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For Bill Mallory and Family, Football is Just a Way of
Life
By David Purdum
In Bill Mallory's Bloomington, Ind., office, there is a picture
hanging on the wall of the former coach celebrating on top
of his team's shoulders. Like all good pictures, there's a
story behind this one, and it reflects what family and football
is all about.
In 1987, Mallory, in his fourth year as head football coach
at Indiana, had his team off to a 5-1 start, and with wins
over Ohio State, Northwestern and Minnesota, it was the Hoosiers
sitting atop the Big Ten, awaiting a visit from mighty Michigan.
Indiana had not beaten the Wolverines in 20 years, and Mallory's
teams had been outscored 96-21 in their three losses to Bo
Schembechler's squads. Memorial Stadium was packed with Hoosier
fans on that October day. The Mallory family was in attendance:
Wife Ellie rooting for her husband as always, and the couple's
youngest son, Curt, a high school senior, was in the stands
checking out the maize and gold uniforms, which he would be
wearing the following season. Mike, the Mallory's eldest son
and a four-year letterman at linebacker for Schembechler from
1982-1985, was now on the Indiana sideline in his second year
as a graduate assistant.
Bill and Mike would lead the Hoosiers to a 14-10 win over
Michigan that day, and the celebration would begin.
Amidst the party on the field, a Michigan player made his
way through the madness to congratulate the winning coach.
That player was junior safety Doug Mallory, and even though
he was suffering from the agony of defeat, he wanted to shake
his father's hand. At the bottom of that picture hanging in
Bill's office, Doug's Wolverine helmet can be seen, along
with his hand reading out toward his dad.
"When Bill took the Indiana job," said Ellie, "Doug
and Mike were at the Sugar Bowl, Bill wanted to tell them
that he had accepted the position, because those things have
a way of leaking out; so he called them and when he told them,
Doug said, 'I hope I graduate before you beat Michigan.'"
To this day, football plays a major role in the Mallory family.
Mike is in his third year at the University of Illinois, where
he coached the safeties for two years before taking over the
linebackers this season. Doug is in his second season coaching
the Oklahoma State Cowboys' secondary, and Curt is in his
second year as Indiana's secondary coach.
"Football was obviously a shared family interest,"
Bill said, "but it was never forced upon them. That was
something I really tried not to do. I wanted them to enjoy
it, but without going overboard. I didn't want to put any
pressure on them."
Mallory was adamant about letting his sons enjoy their childhood:
If they wanted to go play with their friends, great; if they
wanted to watch a game, even better.
But it didn't take long for Doug, Mike and Curt to find their
passion for the game, and at an early age, they could be found
at their dad's practices or working out at the school's facilities.
Mike and Doug each were ball boys for their father.
"I never really looked at any other schools besides
Indiana and Michigan," said Curt, who was a part of five
Big Ten championships at Michigan, four as a player and one
as a student assistant. "I really never saw myself anywhere
else but those two places. In the end, I felt maybe it was
time to get away from home, branch out."
"I'd always dreamed of playing for my father growing
up ... or someone like him," said Mike, who after his
days at Michigan had a tryout with the Green Bay Packers.
Bill says he was never disappointed about not getting to
coach any of his sons. "To be honest, we were such a
close family," he said, "so, I felt it was time
for them to get away and be their own person. I talked to
other coaches who had sons that played, and decided that now
would be a great time for them to move on and get involved
in another program, with a great coach."
"I never dreamt that our sons would enjoy it as much
as we did," said Ellie, "but they have. They all
three have a great passion for the game and the people involved.
"We talked about a lot of things (at the dinner table),"
she said. "But the boys grew up with it, and they saw
how much their dad enjoyed the game and coaching. And how
much we enjoyed the players and the coaches ... it was a good
life for us."
It was a good and busy life, especially for Ellie. As a wife
of the head coach and the mother of one daughter, Barb, and
three sons who all played in college, Ellie's weekends were
spent traveling from game to game and school to school, all
this from a woman who knew very little about the game when
her and her future husband first started dating.
"I really didn't know much about football. I was a music
major," said Ellie, who graduated, like her husband,
from Miami (OH). "I knew nothing. When Bill was a G.A.
at Bowling Green, and I was still at Miami, I asked him to
explain the game. He didn't want to, because he wanted to
watch it, or course. He said, 'just look at the scoreboard.'
"So, the first play, I looked at the scoreboard, and,
I said 'well, the scoreboard's wrong. It says down 2, and
I know there are at least 11 guys on the field. That's how
much I knew about football ... but he still married me anyway.
The Mallory's now have nine grandchildren.
