Bo's Warriors: Bo Schembechler and the Transformation of Michigan Football
By (Author) Frank Lieberman
Foreword by Mike Keller
Triumph Books
Triumph Books
7th January 2015
United States
General
Non Fiction
Sports training and coaching
History of sport
Biography: sport
796.332
Paperback
256
Width 152mm, Height 228mm, Spine 20mm
403g
A giant tsunami hit the staid Ann Arbor campus of the University of Michigan in 1969 when it was announced that Glenn Edward Bo Schembechler was to be the new head football coach, replacing the beloved Bump Elliott. Efforts to pronounce the last name correctly came in response to thousands of questioners asking Bo who but it didnt take long before his name and the Wolverines resurrected football fortunes were the talk not only of the town, but of the hundreds of thousands of Michigan alumni across the country and around the world. Bos Warriors is the story of that man and the moribund football program he revived. Bo won a school record 194 games while losing only 48 and never had a losing season. His Michigan teams won or shared the Big Ten title 13 times and made 10 Rose Bowl appearances. In 1968 under Elliott, archrival Ohio State had pounded the Wolverines 50-14, and to add insult to injury, Buckeye coach Woody Hayes went for a two point conversion late in the game rather than kicking the extra point. When asked why he went for two, Hayes is said to have replied, because I couldnt go for three. The next year, Bos first as coach, the defending national champion Buckeyes were 17 point favorites, but the 7-2 Wolverines dominated Ohio State and beat them 24-12. In a single afternoon, Schembechler had resurrected Michigans proud football tradition and returned the program to the countrys elite. Bos Warriors is the story of Bos first year as coach, seen through the eyes of several players and one assistant coach, and making the excitement of that historic season come alive.
Frank Lieberman, PhD, is a practicing psychologist, a TV host, a motivational speaker, and an ultrarunner. He has teaching experience at all levels of public education, including community college and university. He won all-city honors playing football in Detroit public schools and attended the University of Detroit on a football scholarship. He is the author of It Has Nothing to Do with Age. He lives in the Sierra Nevada foothills of Northern California. Mike Keller was a defensive end and linebacker for the University of Michigan from 1969 to 1971 and for the Dallas Cowboys in 1972. He subsequently had a career in sports management and consulting, including stints as the director of operations and assistant general manager for the Michigan Panthers of the USFL, vice president of football operations for the XFL, general manager of the Sacramento Surge and Scottish Claymores, and chief operating officer of the American Rugby Football League LLC. He was born in Chicago, Illinois.