Page 12S - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, November 28, 1984 w v U V ]Rappin' with Frieder: The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, N ONE SMALL VOICE One win away from Fi Bi JffBergida ...,*or was it all c Entering his fifth season at the helm of the Michigan basketball program, head coach Bill Frieder is facing many new challenges. Daily sportswriters Tim Makinen and Jeff Bergida talked with Frieder three weeks into prac- tice to see how everything was shaping up for the 1984-85 cam- paign. DAILY: You've been practicing for a few weeks now, are there any surprises so far? BILL FRIEDER: I'd say the biggest surprise is Gary Grant being as good as he is right now. He's already proven to me, the staff, and the team that he is going to be a strong factor on this basketball team. Q: Who are you going to look for as the floor leader? BF: Well, you know, I think this is the kind of team that is going to have to get leadership from a lot of players. We don't have a real veteran returning with a lot of experience. So that's one of our question marks, as to where the leadershiphis going to come from. That's what we're going to have to develop. Had Tim (McCormick) and Eric (Turner) not left, they'd have been our leaders. But they're gone and now we might find ourselves in a position where we don't even have a senior starter. Senior guard Leslie Rockymore is a possible starter, but if he doesn't start we won't have a senior starter and you've got to find your leadership nor- mally from the seniors. That's one of our tough problems. Q: Do you see anybody who has special potential? BF: Well, you notice it in one kid one day and another kid another day, but the consistency of one guy providing it every day has not emerged. Q: In retrospect, is there anything you would have done differently to try to get Turner or McCormick to stay another year? BF: No, the school blew it on McCor- mick. I think enough has been said on it, but when they sent him his rejection notice (from the graduate com- munication program) he was not going to come back to Michigan. It's as sim- ple as that. I can't control those people. It's a serious mistake but it's too bad. Turner, he had his mind made up all year that he wanted to play pro ball so that's what I felt he should have done. You don't want to talk a kid into staying if he feels that he should go. Q: What would you consider a suc- cessful season in terms of record, place of finish, or post-season play. BF: I think a successful season is if we got into the NCAA tournament. We won the NIT last year and now we want to improve upon that and get into the NCAA. Our goal is to win the Big Ten championship but that is going to be ex- tremely tough with Illinois and Indiana having all their players back and with six of the other eight teams improved. Q: In what ways will the 45-second shot clock help Michigan? BF: It's going to help the league in general because it's going to take away from the out-and-out stall. Teams like Indiana and Iowa and Purdue, they're not going to be able to take a three-point lead with 12 minutes to go and sit on the ball for two minutes. So from the stan- dpoint that you know they're going to have to shoot it in 45 seconds, it is going to help the league in general. But what you have to realize is that 45 seconds is still a long time. It gives you a lot of time to take (your) time, be patient and run your five-on-five offen- se. You're not going to have a run-and- gun league. Q: You've been saying all along that the Big Ten is the kind of league where you can't run and gun because you'll get killed. Exactly why is that? BF: Number one, the teams are great defensive teams and if you run-and-gun it is going to mean you aren't going to get the types of shots that you need to be successful. To win in this league, you've got to shoot 55 to 60 percent. You run into teams like Indiana who might only miss 12 or 13 shots in a ballgame. If you miss 30 or 35 shots and your op- ponent only misses a dozen, you're in trouble. And so a combination of the size which prevents you from getting the break started, the shooting percentages which prevent you from getting the ball off the board, and the overall depth in the league prevents you from running a great deal. Our first preference is to run. If you watch our practices you can see we try to stress running and going. But, boom, once that's taken away, you've got to go to the next thing. Q: Is that why you run a lot more in non-conference games? BF: Sure. That's why, last year, we ran well