1898 Chicago-Michigan Ticket StubStub via ticketmuseum.com and Ken Magee of Ann Arbor Sports Memorabilia

This week we go back to Thanksgiving Day, 1898 as Michigan head coach Gustave Ferbert and his undefeated Wolverines traveled to Chicago to face Amos Alonzo Stagg and his powerful University of Chicago Maroons. While rarely discussed these days, the game is without a doubt one of the most notable match-ups in Wolverine lore.

While today’s our undisputed rival is clearly The Buckeyes, back in 1898, the coach and the team that really got maize and blue blood boiling was Stagg and his Chicago teams.   Have a listen:

You can catch all of the This Week in Michigan Football History clips here.   Listen to it live tomorrow on the KeyBank Countdown to kick-off on WTKA 1050AM.

I always like to check out the old letters that pop up on eBay for stuff just like this.  Back in 1962 then-athletic director Fritz Crisler submitted a story to Reader’s Digest on his college coach and mentor, Chicago legend Amos Alonzo Stagg.  [As an aside, there’s a copy of the story at the Bentley Library in Crisler’s archives and I plan to check it out.]

Fritz clearly had deep admiration for his former coach.  Heck, Sports Illustrated, in its wonderful 1964 piece on Crisler  ‘The Man Who Changed Football’ even suggested the ‘1’ in the Michigan Stadium attendance might actually be reserved for Stagg!:

It was his secret. But anyone is entitled to guess, and one guess might be that somewhere in that vast stadium there is this one seat, and perhaps it is never sold. Perhaps it is reserved, now and forever, for someone who taught Fritz Crisler a way of coaching football and a way of life. For the Old Man, Amos Alonzo Stagg.

So coupling Crisler’s demeanor, his air-tight professionalism and his admiration for his mentor I’m guessing Fritz put a lot of thought into the words he chose for this story for Reader’s Digest.  So what could go wrong?

Fritz Not Happy

Well thanks to Mr. Myron Green of Worcester, Mass, we know that Crisler was none-too-happy with what happened after he submitted his story to the popular magazine.   Green wrote Crisler apparently commending him on the piece, but in his reply (above) Fritz revealed that Reader’s Digest messed with this draft (and even rewrote some of it) without his sign off.    Ugh.

I’m guessing the folks at RD got more than an earful from the ol’ Fritz.

The seller is asking a cool $399.00 (yeesh) or best offer for the original letter. 

Related:
I can’t wait for John Kryk’s book on Stagg and Yost, still in the works.  If you haven’t, order your copy of Hail to the Victors 2012.  Kryk’s piece on Yost, which includes pieces from the upcoming book, is worth the price of the mag.

For this week in Michigan football History we take a trip to the finale of the 1896 season in a game played indoors…yes, INDOORS at the Chicago Coliseum complex.  They even turned on the lights when a storm outdoors made it dark inside the facility.

As always, you can listen to it out before the KeyBank Countdown to Kick-off on WTKA 1050AM tomorrow, or click play now:

You can hear all of the  This Week… clips here.

 

BEAT OHIO!

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