The 1 and the 7 | Storytime with Dr. Sap

Two of the most iconic numbers in Detroit Red Wings hockey history were determined by bunk bed assignments on the team train in the 1940s. Ted Lindsay & Gordie Howe were awarded the #7 and #9 jerseys respectively not because someone in the organization thought they’d be great, but because bunk beds #7 and #9 became available for Lindsay & Howe when they were just beginning their Hall of Fame NHL careers.

Back then, whatever bunk bed you slept in on the train was the number you would wear on the ice.

Legend has it that Old Number 98 was given his iconic number after a little dispute with his high school coach.  Years ago Mark Harmon told Sports Illustrated his understanding of what happened:

As a freshman he was once chewing gum while the coach was talking and the coach got upset. He told him to get off the field but my dad said no. So they lined him up against the varsity and they kicked off to him and he ran three consecutive kickoffs for touchdowns. The coach told him to go to the office and pick out a uniform. So he did and he was the first one there. He picked the newest jersey, newest pair of pads, newest everything. He felt good and as he came back down from the office, the rest of the team was coming up. He went down to the field and the coach told him he had the starting halfback’s uniform on. The coach said, “Go take it off and get something else.” So he went back there and everything was gone except a moth-eaten torn-up jersey in the corner. Number 98. He loved that number and it came up continually in his life. It was the name of his sports-production company.

For Michigan football, two of the more recent iconic numbers have similarly interesting stories on how and why the respective players were given their iconic numbers and who subsequently has and hasn’t worn them since.  The numbers 1 and 7 have ultimately defined two positions for Michigan Football after their respective legends first donned those now iconic numerals.

When I mention #1 and #7 at Michigan don’t you automatically think of wide receiver and quarterback?  Interestingly enough, Anthony Carter and Rick Leach were the first players to wear the #1 and #7 jerseys at their respective positions.  Before AC, Gregg Willner, a placekicker (1975-78), and David Whiteford, a defensive back (1973-1975) wore #1.  Before Leach wore #7, Mark Jacoby wore it from 1972-1974 as a defensive end and wolfman.

I asked legendary equipment manager Jon Falk why Leach, who wore #13 as a Flint Southwestern Colt, was given #7 at Michigan in 1975, he explained to me how the number assignment process worked.  During the summers, Falk & Bo would sit down and review the list of available numbers based on which players were returning each year. That list would then be matched up to the incoming freshman class and numbers were assigned to each new player based on position.

For Leach, #13 was already taken by backup junior QB John Ceddia.  Falk and Bo saw that #7 was open, so they assigned the player who would eventually become the first freshman to start at QB in Michigan Football history, lucky #7.  Anthony Carter’s story was a little more interesting.

After hearing the reports about how dynamic Carter was in high school and once Bo and Bill McCartney saw Carter play in Florida, Schembechler gave Falk this bold prediction: “This kid is going to be the next Johnny Rodgers of College Football! He is going to return some kicks for touchdowns!  We’re gonna give him #1!”

Since AC last wore #1 in the 1983 Rose Bowl, there have been a few others to don the ultimate binary jersey: Greg McMurtry, Derrick Alexander, Tyrone Butterfield , David Terrell and Braylon Edwards – all wide receivers of course.

After Leach last wore #7 in the 1979 Rose Bowl, several other players at different positions have worn the lucky number. QB’s Dave Hall, Demetrius Brown, Drew Henson, Spencer Brinton, Chad Henne, Devin Gardner (for a couple of years) and now Shane Morris.  DB Shonte Peoples and RB Chris Floyd were a few other non-QB’s to wear #7.

So I am not the only one who likes the fact that Shane Morris, a lefty QB, is wearing #7 – it just looks right.

But since Edwards left UM, no one has worn the coveted #1 jersey. Braylon has funded an endowment scholarship for the right to wear the #1 jersey, but no one has worn it since Edwards did in his last game – the 2005 Rose Bowl.

All this now leads to a couple questions:

  • Should the #1 jersey be put back into circulation?
  • Should #1 and #7 be worn by only WR’s and QB’s exclusively?

While Leach had a stellar career at U-M (3 Big Ten Championships, three-time 1st Team All-Big Ten QB, All-American QB in 1978 and the re-writing of the UM Passing Record Book), Carter’s dossier was a notch above: (2 Big Ten Championships, three-time 1st Team All-Big Ten WR, three-time All-American WR and the re-writing of the UM Receiving & Kick Return Record Books).

7 Comments

  • Buddy Moorehouse

    I think it’s obvious that No. 1 should be a Legacy jersey in honor of AC (no offense to the other 1’s, but the number belongs to AC). Desmond Howard won a Heisman, but Anthony Carter is the greatest wide receiver Michigan has ever had. No. 7 is a little trickier. I’m not sure I’m quite ready to make that one a Legacy.

  • Teddy

    I like the legacy numbers but the patch on the jersey needs to go or become smaller (http://mvictors.com/WordPress/images/2009/IMG_6861gallonunitimeline_thumb1.jpg this looked awful). Maybe the player wears it in the first game when they officially unretire it but after that it goes back in circulation like a regular jersey. Also, it would be nice if we kept these numbers for the same position of the honored players. To me, seeing Shawn Crable or Vincent Smith wearing the #2 was just wrong.

    My next five number to honor:
    #1 Carter
    #2 Woodson
    #46 Newman
    #49 Chappuis
    #76 Hutchinson
    #77 Long

  • Jeff Cummins

    I’d definitely agree on the number assignment for the first five players, but the last one is a little trickier. Was Jake Long really that much more dominant than Jon Jansen? Does anyone else remember that iconic photo of Jansen pulverizing an opponent into the ground?

  • AC1997

    Why does a legacy jersey have to honor just one player? Why couldn’t they roll out the legacy #1 jersey and have all the famous wearers honored at the same time? (My list would be AC, McMurtry, Alexander, Terrell, and Braylon)

    Now a different comment……about the legendary Jon Falk. First let me say that I love Falk, own his book, and appreciate all he’s done for the program. But no one has ever been able to answer one question for me about his legacy. When RichRod was hired he got off on the wrong foot for many reasons both of his own creation and due to others that were out of his control. But one small part of that bad first impression was that RichRod gave out the #1 jersey to JT Floyd (I think) during spring practice and upset Braylon Edwards. Braylon’s response and the way both he and Rodriguez handled the situation affected the opinions of some former players and fans before RichRod even had done anything on the field.

    But here’s the question – Jon Falk was one of the few people within the program to survive the transition from Carr to RichRod. His JOB was the equipment. Why on earth would he allow Rodriguez to hand out the #1 jersey when he knew not only the legacy but more importantly the Braylon endowment? Either he tried to stop it and RichRod over-ruled him or he didn’t do anything, knowing the potential backlash that awaited. I would love to hear Falk tell THAT story.

  • Greg - MVictors

    re: (Why on earth would he allow Rodriguez to hand out the #1 jersey when he knew not only the legacy but more importantly the Braylon endowment).

    Knowing Falk a little bit – his job is to make sure the players have the equipment to perform and ok, a tiny part of that is the jersey number I suppose. But Falk isn’t going to get into the politics around legacy jerseys and all that – hell no. It’s hard to find someone who loves this place more than Falk, but I’m guessing, beyond perhaps an opinion if asked, he steered way clear of that kind of stuff.