The Michigan Daily- Monday, October 22,1990- Page 11 Albom ;The nation's top sportswriter offers his i Mike Gill views on loc Mitch Albom has been a colum- nist at the Detroit Free Press since '1985.Writing in his unique, ersonal style, he won the A.P. Best Sports Writer award the past four tyears. He has two books in print: "The Live Albom," a collection of his articles and "Bo," the autobiography of Bo Schembechler which he helped produce. "The tjive Albom II" is scheduled to be released this month. Daily sports writer Adam Miller interviewed lbom during a break in his WLLZ orning radio show. Daily: Do you think that there should be an instant replay system of any kind? Albom: On the one hand, I like it in the NFL, but in the NFL there Is money riding on the games. You know, guys' salaries and all the money you get for winning playoffs and things like that. In college, sup- osedly anyhow, there is no money riding on the games so that I think if you put in instant replay, it starts to suggest that the game is even more important that it's being taken and I think college sports are probably taken too importantly as it is right now. So, because of the impression that it would give, that you know, now we've got instant replay and ings and it's so critical to win, I'd obably say I wouldn't like to see it although certainly in games like (the Michigan-Michigan State game), you wish you had one. I especially think the idea of one instant replay causes more problems than it solves. What if you use that one replay earlier in the half in that game and then comes that critical play in the last play, or next to last slay in the game, and you don't have it left? You feel like a fool for hav- ing used it on a play that was only in the middle of the field, you know, people start second guessing that. You shouldn't have used the replay. You should have saved it. I think that if you have it, you have it. If you don't, you don't. I don't like the idea of just having one. D: I'd like to discuss the locker *oom controversy. A: You have to understand that reporters' presence in the locker room is not about interfering with players in a private ceremony. It re- ally has to do with timing more than anything else. The reason reporters got into the locker room in the first place is because, let's take a game where, let's say we're covering the . etroit Lions. And they're playing nLos Angeles, on the road. The gme is over. They have about. 25 utinutes from the time the game is over, let's say a half hour, from the ine the game is over to the time they get on the bus to go to the air- rt to leave. Now, if you don't talk tq them while they're getting dressed in the locker room, you don't talk to Ghem because they're on the bus and hey've flown home and you've got 1 stay there and write your story. That's how this stuff got invented. The chance to talk with players in the locker room because you're on deadline, you've got to grab them Wlile you Ean. And that's the only place you can do it. And for all this lofty talk about prrciples and ideals, that's really where all this locker room stuff be- san. Having accepted that, and I think that the press in the locker Ak Ad kerrooms and other issues room does a lot for the players in terms of publicity and what ulti- mately gets them money in terms of endorsements and contracts and things like that, I would expect the players would tolerate that as part of their job and part of what comes with those multi-million dollar con- tracts that they talk to reporters after a game. If anything, I think that's a positive and a benefit of their job as 'I think that the press in the locker room does a lot for the players in terms of publicity and what ulti- mately gets them money in terms of endorsements and contracts...) would expect the players would tolerate that as part of their job.' opposed to a negative. That's where it sprung up and as far as who be- longs in there, we all belong in there. Reporters belong in there. Reporters can be men and women and as long as you allow reporters in, then you have to allow all re- porters in. That means male and fe- male reporters. That means Black, white, Hispanic reporters. That means young and old reporters. If someone is qualified and credentialed, they have to be allowed in. They can't make distinctions between the two. It's either all in or all out. D: How do you see the current controversy resolving? A: I think it will just blow over quite frankly. I think it's just sort of a flavor-of-the-week controversy and in a couple of weeks there will be something else to worry about. I think that the players have used this as a chance to try to get reporters out of the locker room period because they don't like them in there. But I think very few of them actually have that strong a feeling about women one way or the other. I think they just saw this as an opportunity to drive reporters out of the locker room if they could and it's not very hard to put on a towel or to get dressed in a different room if you're really, really bothered personally, or morally, or ethically, by the pres- ence of a woman in the locker room. A ni I think that it will just kind of blow over. D: How do the reporters feel in there? Are they at all uncomfortable? A: Sure. I'm uncomfortable ev- ery time I go in there. But, that's the only chance that I get to gather in- formation. It's not a great environ- ment. It's an embarrassing, frustrat- ing, crowded, hot, sweaty, uncom- fortable environment. But if that's the only place that you can find out what happened on that third down play when he thought he had the ball and then he dropped it. I can't speak for the guy. I'm