FOURTH AND LONG
The Fight for the Soul of College Football
Hardcover 339 Pages
Published 2013
Simon & Schuster
Published 2013
Simon & Schuster
I
had the opportunity to meet author John U. Bacon recently. He spoke to the Michigan Funeral Directors
Association annual convention in Kalamazoo, Michigan as the keynote
speaker. Bacon, who is the official
biographer of University of Michigan’s legendary football coach, Bo
Schembechler, spoke on Bo’s Lasting
Legacy and his personal character. He
gave an awesome speech and apparently absorbed some of Schembechler’s speaking
skills with his enthusiastic and high-spirited excitement. There is no greater advocate for college
football; especially Big Ten football and even more especially, University of
Michigan football than Bacon.
While some might
think it’s odd a sports historian and commentator would speak to a gathering of
funeral directors. As it turns out, Bacon, an Ann Arbor native and now
history professor at U of M, was high school classmates with MFDA’s President
Dutch Nie at Ann Arbor Huron High School.
Nie now owns the Nie Funeral Home in Ann Arbor and has been close to Bacon and
the University all his life. Bacon’s
remarks on Bo’s character fit right in with the atmosphere and character of the
convention.
Bacon and I
shared stories on our family history. My
father and some of his friends chaired the Michigan Day Golf Outing in Battle
Creek for more than 25 years and my family has been “True Blue” for decades and
at least three generations and have been assiduous supports of college
football. We hit it off well.
With Author John U. Bacon
at the MFDA Convention in Kalamazoo, Michigan, May, 2014
****
Fourth and Long is a great read for any
red-blooded American college football fan, regardless of your loyalty to a particular
school. As you pick up the book, the
dust cover is pigskin brown with raised dimples and a lace that makes it feel
you are holding a football. Brilliant packaging
from the designer and publisher!
Bacon, a huge advocate and promoter of
University of Michigan football is also a staunch defender of college football
itself and the Big Ten. The book takes a
broad look at all college conferences and delves deep into the history of the
Big Ten and each member school.
Bacon, a
professor of sports history at Michigan, is also a professor at Northwestern
University and has spent a great of time around the Big Ten. He has been close to all the athletic directors,
coaches, players and even Presidents in the Big Ten.
Fourth and Long focuses primarily on four
of the legendary programs in the Big Ten; Michigan, Ohio State, Northwestern
and Penn State. He even includes a chapter
on Michigan State and the contributions MSU has made to the conference since
joining. He was especially generous with
his praise of former MSU President John Hanna who built the school with the GI
Bill following WWII, getting veterans on campus. Hanna was also one of the biggest advocates
of MSU football and made it into Ripley’s
Believe it or Not by attending every MSU football game, home and away,
during his tenure as President. He also explains why there is so much rivalry and tradition in every state between the University of _______, and ______State University, something the common college football fan hasn't really pondered.
Not to worry Fighting Irish fans, there are also several quips, history an anecdotes on Notre Dame and the great rivalries they've had with the Big Ten over the years.
Not to worry Fighting Irish fans, there are also several quips, history an anecdotes on Notre Dame and the great rivalries they've had with the Big Ten over the years.
Early on, he
writes about how the Big Ten conference came to be and why it was formed in 1896 (when the President of Purdue, James Smart, called a meeting of several presidents in Chicago to gain control of college athletics) -- the first name of the conference was actually Conference of Faculty Representatives of Midwestern Universities. No wonder they shortened it to Big Ten. It was
the nation’s first athletic conference. It was a collection of Midwestern schools,
centered around the Great Lakes, who were alike academically. The University of Chicago was an original
member, but dropped out when they abandoned athletics altogether and focused on
being a purely academic school.
He also points
out how important the City of Chicago is to the Big Ten. He makes the point that no other conference
has a city where alumni of each of the conference schools gather. It seems everyone in the Big Ten gravitates
to Chicago and that makes it the “Capital of the Big Ten.” You can go into a bar in Chicago and meet up
with graduates of nearly every Big Ten college.
An observation I never really made.
For a good part
of the book, Bacon embedded himself in the Penn State program immediately
following the ugly Jerry Sandusky travesty and chronicles the first season back
following the NCAA sanctions and the effort to maintain and rebuild the great Penn
State traditions. He got close to
everyone in the program, especially the players who he credits the most for
saving Penn State’s great traditions.
Following the
Sandusky and Paterno tragedies, the NCAA pretty much declared “open season” on
Penn State players. They were free to go
anywhere they wanted and coaches could pursue the players with no
limitations. Bacon gets to the heart of
the matter and that Penn State mattered to the student-athletes. Only a small handful left the program. Most of the team valued a Penn State
education and, refreshingly, that’s what they came for, most of them wanted to
be part of the new Penn State and preserve the great traditions of the past. Above all, they sought a Penn State diploma.
Those players elevated the status of student-athlete by staying put, something
the major sports media has failed to recognize.
Getting Bill O’Brien,
or any coach, to Penn State was no easy task.
It was a hot potato and with bowl bans and restricted scholarships who
would want it? But as fate would have
it, he was the right person at the right time.
