When Al McGuire Said Yes
Having worked
in the real world for a few years after graduating from Marquette
University in 1980, I was surprised that no book had ever been written
about Al McGuire. Sure, there were plenty of newspaper and magazine
stories, but no books. Here was one of the most colorful characters in
the history of college basketball, if not all of sports, and there was
no book.
The idea to write a book began percolating in my head
during the summer of 1984. I took the afternoon off from the weekly
newspaper I was working for in Highland Park, Illinois, at the time and
visited the sports information department at Marquette, which at that
time was located in the 1212 Building on Wisconsin Avenue.
I made Xerox copies of every Al McGuire story in the archives files.
“You
Can Call Me Al” was not the original title of the book. Initially I
wanted to go with “Seashells & Balloons: The Life and Times of Al
McGuire.”
The book would contain 13 chapters, representing the
number of years McGuire coached at Marquette. Each chapter would be
named for a particular McGuireism. For example, Dance Hall Player was
about his playing days. Whistle Blower covered his early coaching days
at Dartmouth College. All of the Xerox copies were organized into manila
file folders labeled with the appropriate McGuire chapter name.
My
research continued as I read anything and everything I could find about
Al McGuire. I also talked to anyone who knew Al, including Hank
Raymonds, who offered numerous stories and perspectives on Al the coach
and Al the man. After such interviews, I tucked the notes into the
appropriate file folder.
I put my research on hold while earning
my master’s degree at Northwestern University’s Medill School of
Journalism. However, Al McGuire was not out of sight or out of mind
during my hiatus.
After graduate school, I began working as an
editor at Chicago area trade publications. During my evenings and
weekends, I resumed my research into Al’s life and career. Quite a few
hours on Saturdays and Sundays were spent poring over yearbooks and
newspaper clippings of each of the Marquette basketball seasons during
the Eddie Hickey and Al McGuire eras.
In 1987, most of Al’s 1977
National Championship team returned to Milwaukee for a reunion and old
timer’s game. I contracted with The Sporting News to write a “where are
they now” feature for the magazine. I interviewed Hank and Rick Majerus,
in addition to a number of the former players. While Al did not attend
the reunion, we talked for 45 minutes by phone. I was able to glean
quite a bit during our conversation, much more than I had anticipated.
The
full-page feature was placed opposite The Sporting News’s game story of
Kansas’s win over Oklahoma in the 1988 National Championship. When I
brought copies of the feature to Al’s office in Mequon, Wisconsin, I
asked his secretary what Al thought. “He said it wasn’t long enough.”
Then I asked if anyone had ever approached him about writing a book.
“Get in line,” she replied. “Everyone wants to write his book.”
In
1990, I was put in touch with Al’s youngest son, Robbie, who produced
many of Al’s television specials during his broadcast career. When I
related my interest in writing a book, Robbie invited me to a basketball
luncheon prior to an upcoming DePaul-UCLA game, at which Al was the
featured speaker.
After the luncheon, Robbie introduced us and I
told Al what I had in mind. “Call my secretary in Wisconsin and she will
send you all of the tapes of my speeches and interviews.” Needless to
say I was pleasantly surprised. I could not wait to get started.
Several
weeks later, however, I received a package in the mail from Al McGuire
Enterprises. Thinking it was the first batch of tapes, I could not wait
to open the package. To my great disappointment, it contained two Al’s
Run tee shirts and a note from Al: “I know I said you could do the book,
but I’ve decided to pull back. Coach McGuire.”
This did not
deter me. I was determined to go ahead and not give up the book project,
even if it meant going the unauthorized route. I knew there were others
who had wanted to write Al’s book, including Roger Jaynes of The
Milwaukee Journal, Frank Deford of Sports Illustrated, Dick Enberg,
Jimmy Breslin and John Feinstein of The Washington Post. Also, I knew Al
was in the fall of his years and I could not wait forever.
I
then called George Reedy who was my advisor during my senior year at
Marquette. He had also served as dean of Marquette’s Journalism School
and before that was President Lyndon Johnson’s press secretary in the
mid-1960s. Reedy also wanted to write Al’s book and had set up a
luncheon with his agent, Michael Hambilburg, and Al during the early
1970s.
Al never showed up.
Reedy never pursued the book with Al after that.
Reedy
warned me that if I did go the unauthorized route that I should be
prepared to have a lot of doors slammed in my face. “Al’s friends are
very loyal,” he cautioned.
I decided to go ahead and begin
talking to those who knew Al from his formative years in Rockaway Beach,
New York, and his head coaching days at Belmont Abbey College.
Norman
Ochs, who grew up with Al and was a lifelong friend, put me in touch
with Jim Lytle, one of Al’s captains at Belmont Abbey, which was located
in Belmont, North Carolina. During our phone conversation, Jim regaled
me with humorous stories and memories of Al and how he brought New York
and New Jersey wise guys down to Baptist Belmont. Stories I had never
heard before. He also put me in touch with a number of his New York
teammates.
