The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, October 11, 1993 - 3 Schembechler Bo concludes with a look at the issues of college football today KEN SUGIURA Close But No Sugiura In the conclusion of his interview withDaily SportsEditorAdamMiller, former Michigan coach Bo Schembechler comments on all as- pects of college football, including Michigan and the Big Ten, the Michi- ganAthleticDepartment and his plans for the future. BOON... College Football Daily: What is your opinion on the trend toward superconferences in football, possibly with a second tier? Bo: Isee that as aviable answer to those that don't want to have com- petitive football. Those that do will end up joining superconferences and perhaps, if the NCAA doesn't give rules too cumbersome to govern these teams properly, they probably ought to have their own governing body, have a superconference in the west, ttlwest, east and south. D: Already you have the 12-team SEC with its own playoff schedule. B: The SEC is powerful there, but they would probably have to integrate some from the southwest because there may be some teams in the SEC that don't want to compete. Maybe Vanderbilt chooses to go a different route. Maybe Northwestern chooses togo a different route. A lot of those schools may choose to do something else andif they do, that's fine. There's another conference that they could belong to. I'm talking about perhaps 60 of the top teams in the country, something like that. S-D: On another note, You always talked about the officiating in college football. Do you see that as having improved at all? 'Generally the changing of football makes the it, reason is such a great game is because It does change. I mean, it changes from year to year and you had better be up on what's going on or you're not going to be able to cpmpete.' letic directors. D: Really? B: Yeah. Nobody knew anything about it until two hours before the announcement. No athletic director knew anything about it. I just think that that gave notice to athletic direc- tors that you're just an administrator. You are not a leader of your athletic program and the Big Ten conference. They let us know; that finished them. D: Okay. Which way do you think the conference will eventually go? B: If they could get Notre Dame, go to 12. They can't get Notre Dame. D: Do you see Northwestern in jeopardy then? conference, go to the Rose Bowl and win the Rose Bowl. And if in the course of events we're voted No. 1, then we'll take the National Champi- onship. But we don't line up to say we're going towin the NationalCham- pionship because if you do, you end up not winning the conference, not going to the Rose Bowl, not winning the Rose Bowl and then end up with nothing. Now, is that clear? May I ask you this question? Why are we in the Big Ten? To play for the National Championship? Because there will come a time when you may have to make a decision as to whether it's in my best interest to go for this tie 'When I was a coach I said that the ultimate goal was to win the Big Ten conference, go to the Rose Bowl and win the Rose Bowl. And If In the course of events we're voted No. 1, then we'll take the National Championship. But we don't line up to say we're going to win the National Championship because If you do, you end up not winning the conference, not going to the Rose Bowl, not winning the Rose Bowl and then end up with nothing.' B: I'm not close enough to judge that. The only way you can judge that is if you have spent an enormous numberofhours studying game films. I'm not doing that now so I wouldn't even want to comment on officiating. I could not answer that question no matter what. D: You left with a rather large run- in with the officials. B: Not really,not the Big Ten that much, no. I had arun-in on a guy who called a holding call on a punt in the Pac-10. I mean, if you want to call a unm-in, that was a run-in. D: There was a reprimand ... B: Oh sure, but after I was Presi- dent of the Detroit Tigers. That was real smooth. BO ON... The Big Ten D: Similarly, how do you see the Big Ten working out with 11 teams? B: Well, that's going to continue to be a problem. The conference should have 10 teams or 12 teams. Eleven is not the right number. It's just logistically not right. These open dates during the season, teams not playing three (actually two, Ed)other teams in the league. It's too unruly. But of course nobody ever thought of that when they invited Penn State. They just invite them. Then, let's work it out later. -D: Was the addition of Penn State a decent one? B: I don'tknow. I think only time will tell there and I think you'd have to ask Penn State whether they're happy with the arrangement, but, as you know, no athletic director knew anything about it until it was done. At that point, in the Big Ten conference, it was obvious to everybody that the presidents were going to make all decisions and the athletic directors B: They would be the logical choice. D: But should the Big Ten be adding and subtracting teams strictly on their football performance? B: No, they can't.They have to do it on the basis of whether they are similar academically to the other schools in the Big Ten. If they are not similar academically, then you can't allow them to come in just based on athletic performance because they won't fit. BO ON ... The 1993 Wolverines D: Compare today's Michigan team's personnel, its philosophy to the teams in the Schembechler Years when you coached. Especially in terms of offensive and defensive philoso- phy. The defense has gone to a more attacking defense. The offense is ad- mittedly throwing the ball a little more than youused to. B: Well, I don't think that you could philosophize these. The phi- losophy hasn't changed; strategies might have changed a little bit, but that's true of all of football. Football is playing less and less with lead backs and tight ends. We haven't changed here in that regard and I'm glad we haven't, because the the teams that have minimized the importance of those blockers have not been able to mount the offenses that are necessary to score 11 points and win. Generally the changing of foot- ball makes ... the reason it is such a great game is because