w w mw IW lw w lw mw w PLAYER W w S THE TASTE OF IS WAITING F( stood at 1-13 for the MICHIGAN'S RECORD team's second-year head coach. A story titled "The Crumbling 'M' " subse - quently appeared in one of the Detroit papers discussing the decline of Wolverine basketball. After posting more victories (19) in the 1980-81 season than any other first-year Wolverine head coach, Bill Frieder had to be doubting himself. But another man had no doubts. "I still have a letter (Athletic Director Don) Canham sent me," said Frieder. "It said 'Don't worry about it. It is a throwaway season. Do the best you can and try to come up with a good recruiting year. But you are my basketball coach as long as you want to be.' " The Wolverines finished that 1981-82 season with an 8-19 mark, and Frieder never looked back. Just two years later, Michigan won the National Invitational Tournament, the school's only national basketball championship. Add back-to-back Big Ten Championships, and one has the makings of a tremendously successful coach. "What we've accomplished in a short time has surprised me because the league is such a demanding league," said Frieder. "I consider guys like Lou Henson, Gene Keady, Bobby Knight, and Jud Heathcote real fine basketball coaches. I have coached six years, and Knight and I are the only guys to win the Big Ten outright twice. So that's a heck of an accomplishment." For his team's accomplishments, Associated Press and Basketball Weekly named Frieder National Coach of the Year, and both wire services honored him as Big Ten Coach of the Year for the 1984-85 campaign. Success is not new to the Saginaw native. Wherever he has coached, he has won, whether it be at Alpena High School at the junior varsity level, Flint Northern High School at the junior varsity and varsity level, or Michigan as an assistant and head coach. In six seasons at the Wolverine helm, Frieder's record stands at 121-60 - a .669 winning percentage. Only the man that hired Frieder, Johnny Orr, possesses more career victories at Michigan (209). F RIEDER'S COACHING achieve - ments are no accident. A com - bination of hard work, intelligence, and dedication is responsible. Hard Work: Frieder can be characterized as the ultimate hoop junkie. He just loves the game. How much? Instead of becoming a businessman following the completion of his MBA degree, Frieder took the Alpena coaching position. "My relaxation is basketball. My work is basketball," said the seventh-year head coach. "Everything I do is basketball related. I hardly do anything in this town without stopping in at the office or Crisler Arena. That's year round." With such a passion for the game, it is easy to see why Frieder toils so diligently. His hard work pays dividends on and off the court. As a recruiter, he is second to none. Hlooked on Hoops Bill Frieder is addicted to the game. My relaxation is basketball,' he says. My work is basketball. Everything I do is basketball related. I hardly do anything in this town without stopping in at the office or Crisler Arena. That's year round.' By Scott G. Miller Frieder relentlessly pursues the best talent in the nation. To land Michigan's Mr. Basketball 1986 Terry Mills, for example, Frieder began writing to the Romulus native during his freshman year in high school. "He does the little things right," said freshman Jack Kramer. "He makes you feel important. When he recruits you, he gives you the personal touch. "A lot of head coaches are in the background. Coach Frieder does a lot of the recruiting with his assistants. He would send little notes. He would write them in his own handwriting, and that means a little more to you." Intelligence: Doing the little things are important to Frieder. His mind is meticulous and employs its genius level IQ to the maximum. Legend has it that the Michigan coach is persona non grata in Las Vegas. He has not been to Vegas in seven years. "Why not beat them (the casinos) if you are going to sit down and play?" asked Frieder. "I work too hard for my money to give it to them. "I developed a system to beat the game of blackjack. It has been proven statistically that you can beat it." But can the same ingenuity be used in coaching? "Gambling requires all the same ingredients that coaching a team does," said Frieder. "You have to be patient, poised, mentally and physically prepared, and disciplined." Dedication: Frieder loves the University of Michigan. He obtained his BBA and MBA from Michigan. He spent seven years as Orr's assistant while rejecting numerous head coaching offers. Orr's surprise departure allowed