w AME w w w m lw ,w ... e...r a,_ w ,w PREVIEW Blue outlook: Partly cloudy, chance of sunshine By Rick Kaplan The recent past of Michigan basketball has been sunny, with record highs. The long-term forecast looks bright, too. But the outlook for the immediate future is uncertain. Changes in formation have left the 1986-87 Wolverines with an unpredictable climate. Michigan is the two-time defending Big Ten champion, but the team taking the floor in tonight's opener against Bradley is not the same squad that won those titles. Last year's frontcourt of Roy Tarpley, Butch Wade, Richard Rellford, and Robert Henderson picked a bad time to graduate-the same time-leaving head coach Bill Frieder with virtually no experience up front to replace them. The backcourt, however, has a veteran crew returning. Junior Gary Grant and senior Antoine Joubert have started together for two years, while senior Garde Thompson returns to his familiar third-guard role. Backcourt strength alone has opponents doubting Michigan's alleged shortcomings. "When you lose a front line like they did, it's hard to replace that right away," said Northwestern center Shon Morris. "The guards are going to have to play well this year. People are saying, 'Poor Michigan.' I don't go for that. They have a good team." "This year, there's no question, we have a different type of team," said Frieder. "It's going to be young. It's going to be inexperienced. It's going to be small compared to what we've had, and compared to what we need in the league. It's going to be the type of team that is going to have to have everything break right to experience some success." Success has been in abundance at Crisler Arena since the 1983-84 season. The Wolverines won the postseason National Invitational Tournament that year, capping a 24-9 campaign. The next two years, Michigan ruled the conference with 16-2 and 14-4 records (26-4 and 28- 5 overall). Both seasons, however, ended in disappointment with second-round losses in the NCAA tournament. The squad is considered a darkhorse for the NCAAs this year, but it needs to buck the odds and ride out its problems to qualify for the tourney. "There are a lot of question marks," Frieder said. "That's what concerns me. When you have a lot of question marks, you usually don't have a team that's goo enough. Hopefully, we can get these question marks resolved before the Big Ten season." The $64,000" Question is obviously, "How do you replace Tarpley, Wade, Rellford, and Henderson, and their 40 points and 23 rebounds per game?" Frieder is still searching for the answer. The opening-day frontcourt looks like a hastily concocted casserole: Rice and any other ingredients lying around. Aside from 6-7 sophomore forward Glen Rice (Frieder: "I'm sure you're going to see him in there") the forward and center positions are up for grabs. Redshirt freshmen Loy Vaught, J.P. Oosterbaan, and Mike Griffin, and sophomore Mark Hughes will get to battle for Big Ten playing time against non-conference non-powers like Illinois-Chicago and Northern Michigan. "The guys we have to replace the guys that left have kind of been around to enjoy all of the success, the tournaments, the championship rings, and all of that," said Frieder. "But they've never done a damn thing. Now we're going to have to throw them out there against a lot of veteran players in the league." One possible solution to the frontcourt question is not answering it at all. Frieder is considering a three-guard lineup. Grant (12.2 points per game, 5.6 assists, 2.5 steals) was a Second Team All-Big Ten selection a year ago, while Joubert (12.0 ppg, 4.7 apg) earned Honorable Mention. But starting the 6-1 Thompson (4.9 ppg, 1.8 apg) would create a lineup with three players 6-5 or under. "We might be the type of team that plays different lineups depending (on the opponent), and what the matchups are," the seventh-year head coach. "It might be best in some games to start three guards because we can match up properly, but in other games we might have to start three big guys because we're playing somebody extremely big. "The thing that bothers me most about the three-guard lineup is that it's not going to survive in the Big Ten. We probably won't go with three guards in the Big Ten season. I don't know if we've got a guard that's good enough to guard a 6-8 forward, rebound, and keep him off the boards." Grant is more optimistic about the unusual formation. "Three guards gives us more options to score," said the 1985 Big Ten Freshman of the Year. "Garde is an outstanding shooter. I think it will Continued on Page 5 INTERVIEW Continued from Page 16 appreciated it. The fans saw more in our team than just the starting five. They saw some hard workers on the team, people who love the game for the game itself. I'm going to bring that attitude in if I get in there this year, too. Try to play hard, give 100 percent, try to make no mistakes, and try to win. D: But wouldn't you like to shed that image now? Wouldn't you like to prove to everyone that you are a good basketball player, and not just a fun one? S: I definitely want to do that. Everyone thinks of me as, 'Oh, yeah, you're the guy who goes flying into the stands.' This year I wantrto show them that I am in control of my own game, I'm not just the guy flying around all over the place. I want to show them that I can go