Bo that really melded us into notjust agood IowatCity first. football team. We formed a lot of lifelong After 60 minutea of physical, hard-nosed friendships, and they continue to this day." football, Michigan had not only beaten Dick Caldarazzo, a senior left guard on Iowa - it had bulldozed right through the the team, is in charge of emailing the for- Hawkeyes en route to a 51-6 pounding. mer players and setting up reunions. And the Wolverines could sense the "What was the class I believe (Schem- Buckeyes all the way from Iowa City. bechler) was closest to," Caldarazzo said. "I "We were really happy we won that think it was the fact that he introduced this game, but the next thing, we just wanted concept, this way of playing football, way of Ohio State," Caldarazzo said. "We would've practicing, that we all bought into." left our clothes on and played Ohio State It's a camaraderie that began with that afternoon if we could come back on the Schembechler and was carried out by the field." seniors on that 1969 team. And if Michigan does this year what it did in 1969 during Schembechler's first sea- November 19, 2011 son at the helm, it's a camaraderie that can There were over six minutes left, but be cemented in the legacy of Brady Hoke. already the chants had begun. No. 20 Michigan led No. 17 Nebraska, 45-17 - the Wolverines had dominated in November 15,1969 every facet of the game. It was one of those days in November "Beat O-HI-O! Beat O-HI-O!" when you yearned to have warm summer The cheer started in a small corner of the days back, one of those days where it hits student section but grew like wildfire. As you: "Winter is here." the clock wound down to zero, Michigan Or, for a Michigan football player: "Ohio Stadium echoed the words of former coach- State week can't be far off." es and players alike. "It snowed like crazy," recalled Jerry Beat Ohio. Hanlon, who was an assistant coach under The players heard it. Schembechler from 1969-89. "I think that as the game winded down "We had a motel we stayed at, and there and we were kneeling the ball, everyone was so much space under the door that was thinking that in the back of their head," snow came halfway into my room." said redshirt junior safety Jordan Kovacs. In those days, there were no snow blow- "Like all right, that was a big win, but it's on ers, no easy ways out. to the next one." So they innovated. The cheers only grew louder as the clock "They got a helicopter on Saturday morn- hit zero and the players ran to the student ing and just blew all the snow off the field," section to sing the fight song with their Hanlon said. "And then the sun came out, peers, like they do after every home win. and it was a beautiful day." Senior defensive tackle Mike Martin led No. 14 Michigan, 6-2 at the time, was the charge, jumping into the front row of playing unranked Iowa, who was 4-4 and in the student section, holding his winged hel- desperate need of a win. met high in the air, singing the fight song. It was the perfect trap game. No. 1 Ohio But Martin's work wasn't done. State - which had been deemed "The "We know we're getting better, but the Greatest Team in the History of College season is far from over," he said after the Football" - loomed a week away. With just game. "(Ohio State) is a huge game for our one Big Ten loss, the Wolverines were in legacy as a team, for this senior group, for line for a Rose Bowl berth if they could win Team 132, and we just gotta make sure we their last two games. finish this season out the way we want to, But they had to beat the Hawkeyes in and the way we envisioned the whole sea- 0 w w w w w w w W- Robinson and Miller share the spotlight Bo Schembechler is carried off the field after No. 12 Michigan's 24-12 victory over No.1 Ohio State in 1969. son." It was a vision started in the early 1900s by Michigan's Fielding H. Yost, a vision car- ried out bycoaches like Harry Kipke, Fritz Crisler, Bennie Oosterbaan. It was a vision restored by Schembechler. And now, it's in the hands of Hoke. Bo Schembechler, an Ohio native, came to Michigan in 1969 after serving as head coach at Miami University, his alma mater, from 1963-1968. In six seasons with the Redskins (now the RedHawks), Schembechler won two conference titles and finished second three times. At Michigan, he took over for the retired Bump Elliot, who, in10 years as head coach, posted a mediocre 51-42-2 record. Schembechler's