8B - The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday--December 7, 1998 By Mark Snyder U Daily Sports Editor Imagine this: Every day your trip to work is but a few miles. The destination is a building that bears your name and inside rests a beautiful office - for you - with a view of S. State Street. As offices go, it is of average size, but when adorned with your awards and honors, cramped is a generous description. There's a framed photo of the game-turning, phantom touchdown that cost Michigan the 1979 Rose Bowl near the wall, definitely not your proudest moment, but memorable nonetheless. A bronze bust of your head - when both your hair and patience were shorter - rests conspicuously in the far corner of the room. Photos with some of the world's most famous citizens dominate the wooden desk under the window. But despite this, despite your status as the state's resident legend, just five years ago the woman who is now your wife didn't know you from the pope. "She was not a football fan," said Bo Schembechler, the winningest football coach from the winningest college foot- ball school in the nation. "So when I met her, everybody told her I was a coach and she said, 'What did you coach? Did you coach basketball?' I said, 'No, I was a football coach.' And then she said, 'Is that all you did?' "I said, 'Lady, it's a full-time job."' While fans across the nation planned 20 years of fall Saturdays around Schembechler's Michigan Wolverines, his future wife had no idea what she was missing. "When she came (to Ann Arbor) for the first time and I took her to a game, it overwhelmed her because everybody yelled, 'Hey Bo,"' he said. "She couldn't believe it." On her first trip to Michigan Stadium, the future Cathy Schembechler found out about the frenzy. Fans, alumni, media, administrators, vendors and friends would offer a "What's up, Bo?" or a "How ya doin'?" And the visitor was awed. In the time it took to travel to the stadium, she went from June Cleaver to Hillary Clinton - an attention magnet traveling with a rock star. Michigan Stadium is commonly referred to as the hole dug by Yost, built by Crisler and filled by Bo. That's right, this guy packed the Biggest House in the country with 100,000 fans for two decades, and every Saturday they still enter thinking about him. It wasn't always that way, though. ONE1 FN ยข DAY When Bo first came to visit Michigan in the early winter of 1969, the stadium was empty. Of course, that's because it was the off-season, but on game days, it wasn't much better. As Michigan's head coach Bo never realized it, but 70,000 fans in the Medium-Sized House was a minor victory for the disheveled Athletic Department in 1968. And as the busi- nessman hired to revamp the Athletic Department, Don Canham was determined to make his first decision the one that would alter the program forever. "We needed a coach who was a Big Ten guy," Canham says today. "Nothing against those good ole boys from the south, but we needed a guy who knew the league. Bo had been around (at Ohio State and Northwestern), so he knew." What Bo knew extended far beyond Canham's imagina- tion. Bo was smuggled into Ann Arbor under cover of night to stay at a local hotel under an assumed name. Only Canham knew he was coming, and secrecy proved to be the key in securing the man with the unforgettable moniker. Bo remembers the meeting as if it were yesterday. "I came into town and talked to Don Canham for hours down in the coffee shop," he recalled. "And Canham says, 'Look, I want you to meet one other guy.' So he goes to get Mark Plant, who teaches in the law school - a long-time faculty representative in the Big Ten. His daughter was in school at Miami (Ohio), where I was coaching. I talked to Canham and Mark Plant up in the lounge of Crisler Arena and then got on the plane to Cincinnati." On the flight home to southern Ohio, Schembechler assessed his situation - he was a successful coach at a smaller midwestern school, but had been for five years, and jobs like this were rare - and convinced himself of his future. "I met with my staff and said, 'You're looking at the new head football coach of the University of Michigan.' One guy said, 'Did they offer you the job?' And I said, 'No, but they will,"' Bo reminisced, as if opening the vault of history. "Imagine today if someone only talked to the athletic direc- tor and the faculty. That's all I talked to. When I came here and took the job, at the (hiring) press conference, I met the Board in Control of Intercollegiate Athletics. No one knew who I was, or where I came from." It wouldn't take them long to find out. In his first season - with players left over from previous coach Bump Elliott's tenure - Bo's boys toppled undefeated Ohio State in the final game of the season. The 24-12 victory remains one of college football's greatest upsets but was just the eighth of the 194 victories Bo would compile at Michigan. At that point, Schembechler won games through fury, intimidation and intensity. Today, the deliberate sentences of a man reflecting on his past - and looking to his future - still contain the twinkle of that fiery passion. 'NOT A ID-BACK C0ACH~ When he was coaching, containing Bo's energy was impossible. He would storm up and down the sidelines, throwing his hat, tripping over headset cords and generally make a scene. That intensity came from a love for his play- ers and staff that is unparalleled. "What I came to love and be impressed with Bo was he pursued excellence in everything he did. He wanted to do things with integrity and he wanted to do things with the best interests of the people he coached," said Lloyd Carr, Michigan's current head coach who was one of Bo's assis- tants from 1980-89. "1 don't think there's a guy out there that played for Bo, or coached for him, that if they had a problem, he'd be there. I've seen him do that literally hun- dreds of times." The Catch-22 is that the passion that drove him to success also became his undoing. On two separate occasions, each time just before a bowl game (the 1970 Rose Bowl and the 1988 Hall of Fame Bowl), Bo had a heart attack from the stress of coaching. Finally, eight years ago, his ticker robbed him of his life's work. "I never thought I'd live this long," Bo says now. "I mean, I had a heart attack