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- <text id=92TT2447>
- <title>
- Nov. 02, 1992: Profile:Bill Walsh
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Nov. 02, 1992 Bill Clinton's Long March
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- PROFILE, Page 62
- The Second Coming
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>With his return to Stanford, Bill Walsh converts campus agnostics
- into believers and raises an academic question: Can a football
- coach be called a genius?
- </p>
- <p>By Paul Witteman/Palo Alto
- </p>
- <p> Nestled in a stand of fragrant eucalyptus trees at the
- Embarcadero Road entrance to the campus of Stanford University
- is a billboard advertising the home schedule of the varsity
- football team. But the larger-than-life image on the billboard
- that causes motorists to pause is that of a man with a mane of
- white hair beckoning them to turn in on a Saturday afternoon,
- park their cars, fill the 85,500 seats at Stanford Stadium and
- watch him lead the local student athletes to the promised land.
- Which, in the vernacular of Stanford football, means the Rose
- Bowl game in Pasadena on January 1st.
- </p>
- <p> In the rich but checkered history of Stanford football,
- sporting supplicants who have placed their fannies on Stanford
- Stadium's wooden-bench seats in prayerful anticipation of just
- such an event have spent more than their share of New Year's
- days sorely disappointed. There have been moments of brilliance,
- of course. On occasion, there have even been seasons of
- considerable distinction. But the chroniclers of sport have
- always preferred to measure excellence in terms of eras. Eras
- have been in short supply recently at Stanford. So too have been
- coaching dynasties. There's certainly been nothing like the
- dynasty Bill Walsh ruled when he was the coach of San
- Francisco's professional team, the 49ers.
- </p>
- <p> Sportswise, that was a dynasty with substantial heft. It
- lasted the better part of a decade and led to three triumphs in
- the Super Bowl. As a result, Walsh first had the cloak of
- greatness draped around his shoulders. Then, as the
- championships accumulated, the purveyors of hyperbole whisked
- it away and replaced it with the heavier mantle that bore the
- title "genius." The fact that Walsh on occasion used words such
- as "sublime" to describe the play of his team certainly set him
- apart from those in the pro-football fraternity, whose
- grammatical constructions often drift toward the martial,
- monosyllabic and scatological. No less a personage than former
- Secretary of State George Shultz, now penning his memoirs at the
- Hoover Institution on Stanford's campus, says, "I have come to
- admire him as a great intellect."
- </p>
- <p> In January, at age 60, years after he stepped down as head
- coach of the 49ers, Walsh decided to seek the sublime again,
- leaving the television booth and a lucrative contract as an
- analyst of N.F.L. games for NBC. To the surprise of many,
- perhaps even himself, he took a pay cut to $150,000 a year (plus
- fringes) to become head coach at a school where athletes can
- conjugate a verb, carry on a conversation and occasionally play
- a little football. Walsh described the feeling upon his return
- home to a campus where he last coached 14 years ago as one of
- unmitigated "bliss."
- </p>
- <p> Midway through his first season that feeling is
- undiminished, and it has spread into academic nooks where
- enthusiasm for football has rarely flourished. Unexpected
- back-to-back victories over Notre Dame and UCLA propelled
- Walsh's charges into a national ranking in the top 10 for the
- first time in 22 years; despite a subsequent loss to Arizona,
- Walsh's return to Stanford and his application of complex pro
- strategies to college ball have revived discussion of whether
- a mere football coach could actually qualify for the untenured
- title of genius.
- </p>
- <p> Some students of the sport believe so. Says Beano Cook,
- the clever TV analyst for ESPN: "If Walsh was a general, he
- would be able to overrun Europe with the army from Sweden."
- Leonard Koppett, whose observations of the game have graced many
- publications, including the New York Times, for almost 50 years,
- puts it another way: "In that narrow field of conceptual
- football, Walsh is a genius the way Heifetz was a genius with
- the violin."