mission was simple: get Michigan back into national prominence. And his first ingredient was simple, too. "Coach Schembechler said it in the first meeting," said Jim Brandstatter, an offen- sive tackle and now Michigan's radio color commentator. "The seniors have to have their best year of football. He puts that responsibility right on their shoulders, and every one of them took it to heart. When practice got too hard, when Bo was on us too much, those guys stood there and took it. Those guys made everybody aware that this is what it takes to win." From there, the rest of Schembechler's formula fell into place. Toughness. Disci- pline. Respect. "Seldom can you have a successful season unless your seniors are having their great- est year," Schembechler said on Nov. 25, 1969. "That's an especially important factor in transition because they're the hardest guys to sell. They're the nucleus." From 2003 to 2008, Brady Hoke served as head coach at his alma mater, Ball State. In 2008, he led the Cardinals to a perfect 12-0 season before losing to Buffalo in the MAC Championship. The season propelled him into the national spotlight for the first time. The next season, he took the head-coach- ing job at San Diego State, and in 2010, he turned a sputtering program into a compet- itor, finishing the season 9-4. In January 2011, Hoke took over at Mich- igan for the departed Rich Rodriguez. And at his opening press conference, he had a message. "We're gonna coach for our seniors," Hoke said. "Because seniors have been through those struggles. We're always gonna play and coach for our seniors in this program." It seemed almost clich6 at the time. Every new coach has to say that. But as is clear now, Brady Hoke isn't your average new coach. "The thing about him is that he is what he is," said Hanlon, who went to school with Hoke's father and has known Brady for years. "There's not a phony bone in his body. What you see is what you get, and I think that goes a long way for kids to believe in somebody." Hoke has stuck to his word. "This is a group of (seniors) who have been through a lot," Hoke said on Monday. "They've hung together well and they've done a nice job of preparing weekly. "There are seniors that have done a tre- mendous job of understanding you start with the fundamentals, you start with the technique, you start with discipline." November 18,1969 It was the start o= Ohio State week, and if you didn't know it, you either lived in a box or didn't care about sports. Everybody was talking about it. In Columbus, an abundance of "pro- Michigan" newspapers flooded the city two weeks before the matchup, and Michigan students invaded the Ohio State campus, By TIM ROHAN Miller's talent was undeniable. Daily Sports Editor "He's a great quarterback," Robinson said. "He's got a lot of "It's going to be a physical fight, growing (to do), but I think he's because that's what it is - like Joe going to be good. And we've got Frazier versus to be prepared for him Saturday MuhammadAli." because he can run around and -Junior quar- OhiO State he can throw it." terback Denard at Michigan Michigan coach Brady Hoke Robinson Mth- defended Robinson's perfor- MOhio State mance in the middle of the sea- Two quarter- 6-5; Michi- son, saying he too was "growing." backs will carry gan 9-2 Robinson looked all grown up the weight of The When: Sar- against Nebraska last weekend, Game on Sat- day 12 P.M. accounting for 263 total yards urday. One is a and four touchdowns in what can junior, adapting Where: Michi- be considered his best all-around to a new offense. gao Stadium game of the season. The other a true TV/Radio: The nagging mechanical issues freshman, tasked ABC or ESPN that hurt him earlier in the sea- with stabilizing a son are less worrisome now, said program shaken offensive coordinator Al Borges. by scandal. Instead, Borges has created a Both can change the game with monster - one that listened too their dynamic abilities. Both face well, stays in the pocket too long an elite top-20 defense. and doesn't scramble as much as Both are Muhammad Ali, float- he should. ing like butterflies, stinging like "They want to prove that they bees. can throw the ball, but there's a Michigan junior Denard Rob- point where you have to use your inson can single-handedly keep skills," Borges said. the Wolverines' offense churning A few weeks ago, Robinson's if he executes, or he can drown