The Michigan Daily-Sports Monday- February 15, 19Q ~'& 7+4, Ashe The late author and tennis great's interview with the Daily John Niyo Blame It On Niyo The late Arthur Ashe achieved fame in many ways, most notably as a tennis player. Winner of the U.S. Open in 1968 and Wimbledon in 1975, as well as many other tourna- ments, Ashe co-founded the Asso- ciation of Tennis Professionals (ATP). Following his tennis career, Ashe worked extensively, as an author and speaker, on the obstacles facing minority athletes. His three volume series, A Hard Road to Glory, is considered the definitive work on the history of the Black athlete. When the book was produced as a television movie, Ashe garnered an Emmy Award. This interview was originally published in the Sept. 16, 1991 edi- tion of the Daily, before Ashe pub- licly revealed he had AIDS. Daily: You talk a lot about Proposition 48, how athletes aim for the 700 on the SAT and how they should be aiming a little higher. Can you discuss that a little'? Ashe: Well, Prop 48 was a first attempt by the NCAA to reduce the exploitation of the Black athlete. Let's make no mistake, Prop 48 was aimed at Black male athletes. Zealous coaches would bring them in, knowing that the kids in many, many cases had no chance of gradu- ating. But in so doing, it (Prop 48) set as a Holy Grail an abominably low figure. Seven hundred is laugh- able, which is not to say that there are not some students who if they try very hard may have scored below 700 total on their SAT's, or around or just below a 2.0 grade point aver- age. And if they try very hard, yes 0 they might graduate in five years or so, maybe. But that is a very, very small minority. Put another way, for me the worst blow of all is that unspoken and unwritten in setting the mini- mum of 700 was the idea of setting a minimum that "even Black athletes could pass." And so now I have used several examples of minority high school student athletes, who when learning that they have taken the SAT exam and scored over 700 the first time, they jumped for joy. And I'm saying to myself, "What the f--k are they talking about here? What's going on here?" It's ridiculous. D: Michigan, which is generally well regarded for its academics, I re- call signed a recruit, and he got an 840. Now, that's great compared to 700, but an 840, they'd never look at it in the administration office other- wise. A: And that's the other irony to the situation. If you are a terrific ath- lete and minority and you score 701 on your SAT and you have a 2.0 grade point average you are among the most sought after people in the country. But if you are just an aver- age student, it doesn't matter whether you're a minority or not and you score 850 on your SAT and have a 2.5, you ain't getting into the University of Michigan. You have a lot of Black parents saying, "Wait a minute now. You are showering this kid who may have scored under 700 with all these scholarship offers and you know he ain't going to graduate. Now explain that." D: I guess people like Rumeal Robinson who came here and was Prop. 48 and they discover he was dyslexic, how much of an exception is he? A: He is an exception. Even Tony Rice was an exception. He scored 680 on his SAT and couldn't play football at Notre Dame as a freshman. But he has done well. You certainly can't use those two excep- tions, and there are very few, as ex- amples of what could happen if you, as John Chaney, once said, "give the kid a chance." I'm all for giving kids a chance, but I'd like to see them get their chances a little earlier. Let me put the problem another way, obviously looking at it from the standpoint of the Black student- athlete. In the 300 or so Division I schools in the NCAA, 200 or so.. have basketball and 100 super schools that field quality teams of both there are roughly 10,000 Black student-athletes in football and bas- ketball. Now if, as we hear in the American Council on Education re- ports, the average tuition at four- year schools, public and private, is $10,000 a year, the average time it takes to graduate for anybody is five-and-a-half years. So, if you multiply 10,000 Black student-ath- letes by just, say, five years, times $10,000 per year, you come up with a billion dollars that society has to find every five years. - If the graduation rate for those students is what it is, and we're talk- ing football slightly higher than bas- ketball, but certainly between 18 and 25 percent in five years, it seems to me that it doesn't take a Norman Schwarzkopf to realize that there's a lot of wasted money there. Let me put it another way as I explained