w w V V 7W w -W 0 0I The Michigan Daily - Friday, N, Page 8 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, November 22, 1985 Double flgUre 'fearsome forward puts aside aggression in everyday arena '.1.. I Le Assistants hold program key By STEVE WISE T O MOST people, Butch Wade epitomizes the punishing, powerful player for which the Big Ten is famous. "You need one bruiser," said Wade's front line par- tner, Richard Relford," and believe me, Butch is a bruiser. He already hurt four guys in practice." Off the court though, Butch Wade changes. Crushing picks give way to contemplation, and the Wolverines' second leading rebounder becomes reserved. "He's very conservative, rather quiet," said Wade's mother, Dorothy, "He's not a violent tough guy." The violent tough guy is the one who averaged slightly more than seven rebounds per game. Butch the Bruiser earned Honorable Mention All Big Ten status last year by shutting down offensive stars like Greg Stokes of Iowa. Wade admits he doesn't mind the pushing and shoving, but said he does not intend to be violent. "You don't try to hurt people, but you gotta let people know you're not gonna stand for it," said the 6- 8, 235-pound forward. "If somebody intimidates you, they've got you where they want you." Where opposing big men want Wade is out of the action, but he said that won't happen. "If somebody knocks me on me ass, I'm bouncin' back up-quick." Wade learned to bounce back early, growing up in a Boston housing project. Some of his earliest athletic training came while dodging through buildings as he was chased home from school. "It was tough.. . growing up fighting," said Wade. "I was the same size as everyone else. Then I got a little bigger and they began to think twice." They also began to think twice about Wade's basketball talent, which was apparent from his first participation in organized ball. The 13-year-old Wade led his team to a recreational league championship. "Iused to get 51 points in a game," he said. "I said, 'Hey, this is alright.'" He was even better in high school. At Boston Tech, Wade was the city's top scorer his junior and senior years and top rebounder his last three years, grab- bing 22 and 24 rebounds per game as a junior and senior. With 30 points and 32 rebounds, Wade also grabbed a city championship his senior year, along with Massachusetts Player-of-the-Year honors and All America status from two magazines.u Despite the success, Wade needed some time to emerge from the shadow of another basketball player, his sister Lisa. "She was really good," Wade said. "When I first started, they'd say, 'Here he comes. That's Lisa Wade's little brother.' " Butch, or Mark as he is legally named, alsox followed the footsteps of his father, Mark Sr., who was Most Valuable Player at Prairie View A&M. "I had a little taste of it myself," said Mark Sr. "Maybe some of it rubbed off." What did rub off was Wade's parents' idea of how to deal with trouble. "We always told him not to start anything," said Dorothy Wade, "But if you get pushed, you have to defend yourself." His parents encouraged Butch to attend college, which he said he would have done even without basketball. Wade made his specific choice of schools, however, with some more impersonal assistance. Wade's high school coach was head of the math department, and he developed a computer program to evaluate colleges. "He ran it through a com- puter," said Wade, "all the factors of different schools, like academics and facilities, and Michigan came out on top." Michigan was also at the top of Dorothy Wade's list. "Mom wanted me to go to Michigan from the jump," Wade said. "She wanted me to get away from all the people, all the crime, the streets really." Mark Sr. said leaving Boston turned out to be a good idea. "(Butch) has matured a lot since he went to Michigan. Being away from home helped him." "It was fast and action packed in the projects," Wade said. "Here it's more laid back.", "I still clown around," the communication major added, "But I've been doing a lot of thinking ... about the upcoming season, about my future." The foremost concern for Wade's immediate basketball futre is his offense. a' .r U.IN,,P ge..... e a . . a a a By BARB McQUADE THEY PROVIDE the link to academics, recruiting and fine- tuning skills. They teach fundamentals as they work with players on an individual basis. They're the guys wearing the dark suits in the back row of the team pic- ture - the assistant coaches. Under head coach Bill Frieder, the Michigan Basketball staff - Mike Boyd, Steve Fisher, and David Ham- mer - works behind the scenes to keep the stage set and the players on cue. And in the competitive world of college basketball, the assistants are more than just understudies. "We've got a great staff, but I think everybody in the Big Ten has a great staff," Frieder said. "You've got a lot of things involved to make a program be successful. You can't do it all your- self. Frieder's assistants handle