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Beamer
This is truly a sad day. Bo was the symbol of Michigan football - his attitude, his enthusiasm, his integrity. Every Michigander loved Bo. Sad, sad.


QUOTE
Remembering Schembechler

By Dan Wetzel, Yahoo! Sports
November 17, 2006




ANN ARBOR, Mich. – They decided to bring a stool out for Bo Schembechler, because he was 77 and fresh off a heart procedure and everyone knew that once he got going at Monday’s press conference, once he started regaling everyone with stories of Ohio State and Michigan, of he and Woody, of a bygone era when college football was both more and less important, he was going to keep going.

Bo needed a stool. Bo needed to sit. Bo needed some help.

“I think I’ll stand,” he said, of course.

Bo Schembechler died Friday of a massive heart attack just before he filmed his weekly television show, just at the end of another busy, uncompromising week. If there is any solace to the sadness here, any silver lining to the loss, it is that Bo went out like Bo, fulfilling obligations, refusing to slow down, accepting no stool to sit on.

The winningest coach in University of Michigan history, a giant of an icon here in the Midwest, a legend of the sport, is gone on the eve of the biggest game in a rivalry he helped turn into arguably the best in all of sports.

“I just don't see one any bigger than this,” he said.

Monday he was everything Bo Schembechler ever was, charismatic yet uncompromising, charming yet combative. Bo was never one to tell stories about himself, that’s the kind of self promoting he would never stand for. But here on game week he was willing to talk about Woody Hayes, he was willing to stick up for his protégé, Lloyd Carr, he was willing to choose sides and say the things that others couldn’t or wouldn’t and fight for what he always believes is right.

He would laugh one minute and growl the next. He would bash Ohio State for silly gamesmanship one sentence and praise its class the next.

“I hope Bo didn’t say anything to screw this up,” Carr smiled, wondering if old Bo had just given the Buckeyes bulletin board material.

He hadn’t, of course. Schembechler was always tough but always respectful, especially about Ohio State, whose own excellence had driven him to greatness.

He was, as always, a throw back to a time when football was about building character, about accepting challenges instead of money, fame or glory. A window into a day and age that is about gone for good now, and not for the better. It sounds trite until you listened to Schembechler, until you looked into his eyes and saw the truth.

Bo never believed in national championships, never believed there should be or could be anything greater for a Michigan team than beating Ohio State, winning the Big Ten and playing in the Rose Bowl. He never cared to hold the school up for money, to move games to night for television, to play on a weekday, to make kids miss class.

For as unbending as his demands were, for as tough as he could be, for as all-encompassing as his focus was on winning football games for the Maize and Blue, he also always fell back on a realization that this was nothing more than extracurricular pursuit, that academics were the priority, that this wasn’t the pros.

He coached 20 years at Michigan (and five prior to that at his alma mater, Miami of Ohio). His team’s reached 10 Rose Bowls, including three in the final four seasons before he retired in 1989.


That run of success, 235 career victories, is what he will always be remembered for on the field. But Schembechler was always more proud of the kids he turned into men, of the degrees that were hanging on office walls, of the fact that in two decades the NCAA investigators never even bothered to sniff around Ann Arbor.


Bo Schembechler did things his way, without excuse, without debate and his way turned out to be the best way.


He believed in personal integrity and responsibility, of ethics that never wavered, of doing things only one way – the right way – because any other way wasn’t worth doing.


He coached hundreds of players and taught scores of young coaches, but he also, through his powerful position, was a rock who navigated the turbulent 60s and 70s, inspiring a state, a region, a country even, with the reminder that bedrock values still had their place.


He wasn’t just a role model to his players, but to a lot of everyday people who had never been near Ann Arbor.


He was fair to whites and blacks, to men and women, to rich and poor, old and young. Even in his retirement, even as old age and modern challenges could have made him callous and unreasonable, he was still trying to relate to the kids, still trying to live in a bright new day.


Here in his final week, he was just as alive and just as active as ever. He wasn’t going to attend the game because travel was difficult, but he was as engaged in it as ever.


“I'm as excited as you are about this game,” he said. “Because I love to see Ohio State and Michigan come down to the end and, ‘let's play it.’”


"The leaders and the best," hails the school fight song.


About one man they could have written it for.



Dan Wetzel is Yahoo! Sports' national columnist. Send Dan a question or comment for potential use in a future column or webcast.


http://sports.yahoo.com/ncaaf/news?slug=dw...=yhoo&type=lgns
Beamer
I'm going to have to do a Bo tribute.


