"Bo's Lasting Lessons" Revisited

Submitted by Fhshockey112002 on

Over the past week during a vacation I re-read "Bo's Lasting Lessons" I hadn't read it in probably 5+ years.  If you haven't read it I think I wouldn't be alone in reccomending it.  If you have read it, but like me its been years I hope this will encourage you to pick it back up. 

I was struck by how certain names that are very relevant today were picked out of a distinguished crowd by Bo almost a decade ago. Below are a couple short clips that stood out:

Brad Bates

"Today Brad bates is the athletic director at Miami of Ohio- and they love him, there, too. They love him! He's done a marvelous job, and I'm sure you'l be hearing his name wherever a big job opens up. I would not be surprised if he becomes Michiagan's athletic director down the road. If he doesn't, it'll be our loss."

Jim Hackett

"Years later, Jimmy told me he leared a lot from that meeting, that you can have a tremendous impact as a leader just by taking a little time. Your people have to know that their value to you and your organization is not determined just by what they do, but by who they are. I cant make it any clearer than that."

Jim Harbaugh

"Jim ended up being twice as good, in my book, as the Golden Arm- Harbaugh was the Big Ten MVP his senior year, beating the other guy by a mile- and Jim's teammates liked him. Maybe Harbaugh didn't have half the arm of the Golden Boy, but he had twice the brains and ten times the heart. Give me those specs, anyday."

Jerry Hanlon 

(Jerry's words in response to a question from Jim Harbaugh "what kind of team will we have next year') "Jim, come back in twenty years, and I'll tell you. Only then will we know how you and your classmates turned out. Did you get good jobs? Are you hardworking and honest? Were you good husbands and fathers? Did you contribute to your community? Did you make the world a better place?"

 

I couldn't believe how well this book held up in the quick changing sports landscape.  It shows how much character Bo saw in these individuals and how much they learned and valued their time at Michigan.  (I know cool story bro).

readyourguard

January 19th, 2015 at 11:03 PM ^

Jim Everitt. Guy was a total asshole. We were lined up in the tunnel, about to take the field for pre-game. Some dude came crashing through our entire team, punching guys in the back and on the helmet, saying "F*** off. Get the f*** out of my way." It was a total sneak attack and cowardly. We beat their ass so bad even *I* got in.

Gulo Blue

January 19th, 2015 at 10:43 PM ^

Any regular reader of this blog should just make it a belated New Year's resolution to read this book sometime this off season. I found a stack of 'em on clearance once. Bought 12 copies to give to friends. Even the Maryland alum, non-football fan I gave it to said it was a great book.

Tater

January 19th, 2015 at 11:29 PM ^

Brandon proudly wore his "Bo Schembechler disciple" status on his sleeve.  It wasn't until he actually started fucking up the entire program that anyone figured out he was full of shit and more the "Anti-Bo" than a "Bo Schembechler disciple."

Bo wasn't the only person who got fooled by David Brandon.

jmdblue

January 20th, 2015 at 11:41 AM ^

but I think you have this right. Bo wasn't perfect.  He allowed both Brandon and Monahan to glom onto him and both are pretty slimey (for entirely different reasons).  Brandon espoused what he wanted of Bo's "ethos" and ignored (if not trashed) the rest.  That Bo said nice things about Brandon is neither surprising nor bad on Bo.  He was just one of his former players who went on to do good before doing very bad (well I guess he didn't kill anyone - I've been watching The Wire - that's very bad).

HANCOCK

January 20th, 2015 at 12:40 AM ^

being a douche doesnt mean you are a bad guy. i still like hoke and brandon. they just werent good at their jobs. 

 

yes, brandon said stupid things to fairly innocent people and was inprofessional, but the pressure of this job can do that t people, especially considering he wasnt doing well here. i wish him the best going forward

jmdblue

January 20th, 2015 at 11:45 AM ^

it's what he communicates that sucks.  From what I've seen he isn't a bit full of his own ideas.... he has an entirely infallible view of himself.  Dude's a jerk and made Michigan football much worse both on the field and in the stadium and for that we got to pay much, much more.  

csmhowitzer

January 20th, 2015 at 7:43 AM ^

I think this is a great point. I think I first read the book maybe a year before we hired Brandon. So I knew something about him, and I never did before then. The big part in the book that stood out to me was Brandon's open door policy. That's besides the point though. I think There were things that made Brandon stand out as a great competitor and that was one thing Bo always welcomed with open arms, men and women who wouldn't stand down (think of his secretary stories). 

 

Still a big DB, haha also his initials, who'da'thunk'it?

megaswami

January 19th, 2015 at 10:52 PM ^

I'm reading it right now for the first time. I love it. Think "BO" with Albom was a quicker read, but it shows Bo's tremendous passion for football, people, and the University of Michigan.



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QVIST

January 19th, 2015 at 11:09 PM ^

The "Golden Boy" was Tony Banks. I did research into this a few weeks ago when I read Bo's Lasting Lessons. He mentioned that MSU got him.

CoverZero

January 19th, 2015 at 11:22 PM ^

Schembechler had an extraordinary gift of being able to read and understand people...people of all ages...players, coaches too...and knowing what buttons to push in them to motivate.  its what made him a great recruiter and a great coach.

CarrIsMyHomeboy

January 19th, 2015 at 11:31 PM ^

Who was the "Golden Arm" from 1986 that Bo pejoratively referenced?

EDIT: Whoops, so this was tardy like a mid-January comment about the Times Square crystal ball. That's what I get for opening this tab, and submitting it an hour later.

MGrether

January 20th, 2015 at 5:57 AM ^

I am reading it as well. Jimmy is the text in the flesh: how he leads, how he recruits, his rules/team organization... I wonder if Jimmy re reads it every year just to make sure he didn't fall out of alignment.



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csmhowitzer

January 20th, 2015 at 7:55 AM ^

Every time I read this book I always wonder who the Golden Arm was. Hopefully someone can pin point it. 

Another great story in the book, and it's one of my favorites, is the one about how he hires Lloyd Carr. I love that one.

PA_Blue

January 20th, 2015 at 11:41 AM ^

I always thought it was Jeff George.  Seems to fit all the criteria.

 

Midwest kid (Indianapolis) who gradutaed from high school in 1986, tranferred from Purdue to Illinois, and put up some decent numbers in the NFL.  Also seemed like the type that was not well liked by his teammates.

samsoccer7

January 20th, 2015 at 8:19 AM ^

Bo says Golden Arm and Golden Boy... Any chance he's referring to the prototype passer/highly rated/highly desired qbs? Maybe it's just the idea of this Golden Boy and Harbaugh surpassed that with his brains and heart.