Frieder to rise to the top position, but he would have remained an assistant for longer if necessary. "It is hard to leave Michigan because it is a first-class place," said Frieder. "It has great facilities, a great alumni body, and a great school. "So every time I interviewed for a job when I was an assistant, I compared it to Michigan and then I just turned it down. I was just too greedy." SUCCESS IS DIFFICULT to argue with, yet the fans and media relish the opportunity to criticize the man who has 63 victories in his last 73 outings. Pressure to win at all costs exists for many college coaches. Last year 68 Division I basketball coaching changes were made. Frieder is lucky. He occupies one of the safest positions in all of college athletics. As long as Michigan basketball remains a clean program, Frieder's job is secure. Canham would have it no other way, so the only pressure Frieder feels is self-generated.. "I know in this business every year you create new enemies," said the 12th head coach in Wolverine history. "You keep adding, enemies if you stay at a place long enough. You are never going to satisfy all the people so you can't try. "I know that there are 13,000 people at the games, but I know I know more about basketball than them, including the writers. I can't be concerned about what they say, what they write, and what they do. I just have to go about doing my business." Maybe recruiting too many blue-chip players has created problems for Frieder. With all the talent Michigan possessed the last few seasons, fans felt the Wolverines never should have lost. The coach took the heat. "It's a shame with all (Frieder's) accomplishments that people keep saying that he can't coach," said assistant coach Mike Boyd. "What else does he have to do to be classified as a good coach?" "It is a bad rap that Frieder can't coach just like a lot of bad raps against me," said senior guard Antoine Joubert. "There are just some things you have to live and die with." Another criticism is that Frieder's clubs fail to prevail in crucial situations - like the NCAA Tournament. The past two seasons ended in the second-round of the NCAAs for the highly-rated Wolverines. In first-round action two years ago, Michigan squeaked by lowly-regarded Fairleigh Dickinson, 59-54, and slid by even lower regarded-Akron, 70-64, last year. "I will be the first to admit we have been a disappointment in the tournaments," said Frieder. "But those things happen. "Take a Ray Meyer. Look how long it took him to finally get a team to the Final Four. Rollie Massimino finally won it, but it took him many years. There is a share of luck in there too as well as everything else." "Our first concern is winning the Big Ten Championship," said Boyd. "We take pride, not to knock the NCAAs, in winning the Big Ten title, and anything after that is icing on the cake." That frosting though would establish Frieder as one of the finest coaches in the country. "There are certain guys that don't get much credit, and Bill falls in that category," said CBS basketball analyst Billy Packer. "He beats Knight for the conference championship last year and blows him off the wall. "But nobody says 'Great job Bill Frieder.' They say he had all the players. But if Bobby wins the game, they say he is a great coach and Frieder can't coach. "What he has got to do is win a national crown or else the stigma stays." Even Frieder's recruiting has come under close scrutiny recently. Michigan's top two recruits, high school All-Americans Mills and Rumeal Robinson, are ineligible for this season due to below-minimum college board scores as required by Proposition 48. Daily reports in national newspapers regarding the Wolverines' recruits helped fuel the debate over preferential treatment of athletes. "I have to stick around long enough to prove to the people we did the right thing," said Frieder. "You can't measure dedication in a test score. Robinson is going to be a good student because he puts in the time. Mills is off to a great start, too. "We did it all legally. We are not going to try to buy the fourth year. We put them on scholarshipfand they will have three years of eligibility after this year." Frieder favors Proposition 48 because it upgrades academics and athletics. He feels the number of athletes who fail to qualify will decrease every year. Proposition 48 caused a reevaluation of Michigan recruiting policy, but no fundamental changes. "We want to get kids that can come in and help us immediately," said Frieder. "Yet if you had a kid like Terry Mills that is 20 minutes away, and if you