orts Changing Of The Guard Mat Ishbia has grown into the role of Seaholm's floor leader. MIKE ROSENBAUM Special to The Jewish News L ike the main character of the classic Charles Dickens novel, Mat Ishbia was given Great Expectations for this basketball season. Lifted from his job as a working-class role player, the Birmingham Seaholm senior received the high-class position of scorer. But unlike Dickens' character Pip, Ishbia is thriving in his new life, averag- ing 20 points and seven assists per game, while leading an inexperienced Maples team to a respectable 4-4 start. Ishbia is a third-year varsity player at Seaholm. In the off-season, he also plays for the talented Michigan Mustangs Amateur Athletic Union (AAU) team, which finished second in the nation in 1997. Until this season, however, his role on both teams was similar — the 5-foot- 10 Ishbia was supposed to get the ball to the big men who did the scoring. Ishbia started about half of Seaholm's games last season, playing in the shadow of star guard Jon Borovich, - who earned a basketball scholarship from Central Michigan University. Ishbia scored 7.1 points per game, along with four assists and two steals. "He was a guy who gave us big min- utes," explained Maples Coach Dave Watkins. "Last year we didn't ask him to score a lot, but he was able to get the ball to our scorers." _ But Borovich and 'the team's other scorers graduated, so the torch passed to Ishbia. "This year he's our scorer," Watkins said. "He's the guy who's got the ball in his hands and he makes the decisions. If he needs to score 20 he can. If he needs to play good defense and get the ball to other people who are hot, he can do that." Mostly, Ishbia's had the hot hand. He scored a career-best 36 points against Waterford Kettering on Jan. 6, and still added seven assists and six steals. Ishbia began preparing for his scorer's role last summer. Mike Rosenbaum is a Southfield- based freelance writer. "All summer I worked on my jumper and was practicing more of the mentality of scoring, instead of giving it up to the other players," he said. "I just worked all summer with some of the kids on the team. I had to work on my jump shot and all my scoring tools so I could shoot better, score more and pass better." -0 8 Above: Mat Ishbia pulls down a rebound. Left: Mat Ishbia drives past a Clawson defender. o. d But a scorer doesn't succeed on phys- ical tools alone. He must also be strong mentally. "I guess I was confident but also a lit- tle nervous," Ishbia said, "I could (score) in the summer, but it's always different when the season starts. "I was worried because there is pres- sure. If I didn't score, we'd have trouble. scoring." So far, Ishbia's physical and mental games have come together. Watkins, who helped Ishbia work on his offensive skills last summer, appreciates Ishbia's progress. "He wasn't a great scorer as a fresh- man or sophomore," Watkins recalled. "His junior year he started proving that he could score, and of course he knows he has to score for us this year. "It used to be his three-point shot was a little suspect last year, but this year you've got to come out and guard him. Mat's in that category where he can score but he can also dish out the assists." Indeed, in Seaholm's fourth game this season, Ishbia yielded his scoring role, finishing with seven points and a school-record 15 assists in a victory over Madison Heights Lamphere. "He likes to get his points just like anybody," Watkins said. "But he also realizes that if somebody else is hot, he has no problem giving them the ball." Asked to compare the 15-assist game with his 36-point effort, Ishbia respond- ed, "Any game is great as long as we win. I enjoyed the 15-assist game, because with assists it's not really me and it was more of a team effort. "With the 36 points, we needed someone to score and I was just trying to do my best to keep up in the game. But I was disappointed we lost that game." As a senior captain, Ishbia's responsi- bilities also include team leadership. In that important area, Watkins says, Ishbia also has improved. "He can be very emotional. It used to be if things would go bad he'd kind of lose his cool a little bit and start arguing with the ref and things like that," he said. "Now he's really matured into understanding that sometimes you've got to just stay posi- tive; sometimes there are going to be bad calls. Sometimes players are going to make mistakes. But you've just got to hang in there with them and things will get better." Another key facet to Ishbia's game is his intelligence. "His basketball IQ is as high as any- body I've ever had on the team, and I've had some pretty good players in the last six years," Watkins said. "He really understands the game. He's not the tallest or the quickest, but you'll be- hard-pressed to find anybody smarter than him on the court." Ishbia believes he's developed his court-sense through study, as well as practice. In addition to playing on school and AAU teams, Ishbia was a mainstay on Detroit's Maccabi basketball team from age 13 through 16. "Being there was a fun experience," he said. "I wasn't friends with anyone who goes to those schools, but we became friends." -Ishbia's future basketball goals include a repeat of Seaholm's Oakland Activities Association Division III cham- pionship and another good run in the state tournament, where the Maples were a regional finalist last year. Next fall he expects to play college basketball. He's heard from a number of schools, including many Division III colleges and some Division I and II schools. "Hopefully, if the season keeps going well, eventually I can go to a Division I school ... maybe an Ivy League school," he says. Ultimately, Ishbia would like to be a coach. "I think I understand the game and I enjoy it. I always like to be around it," he said. "I think I could see myself being a coach, because I like to be with kids. That would be fun, I think.", For now, Ishbia the player is enjoying the best of times. ❑ 1 / 23 1998 13E