it does change. I mean, it changes from year to year and you had better be up on what's going on or you're not going to be able to compete and there's some innovative things-a lot of no huddle, probably increases the number of passes, and a reduction in the number of option plays. However, the moving of the hash marks may bring the op- tion back. I watch Syracuse run it pretty well. I watch North Carolina run it pretty well. There is some re- turn to option football that teams with mobile quarterbacks. D: Speaking of innovations, Florida State runs no-huddle, shot- gun passes almost every down. Is that the future of football? B: Only if I have (Charlie) Ward at quarterback. If I don't have Ward, then I don't want to depend as much on one player in my offense. Now, Ward is fortunate that he is also sur- roundedby giftedathletes,but Ward's danger is that he is a stone cold athlete that can take and improvise play and make it into abig gainer. That's where he is a special talent. D: Back to Michigan. What do you think of the notion that the Rose Bowl, unlike what you used to preach, is not the ultimate goal any more, but Michigan has to look beyond the Rose Bowl to the National Championship? B: You'd never hear me say that. and win the conference, or try to win this game in the National Champion- ship, what are you going to do? I'm going to win the conference. .D: What about Michigan's funda- mental problems? You always preached proper tackling positions and blocking. B: Letme tell you this. I am retired from coaching. But because this is an exceptional coaching staff - mark my words -if we have enough talent to improve and win the conference, we will do it. The coaching will get it done. Now, that's the way I feel. I'm not going out here and say they miss tackles because of this technique or that technique because I'm not going to get into that. Because I don't know these indi- vidual players as much as I should. There may be some of these kids that just have a tough time getting into the positions they need toget into to make these tackles. I don't know that, so why should I try to judge what's go- ing on. BO ON... Michigan Athletics D: A couple questions on the fu- tureofMichigan AthleticDepartment. Obviously, it'sin a transition, and it's changed a lot since you left the A.D. spot. How about incoming Athletic Director Joe Roberson. What kind of job do you think he's going to do? B: I have no idea. I just met him for the first time today. And so, I had a nice conversation with him. I think he's certainly a good person and ev- erything but I can't answer that. You've got to understand, I'm kind of out of the main stream. D: How about Michigan's con- tinual renovation and expansion in terms of sites. The football team now plays on grass. They played on astroturf when you were here. Yost Arena, Varsity Diamond, Crisler, they've all been renovated recently. Yet, some criticize the amount of money that Michigan pours into site renovations. Do you think that in the future Michigan should keep spend- ing all this money on its facilities? B: Well, if you're going to have a quality, first-class program, you've got to have quality, first-class facili- ties. I think that's necessary. Whether you want to or not, you have to spend money to keep up the stadium. It's an old stadium. You have to spend money to keep up Yost Arena. It's an old facility. You've got to spend money to keep these facilities current. That's just something that you have to do. Maintenance is very expensive. There probably aren't a lot of new facilities that they're looking at. Now I do know they're looking for a tennis facility, and we have no tennis facility. So, we're talking about something we haven't got. You know, it's not like we can fix up what we got, because we don't have anything. So, if in the minds of the people here tennis is important, then we'll have to do that. BO ON... Bo D: Are you still, in your heart, a football coach? B: Always have been, always will be. Football is my game. Football coaching was my life. That hasn't changed. That's why I still love to go to games. I love to watch college football. It's a magnificent game. D: How have you changed? Are you the same Bo as a person now that you're not an active football coach? B: Just age. I haven't changed other than that. It's like I said, I'm not in the pressure cooker like I was. And so, that's different. That's different for me than I've ever been because, I was right in the middle of it for 37 years. D: Okay, but you still see yourself as pretty much the same guy, to quote your autobiography, the guy with the whistle? B: Yeah, that's it. I was the guy with the whistle. I never took myself any more seriously than that. I never looked like I was, or felt like I was, special. I was just lucky enough to coach here and hire good people and get good players, have good relation- ships, have a lot of fun and won some games. That's it. I don't look at my- self as anything other than that. D: Lastly, what are your goals and plans for the future, both personal and professional. Do you have it planned out? B: No. Right now, I'm, Ijust go do the things that I enjoy doing. I was over in Pittsburgh over the weekend (of Sept.19), so you know what I did? I went in and sat and watched Pitt play Ohio State. The next day I went down to Three Rivers and watched the Pitts- burgh Steelers play the Cincinnati Bengals. And I enjoyed it. D: So do you plan on keeping this office for awhile, working for Michi- gan and things like that? B: Yeah, and probably be here a little less than I have been. Do some other things. I may want to travel a little bit more. That's the way I feel now, but I don't have any specific plans at the present time, as far as a commitment that will be on a daily basis over several years. I don't have that. Now, I may go make some speeches and do a little television. I've done a lot of things that I would never have done before. I was base- ball sports casting, cameo appear- ancein amovie (The Program), played some golf, go to football games as a spectator. Go to see some pro games, do the Lions preseason (analyst role). Those are just things that I want to do and Ihave done them. I'm doing