Page 4-The Michigan Daily- Sports Monday- March 2, 1992 Ray Jackson is happy away from spotlight JACKSON Continued from page 4 attributes much of his running and jumping ability to his track days, when he was a 22-foot long jumper and a 48-second quarter miler. But basketball was where he excelled. He was dunking at the end of junior high, and, like all kids, vividly remembers his first triumph. Jackson used to play ball before school as a 5'10" eighth grader. One morning, "we were just playing, and I got a break and I just went up - And I was in pants at the time, so I didn't expect to do it - and I went up, and it was like, 'Damn!' and everybody was like, 'Yeah, yeah."' It would be the first of many successes on the hardwood for Jackson. U.. Lyndon Baines Johnson High is one of 10 high schools in Austin. The city does not have open enrollment, but much like Detroit, has magnet schools which students may attend if enrolled in a particular program. LBJ is one of those schools, with a science academy that draws kids from around the city. Ray Jackson arrived at this school of 1,300 students in the fall of 1987. The basketball team played in Class SA, the largest division in Texas, against squads that draw from enrollments of five thousand or more. LBJ is moving to 4A next season, but coach Mike McShane says it should have been in the smaller class all along. Jackson initially played on the freshman team his first year, but because members of the varsity became ineligible, he was moved up less than halfway through the season - still the only frosh to play varsity in McShane's eight seasons. At 6'2", he was put in the post against much bigger individuals. In one of his first games with the big boys, LBJ played Austin High, the best team in the district. Jackson matched up with 6'7" Scott Ruffcom, a senior who would go on to Baylor and become the first round selection (25th overall) of the Chicago White Sox in the 1991 June baseball draft. Jackson recalled that although he had a slight injury, Ruffcom didn't let up. "This kid just used Ray," says McShane, who has known Jackson since the latter was a third grader. "Of course, Ray was only 13 years old." "My leg was hurt, and he kept playing me," Jackson says. "And this dude was pretty good, so I was like, 'All right.' Next time we played, I just went right at him." The two teams met again the last game of the year, and Jackson did just what he said he would do. McShane remembers his 18 points, 13 rebounds and four blocks - a boy against an NCAA Division I prospect. Jackson remained a post player his sophomore year, finishing the season with averages of 16 points and eight rebounds a game as LBJ completed a 28-4 campaign. He moved out on the wing beginning his junior season and exploded, leading LBJ to its best season yet. Jackson averaged 23.5 points, 12 rebounds and three blocks a game as the Jaguars finished at 32-5, losing in -the state semifinals to eventual champion Dallas Kimball, 61-52. That game is still on the minds of many Texans. McShane says it was thought of as the final because it pitted what was considered the two best teams in the state against one another. Kimball junior Jayson Walton, rated one of the top 25 seniors in the country a year later and now a fellow Big Ten rookie at Minnesota, squared off against Jackson. "I knew they had a good ballclub, and he was the catalyst of the team," Walton says. "By far he was the best player on the team, and probably one of the better players to come out-of the Austin area. It was a clash between a couple of the top players in the state. "From the scouting report when we were going to play those guys, if we stopped him, we would win the ballgame. So that says a lot for him ... what kind of athlete he is, what kind of player he is." Although Jackson had a solid 18- point, 10-rebound type game, the loss was hard to take. "I think we just took them a little lightly," he says. "They came out on us, and it was hard to come back on a good team. It was a close game until the end of the fourth quarter. We started giving up, I guess." The Jaguars stormed through the competition again Jackson's senior year, streaking to 28 consecutive victories en route to a 31-2 record. But the year, and the streak, ended with a two-point loss in the area championship to a club that LBJ defeated earlier in the season. Jackson again had a stellar U.. Former Michigan coach Bill Frieder calls Texas "a big untapped resource" of basketball talent. There has always been an abundance of very good basketball players - Clyde Drexler and Spud Webb, to name a couple - but the amount of talent coming out of the state recently has been amazing. Larry Johnson, LaBradford Smith and Shaquille O'Neal are part of the new breed of Texas athlete. "Every good Division I ballclub has a Texas player on their roster," Walton says. "So that goes to show you that Texas is steadily rising as far as basketball is concerned." Unfortunately for prospective hoopsters, Texas has and always will be a football state. And although basketball is growing in popularity, the fact remains that it still plays second fiddle to the pigskin. Oh, the Texas college basketball crowds are comparable in size to other parts of the country. But football will forever, it sometimes seems, be No. 1 with fans and the media. For that reason, much of the local high school talent looks elsewhere when it comes time for college. Of the five players mentioned above, only Drexler stayed in state, to play for Houston. Southwest Conference