The Michigan Daily - Monday, August 9, 2004 - 160 Lee Bollinger (blue ring) called Bill Martin (grey ring) to clean up the Michigan athletic depart- ment. Gerald Ford (yellow ring) formed the U OC in the 1970s. Martin replaced Marty Mankamyer (green ring) as USOC president. Peter Ueberroth (red ring) took the reigns as chairmen when Martin's term ended. JANITOR OF THE RINGS By Josh Holman Daily Sports Writer Bill Martin is the last one to leave the office at Weidenbach Hall on State Street. He roams the hall- ways making sure all the lights are flicked off. He still has two outdated file cabinets taking up space in a corner that he'll have to sort through eventual- ly. And when there's a mess, Martin is the one people call to clean it up. Take a quick look down his resume. Have you figured out exactly what Bill Martin does? "When there's a problem, people say, 'Martin, come and bring your broom and clean it up," Martin said. "Every- body nicknames me at times The Jani- tor. When organizations get in trouble, I come in and clean them up." Entire organizations might seem like a lot for an ordinary janitor to clean up, but Martin isn't your ordinary janitor. On top of his responsibilities as Michigan's Athletic Director, Martin just closed out an 18-month run as act- ing president of the United States Olympic Committee. If there was ever an organization that needed cleaning up, it was the USOC. In May of 2002, President Sandy Bald- win resigned amid rumors of reportedly using inaccurate academic credentials. Baldwin's replacement, Marty Mankamyer only threw the USOC fur- ther into disarray. After months of infighting, Mankamyer and CEO Lloyd Ward were both eventually ousted from their positions. Martin had only recently been elected Vice President/Secretariat in December of 2002, a few months before Mankamyer's resignation. "Literally, the very first meeting I attended in that room of the Executive Committee our president had to resign," Martin said. "When that hap- pened, unbeknownst to me because I never looked at them, our bylaws say that the Vice President/Secretariat automatically becomes president. So all of the sudden I went from being one of a 125-person board to being president." Martin had been thrust into a spot- light he didn't ask for. He was the interim president of an organization rocked by scandal, plagued by budget problem and in danger of losing mil- lions from sponsors that were ready to pull the plug. Conveniently, Martin had been in that position before. In 2000, then-Michigan If there's one place for any sort of ter- President Lee Bollinger came running rorist organization to send a statement to Martin to help bail out an athletic to the world, the Olympics are that tar- department mired in budget problems get. It already happened in 1972 in of its own and a basketball scandal in its Munich, when members of the Palestin- early stages. ian group Black September took 11 The budget ship is balanced once Israeli athletes hostage in the Olympic again at Michigan, and the basketball Village, eventually killing them all. team is free of its sanctions from the "We'll all be holding our breath Ed Martin ordeal. No wonder Martin - during the Games," Martin said. "But Bill, not Ed - came with such high having said that, is there any place in recommendations. And, as his track the world that's really secure? I don't record shows, he didn't disappoint the think so." USOC either. Martin experienced the tightened "Along with some other people, we security firsthand when he visited put together a good team that knew Athens. Shortly after he arrived, a how to straighten the organization up," Greek man clad in a black suit and tie Martin said. "And all of us had no woke Martin from his bed to intro- evils. None of us had duce himself as any objective to move "When there's a problem Martin's per- on." sonal chief of That team-first atti- people say, 'Martin, come security. tude completely and bring your broom and "They never changed the USOC. clean it up.' When organza-told me about Martin - a banker and tions get in trouble I come this," Martin real estate man by trade in and clean them up." said. "There - cut all the fat out of were seven guys the committee. He - Bill Martinthat guarded me trimmed down the the entire week. excess budget and replaced the sen- They wouldn't let me go any place ior leadership from the start. An without them. A little bit of an organiza- organization that had suffered from tional challenge right there. I was con- internal feuding was working togeth- sidered a high-risk target." er and making some real changes. It's no secret that this year's host city The most notable change was an has given all sorts of reason for the entire reform of the USOC structure. international community to be con- Martin and his team downsized the cerned. It seems as though Athens will Board of Directors down from 125 to barely finish its facilities on time, and 11 and eliminating his own position, questions have been floating on how appointing a Chairman to head the seriously Greece has taken security operations. threats. The U.S. and its international After Martin got the organization to allies decided to take matters into their stop worrying about itself, it was able own hands. NATO will now be present to turn its attention to two monstrous at the Games, and 125 of the U.S.'s own issues facing