I Page 10-Wednesday, March 16, 1983-The Michigan Daily Frieder sees bright Wolverine future After suffering through one of its worst seasons in history in 1981-81, the Michigan basketball team boun- ced back from a 7-20 record to post a respectable 15-13 mark. Although, the team did not earn a tournament berth, the future is bright for Michigan, which has three blue-chip recruits committed for next season. Daily sports writers Larry Freed and Jim Dworman, checked in with coach Bill Frieder for some com- ments on the past season and the future of the Michigan basketball program. Daily: You had a specific list of goals posted in the locker room and you didn't accomplish too many of them. Do you still consider the season a success? Frieder: Well, I'm disappointed we didn't get into a post-season tour- nament. If we'd gotten into a post- season then I'd have been satisfied. However, we had a key injury, at a crucial time, that took a lot out of us. After losing those five games right in that period, I thought we did a good job of recovering and coming back. I think you can look at it in a lot of ways. It's a very young team that only won seven games a year ago and now they won 15. From that standpoint, it's a great suc- cess. On the other hand, from not being able to finish higher in the Big Ten to not getting into a post-season tour- nament, it's a disappointment. We also wanted to beat what we felt were the bottom three teams in the conference twice. If you're ever going to be any good in this league, you've got to beat OSR' STH AN 25%-75% OFF EVERYTHING! Area merchants & wholesalers WHAT: join together to offer you brand new merchandise & services at 25 % -75 % off. U-M Track & Tennis Building WHERE: (State & Hoover) Saturday, March 19 WHEN: 10 a.m. - 8 p.m. Sunday, March 20, 10 a.m. - 6 p.m. TWO DAYS OF MADNESS! FREE ADMISSION Presented by WIQB & Americon Retail Promotions the bottom teams regularly. Well, we split with them - so that wasn't good enough. Losing to Wisconsin up there was a crucial loss. But we wanted to beat all the Michigan teams and we did fairly well on our goals on that. But we didn't make it to the tournament. Daily: How much did Rockymore's injury hurt the team statistically? Psychologically? Frieder: Well, I'll tell you what. When Kitchel got hurt for Indiana they dropped a few games right away. Although they did recover faster than we did, but they had many more ex- perienced veterans. If you take the second best player off of any team ... it's going to have an effect on the team. And when we lost Rockymore, it was at a position where we could least afford it and it took us a while before we could determine a line-up that could win without him. I think if we went to the format we went to the last nine games with right away, we might have beaten Illinois and Michigan State. We lost those games in the stretch because our guards got tired, but later on that got corrected. That was a key injury and the thing we've done now is that we recruited well enough, so that if we have an injury at the guard position we'll be much better prepared to handle it. Daily: After the injury to Rockymore do you now regret not recruiting another guard? Frieder: No. I think that would have affected our recruiting this year. It could have affected us getting Antoine ... there were good guards in the state this year and if we recruited one last season we would have had trouble get- ting one. Daily: You always made it a point to caution everyone not to be too op- timistic about the freshman. Now that the season's over, how would you evaluate their performance? Frieder: I was hoping that one or two of them would have emerged sooner as a more consistent player. Henderson looked like he was going to do that in December. He played really well there against Detroit and in the Toledo tour- nament - against Oklahoma State - and then he had an up and down Big Ten season. But, like I've said so many times, to think that they're going to do it, to expect them to do it, is wrong because you know from experience it's a very tough year for them, a very tough transition. I think they all had bright spots, they all helped us at one time or another. And I think they all got better. Now is a crucial time in their careers because now they have to work in the summer to improve their skills, to improve their weaknesses, and to become more consistent players if they're going to play. Now they're at a point where they're either going to get it done or they're not. I think you'll see great improvement in most of them when they come back next year ... When you compare what our freshman did ... Take a look at a Tony Campbell as a freshman, a Bob Hansen as a freshman, or a Kitchel or a Wittman as a freshman. Or a Randy Breuer as a freshman. Maybe take a look at the All- Big Ten team and Derek Harper as freshmen and compare what they did then with what our guys did this year. They fare fairly well. That's a good sign and that's why you have to remain op- timistic with them. But now they have to go out and improve themselves. Daily: Were you happy with the up- Frieder wanted A. C. Now that the season has been completed, Bill Frieder has let the cat out of the