14 - The Michigan Daily -- SportsMonday - April 19, 1999 - V2.In fir the au "On the road you'd go places and people would come out and watch because they thought we were Michigan's varsity team." fow e lae After 46 years, men's soccer gets a foot in the varsity door Stories by Uma Subramanian O Daily Sports Writer In the early 1950s, the United States was in the middle of the Cold War, Buddy Holly blared from the jukebox and James Dean was in his prime. Legendary heroes like baseball's Jackie Robinson and track's Roger Bannister lit up the sports world. But far away from the media glare, the game of soccer was beginning to pene- trate Amrican lives. On Oct. 17, 1953, The Midigan Daily described soccer as a "rugged sport with an international fla- vor that is rapidly climbing on the Michigan sports horizon." At that same time, the paper predicted that the Wolverine Soccer Club - as the Michigan men's soccer team was known was on the verge of gaining varsity status. The Wolverines remained on that verge through 46 years and two national championships. Now, the team finally has wbatit has so long sought. "We't all out there playing because we like to play now," club president Ryan Yoder said. "The game isn't going to change any. We're still going to play every day and have fun doing it. "It's just now there are new opportunities that we haven't ever experienced at before, like good travel { arrangements ... no more dri- ving team buses and vans. It's those things that everyone is excited about. It's been 50 years in the coming. Fifty years and we're finally going to get the little perks that we've been wanting." But those 50 years weren't wast- ed. The Michigan men's soccer team has had a rich and complicated his- tory that began after World War II and is still unfolding today. Throughout the years, the team has been composed of foreign students, former football players and Ameritans who just love the game. From Football to "Football" Though in this country it has only begun to emerge as a national pastime in recent years, soccer has long been popu- lar on the international scene, uniting fans from around the globe. This team's roots are also deeply inter- twined with that "foreign" game. In the late 1940s, the University's International Center sponsored an intramural soccer league that played games twice a week. Eath country formed its own team, and each fall there were approximately nine countries represented. But not everyone had a country for which to play. As a result, the club was officially founded in 1948. In those early years, the program received no funding from the University. "Those of us that were left over formed our own team," said Len Harding, who was one of the only Americans on the team in 1957. "It was very informal and for a while we had only four or five guys. "We really enjoyed the game and we got some fans - especially girlfriends - who came out and watched. It was a lot of fun and we didn't lose." Due to the lack of support, the players often wore jerseys borrowed from the football team and supplied their own socks and pads. "Soccer was never a sport in this country," Harding said. "It's a world- class sport that never really caught on here. If you played baseball, you taught your son to play baseball and he taught his son. It was a pretty rough-and- tumble game because t h e interesting trend began. Extending their careers Players who had played in major col- legiate programs as undergrads, espe- cially in the East, came to Michigan and saw the club team as a way to continue playing as graduate students. "The team played a lot of ethnic teams around Detroit, said Mike Malley, a for- mer Wolverine from England. "It was very much an ethnic game in those days. Everybody playing was born and raised in foreign countries like Germany, England, India and Brazil. "Every country had its own style and it was hard to make everyone agree. But the foreigners had a passion for the game because there was national pride on the line." Undoubtedly, the '70s were a time of transition throughout much of the world. The same was true for the Wolverines. In the early '70s, when Steve Olson was a player, there were two teams, one for graduate students, and the other for s undergrads. Those former collegiate stars who had once consented to playing with the undergrads had split off and formed their own team. "When I first started, the gradu- ate club was the stronger club and it regularly kicked our asses," said Olson, a veteran referee who ' called the first championship game of Major League Soccer. "It was composed of foreigners and varsity athletes from other colleges who still wanted to play. In fact, in '74-75, our team had only two foreigners." Olson took over as coach in 1978, the team became more successful, and went 18-2 in 1980, his final year. In the '70s, the club remained on its own to fund itself and find places to play. The players didn't even have prop- er uniforms. Their jerseys shrank by 25 percent the first time they were washed. "It was hard to go and beat varsity teams and not have the same respect and treatment here," Olson said. "But on the road you'd go places and people would come out and watch because they thought we were Michigan's varsity team." Olson recalled a game against Indiana-Purdue at a stadium in Fort Wayne when the stands were filled because it was Girl Scout Night. "All the little girls thought that we were U of M varsity athletes," Olson said. "Our guys were signing auto- graphs, but were pretty embarrassed Because of Michigan's contract with Nike, the Michigan men's soccer team may not be able to practice in their favorite warmups in the new millenlum. But that's OK, because that means the team has achieved varsity status. On Oct. 17, 1953, the Daily showed the Wolverine Soccer Club trying to kick into a higher gear. players weren't skilled." Harding said many teams the Wolverines faced in those early years were composed from a thin population of qualified athletes. "The players I played against weren't coached," Harding said. "They were what was left over from the football team. They played with football cleats too, which hurt when you were kicked," The team flourished in the 1950s, winning a lot more than it lost. Throughout the '60s, soccer at Michigan continued in pretty much the same way, as a loosely organized team that played just for fun. But in the early years of the decade, an because they weren't used to the recog- nition. People were flabbergasted that we weren't a varsity program." Kickoff Soccer's popularity in the United States really began to grow in the late '70s when the North American Soccer League, the now defunct professional soccer league, planted its seed in the suburbs, where the game really took off. "So many changes have happened to the sporting landscape where in the '70s soccer was a part of the subculture and now it's a major demographic." As the game was developing on a national level, it was also developing on the collegiate level. During Burns' time as a player, the National Collegiate Soccer Association was formed in 1988. The formal organization of club soc- cer made it more difficult for Michigan to compete against varsity teams. Regardless, in the past five years, the Wolverines have achieved the most suc- cess they have ever known. The past three