- </p>
- <p> The genius flows, in part, from Walsh's capacity to master
- the intricacies and smallest details of the game. If an
- opponent devised a defense that nullified the five options
- designed into the 49er offense, Walsh would quickly create a
- sixth. Then a seventh. No detail was too insignificant, and no
- game ever strayed far from his mind. "If we won by 35, I would
- wake up in the middle of the night and see how we could have won
- by 42," he says. "In the early days, if we lost by 21, I would
- wake up and see how we could have lost by only 14."
- </p>
- <p> Walsh would extract those lessons from his subconscious
- and bake them into his next game plan. In turn, he made his
- players practice the hypothetical so as never to be surprised
- when it unexpectedly happened the next Sunday. "Everybody was
- ready for every situation," says 49er offensive tackle Harris
- Barton. "When we began a game, we really had an edge." Adds 49er
- linebacker Mike Walter: "On the field, the game can be a blur.
- If you have panic on the sideline, it will kill a team quickly."
- Walsh, standing serenely on the 49er sideline, secure in the
- knowledge that he had every option covered, was the antithesis
- of panic.
- </p>
- <p> Yet Walsh has often seemed most creative when he turns
- apparent weakness into unorthodox strength. At Stanford that has
- proved to be something of a necessity. Walsh inherited a stout
- defense from his predecessor and onetime protege Dennis Green.
- The offense is a different story. With the exception of Glyn
- Milburn, an elusive back who runs like a scalded whippet, there
- is little team speed. After some thought, Walsh converted
- 250-lb. defensive end Nate Olsen, son of former N.F.L. star
- Merlin, into a blocking back, and sometimes uses 290-lb. tackle
- Jeff Buckey as if he were a tight end. "I never would have
- thought of that," says Stanford running-back coach Bill Ring,
- who played for Walsh in San Francisco and suspended a successful
- career as a banker with Wells Fargo to learn to coach at the
- knee of the master. "We had to get an advantage somehow," says
- Walsh. "Without speed, we sought a size advantage." Olsen has
- yet to run with the ball, but the genius says the opportunity
- will present itself when least expected. "We've got a play," he
- hints.
- </p>
- <p> "Walsh is unhappy unless he's plotting to beat somebody on
- Saturday," says Beano Cook. Not really, says Walsh, who sees his
- role now as a coach of coaches as well as of players. Besides
- Ring, there are four other former 49er players on Walsh's staff
- who have little or no coaching experience. Says Ring, speaking
- of the intellectual challenge Walsh presents to both players and
- coaches: "You don't have to be a Rhodes scholar, but it helps
- to be bright." The bright, of course, are easier to teach. "This
- is a platform to use my teaching and counseling skills," Walsh
- says. "When you reach age 60, you want to give something back,
- to teach. There isn't anything I have to prove to myself."
- </p>
- <p> Without question, but Walsh is not being entirely honest
- with himself. He still wants to win each Saturday. "It will be
- difficult to be the Rose Bowl representative, but it can be
- done," he says, articulating goals that are tangential to
- teaching. "It is not likely that we will be national champion."
- He quickly ticks off the reasons: admissions standards that are
- arguably the toughest of any college playing Division 1
- football, academic standards that require players to take
- courses in actual intellectual disciplines. "A lot of
- universities have a group of mercenaries playing for them,"
- Walsh says. "You hope they're learning something, but their goal
- is merely to play pro football."
- </p>
- <p> Stanford's rigorous academic requirements can be viewed,
- as they should be, as laudable institutional attributes. Or
- they can be seen darkly as impediments to achieving the kind of
- success that has made Bill Walsh famous. "Some people will look
- for me to fail," he says. That Walsh worries about such things
- reveals an ego that is curiously fragile. "For all his success,
- he's not as secure as he should be," says a former coaching
- colleague. "He agonizes." Walsh is also easily wounded by
- criticism. Several years ago, when quarterback turned
- TV-talking-head Terry Bradshaw publicly criticized Walsh's
- earnest style in the broadcast booth, Walsh subsequently
- buttonholed friends and colleagues to seek reassurance that he
- was not a failure.
