[Ed. via Steve “Dr. Sap” Sapardanis, an excellent extension of the Uniform Timeline.]
Guest post by Dr. Sap

From as early as 1968, Michigan has been a hodge-podge of shoe manufacturers until Nike changed all that staring in 1983. A recap:

1968
Players are primarily wearing Riddell (black shoes with white & black trim around ankles) and Spot-bilt cleats, but some are adopting the “new” shoe – adidas.
clip_image002[1]
1969
Barry Pierson (#29) sporting the Riddell multi-studded Buckeye-killer cleat.
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1970
A good shot of all three shoes worn by Michigan in ‘70 (Spot-bilt on the far right).
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1971
In ‘71, a new shoe manufacturer was introduced – Puma…
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…so now Michigan players were wearing four shoes: Riddell, Spot-bilt, adidas and Puma. clip_image009[1]
1975
Another shoe manufacturer was added to the group in ‘75.  This one was from Quebec, Canada and had a very distinct design/logo on the side of the shoe.It was a multi-studded cleat that was supposed to provide superior traction on Michigan’s Tartan (not Astro) Turf playing surface.
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1976
In ‘76, a sixth manufacturer was added to the group – some new upstart company called Nike.Here’s Rick Leach is wearing Puma cleats, while Rob Lytle is opting for the new Nike shoes.
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1979
By ‘79, there was still no exclusive deal with just one shoe company, so Michigan Equipment Manager Big Jon Falk would recommend the shoe for each game depending on surface type and weather conditions.To the right here’s Stan Edwards rocking the Puma look on a dry, clear day in ‘79…
clip_image012
..but on a cold, dreary, slick day in 1980, #32 went with the Canadian/Quebec shoe for better traction. clip_image013
1980
In ‘80, two new shoes could be seen on the feet of the U-M players: Converse and Pony.
image
1982
When ‘82 rolled around, Nike was the predominant shoe worn by the Wolverines. The Canadian shoe company was around for inclement weather game conditions (see AC in last game in 1982), but Puma, Spot-bilt and Riddell were now out of the picture.
  image
1983
By ‘83, Michigan was an exclusive  Nike school [Ed. or near exclusive? Still trying to confirm] and this made Big Jon’s job a lot easier in that he didn’t have to manage 6 or 7 shoe manufacturers anymore.
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For more, check out the Uniform Timeline.

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[Ed. Given I ran into big Russell Davis on Saturday, what a perfect time for this guest post by Dr. Sap!]

Russell Davis

Guest post by Dr. Steve “Sap” Sapardanis

Back in the 1970s, the first week of January was typically not a good one for the Michigan Football team or its players.  It usually meant devastating Rose Bowl defeats.  But on January 6th, 1979, Rick Leach and Russell Davis changed all that.

Leach was one of three QB’s for the East All-Stars playing in the Hula Bowl in Hawaii.  Russell Davis was playing fullback for the East squad in the East-West Shrine Game played in Palo Alto, California.

Many expected Leach to be overshadowed by his more high profile counterparts – Notre Dame’s golden boy, Joe Montana and Penn State’s Heisman Trophy runner-up, Chuck Fusina.  Davis was just a fullback…and when had a fullback ever done anything of note in an All-Star or Bowl Game?

When the day was over with, Bo Schembechler had to have been all smiles.

Each player walked away with Offensive MVP honors in both games.

Leach showed a national TV audience that he could throw the football with the best of them, completing 7 of 12 passes for 187 yards and 2 touchdowns.  He led the East All-Stars on a 23-point 4th quarter comeback that had to have gotten the attention of one certain QB who was watching on the sidelines.

All Davis did to earn his MVP award was rush for 200 yards on 27 carries. Oh yeah, he also scored SIX touchdowns!  Those six TDs were the most scored by a player in Shrine game history.

Davis had neither carried the ball that many times in a single game for Michigan, nor had he ever run for as many yards in one game as a Wolverine.   And he certainly never scored 6 TDs in one contest for the Maize and Blue.

Afterwards, a tired Davis said, “I’m going home and rest…I’ll sit back and watch the rest of them (games) on TV.”

After a performance like that, who could blame him?

 

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image_thumb166[1] Guest post by Steve “Dr. Sap” Sapardanis

Last year, we kept track of the helmet stickers every game for each player deserving these awards based on not only individual, but team accomplishments.  After the Ohio State game, Denard Robinson led all players with 42 award decals.

Ever since then I wondered what would Denard’s helmet look like if it had decals on it?  With a little PhotoShop work, wonder no more.

Below are a couple of possibilities – one with all 42 decals on one side, and another with half, or 21 on one side.