basketball does not get the recognition it needs to draw the talent necessary to increase its competitiveness, thereby attracting more top players. When kids look for a college, they look for two things: exposure and competition. And none of the Texas schools adequately fit the bill. "I think the conference is gonna have to change," McShane says. "Seniors who are really good think exposure, NBA. Now we know only one, two percent make it, but the schools back east show the TV contracts, the arenas, the exposure. Those things turn a kid's head. "I think in a few years the Southwest Conference will be a small church league. (Texas) A&M, Texas, Houston will align themselves with another conference, and the TV package will come." The in-state coaches themselves are another problem. They seemingly don't recruit Texas natives as hard as out-of-state coaches do, for whatever reason. Some assume the kids will stay; other coaches think the kids are definitely leaving; still more feel there are other players that they have a better chance at landing. Jackson knew all this, but he didn't have any worries. He already had an idea where he was headed for college. As early as the 10th grade, Jackson had told McShane that he wasn't going to stay home and play for Texas - he just wanted to get away from home. The recruiters began to come hard the summer between his junior and senior seasons. But as he listened to their overtures, there was one school always on his mind. Although he downplays how strongly he felt about it, his parents say it is a dream come true for him to be there now. That place, of course, is the University of Michigan. U.. His family and coach say Jackson has always been a Michigan fan. No one is sure when it started, and there are many theories as to why. But one thing that is certain is that he has been a Wolverine at heart for a long time. The explanation Jackson gives is that he was a Michigan football fan. Not so much of the team, but - like many youngsters across the country - of the helmets. So Jackson began to watch whenever the Wolverines were on TV. He fell in love with the team, and had his heart set on coming here, his parents say. Not quite so, says Jackson. "It was a school that I wanted to look into, but I didn't know anything about it to want to go there." At any rate, his parents began to look at the school. One of Ray Sr.'s fellow coaches at LBJ was a lady by the name of Diane Wiley. Wiley, conveniently, payed on the women's team at Michigan from 1981-85. When Jackson was a sophomore, Ray Sr. asked Wiley whether she knew anybody involved with the Michigan men's team. She did, but her acquaintances were affiliated with the Bill Frieder era, which was about to come to an end. It was a start, though, and throughout the recruiting process, his parents kept Michigan in the back of their minds. "A lot of people said he had wanted Michigan because they had won a national championship," Ray Sr. says. "But Ray was in love with Michigan before.... I don't know where that came from, but he's always been in love with it." Fisher, fresh off his NCAA triumph, first saw Jackson play in a shootout in Houston that summer before his senior year. "We just said, 'Boy, oh, boy! He's really good,"' Fisher recalls. And Michigan's recruitment of Jackson began. Gladys remembers the Michigan coaching staff's home visit with her son. Fisher and then-assistant Mike Boyd showed up an hour earlier than expected. They saiu they could come back, but Gladys wouldn't let them: "I said, 'No! Ray would be too upset if that happened. This is the visit he's looked forward to the most."' Jackson says all his home visits went well. But there had to be something special about this one, and about Jackson's trip to Ann Arbor. Because that November, during the early signing period, Jackson said no to Georgetown and Arkansas and became the third recruit in Fisher's class-to-end-all classes. U.. By the time Ray Jackson got to Ann Arbor, he had practically been forgotten. His four fellow newcomers had played all-star games and AAU summer ball around the country together, while he was home in Texas. He was a good player, one of the top 100 'It's like I don't even want the recognition. ... I just need my chance. If I prove myself, then everything will come.' - Ray Jackson seniors in the nation. But when your fellow rookies are all in the top 12 or 15, you tend to get less recognition. That was all right for Jackson. He had his share of notoriety in high school, and was willing to let others face the pressure of the national media. What did bother him was speculation about Fisher possibly redshirting him for the season. "Where's he going to play?" people said. "Michigan has four super rookies joining a team that lost only Demetrius Calip. Might as well save Jackson a year of eligibility while he improves his game." What those people didn't know was just how hard Jackson would work, and how hard he would play. They didn't know he was willing to step into a uiimited role and do everything he uld - in that role - to help the Wolverines win. "It's like I don't even want the recognition," Jackson says. "First, I just net a aiy chance. If I prove myse men everything will come. . i ien players) are gonna have to -e ourselves eventually, since its >4 est players that play." i . 