w: V VVVr i '4 W'. w MICH.ELLANY 0, 'Di '! Sixth grc Basketball. Sixth grade. I was a guard for my school team, the John Ball Superstars. I wasn't entirely sure what a guard was. Even so, I knew what I would do... Steal the ball! See, I'm not very tall. Never have been. I've gradually realized that this places me at an extreme disadvantage when it comes to shooting the ball over people. But when other people dribble, the ball often travels from what is for me eye-level, to the floor. I have found that if I grab the ball as it passes the knees of my opponents, the worst that can hap- pen is we'll end up wrestling for it, and sometimes, I get away with it. And that's when the problems start. See, my hands are tiny. Al- ways have been. Back in sixth grade they were even tinier. Once my fa- ther tried to show me how to palm a basketball. I grasped the concept, and that's all. Dribbling was never a strong suit for me. Even without a ball to con- tend with, I'm no "speed merchant." With a ball in front of me, I have all of the grace and speed of a soused badger. My shooting's not too hot either. I hit 50 percent of my free-throws, but my field-goal percentage for the ode hoops SeanHigin INT ERVIEW One of the top five recruits in the nation, he's T s- trying to prove he's one of the top five on the Michigan basketball team Sean Higgins was one of the most highly recruited high school basketball players in the country last season. In an unusual and extremely controversial situation, the 6-8,195-pound swingman from Los Angeles originally signed to play close to home with the UCLA Bruins. He later claimed that he did so under duress because his step- father had threatened him with a baseball bat. The NCAA began an investigation and subsequently released Higgins from his binding letter of intent.The ruling allowed him to return to Ann Arbor, where he had lived until age nine, to play for the University of Michigan: Higgins recently spoke with basketball reporter Adam Schefter during basketball media day at Crisler Arena. Daily: As a high-school hoops star you received many scholarship offers. The bidding for you was intense. Coach Frieder thrives upon recruiting. When did you start receiving love letters from him? Higgins: I think I started receiving letters from Coach Frieder in the tenth grade. D: What did those letters say? H: Some of them just used to be one-liners like, "How are you doing? How did you play today? Did you get enough sleep last night? How's the girlfriend doing?" Things like that. D: When .practice first started, the running drills were a bit excessive. Coach Frieder was hard on you guys. Yet, you seemed more winded than the other guys. Were you unprepared for the rigors of college basketball practice? H: I wasn't unprepared. That's what you probably read in the paper, that I was falling all over the floor. Someone wrote that. D: I wrote it. H: You wrote it? Well, that was just a joke. I just fell down because they told me that Richard Rellford used to fall down on the floor. So I fell down too. Now everybody says that I'm another Richard Rellford because of running. D: How does it feel to bring your Californian style out to the Midwest? H: I think it's a plus for the people in the Midwest because I think a lot of the people in the Midwest are so-called hard-core, they say. But I think'a little finesse and a little smoothness are needed out here. D: Do you think you can start for this team? See INTERVIEW, Page 21 year hovered around 0.0 percent, jumping briefly to 0.1 percent, when I "drew iron" from eight feet, and then returning to neat, round, sym- metrical 0.0 percent. Even so, in a crucial game Karl Mayweather passed the ball to me. Karl was the finest athlete at m y school. He wasn't that much taller than me, but his muscle-to-poundage ratio was probably twice mine. Karl had nabbed a key rebound at the other end of the gym. He charged downcourt, dueling an opponent. The other guy had a real uniform, specially printed with his name and school colors. The Superstars all had homemade t-shirts, and we had been jealous when the other team charged out, looking like they were for real. But Karl looked better now, forc- ing his jittery foe to backpedal clumsily all the way to midcourt. Suddenly, the guy tied Karl up, and Karl saw that I was in the clear. I was complimented that Karl would hysteria consider passing to me, though to this day I have no notion what pos- sessed him to do so. Karl's pass was beautiful. Hard, fast, solid, and right on target. I ducked. The ball ricocheted off of the gym wall, sounding like a bazooka- shot hitting a gong. I ducked again. The ball slashed over my head and out of bounds. It was the final game of the sea- son. Our coach chewed Karl out for not thinking about who he was passing to. Karl apologized, and played his heart out for the rest of the game. Remember the free-throw percentage? That was earned in this game. I was fouled after I stole the ball from a pituitary victim, and I hit the first side of a one-on-one. I missed the backboard on the follow- up. 50 percent. We ended up losing by one point. I mised the free-throw in early in the second quarter, but when all was said and done, I felt like the goat all the same. I was sure that I had been the difference between the loss, and sudden-death overtime. And in sud- den-death, we would have taken them for sure. In the locker room after the game, See LOGIE, 'Page 21 By SCOTT SHAFFER Welcome to prime time. The Michigan basketball team is determined to prove that it merits all the pre-season attention it has been getting. It is determined to prove that, yes, the Wolverines do belong in the limelight - even if head coach Bill Frieder has to be dragged along kicking and screaming. Everyone seems to think that this year's team will be one of the great ones. The players think so. The television announcers and the sports magazines think so. The fans certainly think so. But Frieder thinks that the lofty predictions made for his team are undeserved. "Despite what you've heard about our team, no one knows better than me that we are extremely young. You have to have veterans returning who have had success. Those are the teams you want to discuss," said the man who followed up back-to-back Big Ten cham- pionships with a 20-12, fifth-place finish last year. SO