Chattanooga Times Free Press

Report on doctor raises flags about coach

- BY ED WHITE AND MIKE HOUSEHOLDE­R

ANN ARBOR, Mich. — A report about the stunning lack of action at the University of Michigan while a rogue doctor was sexually assaulting hundreds of young men has cast an unflatteri­ng light at one of the school’s giants, the late football coach Bo Schembechl­er, whose bronze statue stands on campus.

Schembechl­er, who led the team from 1969-89, was vividly told by at least four people that Robert Anderson

had molested them during routine physicals or other exams, according to the report commission­ed by the university. Yet, the report says, he took no direct steps and even told one man to “toughen up.”

While U-M digests the report by the WilmerHale law firm and deals with a flood of lawsuits by Anderson’s victims, it also might have to consider the future of the Schembechl­er statue and the football building that bears his name. Penn State University in 2012 removed a statue of the iconic coach Joe Paterno who was accused of burying child sex abuse allegation­s against an assistant coach.

The report about Anderson, released Tuesday, details many missed opportunit­ies to stop the doctor, who spent 37 years on campus and died in 2008. But no other name in the report is more recognizab­le than Schembechl­er.

“At this early stage, all I can really say with confidence is that it’s a tragedy, it can’t happen again, and we have more questions than answers until we learn more,” said author John U. Bacon, who wrote “Bo’s Lasting Lessons” with Schembechl­er, along with other books about Michigan sports.

Schembechl­er, who died in 2006, is a revered figure in Ann Arbor, though it’s been 32 years since he last coached a team. The Wolverines won or shared 13 Big Ten football championsh­ips while regularly playing in front of 100,000 fans at Michigan Stadium.

 ??  ?? Bo Schembechl­er
Bo Schembechl­er

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