The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - September 8, 1997 - 38 I M Q&: MilhbAbom Bo Schembechler, the Fab Five, jobs that pay $25 per month - Mitch Albom has seen a lot in his day " There is always a best in everything. And there is always an award to give to the best. When the same person wins year after year; an award is considered not up forgrabs, but rather thefrontrun- ner's to lose. Michael Jordan and the NBA MVP award. Greg Maddux and the Cy Young award. Mitch Albdm and the AP Sports Editors Award for the best column in the United States. True, Albom may not be as much of a ousehold name as Jordan or Maddux, ut in his field, Albom sets the standard for which other journalists work to achieve. Albom has won the Associated Press Sports Editors Award 10 of the past 11years, an award no other colum- nist has ever won twice. Albom, a columnist for the Detroit Free Press, is also an Emmy-Award winner and a best-selling author He also hosts two nationally syndicated radio shows, and *orks with ESPN, heading a weekly panel on "Prime Monday," and appear- ing regularly on "The Sports Reporters." Albom's resume includes two award- winning books about University of Michigan personalities: Bo Schembechler, titled "Bao", and Michigan's freshman basketball class from 1991, titled "Fab Five ". His newest work, "Tuesdays with Morrie: an old man, a young man, and life's greatest lesson', is a memoir of his relationship 40th and admiration for his college pro- fessor, Morrie Schwartz. The book details the lessons Albom learned from Schwartz as they met every Tuesday before Schwartz lost his battle with Lou Gehrig's disease. They talked about life, leading to what Albom calls his "final and most powerful lesson." The Michigan Daily's Jordan Field recently sat down with Albom to discuss tis column, Michigan sports and life's nportant lessons. Daily: How did you get into sports journalism? Albom: It was an accident. I was a musician coming out of school, and I never really aspired to be, or never wrote for any school paper. I didn't even read the school paper. The only time I was ever in the school paper was when they did a story on exciting new ways to dec- orate your dorm room, and they took a Oicture of my room because I had record albums up on my wall, so that was the only time I was ever in the school paper. After school I was getting discouraged with the music business so I volunteered for a local newspaper. It was one of those throwaway things at the supermar- ket, and one thing led to another. I worked for free for six months, I worked for $25 a week for six months, then I ent back to graduate school, and while t graduate school, just to make some money, I took a job with a sports maga- zine. I had no particular interest in sports writing, and I've been in sports ever since. D: Most people can recognize your writing to be very easy to read, and almost rhythmic. How has your music background affected your writing? A: That is a very smart observation because that is absolutely true. Chysically, my wife has noticed that en I write, I bob back and forth, and she always says to me, "What are you doing?" I just have sort of like a drum beat in my head when I write. For instance if I read a couple of sentences strung together that just don't feel right, then I'll stop bobbing back and forth, and I'll fix it, read it again and start bob- bing again when it sounds right. So I just sort of go with that. It must be *omething internal. Because I really find music and writing very similar. Especially with the column format, you have the freedom to create, you have the theme you can always come back to that is kind of like a chorus, and you have that one little area that goes off on atan- gent and that's the bridge and you have to wrap it up in a certain period of time just like a song. So yes, I think there are a lot of similarities. D: You mentioned you hardly read in hool. Who do you read now, and what authors or columnists do you particular- ly enjoy? A: I read a lot. First and foremost I try to read things that are not newspapers, because I read a lot of newspapers as it is. So I try to read good writers, good in fiction and non-fiction, not just journal- ism. That varies, everything from a lot of young fiction writers all the way to nsmeone like Tom Wolfe. In the sports business, I read a lot of my friends' stuff through the Internet, like Mike Downey in Los Angeles or Bob Ryan out in Boston. It's all there on my computer screen. D: You do so many things, from your weekly column to radio and TV What is your favorite thing you do? What do you enjoy most? A: Writing. To me it's the writing first and everything else second. If you real- think about it, the writing dominates those other jobs. Because like on ESPN on the sports reporters, or on Prime Monday, you have to write what you say. So whatever it is I want to say, I write it out ahead of time, and on radio I began writing my scripts out and by now I can hear it in my head without needing to script it out anymore. So I think the writ- ing fuels all the other ones. I don't think I'd be any good at any of the other things Without really knowing how to write. I might know how to write without being on the radio, but not the other way around. D: You and Bo Schembechler wrote a book together a couple years ago titled "Bo". What did you learn from that experience with Coach Schembechler? A: I learned never to do "Bo II". I'm just kidding. I made a great friend in Bo Schembechler. In seriousness, I learned from Bo that he doesn't have a memory of his own life. He is the only person on the plan- et, who you write an autobiography with him and you have to interview a hundred people because he can't remember any-. thing. And I also learned why the guys that played for him would go through a wall for him. I didn't play far him, but after spending so much time with him, 1 kind of felt that way. He had a certain charisma and just a way, that, you didn't always