Denard Robinson with Helmet Decals Denard Robinson with Rich Rodriguez

In order to fit 42 decals on one side of the helmet, the decal size would need to be reduced, but you get the idea.  That’s what happens when you are made of Dilithium!

Think there are a lot of decals on Denard’s helmet?

Mike Hammerstein in 1985 and Desmond Howard in 1991 were two former UM players that had a ton of decals on their helmets.  #66 sported 47 decals on his helmet in the 1986 Fiesta Bowl against Nebraska:

Mike Hammerstein helmet Mike Hammerstein Fiesta Bowl

#21 in the 1992 Rose Bowl and against OSU in 1991:

Desmond Howard helmet Desmond Howard helmet

To me, there was nothing like seeing Michigan and Ohio State clash at the end of the season. Having both teams’ helmets filled with decals just added to the spectacle.

So I ask you, wouldn’t you rather see the winged helmet decorated with decals at the end of the season, or would you rather see the same old wings and stripes with nothing on it?

Remember, THIS IS MICHIGAN, and the decals are a tradition that Bo started back when he was at Miami (Ohio) and brought to Michigan in 1969.

 

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Ed. Instant historical analysis of the Outback Bowl jersey reveal compliments of Steve Sapardanis aka Dr. Sap:

HELMET
The matte finish is a first for the U-M headgear.  Back in the 70s and 80s there was no gloss finish on the Michigan helmets.  Much like their coach, there was no flashiness to them – they were maize and blue and that was that.  You’d be surprised at how basic and crude those old helmets look compared to the newer ones of today.  From 1977:

1976 helmets

If you wanted the old ones to look shiny, you would have to rub some car wax on them! 

In the past 10 years or so the paint used has been more automotive grade with a much more durable and glossy finish to it.  As long as it’s not a chrome finish, I can deal with it.  The blue color seems deeper and darker, but might have more to do with the matte finish more than anything else.  Can’t really speak to the yellow unless I see it next to a current helmet that has the newer "neon" yellow color to it.   The Outback Bowl helmet seems to have a more deeper yellow than (older helmet) orange hue to it.

jerseys Via mgoblue.com photo gallery

JERSEY
You have to go back to Jim Mandich in 1968 to see when the yellow "M" first appeared on the sleeves of the U-M jerseys:

mandich 1968But that was on the home, blue jerseys, not the road whites.   [Ed. Reader Brian noted this blue block M on the road jersey in the 1965 Rose Bowl]:

1965 Rose Bowl Block M

The yellow numbers are a first for the road whites as well.   Speaking of the road whites, here’s a look at the 1976 Orange Bowl whiteys:

All Whites 
The bowl game patches are now commonplace, but that took a long time for U-M to accept them on their jerseys.  The first U-M bowl game "patch" was the 1984 Sugar Bowl when MIKEHAMMERSTEIN and crew hounded Bo Jackson all day:

1984 Sugar Bowl Michigan

It wasn’t really a “patch”– it was silk-screened and printed on the shoulders of Michigan’s white jerseys.

Editor’s take:  If you are going to go white, go all the way and toss in the pants.   I don’t like what appears to be multiple different shades of maize.   I’m good with block M on the jersey, don’t like the maize numbers, I’m ok with the matte helmet.  I also like the band Rush.

Other takes:  Brian at mgoblog    Brad at MBN    Zach T. at MnB

 

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Michigan athletic director Dave Brandon recently indicated that fans can expect the Wolverines to enter the Big House donning alternatively styled uniforms from time to time. Last season we witnessed a variety of uniforms tweaks, most notably the throwback styles used against Notre Dame and Michigan State, and of course the addition the numbers on the helmets, grace the gridiron.

Perhaps fans are becoming a bit numb to the changes. The unveiling of maize shoelaces (do you even remember?) during Michigan’s Spring Game/Practice/Snooze Fest in April was met with a mere whimper compared to the usual euphoria or outrage (depending on your perspective) that typically follows after such announcements.

Maize Laces from 2012 Spring Game - Credit Brad MuckenthalerMaize Laces – Thanks to Brad of Maize & Blue Nation for sharing this beauty

The tweaks to the footwear, surprising something that’s rarely discussed amongst fans, do hold a place in Michigan football lore. Early players wore what we’d consider today to be a more of a cleated leather boot (below) and this gradually evolved to the high tech shoes we see today.

With the unveiling of the maize laces – the question emerges – when, if ever, has Michigan deviated from the traditional same black shoe/white lace look that’s been in place for the past several decades?

