V V V w . MW _W _qF wr w -W By PETE STEINERT Last winter engineering junior Inder Soni sat down next to Mark Hughes on a train going to Chicago. Along the way Soni and a couple of other Michigan students struck up a conversation with Hughes, unaware of who he was at the time. Not once during the entire trip did Hughes reveal his basketball iden- tity. He never said, "Hi, I'm Mark Hughes, I'm on the Michigan bas- ketball team. I bet you want my au- tograph now, right?" So much for the common stereo- type that all college basketball play- ers were voted most in love with themselves by their high school se- nior classes. SOME PLAYERS may dwell on their scoring averages and shoot- ing percentages. Hughes and team- mate and close friend Loy Vaught, however, concern themselves with more important issues - like win- ning, something the Wolverines should do quite a bit of this season. "Even if I don't play or don't score, as long as the team wins," said Hughes. "I like to see everybody on our team do well," added Vaught. "It's great when one guy has a great night, but I'd rather see everyone on our team have a great night." This unselfishness characterizes their easy-going personalities off the court. Together they consist of 13- and-a-half feet and 460 pounds of pure likableness. This past October Hughes and Vaught shared some of that giant friendliness with the community. Along with several other Wolverine players, they co-hosted Mosher-Jor- dan's annual "Halloween at MoJo" for underprivileged children in Ann Arbor. THE TWO, who roomed to- gether for their first two years at Michigan, also appreciate quieter times to themselves to escape the spotlight of major college basket- ball. "I have a place to myself," said Vaught, "and I guess I'm kind of a loner because I like to go there and just be by myself sometimes, watch TV, listen to music, lay on my bed and just think about stuff, (or) get on the phone and call home." Hughes, a former homecoming king, listens to gospel music and reads poetry. Certainly, though, some things must disrupt their normal good na- ture. "One of the things that really gets me pissed off is if I think I made a good play either offensively or defensively, and I get whistled for a foul," Hughes admitted. "(The officials) haven't been doing a bad job, but they're not perfect." The likenesses in Hughes and Vaught stem from their similar Hughes and Vaught just a couof friendly giants the season. "We try to (push each other in practice)," Vaught said, "but not in a mean way or whatever. We .try to go at each other hard, but there's still respect between both of us." So far neither one has taken the upper hand over the other in prac- tices and scrimmages. Hughes, bothered recently by nagging injuries to his elbow, hamstring, and knee, started in the pivot last season and has more game experience. V A UG H T, on the other hand, has significantly improved his game from a year ago, particularly his consistency, which has been a prob- lem for him in the past. He already possesses great leaping and running ability. Frieder could very well hold off on his final decision until a few days before Michigan opens its regular season against Miami, Fla., next Friday in the Great Alaskan Shoot- Out. Regardless of who starts, Hughes and Vaught will see plenty of play- ing time with the non-starter likely to hear his name called first off the bench. "It's going to be the type of sea- son where if they keep using that competitiveness, along with Terry Mills, it can't do anything but make this team better," said senior guard Gary Grant. DESPITE HUGHES' and Vaught's battle for a starting spot and their talents as inside players, most of the pre-season media atten- tion has gone to Grant, an All- America candidate; junior forward Glen Rice; and the three highly touted newcomers: Mills, Rumeal Robinson, and Sean Higgins. A sports writer could spend a whole season (maybe more) just writing about those five players. "I imagine Hughes and Vaught are tired of hearing about the rest of those guys," Frieder said jokingly. "It's not anything that I really concern myself with or even think Q about that much," Hughes said i smiling. j "I feel that those are the people o that the fans love to see," he contin- i ued. "They score all the points. They # get all of the aention. I guess that's the way society is." Though Hughes and Vaught sometimes go as unrecognized as one's old classmates, they just keep it all in perspective. Said Michigan assistant coach Steve Fisher: "The one good thing about the both of them is that they do have egos, but they're not so big that they can't cope with not being the focus." m Juniors Loy Vaught (left) and Mark Hughes both will see plenty of playing time in Michigan's frontcourt this season. backgrounds. They both grew up in the suburbs of western Michigan. Hughes graduated from Reeths Puffer High School in Muskegon as a two- time first team all-state selection. Vaught, a first team all-state selec- tion as a senior, graduated from East Kentwood High School in Grand Rapids. THEY MET each other as high school sophomores through a bas- ketball tournament and have been friends ever since. "Mark and I, in a lot of ways, we're very much alike," Vaught said. "We laugh a lot together, and we have a good time. We can communicate really well." Ironically, Hughes and Vaught now find themselves battling each other for the starting center position in head coach Bill Frieder's lineup. They represent the basketball team's equivalent to Demetrius Brown and Michael Taylor who vied for the Wolverines' starting quarterback job this fall up until the first game of tre uil. cause i dunk goo. THE ONLY BILL in the picture that He's not the only Wolverine who can make a ' ."$f day was the one on the Michigan bench. that claim. Loy Vaught's dunk against Navy with two seconds left in the maintenance crews fixed the rim. WEEKEND/NOVEMBER 20, 1987 PAGE0 WEEKEND/NOVEMBER 20, 1987