The Michigan Daily/New Student Edition-Sports -Thursday, September 10, 1992- Page 3 Rookies lead 'M' to Final Four Duke ends Michigan's fabulous NCAA Tournament run John Niyo by John Niyo Daily Basketball Writer When the pairings for the NCAA Tournament were announced, Michigan coach Steve Fisher must have felt a sense of dejk vu. The Wolverines earned the sixth seed in the Southeast Regional, and were sent to Atlanta - the site where Fisher coached his first game at the Michigan helm. He won that game, and the next five, to capture the 1989 NCAA Championship. So when Michigan's name ap- peared opposite Temple in the Atlanta bracket last spring, and a possible Sweet Sixteen berth in Lexington, Ky., loomed on the hori- zon like in 1989, Fisher had to won- der if lightning would strike twice. It did. The Wolverines put away a frus- tratingly patient Temple squad in its first game, 73-66. After the Owls put together a 12- 0 run to take a four-point lead mid- way through the second half, rookie guard Jalen Rose took over. He drove the lane and banked in a pair of one-handed jumpers, then put Michigan ahead to stay with a 3- pointer from the left wing. Rose fin- ished with a game-high 19 points. Jimmy King and Juwan Howard each added 15, as the first-year play- ers passed their first tournament test. "People talked about how Temple had more experience than we did," Webber said. "But we never worried about that. Heart and talent win ballgames." * U U Michigan had expected to face the No. 3 seed, Arizona, in the sec- ond round, but No. 14-seeded East Tennessee State pulled off the first big upset of the tournament. That was just fine with the Wolverines, who manhandled the sharp-shooting Buccaneers, 102-90. Webber and Howard were too much for ETSU inside, combining for 53 points. "It was kind of scary," ETSU forward Rodney English said. "They just turned around and dropped it in." Oklahoma State was the next ob- stacle for Michigan, when the two squared off in the Sweet Sixteen in Lexington. The Cowboys came into the game fresh off a sizzling second- round performance against Tulane. But Michigan overcame tremen- dous foul trouble and won, 75-72, thanks mostly to junior center Eric Riley. With Webber and Juwan Howard customary spectacular game, scoring 25 and snaring 11 rebounds. U The next game provided the Wolverines with a much anticipated rematch against Ohio State - one of only two teams (Duke was the other) on Michigan's schedule whom it failed to defeat. A loss late in the season in Columbus - a game Michigan felt it let slip away - was still fresh in the Wolverines' minds. And when OSU went on an 11-0 run that put it up 61-57 with four minutes to play, Michigan looked like it was going to let it happen all over again. "At that point," Webber said after the game, "I started having flash- backs of Columbus. We just looked at each other and said, 'Let's not let it happen again."' They didn't. Webber grabbed an offensive rebound and dunked to tie the score at 61. Then everyone held their breath while OSU forward Chris Jent's shot at the buzzer car- omed off the rim and sent the game into overtime. In the extra period, Michigan regained control to win, 75-71. Rookie Ray Jackson held OSU All-American Jim Jackson in check all afternoon, and Webber led the way offensively with 23 points and 11 rebounds. U To the surprise of nearly every- one, Michigan paired up against Cincinnati in one of the NCAA semifinals. A team of first-year players vs. a team from the Great Midwest Conference. Neither was supposed to make it this far. The Wolverines battled through a sloppy first half and took control in the second half by using their size advantage inside. And the five starters got another boost from a reserve. This time it was forward James Voskuil, who came off the bench with a crucial nine-point performance. King led Michigan with 17 points. Webber added 16 and 11 boards. Finally came the rematch with Duke. After a close first half, Duke All- American Christian Laettner re- bounded from a seven-turnover first half and Michigan lost its grip, as Duke won, 71-51. "We didn't come here to be in second place, but that's what we have to settle for now," Rose said, as he sat in a dejected Michigan lockerroom. Rose hadn't been able to rescue the Wolverines like he had been do- ing all tournament. Nothing worked for Michigan in the second half - it shot 9-for-30 and scored just 20 points. "We let an opportunity slip through our hands," Rose added. "It wasn't Duke. It was Michigan." But it was Duke on