When it comes to Wolverine uniforms—from helmets, to jerseys, all the way down to the shoes—no one fan knows the history of the gear better than lifelong fan Steve Sapardanis. I called upon “Dr. Sap” to offer some history of the footwear and to no surprise, Sap knocked it out of the park. Check out this outstanding story of no doubt the most unique pair of shoes to grace a Michigan gridiron:

A guest post by Dr. Sap

So the stodgy, conservative Michigan team was wearing maize shoe laces during the Spring game? Alert the uniform police!

When was the last time UM deviated from their black shoe/white lace look, you ask? Well, it’s not as cut and dried as you may think. Back in 1940, Team #61 wore black shoes with leather laces. That was pretty much the standard look back then. Michigan’s first Heisman winner Tom Harmon has been photographed sporting an “M” on white socks. When Bo arrived in 1969, U-M teams wore black shoes with black laces.

But Bo was not impressed with the look of the black laces. Remember, the young, detail-oriented coach was doing things his way and if you didn’t like it, don’t let the “Those Who Stay Will Be Champions” sign hit you in the butt on the way out! A Big Ten Championship and Rose Bowl berth was not enough to change Bo’s mind. In 1970, Michigan was wearing white laces on their black shoes. "Ya got that? That’s just fundamental," as The General used to say.

But in 1971, one player did something that was so shocking even the flamboyant Fielding H. Yost would have flashed his famous smile. “Touchdown” Billy Taylor wore teal blue shoes with, you guessed it – maize laces! It was in the 1972 Rose Bowl Game against Stanford, and yes, those tricked out Puma shoes have not been photoshopped:

1972 Rose Bowl BillyTaylor - Credit U-M Bentley Historical Library

Really the bigger question is how did Bo, the crew-cut donning, uber-conservative, my-way-or-the-highway coach, let this happen? Why did he let Billy Taylor deviate from the team-first mentality and wear something so individualistic?

It turns out those flashy shoes pre-dated Schembechler in Ann Arbor. They were first worn by Michigan’s great back Ron Johnson in 1968. That season Taylor was a freshman and he watched Johnson become U-M’s first 1,000 yard rusher wearing those flashy cleats. It turns out the relationship between #40 and #42 started a year earlier, back in 1967.

When Taylor, a Barberton, Ohio native, visited Ann Arbor as a high school senior, he was hosted by George Hoey, Martin (Marty) Washington, Warren (Carl) Sipp, and Johnson. The two backs connected during Taylor’s recruiting visit and that sealed the deal – Taylor was going to be a Wolverine for Coach Bump Elliott.

While eligibility rules prevented freshman from playing, Taylor and Johnson became tight off the field in 1968. They were frat brothers at UM’s Alpha Phi Alpha – the first African-American fraternity in the United States, according to Taylor. After Johnson graduated and went on to the NFL, he kept his shoes. But before the 1971 season started, the two backs re-connected.

“Hey, BT! I got a gift for you!” is the way Taylor remembered the conversation with Michigan Football’s first African-American team captain, some 41 years ago. The NFL standout decided it was time to have the size 11 ½ shoes that helped him become UM’s All-Time Leading Rusher be worn by the player who was going to break his rushing record of 2,417 yards.

Now Taylor had a dilemma on his hands. He was honored and loved the idea of wearing his frat brother’s shoes, but they were teal blue and white in color. Michigan was now coached by tough-nosed, Bo Schembechler, not Mr. Nice Guy, Bump Elliot who recruited Taylor.

“Nobody liked Bo his first year – not even me!” Taylor recalled.

We all know that Bo demanded a lot—and for the players that meant tough practices and lots of them. As he did with many players, Schembechler pulled Taylor aside in 1971. The master-motivator and coach of the Wolverines told his senior, star running back that he was going to ride him harder than the other players on the team. Taylor thought incredulously to himself, “You mean harder than you’re riding us now?!”

Bo told him that he knew he was tough and that Taylor could handle it because he was from Barberton, Ohio – the same hometown as Schembechler. “Bo knew who his guys were. He knew which players he could count on,” recalled Taylor. And that was Taylor’s “in” for wearing his funky shoes.

You see, before Rick Leach and Anthony Carter were Bo’s favorites, Billy Taylor was the first favored “son” of Bo.

“The guys on team were jealous and started calling me, ‘Bo’s son!’” laughed Taylor.

Taylor used this special relationship that he had with Bo to wear the shoes. He started working on The General early in the fall of 1971. He begged and begged Schembechler to let him wear the teal Puma spikes, but Schembechler was not easy to convince. Then Taylor hit Bo where he was weakest. Bo remembered the loss to the Buckeyes the year before, and there was no way he was going to lose to Woody at home in 1971. So if his star running back wanted to wear teal shoes, fine – as long as he could score and beat the Buckeyes wearing them, that’s all that mattered.