it to a group of Texas so- cial studies teachers. If society handed a representative sample of Black educators a check for half a billion dollars, and said spend as you would like, do you think they would give it to athletes who score around 700? Hell, no. So I am pleased that after one year of the student's right to know law that their schools are going to see their names in the press with graduation rates attached. Obvi- ously, if those numbers are not good, I am certain that there are going to be some local groups saying, "What the hell is going on here?" . D: When you say that a lot of the money is wasted like, that are you blaming the universities? A: I blame the universities for taking advantage of the high, false, psychic value that a lot of Black stu- dent-athletes, especially boys, have concerning success in sports. We all know, for instance, that it takes less to even entice a Black ath- lete recruit to a school than it does a white because Blacks usually have less. So,they will be satisfied with less. We're talking now, in terms of illegal bribes. Even though it's ille- gal for both white and Black stu- dent-athletes, it is widely known that it may not take much at all to entice a Black student-athlete and his fam- ily to go to a particular school, be- cause they want that scholarship so badly. On the other hand, there's cer- tainly some culpability in the Black community, who continue to deify success in sports to the detriment of so many other things. The occasion which will bring, in many cases, more minority parents to a school event is a Friday after- noon or night football or basketball game. You will see few of them, by and large at, PTA meetings. There are many reasons for that, but it's a fact. It's something we, as African- Americans, need to address and be very truthful and frank about. D: The universities do provide the opportunity for an education. Do you think that it's just a token oppor- tunity? A: In a comparative sense, a stu- dent-athlete who is in college, whether he's attending class or not, is probably better off then one who is not in college. But many of the student-athletes who do graduate are getting degrees in very soft subjects. And in fact, some schools have cre- ated special majors with minimal academic qualifications just so they can say that some of these students are getting degrees. But truthfully, having that degree even though it may be a soft subject is certainly better than not having a degree. And that means that you will have attended class. You will be much better off than you would have had you not attended class or gotten your degree. What I'm saying is that in gen- eral a lot of colleges have lowered their own standards. They have im- pugned their own academic integrity by trying to accommodate students as athletes when with the same aca- demic minimum qualifications they (the admission officers) wouldn't have even thought of accepting those students. And those students would have to go to community college or other institution of higher education with lower academic stan- dards. Grass is greener for Michigan's coaches Picture Steve Fisher in his office on a Thursday evening in mid- January last season.... Practice has just ended. Mercifully. Steve Fisher winces as he mentally rewinds a tape of the afternoon session. Hear Steve scream for execution. See Jalen throw up an off-balance three-pointer that clangs off the rim. Hear Steve yell for patience on offense. See Chris promptly throw an alley-oop but forget to tell anyone it is coming. See the gray hairs continue to multiply. Things are going from bad to worse. The freshmen, after some early successes, aren't listening to the coaches very much anymore. The attention the Fab Five is drawing is suffocating the veteran players. The coaches yell and scream in practice, trying to regain control. To no avail. Successive road games at Illinois on Saturday and at Indiana on Tuesday are next on the schedule for Fisher and his team. It is Martin Luther King Jr.'s official birthday on Monday. Keep hope alive? Not hardly. Hope is quickly turning to dismay. Expectations are not being met, and the media is letting Fisher and Co. know. Fisher, sitting in his office, is simply searching for answers. Anything. The players are still mad about the night before, when they lost to Purdue, 65-60. It was the team's second straight Big Ten loss after opening league play with an overtime win at Iowa. And it has left everyone wondering just what the story is with this enigma Fisher is calling a Michigan basketball team. They were outrebounded, 40-20, by the much