NCAA Tournament The Michigan Daily -Thursday, March 12, 1987 - Page 10 0 Pre-view M' 4 shoots to sink Navy Frieder and Heathcote team for tournament By JEFF RUSH Three questions need to be answered in analysing tonight's NCAA tournament first-round matchup between Michigan (19-11) and Navy (26-5) at Charlotte, N.C. (7 p.m., Channel 2). -Can Wolverine Gary Grant break his NCAA tournament jinx? -Is Navy All-American David Robinson good enough to single- handedly lead his team past a more balanced Michigan team? -What does Michigan State coach Jud Heathcote think? HUH? Isn't Michigan coach Bill Frieder the one who must figure out how to guard the man who probably will be the NBA's number-one draft pick this year? Well, yes. But he's not planning how to combat Navy alone. Frieder and Heathcote conferred on the subject Monday night while watching a high school prospect in Holland, Mich. Heathcote, the only coach who has played both Michigan and Navy this season, was more than happy to provide answers to all of the above questions. On Grant - While the junior guard has scored only 16 total points in four previous tournament games, Heathcote is convinced that Grant's inconsistent days are gone, and that he has emerged as a capable leader of the Wolverines. "I look for Gary Grant to have a big game against Navy and I think Michigan needs that," said Heathcote. ON ROBINSON - Heathcote pointed out that a team can stay with Navy even when the seven-footer is playing his best basketball. Robinson set a career- high against the Spartans this season with 43 points (and 16 rebounds), but Navy barely beat the weak Michigan State team, 91-90, in overtime. Later in the season, Heathcote pointed out, Robinson set another career-high with 45 points, but the Midshipmen still lost to Kentucky, 80-69. "Sometimes he can't carry them to victory," said Heathcote. "I don't think their supporting cast is what it needs to be if Michigan plays their game." Heathcote's final words on the game? "I think Michigan is the better team," he said. "They can't play as badly as they did against Illinois, and they probably won't play as well as they did against Purdue. Their performance is going to have to be some place in the middle. If it's a middle-of-the-road performance, that might be good enough to get themselves a victory." And that's what Frieder's troops have been working toward all season. A poster on the wall of the Michigan locker room listed one of the Wolverines main goals as receiving an NCAA bid. THE COACHING staff and the media gathered in the locker room Sunday night to watch the announcement of the tournament pairings. Michigan was one of the first tournament teams announced. It didn't take Michigan's coaching staff long to realize that they had to play the top college player in the country in the first round. If they win that game, they probably will take on the top seed in the East Region - North Carolina. "Can you believe that? That's a pretty tough deal," joked Frieder. "Robinson is one of the great inside players," said Frieder. "I haven't seen a better inside player in a long while - including (Patrick) Ewing and all of them." CENTER MARK Hughes, the only Michigan player present when the pairings were announced, was similarly excited and nervous about facing Robinson in the opening game. "I've seen him play this year quite a bit and I know he's the best player in the country," said Hughes. "He'll probably be picked number one in the NBA draft. "What can I say? He's the best 4 Daily Photo by SCOTT LITUCHY Wolverine coach Bill Frieder (left) will call on Loy Vaught to help shoot down Navy's aircraft carrier, 7-1 David Robinson. center in the country, so he's going to be a big challenge for us. But if we play inside defense like we did against Purdue, we'll beat them." Though Heathcote thinks Navy's supporting cast is weak, Frieder is worried that having to concentrate defensively on Robinson may cause breakdowns. "When you give as much help as you do to defense Robinson, then you're susceptible to three-point shots and things like that," said Frieder. NAVY'S TOP three-point shooter is Doug Wojcik, a 6-2 guard who hit 43 of 102 three-point attempts this season, while averaging 9.2 points per game. Tlie only other real three-point threat is 6-4 guard Cliff Rees, who made 30 of 88 attempts. Rees' scoring average of 11 ppg is second on the team