agree with him, but because you know he was so true to himself, you respected him. Plus, he had the loudest voice of any- one I've ever met. When he yelled, I jumped. We got in a lot of fights over that book. I remember one fight when he was in the shower. He came out of the shower with a towel on and he was yelling at me, but I had to keep from laughing because he was wearing this little towel but he was screaming at me about this book. But you don't laugh at Bo, so I went home and laughed. D: I'm sure your experience was much different, but what was your expe- rience working with Michigan's Fab Five, when you wrote the book about them? A: Well that was very different, because that was a book about the Fab Five - with Bo, we wrote it together. One was an autobiography and one was a story about them. I had to ask them for their time, and they weren't obligated to give it to me. You know, I was writing about them and some things were com- plimentary and some weren't. ButI did spend a lot of time with them and I feel like I got to know all of them pretty well, as a group and individually. I watched them grow up. I've seen them change so much. Just to see their attitude in college versus the pros. How even guys like that, who were so cocky and so sure of themselves when they were at Michigan - it's a good lesson to anybody who thinks they're going to make it like that. Because they were as talented as anyone I've ever seen, and it didn't happen quickly for any of them, some of them are still wait- ing for it to hap- pen. But they were unique, I haven't seen anything like them. Another Fab Five will come along, but in name only. I don't think > there will ever be five freshman who shape the way the game looks, and the way the game is played, the way they did in one or two years. D: What, of all of your work, are you most proud of? A: This right here (he picks up his new book, Tuesdays with Morrie). You know, I guess all of the other things I wrote were about me, or my take on things - what I particularly thought about something. This was a chance to go back to being a student again. Instead of being the person who knows it all, and writing from a position of authority, you don't have to listen to me (just) because I know what I'm talking about. If you read this book, you'll see I'm ask- ing all the questions. I don't know what I'm talking about. Instead of being the teacher, it's not like any of the other books; I'm the student in this book. I found it more humbling and more grat- ifying in the end to bring the lessons from someone else - who is really important to you - to the world, more than it is to bring your own words there. D: You have won so many awards throughout your career and have almost created a standard of excellence for which your fans expect. Do you feel pressure every time you write some- thing with your name on it? A: I feel pressure anytime I write any- thing, but it's not because of awards. I win those awards, but they are entered for me by the newspaper. I don't count them when I win. If I lose, the world doesn't end, but yes, I put pressure on myself every time I write. I have my own standards. I have a hard time read- ing my work in the morning paper. It usually takes a few weeks before I'll even look at it because I'm always con- vinced I could have done better. I read it and think 'Oh God, how could I have made that mistake' or 'How could I have chosen that word?' It's so obvious in the morning that if I'd cut this paragraph or taken this line out, it would have been so much better. But when you're writing on deadline, at the Palace or at Crisler or something like that, you work with what you've got. So there is always pressure, but you kind of have to like the pressure, otherwise it will kill you. D: After all of these years in the sports business, who do you root for? A: I root for the good story. I grew up in Philadelphia, and the true test was with the (NHLs Detroit Red) Wings this year. I was rooting for the Wings and it was because of the players' personali- ties. With the Wings, some of those guys are such exceptionally good guys, I was rooting for them. And I didn't know anyone on the Flyers, so I was rooting for Detroit. I'm sure anyone in this busi- ness will find this, that you root for peo- ple who are good people, and it really doesn't matter who they play for. If they are on your home team then you'll root for them, but if they aren't you still root for them because they are good people. When Willie Hernandez dumped a bucket of water over my head, I didn't exactly root for him to do well, and he was playing here in Detroit with the Tigers. So that's what it really boils down to. D: In both your writing and radio show you deal with sports and also "real life" issues. Do you have a preference on the topic you deal with? A: People ask me all the time which one I like better, but to me it's the same. It's just whatever mood I'm in. But if I'm going to have an opinion column, I really want it to be some- thing that is worth saying. Sometimes people write columns because it's their day. Like, "Well, it's Tuesday, I have to write a column and come up with something to have an opinion about." That's wrong, that's not how a column should be done. If you don't have a strong opinion about some- thing, you shouldn't be writing a col- umn about it. If it's your turn to write a column and you have nothing to say, then just reflect on something or do something different. Don't just slam somebody because it's Tuesday and you have to write something. That just undermines what journalism is sup- posed to be about. It's not about filling up a page, it's about having something worthwhile to say. D: What do you think about all of the allegations surrounding Michigan sports, especially the basketball pro- See ALBOM, Page 12B Bik Thnree aside 7WM sports contbzue to thrve : All incoming students FROM: The Michigan Athletic Department RE: The Big Three MESSAGE: We apologize, but... Because it