The Michigan Daily - Sports Monday - February 8, 1993 - Page 3 !Staudt The Raycom announcer discusses Big Ten basketball, the Fab Five, and football recruiting John Niyo Blame It On Niyo Tm Staudt has been a Raycom bas- ketball commentator for the past three years. Staudt has been a sports anchor in mid-Michigan for over twenty years. He worked at the CBS affiliate in Lan- sing in the 70s. He now is the sports anchor at NBC affiliate WILX in Lan- sing and Jackson. This year he has covered several Big Ten games for Raycom including Michigan at Minne- sota and Michigan at Purdue. Daily Sports Writer Jeremy Strachan ques- tioned Staudt about Michigan athletics and this year's Big Ten basketball sea- son. Daily: Which Big Ten teams have impressed you the most so far this sea- son? Staudt: Michigan andIndiana. They are clearly head-and-shoulders above the rest in terms of talent. I don't think the league from top to bottom is as nearly as strong as everyone said it is throughallof thehype. Ithink those two teams are as strong as anyone in the country. After (Michigan and Indiana) the rest of them struggle both home and away. I've seen better Big Ten confer- ences from top to bottom than the one this year. I don't think Indiana has enough depth at this point. I still think if they have one guy get hurt (they're in trouble). I think Michigan might beat them yet. The only thing about Michi- gan is, are they going to lose one they shouldn't lose. That's the intrigue in February coming up. D: How many teams do you think the Big Ten will send to the NCAA Tournament this season? S: I don't know. But I don't think any more than two of them (Michigan and Indiana) will go very far. Michigan State has some pretty good talent when they play well, but the problem is they don't play well very often. They prob- ably have as much talent as any of the other ten clubs but whether or not they can harness that all together, I don't see them making it past a game or two. Iowa is the same way. I don't see them going far. They have a couple of good players, but them making any kind of a serious run is a different story. On the road, and at a neutral site it's another month away, it's hard to tell what (the Big Ten) will be like then. In a single game knockout, they could lose their first game. With Michi- ganlastyear, you didn'tknow whatthey were going to do. They managed to get a little momentum going and ended up going all the way to the final game as freshmen. In a best-of-seven series, teams are more predictable, but any one of those clubs could have a bad day and that would be it. D: Whoare the teams that you could see as finalists this year? S: (Last week) I liked North Caro- lina. I think Kentucky is a good shot. I think it's going tobea good tournament. There are teams thatyou don't really know how good they are, like Nevada- Las Vegas, because we don'thearmuch aboutthem. They've only lostonegame. Are they any good? It's hard to tell. The west coast teams don't get as much exposure. You hear about the Big East, and those clubs all beat each other back and forth so it's hard to pin one of them down. I think it's hard to find ateam that you say well that's the team to beat in the NCAA tournament. Good teams seem to get the farthest along, but then it gets to be a real crapshoot from there. Kentucky has a lot of talent, and Michi- gan has a lot of talent, and Indiana has a lot of talent. D: How would you characterize this year's Wolverine squad as opposed to last year's NCAA finalists? S: Well, I think they are a much better team this year because they have much more depth. They're used to play- ing with each other and I think they realize what it takes to do what they have to do. They seem much more mature on the road. I think the differ- ence with them in my judgment is on the road. Theyjustlook like they area much more mature road club tome. That's not to say they're going to go as far as they did a year ago. I thought that was a remarkable achievement last year. But there are a lot of other factors besides talent that play into it. I don't see a game on their schedule the rest of the way that I would predict them to lose - including the Feb. 14 game at Bloomington. I'm not saying there going to win it, but I wouldn't want to predict them to lose it because they have so much talent. I think they're a better team than Indiana in terms of talent, but whether or not that translates into winning a championship or not is hard to tell. D: Who would you say is in the running for first team all-Big Ten hon- ors this year? S: Well, I'd have (Indiana's Calbert) Cheaney and (Michigan's Chris) Webber without any question. To me, those two are by far the best players in the league. I don't think anybody else comes close. Then after that, I figure