a vast number of responsibilities to help maintain his program and contribute to producing a winning basketball team. In addition to Frieder's right- hand trio, graduate assistants Thad Garner, Dan Pelekoudas and Scott Tompkins work to keep Michigan's high-flying program on its feet. "The nature of how things are run around here make the assistants feel important in terms of not just recruiting, not just coaching, but totally involved in what we're trying to do," said Fisher, beginning his fourth year on Frieder's staff. Each of the three assistants is ac- tively involved in practices and provides input during games. The coaches work with players on in- dividual skills each day - with the freshmen at pre-practice workouts, and with the veterans as well during practice. Garner, a graduate student in the School of Social Work, lends Big Ten experience to the team. The 1982 Michigan graduate provides tips from the sidelines at practice. "There have been times when Bill has sat up in the bleachers and wat- ched the practice," Fisher said, "and Mike and I have been the 'head coach' for that particular day." "I utilize them at practice so I can oversee it all," Frieder explained. The head coach's trust in his assistan- ts extends to game situations. Flanked by Fisher and Boyd, Frieder entertains suggestions from each side during a game. "Eight or 10 eyes out there are bet- ter than two," said Frieder, who ser- ved as a Wolverine assistant coach for seven years before being named to the head position. "Each of us has a duty to find out what we're doing wrong or right on the floor and pass the information on to Bill," said Boyd, a former assistant coach at Kent State. "Any time we have a comment we're allowed to make that to Bill. But he's the boss. He's the one that gets to veto or agree that that's what we're going to do." The ,courtside 'cHvity comprises Michigan SPOR 763-03 Daily Photo by DAN HABIB Wolverine assistant coach Steve Fisher helps hold the Michigan basket- ball program together. Frieder's staff handles academics, recruiting, and individual instruction. only half the job. No matter how strong a program is, it cannot endurep without recruiting.r Spotting and signing high schoolI players is Boyd's main role. The Nor-1 thern Michigan graduate travels1 "wherever (the recruit) is" to watcht him play. "I try to narrow it down to kids we're interested in for the following year," he said. Because of early signings that began November 15, recruiting for this year is almost finished. "We're now looking at juniors and sophomores," Boyd said, "following their schedules and picking certain games to go see them play." M ICHIGAN'S recruiting success in recent years has been no fluke. While the school's academic and athletic programs help sell the Maize 'n' Blue, the assistant coaches have worked "around the clock," Frieder said, to ink standout players. Letter writing, phone calls and arranging campus visits are all part of enticing a high school star to attend Michigan. "When Bill took over, our first priority was to make sure we got the best player in the state," Boyd said. Michigan's success in recruiting foot- ball players from the East and from Florida, Boyd Idded, has bolstered in- terest in Wolverine athletics among, prpeet'sfrom those areas.'.' ' Grad assistant Pelekoudas isy. heavily involved in campus tours and ° meeting with players and coaches, Fisher said. Because of demands as a law student here, the 1984 graduate limits his commitments to enter- tainingnglavers on official campus " -may IOL t 1 i 1 1 i Daily Photo by DAN HABIB b1spl visits. Hammer rounds out the assistantC duties with perhaps the most impor- South of the tant of all. Academics is the main on South Ma concern of the former head coach at Experience B Delta College. Hammer arranges featuring authentic ME tutoring and counseling to keep the a Wolverines academically sound. "We and American try to locate problems early, so we in thessophisticate can do something about them," he of a restored Ann Ai said. Correspondence with parents of Open for lunch < freshmen and sophomores is part of Hammer's weekly routine. RESTAURA? In addition, the second-year _/326 South Main Street+ Ann Arbor assistant is in charge of scouting and travel arrangements. "Everything' other than going out on the road to recruit I do," he said. Tompkins assists Hammer in his4; administrative duties. The next step for an assistant coach - is, of course, to secure a position as Food-At head coach. "Anybody that's sitting in Great Food At Aff my chair want to be a head coach and to have a chance to make his own -- decisions," Fisher said.O- Boyd agreed with that view, but - pointed out that contributions as an assitant may, e, pu, pshimporta=F - * 'WeemAtrgtt' Muscling for position under the boar- ds (right), Butch Wade belies his conservative, quiet off-court demeanor. Still, it's not difficult to be intimidated by the big man and his "Green Machine." 4 . i ' '4a . ' '4 **