- </p>
- <p> In the days immediately following his appointment, San
- Francisco newspapers reported that Walsh's compensation package
- ranged anywhere from $350,000 to $500,000. If true, that would
- have been more than the salary of then Stanford president
- Donald Kennedy, who made $240,000 in 1990. There was a brief
- flurry of protest raised by faculty members who thought the
- football tail was wagging the institutional dog at a university
- that had always placed academics first. English professor
- Ronald Rebholz raised the issue in the faculty senate to no
- avail. "It's nonsense," says political science professor Stephen
- Krasner. "Football is a business. The guy is going to bring in
- more money than his salary is going to cost."
- </p>
- <p> Indeed, athletic director Ted Leland points out that
- season-ticket sales increased by 5,000 over 1991 after Walsh's
- appointment was announced. That's a net increase in revenue of
- $250,000. The size of the radio contract Stanford signed to
- broadcast its games doubled this year, a fact Leland attributes
- directly to Walsh. While Walsh draws a percentage from that
- contract, he's still probably making less than David Korn, dean
- of the Stanford school of medicine, who has yet to beat UCLA.
- Korn was paid $274,000 in 1990, the last year for which figures
- are available.
- </p>
- <p> Says Walsh: "I engaged in no negotiations whatsoever. I
- accepted what Stanford offered." Since then he has checked with
- his good friend Lou Holtz at Notre Dame, who has a practiced eye
- for assessing compensation packages among his peers. "Lou tells
- me that I'm in the top 30. There are probably three coaches in
- the Pac-10 who make more. I'm sure I'm not breaking the bank,
- but I can understand the faculty's feelings."
- </p>
- <p> Not to worry, Bill. "From the faculty standpoint, this is
- not an issue," says Krasner. Even critic Rebholz admits the
- truth of that assertion. "Everybody is delighted by the fact
- that Stanford is doing well. There is no negative sentiment."
- </p>
- <p> If the faculty and athletic administration are pleased,
- the football players required some initial convincing. "Most of
- the members of this year's team were recruited by Denny Green,"
- says Merlin Olsen. "They liked Denny. Bill had to do a sales
- job, and he has done a good one." But in the early days of the
- Walsh regime, the players held back, not sure what to make of a
- coach whose sense of humor once prompted him to disguise
- himself on the spur of the moment as a bellhop. He then tried
- to extract tips from his players as they emerged from the team
- bus after it arrived at the hotel. "In the beginning," says
- junior quarterback Steve Stenstrom, "he would say something
- funny, but we weren't sure we should laugh. Now we laugh at his
- jokes every day. He keeps us loose."
- </p>
- <p> On top of that, Stenstrom was suddenly attending a seminar
- in the techniques of becoming a great quarterback run by the
- premier teacher of N.F.L. quarterbacks over the past two
- decades. "The day I found out that he was coming here, I was
- overwhelmed," says Stenstrom. "I was a big Joe Montana fan, and
- now I was going to be coached by Joe Montana's coach." One
- problem. Walsh was unable to bring Jerry Rice from the 49ers to
- catch passes. Walsh will be scouring the nation's high schools
- for a Rice catch-alike.
- </p>
- <p> Stanford's opponents will not be happy if he finds such a
- player. Or three. Stanford is no longer a soft touch eagerly
- sought out by schedulemakers at other institutions. "He's going
- to drive Notre Dame nuts," says ESPN's Cook of Walsh. That will
- surely be the case as well with traditional rivals U.S.C. and
- California. Not to mention powerful Washington, which shares the
- top of the national polls this season with Miami of Florida.
- </p>
- <p> Washington will be favored comfortably when Walsh takes
- his team to Seattle for the game that will probably decide who
- goes to the Rose Bowl. If Walsh manages to upset the odds again
- and bring home a victory, there are some at Stanford who feel
- that it would be time to re-examine the question of genius. "If
- he beats Washington," says Professor Krasner, "all questions
- will have been answered. We will deify him."
- </p>
- <p> Don't take it personally, Bill.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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