bag on his secret weapon - Anthony Carter. If the USFL's Michigan Panthers had not signed the three-time Wolverine grid All-American, he might have been shooting the ball instead of catching it following the Rose Bowl. "Bo Schembechler and Don Canham aren't the only ones upset with them. I'm upset with them," said Frieder. "Anthony Carter was my ace in the hole, because after the Rose Bowl I thought he would be out for basketball, and especially with Rockymore's injury we would have gone out and gotten him." If things do not work out for Carter in the USFL maybe Michigan baseball coach Bud Middaugh will Carter be asking him to trade the pigskin in . .basketball star? for horsehide. perclass improvement - mostly Mc- Cormick? Frieder: There's no question that Tim is the most improved player. He just got better and better and better and better because he worked at it. He's coachable and he spends extra time working on the things he has to work on. And I think now that he's confident that his knees are ok, which he wasn't last October, so now the sky's the limit. He can do many more things this summer, including running. He didn't run at all last summer. And that'll get his legs stronger and that'll make him a much better player. Eric Turner has to develop consisten- cy. He had some great games and some horrible games. If he's going to be a great player he's got to eliminate the horrible games. I think the fact that he knew he was going to play all the time, not consciously, but maybe subcon- sciously, you don't work quite as hard. But now, with guards coming in, if he has a bad game or two he's going to sit. And that has got to spur him on to be a more consistent player. Daily: What did you think- of the three-point play? Frieder: I liked it. I don't think it helped us that much, but I hope they adopt it nationally, because it adds a lot of excitement to the game. The fans like it; you can come back on a team quicker. Daily: Do you think the team was lacking mental toughness (missed lay- ups, dry spells). Frieder: I think that's young guys, inexperience and I think that's lack of mental concentration. Our mental con- centration and mental toughness is not good. And you have to be mentally tough to be successful at this level of play. Conditioning is part of it and just not being detracted by anything is another. Daily: It seemed as if the freshmen were gun shy. Frieder: That's just a matter of con- fidence. It'll come, that's just fresh- men. They had no restrictions or anything, but they were trying to do the right thing. You just have to get kids to work hard and to get open for the good shots. I think some of 'em were just trying real hard to do a good job. I Daily: What was the team missing most this year? Frieder: Well you have to remember that until Rockymore got hurt this year we were 11-3, but the thing that we were lacking was a type of catalyst ... for some reason that - a Scott Skiles type catalyst - didn't happen to us. Next year there are a lot of guys that could provide that for us. Like Eric Turner, or possibly Antoine Joubert. The thing is when we lost Rockymore it became too difficult for Turner to do everything. We had problems against zone, if we wanted him to handle the ball then we didn't have an outside shooter and if we wanted to have him score outside then we had problems with somebody else at the point. But I think that will be corrected next year .;. he can be a playmaker or, if we want, we can have Joubert at the point, and Tur- ner can be a scorer. Daily: How much of an impact do you think Antoine will have? Frieder: Well, we'll just have to wait and see. But I'm glad he's coming to Michigan. 6 AP All-America Robert Morris beats Georgia S., NEW YORK (AP) The 1982-83 Associated Press college basketball All-Americans: First Team Ralph Sampson, senior, Virginia; Dale Ellis, Tennessee; Patrick Ewing, sophomore, Georgetown; Michael Jor- dan, sophomore, North Carolina; Wayman Tisdale, freshman, Oklahoma. Derek Harper, junior, Illinois; Clyde Drexler, junior, Houston; Keith Lee, sophomore, Memphis State. Third Team Antoine Carr, senior, Wichita State; John Pinone, senior, Villanova;Sam Perkins, junior, North Carolina; Ennis Whatley, sophomore, Alabama; Kenny Fields, junior, UCLA. Michigan's ERIC TURNER was named honorable mention All- American for the second straight year. Meanwhile, Wolverine center TIM McCORMICK was named AP honorable mention All-Big Ten. DAYTON, Ohio (AP)-Forest Grant scored 17 points and Chipper Harris ad- ded 16 to lead Robert Morris past Georgia Southern 64-54 last night to ad- vance to the first round of the NCAA basketball tournament. The victory put the ECAC Metro champion into a Mideast Regional fir- st-round game Thursday night in Tam- pa, Fla., against the Purdue Boilmakers. Robert Morris, 23-7, has won 19 of their last 20 games. Eric Hightower had 14 points to pace Georgia Southern, 18- 12, the champions of the Trans America Athletic Conference. SCORES NCAA Basketball Robert Morris 64,Georgia So.54 Princeton 53, NC A&T 41 Exhibition Baseball Cleveland 6.Oakland 2 San Francisco 7, Seattle 2 Milwaukee 5, San D~iego I Chicago (NIJ 5. 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