in the non-conference and we ran well in the NIT. Because the teams weren't as big, they weren't as defen- sive-oriented, and they weren't Big Ten caliber. Wichita State, for instance. They were 25 for 75, they missed 50 shots and they had 27 turnovers. You give me any team that does that and I'll show you 90 to 100 points. Q: What do you think of your non- conference schedule this year? BF: Our total schedule is one of the top 10, 12 or 15 in the country. What makes it a great schedule is the Big Ten games. But our non-conference schedule is very tough. You have to take into consideration that, in addition to 18 Big Ten games, we're playing Tennessee, Kansas, Dayton, Rutgers, and Georgia. Those other teams like Alcorn State, they're good. And Detroit is better. Those are all good teams. It's a very good non-conference schedule. You take a look at some of the others. You look at Michigan State's and Iowa's. Really, you take a good hard look and you compare them. It's a big, big difference. Q: Recently Scott Skiles of Michigan State was charged with possession of cocaine and drunk driving. Do you and your staff forsee any drug problems in college basketball? BF: I think drugs are always a problem in life. You know, they're on the college campuses, they're in the high schools, they're in the junior highs, they're in the elementary schools. You've got guys like DeLorean screwing around with drugs, you've got guys like Denny McLain, so it's a problem. I don't think it's a problem in my basketball program. And I think one of the reasons it isn't is because we are very selective with the types of kids we recruit, and we have a drug testing program which deters that type of thing. But I think it is something you have to be aware of, you have to discuss with your players, and you have to stay on top of the situation. Q: Could you go over the five starting positions and give us a breakdown on how the competition shapes up? BF: The two guards are going to come from (Antoine) Joubert, Rockymore Grant, and Garde Thompson. Right now, I think it's a pretty good battle. Roy Tarpley is going to be the center and the two forward positions are going to come from (Robert) Henderson, (Butch) Wade, and (Richard) Rellford. Then, possibly, Joubert or Rockymore if they get beat out at guard. And it's about as simple as that. Q: Henderson looks a lot more sure of himself this year. Where do you see the team's improvement coming from? BF: Henderson is getting better. All of our players, I think, are improved over last year at this time. Most of our players are improved over when we finished last year. Rockymore, Tar- pley, Garde and Henderson are better than when we finished in March. Rellford and Wade are a little behind. Our freshmen are in much better shape than most freshmen that come into a system. (Steve) Stoyko and Grant have done a great job as far as being prepared physically and mentally to handle the types of practices that they have to handle. Q: You're considered one of the top recruiters in the country. Every year your class is rated in the top 30 or so. What is the key to being a good recruiter? BF: Oh, we work hard and just work year round at recruiting. But most people do. I don't do anything that anybody else doesn't do. I think we've done a good job of get- ting in on kids we think we have a good chance at. We don't waste a lot of time on some kid in California or a guy down in Texas. If we leave this area we have to know that we have a chance to get the kid. We might tell a kid, "If we're going to recruit you then you're going to have to visit in the fall." And if he won't visit then we're not going to waste any time with him. When we recruited Rellford (out of Florida), we told him he had to let us know by February 15 if he was coming or-not because we weren't going to take any more time. So I think if you leave the area you have to be careful to make sure you have a solid chance on the kid. But most of our recruiting is Michigan, Indiana, Illinois, Ohio. You have a better feeling for the kids. You've seen them many more times and you're on top of the situation a little better. In terms of calling kids and sending them mail, and communicating with them and showing them what Michigan is all about in the 48 hours of their of- ficial visit, you've got a great place at Michigan. If you get a kid to visit, he's nuts if he doesn't consider Michigan. The kids in our program are super, our athletic program and tradition is tremendous, our facilities are second to none. It's been over seven years since a Michigan