the coming Olympic state department security people will Games. protect athletes and officials. dred medals," Martin said. "We changed that here a few months ago. We don't care if we win a hundred medals or 50 medals, as long as they're all clean medals." It's anyone's guess whether the dop- ing has been blown out of proportion, but it will stay on the front pages until the start of the Games, thanks to the very public cases of Tim Montgomery and Marion Jones, who face allegations of drug use and the possibility of severe consequences from the United States Anti-Doping Agency. "That is entirely in the hands of USADA," Martin said. "And they are seeking a lifetime ban for Tim Mont- gomery. The Marion Jones case is yet to be heard. It may be she made the team in the long jump and it's yet to be seen what's going to happen on that." Montgomery and Jones both failed to qualify in their strongest event this year - the 100-meter dash - saving the USOC from the trouble of deciding whether or not to bar two of its strongest athletes from the ultimate world stage. According to Martin, though, if there was any evidence against them, they were likely to see consequences from it. "I liken track and field (and) our Olympic sports like I had 45 kids and one of them you had to take out back to the woodshed," Martin said. "That's what I did with track and field." The Jones and Montgomery cases are only the most public of cases. If any- thing positive can come from them, it allows the USOC to make an example out of even the highest profile athletes. The problem is still out there, but peo- ple are at least talking about it. "I believe we need to have a national discussion on should we or should we not have a consistent drug policy across all sports," Martin said. "I'm talking from kindergarten through professional sports, Olympic sports, collegiate sports. One standard." Martin has righted the ship at the USOC, and for him, that's good enough. He would have been more than welcome in Athens during the Games, but instead, he's decided to vacation on the shores of Lake Superior. "I don't think it's appropriate to go and be there when the new leadership is there," Martin said. "It's their day, not my day. My day has passed. I don't want to be any sort of side act to them because I know all the press and any issue that would come up the press would come up and ask me." It's hard to imagine Martin stealing the spotlight away from new chair- man Peter Ueberroth, a former com- missioner of Major League Baseball. But through all of this, Martin made quite a name for himself. He led a team composed of all-stars like Hol- lywood producer Frank Marshall ("Raiders of the Lost Ark") and Bill Stapelton - Lance Armstrong's friend and agent. "Everybody just check your ego at the door and sit down and figure out what's right for the American Olympic movement," Martin said. "You've got to have the right people who have the organization's interests ahead of their own." Given the people Martin has been directing, keeping a sensible head may seem harder-than you'd think. He speaks with Ueberroth on a consistent basis, and even keeps in touch with for- mer President and Michigan alumni Gerald Ford, who played a large part in forming the USOC in the 1970s when he was Vice President. Through all of this, Martin has man- aged to keep from being star-struck and even remains humble. That can proba- bly be attributed to his role here at Michigan. He's been through the ups and downs of a national organization, but when's it's all said and done, he's still the athletic director at his school. His reputation precedes him, and peo- ple often come calling to have him clean up their own athletic departments and organizations, but Ann Arbor is the place to be. "I'm a Michigan guy," Martin said. "This is my home. I'm very honored every time I get those calls, but I'm not leaving here. Would I look at some- thing else? I don't know. My objective is I put Michigan on the right track financially now" So now it's time for a much-needed vacation. Martin can put away his broom and worry about something a lit- tle less stressful, like whom to root for if an American athlete matches up against a foreign-born Wolverine, like New Zealander Nick Willis. "I'm rooting for both of them," Mar- tin said. "I'm saying may the best man win. I'mjust proud of both of them, and I'm happy that they're there." SECURITY A lot has changed since the Sydney Games in 2000. The country's war on terror and its effect on this year's games in Athens, Greece is substantial. Fear of another attack at the Olympics is on everyone's mind, and it was priority No. I for Martin. "I can't tell you how many hours over the last year I've spent dealing with security," Martin said. "Everything from briefings we've had with our own internal security people to briefings we've had with our U.S. Ambassador Tom Miller, to state department staff." "With NATO coming in, and every- body else, it's been stepped up immensely," Martin said. "I feel confi- dent that the American team will be secure. I'm not worried about that" DOPING When Martin isn't worrying about how to protect his team's athletes, he's usually trying to figure out how to keep them clean. This year's hot topic seems to be dop- ing, and everybody has an opinion on it. Martin's opinion is clear - keep it clean. "We've talked about winning a hun-