The Michigan Daily - Sports Monday - April 2, 1990 - Page 3 ~& ,%Bo The former football god and coach * talks about his new lfe with the Tigers - '*" .1= Richard Eisen { Bo did football. Last year, Bo did basketball. Now Bo wants to try baseball. Former Michigan football coach and athletic director Bo Schembechler is presently in Lakeland, Florida as the President of * the Detroit Tigers. Schembechler coached the Wolverines for 21 years before retiring this past January. Daily sports writer Theodore Cox caught up with Schembechler this past Saturday to find out how he's handling life without spring football practice in Ann Arbor. Daily: First of all, give us an update of what you have been up to down there in Lakeland? Schembechler: Well, for a long time, I spent most of my time with the minor leagues, because the major team was not in here. See, we moved the whole operation down here. Everything that has anything to do with baseball, other than the stadium operations and promotions, we moved down here. So, I've just been functioning out of the offices here. 'A coach retiring is no different than any other guy on the campus that decides to hang it up.... Slowly but surely I'm fading into the woodwork.' D: I noticed Thursday, the Tigers decided to eliminate low-alcohol beer (about 1.9 percent alcohol) at Tiger Stadium and replace it with light beer (about 3 percent alcohol). You were quoted as saying that the team was forced to make the change. Were you in favor of the new policy? S: I think the thing that is most you've already noticed several things that you would like to change, but you're going to hold back this year and work with retiring President Jim Cambell. Is that true, are you noticing a lot of changes that need to be made? S: Well, I don't know about that. I don't think that if you start a job March 1st and you go into spring practice, there aren't a lot of changes you can make until after the season. These would only be organizational things and emphasis maybe, things like that. Right now I'm spending almost all of my time with general manager Bill Lajoie and Joe McDonald because I'm very much interested in the scouting: how we scout, how we recruit, how we sign players, how we develop them, what kind of coaching staffs and facilities we have in the minor leagues, because I know something about that. That's the most important thing to having a good team. I think in order to build a strong foundation, you have to do it through the scouting and the minor league system. So that's where I'm spending a lot of time. D: After last season, the Tigers obviously have to rebuild. Do you see the organization putting more emphasis on the minor league system? S: I promise you that, but you don't do that over night. For example, I think we have the 2nd pick in the June draft, and we don't draft again until 58 of 59. It's tough to say you're going to do it. It takes time to make sure you're making the right selections and so forth. I think from time to time you'll have to plug holes. You can't be sure because you could have a systbm that produces a lot of pitchers and not a lot of hitters or your system may not produce a catcher, so you have to go out and get a catcher. You can't be sure that you can always produce what you need out of your minor league system. But you're allowed to trade; you've got other ways to do things. If you're overloading in some positions and weak in others, you got that chance. We could never do that in college, whatever you recruit you got. D: Do you work with the major league players at all? S: Oh yeah, I talk with them, individually. I'm not in the locker room, no. I may stop in' once and awhile, but not often. I gave my whistle to Mo'. D: Here's a question that I have to ask you about. I was watching the news and I saw Tiger manager Sparky Anderson taking over the Lakeland stadium in order to do a Wheaties commercial. And, I thought, Bo would never do something like that at the start of the football season. S: Well, he took it over and I think he finished it at about two o'clock in the morning. I'm anxious to see it. No, but I wouldn't do that I don't think. D: Do you miss spring football at all? S: Yeah, I've called up there to find out what's going on and to find out who's doing what and how thing's are going. I think the real test will be September when they're ready to kick it off. That will be the true test depending on what the Tigers have done in the baseball season. Maybe we'll be in a race, I hope. D: Looking back at your retirement, were you surprised at how much attention you received? S: Yeah, a coach retiring is no different than any other guy on the campus that decides to hang it up. But you know, that's the way it's been ever since I've been there. So, I've learned to accept that, but slowly but surely I'm fading into the woodwork, except when guys like you still call me. D: You're still receiving praise three months later. I noticed Friday you received the 1990 Robert R. Neyland Award which is given to someone who just retired that has made a significant contribution to college football. S: Yeah, Robert Neyland is one of the great coaches of all time from Tennessee. He was the guy who said you can win games with the kicking game. He was a great proponent of the kicking game. In the south he was one of the great coaches of all time. So, I was quite honored. D: Let me ask you about the Michigan State steroid ordeal. Do you think if your team was using steroids, do you feel as a coach, you would notice those wrong-doings? S: Well, I don't know, because we would random test. We probably tested, average out, about 30 guys a month. If we had any suspicion of rapid weight gain or behavior patters that were not what the guy was really like, he'd become random. I still say the only sure way is to test. You can accuse and do all those other things, but the only positive way, and the greatest deterrent is still to test. I think that's been great for us and we haven't had significant problems with drugs, and that's the reason. It isn't anything other than that. D: Michigan State President Dr. John DiBiaggio came out and said this is exactly