-I t 4 k 40, Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, March 28, 1971 Sunday, March 28, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY I ______________________________________________ GO WITH THE BLUE to Ann Arbor's No. 1 Sporting Goods Store- for teams or individuals it's Stein & Goetz Sporting Goods 315 SO. MAIN ST.-DOWNTOWN Open Mon. & Fri. 'til 8:30 p.m. 662-5001 Henry Wilmore Rod Ford Ken Brady Wayne Grabiec The coach and his man -table of contents - TEAM ROSTER ........................ WOLVERINE BASKETBALL HISTORY...... N.l.T. 1971 ........................... SUPER SEASON ....................... SEASON RECORD .................... . THE WAY IT ,LOOKED .................. THE BIG TEN . . . . ............. THE ONE THAT GOT AWAY ............ SUPERFAN .............. .............. THE GUYS ........................... PHOTO CREDITS 3 4 5 5 5 6 8 10 10 11 Mort Noveck-page 2, bottom; page page 5, top; page 9; page 11. Terry McCarthy-the rest Photo technician-Terry McCarthy supplement editors 3, center left; William Alterman Mort Noveck A ttitud By .TERRI FOUCHEY A casual observer, the average fan, of the renaissance in Michigan basketball would express the main reason for this remarkable change of fortunes in these two words, "Henry Wilmore." A more informed respondent, most like- ly a member of the knowledgable press. would agree and add, "Ken Brady and the rest of the sophomores should be taken into account, too." Everyone has a different way of saying the same thing, the idea which is the theme of the above statements. The idea is that the sophomores brought with them not only the talent, but also the attitude to transform the Wolverine cagers into winners over the span of one season. Winners the Wolverines did become in one season, but not solely on the basis of the super sophs performing their roles as Messiahs to a T. The sophomores, bring- ing with them a winning spirit and only winning experience at Michigan, have to be considered an important factor in the team's resurgence. However, different players were not the only new addition to the team. A new, winning, "we can do it" attitude, perhaps picked up from the sophomores. possibly lying dormant wait- ing for the breaks to fall, was the inter- vening variable, the main difference be- tween the teams with 10-14 and 18-6 records. This is the opinion held by the people presiding over the metamorphosis, the coaches and p 1 a y e r s themselves. As assistant coach Fred Snowden notes, "The basic ingredients in the difference are a great collective winning attitude and in- dividual desire and dedication." Senior forward Rod Ford echoes Snow- den's sentiments, "Winning spirit is the main difference. We also play together much more as a team. We were close knit last year, but we just didn't play to- gether." Captain Dan Fife explains the sopho- mores part in the turn-about. "The soph- omores have done nothing up here except win; that's their whole idea. They've made believers of the seniors. Their winning attitude's brushed off of us and the other upperclassmen." This winning attitude began gaining momentum and eventually control after Michigan had lost their first three games Pessimists were ready to write them off and chalk up another losing season even in the midst of all that talent. The reports of death didn't reach the cagers however and Snowden describes how they took their foot out of the grave. builds "The turning point of the season was actually the courage they showed after those first three heartbreaking losses. It involved having enough character to beat Eastern Michigan. Eastern had all the psychological advantages at that point- their biggest game of the season, every- thing to win, and nothing to lose. "We, on the other hand, were depress- ed and beginning to doubt our own abili- ties and needing a victory to vindicate our own philosophies. Under these cir- cumstances we won and then we realized that even with all that adversity against us we could still win. "it helped us realize that when things were normal, we would have a great op- portunity to win any basketball game we went into." Fife offers the background leading to that first win. "After our first three games, the team got together and we talked things out. It helped because the sophomores came of age and we began to win the close games. We saw we could win and one victory just led to another." Then off to Hawaii where the cagers discovered the extent of their potential. Fife describes the unearthing, "We hadn't played well the first two games and we lost to Hawaii. Then, we beat Villanova, and they were ranked quite high at the time. We had never before put it all together. Villanova made us realize our capabilities; how good we could be." From then on it was just a case of using the talent and newfound team spirit to the results everyone had pre- dicted for this team. Junior guard Wayne Grabiec describes the outlook which the team holds, "Everyone on the team is unselfish. On the court we all look for the open man and are trying constantly to get open. Off the court, we stick to- gether; we all stick with someone who's down. This is very important, that we're a team on and off court. Fife finds this prevailing perspective manifested in several ways. "Every man out there knows his job and what they have to do to win. The team isn't de- pendent on any one person. "On defense, everyone plays hard. Be- fore we weren't pulling together, and it's important because so much of the game is on defense and rebounding. Now we are and we're winning. Also, if we lose one good player or they're stopping him, we can still win because everyone can score. Everyone's contributing on both offense and defense and that's what makes a team." Ford adds, "It's a 14 man deal. Every man is vitally important to the team's success." winner Snowden comments on the sophomores, "They are essential to the team's pro- gress. They filled the voids that existed and made it possible for a cohesive, tal- ented unit to come together." The player who is credited with doing the most to bring Michigan basketball back to prominence is Wilmore, every- one's hero, who is touted as picking up where Cazzie left off. His 610 points and 25.4 average obviously added a great deal to the Wolverines' efforts, but he himself discounts any notions of being a super- man. "There's no really important player on our team. All the individuals work to- gether. You can't single out any one in- dividual." Convinced of his own importance or not, Wilmore did contribute abundantly to the ascent of the team. However his own views go along with the unselfish, team attitude which has put the Wolver- ines in the position they now find them- selves; participating in the NIT. His teammates, however, recognize his accomplishments and their value to the team. Fife states, "Hank could shoot all the time, but he's so unselfish. Hie only takes about 16 shots a game and what's important is that he makes most of them. Some of his shots are amazing, the way he 'uses the backboard." Fife also attributes much of the team's success to center Ken Brady, another su- per soph. "Brady's the whole secret; the way he gets the ball out and releases it so quick on rebounds, it makes it easy for us to run the fast break or to set up our offense. Another prime factor in the success saga is Fife himself. A fact head coach John Orr attests to, "He has a burning desire to win and this rubs off on the others. Combined with his talent and en- thusiasm and his willingness to sacrifice anything for the team, this makes him a tremendous leader." Fife returns the compliments of his coaches and presents them these acco- lades from the team. "The hardest thing to do was to take all of us, from our dif- ferent backgrounds, with our different ideas, and mold us into a team. They've been very successful and done a great job. We're a team and that's why we're winning and that's what they made us." Really only one four letter word is res- ponsible for the renaissance in Michigan basketball. Through experience, observa- tion, and encounter, every individual con- nected with the cagers has learned all the connotations, aspects, and facets of this word. TEAM. r k Fred Snowden: The Fox CONGRATULATIONS BLUE on a Fine Season! INSTA-PRINT cartoons by John Lockard Sr. Qualily Printing While-U-Wait 221 S. Main St. Ann Arbor Phone 969-6636 it III! ' --_ -_ -- _--- ____ ___ ___ ___ _-_ ___' Dave Hart Steve Bazelon John L©ckard Ernie: Johnson