Alan Henderson of Indiana I'd put on there because (Cheaney and Henderson) are clearly super players. I'm not sold on (Purdue's Glenn) Robinson. I think he's a great individual talent, he would be a first team player. The problem with Robinson is they have him trying to do so many things, if he could just stay in one position and play there (it would be better). Sol guess Robinson, Henderson, Cheaney, Webber, and after that there are alot of guys with talent. (Michigan's Jalen) Rose is a possibility but then he scores five points in a game (against Ohio State). Certainly Rose is a possi- bility. (Michigan State's) Shawn Respert is apossibility. Respertis a very talented player when he's playing under control. He and Rose are kind of like that. I think those two guys will vie for the last position. D: Comment, if you will, on how the death of Chris Street affected Iowa, the Big Ten, and the nation this season. S: Well, I go with the party line there. It's certainly a tragedy. How that will affect them down the road remains to be seen. I think kids are resilient to endless grief. Thekids aresadand they'll miss him, and they'll miss him dearly over the days of the spring and summer. In terms of how he helped them as a player it's hard to tell how much they'll drop. With him-I don't think they would have come in higher then third place. They still may finish third if they beat the other seven teams. Emotionally, I don't think they'll be scarred because they're (mourning) in a way that's not maudlin. It's like any tragedy, everybody stops and reflects about it. The kids I've talked to: (Michigan's James) Voskuil, (Michi- gan State's) Eric Snow, and Mark Davidson from Illinois, are really hit hard because they knew him so well (from last summer's Big Ten European tour). They reflect on it, but then after a while, you've got school, you've got games, you've got everything else and your mind can only take so much. I think in the slow moments some of those memories will come back and guys will react to them differently in their own ways. D: Tuesday's Michigan-Michigan State game has been talked about all week, comment on the game. S: Well, everybody says it wasn't very wellplayed. ButI think that's what happens when you have an intense ri- valry like that, when there is so much pressure and emotion on the line. There are going to be mistakes, just as in any other game. But I don't think there were to many surprises in terms of who won, and that it was close. Michigan is a little better team. D: What did you think about the free throw shooting? S: Well, that's killed Michigan State all year. You know, the national free throw shooting percentage is down for whatever reason. It's down as low as it has been from 1958, according to the Detroit Free Press, and Michigan State is doing its part to keep it down there. It's notthe first game this has cost them. If they could have made theirfree throws it would've given them a better chance to win that game and a couple of others. D: And aforecast for theMarch 20th game in Ann Arbor between Michigan and Michigan State? S: It will probablyjustbe exactly the same. It will be hard-fought. You know, the visiting team won both games last year and since the Fab Five came, the visitors in the series are now 3-0. So you are probably gonna have another very close game. And it's one of those things where whoever plays ;t little bit better with fewer mistakes is gonna win. On paper Michigan is abetter team, but it doesn't always happen that way. So it will be fun to watch. There will be a lot of fan emotion and playeremotionjustas there has been in the first three. There'll be a lot of mistakes probably. But the team that shoots the best probably will win. D: Switching frombasketball to foot- ball: the top midwest recruit, East Lan- sing's Randy Kinder, decided to attend Notre Dame last week. Your thoughts on that, please. S: Well, he's the best high school football player I've seen by a mile and I've been covering it for 25 years. But that doesn't always translate into a su- perstar in college. He's got all of the tools. It's a tough break for Michigan State, because he is a hometown kid. And they certainly needed him more than theother four (Michigan, Stanford, Penn State and Notre Dame), because the other four all went to bowls last year and they probably will be ranked real high next year. I think one thing that really put it over the top for Notre Dame was that they had an opening at that position. Timing is everything. D: Comment on Michigan's foot- ball recruiting class. S: In my lifetime Michigan is never going to have a bad (recruiting class). It's well organized and the tradition gives them quality athletes. They have national recognition, national reputa- tion. Their recruitng class