<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8902200092
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
891214
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Thursday, December 14, 1989
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
NWS
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1A
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo Color ALAN KAMUDA
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>


:
Bo Schembechler announces his retirement at a news conference
in Ann Arbor on Wednesday. "The hardest thing I've ever had to
do . . . is give up   . . . my football team," he said.
</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
SEE ALSO METRO EDITION page 1A
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1989, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
U-M'S LEGEND SAYS GOOD-BYE
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
He began his legacy by driving down the wrong street, getting lost, and having
to call the football office from a pay phone. "Uh, this is Bo Schembechler,
the new coach?" he said to a rather confused  secretary.  "Where the heck are
you?"

  Twenty-one years later, on a cold winter evening, he was saying good-bye.
This time the room was stuffed with reporters, tight-lipped coaches, former
players  and a million memories.  This time, he knew exactly where he was.
This time, it was the university that felt lost.

  "The hardest thing I've ever had to do," said Bo Schembechler, 60, choking
back  tears as he announced his retirement, "is give up  . . . my football
team  . . . but I'm doing it  . . . I think I've run my luck about as far as I
can take it."
  There goes a legend.  What will  Michigan do without Bo? Who will win all
those games?  Who will pace the sidelines on Saturday afternoons, who will
scream at the referees, who will waddle through an army of apple-cheeked
freshmen  every August as they squat on the playing field.  "GENTLEMEN, THIS
IS MICHIGAN!" he would say.  "AND AT MICHIGAN WE DO THINGS ONE WAY."
  His way. 
  It was always his way. Oh, maybe not this  retirement part. He had wanted
to tell his team first, but when he woke up Wednesday, the story had leaked.
That upset him.  So did these questions about the athletic director position
-- a job he can't possibly keep, not if you know his personality. 
  Here walks the ultimate coach.  On his first day of practice, 21 autumns
ago, he sucked a mouthful of air and blew into a whistle -- only  to find the
whistle was broken.  So? He just screamed, "GATHER ROUND," and began a
remarkable era of college football, one that would span countless big games
and Big Ten titles and Rose Bowls and star  players and never, never a losing
season.  Nor the hint of scandal.  His way. Always his way.  He beat Ohio
State, he beat USC, UCLA, Notre Dame.  He beat the Big Ten knotheads, he beat
the doctors.  He beat everything they could throw at him; he just couldn't
beat himself.  Finally, after a lifetime of pushing the outer envelope of his
existence, he said, "All right, you win.  I'll slow down.  I will live."
  "Something told me after the last Ohio State game I would not be back
again," he said Wednesday.  Truth is, he knew sooner than that.  The thing
that was telling him was his own voice.
  And there is no mistaking that voice.
Last one-name coach 
  "This has been the greatest job I've ever had," he said. And he will miss
it.  Big time. 
  This, after all, is the last of the  one-name coaches. Woody.  Bear.  Bo.
You know how some men seem born for their occupations?  Check out that walk,
that frumpy coat, that crooked smile, those booming vocal cords.  A football
coach. "That's all I am," he would always say.  As of Jan. 2 -- after his
final game, the Rose Bowl against USC -- he will be one no more.  Gary
Moeller, his long-time assistant, will take over.  Bo's Wolverine  days, at
least the active ones, will be finished.
  Oh sure, he said he "might stay on" as athletic director, the position he
has held the last year.  I don't buy it.  Not for a second.  He will be  gone
when the football is over. Let's face it.  Bo is never one for office work.
He was never one for watching.  I once sat next to him in the stands, and he
nearly punched a hole in my arm.  And that  was basketball!
  No.  A football coach should coach football, not play executive.  Bo never
really liked the role of athletic director -- he really only took it because
of university pressure and his desire to keep the football team away from any
evil new bosses.  Once he hands over the whistle on Jan. 2, he will find a new
challenge, something closer to home, something with fewer airplanes,
something in sports.  I promise you this:  He will not go gentle into that
good night.
  He never has.
  This, after all, is a man who once destroyed an office when the Big Ten
sent Ohio State  to the Rose Bowl instead of Michigan.  A man who got so mad
once at halftime, he kicked an entire tray of Coca-Colas into the air.  A man
who stood in the middle of practice and got blind-sided by a  speeding
receiver, knocking him down, making his entire body throb with pain.  You know
what he did?  He looked up, saw his team gathered in a circle, and rose to his
feet.  "That," he said, dusting himself off, "would have killed a mortal man."
  That's Bo.  Ask any of his former players to tell you a story and they
will inevitably launch into an impersonation, some bark, some holler, some
magic  words that have stayed with them years after Schembechler has forgotten
them.
  Think of what he has done.  When he first arrived, the program was merely
average, in the shadow of national champion Ohio State and his one-time mentor
Woody Hayes.
 "GENTLEMEN," Bo said to his skeptical players, "THOSE WHO STAY WILL BE
CHAMPIONS!"  That November, his Wolverines shocked the nation by upsetting
Ohio  State in the biggest game to be played here this century.