it father felt the need to call his son, all if he turns the ball over. whose rushing numbers dimin- Last Saturday, as Robinson was ished with each Big Ten game. coming off the field after scoring "If nothing's there, just make a a touchdown, his hands waved play," his father told him. "You've wildly in front of his face as he got that ability to do it, so just do trotted back to the sidelines. He it." motioned an imaginary spoon Borges talks to Robinson about towards his mouth. how his best check down may be "This program has been starv- himself. To that point, footwork is ing for a while," Robinson said key. Robinson's feet scream what Monday. "It's time for us to make he's going to do with the football, something happen this year." whether he's sliding in the pocket If No. 17 Michigan plans to get still looking to throw or moving its fill, it'll have to do so riding to an open space to run it. Robinson into battle with Ohio Hoke said Robinson ran with State. On the line: the Wolverines' more "authority" against the first 10-win campaign and first Cornhuskers. The junior signal BCS bowl berth since the 2006 caller seemed less hesitant as he season. ran for 83 yards - his highest Robinson's counterpart in total since Oct. 8 against North- Saturday's heavyweight bout is western. equally as maddening, nearly as What may help Robinson most amazing, Braxton Miller. is heeding the advice Borges gave Two weeks ago, down six him during spring practice, when points on the road against Purdue, the two were still getting to know the Ohio State freshman quarter- each other: "Make plays and let back faced a 4th-and-3 with only the good Lord make miracles." a minute left. In true Robinson Ohio State coach Luke Fick- fashion, Miller scrambled to his ell said he'd offer similar advice right when the pocket collapsed, to his dual-threat quarterback jumped over a defender, and with before The Game. two more Boilermakers in his "We don't need anything face, he threw off his back foot superhuman, we just need you and hit an open receiver in the to be who you've been and have endzone. Ohio State missed the some confidence in what you do," extra point and lost the game, but Fickell said. Miller's signature moment so far may have been when he launched a 40-yard touchdown pass on the run with less than 30 seconds left to topple then-No. 15 Wisconsin. It was Robinson-like, making the impossible play out of noth- ing. But Miller shares Robinson's pension for poor passing. Albeit, his kryptonite is accuracy, not turnovers. In the eight games Miller has started, he has completed just 46 percent of his throws and has topped 100-yards passing only once. Miller's youth, multiplied by suspensions to key contributors running back Dan Herron and wide receiver DeVier Posey, have the Buckeyes' offense ranked 108th in the Division I. "I'm disappointed right now in the way we've played the last three weeks as a team," Fickell said. "With the type of people we're dealing, with the youth and the different things we have ... you can't just point a finger." Now, Miller will be fed to a Wolverine defense coming off their best two games of the sea- son. Having Mattison dialing up exotic blitzes and disguising cov- erages will only exaggerate Mill- er's problems. Considering everything sur- rounding The Game - Ohio State's series streak on the line, the departures of Jim Tressel and Terrelle Pryor amidst pro- gram strife and the resurgence of Michigan - Fickell thinks Mill- er's youth may help him in this fight. "Sometimes the best thing you can be as a young guy and not realize exactly the magnitude," Fickell said. "Sometimes the younger guys, they're almost oblivious. ... Hope- fully that's the way he continues to attack it." Robinson, meanwhile, is com- pletely aware. He remembered how he felt walking off the field at Ohio Stadium last year, los- ing Michigan's seventh-straight game in the rivalry. "Everybody hates that taste," Robinson said. "We still have that taste in our mouth, losing last year. We want to change that. "We've been starving. This program's been starving. So it's time for us to eat." In 1969, the Michigan defense held Ohio State's offense, one of the best in the nation, to just 12 points. Michigan quarterback Denard Robinson did a better job of scrambling when he's supposed to against Nebraska. TheMichiganDaily - www.michigandaily.com 3 6 FootballSaturday - November 26, 2011