2B - April 2, 2012 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com It takes two to tandem: The tale of Taylor Lewan's twosie JI t took more than five decades of living, but Joel Hakken- who had navigated his way from wildly successful business owner to comfortably retired to sports photog- rapher, while- in and out of love, and back in love again - decided his friend had ; been right: "If you tandem before you get TIM married, then ROHAN you know- what the mar- riage is going to be like." Life and tandem biking aren't so different, after all. Life led Hakken to a small, two-stall shop in a plaza off Plym- outh Road near North Campus, where Hakken sells and repairs bicycles, primarily tandem bikes. The man, who grew up down the street from Bo Schembechler in Ann Arbor, hasa tired, weath- ered face and hands that look as thoughthey're familiar with handy work. Not every customer knows what they're looking for when they find him. Some do; others stumble upon Hakken's passion, Midwest Bike & Tandem, and walk out having enjoyed a healthy con- versation and traded new ideas. Not of bikes, but of life, Hakken's hometown, its people and its school. "Half the time, I don't know what he's talking about," said Hakken's son, Dylan, who had been busy fixing a deep-blue-col- ored tandem bike, and who lov- ingly called his father a hippie. In the 1970s, before his first tandem, Hakken indulged his first love studying fine-art photogra- phy at Michigan. He practiced as a professional photographer briefly, then decided to get his graduate degree, also in fine-art photography, at Ohio University. To scratch his itch after col- lege, Hakken taught part time at Washtenaw Community College and started his own business selling and renting photography equipmenton the side. Hakken was married and enjoyed bike rid- ing in his free time. "My wife and I rode at two dif- ferent speeds. So we said, let's get a tandem and we can ride togeth- er," Hakken said. Tandem bikes are romantic at their essence, Hakken says. With a normal-bicycle look, but extended and built for two, it takes teamwork, coordination, trust and communication for the captain - who controls the steer- ing, sitting in front - and his or her partner to ride painlessly. Hakken surely imagined sum- mer afternoons spent biking serenely around Ann Arbor with his wife when his photography business took off, and he sold it for enough money that he thought he could retire. But five years after his first tandem purchase, FTAIU YE l MARISSA MCCLAIN/Daily M Joel Hakken stands outside his bike store near North Campus. Joel Hakken works ona tandem bike inside Midwest Bike &T 300-plus pounds, which would be the measurements of the biggest person to ever buy one of Hak- ken's tandems. Lewan has an entourage with him, including Chris Brown, the hockey team's imposing right- winger, who looks small next to Lewan. Hakken has seen college kids before: they come in, take a look, but never buy his bikes. He doubts Lewan will. It doesn't take long for Lewan to spot the 1962 Firestone and announce, "That's my bike!" Everyone laughs, but Hakken starts preparing the bike for a test ride. Hakken figures, OK, they'll ride it up and down the parking lot and that'll be that. Lewan takes it for a spin, try- ing to move his weightback and lift up the handlebars and get the classic tandem in the air while going overthe parking lot's speed bumps. ARISSA MCCAIN/Daily Later, Lewan will tell report- Tandem. ers that he's more serious now. He will be a redshirt junior next F fall and he expects to be a leader. He will say there are a times and places for his humor, including the impromptu mustache readily tattooed on his index finger and the tattooed "right-hand man" stick figure. He will sound sincere and more mature. "Football players cannot fly!" Hakken shouts. Nowis the time for fun. Hakken asks Lewan where the coeds are goingto sit, as he rides around with his friends. Tandem bikes are, after all, romantic. "No girls are goingto ride my twosie," Lewan says, incredulous- ly, and Hakken laughs again. He's never heard anyone call a tandem that before, but he chooses not to correct Lewan, who makes it clear he's serious about buying the bike. "Can you do me better on the price?" Lewan