Page 4-The Michigan Daily- Sports Monday - March 8, 1993 ROSE Continued from page 1 Plenty of these stories concern themselves with his singular personality. Remarkably, there actually was a time when Rose wanted to be like everyone else. "I used to tell him, 'You don't have to look like everybody else. Be yourself.' And I guess that's carried through on him," says Jeanne Rose, his mother. It seems that ever since, Jalen has been on a mission to avoid the curse of being considered average or typical. This desire to be different manifests itself on the court. It keeps him from setting up fast breaks with the simple pass. Instead, he must wing the ball baseball-style downcourt, or lob alley-oop passes from the three- point line. It could be called ill- advised, perhaps, seeing that for each completed pass there seems to Rocky going at it," he describes. "And Clubber Lang's talking the whole time, but he's winning." But didn't Rocky end up winning in the end? "It's Rocky's movie. Rocky's not gonna lose in his movie," Rose says. It goes back to his playground days, when he would play with the older neighborhood kids. "It seemed like I could play all day and not score a basket," Rose said. "But when I scored that one basket, they were gonna remember that I did." He has been yammering, scolding, annoying and teasing opponents ever since. In fact, a Sports Illustrated article last fall declared Rose "probably the biggest smack talker in the country." When this is brought up, Rose giggles and buries his face in his hands. But surprisingly, for all his swagger and pride, he declines the crown. "I'm pretty sure that there's a few Webber says. "He likes a lot of attention. To make people laugh, that's what he likes." "He's usually pretty up. He doesn't let too much bother him," Jeanne Rose said. "You can't dwell on negatives. You have to keep living. And that seems to be his philosophy." And even on his bad days, when nothing seems to be going right, he is still happy Jalen. "I have my bad streaks. But what I do is, when I'm on a bad streak, I stop. I just stop. Turn off the radio, turn off the TV, close the door, lock it, just stop. And I tell myself, 'I know my good luck streak is coming. It's coming. And when it comes, I'm gonna ride it all the way out.' I think that keeps me going, keeps me happy, keeps me energetic." But the non-stop talk not only represents his easygoing ways, but his intense pride as well. He knows see them out there and their situations as I'm growing up," Rose says. "I see how my brother relates to people, how my other brother relates to people, how people relate to my sister. You gotta learn from every situation you're in. That makes you a solid person. " And of course, being who he is, there were always laughs around the Rose home. In particular, Rose recalls his uncle Paramore, the family comedian. "The world's greatest entertainer, that's what I call him," Rose says. "If he came to Crisler, he'd turn it out. He can dance, entertain, tell jokes, do whatever. I can remember a few times I've seen him stand on his head, break dance - he'd do anything." Thus equipped with his family's love, his self-esteem and his uncle's latest knock-knock jokes, Rose went out and was bitten by the basketball bug. He was a basketball Jones, the kid who would leave in the morning and stay out all night, shooting hoops with his buddies. The game was in his blood. "I have so much fun when I'm playing basketball," he says. "For me, being out on the court, it's like paradise." As kids, Rose and his friends would sneak into the lumber yard late at night and pilfer a board and a beam, and set to work. Crates loaded down with bricks would be nailed to the post for the base. Next, the board would be attached to the other end of the beam for the backboard. A trip to the store for the rim and ball, and voih, a hoop and hours of entertainment. "We'd play all day, all night," Rose recalls. "We'd put it back there in the alley where the street lights were - first we had it in the street, but too many cars came down the street - so we put it in the alley, put it under a street light, and played all day, all night." The hours spent on the court, his height and his extraordinary hand- eye coordination fashioned Rose into a player who, even in the fifth grade, had obvious talent. His mother sent him to St. Cecilia's Grade School, where he could play under coach Sam Washington. Since passed away, Washington was a highly-respected and beloved man in Detroit basketball circles. "Sam was really his first guiding force to put him in the right direction," Jeanne Rose says. "He saw the talent in Jay and he worked with him. I really hate that Sam didn't live long to see this. He would have been really proud of him." After St. Cecilia's, Southwestern High School and then-head coach Watson beckoned. The two first met at a game when Rose was still at St. . Cecilia's. It was at a Police Athletic League game between Rose's AAU team, including Rose, Webber and current Minnesota guard Voshon Lenard, and Southwestern's junior varsity. "Everybody was watching Webber, and so was I, of course," Watson said. "Then I saw this kid come off the bench with long arms and immediately you could tell he was a shooter. I was aware that Voshon was