PHOTOS BY DANIEL LIPPIM Top: Ronnie Levin: A senior starter. Left: Garon Oseff has been big in the middle. West Bloomfield High's basketball team is proud of its accomplishments this season. MIKE ROSENBAUM SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS T he West Bloomfield High School basketball coach- es feared this would be a long season. After losing eight seniors, including four starters, from last year's squad, Coach Tim Domke and his two Jewish assistants, Barry Bershad and Gary Wasser- man, were prepared for the worst. But the worst hasn't happened. Thanks in large part to the leadership of the team's Jewish players, West Bloomfield is playing close to .500 basketball in the competitive Oakland Activities Asso- ciation (OAA) Division II. Last Friday, after a 66-38 loss to Oak Park, West Bloomfield dropped to 6-9 overall and 4-5 in the division. The Lakers' lone returning starter, senior co-captain Garon Oseff, is the team's undisputed leader, while co- captain Ron Levin, also a senior, joins Oseff in the start- ing five. Sophomore guard Randy Wexelman is a part-time starter while junior guard Blair Gottlieb comes off the bench. Bershad describes the 6-foot-6, 290-pound Oseff as "much improved from last year and a real good shooter around the basket. He's agile and a good team leader." Oseff is a four-year varsity performer. He played for Walled Lake Western in his freshman and sophomore seasons, then transferred to West Bloomfield. Oseff av- eraged 3.5 points and 10 rebounds per game last year. This season he's averaging 13 points and 16 rebounds. But Oseffs leadership may be just as important as his scoring. "I love being in a leadership role," he says. "I'm always talking and yelling. Not yelling criticism — just trying to get everybody on the same page so we can win. "I feel I need to set an example, like how to take care of your business on the court. If you get mad, you want to show it a little bit, but you don't want to be kicking chairs, taking stupid fouls. Just be a leader and show a positive example for the younger guys." "Garon's great," says teammate Blair Gottlieb. "He's nice and loud. You always know where he is. He's a real good basketball player, too." Oseff "tells us what to do and we listen to him," Wex- elman adds. "He's just like another coach for us." Levin was generally the second or third man off the bench last year. This year he's a starting guard who of- ten scores in double figures. The 5-10 Levin "is someone who has really worked at basketball his whole life," Bershad says. "He's prob- -.6insmi- 4,ftwipmempft.- -.4sweiremost. ably one of the few kids on the team who really has over- achieved from what he was given (physically). And he's a leader. Kids look up to him. He's earned their respect by a lot of hard work." In recent summers, Levin says, "I put a lot of extra time in shooting jump shots and a lot of extra time play- ing basketball, working on things I needed to work on." Levin began'the season at point guard, but recently switched to shooting guard. "I like point guard better because I like to get other people involved in the game," Levin says. "But lately I've been playing shooting guard because they want to get me more shots." Oseff has known Levin for 12 years. "Ronnie's a great player," he says. "He's stepped up tremendously this year. His ballhandling improved and he's a great leader ... He really helps out with younger guys, showing them what they need to do, and especially with the guards. He sets an example." Wexelman is one of the Lakers' surprises. He played on the freshman team last season and was slated for the junior varsity this year. He's started about half the var- sity games. HOLDING THEIR OWN page 108