them and I'll do some other things too that might surprise you, you know what I mean. That's my life now. And, what's wrong with that? It's kind of neat really. Now, probably if I had my druthers, I should probably have my own team coaching football, and making that kind of commitment. But that kind of commitment would take all of my energy because when I coached football, I did it seven days a week, 12 hours a day. That's all I did. That's all I did and loved it. Making big bucks with a straw and a Penny have an idea. Given the huge long-term salaries given to NBA rookies Anfernee "Penny" Hardaway and Shawn Bradley, among others, I think I might give this pro basketball thing a shot. Let's look at this logically. Shawn Bradley is a 7-foot-6, 21-year old who, if he wore felt, could easily pass for a pipe cleaner. With the second pick in last June's NBA draft, the Philadelphia 76ers had the choice of every senior in the country, all the other college players who decided to leave school early (except for Chris Webber, since he was already taken) and all the players in the rest of the world who weren't already on NBA teams. The 76ers picked Bradley, a guy who, if he wore a white shirt and pants with red and white vertical stripes, could be a stunt double for one of those bendy straws. Bradley spent the last two years of his life in Australia, serving as a missionary for the Mormon church. Lest I forget, he also spent it not playing basketball in addition to losing so much weight from his thin frame that upon return, he probably could not have passed for a straw, not even a coffee stirrer. Before that, he played one season at BYU in the Western Athletic Conference, a group of schools known for being in the West and for being athletic, but not necessarily for producing NBA centers. And before that, he played his high school ball at Emery High School in Castle Dale, Utah. As Utah is probably closer to Pago Pago in terms of basketball talent than it is to California, or most of the other continental 48, it was even harder than it was at BYU to gauge exactly what sort of player Bradley was and would eventually become. So anyway, what I am getting at is that the 76ers had the choice of just about everybody in the living world, and they selected Bradley, an unknown commodity if ever one existed. Guess what the 76ers spent on Bradley, a guy who, if you had him hold out a bedsheet in his hands and tied string to his feet, would make the mother of all kites. Forty-four million for 8 years. That's right. The Sixers gave Bradley a very long contract so that, even if he turns out to be a dud, they will still be paying him serious moolah for a long time. Friends call Hardaway "Penny," a name which might have had some basis last week, but now no longer will. Hardaway was a student-athlete at Memphis State University, a school that has the same initials as a certain Midwestern college whose football team will cause us all some grief as soon as the students at that school learn the complexities of area codes. Besides that, though, I don't know too much about Memphis State, other than the obvious (It is in Memphis and it is a state university). I do know this, however: the Golden State Warriors had the third pick in the NBA draft, right after the 76ers, and selected Hardaway. However, the Warriors' management very much wanted Bradley on its team, even though Bradley is an unknown commodity who will probably have to have his name on his jersey done in agate type, not because Bradley is a particularly long name, but because there just can't be too much space between his shoulders. But the 76ers said no, so they swapped the rights to Orlando along with a few draft picks for the rights to Webber. It worked out nicely, because it seems Orlando was hoping to get Hardaway all along. So Orlando had to sign Hardaway to a contract. Like Webber, Hardaway played for two years in college and practiced with the Dream Team. So it looks like he has potential to be a good player. But basically, like Bradley, he is an unknown commodity. He, too, played in a conference, the Great Midwest Conference. So far as I can tell, while the Midwest is great, Memphis is not in the Midwest, and the extent to which Memphis is great is up for discussion. I digress. However, the Magic feel a little more strongly about his potential than do I. Last Wednesday, Orlando signed Hardaway to a contract worth over $65 million. It is a long-term contract. Just like Bradley, if Hardaway turns out to be a dud, he will still get a whole lot of cash, especially for a dud. So here is my idea. As best my LS&A-educated mind can critically analyze, the trend in the NBA is to find and sign picks, especially unknown commodities, to long-term deals. Webber has picked up on this. He has made it clear he will sign for no less than what Bradley did. So I intend to enter the NBA draft. However, I will buck the practice of. going to pre-draft camps and playing in front of scouts. We are dealing with the thirst for unknown commodities, remember? I am 5-foot-4. I weigh too much (probably about as much as Bradley). And on a good day, I can touch my toes. As best I know, no one like me has ever played in the NBA before, just like Bradley. I am an unknown commodity deluxe. Who knows? Maybe, like they say about Bradley, I ' will revolutionize the game. To make myself even more of an unknown commodity, I will go to Australia and put on weight. I will stay there for two years and eat until I approximate the shape of the Cube in front of the Fleming Building. My personal fitness level will hopefully arrive at a point where, on a good day, I will be able to see my toes. Who would not want me? Pro scouts will say, I must have this kid. I know nothing about him. What? He's from the suburbs? Even better. They can't play basketball in the 'burbs. I will get a long-term contract for zillions of dollars. I will be the highest-paid dud ever. I cannot wait. - NEWCOMB LECTURE RICHARD E. NISBETT Theodore M. Newcomb Distinguished University Professor of Psychology and Director and Research Scientist, Research Center for Group Dynamics, institute for Social Research -x ... ,... .., THE PSYCHOLOGY OF -RESTIAURANT "*BAR