WHY ARE so many people so excited about such an extremely young team? When the kiddie corps consist of Terry Mills, Rumeal Robinson and Sean Higgins, three high school All-Americans, and you throw in Gary Grant, one of the best all-around guards in the country, one can un- derstand why there might be more than a few enthusiastic supporters. Enough supporters, in fact, for Michigan to be ranked seventh in the nation by Sports Illustrated and ninth by the Associated Press. Simply calling Mills and Robinson young is like saying Picasso is dead. Sure it's true, but there is a lot more to the story. Both of them were forced to sit out their freshman seasons, victims of the NCAA's Proposition 48. During their senior year, the two of them were rated equal to or just a shade below J. R. Reid and Rex Chapman, respectively. That's some pretty elite company. The 6-10 Mills will start either at center or power forward, while Robinson, at 6-2, should start at the off- guard position. When they committed to Michigan over a year ago, experts rated Michigan's recruit class as the best in the land. Finally, Mills and Robinson are eligible to play. FRIEDER, however, remains unmoved. "We have six new players and three of them will be in our top eight players. And we have only one guard who has ever played one minute for Michigan." Frieder's troops are armed and dangerous But, oh, is that one guard a dandy. Gary Grant is a complete player. Last year, he led the conference in steals, finished fourth in scoring and free throw per- centage and third in assists. He already has been named the pre-season Big Ten Player of the Year. And when it is prime time for the Wolverines, you can bet it will be the Gary Grant show. Frieder, as di- rector, will make sure of that. "We are going to use the one-guard offense this year. We have to rely on Gary to have that basketball because he's our captain and he knows what to do with it," said the eighth-year head coach. With the graduation of the other two backcourt starters, Antoine Joubert and Garde Thompson, the pressure on Grant is even more increased. And the man they call the General is well aware of his responsibili- ties. "This year I'll get the ball on almost every play. I have to be the set-up man and make sure everybody gets their points and no one gets upset," said the 6-3 Grant. All this in addition to maintaining his scoring duties and playing his aggressive brand of defense while staying out of foul trouble. IF GRANT IS THE STAR of the show, then the nomination for best supporting actor certainly goes to forward Glen Rice. A 6-7 junior, Rice was second in the league with 9.1 rebounds per game last year. He also was among the top seven in scoring and field goal percentage. As a freshman in 1985, Rice was a pleasant sur- prise, giving Michigan some scoring off the bench. Last year, he became a starter and top-flight rebounder. This year, he will have to become a leader and take some of the heat off Grant. "As far as I'm concerned, I'm willing to step out and do the job and face the pressure," said the Flint native. The final starting job will be shared by big men Loy Vaught and Mark Hughes. Although overshadowed by the excitement over the newcomers and Grant, their performance will nonetheless be a key indicator of the reviews that Michigan will receive. The 6-9 Vaught is a flashier player, but it was the 6-8 Hughes who logged more minutes last year. This duo will be relied on to provide aggressive rebounding and tough inside defense. With the starting cast completed, the plot thickens when it comes to the role players, the bench. Who will emerge as the third and fourth guards remains a mys- tery. See TEAM, Page 19 OFF THE WALL Look closely at those you most despise. In them your unexplored self lies. (in reply) THAT IS BULLSHIT - YOU MAY LEGITIMATELY DESPISE FALSENESS AND CRUELTY. -Angell Hall We are nothing but associated random molecules striving to reach equilibrium within the cosmos. -Graduate Library Why is there so much aggression expressed on this door? (in reply) NEUROLOGICAL DISORDERS CAUSED BY CONSTANT EXPOSURE TO FLUORESCENT LIGHT. -Graduate Library He (or she) who accepts novel conceptions which are unsupported by tangible verification w11 inevitably become bewildered and misled. That is, skepticism as a practical state of mind must be incorporated into one's learning process if veritable mentality is to be revealed. -Graduate Library SKETCIA? AD lurr '(ooR amDQMMA kuaA pqh NAS KE BtN MLA& 10rafn&'4 . ZINN .OQ Co OL I 'S' ' 'e, f .A s=' r ,.j ^iyy :<:,, - .r, ,. ; :, .i ,,,M ' , s, ,; ', ^;' q .;'.. : . ' :;., ,,r. , :K t :, - . v ';,Kh;".may j "w '4 ' ;;:irk: I'" -" . ,"/"!d t ti's: StINNNN! Mfg, 4bo yaowj . WK AYtturlW W' , . r f, FaN 1ml!$ " Indiana's Keith Smart (23) and Dea their Big Ten and national champions] Fab four stood above rest i n 1986-8 7 By PETE STEINERT "People are saying, 'Poor Michigan.' I don't go for that. They have a good team." - Northwestern senior center Shon Morris on Michigan's 1986- 87 team at last year's Big Ten press conference. The Wolverines did indeed prove themselves ' as a good a n d sometimes great team last season. As far as wins were concerned, they had some real keepers. Michigan defeated three teams ranked in the top five in the country during the regular season on its way to a 20-12 overall record (10-8 in the Big Ten). The three victories over Syracuse, Iowa, and Purdue all came at Crisler Arena, where the Wolverines went 15-3. Michigan then advanced to the NCAA Tournament and beat Navy in the first round of the East Regionals. Here is a game-by-game look back at the "Fab Four": Michigan 91, Syracuse 88 January 18, 1987 The Wolverines entered this game on a mission - to beat undefeated and fifth-ranked Syracuse I 0 - and they fulfilled their quest. "I know Loy (Vaught) made a couple of great plays in the game with a couple of big dunks," recalled Mark Hughes. Vaught, who came off the bench to score 10 points, jammed twice on consecutive M i c h i g a n possessions with less than two minutes remaining to keep the Orangemen off the Wolverines' heals. Syracuse head coach Jim Boeheim called Garde Thompson "the key to the ball game." The senior guard scored 23 points with his nine-of-13 floor shooting, four- I PAGE 20 WEEKEND/NOVEMBER 20, 1987 WEEKEND/NOVEMBER 20, 1987