The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Michigan's * record with Ford Thursday, January 4, 2007 - 5C Year W 1932 8 1933 7 1934 1 L 0 0 7 T 0 1 a By the* numbers 2 National titles won during Ford's tenure at Michigan 2 Conference championships 2-1 Michigan's record vs. Ohio State in Ford's three years $2,400 Salary in first year as a coach at Yale Awards at Michigan g Meyer Morton Award (1932) Team's Most Valuable Player (1934) Notable Quotables "I was lucky enough to play football for the University of Michi- gan. First on Ferry Field and then in the stadium. And I was lucky enough to start a few games in the football season of 1934 - and that was quite a year. The Wolverines on that memorable occasion played Ohio State, and we lost 34 to 0. And to make it even worse, that was the year we lost seven out of eight of our sched- uled games. But you know, what really hurt me most was when my teammates voted me their most valuable player. I didn't know whether to smile or sue." AP PHO Former president and Michigan center Gerald Ford went onto Yale after finishing undergraduate studies at the University. He coached three years at Yale before being accepted into Yale Law School, where he eventu- ally graduatedi nthe tnp thirdnt his class. Ford's education didn enda By JACK HERMAN Daily Sports Editor At first, Yale Law School didn't want Gerald Ford. He posted a "fair-to-middling scholastic record" while at Michi- gan, according to a 1977 New York Times article. More than 75 per- cent of his eventual law school classmates were members of the academic honor society Phi Beta Kappa. Ford coached both football and boxing in New Haven. In 1935, Yale law students did not have full-time jobs. "At first, Yale Law School was reluctant to admit a jock from Grand Rapids on the basis I couldn't handle a full-time job and the Ivy League law school challenge at the same time," Ford said in a 1998 speech. "I managed to overcome their objections and joined my place in a class that included Cyrus Vance, Potter Stewart and Sargent Shriver - a pretty impressive law firm in themselves!" An oft-mentioned part of Ford's legacy is his decision to reject offers to play pro football, choosing instead to attend law school. But while Ford might have known he wanted to be a lawyer, he couldn't afford tuition, so in 1935, he agreed to coach football and boxing (a sport which he had never participated in) at Yale (on the East Coast, where he had never been), putting his law school dreams on hold. His salary was $2,400 a year, the equivalent of about $33,000 today, adjusted for inflation. Determined to attend law school, Ford consistently campaigned with the admissions staff, arguing that he could handle the full schedule that coaching and class consisted of. He attended summer school at Michigan in 1937, according to the Yale athletic department, and after nearly three years coaching in New Haven, he finally convinced Yale he was ready. In February 1938, he tookhis first class at Yale Law School. By 1941, he graduated with a B average, good enough to place in the top third of his class. And in the summer of 1940, he even found time to aid in Republi- can Wendell Willkie's unsuccessful presidential run. "I never saw much of Jerry apart from football, because he was always so damn busy," said one of Ford's co-coaches at Yale, Jim DeAngelis, in a 1999 interview with the New Haven Register. "He had boundless energy." Ford coached football for six sea- sons (1935-40), working as an assis- tant line coach, junior varsity coach and a scout. During his tenure, Yale went 25-22-2, graduated two Heis- man Trophy winners (Larry Kelley and Clint Frank) and topped rival Harvard three times. In 1938, Ford scouted Michigan, which beat Yale 15-13. Ford worked for head coach Ray- mond "Ducky" Pond, who earned his nickname - and legend - as a player at Yale in 1923. He returned a fumble 67 yards for Yale's first touchdown against Harvard in seven years, clinching a 13-0 rain- soaked victory on the way to an undefeated, untied season. Pond and his wife, Anna, took a special interest in Ford, an act the Wolverine never forgot. They formed a life-long friendship, with Ford meeting with Pond a number of times as president, according to the Hartford Courant. Asaboxingcoach,Fordmentored William Proxmire, who would later join Ford on Capitol Hill. Proxmire was a Democratic Senator from Wisconsin, but the two neverrlet politics come between them. "Bill and Jerry were always fond of each other," Proxmire's wife, Ellen, told The New Republic in 2005. "They were on the Hill in a time when things were much less partisan, much less vicious. To peo- ple like Bill and Jerry, sports were a metaphor for politics. You needed viable competition in your life." It was also during Ford's time at Yale that he discovered a love for - and in - New York City. He fell for a blonde model from the city named Phyllis Brown. The romance was captured in a 1940 Look Magazine spread.A skiing trip the couple took to Vermont served as the focus of a five-page feature documenting the growing trend of New Yorkers heading to the slopes for the weekend, according to the Associated Press. "I had this very beautiful gal as a close to three-year romance, and I used to go to New York most every weekend," Ford told the New York Daily News in a 2002 interview. "I used to drive down.... Igotacquaint- ed with a lot of the things you do in New York - the theater, etc." If at first Yale was reluctant to accept Ford, the school has exhib- ited its pride in its alum since. A picture of Ford hangs in the hallway and a scholar-athlete award at the school now bears his name. "Jerry was a man of great integ- rity," Ford's fellow coach, DeAn- gelis told the New Haven Register after Ford's death. "He was a great all-around guy. He was kind and considerate and had a great sense of humor. ... I personally think - of course, I'm prejudiced - that he made a wonderful president." Ford . 