don't know for sure he is going to pass the test then you recruit him. You are not going to pass up a kid like that." Continued on Page 12 WEEKEND / JOHN MUNSON Michigan's forwards: Mark Hughes (55), Glen Rice (41), J.P. Oosterbaan (54), Loy Vaught (35). Like our delicious Mexican cuisine. our resta right mixture of special ingredients to be suc and look forward to joining a top foodservic Monday-Friday - 2-4 or 9-11. We have an e time or full time positions. No experience nE price. We will work around your schedule. EARN EXTRA CASH FC Located at 3776 S. State, just south of I- Jeefry Sc It EveniTel] We're looking for the following SPECIAL INGREDI All chaotic on the Blue front " Food Servers " Line Cooks " Bartenders * Dishwashers " Waiters By Adam Ochlis BILL FRIEDER will try something new with this year's basketball team. Instead of size and experience in the frontcourt, Frieder will shoot for a third straight Big Ten championship with five players who average six-feet, eight-inches, and have a collective 36 college basketball games under their belt. Frieder has no choice. The man known for his Las Vegas excursions will play the only cards dealt to him. Gone are seniors Roy Tarpley, Butch Wade, Richard Rellford, and Rob Henderson. Enter sophomores Glen Rice, Loy Vaught, Mark Hughes, Mike Griffin, and J.P. Oosterbaan. None of the five have ever started a game at Michigan. Only Rice has experienced the fierce competition of the Big Ten. Hughes played sparingly last season, and the other three were redshirted. Get the picture? "Talking about Tarpley, Rellford, Henderson, and Wade, you're losing your best scorer, your best rebounder, and your best defensive player all at the same time," said Frieder, "and because they played so much, there really isn't much experience to replace them." Even worse for the seventh-year head coach is that, other than Rice, not one of the other four has established himself in practice. Frieder makes no bones that Rice will start at the small forward position. The other two starting spots have Frieder worried. "After Rice, I don't know (who will start up front)," he said. "I honestly don't know. I don't know which one of Oosterbaan or Hughes or Vaught will play that inside position. They're all competing, they're all working at it, and they're all coming along. But they all have a long way to go. "I don't know if eventually more than one of those guys might make it where one of them will play center and one of them will play forward. There's'just a lot of question marks." Frieder admits that no matter who starts, all will play considerably. He isn't a big fan of the three-guard offense, which translates into a lot of on-the-job- training for the five big men. Leading the quintet is Rice, the 6-7, silky-smooth forward from Flint. Michigan's Mr. Basketball in 1985, Rice is expected to pick up where he left off last season. As Frieder's sixth man last year, Rice averaged seven points a game and excited crowds with his rainbow jump shots and acrobatic dunks. He scored in double figures 12 times during the season, and led the team with 14 points against Akron in the first round of the NCAA tournament. As the only proven scorer up front, Rice will be looked upon to supply a great deal of offense. "I'm looking forward to scoring a lot and helping the team out a lot," he said with a smile. Vaught and Oosterbaan are the two most likely to play center. Vaught (6-9, 225 pounds) is the better rebounder while Oosterbaan (6-10, 240) has better court sense. Both had stellar high school careers - Vaught at East Kentwood High in Grand Rapids and Oosterbaan at Kalamazoo Christian - yet both realize what they're up against. "It's going to take some time, but I think we'll be all right," said Vaught. Vaught's weaknesses stem from his inexperience in basketball. He didn't start playing organized ball until thelOth grade. He is, however, an excellent athelete and very eager to play against the best centers the Big Ten has to offer - namely Illinois' KensNorman and Purdue's Melvin McCants. "I think I'm going to do all right Continued on Page 17 U Square 8135 E~bony i al Iila k and C old- font lRraielet Mineral Cr'tai Round$1,3,5 C hampagne ial Iwo-Tone Pnacel Mineral (1 yual The Citizen High Fashion Coll to give you the right time a In tones of gold on gold or a sr black and gold, white and go Jewelry to make you look i while helping you arrive on tin OCITIr The Smartest Engineering Ever I1 SouthNDvers 1113 662-3773 Miller is a Daily basketball writer. PAGE 8 WEEKEND/NOVEMBER 2 x,1986E1 WEEKENDINQY MK3 21 f, ,M6- , . ,