Page 6-Sunday, February 5, 1978-The Michigan Daily The Michigan Daily-Sunday, Feb 'Starting tonight for-Huron High... By Jim Tobin AROLD SIMONS checked his watch. Ten minutes until game-time. Lockers slammed shut as the thirteen boys he coaches prepared to play basketball. Tony Patton scrambled out of one jersey and into another. Demar Loving made last- minute alterations to his close-cropped curly hair. Warren Stel- zer, the tall, bespectaled center, slapped a ball from one hand to another, back and forth several times, to get the feel of the slippery leather. Simons, looking barely older than the smooth-skinned, lanky boys lacing up shoes and tucking in jerseys all around him, made a slight gesture. His team encircled him, shrugging shoulders and flexing legs to loosen up. "Is there anyone who isn't mentally ready to play this game?" he asked. Silence. "Is there anyone who isn't physically ready? If so, let me know right now." No reply. Then they were running upstairs to Ann Arbor Huron High's circular, domed gymnasium, shouting and slapping each other on the rear end and bouncing basketballs on the shiny tile stairs. The doors to the gym opened and the players were out on the floor, racing through a warm-up drill as cheerleaders, Moms, Dads, girlfriends-and maybe, those juniors and seniors were hoping, just maybe a college scout or two-sat up and watched. Coach Simons nodded grimly to the referees and said a word to the team's managers. The starting players were introduced; as each of Jackson High's starting five dashed to center court when the announcer called his name, Simons asked his team quietly, "Whose man?", and a hand would dutifully raise. The whistle blew at center court and Warren Stelzer. his features grim and his 6-foot, 5-inch frame tense, nudged up to the Jackson center, then reached high at the top of his jump to tip the ball to the Huron guards. A quick basket for Huron, then a steal as Jackson came down- court with the ball. A fast pass under the basket and suddenly Erich Santifer had ducked under a Jackson defender, jumped, twisted under another arm, and dropped the ball through the hoop for Huron 's second score. Jim Tobin is a former co-editor of the Daily. ' I, ERICH." 1.11" "What's happenin', Erich?" *fl "How many tonight, Erich?" ~ Erich Santifer covered three rows of bleachers. His elbows were planted squarely on one, his seat on the next, and his feet were crossed over the third. "Twenty-five, man, I was just tellin' this cat. And fifteen rebounds." - At six-foot-four, he is Harold. Simons' star junior forward, averaging roughly 22 points a game. That is a fine average in anyone's league, and Erich-quiet, calm, and confident-=is well aware of it. He was sitting in the stands an hour before the opening tipoff of the varsity game against Jackson, watching the junior varsity teams play as Huron fans drifted into the bright gymnasium. In tones that were a mix. of awe, friendliness, and a desire to show that one knew the star well enough to say hi, students greeted Erich and formed a sort of crescent around him in the stands. Santifer has a very good chance of playing basketball in college, perhaps the best chance of anyone on the Huron team. He may be named to an All-State high school team at the end of the season-fairly rare for a junior. He knows all of this as well as anyone. His talk is cocky, but as he speaks there is a look of won- der on his face, as in a child who has just sunk his first lay-up, a soft smile of quiet pride. Though he is the team's leading scorer, he is perhaps most valuable as a rebounder. Not a sparkplug type, he usually lopes down the court just behind the rest of the pack, then slips his thin frame through the tangle to get under the boards. He is one of those basketball players with the gift of making all his moves look like slow motion: his feints to the basket, his long jump shots from the sideline, and his leaps to the boards. He plays with that calmness on his face, that quiet pride. Why does he love it so much? "I love the game of basketball because it makes me happy," he said softly, lacing his long fingers behind his head and tilting back on the bleacher behind him. "It's something I've grown up with. Like, success; my success made me want more success. "I think I could play pro basketball, that's the goal. I think basketball could be my whole life. But I won't get the big head, man. I won't get the big head because I'm too intelligent." What's the biggest kick, the thing that makes him feel good even when he's tired and hot and his team is trailing? Erich gave a coach's answer, albeit with sincerity: "Seeing us execute well as a squad, offensively and defensively." Then he thought a moment and said, "One of the best things for me~is just to watch Tony Patton play~defense. If a team comes in - here with a big gun, I know I've got Tony to depend on. Just like I feel my goin' to the boards is an art, I feel Tony's defense is an art." H URON HAD BROKEN the game wide open before it had barely gotten under way, and went. down to the locker room at half-time with a 39-17 lead. But the team was playing a sloppy third quarter, and Jackson was soon staging a plodding comeback. Built more like a thick-set baseball catcher than a basketball player, Tony Patton was reac- ting to the Jackson drive with scrambling, shifting defense. Those who know the game only through kids showing off on a playground, or watching Julius Erving's acrobatics on television, miss the guts of basketball. "If the opponents do not score," coaches tell their teams, "you will not lose." The beauty of that logic is lost on many fans, but not on Huron's Steve Davis and Tony Patton. If there is a way to make defense flashy, Davis knows it. His style dares the man with the ball. He stares at the dribbler with an open-mouthed half-grin, as if to say, "I can't believe you're trying to get by me, man." He waits for the dribbler to move, then darts at the ball, hoping for the big steal and the fast break. It works frequently. But Davis's style is not Tony's. Playing with his eyebrows ar- ched as if in surprise, he is Huron's classic dogged defender. Out- standing defense really takes no greater gift than will power, the resolution to stay with one's man no matter how fast he runs downcourt, how deceptive his faking, how quick his moves to the basket, how high his. jumps. Tony has that will, in practice as well as against opponents. With Santifer out of the game with a twisted ankle in the second half, Huron pressed hard to stall Jackson's comeback. This is where Patton's sort of defense is most valuable. As Jackson grew desperate to slip passes under the basket, Tony dodged back and forth with his man, lunging at the ball, faking a steal attempt, staying between his man and the passer, always alert for the steal, understanding that if Jackson did not score again Huron could not lose. O F F THE COURT, the way Tony Patton feels about basketball shows mostly 'in his eyes. He is too shy to put the exact feeling in words. "I'll tell you, man, I really want to go out to Calif or- nia 'cause then I could play basketball all year round like I wanna." He sweats a lot in practice. Though his shooting eye is good, he does most for,the team when the other team has the ball, and so he works hardest in practice on the stamina he needs to play four quarters of all-out defense. "It hurts, but it's worth workin' for. I figure if I'm gonna play basketball for the rest of my life, it's worth workin' for." Why is it so special, why does it mean so much to him? Tony rolled his dark eyes and grinned in embarrassment. "That's a really personal question, man, I'd rather not an- swer. It's just really personal." It really had not been much of a contest. In the last moments Huron staged a stall, passing the ball back and forth to each other without even attempting a shot. The scoreboard, high over head, read 60-51. It had not been that close. Erich Santifer sat on the bench with his ankle wrapped in a bandage. He had predicted he would score 25; before he turned his ankle just before the half, he had scored 21. As the buzzer sounded, he pointed toward the ceiling and smiled. For himself, his coach, his team, and for the way he was feeling, he was saying, "Number One." Above, Erich Santifer (40) goes to the boards. Below, Coach H, the clock as his team races through the demanding "thir players run to the free-throw line and back, to mid-court and throw line and back, then to the court's far end and back-all w Photos by Steve Kagan