to Robinson. Robinson's frontcourt mates are 6-6 Carl Liebert (9.7 ppg), and 6-7 Derric Turner (7.0 ppg). "This year (teams) are going to take us lightly when we come in," said Antoine Joubert. "If they take us lightly, we've got a good chance to win. "I think if we let (Robinson) get his shots and contain the other people, we've got a good shot at winning the game." Navy All-American David Robinson is the only player in NCAA history to score over 2,500 points, grab over 1,300 rebounds, and shoot over 60 per- cent from the floor during a career. I Tip of the Kap Y SBY RICK KAPLAN A throw-away season, Bill Frieder said. Before the season, Michigan's basketball coach told everyone who would listen that the 1986-87 team would struggle. Its inexperience would cause inconsistency, he claimed. "It's going to be the type of team," Frieder said last October, "that is going to have to have everything break right to experience some success." The squad broke quickly from the gate. Michigan opened with seven wins against weak non-conference competition in its first nine games. The rest of the season, though, has been marked by streaks. THE WOLVERINES lost four of six around the holidays. Then, after a rousing comeback in a 85- 84 loss to Big Ten leader Indiana, Michigan pulled its game together. Six straight wins followed, including upsets of nationally-ranked Syracuse and Iowa, and a road sweep at Northwestern and Wisconsin. Back on the road in early February, Michigan looked horrible in consecutive losses to Ohio State, Indiana, and a terrible Michigan State team. But Northwestern, Wisconsin, and fellow conference doormat Minnesota arrived on the schedule at the right time, allowing the Wolverines to reel off three more wins. The season ended with three games against Top 20 competition: Iowa, Illinois, and Purdue. With an 18-9 record entering that stretch, the Wolverines appeared bound for the NCAA tournament, iless they lost all three.j Iowa downed Michigan, 95-85, ' on a nationally-televised game at Iowa City. Despite trailing by large margins the entire game, the Wolverines showed flashes of effective play, and did not embarrass themselves. They saved that indignity until the Illinois game, an 89-75 Illini victory that left handwriting on the wall: the letters N-I-T. Michigan found an eraser three days later, and rubbed out Purdue, 104-68, clinching an NCAA bid and fifth place in the Big Ten. FIFTH PLACE is a far cry from the conference championships Michigan won the previous two ,: Surprising Blue: a successful season them out there against a lot of veteran players in the league." The forwards struggled in the early going. Glen Rice, the only big man with any conference experience, was Frieder's lone consistent performer up front in the first part of the season. The sophomore finished second in rebounding in the Big Ten, behind Illinois' Ken Norman. The remainder of the frontcourt was, as advertised, rough around the edges. Centers Mark Hughes and Loy Vaught effectively supported Rice on the boards, but were up and down offensively all season. Frieder did not expect to start Gary Grant, Antoine Joubert, and Garde Thompson every game. "The thing that bothers me most about the three-guard lineup is that it's not going to survive in the Big Ten," the Wolverine coach said in October. "We probably won't go with three guards in the Big Ten season." WHOOPS. If not for the trio of backcourt men, the Wolverines would have been much slower, more boring, and a lot less successful. Grant's numerous offensive and defensive talents began to be realized. His ball-handling skills, shooting touch, and Hands of Steal make the junior one of the best two-way players in the country, but he is still only regionally recognized. NBC commentator Al McGuire asked two weeks ago, "Who is this Gary Grant? Why don't I know more about him?" These ridiculous questions say as much for Grant's lack of respect as McGuire's ignorance. Ignoring his backup status of the past three years, Thompson made the best of the chance to start in his senior season. Due mainly to 43 percent shooting from behind the new three-point line, he increased his scoring average from 4.9 to 14.2 points per game. He was particularly dangerous at Crisler Arena. On the road, he did not look for his shot as often. Joubert finished his Wolverine career with a two 30-point efforts, 14 I 1 4 A '" x