asks. "Yeah, Ican do you a little bet- LSY OF TAYLOR LEWAN , -tall. ter." "That's good, that's what I was heir outrageous hoping. We've got a deal." x, they needed Hakken will later admit it was I said, it wasn't the cheapest he's ever sold a bike. hat I normally And no more than 30 minutes bad for them." after they walked in, Lewan had ed the bike, which his twosie and Hakken had two iful, "borderline new friends. never sell. When Lewan's also the youngest per- it out for two son to ever buy one of Hakken's e elderly couple, tandems. One day, Lewan will put ld be the bike's away his right-hand man, he will hide his mustache, and, instead, eet some of the he will pursue or nurture love, as n tandem bikes," Hakken did, riding his first tan- dem. Until Lewan does, Hakken ago, Hakken met will hope he "is wearing the thing right out." Life and tandem biking aren't *** so different, after all. "Don't tell coach that I'm riding an football this thing!" Brown shouts as he, approaches the Lewan and their friends scamper onders whether out of Hakken's store. 6 " Redshirt junior left tackle Taylor Lewan tweeted this photo of himself and a teammate riding the 1962 Firestone 'twosie' outside Schembechler F after many bumpy rides, Hakken divorced his wife. "The tandem wasn't the root of the cause, but it didn't help," he said. Half of his money gone, Hak- ken found work at The Wolverine magazine asa sports photogra- pher. He stayed three years, but they were painfully revelatory years: he saw his friends pushed out in favor of quantity and profit over quality. Life wasn't as hope- ful. He swore off journalism. With similar passion, he had sworn to his mother that he would never marry again. Then he met Wendy, a Ford Motor Company engineer who lived two doors down and who said "sure" when Hakken asked her to ride the tandem. They rode comfort- ably together. They weda few years later and decided their wedding present would be a tandem. They settled on a bike that had been built in Eugene, Ore. Since they had friends in Seattle, they planned to visit and pick it up from the man- ufacturer, Co-Motion Cycles. Always a people person, Hak- ken met everyone who worked at Co-Motion and befriended the owner, who complained about the company's lacking presence in Ann Arbor. Hakken said, "Well, I'll see what I can do," and started refer- ring potential riders, who he had a knack for spotting. Three years later, Co-Motion came to him. "They said, 'Just open a store, you're selling enough bikes just referring people, just open your own store,"' Hakken said. "That's how we started." Since September 2008, Mid- west Bike £b Tandem has been owned and operated and embod- ied by Hakken. He has indulged his creative side by designing bikes for Co-Motion and build- ing prototypes himself: In 2010, he entered a remarkably light 20-pound tandem in the North American Handmade Bicycle Show in Richmond, Va. Currently, Co-Motion is build- ing the 20-pounder with a few modifications, Hakken said. For him and Wendy, the wed- ding present remained the "coun- terpoint of our summer existence, getting out on the bike, getting away from phones and enjoying each other's company." Hakken's line of work intro- duced him to more eclectic com- pany, the kind that would make interesting dinner guests. He's a pied piper of sorts, hosting 420 riders at last year's Midwest Tan- dem Rally and selling tandems to people all over Michigan, Indi- ana, Illinois and Ohio. One day, an elderly couple offered to sell Hakken a teal-blue-colored, two- speed, 1962 Firestone tandem with its original paint. "It's a terrible, sad story," Hak- ken said. "With t state property ta some money. So: the type of bike t buy, butI felt so t Hakken figure he called a beaut antique," wouldi asked, he loaned weddings, but th in his mind, wou last owners. "You get to me neatest people ox Hakken said. Three weeks: Taylor Lewan. As the Michig team's left tackle door, Hakken wo 0 he can fit through it and whether his alma mater has desks big enough for a man this big. He guesses Lewan's about 6-foot-8, - Rohan can be reached at trohan@umich.edu or on Twitter @TimRohan. for more information call 734/615-6449 thescollege of literature, science, and the arts presents the 32nd