trying to gather in- formation so I'm accurate in my re- ports and if I just observe something that I see up in the press box and don't go down and talk to the guy and write about it and it appears in the newspaper in front of one and one-half million people in that state and I got it wrong and then the guy says to me, "Why didn't you ask me about it? I would have told you." Well, you know, I obviously didn't do my job if I could have asked about it. If they close up the locker rooms, how am I going to ask him about it? So, yeah, it's uncomfort- able for both sides probably but it's a necessary evil. D: Just a couple of general re- porting questions. There's a lot of talk about bias in reporting recently. I know you were questioned about your bias toward Bo after you wrote his book. I know Joe Falls just wrote one with Chuck Daly. When does the personal attachments of a reporter to his subject interfere with his objectivity? A: I think it's an individual question. You can't say when it does. Sometimes people have biases toward athletes or coaches and they don't have to have written a book with them. They don't have to have done anything with them. They can be biased one way or the other just from personal opinion. My feeling on the Bo book is that I had a pretty strong opinion of Bo and knowledge of Bo long before I ever wrote that book. And I think if you were to go back and look at my work before that book on him, and my work after that book on him, you would see complete consistency. I never really changed my view and never really changed my attitude. I think that that's the key. You have to trust your own instincts. You also have to take certain precautions, such as w did not work on that book while the season was going on so that we would never have a day where, you know, they played a game and then the next day we had to do something with the book because that could maybe influence my actual reporting on him at that point. You don't want to ever risk that. When we worked on the book, it was the off season. I wasn't writing about Schembechler to begin with and by the time the season started, the book was all done, finished, and in. There was nothing either one of us could do about it. So, we tried as hard as we could to avoid any head-to-head conflicts unlike Joe Falls who wrote that book and talked about writing it with Chuck Daly during the playoffs last year. I don't know how he did that in good conscience. He sometimes wrote in his column that he was working on the book that day and there was a game the next day. But everybody is entitled to their own approach to it. I still think the question is your own ethics and your own morality and then primarily what your newspaper feels about it. And if my newspaper or the higher ups in the newspaper had said to me we don't want you to write the book, I never would have done it. They did not say that. They were en- couraging and felt trusting, I guess is the right word, that I could keep my perspective on the guy. In fact, I know my subject Schembechler a hell of a lot better now and under- stand the things he does a lot better now than before we worked on that thing. That's almost inevitable and I hope that I can use that when in the future I have to write about him in terms of being correct about what I'm saying. Ultimately that's what you want to be when you're a re- porter of any kind. You want to be correct and I know now that I would be a lot more correct in the things that I said about Schembechler and I wouldn't be afraid to criticize him. D: One final question. What is, in general, your approach to sports? I talked to Bernie Smilovitz and he said that he never takes anything that seriously. He said that "we're not splitting the atom here" when I asked him about "We got high- lights" and that kind of thing. So, what's your view and what do you think the healthy view toward sports should be? A: I agree with Bernie. We're not splitting the atom, but I still think it's an important walk of life and people who read it take it seri- ously. My operative word is per- spective. Keep everything in its per- spective. When something is really big, it seems unbelievable. I still try 'I still think the question is your own ethics and your own morality... If my newspaper or the higher ups in the newspaper had said to me we don't want you to write the book, I never would have done it.' to keep it in perspective that, you know, every day there is a team winning a championship, there's 50 people dying of hunger some place. Let's not turn this into the biggest thing on earth. And by the same to- ken, when a player gets arrested for drugs, or gambling, or something like that, let's not act like our own child came home and admitted that he murdered somebody. I mean, these are just people and they're like any other people in American soci- ety and some of them are good and some of them are bad and many of them have faults. The same faults that happen to a lot of people when they get money young and we shouldn't be so shocked and dis- mayed by this stuff. It's serious, but not life ending anymore than drop- ping a football in the end zone shouldn't make a kid feel like he's let down the whole world when something like that happens. So, perspective is the operative word and I think humor is a good idea. Does this picture look familiar? It's Albom's column head photo, courtesy of the Detroit Free Press. Delany fails as leader of prestigious Big Ten The Big Ten is in shambles. That's the simple truth. And I don't mean it is messed up because Michigan is not remotely near the top of the conference standings and certainly won't be the Big Ten's rep- resentative