club has earned a berth in the NCAA basketball tour- nament. Last year, however, Bill Frieder's club came within a two-point overtime loss at North- western of a probable spot in that prestigious event. The 1984-85 version of the Wolverines is an enigma. It's extremely difficult to say just how good this team can be. Such are the teams of which dreams are made... December 1, 1984-Michigan raises its record to 2-0 with an 86-70 victory over the under-manned Georgia Bulldogs. Freshman sensation Gary Grant leads the attackwith 19 points and 11 assists while, in the stan- ds, a rookie guard with the Detroit Spirits thinks, "That could've been me." December 22-The Rutgers Scarlet Knights come marching into Crisler Arena, out to gain revenge for the great state of New Jersey. The last two times these clubs met, the Wolverines pounded the Garden Staters by scores of 86-70 and 97-69. Rutgers coach Tom Young predicts an upset in the name of toxic waste sites. But Rich Rellford spoils Young's day with 23 points to lead Michigan to its eighth straight win, 90-65. Rutgers scampers on home to exit 120. January 2, 1985-All the students are still home on break. Crisler is filled with nursing home patients, there to see the 9-0 Wolverines open their conference schedule against Bobby "I make Bo Schembechler look liberal" Knight and his 9-1 Indiana Hoosiers. The Geritol sect greets Bobby Sportcoat with a chorus of boos. They still remember last year's in- cident when Knight called Frieder a string of ob- scenities. A nail-biter comes down to the final seconds when Hoosier guard Steve Alford has two free throw at- tempts with Michigan leading, 61-59. Alford misses the second and Michigan wins by one. In the pressroom after the game, Frieder decks his hefty rival with a left hook. Tlhe Illini roll on January 10-The Wolverines are within two of a club record 13 straight wins as they head into Champaign for a showdown with the nation's number-one team, the Fighting Illini. Despite the loss of center George Montgomery, whose jaw was shattered by the force of a dunk by Maryland's Len Bias in the Great Alaskan Shootout, Illinois has cruised out to a 15-0 mark. The undefeated Wolverines, ranked fourth in both polls, just "can't get going in front of 16,153 orange maniacs. Roy Tarpley and Antione Joubert get into early foul trouble and a strong second-half comeback isn't enough to prevent Lou Henson's club from its 16th victory, 71-67. January 17-Despite his club's 12-1 record going into tonight's game with Minnesota, Frieder is worried about his 9-4 opponent. "You can't take any team in this league lightly," he comments. Frieder, of course, has to say that. The Gophers, who fattened up their record against such giants as Montana State and Wisconsin-Green Bay, fall, 75-54. Robert Henderson, who has earned the starting spot at big forward, leads the way with 16 points. "They were tough," Frieder said after the game. "We were lousy," counters Minnesota head man Jim Dutcher. January 24-The eighth-rated Wolverines face the struggling MSU Spartans. Jud Heathcote is having a tough time finding a replacement for guard Scott Skiles, currently serving one-to-five for embez- zlement. State's frontcourt of Ken Johnson, Larry Polec and Richard Mudd is pathetic on this night as Tarpley and Rellford have a field day, scoring 22 and 19 respec- tively in Michigan's 80-73 win. Garde Thompson comes off the bench to contribute 15 points to the Wolverine cause. February 2-Frieder makes the big time, Al McGuire's pre-game show. The 17-1 Wolverines are getting national attention and Al jumps right on the bandwagon with such insightful questions as "What about dat Grant kid, Bill?" and "Youse guys are really puttin' it together, huh?" Michigan is in Madison today to take on poor Steve Yoder and his 8-9 Badgers. Yoder has been getting abused by his players and the media alike for the past three seasons. His talented players either transfer or go hardship. The Wolverines win, 88-76. February 7-Frieder was 0-8 against Gene Keady's Purdue Boilermakers going into the season but ended that streak earlier this year in West Lafayette. Keady, who earned his reputation as an outstanding coach over the past few seasons, has got his club up among the Big Ten leaders once again with a 6-3 con- ference mark, including an upset of Illinois. Michigan is hot, though. Freshman forward Steve Stoyko is called into action when Henderson and But- ch Wade each get three early fouls and responds with 14 points and nine rebounds. Joubert leads the attack with 24 in a 