why he's against having the football coach double as athletic director, because now the fox is in the hen house. Do you think that poses a problem? S: No, I don't particularly think that's the problem. I mean, and I say, you have to believe and commit to random testing. Once you do that, then you will resolve your drug problems, but you must commit. If you do that, you don't have to worry about people accusing you. D: So are you having fun down there? S: Yeah, although it rained today. Hopefully we'll be able to get the game in today. We got Kansas City coming in here. If the games are here I'll go to them. I don't always go to the road games, like I didn't go up to 'I still say the only sure way (to detect steroids) is to test. You can accuse and do all those other things, but the only positive way, and the greatest deterrent is still to test.' Baseball City to see the game yesterday, but I went over to the minor league camp and saw Toledo and I saw Lakeland play. Another words there are five, sometimes six, Tiger teams playing everyday right here for me to watch. You know Mike Gillette's down here (former Michigan football kicker and baseball player). He'll play at Fayville this year. He'll be the catcher, he should be the first string catcher there. He's done very well. He can throw better than anyone they got in back of the plate. And they like him because he's a competitive kid. He's done a good job here. Some NBA predictions to fill a sports vacuum As March Madness fades into the sunset tonight with what promises to be another heart-stopping finish, a tremendous sports void rears its ugly head. Usually, now is the time when baseball takes over the hearts and minds of the general public, making us quickly forget that college basketball ever existed. Unfortunately, most baseball players are about as physically fit as Rosanne Barr right now. And obese comediennes playing exhibition games just doesn't cut it. In fact, the Tigers double play combination looks like Trammell to Whitaker to Divine. In addition, the players and owners continue to bicker over the roster size; right now, it stands at 24 men per team to open the season. In order to avoid injuries, managers will have to carry at least 12 pitchers, leaving only three bench players who can bat. Look for some pitchers to actually play some outfield in April. Thus, no one will be ready for the regular season, making April look like a docket full of exhibition games that really count. So, where can one turn? Forget the NHL playoffs, which perennially drag on longer than the Winds of War. Starting this Wednesday, 16 teams will lace up the skates for their one month oddessy towards the Stanley Cup. The Cup will be awarded in mid-May, when the only ice left from winter will be in the back of a Good Humor truck. In essence, the NHL playoffs are not a test of who's the best, but of who can stand up after playing hockey for yet another month. Hence, the only place left to turn to would be the NBA playoffs, a logical move considering the tournament has the old basketball juices a- flowin'. Thus, in celebration of finally finding a sport with which to occupy our time, I give my NBA playofff predictions. EASTERN CONFERENCE: The question here is not who will make the playoffs, but rather who will play the Detroit Pistons in the conference final game. Let's not kid anybody; with All-Star guard Joe Dumars out of the line-up until the second playoff series, the Pistons are still one of the league's best. Either Cleveland or Atlanta will be the eighth seed and sacrificial lamb for the Pistons. Both the Cavs and Hawks would be better off missing the playoffs and entering the lottery for Derrick Coleman. Regardless of the opponent, the Pistons will advance and play the winner of the 4-5 seed, bracket, which looks like will be the Boston Celtics versus the New York Knicks. Knick fans campus wide probably just winced, because the Knicks, who have crumbled faster than an Oreo cookie dipped in milk, haven't won in Boston in over four years. The Knick plunge, brought on by Mark Jackson's whining and Charles Oakley's broken hand, have allowed the Celtics to grab home court in this series. End of story, Celtics advance. Behind Michael Jordan's a thousand points of basketball, the Bulls will beat Indiana and then Philadelphia, which has had a tremendous season. But the Chicago Jordans will end up losing to Detroit in the conference finals - again. WESTERN CONFERENCE: Usually the question here would be, who's going to play the Los Angeles Lakers in the conference final. But, despite the fact that five Western teams (L.A., 53; Portland, 51; Utah, 50; Phoenix, 48; and the Spurs, 47) will win 50 games for the first time in NBA history, the Lakers will still leave this conference victorious. No one can stop Magic Johnson. No one can stop Magic when he passes to two more unstoppables, James Worthy and Bryon Scott. San Antonio is still too green to knock off the Lakers and Portland, the team which has hounded L.A. all year, lost to Magic and Co. by 29 points Friday. Utah might make it to the conference final this year, but, again, the: Lakers are just too damn tough. Look for them to beat Utah here and then beat the Pistons in seven games in June for the title. The Lakers will have the home court advantage and thus the impetus to win the whole shooting match. Or, forget the NBA playoffs, when does indoor lacrosse season start? important is that we are not going to serve full-bodied beer (about 6 percent alcohol) at the stadium. That's fundamental. The low-alcohol beer is apparently, according to beer manufacturers, a thing of the past. So we decided that if that's the case, then we'll just serve light beer. That's not a big deal really. D: Do you know why the Tigers started selling low-alcohol beer in *4 985? Was it because of problems with the fans? S: Yeah, but I can't give you the whole ramifications of that. But at that time they were serving full- bodied beer. But now there are other precautions that we use. After the §eventh inning you can't buy beer. We don't hawk it in the stands either. 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