2B -'September 29, 2014 The Michigan Daily -.michiganda ly.cam They don't celebrate mediocrity at Michigan In the Crisler Center parking lot, a group of men in their mid-60s ate cold cuts and drahk beer Saturday morning. Forty-five years ago, they were Michigan's heroes - Bo Schembechler's first team. Forty- eight members of the 1969 Michigan football team gathered in Ann Arbor this weekend MAX to celebrate COHEN the 45-year anniversary of their Big Ten championship and monumental defeat of Ohio State. They spent the tailgate before Michigan played Minnesota laughing and smiling, telling stories of their glory days, which they claim grow more exaggerated by the year. They take pride in starting what they consider to be the modern era of Michigan football. They're the ones who survived Schembechler's first training camp, the one where he hung the "Those who stay will be champions" sigh. They toppled undefeated and top-ranked Ohio State, even though nobody gave them a chance. Starting quarterback - Don Moorhead tells a reporter his team beat the Buckeyes, not upset them. Schembechler made sure they had no doubts they could win the game. They speak lovingly of their coach; he brought them together when they needed him and still connects them even after his death. A sign stretched across the top of one of the group's tents reads, "'69 Bo's Boys, We Stayed." At their 40-year reunion, each player received a shirt that says "We Stayed." This year, they received hats Michigan coach Brady Hoke couldrnt get his team turned around against Minnesota, as the 1969 team did. with the same message. They come back'to Ann Arbor to bask in their legacy, to reunite with old friends and to remember their coach and some of their teammates who are no longer with them. A handful of the men still live in Ann Arbor, while some travel from as far as Arizona. They wear their Big Ten championship rings, each with a big block 'M' facing outward. The right guard from the 1969 team, Dick Caldorazzo, never misses a home game, wearing his ring to each one. Most of the players consider the victory over the Buckeyes to be one of the greatest moments of their lives. They stayed when others left, and they are forever champions. But it almost wasn't so. Like the 2014 Michigan football team, their season also seemed to be headed toward irrelevancy. Unlike this team, they found a way to pull together. The early r 1969 seas( reveal the a championship t five games, Mich one loss was a 40 at the hands of M other was a 23-12 Michigan State. The Wolverine home games in fr empty Michigan People on the outside wondered if this new Schembechler guy from Miami (Ohio) could cut it as a big- time college football coach. The week following the loss to the Spa began ominously. was scheduled to Minnesota, but nc team's key player; Schembechler on his principle tl players didn't pra esults of the on didn't makings of eam. After igan was 3-2. 3-13 drubbing. issouri. The loss against s played their ont of a mostly Stadium. as they were going to play Saturday, the team wouldn't win. So if his players didn't practice Tuesday, they wouldn't play Saturday. The Tuesday before the Minnesota game, starting halfbacks John Gabler and Glenn Doughty missed practice because of injuries suffered during the Michigan State game. They missed practice Wednesday cortisone shot during halftime. But the Wolverines were resolute. They dominated the second half, winning 35-9. Then they won five straight games and didn't lpse again until the Rose Bowl. This year, skepticism has mounted by the week. That much was evident by the tailgaters in the parking lot spaces surrounding the 1969 team. The current Wolverines were 2-2, their season teetering on the brink of disaster, just like the 1969 team's season once was. The tailgaters wondered aloud whether Brady Hoke was the man to win Big Ten championships and if this year's team still had a chance. Hoke has been resolute that his team can get the job done. His players have been, too, insisting the team is good based upon what goes on in practice. The words of 1969 defensive end Michael Keller about his own team after five games are reminiscent of what many of this year's Wolverines had been insisting all season. "We knew we were good," Keller said. "We knew we were good enough to play better than we did.... From then on, we just kicked the crap out of everybody." Keller had no doubts about when this year's team needed to start performing if it wanted to follow his own team's path. "Itstarts today," he said Saturday. Against Minnesota, this, year's Michigan team had its own opportunity to start something bigger, a game that could turn around its- season. The players and coaches emphasized they understood the stakes and that the team could get the job done. The concept feels laughable now. Early on, the 2014 Wolverines followed the pattern of the 1969 team's game against Minnesota. They trailed, 10-7,.at the half. But history doesn't always repeat itself. The 1969 team scored 28 straight points in the second half against Minnesota. This year's team surrendered 20 in a row, 30 if you include the first half. The Wolverines were outmanned in every way, on offense, defense and special teams. They did nothing the champions of the past did. They showed little fight on the field. It was a sad chapter in what's now sure to be a sad season. People stopped questioning Brady Hoke, instead screaming with conviction for his dismissal, chanting for it in the