February 10, 1983-The Michigan Daily Hitting the deck: Jokiseb wins playing time with hustle and floor burns By JIM DWORMAN Basketball players, like playing car- ds, get shuffled around. Lineup changes, especially on Michigan's young team, are frequent and players quickly change from starters to sub- stitutes to benchwarmers. Amidst coach Bill Frieder's pre- season experimentation and the Wolverines' 2-7 start in the Big Ten, Paul Jokisch almost got lost in the deck. AFTER PLAYING roughly 15 to 20 minutes in Michigan's first half-dozen games - including a starting assign- ment against Cleveland State - the freshman forward found himself en- trenched on the Wolverine bench, get- ting only five or six minutes of action per game. "He had a stretch there for about two or three weeks where he just didn't play very well," says Frieder. "I think a lot of it was frustration and he also had the flu for a week." It is doubtful whether Jokisch really was frustrated on the court, because a --m m ------ ammea = == = = inmnin i m inm inin i * I I FLIPPER McGEE'S S8TOKENS for$1 i & 2with Student I. D. e 1217 S. University is a=== == m==m m m mm mm mmmm mm m a frustrated player seemingly would slack off a little in practice. Jokisch didn't, and now he's back where the ac- tion is. "LAST WEEK was his best week of practice all year," said Frieder. "So I played him against Michigan State and he contributed." Jokisch did put in nine points in Michigan's 70-65 loss to theSpartans, but a far greater contribution than his scoring was his effort. The 6-8, 230- pounder's hustle apparently rubbed off on his teammates and propelled the Wolverines from a five-point halftime deficit to a momentary second-half lead. But Jokisch's hustle shouldn't be anything new to the Wolverines. It is his trademark. It is what distinguishes him from the other players on the court. "THE MOST important thing to me is playing as hard as I can," said the education major. "I feel that if I'm not completely exhausted when I'm done playing, I haven't given 100-percent. If I play hard, everything will fall into place." Or fall to the floor, a spot where Jokisch often can be found during the course of a game. The two-sport high school All- American dives for more loose balls than the rest of the team combined. That practice, however, has both its good points and its bad. Sometimes Jokisch gets the ball, sometimes he doesn't. Always, he gets a floor burn. "They (the burns) don't really bother me," he said, pointing to 20 or so scabs on and around his knees. BUT JOKISCH should be used to bumps, bruises and friction burns. Only fourteen months ago he was a wide receiver for Birmingham Brother Rice High School's state championship football team, where his size and speed (by his own estimate, he clocks at 4.5 seconds in the 40-yard dash), attracted the attention of Bo Schembechler. Much to Schembechler's chargin, however, Jokish had his heart set on playing college basketball. "I've always played more basketball than football," says the West Quad resident. "Before my junior year I' wasn't even going to play football. I was talked into it. But I've just grown to love the sport." And his love of football may result in his playing spring ball for Schem- bechler. "Earlier in the year, Bo would say, 'Get dribbling out of your system and get ready for spring ball," says Jokisch. "It's a possibility. I don't know what the future holds. I just like to compete." orts you Go tutors:' M' CIL By BARB BARKER Ever wonder how Anthony Carter goes to school while he's jetting off to Florida for contract talks with the USFL? Or how Michigan baseball players keep up with classes when they swing south for two weeks in March? Or, for that matter, how any University athlete juggles his studies around prac- tice and road trips? The 'M' Club supports an extensive tutor program aimed at helping those student-athletes who have trouble balancing both. George Hoey, the Athletic Department's academic coun- selor, said he contracts "between 30 and 40 tutors" to help athletes on both a one-to-one basis and at study tables at the Undergraduate Library. "THE PAY ranges between $5.00 and hour to maybe $7.50 for someone who's a TA.," he said. "The funds are chan- neled through the Athletic Department, but the program is supported by the graduate 'M' club. The contributions are made specifically for the tutorial fund." Sue Collins, a former Michigan swimmer and current exercise science Good friends will be there come hell or high water. graduate student, tutors athletes by appointment in kines iology and bio- mechanics. Football players Marion Body, Butch Woolfolk and baseball player Bill Shuta are among the physical education students she has tutored in the last five semesters. "These people have to miss a lot of class because of their sport," she ex- plained. "They're out of town a lot, and I try to help them with the class time that they've missed. I deal mostly with the older students who know they need help and that's why they're there." HOEY SAID most athletes who receive tutoring have specifically asked for assistance, but some are required to seek academic help. Freshman football players attend a mandatory study table for two hours a night, five nights a week at the UGLI, and the hockey team recently under- took a similar program: Senior LSA student Greg Helmer, who worked as a math and science tutor at these study tables for a year-and-a- half, felt the problem was more than simply missing class time. Football players Clay Miller and Dave Hall have been among Helmer's students. "Some of the athletes that you deal with need a lot of help," he said. "You GUADALAJARA SUMMER" SCHOOL University of Arizona offers more than 40 courses: anthro- pology, art, bilingual educa- tion, folk music and folk dance, history, political sci- ence, sociology, Spanish lan- guage and literature and inten- sive Spanish. Six-week ses- sion. July 4-August 12, 1983. Fully accredited program. Tuition $400. Room and board in Mexican home, $425. EEO/AA Write Guadalajara Summer School Robert L. Nugent 205 University of Arizona Tucson 85721 (602) 626-4729 get a variety, some really want to learn but some you wonder how they got into school. They're lacking in skills they should have picked up in high school. I can't teach them how to find the square root of something when they're trying to work with limits. "IT'S FRUSTRATING and kind of sad," Helmer continued. "Some of these guys are in for athletics, and they want to find the easiest way out. It's sad because 98-percent of them will get out of school and have to find a job other than athletics. Sometimes I feel kind of helpless." Some of Helmer's helpless feeling could be relieved by the new NCAA ruling which sets minimum standards that incoming freshman athletes must meet. High school students must score a 700 total on their SATs and achieve a 2.0 grade-point average in a core high school curriculum in order to be eligible for athletics and athletic scholarships. Hoey, however, indicated that the new ruling would not have a great im- pact on Michigan athletics. "On the terms of just GPA's and test scores, less than one percent of the athletes we have here now would not be here if that ruling had been in affect. before," he said. "On the basis of the core curriculum clause, I can't say. I'm not really sure." leer Grade suspended By CHUCK JAFFE Michigan hockey player Jeff Grade, missing from the team's lineup against both Michigan State and Northern Michigan, has been suspended from the team according to coach John Gior- dano. Other sources close to the team said -that Giordano kicked the sophomore center and wing- off the team. "It's an intra-team thing, and we're not talking about the causes," Giordano said yesterday. "We want to handle it as a private matter." Grade, a center from Warren, had scored five goals and two assists before the suspension. He was unavailable for comment about his condition with the team. 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