the victory stand, celebrating a second consecu- tive national title, and it wasn't Michigan. The tears flowed, with the small consolation of next year. "We had a great season," Webber said. "There will never be a fresh- man class to do that again." I QsolloG a %oll msyv Frosh 'shock the world' in unbelievable season 4 Did it all really happen? The Fab Five? The Final Four? It doesn't seem possible - even now, months later - but yeah, well, it really did. Every spine-tingling minute of last year's amazing Michigan basketball season happened. Believe it. But back on Oct. 15, when Michigan kicked off fall practice and when "the best recruiting class ever" was introduced to a Midnight Madness crowd of 3,000, nobody could have foreseen all this. The Fab Five? The, Final Four? No, not just yet. Maybe next year. The five rookies were impressive, without a doubt. They brought the house down that rainy October night, with a collection of slick passes and thunderous dunks. They certainly didn't play much like newcomers. And come to think of it, they didn't really look like they were only 18 years old. Take Chris Webber and Juwan Howard. They were men among boys in high school, talent-wise and physically. Six-foot-9, 240 pounds each. And they were agile. So certainly, the team would be better - better than the 1990-91 squad, which finished eighth in the Big Ten and 14-15 overall after a first-round NIT loss. But how much better depended on how fast they matured. Maybe by the season's end things would start to come together, fans said rather sheepishly. Maybe these Wolverines could make some noise come tour- nament time. Well, they did just that. And our ears are still ringing. The noise began to crescendo in December. The rest of the nation had heard rumors about what was happening in Ann Arbor. The Fab Five, as they had already been dubbed, were making an im- pact. Word was out that three of the five were now starting - Howard, Webber, and a kid by the name of Jalen Rose. Michigan was 4-0, lurking in the second ten of all those fickle national-ranking polls. They might be for real. On Dec. 14, as most of the Michigan student body took a break from studying for finals, those ru- mors about possible greatness erupted into a full-fledged scandal. Definite front-page material. Top-ranked Duke came to town, and the Blue Devils barely escaped from Crisler Arena into the snowy night with their defending-cham- pion bravado intact. 88-85. In over- time. A three-quarter court desper- ation shot by Webber at the end of regulation clanged off the front of the rim. Rose He was that close. So was Michigan. There were some warning signs of what was about to happen in that game early on. Webber skied for a rebound, snatching it away from - most notably - Christian Laettner, everybody's All-American. Laettner tried to slap the ball - Webber's ball - away as he landed. And Webber simply smiled at Laettner's feeble attempt. He smiled and shook his head. Not today. Not with us. We have something to prove. Webber said that he did have something to prove, as he talked about that December afternoon months later at the Final Four in Minneapolis. "That game," Webber explained, "I just wanted to show people that I could play, too. Laettner knew that. I just wanted to remind him on the court." Webber reminded him by scoring 27 points and grabbing 12 rebounds in front of a national television audience. Webber dunked. Webber dunked again. He laughed. He informed Laettner, "I just dunked on you on na- tional television." It was a message. Chris Webber could play, too. As well, if not better than most. And now the whole country knew. Meanwhile, "that Rose kid" proceeded to make a name for himself, too, with 18 second-half points - slashing, driving and scoring like he was the second-coming of Magic Johnson - in leading a comeback charge against Duke. Among those dazzled by the 6-foot-8 point guard's play was Duke's coach, Mike Krzyzewski, who commented after the game that Rose played "more like an eight-year NBA veteran than a college freshman." Howard was also a factor. He hounded Laettner into exhaustion, earn- ing the praise of his coach and teammates for an outstanding defensive game. And newcomer Jimmy King made all the highlight films as well, soar- ing above the rim and the Duke defense to grab a Jalen Rose alley-oop and slam it home. He landed, fist in the air, a big smile on his face. The crowd went crazy. In the end, though, Duke came out on top. The Blue Devils found a way, as champions are apt to do, to win