The Michigan Daily - Sports Monday - October 19, 1 Q&R Bowie -Page 3 John Niyo A-MA ------,16 Bowie ponders Kentucky's past, New Jersey's present, Michigan's future Fourteen years ago, Sam Bowie came to the University of Kentucky. The 7-foot-1 center from Lebanon, Penn., had all the tools to become a great player. He won the 1979-80 Southeast- ern Conference Freshman of the Year award, and his sophomore season in- cluded more of the same. He aver- aged over 17 points and nine re- bounds a game. However, a promis- *ing junior season was shot down when Bowie suffered a stress fracture in his left shin. The bone did not heal as ex- pected, and Bowie missed two straight seasons. Bowie rejoined the team for the 1983-84 season and went on to have a productive year. After the season, Bowie was drafted No. 2 overall by Portland. He had a good rookie season and was named to the NBA all-rookie squad. Leg injuries once again hit him in the 1985-86 season, and he would only play 63 games in the next four years. Daily sports writer Brett Johnson talked to Bowie at the Pistons-Nets game Friday night at Crisler Arena. Daily: The Nets are coming off of their first playoff appearance in six years. What are your goals for the upcoming season? Bowie: Well, I think our ulti- mate goal is to get back into the playoffs. It's been a long time since this organization has been accus- tomed to being in the playoffs. The fact that we have Chuck Daly, he brings some immediate exposure and confidence to this ball club. We not only want to get into the playoffs, but we want to go ahead and advance once we get in there. D: Last year the team had some internal problems with some players and Coach Fitch. What do you think Coach Daly will bring to the team? B: I don't think you'll have the * disciplinary actions that will be needed this year. The fact that the players respect Coach Daly will erase all those type of confrontations that we had last year. D: Turning to your college days, you were highly recruited out of high school and were part of a very good recruiting class with Derrick Hord, Charles Hurt, and Dirk Min- niefield. What types of pressures were on you to make an immediate impact on the University of Ken- tucky program? B: Well, when I came out of Lebanon High School, I was one of the highly touted so-called scholastic kids in the country. When I chose to go to the University of Kentucky, I went to a school that had a lot of tradition. I was going to get a lot of exposure. That school prepared me to go to the next stepping stone which was to play professional ball. And I've had some unfortunate injuries in my career, but I've been able to bounce back from them. I've never been a guy that kind of tries to sit back and say 'why me?' It occurred, you deal with it and go on. D: You came off a great season your sophomore year and then you ran into your first leg injury. What type of mental and physical pro- cesses did you have to go through to overcome this? B: From the mental perspective, I think you deal with it much more than the physical aspect of it. Physically, you know the bone is going to heal up. The leg will get to the point where you can go back out and play. But the mental perspective, each and every time you run up and down the court, you're just wondering if this is going to be the next time the leg re-fractures. That was the toughest part for me, dealing with the mental aspect. D: Did you ever feel like you just wanted to give up? B: I'd be lying to you if I didn't say there were times when I started doubting whether or not it was really ' meant to be. I had done everything the orthopedic doctors had wanted me to do and yet, each time I'd have an- other setback. So, there were times that I wanted to call it quits, but I just think that inner strength that I had just wouldn't allow me to do so. D: When you came back in 83- 84 for your senior year, what were your goals for that season personally and from a team perspective? B: My goals were primarily to stay healthy, for one year, and win a championship. I was able to achieve 50 percent of that. I did stay healthy. We got to the Final Four and we were beaten by a very good Georgetown team. It was probably the highlight of my career, making it to the Final Four. D: Speaking of the University of Kentucky, and the play inside with you and Mel Turpin, there is a sim- ilar situation here at Michigan with Juwan Howard and Chris Webber. What types of things did you two Co to make it harder on other teams with the size factor? B: Well, we tried to take advan- tage of the size that we had and get some easy buckets down low. I'm real familiar with the Michigan per- sonnel, and they've got great front- line people who have the same ad- vantages that we had back in those days. And I think the fact that you have a guy like Webber, who is a big jumper, you can get a lot of easy lobs and a lot of, so-called dunks, put-backs. Not only myself, but I think everyone expects big things from those types of kids this upcom- ing year. D: What type of chance do you think they have to get back to the title game and how hard do you think that will be for them? B: I think it will be much more difficult to get back than the first time around, due to the fact that they won't be able to sneak up on any- body. You have a very talented group, and I'd like to think that they'll get an opportunity to get back there and get a championship ring. But the way the money has been passed out on the professional ranks, realistically speaking, I doubt if all those kids will