Page 12-Wednesday, June 18,1980-The Michigan Daily 33-YEAR T RAINER EXITS ON A HIGH NOT E Paddock ends long career By MARK MIHANOVIC Len Paddock brought it out to his kit- chen and displayed it with pride. It was Butch Woolfolk's gold medal for first place in the 200-meter dash at the 1980 Big Ten Track Championships, given by the sprinter and football tailback to Paddock in honor of his retirement af- ter 33 years as Michigan's assistant trainer. "I thought it was a nice gesture," the 65-year-old Paddock said ap- preciatively yesterday.'"You don't give away gold medals; they're something you treasure." THIRTY-THREE years dating back to 1947-48, when the Wolverines won national championships in football, hockey, and swimming, and when Don Canham was an assistant track coach ("I run into people today who say, 'No, Canham was never the assistant anything' "). Thirty-three years ser- ving under 36 head coaches in 11 sports during which the Maize-and-Blue com- piled 102 Big Ten athletic champion- ships, 16 of them in track-and-field. And Paddock says that last month's Big. Ten Championships, in which the men trackers upset Indiana to win the title, is the memory that stands out most. The team members presented Paddock with two $100 bills on the night before they departed for Champaign, Illinois, and standout distance runner Dan Heikkinen promised the trainer that the Wolverines would win the championship for him. PADDOCK RELISHED the thought of the incident. "I said, 'Dammit, I've been through these things before where people dedicate a game to someone and then blow it. You better win this meet.' "Well, they won it. I'm not that vain to think they won it because of me, but I like to think that maybe it had something to do with it. Maybe I'm a lit- tle corny to think so." Paddock, who worked on football and track during the fall and track for most of the rest of the year, has enjoyed the past two weeks of relaxation, although he won't be officially retired until June 30th. It is apparent, however, that the locker room scene will never stray very far from his mind, his love of Michigan athletics and the people involved coming through loud and clear with his every sentence and with the tedious statistics he has kept over the years. Paddock, who had played some college football (at Northern State Teachers' College, now Northern Michigan), came to Ann Arbor with Jim Hunt in 1947 and remained a loyal assistant until the latter's retirement in 1968. It was decision-making time for Paddock, then 53. "BY THE time the situation (an opening for the head trainer job) presented itself, I was too old," he recalled. "At that time, Canham hinted that if I was interested, I might be con- sidered, but I said, 'Absolutely not'. "It's a job for a younger man who can hustle. Financially, I'm sure I would have been better off, but what the hell? The die was cast." However, he never had trouble main- taining interest in his job, which in- volved, on the average, 55 hours per week during football season. "YOU GET tired at times, but you hardly get bored," he said. "It's hard to get bored in a university town where the students are swarming and such. We (the trainers) are right in the center of activity, where we know what's going on. "And every week is a new week. Some of these students who go to class and don't engage in athletics might get bored. For a football player, his objec- tive is right there, five days away. You sure as hell don't get bored." A career spanning the gridiron coaching tenures of Fritz Crisler, Ben- nie Oosterbaan, Bump Elliott, and Bo Schembechler has given Paddock a unique vantage point from which to view the Michigan football program. He declined to compare Schembechler with any of his predecessors, though. "HE (SCHEMBECHLER) would kill me," Paddock joked. "He'd come out here with his little stick and beat me. It's not fair to compare. They're each their own man. And they all had definite ideas on what they'd do if they were in charge." He'll undoubtedly miss being on the "inside" of the Wolverine sports scene, but Paddock is not at all reluctant to move on to the next phase of his life, retirement. "Next fall, it'll be hard to find something to do. But when the old routine is shot, you've got to adapt to a new routine. No problem." the other hundreds and hundreds of As the interview ended, the old Michigan athletes whose ankles he has trainer called out, "Don't forget the taped don't forget the 33-year part of part about Butch." Len Paddock, a man who is truly Not as long as Woolfolk and many of Maize-and-Blue all over. LEN PADDOCK is pictured here (kneeling left) with Lindsy McLean (kneeling right) of the San Francisco 49'ers, Michigan assistant Dan Campbell (standing left) and Al Green of Kentucky. ROWDINESS ENDED: Bleachers emptied By TOM SHAHEEN Special to the Daily DETROIT - The centerfield bleachers at Tiger Stadium were void of a single person during last night's game against the Milwaukee Brewers. Detroit Tiger President and General Manager Jim Campbell announced that the bleachers would be temporarily closed because of the "rowdy and sometimes ' dangerously careless behavior of some fans." The ruling came in the wake of Mon- day night's twinight doubleheader against Milwaukee, during which Brewer centerfielder Gorman Thomas and Sixto Lescano were bombarded by a barrage of cups, bottles and other garbage to the point of making it very dangerous for the two Milwaukee out- fielders. "I got hit with cups and a whiskey bottle," said Thomas. "I have a lot of respect for the Detroit organization. They have to show everybody that this stupidity must stop." Brewers' manager George Bam- berger echoed the disgust of his center- fielder and was pleased with the decision to close the bleachers. "I told the players to walk off the field if they felt they were going to get hurt," said Bamberger. MILWAUKEE CENTERFIELDER Gorman Thomas is surrounded by debris on the field of Tiger Stadium Monday evening. The litter was slung onto the field by Detroit's bleacher fans in the second game of a split doubleheader, and resulted in the closing of the bleachers for last night's game.