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<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9602080648
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
961215
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Sunday, December 15, 1996
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
COM
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1G
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1996, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
GRAMBLING'S GRUMBLING AN INSULT TO ROBINSON
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
When he first took the job, he had no indoor plumbing. He got his water
from a well and it had tiny bugs in it  "wiggle- tails" they called them  so
you had to boil that water before you could  drink it. His kids got sick. His
wife got frustrated. Finally, after two years, Eddie Robinson went to the
school president and said he had to quit. His family couldn't live under those
conditions.

  The president looked at him.

  "Is that the only thing wrong?" he asked.
  Yes, Robinson said. Fix that and I'll stay.
  They fixed it. He stayed. He stayed that year, and the 53 years that
followed,  working at the small, traditionally black university they now call
Grambling, tucked between the tall pines and the flat acres of northern
Louisiana. His title was "football coach," which meant he also  limed the
field and drove the bus. He woke players with a cowbell, marching through the
dorms yelling, "Feet on the floor!" He made sure they went to class, and he
taught many of his backwater kids how  to hold their first knife and fork.
  He coached through segregation and through integration. He coached young
black players when they were not welcome at white Southern schools. And when
those schools  opened their doors, and began stealing his best talent, he told
them, "Go on, take it, it's too good an opportunity to pass up."
  Even with an athletic budget that is pocket change to the major programs,
Eddie Robinson has won more games than any coach in the history of college
football  more than Bear Bryant or Amos Alonzo Stagg.
  And now, some people at Grambling want him out -- including the current
school president -- because he's had two straight losing seasons.
  Robinson should look that man in the eye and repeat an old sentence:
  "Is that all that's wrong?"
 

How quickly they forget

  Who are these people that would push a legend out the door? I don't care if
he's 77. I don't care if he's 97. Without Eddie Robinson, there is no
Grambling football. Without Eddie Robinson, there  is no first black player in
the NFL -- or 200 Grambling alums in the NFL after him.
  Without Eddie Robinson, there is no James Harris. Harris was the
rifle-armed kid who Robinson came to one night  in the 60's and said, "I'm
going to make you the first black quarterback in the pros. You will break the
wall." 
  Robinson kept his word. Harris smashed the stereotype. And every black
quarterback  from Doug Williams to Kordell Stewart owes something to the
gray-haired coach with the smoky voice.
  Yet last week, here was Harris, now a scout for the Jets, with the audacity
to say of his mentor,  "It's time for a change. It's painful to see Grambling
lose to Southern four years in a row."
  So that's what this is all about? Losing to a rival? Grambling would now
toss itself in line with the  other college sports lemmings, interested only
in petty rivalries and bragging rights. Is that the reason Eddie Robinson
labored all those ugly years, years when his team bus was chased by whites
with  baseball bats, who yelled "Get that n--- bus out of town!"?
  Here is Robinson's "crime": a 3-8 season, and a 5-6 season. (Yes, there
have been some off-field incidents with players as there have  been with many
other schools. Trust me. This is about wins and losses.)
  Robinson asked for one more year. He wanted to go out a winner. And while
the powers that be finally acquiesced Friday, it  was a sad and unnecessary
drama. Grambling had a chance to teach the sports world a lesson about
dignity, and respect for elders. It had a chance to say there are some things
more important than our  record, or whether the coach can hit a blocking sled.
  Instead, Grambling put Robinson through one of the worst weeks of his life,
dangling him over the snapping jaws of critics.
  It was like watching  the elves push Santa out the window.
 

Whining about winning

  I once took a bus ride to a game with Robinson. We rode six hours through
the swampy back roads of Mississippi. His players, as always,  were dressed in
suits and ties. Along the way, he pointed out towns that they were once not
allowed to stop in, and restaurants that would not admit his "colored" team.
  He had endured every indignity  the South could heap upon a black man. Yet
later in our conversation, when I asked how he wanted to be remembered, Eddie
Robinson answered without hesitation. 
  "A good American," he said.
  If  he can forgive what the years  and his job  have thrown at him, if he
can forgive the racism and the measly salary, then those around him can
forgive him a won-loss record. The truth is, Grambling  has a resource as rich
as the oil that runs beneath the bayou. What Eddie Robinson could teach his
players just by telling stories each day is worth a lot more than an 11-0
record.
  When the word  came Friday granting him one more season, Robinson turned to
his wife and said, "I'm still the coach." It should never have been in
question.
  Win, win, it's just about winning. Eddie Robinson, who always danced around
the worst parts of our culture, now finds himself stuck in the middle of it.
It's shameful what they tried to do, shameful, yet predictable. The problem
isn't in the water anymore,  Eddie. It's in the air.
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<DISCLAIMER>
THIS ELECTRONIC VERSION MAY DIFFER SLIGHTLY FROM THE PRINTED ARTICLE.
</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
COLLEGE; FOOTBALL; GRAMBLING; EDDIE ROBINSON; COLUMN
</KEYWORDS>
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