down the floor and dunk over the best of them. I'm still going to work hard and go after the ball, but I'm going to show them that I can play defense, run up and down the court, and play offense, too. D: With the inexperience of the frontcourt this year, will those few minutes you've played help in terms of cracking the starting lineup? Or because it was garbage time, will it make no difference? S: Any time you get court time, especially in the Big Ten, you are going to feel how tough it is: the banging, the throwing around. Just that little experience has made ir z feel more at ease at going into games now. At first I felt real nervous. You feel like, "Oh, wow, I'm playing in college." You get a little jittery. You get the ball and you don't know What to do with it. Though I haven't played much, because of the minutes I have played, each game I get more and more relaxed when I get in. I think when I get in this year I'll be much more relaxed. Because of that experience I'll feel very at ease playing, and I can concentrate more on the game and not worry about my fears. But I'll still be inexperienced, too, because I haven't played a lot under tense Big Ten situations. D: Are you worried that you will try too hard to shed your image and it will backfire? S: It could be a problem. I think when I come out there, the fans expect me to do that. But, as Frieder says, 'Steve, when you go out there, you've got to be more in control.' I agree with him. When I go out there with the starters and play a lot, I've got to stick with the game plan. I've got to stay with what I'm out there to do. Work on my defense, execute the offense correctly, make no mistakes. I just hope the fans don't get mad at me if I'm not, every other play, on the floor or in the stands. If I dive for a ball and don't get it, and the other team goes down and scores because I'm not down there, it's a minus on my side. I wasn't in the play; I was too busy unwrapping myself from the band. U FISCH Cont' .red from Page 16 je- 'acket he finds a beer cap. It isn't the same kind of beer that's on the roof of the car. He flips the beer cap into the air, like you would a quarter, and then he smartly snatches it with the same hand, as if he were catching a fly. "You just bought it, buddy," he says, pumping his index finger into my chest, "You just bought it." The cops take the beer and don't spill it out like they're supposed to. The guy who told me I bought it comes over to Tim. He's gritting his teeth and his eyebrows like Clint as he says, -,qw- a r "Are your parents at home?" Tim says no, which is true, but Clint isn't sure if he wants to believe the punk. Tim says, "My grandmother's there." The cop sticks his head even farther through the window so his face is right on top of Tim's, and says,"I don't want your grandmother to see this, I don't want your mother to see this. I 1 S FREE INSTAL.LAT WARM THOSE LONG WINTE ORDER CABLE NOW AN[ INSTALLED FREE (Offer Good Until December 1, 198 LOOK AT WHAT YOU " CNN Headline - CBN o Con * CSpan - WIHT IND - Nic -*WTBS - WGN - Arts - " Weather Channel *U * Nashville Network Li *MTV CNN * AND MUCH MORE ":: COL CC FORWARDS Continued from Page 13 against those guys," he said. "I'm not afraid of those guys in any way and I feel I'm just as good an athlete as them." Oosterbaan, on the other hand, does not have Vaught's physical tools. While he is a good shooter and passer for a big man, Oosterbaan has extremely slow feet, which give him problems under the boards and on defense, areas where he says he needs a lot of work. "Vaught and J.P. have a long way to go, there's no question about it," said Frieder. "They're further ahead right now than they were a year ago, and they're going to get better. They're hard workers and they've got good size. They just have to learn the game." The other forward position will be split between Hughes (6-8, 240) and Griffin (6-7, 215). Although he saw action in just 14 games as a freshman, Hughes says the experience was valuable. "I think it will help out quite a bit because I learned there's a big, big difference between high school and college ball," said the Muskegon native. "I learned that you have to play really hard whenever you're out there." Griffin plays in the Mike O'Koren mold. Like the Washington Bullets forward, Griffin is a hustler who can do a little of everything. "He's an aggressive player," Frieder said. "He is a smart player. He doesn't have the ability to score a great deal, but he gives us some defense and he plays hard and doesn't give us a lot of minuses. He is going to play." While Rice is the only one of the five who has proven scoring abilty, it is rebounding that worries Frieder the most. According to Frieder, 6-2 guard Gary Grant has been the best rebounder in practice, "which shows that we've got problems up front," Frieder said. Grant, however, thinks rebounding is team effort. "If everybody sticks together as a family and everybody rebounds together as a family, then I think we'll be all right," he said. "If it's up to me, I'm going to jump down there and help out as much as I can." CALL TODAY AND SAVE! ANN ARBORIYPSILANTI 973-2266 BRI WEEKEND/JOHN MUNSON Sophomore forward Glen Rice puts one up during a recent practice. Ofer Good In Areas Serviced By Columbia Cable Only. PAGE 4 WEEKEND/NOVEMBER 21, 1986 WEEKEND/NOVEMBER 21, 1986