stay in for four years. D: Back to you and Mel Turpin for a minute, you were one of the first groups to be called the "Twin Towers". How did that come about? B: Well, I guess the fact that we were both seven-footers, and some how, some way, a reporter came up with the idea that we were the so- called 'Twin Towers'. We were being successful at the double low- post that we had. I could play high- post as well. We were feeding each other, so things worked out real well. D: What about the yearbook cover that had you two superimposed with the two dorm towers on UK's campus? B: Yeah, that was kind of unique. It was a publicity stunt, and we got a lot of exposure over that. D: Last year, Michigan had Midnight Madness for the first time. What type of effect did it have when 23,000 fans showed up at Rupp Arena to support UK at Midnight Madness? B: Well, it gives you an extra in- centive to go out when the season starts and play that much harder. The fact that 23,000 people would come to watch you practice at 12 o'clock at night is an accomplishment within itself. D: Turning quickly to the Olympics, you were on the 1980 Olympic team that boycotted the Games in Moscow. I know it must have been a huge disappointment not to get to play. What are your thoughts, reflecting back, on it? B: I was extremely excited when I was notified that I had made the 1980 Olympic team, and then when we were notified that President Carter and the administration was gonna boycott the Olympic Games due to the fact that the political world got involved with the athletic world, it was disappointing. We had some great guys on that team - Isiah Thomas, Rolando. Blackman, Mark Aguirre - super guys. And I thought we had a team that could definitely win a gold medal. D: Finally, last year the pros got to play in the Olympics in Barcelona for the first time. What do you think of the pros being able to play there, and if you ever got a shot, would you like to do that? B: Well, I'd like to see us go back to the old format where the col- legiate kids represent us in the Olympics. After all, in the last fifty years we've only been defeated twice, and once was in controversy in re- gards to the '72 games. I think the collegiate kids are what it is all about. Jordan's not a god after all? You bet. Fifty-seven thousand dollars is pretty much a drop in the bucket when you're talking about a man named Jordan. That's Jordan, as in Michael Jordan. That's Jordan, which rhymes with warden. Which brings to mind a prison, which is where he belongs. Well, not exactly. But, for the last time, he is certainly not the saint that people have been making him out to be for so many years. Please, please don't be like Mike. Enough already. So what if he might be the most exciting player ever to lace up a pair of hightops. So what if he can do things with a basketball that no one - no one - else can. So what if his team has now won back-to-back titles. (That was the knock on Jordan a few years back, if you'll remember, be- cause his team couldn't win the big game. Jordan gets his 63, the Bulls still find a way to lose. In Jordan's defense, though, Magic Johnson, who won five rings, never had to worry about Granville Waiters jumping center for his team. Never.) But so what if he might very well be the best player ever to play the game. He is still no better than your average superstar when it comes to being a role model. Watch Michael Jordan, worship Craig Hodges. Not the other way around. "" See, we all knew there had to be some good reason why he wasn't at the White House with his teammates to receive congratulations for the Chicago Bulls' NBA title. Eleven of the world champions were there, one was not. Where was Mike? Playing poker. And losing big. His original defense was that he gave the money - in the form of a check which surfaced when Jim "Slim" Bouler turned up dead - as a loan to build a golf driving range. Now he says it was just a gambling debt. He goes before a grand jury this week to explain his story, and the $57,000 check. Hey. You win some, you lose some. That's Jordan's reasoning. But all those kids - the kids who drink Gatorade even when they're not thirsty just because they want to Be Like Mike - those kids lose big, too. Their role model is standing up the Commander-in-Chief, hand- ing over money to a drug dealer. Nice message to the little ones, Mike. Work hard on your game and maybe you too can make enough money to keep a convicted drug dealer on the payroll. Air Jordan by Nike. Just Do It. At least he could have won money from the drug dealer. That would have been a little better. These newest allegations are not a shot out of the dark, though. It's not like Michael Jordan all of the sudden transformed into a selfish man with an amazing talent. He's been guilty on both counts since he turned pro in 1984. This is the same man who after an NBA Finals game told reporters that he simply had to thank his "supporting cast." Nice tact, Mike. Way to be a team player. This is the same man who, when asked about his three-point shooting as compared to Clyde Drexler's in the NBA Finals in June, responded with this gem: "He's a better three-point shooter than I choose to be." A Detroit writer came up with a good rebuttal to that, saying that Jordan was "a bigger egomaniac than Drexler chooses to be." See NIYO, Page 7 .. ______________ I I MICHIGAN BEAT MINNESOTA! Come watch your favorite team on a big screen TV via satellite! U of M games and Lions games are our priority. 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