Bacon chronicles how O’Brien had to win the confidence of the team and
get the alumni and supporters back into the fold it wasn’t easy.
Without going
into too much detail, Bacon had many frank conservations with the Penn State student-athletes
and was privy to many tense meetings with the team and experiences all the emotions surrounding
the “comeback.” It was compelling to
peek inside one of the biggest comebacks in college football. It left you feeling good about what college
football is all about.
Bacon also spent
a great deal of time with Ohio State and their former coaches Earle Bruce and John Cooper. He got close to Urban Meyer, an Ohio son who
stepped into another troubled program as OSU faced sanctions following the
departure of Jim Tressel under very bad circumstances. Bacon also documented the history of Ohio
State, revealing many facts about their traditions and history that most
college football fans never knew. I
probably learned more about OSU than any other Big Ten program and it made me
respect the Michigan-OSU rivalry even more. Or should I say TTUN (That Team Up North) as the Buckeye faithful refer to Michigan.
Northwestern is
an anomaly in college football, but fits well in the Big Ten. As a private school, it has different problems
than its conference brethren.
Undoubtedly the most academic school in the conference, it has always had
trouble attracting good players who can cut it in the classroom. For a while, they just didn’t take football
seriously. He alluded to the ten year
stretch where they won only six games.
During that time he stated that only one team in America had a worse
record than NU, the Washington Generals who were paid to lose to the Harlem
Globetrotters! He talks about how they got
their groove back and made it to the Rose Bowl with a lot of insightful stories.
While discussing
all the football programs and traditions, Bacon also discussed the structure of
each Big Ten school and how their governance has affected athletics over the
years. It was an interesting study in
the fact that if the president isn’t behind it, they just didn’t succeed. He parlayed that into the present day dilemma
where the football coach has grown more powerful (and better compensated) in the institution than the
president and how that has affected the school.
Tradition is a
huge talking point in each of the school’s he chronicles throughout the book. The location on a college campus, not in a
big city make it special. Stadiums are set in lush green campuses and not in a sea of concrete. The college stadiums
are built over time and reflect the identity of the school and its traditions. Unlike the NFL who typically build stadiums
at the tax payer’s expense with little or no traditions and tear them down and
rebuild in twenty years.
He has quite an oration on how college football is superior to pro football which I especially enjoyed!
He has quite an oration on how college football is superior to pro football which I especially enjoyed!
Some of his observations are; Colleges are a
connecting place to multi generations and something you have in common with your great-grandparents.
No NFL football team has a marching band. No NFL team has a true rival and parity has given any franchise a shot at the championship. College has no pre-season and every game matters. Pro players are inaccessible. You run into college football players in
class or at the bar.
Bacon also devotes a great deal of time and effort to other college traditions which make college football so special. He even devotes quite a bit of time to the “trophies” in college football; the “Little Brown Jug”, the “Paul Bunyan Trophy;" the "Old Oaken Bucket" and about a 150 other seemingly irrelevant items rivals play for and the traditions and stories behind many them.
Bacon also devotes a great deal of time and effort to other college traditions which make college football so special. He even devotes quite a bit of time to the “trophies” in college football; the “Little Brown Jug”, the “Paul Bunyan Trophy;" the "Old Oaken Bucket" and about a 150 other seemingly irrelevant items rivals play for and the traditions and stories behind many them.
The parting
thoughts of his book deals expressly with the growing menace of money in the
college game. Too many of the storied
programs are driving away fans and especially students, and pricing them out of
the market. Television is now driving
much of the game scheduling and creating problems for the fan. Having to endure twenty TV time outs destroys
the pace of the game and drives fans (in attendance) crazy. Every Big Ten game is now televised and the
Big Ten Network has grown into a behemoth which jeopardizes all the traditions
everyone has built over the years. Talking heads yuck it up at halftime rather
than showing an outstanding band performance.
Maryland and Rutgers were recently added to the Big Ten so the network could reach an “Eastern” market. The two schools have nothing in common with the geography or traditions of the Big Ten.
Maryland and Rutgers were recently added to the Big Ten so the network could reach an “Eastern” market. The two schools have nothing in common with the geography or traditions of the Big Ten.
He’s made it his
personal crusade to preserve the game of college football with all its traditions. We are rapidly turning it into a big business
that will go bust because they have sold out the essence of what made it great
in the first place, a Saturday afternoon game between rivals which means something to everyone involved.
Bacon continues
to turn up the heat with his columns and has taken UM’s AD Dave Brandon to task
for killing off the student support at games and making it inaccessible for the
longtime fan. He talks about a friend
who’s giving up attending games because it’s now a $500 event to take his
family to each game. It’s easier to
watch it on TV with friends in a comfortable setting, every game is now
broadcast.
Bacon
is compelling in his argument that college football is an institution worth
saving and leaves you longing for crisp fall afternoons watching your team take
your rival to the cleaners.
No book has ever
captured the spirit, history and traditions of the college game better than Fourth and Long. It’s a must read for those who truly care about game and reminds us of not only
what makes college great, but also what makes education great.
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