stadium. He had decided to start sophomore quarterback Shane Morris and kept him in for too long, to the point where he could barely stand. Then, when replacement Devin Gardner's helmet came off, necessitating a trip to the sideline, he put in Morris for one more play of what can be deemed a modern.form of torture, football-style. Hoke was the first person to head toward the locker room when the clock approached zero. Morris was the last, needing a cart to exit the field. He looked down at his feet while the cart drove to the tunnel and the Golden Gophers celebrated around him. Michigan had never lost three games in September in the history of the program. This year's team is 2-3 and 0-1 in the Big Ten. In 45 years, this team won't be wearing rings and drinking beer in the parking lot. It will be sitting at home; because they don't celebrate mediocre teams at Michigan. as well, but participated Thursday. Still, They don't Schembechler keptthem celeb ate off the travel list Thursday mediocre teamS night. The players at M ichigan. realized that it didn't matter who they were; everyone had artans to adhere to the coach's rules, Michigan even if it meant having little travel to depth at the halfback position. ot all of the Michigan trailed at halftime s made the trip. against the Golden Gophers, was resolute 9-7. Making matters worse, hat if his Moorhead was injured with ictice Tuesday a hip pointer, receiving a Five Things- We Learned: Minnesota rolls Michigan I 4 Morris struggles, defense sputters in blowout home loss to Minnesota By ALEXA DETTELBACH Daily Sports Editor The Michigan football team's season continued to spiral out of control on Saturday when it lost, 30-14, at home to Minnesota. It was the Wolverines' first loss to the Golden Gophers since 2005 and just their second since 1986. Here are the five things we learned in Michigan's second straight loss: 1. The Wolverines are a bad football team: Maybe we already knew this, or maybe we were naive enough to think that Michigan's struggles would go away once Big Tenplay started. Either way, there's no truer conclusion from the Wolverines' horrific 30-14 loss to Minnesota other than it's a bad football team. From start to finish, the Wolverines looked unprepared, unmotivated and lost on the field. The crowd booed even louder this week calling for Michigan coach Brady Hoke's and Athletic Director Dave Brandon's jobs. It's hard to blame them considering the Wolverines had just 171 total yards of offense, 12 first downs - three of which were earned through penalty - allowed 206 Minnesota rushing yards and have lost three games in the month of September for the first time in program history. And all this coming at the hands of a struggling Minnesota team. 2. Quarterback Shane Morris is not the answer: After the Wolverines lost to Utah last week, it was clear they needed a change. So the coaching staff went with backup quarterback Shane Morris. The sophomore had a long afternoon, going 7-for-19 with 49 yards, one interception and a fumble. But his struggles went beyond his numbers. Morris spent all afternoon over-throwing receivers and missing targets. He also sustained a leg injury in the third quarter, but stayed in the game. Then, early in the fourth he was hit in the head, drawing a roughing-the-passer penalty. He appeared to be wobbly and needed to lean on a lineman to stand. Running back Justice Hayes looked to the sideline on Morris' behalf, but the coaching staff kept him in. He ended up being carted off the field at the end, but even when he was healthy at the beginning of the game, Morris was far from the solution to Michigan's issues. 3. Brady Hoke is a dead man walking: Argue what you want, but an embarrassing loss to Minnesota all but nailed Hoke's coffin shut.. Michigan has just four wins in its last 13 games, the most impressive last year against a subpar Northwestern opponent that required triple overtime. Maybe Brandon won't do it until the end of the season, or maybe one more loss like Saturday's will be all it takes to do it midseason, but it's hard to see this administration retaining Hoke for a fifth year. 4. This team will probably be missing key players against Rutgers: This one is harder to predict considering Hoke never shares injury updates with the public, but junior receiver Devin Funchess was badly limping and needed help off the field at the end of the game. He said earlier this week that he'll be playing with an injury all season, but this could be too much to bear considering he couldn't get to the sideline on his own. Morris also appeared to have a leg injury, but was able to manage, until he was steam- rolled early in the fourth quarter by Minnesota's Theiren Cockran. 5. Bold Prediction: Michigan will win ONE conference game: It's going to be a long Big Ten season if the Wolverines come out playing the way they did Saturday. And thus far they've given fans no reason to think they'll play any differently. So, for now, it feels like this Michigan team is only going to win one more game. How can this team win anymore than one? How can they beat Rutgers on the road or Penn State under the lights if the Wolverines play like they did yesterday? Teams like Indiana and Maryland are going to be a handful for this severely underperforming Michigan squad. BY THE NUMBERS Michigan Football 1 Time in school history that theWolver- ines haveInst threatimsainSantember I I I I 36.8 Completion percentagefor Michigan sonhomore narterhark Shane Morris