Sp or ts Jewish Stars New Hoops Coaches Are Familiar Faces \ . MIKE ROSENBAUM Special to the Jewish News EC oward Golding is the new boys varsity basketball coach at Bloomfield Hills Andover High School. The West Bloomfield resident previously handled squads at Lamphere High in Madison Heights and Birmingham's Seaholm High and coached boys and girls teams at Oak Park High. Golding, 58, coached Maccabi basketball for 11 years and was an assistant at Schoolcraft College in Livonia last season. It's reunion time for former Pistons coach Ron Rothstein, 60, who joins Isiah Thomas' staff as the Indiana Pacers' sen- ior assistant coach. Rothstein spent three seasons as an assistant and one year as head coach during Thomas' playing career in Detroit. Rothstein also coached the Miami Heat for three seasons and was an assistant in Atlanta and Cleveland. Rothstein, known as a defensive special- ist, also coached the WNBA Miami Sol for three seasons, then returned to the NBA as an advisor to Heat coach Pat Riley last year. Grosse Pointe native Morgan Pressel, 15, made the cut in U.S. Women's Open golf last month. She finished in 52nd place, shooting a 20-over par 304. Pressel leaped into the spotlight with an Dr. Michelle Wolfe of Southfield, a former medical officer in the U.S. Navy, has joined the ob-gyn staff at the Henry Ford Medical Center Southfield. She is a member of the American Academy of Obstetrics and Gynecology and American Association of Gynecologic Laparascopists. Dr. Avraham Raz of West Bloomfield has been recognized by his peers for more than two decades of cancer research and discov- ery. The Metastasis Research Society hon- ored Dr. Raz with the Paget-Ewing Award for his years of work in helping to find a Dr. Raz cure for cancer. Dr. 8/ 8 2003 58 opening-round 70, one under-par. Although she didn't maintain that pace, her performance was impressive for a 15-year-old. This was her second trip to the Open. In 2001 Pressel, just shy of her 13th birthday, became the youngest qualifier in U.S. Women's Open history, but missed the cut in that event. Jordan Gruber spent part of his sum- mer playing side-by-side with college rivals and pro soccer players. The former Birmingham Groves' Mr. Soccer and current Michigan State junior played midfield for the Mid Michigan Bucks, a minor league soccer team that plays in the Premier Development League. The league includes professional players but allows amateurs to compete while retain- ing college eligibility. In 10 games, Gruber had no goals and one assist. The team finished 15-4-1 and reached the conference championship game. Several North Farmington-West Bloomfield (NFWB) travel baseball teams with strong Jewish identities enjoyed success this summer. The 12-year-old Cobras featured seven Jewish players: Andy Buchanan (first base-pitcher); Alex Goldfarb (cen- terfield-first base-pitcher); Max Gordon (outfield-catcher-pitcher); Brad Hantler (shortstop); Jake Holloway (outfield- pitcher-first base); Steven Kanter (pitch- er-right field) and Jarrett Levine (third base). Head coach Jeff Levine and assistant Alan Kanter are Jewish, and, says Kanter, "our third coach, Carl Manoogian, thinks he's Jewish!" Kanter adds that the four non-Jewish players, The 12-and-under North Farmington-West Cory Davis, Cory Bloomfield Cobras baseball travel team. Back row: Manoogian, Max Rankin, Manager Jeff Levine, Hitting Coach Frank St. and Matt St. Clair, "have Clair, Pitching and Catching Coach Alan Kanter, come to appreciate many Fielding Coach Carl Manoogian. Second row: Max aspects of Jewish religion." Rankin, Cory Davis, Max Gordon, Alex Goldfarb, The Cobras were 43-12 in Matt St. Clair, Jake Holloway. Front row: Steven the regular season and won three tournaments. The team Kanter, Brad Hantler, Jarrett Levine, Coy played in the 64-team Coop- Manoogian, Andy Buchanan. erstown (N.Y.) Dreams Park National Invitational Tour- mid-July, including an impressive 9-5 nament in June and finished 8-2. mark playing against older boys in the The 15-year-old Cobras, coached by 14-and-under Little Caesar's league. The Alan Borsen, won the state champi- Cobras won one tournament, were run- onship in their age group. The team ners-up in four others and qualified for came from behind to win the first two the CABA World Series. Jewish partici- games of the state tournament and then pants included Jordan Gorosh (outfield- captured the final three contests by a 27- pitcher), Steven Astrein (infield-out- 1 margin. The Jewish players, all of field), Matt Broder (first base-outfield), whom have played for Borsen in the Zach Ehrmann (first base-pitcher), Ben JCC Maccabi Games, include first base- Weiner (outfield) and Justin Rolnitzky man-pitcher Brandon Borsen, infielder- (pitcher-infield-outfield), assistant coach- pitcher Sean Seid, infielder Kevin Sack es Mark Gorosh and Craig Astrein. and infielder-pitcher Brad Levick. The 13-year-old Cobras were the top- Send information to Jewish Stars at ranked Michigan team in their age sports@thejewishnews.com group. The team was 30-8 overall in Raz is also a Barbara Ann Karmanos Cancer Institute researcher and pro- fessor at the Wayne State University School of Medicine in Detroit. Dr. Elie. Schochet, former Detroiter, graduated from Michigan State University's College of Human Medicine. He will be doing a general surgery residency at Lehigh Valley Hospital in Allentown, Pa. Watcher Group Inc., has been appointed by Gov. Jennifer Granholm to the Governor's Council on Physical Fitness, Health and Sports. Three researchers at die Karmanos Cancer Institute released a study on the connection between race and sur- viving brain cancer. The scientists are Jill Barnholtz-Sloan, researcher in the institute's Populations Studies pro- gram; her husband, Dr. Andrew Sloan, head of the neuro-oncology multidisciplinary program; and Ann Schwartz, associate director of popu- lation sciences. Daniel M. Clark of Bloomfield Hills, a Detroit attorney, has been appointed Clark to the Henry Ford Behavioral Health Board of Trustees. The board provides community research for Henry Ford Health System's Department of Psychiatry, Kingswood Hospital and Marygrove Center. Clark has served as president of the Jewish Home for Aged and on the boards of United Hebrew Schools and the Detroit Council of Boy Scouts of America. Dr. Jeffrey Forman of West Bloomfield has been named by Castle Connolly Medical Ltd., a radiation oncologist with the Detroit-based Barbara Ann Karmanos Cancer Institute, to its listing of America's Dr. Forman Top Doctors, based on a survey of 250,000 physicians nationwide. Dr. Forman's special expertise is in the areas of prostate cancer and geni- tourinary cancer. Florine Mark, president and CEO of the Farmington Hills-based Weight