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<UID>
8802260549
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
881229
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Thursday, December 29, 1988
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1988, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
BO'S INSULTS MUSIC TO WOLVERINES' EARS
</HEADLINE>
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</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
NEWPORT BEACH, Calif. --  Maybe your mother once gave you this line: "I
only yell because I love you." And maybe you believed her. Mothers can get
away with that kind of thing. They have credentials.

  Football coaches are another thing. Except Bo Schembechler. On
Schembechler's teams, you are yelled at if you are loved and yelled at if you
are unloved -- unless you are a stud, an excellent player,  someone with real
superstar potential.

  In which case, he really lets you have it.
  I began to notice this pattern with Jim Harbaugh, the former Wolverines
quarterback now with the Chicago Bears. Everyone knows how good Harbaugh was
at Michigan. A leader. A gifted passer. A contender for the Heisman Trophy. So
it took me by surprise when he admitted that Bo had told him, in his very
first freshman  meeting -- and I quote -- "You will never play a down at
Michigan!"
  And he told him again. During freshman practices. "You will never play a
down at Michigan!" And again, during sophomore practices,  switching to the
ever-popular, "You are the worst quarterback in the history of Big Ten
football!"
  "You got used to it," Harbaugh said with a shrug. "Although the first time
he said it I went, "Geez.  The worst in the history of Big Ten football? Did
he really mean that?"
  He couldn't possibly mean it. He says it too often. Schembechler once told
Jamie Morris -- who shattered Michigan rushing  records while he was a
Wolverine -- that "I  must have been out of my mind to recruit you. You will
never play here! Never!"
  Still, this is nothing compared to Jim Brandstatter, who might have set  a
record for abuse during his time at Michigan. Not only did Schembechler once
scream at, belittle and kick Brandstatter in the rear end for a mistake that
someone else made -- but he also told him:  "YOU ARE THE WORST TACKLE IN THE
HISTORY OF COLLEGE FOOTBALL!"
  It's hard to top that.
Bo's barbs sting at first, but . . .  Now. OK. Schembechler, one of the
most caring coaches in college football,  doesn't intend to make his players
feel three inches tall. It just comes out that way. When a tackle misses a
block, when a running back goes the wrong way, well, the coach is going to
explode. Players  know this. And as explosions go, Schembechler could go head
to head with Chernobyl.
  But, in time, when they get over the sting of his words, most players
adjust.  They improve and grow harder, stronger.
  And by the end of their four years, they look back on the verbal abuse the
way a baseball player looks back on his favorite glove.
  "What will I miss most?" Harbaugh said his senior year. "I'll  miss him
yelling at me."
  Which brings us to our current crop of Wolverines, here for Monday's Rose
Bowl against Southern Cal. You will be happy to know that most of these stars
carry the pedigree  that makes Michigan players great: At some point,
Schembechler gave them the once-over.
  Mark Messner, the All-America tackle, was chewed up and down by the coach
during his freshman and sophomore  years. Brent White, his counterpart, says
he is regularly told, "I am the worst defensive tackle in America. But I'm on
defense, and Bo coaches the offense. He always sticks up for the offensive
guy."
  Yeah? Tell that to Leroy Hoard. The star running back was suspended after
his finest game of the season for missing class: "Bo let me have it. I knew it
was coming, too." Demetrius Brown, the incumbent  starter at quarterback, was
demoted in pre-season for a lackadaisical attitude. Mike Gillette, the senior
kicker (punts, field goals, kickoffs) was benched as a freshman for the Ohio
State game.
  And then there's the John Kolesar story.
Step lightly around Bo  Kolesar, as most people know, is a senior wide
receiver who has helped win more than his share of U-M games. Bo loves the
guy. He  didn't always.
  "I was a sophomore in high school," Kolesar said. "I came to Michigan
Stadium to see a game. A couple of my friends were being recruited and they
got to go in the locker room afterwards.  So I stuck on a name tag and snuck
in there with them.
  "So I'm in there, and I step backwards, right onto somebody's foot. I turn
around, and it's Bo. And he stares at me, he doesn't even know who  I am, but
he sees my name tag and he says, 'Well, you'll never play a down for
Michigan!' "
  Imagine that.
  Declared hopeless before he was ever recruited.
  Such is life in the Maize and  Blue. Today they are standout players, and
they carry the insults like combat medals, proof that they came through the
legendary Camp Schembechler and lived to tell the tale. Besides, they all
admit, as a football player, it is better to be yelled at than to be ignored.
  As for the cantankerous coach? What does he say when you remind him that
he predicted Harbaugh and Morris would never play  a down, that Messner and
White might be the worst in America, and that Brandstatter would go down in
history, literally.
  He squints his eyes and crinkles his nose.
  "Did I say that?" he asks.

  Mitch Albom's sports-talk show "The Sunday Sports Albom" will broadcast
live from Pasadena Sunday from 9-11 p.m. on WLLZ (98.7-FM.)
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