smaller Boilermakers. Where was the hustle and the emotion that this team bragged about? Or was that just talk? Fisher flips through his phone messages now - a big stack of pink sheets left on his desk by his secretary on her way out the door for the day. One is marked "Urgent." It's from Jack Weidenbach. Athletic director Jack Weidenbach. Fisher sinks back in his chair and stares out his window. It is cold out, but there is no snow on the ground. Everything is a shade of brown or gray. He picks up the phone and dials the home number next to Weidenbach's name in the rolodex. Jack answers. They talk, though Fisher mostly listens. A few minutes later he puts down the phone. He picks it up again and calls home. His wife, Angie, answers. He tells her he's been fired. Assistant coach Jay Smith will be taking over as interim coach beginning with Saturday's contest in Champaign. *0* Now. Of course we know that did not happen. First of all, things were never quite that bad. They never are. Things are never quite as bad as they seem, Fisher has said more than once, and they're never quite as good as they seem, either. So Steve Fisher wasn't fired. And the team righted itself on that subsequent road trip, winning at Illinois and playing well in a loss at Bloomington. As the season went along there were a few more "valleys," as Fisher likes to call them, but then came the tournament and the Final Four and the title game and... And it could have happened at another school. Really. Steve Fisher could have been out looking for work. Just ask Cal's Lou Campanelli. He is out of a job right now. Forced out, basically, because expectations weren't being met. Suddenly, the grass on the other side doesn't look quite so green anymore. The stability that you find at a school like Michigan you don't find elsewhere. Sure there is pressure here - pressure to win - but not like some other places. No one is quite sure exactly what happened at Cal. Apparently, some of the players complained to school officials about what is being termed Campanelli's "abrasive coaching style." Cal athletic director Bob Bockrath told reporters that those complaints were "part of the decision," See NIYO, Page 4 Manning, Harper lead Clippers past Portland PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) - Y :+ Danny Manning scored 22 points and Ron Harper had 21 as the Los Angeles Clippers beat Portland 96- ":k k 86 Sunday, extending the Trail ,l 5 5 MtBlazers' longest home losing streak y , F since 1989 to four games. The Blazers, who had beaten the Clippers in Los Angeles 111-104 F two nights earlier, shot just 37 per- d' vzcent from the field Sunday and were one-for-eight from three-point range. They scored a season-low 39 f= points in the second half after scor- ing 43 in the final quarter in Los F Angeles on Friday night. Stanley Roberts added 20 for Los -x.Angeles, which snapped a three- j game losing streak. Manning hit just Sone of his first nine shots but was Ssix-for-nine after that. Rod Strickland scored 16 and Clyde Drexler 14 for Portland, ,.~''' which hadn't lost four in arow at Memorial Coliseum since Jan.w26, Xl 1989, just before Mike Schuler was AP PHOTO fired as Blazers coach. .loThe Blazers have lost five of six Los Angeles Clipper Stanley Roberts dunks over Portland's Mark Bryant in overall and are 2-5 since allegations the Clippers' 90-87 victory over the Trailblazers yesterday. surfaced in Salt Lake City that four members of the team had sexual conduct with two 16-year-old girls. After an ugly but close first half, the Clippers outscored the Blazers 15-2 to start the third quarter to go ahead 63-49 on Roberts' stuff with 6:43 remaining in the period. Port- land never got closer than five again. Disgusted Portland coach Rick Adelman replaced four Portland starters at that point, leaving only Clyde Drexler on the floor. The Blazers then used A 9-0 run to make it 70-65 with 2:11 left in the quarter, but the Clippers scored the next six points and led 76-68 after three. FOR YOUR EYE EXAMS & EYEGLASSES lch40ardoi; Calvin Klein e y e w e a r ST U DENT DIS COU NTS 320 S. State St. (Located in the lower level of Richardson's drugs) HOURS: M,TU,TH,F 9AM - 6PM WED &SAT9AM-1PM *FAA * Learn how to become a journalist * Win a $1,500 fellowship * Spend the summer in Florida The Poynter Institute will teach you everything you need to know to start as a newspaper reporter in just six weeks this summer. You'll write and edit stories, work as a reporter on a weekly, and As a UAC EXECUTIVE You have the ability to make a difference APPLICATIONS NOW AVAILABLE Due: March 1 st at noon --- I I