distinguished senior fatuity lecture Third doubles pair sparks Michigan win By JEFF KAPLAN For the Daily When the No. 1 doubles team for the Michigan men's tennis team, consisting of junior Evan King and sophomore Shaun Bern- stein, went down 5-1 on Saturday against Purdue, the weekend was already off to a bad start. But due to the play of the No. 3 doubles team and a comeback from King and Bernstein, the Wolverines were able to turn their poor start into two decisive wins. "(The weekend) was great, " said coach Bruce Berque. "Pur- due and Indiana are both talented teams. Indiana, we lost on the road to last year, 4-3, so that's always more satisfying." On Saturday, the Wolverines defeated Purdue (1-2 Big Ten, 7-8 overall), 5-2, then followed that up with another 5-2 victory on Sunday against Indiana (2-3,14-7). Both of these victories included winning the doubles point, which allowed Michigan (4-1, 11-5) to take a lead into the singles match- es. The decisive victory in the dou- bles match on Saturday came from the No. 3 team of freshmen Alex Petrone and Michael Zhu. After getting out to a 2-1 lead, the third pairing never looked back, cruis- ingto an 8-5 victory. "I think the doubles point was big," Berque said. "We would have been confident that we would have had a great chance to come back, but we took an educated gamble to take Shaun out of the lineup. And having won the doubles, we were a little more confident. It gave us a big lift, and I'm sure Purdue thinks it was a point they felt they could have and winning the game and used the momentum to finish off seniors Stephen Vogl and Will Kendall. That sealed the doubles point for two straight matches. "I think we fell off a little bit (earlier this season), but we are getting back on it because me and Mike, we jell pretty well as a team, and I think we will get the momentum going again," Petrone said. Both matches showed the mat- uration of Zhu should have and Petrone. won, but we Despite their stepped it up at "W e jell pretty youth, they the end." j p both have had Petrone well as a team ." to play impor- and Zhu came tant roles this through again season on a on Sunday, but team without it was a bit more difficult. After any seniors. On Saturday, they going up 3-1, they lostfour straight were thrust into playing a bigger games, putting them in a hole role. With Bernstein unable to and possibly sending Michigan to play singles because of a strained start singles with a 1-0 deficit. But shoulder, Petrone moved up from Petrone and Zhu rallied back, tak- his usual No. 3 slot to play in the ing a one-game lead. second spot. The change didn't The Indiana No. 3 doubles team affect him, as he won, 6-2, 7-5. went up 40-0whenthe match was "No different than any other tied at 7-7, and the Hoosier pair match," Petrone said. "The guy was on the verge of taking all the was pretty good, pretty solid from momentum back when Zhu and the baseline, but I came out firing Petrone rallied. The duo ended up and I did a good job of keeping my energy up. I got a little tight serv- ing for it and was up 5-4 in the sec- ond, but (I) regrouped and got the job done." Zhu was also forced to play up, moving from the No. 4 spot to the No. 3 spot. Just like Petrone, Zhu didn't miss a beat, winning, 7-5, 6-3. "I think (Zhu's) really learning everythingthat's involved in com- peting at a high level in college tennis, even when he's not hitting the ball at hisbest," Berque said. "I think that's his biggest thing that he needs to learn, but he is defi- nitely learning it. He was the lead- er in doubles on that court, like he has been so many times." With Bernstein back in the line- up on Sunday, both freshmen were able to secure a victory. Zhu won, 6-2, 4-6 (10-8), and Petrone, 6-2, 6-0. With only conference match- ups remaining, both Petrone and Zhu will need to keep playing with the same vigor, especially next weekend, with the team trav- eling to powerhouses Illinois and Northwestern. Berque has confi- dence the pairwill keep itup. "They are competing really well," Berque said. "They figured out what they're good at and what they're not as good at." gillian feeley-harnik kathleen gough collegiate professor of anthropology tuesday, april 3, 2012 LSA rackham amphitheater 4:10pm 0