got caught up in mailing you all the junk mail regarding M-Cards, MSA elections, University Health Services and so forth, the University mistaken- ly forgot to send its snazzy-jazzy, whoomp-there-it-is, glam-jam brochure telling you all about the aura that surrounds Michigan's varsity athletics. Sure, it directed you to the Union Bookstore during orientation and showed you the hot items in Maize and Blue haute couture. They forced you to buy the keychains that blare "The Victors" incessantly, and told you that those Nikes sure look a lot cooler than the latest from adidas. But they forgot to tell you all abut the teams that make this university the most marketable one in the nation. With that said, let me take the opportunity to introduce you to Michigan sports - the people that will make you proud (often at the most unexpected of times), but unfortunately, more often than not, will make you seethe with frustration ind force you to ask each other, "Leaders and best?" This athletic department revolves around a lead actor- football - and two very strong supporters - men's basketball and ice hockey. These programs are what makes money for Michigan, and puts the Univerity on SportsCenter night- ly. The football team was a monster under the leadership of coach Bo Schembechler in the 1970s and 1980s winning nearly 80 percent of its games and 12 Big Ten championships during his 21-year reign. The basketball team is the glitziest of the three, gaining much of its fame with- in the past 10 years with the help of a national championship in 1989 and a group of cocky freshmen two years later, known as the Fab Five, who led the " Wolverines to the national-championship game in back-to-back seasons. The hockey team, affectionately referred to as the "icers;' won the NCAA title just two years ago with an overtime goal in the championship game. The Wolverines have set NCAA records by winning 30 games in each of the last six years. Pretty impressive resume, eh? Well, here's the one word you didn't want to hear: letdown. That's the motto for the Big Three this year, which should make for a pretty ugly Michigan sports scene. The football team is a 7-5 team at best. The good news is that the Wolverites have probably the best all-around player in the country in Charles Woodson. The bad news is that they need about 10 clones of him if they want to smell Roses' four months from now. That's because Michigan's schedule, as I'm sure you're all aware, is a god-send for television networks looking for games attracting a national audience, but a nightmare for the Michigan fan; the Wolverines will probably lose most, if not all of those big games. If you find mediocrity humorous, and underachievment captivating, then be sure to pick up some men's basketball tickets. Don't let anyone tell you that Michigan has so-and-so who was this guy's national high school player of the year. This is ateam that lost it's best player to the NBA and couldn't even crack the NCAA Tournament last year with him. Prepare yourselves for a .500 record and a sixth- or seventh-place finish. Even though you've probably noticed a pattem developing here, you're going to ask why the hockey team is headed for a sub-standard season after such a' splendid streak of consistent domination. Ever heard of these guys: Morrison, Botterill, Legg, Madden? Haven't? Good. Then you won't feel like there's a void to be filled on this team that lost the greatest recruiting class in college hockey history and players who were all among the 20 best in school history. Michigan coach Red Berenson brought in a solid recruiting class, but it will be at least a year or two before it begins paying dividends. These are the reasons why the athletic department didn't send you anything. this summer. Calm down. I'll give you a couple of minutes now to call yourpar- ents to tell them that you want to transfer. Okay, now that I have your attention again, I want to point out to you that. because this is a down year for the "Big Three", it's prime time to acquaint your- selves with the low-budget, and even lower profile teams that, unlike the afore- mentioned, are on the upside. These could be bandwagon teams quite soonespe- cially if the "Big Three" fail to meet even the lowest of expectations. Did you watch the Olympics last summer? See that guy Tom Dolan, ak.a. The best male swimmer in the world? A Wolverine, although not anymore. Still, both the men's and women's swimming teams at Michigan have routinely placed among the top five in the nation for the past decade. Men's coach Jon Urbaichek and women's skipper Jim Richardson are considered among the nation's coaching See BOMBER, Page 12B Mitch Aibom signs a copy of his new book, "Tuesdays with Morrie", Friday at The Uttie Professor bookstore in Ann Arbor. The Michigan Athletic Media Relations Department seeks reliable work-study and volunteer students. Flexible hours and must be available to work evenings and weekends.Various duties include writing, research and statistical work plus game day activities for Michigan's 23 varsity sports. Stop in the Athletic Media Relations Office, 1000S. State St., or call 763-4423 for more information. Student meeting Sept. 9, 4:00 p.m. WAhat's New at the V North Campus Satellite Office Now Open Where: 1212 Pierpont Commons (in the same location as the Office of the Registrar and the Entre Office) What: Offering a range of services (including advising and application material drop-off and pick-up) When: Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, and Friday: 9 a.m.-12 noon & 1 p.m.-3 p.m. Thursday: 1 p.m.-5 p.m. Telephone: 763-6600 (same as the Main Office number) V/Student Employment Job Search Website: http://www.umich.edu/~finaid/Employ/ Tap into listings for Work-Study and Non-Work-Study employment opportunities on and off campus! MASS MEETING Wednesday September 10th 7:30 PM * CCRB Office of Financial Aid Office of Financial Aid " 2011 S.A.B. " U of M " (313)763-6600 " financial.aid~umich.edu