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<UID>
9402110274
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
941118
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Friday, November 18, 1994
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1F
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<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1994, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
U-M'S TRADITION WAS BORN IN THE FALL OF '69
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
Their hair is thinner now. Their bellies jell over their belts. Their
muscles are fleshy, no longer tight. Some have had doctors tell them to slow
down, watch the blood pressure. When you meet  them, many do not seem big
enough to have done what they did on that cold Saturday in November 1969.

  But then, what they did was the stuff of giants.

  There are big games, huge games, and once  in a while, life and football
actually switch places. I never used to believe that. It wasn't until I did a
book with Bo Schembechler a few years ago, and talked with dozens of his
former players, and kept hearing "1969." Over and over. Like a password from a
secret society.
  "Oh, 1969" they'd say, "nothing tops '69 . . ."
  They were talking about a season -- Schembechler's first, when many
players quit under his tyranny -- but mostly they were talking about a game.
The last game. The championship game. Michigan-Ohio State. They talk about it
still. It binds them like a shoelace, weaving  through their pride then
yanking tightly.
  Was there ever a day like that? Unlikely heroes, like Barry Pierson, a
defensive back who is now in the fish business. He caught three interceptions
that  day -- "A career in one game," people said. And Garvie Craw, the running
back, who now works on Wall Street. He dove for two touchdowns against a
defense that just didn't give up touchdowns.
  Maybe  the greatest one-day accomplishment in U-M football the last 30
years -- is this: Of all the players Schembechler has coached, none are closer
to him than the men who wore the helmets that Saturday.
  And he didn't recruit a single one of them.
Bo and Woody, face to face
 
  "They're on our side of the field!"
  Schembechler swallowed. He had just led his team out of the tunnel,
whooping with the fever of playing the best team in the nation, and here was
Woody Hayes' mighty Ohio State Buckeyes, unbeaten, untouched, warming up on
the Michigan side of the field. It was a psyche job. Woody  knew better. He
was seeing if anyone had the guts.
  All eyes fell on Schembechler. A few years earlier, he was Woody's
protege, his football son, the man who would succeed Woody at Ohio State.
Instead,  he struck out on his own. Now, here he was, telling his mentor to
skedaddle. His players watched. A test of faith.
  "Woody," Bo announced, heart racing, "you're on our side of the field . .
."
  Hayes glared at him. For years he had coached this pugnacious kid, made
him the pit bull that he was. Would he laugh now and shoo him away? They
stared each other down. Four seconds. Five seconds.
  "FINE," Hayes finally barked. "OK, MEN! LET'S MOVE!"
  Schembechler exhaled. He turned back towards his team, and saw them
whopping in celebration. "BO TOLD WOODY!" they cheered.
  Some feel  the game was won right then.
  But you could trace this thing to a million openings. There was the year
before, when the Wolverines were embarrassed by the Buckeyes, who went for a
two-point conversion  when leading, 48-14.
  There was the week before, when, in the locker room after beating Iowa,
the entire U-M team stayed in uniform and chanted, "BEAT THE BUCKS!"
  There were the days before,  when Schembechler taped photos to each
player's locker, photos of their Buckeye parallel, a quarterback for
quarterback, lineman for a lineman. And then he hollered, "You, Thom Darden!
Are you ready  to outplay the great Jack Tatum? . . . And you, Don Moorhead!
Are you ready to outplay the great Rex Kern?"
  "YES SIR!" they shouted back.
  It was every movie you'd ever seen.
'They will not  score again!'
 
  And so, naturally, it had to have the perfect ending. Truth be told, it
was over at halftime, after Michigan, on liquid adrenaline, scored three
touchdowns and a field goal and stunned the nation. It was like wiping out a
Navy fleet. Ohio State was the best team in college football -- some said
better than several NFL teams -- and no opponent had come closer than 27
points.  Here was Michigan, a laughable underdog, leading, 24-12?
  "THEY WILL NOT SCORE AGAIN!" yelled Jim Young, Schembechler's defensive
coordinator, in the wild halftime locker room. He pounded the blackboard  with
both fists. "THEY WILL NOT SCORE AGAIN!"
  They didn't. That was the final: 24-12. And more than just a Rose Bowl was
decided when the sun set. A football program was born again. A coach was
made. Schembechler, who stayed up all night greeting well-wishers at his
house, became an instant legend, and the war between he and Woody was begun.
"The upset of the decade . . ." reporters typed in  the press box, even as the
last strains of "California Here We Come" wafted into the late autumn air.
  Twenty five years later now. Schembechler does the radio analysis.
Moorhead is a schoolteacher.  Dan Dierdorf, one of the lineman, does "Monday
Night Football." Dick Calderazzo, another lineman, is a lawyer.
  They are all over the place, but they are back here, every November -- at
least in  their minds and hearts. I call Schembechler and ask if he could,
right now, sit down and recite every play, every series, of that one game 25
years ago.
  "Of course," he says, as if it's a stupid  question. And maybe it is.
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