“If you want me to play a great game, you gotta let me wear those shoes!” professed the star running back.

Finally, before the second game of the 1971 season Taylor asked for permission once again. “Bo growled and snarled, but finally said, ‘OK’,” Taylor recalled.

His teammates razzed him about his funky looking shoes, but Taylor pointed out, “They were ok with me wearing them because I was running for 100 yards per game.” Michigan went undefeated and Taylor went on to top the 100-yard mark five times during his All-American season of 1971 wearing those teal spikes.

He broke Ron Johnson’s career rushing mark at U-M, but had one more surprise in mind for his last game against Stanford. Taylor decided that teal was not tricked out enough.

So he colored the Puma striping maize (or “wings” as Taylor called them) and changed the white laces out for maize ones just before the 1972 Rose Bowl!  

Where are those shoes today? 

“I have no idea,”  [Ed.  DAMN!] Taylor said recently with a tinge of sadness.

So while UM is honoring some former greats with jersey patches, you could say Team #133 and adidas is giving a proverbial nod to another Michigan great, “Touchdown” Billy Taylor, by wearing maize laces this year!

———————————————————————————————————–

Check out Billy Taylor’s ‘Get Back Up’ facility and program – inspired by Bo
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[Ed: This originally appeared in GoBlueWolverine Magazine –so get yours!]

dr sap

Many to hand out this week via Dr. Sap:

Jet-Pack Guy: 2 decals – one for the spot-on landing and one for the sweet helmet! 
Mike Martin: 3 decals – two on the same play: one for the sack and one for the safety in the 2nd QTR.  One more for sack #2 later that same QTR.
Matt Wile: 3 decals – Non-Returnable Kickoffs in 1st & 2nd QTR’s and extra decal for putting 2nd QTR kickoff through the uprights!!
Denard Robinson: 2 decals – 1-yard TD run in 1st QTR; 28-yard run in 2nd QTR
Jake Ryan: 2 decals – 1st QTR Tackle For Loss, 4th QTR TFL
Craig Roh: 2 decals – 1st QTR Tackle For Loss, 4th QTR Sack
Brendan Gibbons: 2 decals – 2 field goals in 2nd QTR
J.T. Floyd: 2 decals for PBU in 2nd & 3rd QTR’s
Courtney Avery: 2 decals – 2nd QTR INT, 4th QTR Sack
Fitzgerald Toussaint: 3 decals – 2nd QTR 2-yard TD run, 3rd QTR 59-yard TD run and +1 editor’s pick, for carrying 20+ times, the first time in a couple seasons.
Roy Roundtree: 1 decal for 49-yard reception in 2nd QTR
Jeremy Gallon: 1 decal for 42-yard reception in 2nd QTR
Martavious Odoms: 1 decal for 33-yard kickoff return in 3rd QTR
Vincent Smith: 1 decal for 26-yard reception in 3rd QTR
Will Campbell: 1 decal for 3rd QTR PBU
Ryan Van Bergen: 1 decal for TFL
Blake Countess: 1 decal for TFL
Brandin Hawthorne: 1 decal for TFL
Taylor Lewan: 2 decals, 1 for seal block on Toussaint 59-yard TD run, +1 editor’s pick for playing through the pain.
Michael Shaw: 1 decal for 37-yard TD run in 4th QTR
Mark Huyge: 1 decal for seal block on Shaw TD run
Kevin Koger: 1 decal for onside kick recovery in 4th QTR
Desmond Morgan: 1 decal for 4th QTR goal line stop tackle
Kenny Demens: 1 decal for 4th QTR goal line stop tackle
Defense: 1 decal for every member of unit for 4th QTR stop/goal line stand

Season tally leaders (doesn’t include “team” or unit stickers):

 PLAYER: TOTAL:
Denard Robinson 26
Vincent Smith 13
Jordan Kovacs 10
Ryan Van Bergen 10
Craig Roh 10
Jake Ryan 9
Jeremy Gallon 7
Desmond Morgan 7
Brendan Gibbons 7
Thomas Gordon 6
Big Will Campbell 6
Blake Countess 6
JT Floyd 6
Fitz Toussaint 6
Mike Martin 6
Mark Huyge 5
Stephen Hopkins 4
Devin Gardner 4
Will Hagerup 4
Kevin Koger 4
Michael Shaw 4
Kenny Demons 4
Matt Wile 4

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