On a Friday morning of Labor Day weekend 1994, I
received a phone call in my office. “Joe, this is Coach. I haven’t tried
to keep you from doing this book, but I’m not sure you know the right
way to go about it. I know this is serious when I get a call from Jimmy
Ly-TELL (McGuire pronunciation), and when Jimmy calls me, I know it’s
serious.
“I’m gettin’ on a plane Tuesday morning to West
Lafayette, Indiana. There’s an extra seat on the plane if you want to
join me and we can talk.”
Due to my work schedule I could not go, but I offered to meet him at his office the next day (Saturday). He agreed.
When I arrived the next day, he was by himself in a small matchbox of an office. We sat and talked for three hours.
“I
know you are doing a lot of research at Marquette, but I think you’re
going about it in a theoretical way,” he said. I replied that when
putting together someone’s life, it is like putting the pieces of a
puzzle together, and it takes a while to find all of those pieces.” The
puzzle imagery seemed to strike a chord with McGuire as he listened to
my pitch.
“But Joe, you really don’t know me,” he countered. “I
have traveled all over with Roger Jaynes on road trips, garage sales,
restaurants, tournaments.” He did not sound convinced that I was the man
for the job. After all, I was going to be holding Al McGuire’s life in
my hands.
After some thought, he added: “To do this right, you
have to end each chapter with a good story, to tie it up in a neat bow.
And if you do this, you have to have something in there about the
original flower child.”
When we finished, he began rummaging
through some boxes on shelves and took out an Oscar Mayer Wienermobile.
He signed it, “To Joe, Al McGuire. Good Life ’94.”
I thanked him
as we walked outside his office. We drove our cars to a little diner not
far from his Pewaukee, Wisconsin, office. Al ordered pancakes and I had
coffee. Afterward, Al uncharacteristically reached for the check. Since
he was paying, I left a dollar for Al and a dollar for me on the table.
As we started to walk away, Al said: “Joe, put one of those dollars
back in your pocket. You’re not obligated. NEVER OVER TIP!”
As we
said our goodbyes, Al said: “This is your book. This is your baby. You
do whatever you want. You talk to whoever you want, including my family.
But I’m not going to be involved.” What he meant was that he was not
going to do any public relations to promote the book, including radio or
tv or book signings. Al was someone who disliked being a shill, which
was why he was very selective about what products he would endorse and
for how long. “I like to get in and get out within two years, tops.”
As
I look back on it, I just happened to be in the right place at the
right time of Al McGuire’s life. The fact that I was straightforward
with him about what I wanted to do and how I wanted to handle his
biography, in addition to being a Marquette graduate, stood me in good
stead.
It took 10 years to get the green light from Al, but those
doors to people in his life started to open. The first was then-Indiana
University basketball coach Bob Knight, who wrote the foreword for the
book. Then Dean Smith, Coach K and Louie Carnesecca, who wrote the cover
quotes for “You Can Call Me Al,” which is the title I chose after
hearing the Paul Simon hit of the same name. The song – and title –
resonated much better with Marquette and casual sports fans.
I
had to be just as persistent in order to find a publisher. After a
family friend in the business helped me put together a book proposal, I
waited patiently to see what interest there was from publishers big and
small. After numerous rejections, I asked another family friend if her
brother – Rev. Andrew Greeley of Chicago – would take a look at my book
proposal. He thought the book was a great idea. “If there can be a book
about Howard Cosell, why not a book about Al McGuire?” He put me in
touch with his agent, Nat Sobel of Sobel, Weber and Associates of New
York. Sobel stated that if I could get Al McGuire to make it his book,
including doing radio and tv interviews and book signings, Sobel could
get me a publisher.
Al said no. And when he said no, he meant it. He never went back on his word.
Finally,
in 1997, a small sports publisher in Madison, Wisconsin, Prairie Oak
Press, took a chance on an unknown writer and first-time author. George
Reedy had his agent Mike Hamilburg negotiate my first contract, and the
first edition of “You Can Call Me Al: The Colorful Journey of College
Basketball’s Original Flower Child, Al McGuire,” was published in time
for the 1999 Final Four.
This Centennial Edition of “You Can Call
Me Al” (fifth edition) includes an Introduction that covers the
beginnings of the Marquette basketball program during the 1916-17
season, when Ralph Risch coached his one and only season of college
basketball, leading the Marquette Hilltoppers to an 8-3 record.
The
Introduction takes the reader from that inaugural season all the way
through the Eddie Hickey Era, before Al McGuire took over the program
and brought it to new heights. The book also includes a photo page of
every Marquette head coach, from Risch all the way to Steve
Wojciechowski. Pictures of Coach McGuire’s 2001 funeral were also added
to this special edition.
As a Marquette graduate, I feel
privileged that Al McGuire gave me the opportunity of a lifetime for
which I will always be grateful.
Joseph Declan Moran, author/publisher
JDM Press
Arlington Heights, IL
February 2019