-1-119 8B - The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - March 22, 2004 *I By Gabe Edelson Daily Sports Writer They are tossed aside in drawers and closets, the trappings of nearly 50 years in collegiate and international swimming. Watches from his 13 Big Ten Champi- onship teams. Watches and rings from the past five Summer Olympic Games, where he served as an assistant coach for USA Swimming. The 1995 NCAA Championship ring, significantly gaudier than its 1961 counterpart not far away. This is just a sampling of Jon Urbanchek's treasure trove, which he does not showcase for visitors at his home. Some pieces of memorabilia have, in fact, been misplaced. This seemingly indifferent attitude towards his accom- plishments appears incomprehensible, yet Urbanchek's philosophy is simple. "The awards will all tarnish with age," he says. "But the memories will remain vivid throughout the years." The memories - there are so many of them. Urbanchek will end his 22-year run as the head coach of the men's swimming and diving team after this summer's Olympics, but he has already begun to delve back into his past. It's an emotional task that occasionally brings tears to his eyes. While his recollections are fuzzy in some places - "My memory is not that good anymore" -he does remember certain stories remarkably well. Urbanchek's efforts to recall his past reveal a fascinating history of ups and downs. 'The 100 dollar latte' Former Wolverine Tom Malchow, who owns gold and silver medals from the past two Olympics, is well-versed in Urbanchek's caffeinated history. "He spends so much money on coffee," says Malchow, one of Urbanchek's 28 Olympians. "It's probably the reason he didn't retire four years ago." It did not take sophomore Davis Tarwater long to realize this fact. "He usually comes back before finals at night with about 15 cups of coffee, but nobody ever wants to drink it. 'Who needs a cappuccino?' is his favorite line." Senior captain Dan Ketchum says Urbanchek's annual Christmas present from the team is a $10 gift certificate to Starbucks. The driving stories are equally amusing. Urbanchek once got lost on the wrong side of the Charles River in Boston for hours. He made a U- turn and drove the wrong way on a one-way street during a parade in Florida. He has been chased by police officers and he has aroused road rage from California to Texas to New Jersey. And all this with his terrified swimmers sitting in the car next to him. Ketchum remembers what Urbanchek would do when the team approached a state in which the coach's license was suspended. "We would always conveniently stop at the bor- der," Ketchum says, noting that Urbanchek would then make a suggestion for somebody to take over the driving for him. "He would never tell anybody that he couldn't drive in (the state)." "I'm very cautious when I'm with the team," Urbanchek says in his own defense. "I've got a lot of points (on my record)." Brent Lang, who swam at Michigan from 1987- 90 and won a gold medal at the 1988 Olympics, sees his former coach's periodically less-than- ideal behavior as a positive. "He was just a human being like we were," Lang says. "If we had faults, so did he." Namesnik, the owner of silver medals from the 1992 and 1996 Olympics, is amazed at his col- league's ability to weasel his way out of serious trouble. "Jon's got dumb luck," he says. "It all works out in the end." t''t is 0 '' Urbanchek's peculiarities don't stop at speed- ing tickets and cappuccinos. Though he has been described by those who know him as somebody who enjoys "classical music and oldies," former Michigan swimmer and two-time Olympic gold medalist Tom Dolan remembers Urbanchek taking to a slightly different genre. When Snoop Dogg came out with his first solo album, "Doggystyle," in Dolan's freshman year of 1993, the team was on a road trip in Califor- nia. Dolan, who was into rap at the time, switched the van radio to a Los Angeles rap station to hear tracks from the new album. "From then on, (Urbanchek) loved rap and he Ioved Snoop," Dolan says. "He would sit on the deck and hum the background of the Snoop song." S u ch a ccliim a- tion to his sur- roundings has helped Urbanchek's Heart of gold How does a man roughly five-and-a-half feet tall stand out in a sport of giants? Urbanchek's short stature and Hungarian accent - which Lang says is a necessary part of any impersonation - make him seem the most unlikely of swimming legends. As he walks around the pool deck, motivating his swimmers while wearing shorts, a surfing T-shirt and flip flops, one may wonder what makes him so special. But his oversized personality more than makes up for what he lacks in other areas. Urbanchek inspires intense dedication from his currentand former swimmers. WhenBorges, who has accumulated four medals from the past three Olympics, heard that his college coach was plan- ning to retire at season's end, he made sure to travel from his native Brazil to Ann Arbor for one last workout with his mentor. "He was always very approachable," Lang says. "He could laugh at himself and make other swim- mers laugh at themselves. People relate to him more on a personal level than on a pure coaching level." Junior Brendan Neligan admires Urbanchek's selflessness. "He doesn't care about himself," Neligan says. "He just wants to see his swimmers make the Olympic team. Jon could be watching from the stands, Jon could be watching on TV, but I think Jon just brings an aura of excitement to the pool in his final year." "ism a people person' Perhaps Urbanchek's most important memory is something he is not proud of. He reached his peak as a swimmer during his sophomore year at Michi- gan in 1959, when he helped his team capture the NCAA Championship. Urbanchek's junior year proved to be far more difficult. He flunked Organic Chemistry 5E and was ruled ineligible for swim- ming. When the team failed to win the National Championship in 1960, Urbanchek felt guilty "I felt like I could have contributed to the team and didn't," he says with misty eyes. Urbanchek's advisor, Prof. Quackenbush, con- vinced him to leave engineering for the physical education department. It was a move that would change his life. "I can't see myself working with inanimate objects," Urbanchek says. "I'm a people person, and I made the right choice. Sometimes something posi- tive comes out of something negative. I don't think I would be here as a coach today if I didn't leave the school of engineering." Urbanchek would go on to win another national championship ring in 1961 when he returned to the team, in some ways atoning for his past diffi- culties and cementing the confidence that would become a hallmark of his coaching career. Back to the top Urbanchek returned to a floundering Michigan swimming program as the head coach in 1982 after two decades of high school and college coaching in southern California. He felt his alma mater could return to the elite level of college swimming it had maintained for so many years in the past. "I saw a pile of ashes as far as the program goes," Urbanchek says. "But whenever you see ashes, you know something stood there before. All we had to do was rebuild it." Slowly but surely, Urbanchek and his swimmers did just that. Michigan began winning Big Ten Champi- onships - actually, "dominating" might be a better word. From 1986 though 1995, Urbanchek led his teams to 10 straight conference titles, culminating with the national championship in the streak's final year. Urbanchek knew that 1995 would be special when he looked in the pool and saw so many Olympic-cal- iber athletes. "In the back of the minds of every single kid on that team, they knew we were going to win it," he says. "We didn't have to verbalize it." But a careless error on the part of the coaching staff +e~mrrr~vmit, t+he NrAA rhamninnchin in inarv 01 The final chapter There was no Big Ten Championship this year. No commemorative watch to throw in a drawer, no team trophy to set aside. An NCAA Championship this coming weekend is all but ruled out as a possibility. But this year has been extra special for Jon Urbanchek. "In swimming, you measure success by doing your best time," he says. "In that respect, I think the team was a tremendous success. It was by far my most enjoyable year to coach the team. The trophy doesn't really make a rl