Page Twelve TH IHGAN DAILY Friday, May 31, 1974 JOHN KAHLER: Cagers: Where from here? A SENSE of gloom overhangs the cramped basketball offices at 1000 South State these days. Campy Russell is gone, and his leaving laid a colossal bummer on the Michigan basketball pro- gram. Camny made the right personal deci- sion, for reasons that have been dis- cussed before and that I agree with wholeheartedly. But fnr the team his decision is a disaster. Michigan basketball was not a one man show last year. As every basketball magazine will no doubt point out, the Wolverines have four double figure start- ers returning. But Big Camp was the key player, the cog around which all the action moved. Of all his many statistical contribu- tions, Russell's scoring will be the easiest to replace. The returning starters should be able to pick up half his 24 points per game, and Orr should be able to dredge up some geek who can score another twelve points to replace Camp in the lineup. Russell's 300 rebounds, on the other- hand, will prove difficult to replace. None of the candidates for the vacant forward spot are exceptional boarders, and one can't expect 6-2 Wawman Britt to do the job, so the task of controlling the boards falls to C. J. Kupec. This will entail C. J. snending a good deal of time inderneath the basket, where the re- bounds are to be found. This, in turn, does a fine job of mess- ing op Kupec's game, since C.J.'s most effective offensive weapon is the medium range jump shot. C.J. could take that shot last season because he knew that Campy would be around to handle what- ever occurred under the boards. Campy will not be there next year., THEN THERE IS the matter of Rus- sell's 100 assists, only five less than the number garnered by playmaking guard Joe Johnson. Over a third of Russell's assists went to Wayman Britt, and were the biggest single source of Cool Way- man's scoring. It is doubtful that any re- placement will be able or willing to pass off that much. The more one looks at last season, the more one gets the impression that Campy Russell made a lot of people on the Michigan basketball team look good. And the biggest beneficiary was his coach. One can say that the situation Johnny Orr finds himself in is his own fault; that he should have known that Campy wouldn't stay forever and recruited a ready replacement. But anybody who has had to take as much abuse as Orr has over the years deserves a little sym- pathy. Next season, Orr will be in the last year of his contract as head basketball coach. With Campy, he would have been assured a winner and a contract exten- sion. Without him,-Orr will have to do some patching and scrambling. And Lord help Johnny Orr if the Michigan basketball team starts losing. SOMEWHERE, somehow, a replace- ment must be found for Campy Russell among a limited number of available bodies. Bill Ayler and Chuck Rogers have played a good deal at forward and will doubtless do so again. Rick White could take over the job if he doesn't become a starting tight end. If John Robinson and Randy McLean can pull themselves together after the problems they experienced as freshmen, matters would be aided considerably. If Joel Thompson and/or Burrell Mc- Ghee can step right in and do the job as a freshman, there will be dancing in the streets. IN ANY CASE, Orr seems to do a better job coaching teams that aren't favored to do anything. The day Campy was drafted, I was in the office ex- changing pleasantries with the coaches. Orr asked me what I would write about the drafting of Campy. "I'll say that Michigan has four start- ers in double figures, returning," I re- plied. Orr winced. 4 Some who remain: Joe Johnson, Steve Grote, C.J. Kupec and Johnny Orr