r O)OVI 8 - Friday, September 27, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com SprsTeMcia aiy-mciadiyo .6 In'Fourth and Long,' a look into scandal-ridden sport By EVERETT COOK Daily SportsEditor In an era when getting access to one college football program is hard, author John U. Bacon decid- ed to immerse himself in four of them. In his new book, titled "Fourth and Long: The Fight for the Soul of College Football," Bacon immers- es himself with a quartet of Big Ten programs - Michigan, Ohio State, Penn State and Northwest- ern - to get a clearer picture of the operations of college football in its current, scandal-ridden state. The book,publishedby Simon& Schuster, came out on Sept. 3 and can be purchased at Barnes and Noble, Amazon, the MDen and Literati Bookstore, among other retailers. While every program and school had their own subplots and information, perhaps the most interesting chapters covered the Penn State program the year after it received impossibly strict pun- ishments from the NCAA the year after the Jerry Sanduskyscandal, In one of the most turmoilous situations in the history of col- lege football, Bacon had complete access to the players, coaches and the walls, not everything was crumbling. "The week after the sanctions, they were trying to field enough players to fill out the schedule," Bacon said in a phone interview with the Daily. "I didn't realize and appreciate how close it was to actually closing. I was equal- ly surprised and impressed by how much effort it took from the coaches, staffers and players to keep that thing from falling apart. It was not a task operation. It was not dumb luck. "If they had done anything less than what was done, Penn State might not have had a team last year." Bacon - who grew up in Ann Arbor, teaches a class at Michigan and wrote a book two years ago about the Rich Rodriguez tenure - has been around the Wolver- ines long enough to know most of Michigan's interworkings. But there were still some surprises behind the curtains in Ann Arbor, so to speak, "One of the better surprises was just how hard working the band is," Bacon said. "I really didn't fully appreciate that even though I've been around it my whole life. That was a very happy aisle to turn to. Also, the budget was an eye- opener. How much goes in and where itgoes. Evenifyou're accus- tomed to certain things, certain things in there still surprised me." By the end of the book, it's clear to the reader that the system is broken. There were enough stories out of Penn State alone to know that massive television contracts and money had corrupted the people supposed to be running the opera- tion. But for Bacon, the saving grace was in the players, not the suits in charge. "By meeting the players at all the schools, it restored my faith that this things is worth protect- ing and saving," he said. "The players I encountered had a better sense of what college football is supposed to be about and a stron- ger moral compass than many of the people who are leading the enterprise. While that's wonder- ful,that's notthe wayit'ssupposed to be. I'm not getting cynical about the players in the same way I'm getting cynical about the NCAA." In a backwards way, it's the players - the amateur athletes - saving the adults, the multi-mil- lionaires. "The players were much more sincere than even the most opti- mistic fans could ever hope for," he said. "Taylor Lewan came back. What does that tell you? The Penn State players were being lured in the parking lot, knowing they could probably get some money E to go other places. Almost all of them stayed. That's amazing. The biggest surprise is that the biggest believers in college football are the players, not the people running it." Penn State coach Bill O'Briengave John U. Bacon unrivaled access to Penn Stale. meetings, and it showed. The most telling section came in the week after the sanctions were handed down, when the NCAA ruled that Penn State players could transfer anywhere without penalty. Players like then- senior linebacker Michael Mauti had to convince the team to stay together, even while knowing that the Nittany Lions weren't bowl eligible and would be facing severe scholarship reductions in the upcoming years. For the last two years, almost every bit of news out of Happy Valley has been negative, Bacon's reporting flipped the view back onto the players and new coach Bill O'Brien, showing that inside >of FOOTBALL EA Sports to end NCAA Football series in'14 featuring Dr. Rajeeb Chakraborty (sarod) and Pandit Samar Saha (tabla) MONDAY, SEPT 30, 2013-8-9:30 PM Stamps Auditorium, Walgreen Drama Center,1226 Murfin Ave. d to the public, For more information visit ii.umich.edu/cwps or call 734.936.2777. k 40 0 0' 1