years, they have com- peted in the championship game of the national club tournament and are cur- rently the defending back-to-back national champions. Even the University's Athletic Department has taken notice. "All of us who are involved with the sport recognize the contributions that these young men have made," Michigan associate Athletic Director Mike Stevenson said. "They're excellent scholar athletes who have brought a lot of pride to the program." A struggle for status Though it has had a successful and colorful history, the team that began as the Wolverine soccer club will have a new title for the new millennium. In the fall of 2000, it will be a fully supported child of the Athletic Department. The telling of the program's colorful history, though, would not be complete without a brief note about the program's fight for varsity status. Club teams are responsible for doing everything themselves. They must fund their own travels, and pay for their own referees, uniforms and expenses. As a result, the coach and the team are not free to merely play the game. They must also concentrate on the piddly details that are taken for granted by var- sity programs. From the beginning, the Michigan men's soccer team has sought help from the Athletic Department, though in the early days there wasn't much talk of var- sity status except from speculative media. But truth be told, the athletes didn't get much support. "Every fall we had guys who would march down to see (former Athletic Director) Fritz Crisler," Harding said. "But he was not about to have a soccer team. We met with him every year, but we never got anywhere nor did we expect to." Though daunted, the team wasn't dis- couraged. But it wasn't until the late '70s that the team started presenting serious proposals to the Athletic Department. During Olson's tenure as coach the team's application for varsity status actu- ally passed through the Board in Control of Intercollegiate Athletics. Because of a lack of funding, the measure failed. Malley, who founded the World Cup Committee in Detroit, helped the team write numerous proposals to the board, including a 37-page work in 1997. Finally this year, the idea caught on. "It's always only been a matter of resources," Stevenson said. "There's been an awareness that it's a tremendous sport that deserves recognition. It was just a matter of timing." For many of the current players, the responsibility rests with them to carry the club tradition out on the highest note possible. Listen up - coach says Michigan could be a national power Walder DeSouza, assistant coach of the Michigan men's soccer team, played on the 1972 Brazilian Olympic team..He's seen the world class players and even was a teammate of Pel6, unquestionably history's greatest play- er. When DeSouza talks, people listen. And right now DeSouza says that when"the Michigan men's soccer team goes Varsity in the fall of 2000, it could be one of the top programs in the coun- try in three years. Granted, that won't be easy, but that's where next year comes in. The 1999- 2000season will be a time of transi- tion. " Everyone associated with the team realizes that things are going to change and change very soon. In less than a year, the roster will be different, the facilities will be different and, as a var- sity team, there will be many more obligations to fulfill and people to please. Forexample, if an athlete prefers to jpractice in a certain pair of lucky shorts he may not be able to because of the stipulations of the University's con- tract With Nike. But while there may be a few drawbacks, the overall consensus is that though it was a long time in the coming, this is a good thing. 4 su~ cr [: 9 .41, - a field, transportation, or jerseys. Although everything may appear grand, there is one issue that's disheart- ening. Michigan unquestionably has one of the most talented club programs in the country. Two national champi- onships will attest to that. But the players will readily admit that they are realistically the equivalent to a mid-level Division I team. For the team to be competitive, it will have to recruit the top players in the country. "The reality is that in Division I men's soccer there's a big gap between the elite teams and everyone else," said former Michigan coach and player Steve Olson. "The top teams are nearly equivalent to professional programs. But Michigan never does anything halfway. They won't do this halfway. "They will try to create a program that's competitive right from the start." The University is known for its recruiting capabilities. The school's name as well as its academic reputation has in the past drawn some of the best student-athletes to Ann Arbor. Both the Athletic Department and Michigan alumni are certain that the Wolverines will become competitive soon. In fact, within the first five years, Michigan will offer 9.9 scholarships. That kind of money will bring with it a lnt of..a ..;ti;c nn,-p ing forward to competing at a high level. We're looking forward to taking the program to a higher level." Another area of uncertainty sur- rounds the coaching staff. As yet, no one knows for sure what direction the program will take. But current coach Steve Burns, who played for the Wolverines in the late '80s and who is in contention for the varsity position, said that no matter who takes over the program, that person will be looking for the "Michigan man." "We're looking for a bright kid who feels they can make a difference," Burns said. "If I could I'd put up fences around the state and no one could come and get players out of Michigan." Although fences might be a bit of a stretch, many people believe that the Wolverines will be able to keep people in state anyway. "Michigan will do everything first class. There's no reason it couldn't be one of the top programs," said current player Russell Walker. Walker played four years of varsity soccer at Cornell before coming to Michigan this year for graduate school. Walker said this current group of Wolverines has all the talent to com- pete with the varsity programs. "The only real difference between the teams is in the attitude and in the But varsity status is still a year away. In the meantime, the 1998 national club champions still want to be a part of the tradition and the transition and bring home another championship in the coming year. This team could become an integral part of the recruiting process if poten- tial recruits are brought in to meet them. This fall the team will face off against Wisconsin and Northwestern, two varsity teams. No one knows what the future will hold, but these players also hope to have some say in one matter - uni- forms. Most of the players were definitely in agreement about a set of yellows, but "I'd like to have white, yellow and blue, three sets," Purdy said. "I'd like to have a uniform designed just for us. A lot of the big time teams have uniforms that were only for them. If you look at our uniforms, they were all kind of generic. I'd like something with a special design." Though changes are in the wind, for 50 years, the Michigan men's club soc- cer team provided the University with something it could be proud of. "The club is going to provide a good transition to the varsity team," Michigan senior Alan Zakaria said. "We've left a strong legacy here. The