every year is not a predominantly Michigan-based recruiting class, because they can get better players nationwide. It's to their credit that they can maintain that level of excellence every year. I'm never surprised when they get all of those guys. Webber, Robinson put rivalry on shelf The rivalry was just a sidelight, supposedly. Basketball, both sides vehe- mently attested aftwerward, is a team game. Five to a team, not one-on-one. That has been Steve Fisher's most monumental task the last year-and-a-half - trying to get the focus off individuals, and onto the team "where it belongs." He cringed every time he heard the words "Fab Five" last fall. After victories he stresses the good help-defense, not the dunks. But this was Chris Webber vs. Glenn Robinson. It is a rivalry that is hard to brush under the rug. The two best players from the high school class of'91. They traded dunks in the McDonald's All-American game that Spring. Some say Webber, the more powerful one, is better. Some say Robinson. There is no consensus. In January, Webber had 22 points, 14 rebounds and four blocks against Purdue. Robinson had 30 points and eight rebounds. Robinson-Webber (Part I) was a draw. This was Part II. Reporters lobbed questions from the back of the press room Sunday afternoon, when the dust had settled, many of them asking about the Webber-Robinson matchup. Fisher couldn't dodge them all. "They both lived up to their billing today," he said, begrudgingly, after Michigan's hard-fought 84-76 victory over Purdue Sunday. Then Michigan's coach added this gem: "Glenn Robinson was Glenn Robinson. He was sensational." Thank you, Steve. The final stats had Glenn Robinson, playing the partofGlenn Robinson quite well, winning the duel. He pumped in 31 points on the afternoon, hitting 10 of 17 shots from the field, including all five of his three-point attempts. "He was rainin' 'em in from all over the place," Fisher said. In between showers, there were also five rebounds, two assists and a steal in Robinson's 38 minutes on the floor. Webber, meanwhile, got off to a slow start. He rarely got the ball down low. Other Wolverines, like Jimmy King and Juwan Howard, were scoring easily, so Webber didn't want to force the issue. The Team, remember. But it was, by Chris Webber standards, shaping up to be quite an off-day. And the frustration showed a bit in the second half. Webber came off the bench after a timeout without his protective face mask that he wears to shield a broken nose. Anything to get back on track, he thought. He had been stuck on six points for what seemed like an eternity. But losing the mask wasn't the answer. He knew it. And the coaching staff let him know right away. "Yeah, I tried to go without it," Webber admitted after the game, "but then Coach (Fisher) talked some sense into me. Hopefully, I don't have to wear it much longer." Mask affixed once again, Webber finally did catch fire. A jump hook in the lane fell. So did an off-balance prayer in traffic after an offensive rebound. Then he broke free for a pair of monster dunks - one a reverse on a fastbreak, the other a powerful one-hander in the middle of a crowd of black and gold jerseys. When it was all over, he had finished with 14 points on 6-of-8 shooting. He also added four rebounds, two assists and a steal. Great players will get their points, even on a "bad" day. And the rivalry? Give the edge to Robinson after the twomeetings this season (very likely the the only two times they will meet in college), but don't forget to note that Webber's team won both times. And don't forget to mention that Robinson's supporting cast pales in comparison with Webber's. "He can score a lot,"' Webber said, before offering some exaggerated parameters. "When you take 70 percent of your team's shots you're gonna score a lot. I don't want to take anything away from Glenn, because he's a great player... "I'm just glad we don't have anybody on this team taking 70 percent of our shots." Touch6, Mr. Webber. But he is exactly right. Circle a bunch of Line Darners and Matt Painters around Webber and he probably throws in 40 and grabs 20 boards. Give Robinson a Jimmy King and a Juwan Howard and his numbers probably fall back into the stratosphere. Someday they will meet on more even terms. They have in the past - in summer leagues -and they certainly will in the future. The NBAbeckons both young men. So whatthey're saying makes sense. Forget the rivalry, fornow. Call itadraw. Whatever. And wait for the rematch in the NBA - one or both may jump to the pros after this season. They can go one-on-one in the NBAAII-Star Game some February afternoon a few years from now. In the meantime, they will shake hands and just worry about winning games. 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