67-60 victory and moves up to second in the league scoring race behind Illini forward Efrem Winters. February 14-The Wolverines have hit their peak at 20-1. Frieder and Joubert are on the cover of Sports Illustrated this week. It may have been the S.I. jinx or it may have been the trip to Iowa City but Michigan plays its worst game of the year. Hawkeye center Greg Stokes dominates the middle in sparking Iowa to a 66-54 win. Following the loss, the Wolverines drop from second in the nation to fifth (A.P.) and sixth (U.P.I.). Those pesky March 2-In the anni western comes into Cr hands the mighty Wolh the year. March 6-Michigan tal over the NIT-bound C Joubert and Grant toss my personality in the w Following its finz Bloomington, Michigan first two rounds of the N March 15-Rellford les team in the Mideast re the Big Ten, to an easy champ of the rugged M The only interesting of the players on the E named after cities in In son, Fort Wayne Watki be strong to make the to March 17-The Wolver Villanova. The Wildcat called the Wildcats?) eliminated the Bethune round. The game makes n. Gary Bender and Bill: language, Tarpley desi middle and Villanova janitor" Massimino pre the final four. "We just play 'em o Frieder, a statement w March 22-We down in next two games. Mic ghost of coach Ray Me have inherited a larg Demons blow a twelve- at the buzzer wins a thr March 24-For the thi: the Illini but now it's outside shooting gets.b but the depth and str( paign prove to be too : the second half to win, I Tarpley is a second wins the Big Ten scorir Wait 'til next year. I Tarpley (Continued from Page 8) unreal," said Johnny Orr, former Michigan head coach who now runs things at Iowa State. That offensive improvement, however, would not have the same pun- ch were it not accompanied by some talent at the other end of the court. But, just as defense and blocks are significant aspects of Karate, so are they important parts of the total Roy Tarpley. With 69 blocked shots last year, Tar- pley set a Michigan single season record. He also played good enough defense to be named the team's Best Defensive Player for 1983-84. "HE GOT better and better defen-- sively," Frieder said. "He'd make the big play in big games ... , but he's not a great defensive player. He's got to do more with team defense." The player agreed with his coach's criticism, but said he is confident he can improve. "My offensive game is coming around," Tarpley said, "but my defen- se, I'm struggling there a little bit. "(BUT) PRACTICE makes perfect, so pretty soon I'll be a perfect defensive player," he added, laughing. Opposing coaches find it more dif- ficult to find humor in Tarpley's deficiencies. Buckeye head man Eldon Miller bristled at the suggestion that Tarpley's second performance against OSU last year was an exceptional one. "A lot of players had good games against us," grumbled Miller, who wat- ched a 24-point Tarpley tornado sweep the Wolverines to a 62-59 win in Colum- bus. "THERE ARE two types of big men," said a more talkative OSU assistant Landrum. "There's the big lumbering guy who goes inside and bangs you around. Then there's people like Roy who can go inside or outside and use his quickness to get you from all over." The victim of Tarpley's finest showing last season, Wichita State head coach Gene Smithson, praised the same things Landrum saw. "Oh hell, he's an outstanding player. He's got a great future," said the man whose Shockers absorbed a 27-point, 10- rebound, four-block beating from Tar- pley." "HE WENT inside on us, he went out- side on us. He did everything against us. I was just impressed with his total game," Smithson added. Having watched Tarpley play in last spring's Olmypic trials, Orr also praised the junior's overall ability. But the coach who led Michigan to its last NCAA tournament appearance used a different measure to describe what he sees as Tarpley's greatest strength. "(It's) his long arms, man, and jum- ping ability around the basket," said Orr. "He can rebound, man, I mean, he's got wingspan!" TARPLEY will need to use his 85% inch wingspan to make up for the loss of fellow front-liner Tim McCormick to the pros. Frieder says his only player over 6-9 may be surpised at the effect of that loss. "He doesn't understand yet how much tougher it's going to be without a guy lik taking "He' there a but he' intellig One parentl profess said pr ter him resist t "THA mind, munica last t' hopeful In th Tarpley tunes. "He's "Oooh, contend . Said basketb play we Daily Photo by DAN HABIB The coach takes control during a timeout.