"I Remember Bo. . .": Memories of Michigan's Legendary Coach
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About this ebook
Offering an exclusive look into the inner workings of the Michigan Wolverines under famed coach Bo Schembechler, this a book takes readers into the huddle and locker room and onto the sidelines of this historic college football program. With unrestricted access into the private world of the players, coaches, and decision makers, I Remember Bo… captures the spirit of the beloved Hall of Fame coach, including details on the real reason why he turned down the multimillion dollar offer from Texas A&M and remained at Michigan in 1982, and the origin of his famous battle cry to his team every time it left a hotel for the game: “Do I have 11? All I need is 11!” Providing a front row seat for the many memories and great stories from the history of Michigan’s football program under the consummate coach’s coach, this unique book is an ideal keepsake for any Wolverine fan.
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"I Remember Bo. . ." - George Cantor
Contents
Foreword by Jim Harbaugh
Preface
Acknowledgments
1. Beginnings at Barberton
2. The Arrival
3. Michigan 24, Ohio State 12
4. Recruiting
5. Soul and Inspiration
6. Loyalty
7. Conflicts
8. Practices
9. Bo among Others
10. Boys to Men
11. Fourth Down
12. My Favorite Bo Memories
13. The 21 Seasons of Bo
Notes
Photo Galley
Foreword by Jim Harbaugh
Bo Schembechler pulled off one of the greatest charades of all time. He wanted you to think of him as a heartless son of a bitch. He wanted to seem tough and gruff. And it was all a façade.
Behind the mask was one of the warmest, most caring and generous human beings I’ve ever known. He was a man who truly enjoyed people and carried around an unfailing moral compass.
You can go to the library and pull down all the books on leadership that have ever been written, and Bo was there first. They are all modeled on the things he preached.
What it all comes down to is this: you build a team or an organization on trust. That was the basis of everything he believed. If you could trust everyone around you, you had a team.
Sometimes I think he really started to trust me when I became his regular babysitter. He and Millie would go out and I’d sit with Shemy because my dad’s house was right down the street in the same neighborhood.
I was 13 years old and Shemy was about five, and Millie would always tell me if I got tired just to fall asleep on the sofa and not worry about it. They never stayed out late. They were always back by midnight. But he’d walk in and call out, Jim, you sleepin’?
and I’d always manage to jerk myself awake, even if I’d dozed off. I think he knew that, too, and just wanted to give me some advance warning.
Once when Shemy was over at our house, Bo came by and told him it was time to go home. Shemy refused. Bo repeated it and again Shemy said no. When Bo said it a third time, Shemy threw a block down the stairs and hit him right in the head. I just stood there in fear and waited for the explosion from this ogre. He just chuckled and said, Kid’s got a little spunk.
I was always around his office. He had a huge soft spot for kids, not just for Shemy but all his coaches’ kids, too. We had the run of the place and he always made us feel special, always asking us what we were up to.
But when I grew up to be his quarterback, it was strictly business. And when I went ahead and said that we could beat Ohio State if they played the game at midnight in a parking lot, I think I might have upset him a little. He never said so publicly. He backed me up all the way.
Years later, though, Cam Cameron, who was our quarterbacks coach, told me that Bo said to the staff, We’ve got a quarterback who’s whistling past the graveyard.
But he never let me know there were any doubts in his mind.
Of course, if my quarterback this season guarantees a win against California the weekend before the game, I might have some second thoughts about all that.
The things I learned from Bo are ingrained in my DNA. Bo and my dad— coach Jack Harbaugh—molded me. It’s not like I sat there and took notes. Just the experience of playing for him put you in the oven and forged you into the iron that he then shaped.
He did that to thousands of people. Even today you can talk to players he kicked off the team and they revere him. They knew in their bones that everything he did was for the good of the team, and even though they suffered for it they understood that. That’s quite a testament.
I took so much from Bo when I became a head coach:
1. Winning by the rules is the most important thing. If you cheat, that equates to losing.
2. Work harder than anyone else. If you did it harder and you did it right, you are going to be more successful than your opponent.
3. Make decisions on just two criteria: Will it help us win? Is it good for the team? Everything else is irrelevant and a distraction.
I look back on it and everything he spoke about was team. Sometimes you almost felt that you were short-changing yourself for the program and the best interests of the team. But you came to realize that he was right. The team was trust and without that, you have no team.
I realize now how incredibly fortunate I was to have played for him and to have known him as a person, a family man, our neighbor. I just want to carry it forward now and transmit all the things I learned from him to the men who will be playing for me. I think that’s the highest honor I can pay to Bo.
—Jim Harbaugh, quarterback, Michigan ’86; Head coach, Stanford University
Preface
Maybe it helps if you understand the times. In the winter of 1968, the country seemed to be coming apart. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Bobby Kennedy had been assassinated. There were riots in Chicago during the Democratic National Convention. The Vietnam protests were deepening in intensity and violence. Ann Arbor was a focus of the anti-war movement, and student demonstrations were an almost daily occurrence. There were calls to armed revolution by half a dozen groups, from the Black Panthers to the Weathermen.
That extended introduction is the best way of explaining the impact Glenn Bo
Schembechler had when he arrived at Michigan, and the genuine sense of loss that accompanied his death in November 2006.
In an era when we were all being told to do our own thing, whatever that was supposed to mean, and when anyone who advocated a disciplined life was regarded as a fascist, here was this guy who refused to bend. Who was uncompromising in his belief that doing things the tough way was the only right way. Who felt that football was more than a metaphor for life. It was life itself, reduced to a 100-yard battle zone, and there could be no substitutes for preparation, dedication, and, yes, discipline.