4 picked law over pigskin By COURTNEY RATKOWIAK Daily Sports Writer Presidential aide Robert Hart- mann once said that Gerald Ford was prouder of his athletic achievements than his political accomplishments. But 40 years before he became president, Ford turned down the opportunity for a professional football career in favor of law school. After playingbehind All-Amer- ican center Chuck Bernard for his first two years, Ford became a starter for the Wolverines as a senior in 1934. Even though he was not selected as a captain - one of his primary athletic goals - Ford's teammates named him the Most Valuable Player of that 1-7 team. Following his final game as a Wolverine, he was invited to play in the Shrine East-West charity football game in San Francisco. As told in the biography "Time and Chance: Gerald Ford's Appoint- ment with History," represen- tatives from four professional football teams attended the con- test, but paid no attention to Ford until he entered the game for an injured starter. FORD ON THE LINKS While Gerald Ford was labeled a klutz during his time in the Oval Office, he was actually one of the most athletic presidents in history. Golf was Ford's most popular and public hobby in his post-presidency days, and unfortunately for Ford, the clumsiness he showed in the White House spread to the greens as well. Ford was well-known for hitting spec- tators while playing golf. "I'll know I'm getting better at golf because Itm hitting fewer specta- tors," Ford once said. His best remembered golf moments come from his appearanc- es at the Bob Hope Chrysler Classic. Hope and Ford were good friends and were always paired together. This is where Ford's inability to keep the ball away from spectators became a nationally renowned joke. Ford would usually crack jokes at himself about his errant shots. He once said, "I would like to deny all allegations by Bob Hope that during my last game of golf, I hit an eagle, a birdie, an elk and a moose." Although Ford sometimes had dif- ficulty keeping the ball in the fairway, he was believed to have a handicap in themid-teens - a significant achieve- ment for any amateur golfer, let alone an 80-year-old former president. He also received guidance from golf greats Jack Nicklaus and Hale Irwin. Ford used his past-presidency to do more than play golf as a hobby. He set up the Jerry Ford Invitational, which raised money for charities near his home in Vail, Colo. Ford was also the first president to become a mem- ber of the United States Golf Associ- ation members program, and served as the honorary chairman of the first President's Cup in 1994. -By Alex Prosperi Gerald Ford, seen in the center of the team picture (No. 48), received offers from both the Detroit Lions and Green Bay Packers to play professional football. He ultimately turned down the offers and went on to a successful career in politics. "I'm a loyal Wo When they lose ball, basketball thing, I still get disappointed." - Ford lverine. in foot- or any- darn - Ford "I was the only center left, so I went in and played the rest of the game and had one of my best days ever," Ford said. The professionalfootball coach- es noticed. After talking to Ford on the train ride home, the Green Bay Packers and the Detroit Lions both presented him football contracts for the following year. The Pack- ers offered $110 per game and the Lions proposed $200 per game for the 14-game professional season. Months before graduation, Ford was $1,000 in debt and needed the income but decided that higher education interested him more than professional football. "What I really wanted to do was go on to law school, and I thought maybe I could find some way to stay on at Michigan and do it," Ford later recalled. He decided not to accept either offer, instead looking for a coach- ing position to help defray the cost of law school at Michigan. After learning that he would receive just $100 as an assistant coach for the Wolverines, he realized that the job would not cover Michigan law school expenses and subsequently accepted a $2,400 per year coach- ing job at Yale. The pay was less than what he would have received from the Detroit Lions, but coaching for the Bulldogs allowed him to apply to Yale Law School. Ford coached football in the fall and spring and boxing in the winter while work- ing toward his degree. "I was assistant line coach and then later made head junior var- sity coach," Ford told The Michi- gan Daily in 1989. "By the time I finished the five years there, I was making $3,600 a year and goingto law school full-time, so it worked out very well." Decades later, when Michigan retired his number, the politician did not hesitate to address his life- long love for athletics. "I am a loyal Wolverine," he told The Ann Arbor News in 1994. "When they lose in football, bas- ketball, or anything, I still get darn disappointed." A