at 39. I don't have the pressure of coach- ing. When I think back and look at Joe (Paterno) still coach- ing (at Penn State), if I had a good heart, he'd still be chas- ing me. The doctors didn't think I could do it. I'd had two open hearts." t But "I'm feeling good. Next year, I'll be 70. Imagine hav- The chance to play In the Rose Bowl was the ultimate goal for Bo Schembechler's Michigan teams, so v finally won the game under Bo in 1981, the thrill of victory was even more special. ing a heart attack, coaching for 20 years and having another one. I had open heart surgery twice and coached right on through it. They thought I was pushing it. Because, you know, I was not a laid-back coach. "I couldn't keep going." A MCHUGN MAN For a man who claims to "live and die" with the current Michigan team, he is still going, just not on the sidelines. Every day, he enters Schembechler Hall - the Michigan football facility - and ascends to a large office on the sec- ond floor, fittingly just a few feet from the program's trophy room. It's a room, and a building, that emerged from Bo's efforts - and so it bears his name. "That was not my intent," he con- tends. "My intent was to build this building for all the things over a 20-year period that Michigan gets done. Why shouldn't they have it? I told people when I went out to get it for them that I'm not doing this to get my name on the building - I didn't want my name on the building." As a tradition-maker at Michigan, such honors follow, as Bo knows all too well. When he arrived at Michigan, the tradition aspect was in a lull and he was determined to re-establish Michigan as the nation's premier college football pro- gram. "When I came to Michigan, I knew the caliber of the school," Bo said. "I wanted to build a program that would last. I wasn't here to get a national championship and get out, go to the next round and make the next buck. That's why I never went to pro ball. I enjoyed it here, I like the community, I like the school. There's not many better jobs in coaching." There aren't better jobs because of the path Bo forged. Michigan had been to the Rose Bowl just twice in the 20 sea- sons before he took the job. Michigan had slipped beyond the point of respectability when Bo took over and he was determined to let everyone - from the top on down -know what Michigan was and what it was going to be again. The coaches "used to dress over at Yost Fieldhouse," he said, recalling his first days on the job. "We used to dress in a room (the) size (of his current office) and we put our clothes on spikes that were nailed to the wall. We sat in folding chairs that were rusted. And I always play for the dramatic. The guys said, 'We had better facilities than this at Miami!' I said, 'Wait a minute. Fielding Yost hung his clothes on that goddamn RICK FREEMAN/Daily spike right there. He sat in that chair. untry to play In "'Miami doesn't have that. Fritz Crisler was here - Do you know who Fritz Crisler is?' So I played on that." And today, telling the stories of the early days, Bo gets excited, bringing back flashes of the days when the only coach louder was his buddy Woody. In his new book, a compilation of pictures and stories from the program's histo- ry, the evolution of the modern program emerges. For now, those days are in the past. But according to Carr, coming to work everyday in Schembechler Hall and interact- ing with the man himself is a privilege few can imagine. "I appreciate Bo every dayI see him," Carr said. "Ilapps ciate him as my mentor, my friend and as an example of what a football coach should be." ON TUE RUN Sitting through a half-hour interview, Bo can hardly con- tain his energy. When he married Cathy just a few years ago, Bo told her he was past his active days, that "I was retired" and the grind was behind him. But one look at his planner and it's hard to believe that his primary working life con- cluded in 1989. "I'm signing books today and doing interviews, and tomorrow morning at 9 o'clock, I'm going to do a commer- cial. (Then), I'm going to catch a plane at 9 p.m. to New York, because the next morning, I've got a Ridell (helmet manufacturer) board meeting in New York," he said one Wednesday in mid-October. "Then I'll catch a plane at four in the afternoon to come back because (WJR radio announc- er) Jim Brandstatter played for me, I've got to do the Brandy and Bo show on Thursday night. On Friday at noon, I've got to tape the Big Ten ticket show that comes on before the game. Then I'll go over to the Marriott where we're kicking off the book (Michigan Memories). "Hey, I go all the time." But aside from his stints in the rredia - which Carr jok- ingly says make Bo "unwelcome around" the building named for him - his primary focus remains undeterred. The Millie Schembechler Adrenal Cancer Research Fund is Bo's tribute to his first wife, who died of the disease in 1992. Since 1993, a golf tournament in her memory is hosted by Bo every July to raise money for the charity. When the char- ity began, the plan was to raise $3.5 million by 2000 with the celebrity-laden tournament being the primary method@ fundraising. Currently, $2.5 million has been raised to combat the incurable disease. Fundraising is the reason for the new book, it's the cause of many of Bo's speaking engagements and often, it's why he's on the run. But he maintains that once the goal is reached, the tournament will not continue, but fundraising will. "The problem that I have is that I'll be over 70 and Howard Wikel, who helps me, is over 75," he said. "There's a lot of work involved." Despite his accessibility now, as soon as the season's c4, circling the globe becomes his No. 1 priority. He has jour- neyed all over the world since he "retired" and the experi- ence is just the way he likes it. "I like to travel," he says. "I like to go places where nobody knows me. Where I'm (just) an old guy that nobody knows." This off-season, the Hawaiian islands and New Zealand are on the itinerary. "My life is good, because when I'm busy, I'm really busy," Bo said. "But when I'm not, you can't find me." Every July, it's under Bo's direction that the Millie Schembechler Classic comes to fruition. Celebrities come from across the cot theytoumament - all while heupIng raise money for adrenal cancer research. 4