If you did not live through those times, you cannot imagine how ludicrous that message sounded on a campus that was halfway to wackyland.
Of course, if Bo hadn’t also been a fantastic coach, none of that would have mattered. But he believed in these qualities and managed to translate them into measurable success, and to some degree the lesson took—not only among the players he coached, but also among those who were drawn to the Michigan team. In more recent years, the term old school has come into vogue as a way of describing a person or a style that conforms to enduring values. Bo was old school all the way.
In 1968, there also was nothing like the autumn celebration that football in Ann Arbor has become. Most crowds in the Big House were around 60,000. Even the Ohio State game did not sell out. In the 17 seasons between 1951 and 1967, Michigan had a losing record seven times and went to the Rose Bowl only once. The dominant football school was MSU, and Michigan was yesterday’s news, wrapped up in a ribbon with Fielding Yost and Fritz Crisler. Bo changed all that.
When I covered his first press conference after he was hired, I never would have guessed I was looking at an icon-to-be. I had been assigned by the Detroit Free Press to find out who the next Michigan football coach would be and wrote that Ara Parseghian was the man. As it turned out, he had recommended Bo, as had his former coach, Woody Hayes. Well, at least I was close.
The only knock on Bo was that he never won a national championship. The fact is, however, that the Fates conspired against him.
In 1971, the only time he took an undefeated team to a bowl game, the team was ranked fourth even before losing to Stanford in the Rose Bowl. Nebraska was number one from start to finish in the polls that season and destroyed Alabama in the Orange Bowl, so there was no chance there.
Two years later, after Michigan tied top-ranked Ohio State, 10–10, but was deprived of a chance to play in the Rose Bowl, the Wolverines actually dropped from fourth to sixth in the final poll. Notre Dame won it by defeating Alabama in the Sugar Bowl.
In 1976, they were ranked second with one loss going into the Rose Bowl, but Pittsburgh finished undefeated and was voted number one. Bo’s best shot actually might have been his last team, in 1989. He went into the Rose Bowl at number three with one loss. Had Michigan won the game, sentiment might have given him the title. But Michigan lost and Miami, with one loss, was voted in.
The Fates conspired.
I interviewed him a few times during his years at Michigan. He always associated me with being a baseball writer and each time I entered his office he would growl, Now why would George Cantor want to write anything about football?
Then he’d talk football for as long as I wanted to stay.
I wrote some tough things about him during the time when legendary announcer Ernie Harwell was fired while Bo was president of the Detroit Tigers. That annoyed him, I’m sure. But once it was over, it was over, and I think that was a constant in his life.
He was a man for all seasons, but autumn is when he truly came alive. Although the man is gone, the stories will live on as long as they play The Victors
and Michigan teams run out of the tunnel into the sunlight at the Big House and the cheers of 110,000 of the Maize and Blue faithful. I am not a big fan of blogs, but reading over hundreds of them that followed the announcement of his death brought tears to my eyes. No matter which side you were on in the big games, you realized that a giant had left us.
This book has pulled together some of the best of the stories, from those who knew him best, told in their own words. His influence on the Michigan program, through his own coaching tenure and those of his protégés, Gary Moeller and Lloyd Carr, is in its 39th year. That is longer than the dynasties of either Yost or Crisler were perpetuated. Michigan players in team meetings are still told to put both feet on the floor and look straight ahead when the coach is talking, just as Bo demanded.
I wish I could say I knew him better. When I was writing a magazine piece on a Michigan fantasy football camp in the summer of 2006, a photographer took a picture of the two of us together. Bo looked at me in amusement and I could almost hear him say to himself, What’s that baseball guy doing here?
I’m not especially sentimental about these things, but I’m going to save that picture. I guess I just told you why.
Acknowledgments
It was not an easy task to track down and interview in such a short time span so many of the players and coaches associated with the life and career of Bo Schembechler. I’d like to thank the Michigan Letterwinners M Club, especially Pam Stevens and Dave Rentschler, for their invaluable assistance in doing this.
Recognition must also go to my sportswriting class at Oakland University. The contributions of these young journalists is irreplaceable and they should be mentioned by name. They are Mike Caravaggio, Kevin Coil, Samantha Franz, Elizabeth Glynn, Matt Goricki, Paul Gully, Aaron Hanke, Justin Howland, Vicky LeFebvre, Patrick Leonhard, Ryan Moskwa, Brittany Ochtinsky, Dave Phillips, Adam Roberts, Jake Sharfman, Matt Wright, and Jake Zammit. On this assignment, they all deserved an A.
The staff at the Detroit News library, headed by Pat Zacharias, was also enormously helpful with the research involved.
1. Beginnings at Barberton
The town is named for the president of a match company. That was one of the few flashes of light Barberton, Ohio, ever saw. It was and remains a hardworking, tough, blue-collar town on the southwestern fringe of Akron. About a quarter of its 25,000 residents are of German descent, like Glenn Schembechler. Tough-minded people who know value when they see it, and are pretty big on values, too.
Barberton is also situated near the historic heart of Ohio football country. It is a few miles up the road from the birthplace of the National Football League in Canton. The town where legendary coach Paul Brown established his storied high school program at Massillon is just down the Tuscarawas Valley. Football is part of the air you breathe in these places.
"I came from Barberton, too, and I knew what it was like to grow up there. When Bo arrived at Michigan in my sophomore year he called me into his office. I just sat there for