the big game. Bobby Hurley hit a clutch three-pointer at one point, knocked in three straight free throws at another. Chris Webber fouled out just over a minute into overtime. There were plenty of reasons. But there were even more answers. Were the Fab Five as good as adver- tised? Was Michigan for real? Yes. Oh, yes. The wait was over. w .E °$ 1* saddled with four fouls for much ofIS the second half, Riley contributed 15 a!I points and 10 rebounds off theKENT MLE y bench. Michigan center Juwan Howard triumphantly holds up the netfrom Rupp Arena. The victory over Ohio State Jalen Rose turned in his now- earned the Wolverines a place in the NCAA Final Four. Blue basketball rides rollercoaster to third-place finish by John Niyo Daily Basketball Writer Michigan coach Steve Fisher and his Young Guns finished the regular season at 20-8, and tied with Michigan State for third in the Big Ten. Twenty wins. Five frosh starters. Not a bad year, huh? But the fun was only just beginning. The Wolverines went on to the NCAA Championship game, where a 71-51 loss to Duke snapped a five- game tournament streak. But while a loss to Duke ended Michigan's sea- son in April, an earlier defeat to the Blue Devils got its season going in December. It was only after the overtime thriller that the rollercoaster ride of a memorable season truly began for the 1991-92 Wolverines. Michigan passed its first Big Ten test, an 80-77 overtime win at Iowa, with flying colors. Jalen Rose led the way for the Wolverines with 34 points. But Michigan followed with a pair of poor showings, at Minnesota and at home against Purdue, dropping the team to 1-2 in the conference. The Wolverines bounced back to win three of the next four. They sandwiched victories against Illinois and Wisconsin around a road loss to Indiana. The streak finished with a spectacular 89-79 upset at Michigan State. The overtime win proved that Michigan was more than just the five first-year players. Junior Rob Pelinka came off the bench and sparked the second-half comeback against the rival Spartans. And in its usual erratic fashion, Michigan followed with an ugly loss on national television. Its embarrass- ing 13-point first half against Ohio State was too much to overcome, as the Buckeyes prevailed, 68-58. But the Wolverines squashed a hapless Northwestern squad, 81-58, to finish the first half of the confer- ence slate above .500 at 5-4. Then came the watershed game for Michigan's rookies. All five got the starting nod when Michigan traveled to South Bend to face Notre Dame. They responded with a domi- nating first half, and went on to win 74-65 victory. The five frosh started the next five games, beating Iowa again, paying back Minnesota, and cruising past Northwestern at Evanston. But Michigan State took the in- trastate rematch, stealing a 70-59 victory at Crisler. The ups and downs that frustrated coach Steve Fisher continued - some nights, his young Wolverines came to play; some nights, they didn't. Feb. 26 was one such night. Michigan students were on Spring Break, and the basketball team de- cided to take a vacation of its own, as an upstart Wisconsin team gave the 17th-ranked Wolverines a 96-78 thrashing in Madison. Michigan apparently learned its lesson, though, and the next game was a completely different story. The Wolverines were the better team on the court for most of the night against Ohio State in Columbus. But the eventual Big Ten champs took advantage of three straight Michigan turnovers late in the game to escape with the victory, 77-66. The Michigan players - the Fab Five in particular - would continu- ally point to that loss the rest of the way as the final lesson in their maturation. After Ohio State, the Wolverines shocked No. 2 Indiana, 68-60, led by Jimmy King's 18 points. They fol- lowed that with victories at Purdue and at home against Illinois to close out the season and ensure themselves a spot in the NCAA tournament. .J 1 --__ 1 , So (QrUF F 0 Ask -1 U SOU VEtNIRS.SPORTWEARAND MORE] _ | Another National Basketball Champion- nna ia -- - - - J ., '" ., " FREE GOLF LESSON WITH PURCHASE OF FULL SET WELL BEAT YOUR PRICE OR THE CLUBS ARE FREE " Indoor hitting net *Equipment rentals eFull club repair service available eGolf lessons available I ship? Another Rose Bowl? Get into the IC IGA N spirit with everything that's AMAIZING BLUE from Ulrich's...t-shirts * jackets ® o trash cans * glassware . flags " mugs prints * sweatshirts * hats sweaters neck ties * lamps 9 baby bottles * pens backpacks " stickers " and much more! i I __