will gladly look elsewhere for President Harold Shapiro's replacement. 4 Standings G oaltending GP GA Avg Pct. (overall) W Mich. St. (8-3-1) 8 Lake Sup. (9-2-1) 7 W. Mich. (7-5) 6 MICHIGAN (6-6) 6 B. Green (6-4-1) 5 Ferris St. (4-7-1) 4 111.-Chicago (4-6) 4 Ohio State (4-4-4) 2 Miami (4-8) 2 L 3 2 4 6 4 7 6 4 8 T 1 1 0 I 1 0 4 0 Pts 17 15 12 12 11 9 8 8 4 Muzz'ti, MSU Horn, WM U Stewart, MSU Greenlay, LSS Hoffort, LSS McKi'n, MIA Connell, BGU Depinto, UIC Williams,FSC Ryan, UIC Sharples, UM 6 16 9 28 6 19 6 18 5 18 7 27 5 22 4 15 9 37 7 33 1048 2.59 3.07 3.18 3.37 3.79 4.10 4.28 4.37 4.67 4.74 4.83 .890 .909 :868 .888 .870 .880 .836 .868 .848 .855 .859 Green DeCa Verm Fridg Parks Meha McRe Ande Ruth Brow Polilb Paluc Emer S taub( P'alum McCa DaPot Lso NelsC CCHA Lead Scoring GP G , WMU 10 12 irle, LSS 10 12 ette, LSS 1 0)I1 ,en, FS U 1 1 10 ,BGU 10 8 rry, BGU 10 9 eyn'ds, MSU 12 5 rson, OSU 10 0 erford, OSU 10 9 n, UOM 12 9 Io,WMU 10 5 h, BGU 10 3 son, BGU 1.0 7 )r, LSS 10 6 ibo, LSS 10 4 aughey, UOM12 8 )uraq, FSC 1 2 8 wood, UOM 12 7 n, UIC 10 7 ders A 9 9 7 8 10 8 12 17 7 7 11 13 8 9 11 6 6 7 6 Pts 21 21 18 18 18 17 17 17 16 16 16 16 15 15 15 14 14 14 13 FRIDAY'S GAMES Bowling Greenaat Ferris State Lake Superior at UIC Miami at Ohio State Western Michigan at Michigan * U.S. National Team vs Michigan State (at Joe Louis Arena) SATURDAY'S GAMES Bowling Green at Ferris State Ohio State at Miami Lake Superior at UIC Michigan atWestern Michigan SUNDAY'S GAMES *U.S. National Team at Michigan State * signifies non-conference matchup Recreational Sports OUTDOOR RECREATION POSITIONS AVAILABLE Students (including work study) are needed to staff the Department of Recreational Sports Outdoor Rec. Center at NCRB and the Nordic Ski Rental Center at Radrick Farms Golf Course for Winter Term. X-Country Ski experience and/or knowledge of outdoor equipment is preferred. Pay is $4.60 per hour. For more information call: 763-4560. To D or not to D2? AlE 1SSPEIALDEALS URICH PEjL 4"W/ THE Ride Ann Arbor Transportation Authority It's Required Riding! Give yourself a new view of the world. Let AATA take you wherever you're going throughout the Ann Arbor-Ypsilanti area. Whether its shopping, a movie or restaurant, or a part-time job, AATA service is convenient and dependable. For route and schedule information, call 996-0400. c'mon, thursday's classes aren't that important presents stanxle cOmcry TIM SLAGLE student comedians Earn 8 Credits This Spring in NEW HAMPSHIRE THE NEW ENGLAND LITERATURE PROGRAM MASS MEETING THURS., NOV. 19 8 p.m. Angell Hall Auditorium A for more information PROF. 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