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Sports columnist Rick Reilly once wrote that weekend golfers invariably claim, “I’m a good golfer. I’m just not consistent.”
Well, he said, if you’re not consistent, you’re not a good golfer.
Americans are great at building things, and rotten at maintaining them. We admire winners and celebrities, but we overlook the loyal spouse and the honest accountant and the people who maintain our bridges – and that’s why they’re falling apart.
So, let this be a salute to consistency – that most unheralded virtue.
In 1984, Red Berenson took over Michigan’s moribund hockey program, which had not been to the NCAA tournament in seven years. Berenson thought it would be easy, but it took seven more years to get Michigan hockey back to the big dance in 1991.
Once they got into the tournament, they made it a point to stay there. Year after year, they suffered heart-breaking tournament losses, but year after year, they kept coming back. Finally, in 1996, they won Michigan’s first national title in 32 years – and they did it again in 1998. They’ve come close a few times since, but they have yet to win another.
This bothers Berenson, one of the most competitive men I’ve ever met — which, in my business, is saying something. When he visited my class, I introduced him by listing his many accomplishments on the board. When he stood up, the first thing he did was point to the two national titles on the board and say, “That’s not enough. We should have more.”
But they always made the tournament – for 22 straight years. It’s the longest streak in the history of college hockey – by far. The next closest, Minnesota, barely made it past Michigan’s halfway mark.
But this year, the team wasn’t getting the goaltending, the leadership, or the luck it needed to win. Snapping the 22-year tournament streak was the least of their worries. The bigger question: Had Michigan hockey lost its way?
Stuck with an anemic 10-18-3 record, Berenson – now 73 – told his team to go out and have some fun. They did – and in the process, they rediscovered who they were. Their goalie got hot. Their leaders found their voice. The team got its mojo back.
They won four straight games to end the regular season. But they had dug themselves such a deep hole, the only way to get out of it was to win an automatic NCAA tournament bid. And the only way to win that was to win the league playoffs. And the only way to win that was to win every game, six straight, against the league’s best teams.
When you’re seeded 7th, nobody outside your locker room believes you can win it. But for the first time this season, everybody in that locker room finally believed. And they played like it.
They swept the first series at home. They went to play third-seeded Western Michigan at their place – and swept the Broncos. In the semi-finals, they faced Miami of Ohio, the nation’s third-ranked team, and simply steamrolled them, 6-2 – giving the Wolverines a .500 record for the first time since November. By then almost everybody believed Michigan would pull off a miracle.
But last Sunday, with just Notre Dame left to beat, the Wolverines finally ran out of gas, and lost, 3-1. When the clock ticked down, there was no suspense. They knew their fate. Their season was over, and so was their streak. They knew what it meant.
When a streak ends, people too often focus on how it ended, not how it started, or why it lasted so long. When Joe Dimaggio’s famous 56-game hitting streak – considered the most unbreakable record in American sports – finally snapped, nobody said, “Wow, Dimaggio wasn’t very good today.”
No, all Dimaggio did was perform at the highest level, every day, for two straight months. No one has come close to his mark in the last 71 years.
And that’s what several hundred Michigan hockey players did, for more than two decades: they worked so hard and so well for so long, they created a streak that might not ever be broken. Perhaps the greatest testament to their stunning achievement is this: when the streak started in 1991, 22 of the 26 players on the current team had not yet been born.
Titles are impressive. They represent a performer at his peak.
But consistency – that cannot be achieved without character. And in this case, the character of an entire program, for a full generation.
That’s something that lasts – and deserves our respect.
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Radio stuff: On Friday mornings, these commentaries run at 8:50 on Michigan Radio (91.7 Ann Arbor/Detroit, Flint, 104.1 Grand Rapids), and a few minutes later, I join Sam Webb and Ira Weintraub LIVE from 9:05 to 9:25 on WTKA.com, 1050 AM. On Sunday mornings, from the start of football season to the end of March Madness, I co-host “Off the Field” with the legendary Jamie Morris on WTKA from 10-11 a.m. And yes, there will be a quiz, so “stop what you’re doing, and listen!”
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“Three and Out: Rich Rodriguez and the Michigan Wolverines in the Crucible of College Football” can be ordered now, in hardcover or paperback.
My next book, “Fourth and Long: The Fight for the Soul of College Football,” will be published by Simon & Schuster in September, 2013. It can be pre-ordered now, on amazon.com, Barnes & Noble, or your local bookseller, like Nicola’s in Ann Arbor.
Right on. The Buddhists say, do not mourn the glass when it breaks, remember all the refreshing beverages you had before it broke. I try to be grateful every day that my vehicles are running, as opposed to sorry for myself when one breaks down. All credit to Red, says here, streak resumes next season. 🙂
Wonderful quote and sentiment! Salud!
When Red was hired, we would have been happy if he could get the hockey team to the point where it could win a game against State. It is disappointing not to be in Grand Rapids today but our disappointment is truly a tribute to the achievements of Red and all of the Michigan students who have played for him during the last 29 years.
Looking forward to reading the new book
Digressing somewhat, what do you think about Merrill turning pro? What are your thoughts about Trouba? Trouba certainly appears to have a long career ahead of him and to be better prepared than most to play professionally, but I think there are still reasons he might stay. As good as he is, he still has room for improvement. I suspect there are some things he wants to work on. He did develop this year, he is better now than the begining of the year. The additional practice at the college level is more conducive to development than the pro schedule. Trouba was dominant at times but not consistently. Giving himself another opportunity to win a national championship gives him a shot at the world juniors, NCAA, Olympic and Stanley Cup. That would be the ultimate legacy. The money is going to be there, an insurance policy would be advisable if he does stay. Ultimately it will be his decision and I wish him the best of luck whichever way he chooses to go.
Red led the expansion St. Louis Blue Notes to 3 straight NHL finals. Michigan picked a winner