Michigan football coach Bo Schembechler, left, meets with Ohio State coach Woody Hayes in this undated photo, location unknown. Top-ranked Ohio State takes on No. 2 Michigan on Saturday, Nov. 18, 2006 in Columbus.(AP Photo)




Michigan football coach Bo Schembechler looks on during the team's 42-27 defeat of Purdue in this Nov. 4, 1989 file photo in Ann Arbor, Mich. Schembechler, who became one of college football's great coaches in two decades at Michigan, died Friday after taping a TV show on the eve of the Wolverines' No. 1 vs. No. 2 showdown with perennial rival Ohio State. He was 77.




This is a good one!



Michigan coach Bo Schembechler is carried off the field by his players after the Wolverines beat Nebraska 27-23 in the Fiesta Bowl college football game in this Jan. 1, 1986 file photo in Tempe Ariz. Schembechler, the winningest coach in Michigan football history.

The thrill of winning.
Beamer
QUOTE
Michigan legend Schembechler dies after collapsing

November 17, 2006
SOUTHFIELD, Michigan (Ticker) - Michigan coaching legend Bo Schembechler died of heart failure Friday morning after collapsing prior to taping a television show. He was 77.

Schembechler collapsed at ABC affiliate WXYZ's studios in Southfield as he prepared to tape the "Big Ten Ticket" show.

He was found face down in a restroom and a call was made for an ambulance at 9:17 a.m. Schembechler was unresponsive when emergency personnel reached him minutes later, and he never regained consciousness. He was pronounced dead at Providence Hospital at 11:42 a.m.


Schembechler, who had two heart attacks and suffered from diabetes, had a pacemaker implanted on October 23 after a previous episode at the studio.

"This is a tremendous shock and an irreplaceable loss for the University of Michigan family," Michigan president Mary Sue Coleman said. "Bo Schembechler embodied all that is best about Michigan - loyalty, dedication and the drive for ever-greater excellence. Our thoughts and prayers are with his family and all those who loved him, a number as great as the Michigan community in every corner of the world.

"This university's deep tradition is our immense pride and our common ground. No one represented Michigan tradition better than Bo."

Born Glenn Schembechler, he won a school-record 194 games and at won or shared 13 Big Ten titles and made 10 Rose Bowl appearances under Schembechler.

"I find it difficult to express what Bo has meant to this program for close to 40 years," Michigan athletic director Bill Martin said. "He was a giant of a coach and giant of a man. His life touched generations of players, families, staff, students and alumni. His energy fueled not only athletic success but the incredible pride of all Michigan fans.

"His impact was immeasurable. On behalf of the athletic department, I express our deep sadness at his loss, and extend our sympathies to his wife, Cathy, and their sons."

The second-ranked Wolverines visit top-ranked rival Ohio State on Saturday for a berth in the Bowl Championship Series title game. A moment of silence will be held before the game.

"This is an extraordinary loss for college football," Buckeyes coach Jim Tressel said. "Bo Schembechler touched the lives of many people and made the game of football better in every way. He will always be both a Buckeye and a Wolverine and our thoughts are with all who grieve his loss."

Schembechler was an assistant to Buckeye legend Woody Hayes for five seasons before taking the head job at Miami of Ohio, his alma mater, before the 1963 campaign. He went 40-17-3 with a pair of Mid-American Conference titles before moving to Ann Arbor.

"Bo touched the lives of so many and helped develop countless young men into role models and leaders," Ohio State athletic director Eugene Smith said. "He is an icon for college athletics, not just the game of football. We extend our deepest sympathy to his family, the University of Michigan and college football fans everywhere."

Arguably Schembechler's greatest victory came in 1969, his first season with the Wolverines, when Michigan stunned Hayes' top-ranked Buckeyes, who were riding a 22-game winning streak, 24-12.

Schembechler spoke of the win at a press conference on Monday previewing this weekend's showdown.

"Of course when I came here, the great win for us in '69, and I'll never forget when Woody said at the dinner we had for him after he retired, and when he looked down at the podium at me and said, 'You will never win a bigger game than that,'" Schembechler said. "And he was right. I don't think I ever did."

The Wolverines went 194-48-5 in his 21 seasons in Ann Arbor, including 143-24-3 in Big Ten play.

"He was a heck of a coach and a really good guy," said Florida State's Bobby Bowden, the winngingest coach in Division I-A history. "I remember a statement he made about 10 years ago that was very significant. He was speaking to our coach's convention somewhere in Texas and he had already been retired for a few years, so he was kind of giving the old-timers' view. I'll never forget that he said he wished that he had never stopped coaching.

"He said he should have continued coaching, but also said he would probably be dead by now if he had. Here is was 60-something years old listening to him and thinking that coaching meant that much to him that he wished he had continued even if it meant shortening his life."

Updated on Friday, Nov 17, 2006 3:01 pm EST



http://sports.yahoo.com/ncaaf/news?slug=mi...ov=st&type=lgns
graham4anything
All the great ones are going...soon there won't be any like them, and they will all just be legends.

What a coaching staff they got up there.
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