in the "Granddaddy of Them All." In fact, if that was the only problem, a cure would be much easier. Instead, the Big Ten suffers from faulty leadership, a lack of direction, and a general chaos surrounds its peo- ple and representatives. Let's start with Big Ten Commissioner Jim Delany. As the story goes, Delany learned of the invitation accorded Penn State University to join the Big Ten in a newspaper. Yep. In the newspaper. Now, that's what I call putting forth visionary leadership. In reality, it really is good eyesight - as well as hand-eye coordination to be able to turn the page when it says, "Continued on page 4." In other words, some newspaper scooped the commissioner about the di- rection his conference would be headed in the next century. I guess it also shows the respect the presidents of the universities have for him. "Be good Jim, we'll tell you all about it after it's announced. Now go play with your Play-Dough." Bo Schembechler wrote in the final chapter of his newly released paper- back version of "BO" some stinging thoughts on the new commissioner. "This Delany is bad news, and people should know it," Bo wrote. Schembechler also penned, "He's not a football guy. He has no real background in the game.... The other coaches in the Big Ten should know what kind of person they're dealing with." Bo made these comments because he believes Delany meddles with the officiating. Delany made a laughingstock out of himself and the Big Ten by issuing Schembechler a reprimand for his Rose Bowl tirade - after he had retired from football. Of course, when Bo received the reprimand, he wet his pants and began shaking in his boots. Scores of people showed up at his house in outrage that the coach would ever act like such a Cromagnon to draw the wrath of a BIG TEN REPRIMAND! But more important to the state of college football today are the armtwisting policies Delany has instituted on officials. Schembechler was told by former supervisor of Officials Gene Calhoun that Delany told the of- ficials he wanted several Illinois players watched for overaggressive behav- ior, and the Michigan coaches kept in check when the two teams met last year. "Bo, he was trying to mindset us," Calhoun said, "You can't do that to officials." Of course, officials had a little something to do with the fiasco that took place in Ann Arbor a week ago. They botched a call. And the week before that - the same crew allowed a forward lateral go unnoticed, which let Illinois defeat Ohio State. Maybe the crew was too focused on overaggres- sive players that they missed the actual play. Or maybe they all made sure John Cooper or Gary Moeller didn't step too far out of their coaching boxes. These same officials had to be told by Tripp Welborne that Michigan State won the coin toss at the start of the game. They believed otherwise. With so much controversy on the final play of Michigan's loss to the Spartans, reporters asked that a pool reporter be sent to the officials dressing area to hear their explanation. Michigan Sports Information Director Bruce Madej took the job. The next day, Madej received a call from the Big Ten. telling him that a pool reporter is not allowed in that situation. Why? Well, you are only allowed to talk to officials about rule interpretations, not judgment calls. That's ludicrous. Maybe an official could have explained why he made such a call. But Director of Big Ten Communications Mark Rudner said that is not a good idea. "Judgment is judgment," Rudner said. "What you see, maybe I don't see." "But don't you think an official being able to explain that would help everyone?" Rudner was asked. "No. No. I mean no," Rudner said. "We just don't want to be question- ing an officials' judgement." In other words, the Big Ten attempts to shield its officials from tough calls. They don't want their judgement questioned, they said. So what do they do? They come out two days later and admit the judgment of the offi- cial was wrong. Of course, Gary Moeller told everyone about his private conversation with new Supervisor of Officials Dave Parry. Then, the Big Ten admits it This sends George Perles jumping up and down - which isn't a good idea considering Perles appears to be in his third trimester of pregnancy. Last week, the Big Ten appeared to be stomping around in 10 different directions. It was pure upheaval. Perles would like the commissioner t. jump in and take hold and stop all these people talking in all different direc tions. Perles is right. Last week was a joke for the Big Ten - and it only started with the officials bad call. The problem Perles will have in receiving any kind of support is that there is no leadership at the top. Only a void. Until Delany gets a grasp oL what it's like to run a conference which is supposed to represent excellence - there's a load of trouble. u Let presidents bicker about whether or not Penn State should be a Big Ten member. Let officials continue to blow calls. Let coaches complain about the conference and other coaches. But make sure that no player is overagressive or no coach tries to take advantage of an official. That's the real job of the commissioner. Yeah, that's it. I I Career Planning and Placement presents.... Jan Harold Brunvand The Scholar of Urban Legends Featured speaker at Career Expo 1990 Wednesday, October 24 5:00 - 6:00 p.m. Pendleton Room, Michigan Union znsvand, a syndicualcohnumistandsuboer of ma~~~~ czu2Kinl yeivbleW iw of the 'world ofwork Seen -nBrown Bag with Brunvand Ps -Noon -1p.m. What to wear to football games: I "to " " i ''. *la m 5 i. , ! -- : ,r , y. i. r f 1 , T M 1-21 rall , ,i J . GO BLUE A' oe oz 4 a r r _. r r _ r r ,. I