Former O-line coach Buck Nystrom heading to MSU Hall
| By Joe Rexrode, Detroit Free Press | |
| McClatchy-Tribune Information Services |
This is not a story about
"He was a good running back -- quicker than hell, stocky and strong," Nystrom, then NMU's offensive line coach, recalled of Izzo. "But (then-NMU basketball coach)
Izzo's main recollection is the speech Nystrom gave before coaching Izzo's team in that spring game.
"Like we were about to play for the national championship," Izzo said, then started laughing.
He sounded like
"He would demonstrate when he coached," Shurmur said with a chuckle, "and he would get into it with you."
He sounded like
"He was as tough a guy as I've ever seen on the football field," Switzer said of Nystrom. "Tougher on players than I've ever seen. But God, they loved him. There's only one
He is 81, recently celebrating a birthday the doctors at the
Nystrom's MSU credentials are strong. The walk-on lineman from
Nystrom's legacy, though, is in his coaching -- 38 years at the college level, 58 years in some capacity. Never a head coach, always an offensive line coach. That's how he wanted it. Nystrom did not find the same glory and rewards that other disciples of Munn and Daugherty found -- coaches such as
There may be no better embodiment, though, of the Munn-Daugherty way and the imprint it left at MSU than Nystrom and his career.
"He made his kids tough, boy, because that's how he was," said Perles, whose first call when he became MSU's head coach in 1983 was to lure Nystrom from
"Best offensive line coach in the country, period," said Bullough, who roomed with Nystrom at MSU.
"One thing our program stood for is mental and physical toughness," Shurmur said. "You can say whatever you want about us, but that's our heritage. And that's what Buck stood for."
The "Fourth Quarter" conditioning program that MSU still uses, that
When games reached the fourth quarter, players on those MSU teams did something many teams do today -- put four fingers in the air. Nystrom told his players those fingers stood for discipline, commitment, effort and enthusiasm. The thumb stood for pride. And Nystrom stood for the same things every day.
"I lived by two words in coaching -- demand and confront," he said. "I had a natural ability to get kids to practice hard and play hard. That's all I can say. I wasn't smarter than anybody else."
He was smart enough to pull off the difficult coaching combination of driving players while keeping them in your corner. Izzo has built his career on the same approach, and he called Nystrom "a major influence on me."
"When I got the (MSU) job, Buck called me and said, 'Hey Izzo, don't screw up my alma mater,' " Izzo recalled, laughing again. "'And definitely don't let the inmates run the asylum.'"
The son of a 36-year firefighter in
After Oklahoma and a one-year stint at MSU under Daugherty in 1971, Nystrom said he got "a little bit burned out" and returned to
He joined Fairbanks at Colorado in 1981 -- Nystrom's offensive line assistant was a young coach named
The Spartans mashed opponents with Nystrom's offensive line. The bread-and-butter play was "Toss 38," a pitch to the halfback for a wide run with the fullback leading. It was devastating with
"We did it over and over," said Shurmur, who met Nystrom for lunch in
But with MSU on the doorstep of a 1987
He found that NMU was affiliated and he made a call. Nystrom was going home again, to be the Wildcats' associate head coach.
"It was a sad, sad day," Perles said.
"I felt extremely bad because George was the best head football coach I ever worked for," Nystrom said. "I worked for 14 head coaches and all of them were good guys. George was the best."
Perles invited the Nystroms to the Rose Bowl to watch MSU take on USC, but Buck declined. He stayed home and he coached through the 1991 season. He got his retirement. He has helped at
And, of course, he still enjoys taking in an MSU practice. He is not always able to sit back and watch.
"Yeah, I nudge in there a little bit," he said. "I get a little bit excited when I see that offensive line working at one end of the field. A little antsy."
One year ago, things looked bleak for Nystrom. He was diagnosed in
Bullough called Izzo and told him they needed to get after Nystrom to tell him to keep fighting. Izzo and about 250 of Nystrom's former players attended a benefit at
It was a good-bye of sorts. But Nystrom wasn't done. He lined up and attacked his radiation and chemotherapy.
"I just had a scan, and there are only a couple spots left," he said. "By gosh, I'm not out of the woods, but I'm in pretty good shape, to be honest with you. I might wipe this damn thing out completely."
That would surprise no one who has watched Nystrom quietly -- and loudly -- make overachieving the standard for so many others.
"I've lived 81 wonderful years, and I've done exactly what I wanted to do," he said. "All I ever wanted to do was coach. And to be honest with you, I still miss it today. Every single day, I think football."
Hall call
Former lineman
MSU's latest Hall of Famers
Dave Thor (gymnastics 1966-68): Thor was a three-time
UP NEXT FOR MSU
Matchup:
When: Noon Saturday.
Where:
TV:
Line: MSU by 44 { .
___
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