Needles to say, Ellie's knowledge of and love for the game
has increased. Late in the fourth quarter of this year's Oklahoma
State-Texas Tech game, she watched in dismay as the Red Raiders
stormed back from a 48-21 fourth-quarter deficit against her
son's secondary. But she kept her cool, and late in the fourth
quarter, with the game on the line, she thought she better
take control of the situation. She looked over to OSU head
coach Les Miles' wife,Kathy, who was holding their three-month-old
baby girl and said, "You better give me that baby."
Ellie's immaculate interception was followed promptly by an
interception by Cowboy defensive back Jon Holland to preserve
an OSU victory.
These days, Ellie enjoys the game immensely.
"The side of football that I saw was the people,"
she said. "I got to know the coaches, their wives, the
players and the families, and that's what was important to
me."
Ellie took that appreciation for the people of football and
helped form the American Football Coaches Wives Association
in 1989. She was the first president of the AFCWA and is currently
a member of the board of trustees.
Roll with the punches
Bill Mallory inherited a program with only five winning seasons
in nearly 40 years when he came to Indiana in 1984. He promptly
took the Hoosiers to five bowl games in his first eight seasons
en route to becoming Indiana's all-time winningest coach.
But in 1996, after suffering through 13 consecutive conference
losses, Mallory and his graduate assistant Doug Mallory were
terminated, relieved of their duties, fired. But that's not
the "F" word, especially in the world of major college
football. It happens - to anyone, anywhere, at any time. The
hot seat seems to be getting bigger each season. And, like
it or not, your position may be on the list someday, making
a coach's mental toughness every bit as important as that
of his players.
"It was tough, to say the least," Bill Mallory
said. "In this business, you're going to have hardships;
that's the testy times that as a coach or for anyone in any
profession. Football conditions you for life. It's a great
teacher of life."
Mallory says, although saddened by the decision, he still
had the determination and passion for football and the University
of Indiana. "There was no time for head hanging,"
he said. "Naturally, I was disappointed, but never bitter.
He remains at Indian to this day.
Doug moved on, joining brother Mike at Maryland. The two
brothers coached the Terrapins for one season, before it happened
again.
"We just got back from visiting them at Maryland,"
remembered Bill, "and they were really making progress.
They both enjoyed it. "We got home, and Ellie checked
the answering machine. She said, 'you'll never guess ... the
boys were fired. I though 'you've got to be kidding me.'"
Both Mike and Doug, showing some of their father's perseverance
landed on their fee, Mike at Illinois and Doug at Oklahoma
State.
"Like any profession, you just really have to keep going,"
said Ellie. "Keep your head up and keep moving forward."
The Bowdens: All in the Family
Playing or coaching against a family member can be a daunting
task. However, the Mallorys each said once the games began,
their focus shifted from their father or brother on the opposing
sideline to their opponent.
"It was difficult to see what my father was going through
after a loss," said Doug, "but, really once the
game started, you really focused in on the game."
Former Auburn coach and current ABC college football analyst
Terry Bowden has it a little tougher. He has to analyze, second-guess
and sometimes criticize two of his siblings and his father
in front of a national television audience. Younger brother
Jeff is the offensive coordinator at Florida State, where
father and head coach Bobby has climbed to the top of the
Division I all-time wins list. And the embattled Tommy Bowden
is currently in his fifth season as head coach at Clemson.
"The hardest part is making yourself be critical,"
says Terry, who joined the ABC staff after resigning as head
coach at Auburn. "My job is to look at their team, at
the plays that were called and the decisions that were made
and decide if I agree with them.
"It goes one step further with me, because I'm critiquing
my family." Terry says he's lucky because his family
is light hearted and easy going. "When I first started,
my dad told me, "Terry, if you knew as much as I do,
you'd still be coaching.'
"Still, sometimes the hardest part for me is not to
overcompensate," he said. "I'll overdo it and pick
against their teams. What people don't understand is the reason
I pick a team has nothing to do with who I want to win. I
analyze and based on a team's talent is how I make my pick."
This year has been especially difficult for Terry, as Tommy
has come under heavy scrutiny at Clemson.
"Even though he's beaten their No. 1 rival, South Carolina
and Lou Holtz, three out of four years and taken Clemson to
bowl games in each year, the 'fun' thing to write about is
him being on the hot seat," said Terry. "I'm not
going to make my mark in this business by being mean-spirited
or controversial just for shock value."
He's also stood by his father's march to the top of the Division
I wins list, which has come under scrutiny because of Bobby
Bowden's wins at Samford.
"First of all the rule says, once a coach coaches in
Division I for 10 years the wins count. So no matter what
I say the rules the rule. But is was a lot more difficult
to win at Samford than at Auburn or at Florida State."
said Terry, who also spent time coaching at Samford. "Ask
any coach, everybody wants to win at every level ... winning
doesn't get any easier at any level."
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