  He kept his word.
  When he first arrived, the coaches' "locker room" was five hooks on the
wall.  "GENTLEMEN," he told his staff, "THERE WILL BE SOME CHANGES AROUND
HERE!" Today, they are building the new Center of Champions, a
state-of-the-art athletic facility that costs $12 million.  Bo raised every
penny from contributors and threw  in a healthy chunk of his own money to
boot.
  He kept his word.
  Throughout his time here, there were scandals across the nation, other
coaches were buying players, changing grades, handing out  sports cars,
cheating.  "GENTLEMEN," he announced. "WE WILL RUN A CLEAN PROGRAM!"  They
never wavered.  Once, in his first year at Michigan, an over-zealous booster
called to complain about the use  of a player.  Bo ignored him.
  "You don't understand," said the man.  "I'm a very influential member of
the M Club."
  "Not anymore, you're not," said Bo.  He kept his word.
He keeps promise
  So it should be no surprise that he is keeping his word now.  He promised
himself and his wife, Millie, who had stood there that morning two years ago
as the doctors gooped his chest and prepared  to slice him open, that he would
not push things beyond human limits.  On Wednesday, Millie stood in the corner
of the crowded press conference, her lips tightly clenched.
  "Did you cry?" someone  asked her. 
  "All day," she confessed.
  She met him on a blind date in St. Louis, back when nobody knew his name.
Bo who?  How do you spell that?  They went for a ride in a Missouri riverboat.
  He played with her children. He seemed so happy. Three months later they
were married.
  And by the following winter, their lives had changed forever.  He was
suddenly coach of the Michigan Wolverines. Who knew what fame that would
bring?  Who could foresee the success -- all those  Big Ten titles, the
coach-of-the-year awards, the banquets, the speeches.  Who might predict that
students would one  day chant, "Bo is God!"
  Nobody.  So in the margins around football, Bo and Millie tried to build a
normal life.  It hasn't really been normal. "You work 14 or 15 hours a day,
you get to bed late,  you get up early, you eat on the run, you don't have
time to exercise," said Schembechler, listing the perils of coaching. After
awhile you say, "It's time to stop."
  The time has come.
  Health  concerns him now, he admits it.  Oh, once upon a time, he laughed
at it.  He suffered a heart attack the morning of his first Rose Bowl, and as
they pushed him down on the operating table he said, "Hey  doc, I've got a
game to coach today."
  Now, health is not so funny.  Despite an image to the contrary,
Schembechler does not wish to be buried on the sidelines.  There were moments
this season when  the travel left him exhausted.  Another airplane.  Another
bus.  Another press conference.  Last month, when someone tried to coerce him
into yet another commitment, he exploded.  "I can't!  I can't do it!" he
yelled.  "I don't want to die, OK."
  His doctors told him he was pushing his luck.  Two heart attacks? Two
open-heart surgeries?  Sixty years old?  Yeah. You could call that pushing
your  luck. 
  But let this be known:  What he did Wednesday was not because of some X-ray
or medical chart.  It was not because a collapse was imminent.  On the
contrary.  He wants to walk away while he still can.
  "I'm not sick, make sure you write that," he admonished one reporter.
  OK.  He's not sick.
True to form 
  But he is gone.  This  is for real.  And the feeling is like losing  an
old friend, a favorite teacher, and, for the players -- a father figure.  True
to form, he announced his retirement now rather than go recruiting when he
knew he wouldn't coach the kids he attracted.
  "That wouldn't be right," he said.  And that was reason enough to say
good-bye.  
  The man who will replace him, Moeller, his offensive coordinator, is his
hand-chosen successor.  Moeller not  only thinks like Bo, reacts like Bo and
has a rhyming nickname (Bo, Mo), but he was in that car 21 years ago when
Schembechler took the wrong turn and wound up cruising Ann Arbor like a
general in search  of his army.
  "Yep, a green Toronado," Moeller said Wednesday.  "I can still remember
that car."  Good.  Tradition should count for something.
  It has counted for 21 years.  We were lucky to  have Schembechler all this
time.  So were his players.  So were his coaches.  So were the mothers and
fathers whose living rooms he graced, from mansions in California to a rundown
tenement in Detroit,  where Bo once visited a promising player and found his
mother huddled around a fire rock that was the only heat in the house.
  "We've got to do something about that," he told his assistant when they
left.  "And we've got to get that kid into Michigan."
  He came.  He graduated. He is on his way to becoming a teacher.
  You want to know the true Schembechler legacy?  That's it right there.
Kids you won't see in the NFL, but who have their degree and a nice job and a
family, thanks largely to the stumpy, grinning tough guy who wore the blue cap
and the black shoes.
  There goes a legend.
  "Would you like to be a sports writer next?" someone jokingly asked.
Schembechler laughed.  "No, because I'd be too much of a homer.  I'd always
come down in favor of the coach."
  You know what,  Bo?  That hasn't been so hard to do.  As Moeller spoke of
the future and reporters scribbled away, someone saddled up to Schembechler
and asked if he would be available the next morning.
  "Hey man,"  said Bo.  "I got some film to look at.  I got one more game
to coach here, you know."
  And with that, he left his farewell party.  What becomes a legend most?
In this case, just being himself.  Really, now. What more could you want?
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
END;FOOTBALL;COLLEGE;COACH;BO SCHEMBECHLER;U-M
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