9 AP PHOTO Jackson (r), shown here in the regional championship game against San Antonio John Jay, led his team to the state semifinals in his junior year. 7th grade campaign, pumping in 23 points, grabbing 9.2 rebounds, handing out six assists, and blocking three shots per contest. He was named MVP in Central Texas and first team all- state. His contribution to Jaguar basketball is one McShane will not soon forget. "He could shoot it, pass it, handle the ball," McShane says. "He brought every skill you look for in a player. ... He just had a great attitude and demeanor for the game. He would do anything that he felt we needed to do to win. If we needed a passer, he would pass. If we needed a point guard, he would play point. If I needed somebody that could score, he'd go to the blocks and score. "My problem was, if I had five of him, no problem. He could play so many different positions. "I've said since when he was a junior - of course, I didn't tell him this - that I think he's one of the best players ever to come out of Austin." "I think he was pleased with the pressure being off of him," Gladys says. "When he came home just before official practice started, to see him and to hear him talk about the other four guys was fantastic - the relationship they had at the time, and the closeness. "To nii, winning is the main thing, and if it takes the other guys to help do that, he's a team player, he's a very unselfish player. "I think he feels like his time is gonna come, and if somebody else is in the spotlight right now, then that's fine with him." After a couple weeks of practices, Fisher knew Jackson would contribute. Although he used him sparingly the first few games, Fisher liked what he saw. Jackson began to average nearly 15 minutes a contest. He contributed what he could in terms of statistics, but he gave his all in other areas. Crashing the boards. Running the floor. Playing tough 'D'. "He's played consistently hard. I think if you say, 'What does he do best?' (I'd answer) he competes really hard," Fisher says. "You couple that with his terrific - and I'm getting into what others are saying - athleticism - he can run, he can jump, and he is slowly but surely learning how to play. He still makes mistakes, but he is learning how to play." . Jackson had become the perfect fifth wheel, so Fisher rewarded him with a starting position Feb. 9, and he has been on the floor at the beginning of every game since. He still has his shortcomings, but he has endeared himself to his coach by his willingness to'play a limited role and let his teammates share the spotlight, while quietly going about and improving his game.. Part of that process includes gaining more confidence in his play. Jackson knows he has the ability, but has been very cautious of making mistakes when he is out on the floor. As a result, his offense has suffered. He frequently passes up open jumpers, a shot definitely in his repertoire but one he has not felt comfortable taking. "In high school, I could put it up," Jackson says. "I mean, (coach McShane) knew I wasn't gonna put up a crazy shot or nothing like that. ... I'm starting to get a little more- confidence." "He's an inconsistent perimeter shooter because he's always played where he can slash and shoot it off the drive," Fisher says. "He's never had to just spot up and hit that perimeter jump shot. So he's been a slasher, a dunker and that kind of thing out of high school. And now he's gotta take that perimeter game to the next level. "I don't expect him to be our leading scorer, but I would say from an offensive standpoint he's gotta be able to be a threat. There can't be five defenders guarding everybody but him. "If you continue to go from where we are right now, we got a team that we could have five guys averaging anywhere from 10 to 18 points a game. And I'd like that." Once that confidence comes, and Jackson is sure enough of himself to know that he can make a few mistakes without getting yanked, Wolverine fans will get to see the full extent of his abilities. "I think in the next two years, he's just really gonna elevate, and the confidence factor is just gonna come," McShane says. "I think he's a definite NBA-level player. Of course, Michigan's got about four of them! ... I think he's gonna stay (in school four years), and his stock will really go up. "He'll be a (Glen) Rice-type player. He can stroke it, he can play inside, he's big and strong and still growing. The coach up there does a great job, ol' Fisher. He knows that Ray's a young guy, probably a little younger than the rest of those freshmen. I think it's just a matter of him maturing, and hey, when that confidence gets there, and he gets the green light, then something's going (to happen). I really think he's just gonna kinda just 'BOOM!' The tools are there." But until that boom takes place, don't expect to see or hear much about Ray Jackson. Unless you're at Crisler Arena watching him grab offensive rebounds or saving balls from going out of bounds. "I think playing at (summer basketball) camps like Nike would've helped my game a lot, and given me a lot more media attention," Jackson says. "But I think I did pretty good without it,"he adds. "It took a lot of hard work to get where I am.... I feel pretty good about myself." ae 0 PRIZES! come in costume, come as you are! .996-9191FREE ..: MASKS 33gSo& BEADS -0 (Hey, Mister! Throw me something!) .Aons a la Louisiane! Q (c'est Mardi Gras, cher!) SRAITE leigan '9 featurig- 1990 World Figure Skating Champion Jill rep ary U HEY WOLVERIN ES!' COME CLEAN1 YOUR ACT {_ WT 1AC IKl. 1 regular washer FREE!! value $1.00 Emit 1 per coupon) 1AVA. ,a4# A Fat Tuesday Party at Ashley's! 'V TUESDAY, March 3 n £nA W1 K y _91 A A R i I