coming to Southwestern because his father taught there. But I kept asking, 'Who's that kid with the arms?"' The kid with the arms, of course, was Rose. He has his own recollections from that day, as well. "I saw him (Watson) at the game, and I knew who he was, 'cause I was all into basketball, and I was surprised to see him, so I was, like, showing off a little so he would keep his eye on me," Rose says. After the game, the two were introduced. "Yeah, I met him that day," Rose says. He pauses, and the temptation to get in a dig is too great. "It's because we won. We blew their team out" 'at day began a tight rel' ship between the two that has g. ..n only tighter with time. Rose played on Watson's varsity squad for four years, and in his junior year, he helped deliver Watson his first state title. The championship followed seven title game losses in eight years for Watson and Southwestern. The following season, Watson and Rose closed out their Southwestern careers together with another state title and the No. 1 ranking in the USA Today prep basketball poll. But it has been more than a another," Fisher says. "Perry is a very big influence in Jalen's life, and in what he's done and how he's done it." George Granderson, a teacher of Rose's back at Southwestern, can attest to this as well. While he was Rose's chemistry teacher, he handed out writing assignments as well. And the topic of many of Rose's essays was Watson. "In his writings, he indicated that he wasn't as serious about his books as he was," he said. "He was saying that Coach had turned him around and given him some direction. Coach is a-lot like a father figure to him, to tell you the truth." And now Fisher himself has helped guide Rose along. "He takes the time to listen to what I have to say, and I respect what he has to say," Rose says. "Anytime someone respects you, and you respect them, the relationship stays strong, and that's have had plenty of fathers, per se." "Maybe it would have been a problem if we had a negative household," Jeanne Rose says. "We didn't. Everything worked out O.K." Having received the proper guidance, Rose has brought himself to the brink of greatness. The accolades have come by the bushel. Last year's NCAA tournament alone brought him All-Tournament team, Southeast Region Most Outstanding Player and Southeast Region All- Tournament team honors. In addition, he was honorable mention All-America, second-team All-Big Ten (media), third-team All- Big Ten (coaches), and Michigan co-MVP. His 597 points were a record for a Michigan freshman. He admits, though, that his sophomore season has not been all it could be. He has .hot poorly from the floor at times, and at others, has seemed lackadaisical. His scoring is down, as is his shooting percentage. rl 0 ^UGLA""A"Waiy While not the most renowned of Wolverine dunkers, Rose shows Indiana superstar Calbert Cheaney that he is fully capable of playing above the rim. -4 DOUGLAS KANTER/Daily Wolverine Jalen Rose's armory of offensive weapons includes both the three-pointer and his pull-up jumper in the lane. He is best known, however, for daring, body-contorting drives through traffic such as this. be another that finds its way into the stands, but it has to be that way, for Rose and for his Wolverine teammates. "Every team doesn't have that trick - the flashy plays, the talking trash, the black shoes, black socks. We just have that personality," he says, failing to mention his penchant for wearing his knee-length shorts halfway down his rear. He also doesn't include mention of his practice outfit. In a rush to get to practice one day, Rose unwittingly slipped his jersey on backwards. A solid practice followed, and the habit has remained. Last season, after discovering his practice jersey was too tight, Rose borrowed one from then-senior Chip Armer. He kept it for the season. He says he is not superstitious, it's just that he had a good practice in it, so why not? Besides, people would expect him to wear his jersey correctly. Why bow to conformity, right? After all, the ones who want him to pull up his shorts, make the textbook pass and wear their jerseys like everyone else are probably the same ones who want him to shut his trap on the court. That, friends, will never happen. For all the coaches, writers and fans who think he should stop because the only thing it does is to people out there that talk a lot more than me," Rose said. "What it is, is, we're winning. When I'm talking trash and we're winning, I can be the best trash talker as long as we're in the Final Four. When you have a losing record, ain't too much you can say." No one is safe from his wicked tongue. Not even his Wolverine teammates. "For instance, if my practice team is doing well, and we're scoring all over the other team and we're stopping them on defense," Rose says, "I'll be yelling, 'Flurries! Flurries!' to make the other team mad." And not even close friend Chris Webber can avoid such treatment. Rose remembers when Webber first came to play for their Superfriends AAU team. Still only 12 or 13, Webber towered over everyone else at 6-foot-5. "We were thinking, 'he's coming to dominate us," Rose says. "So we kind of waited to see how he played. And then when I realized that he was no better than us - 'Oooh. Gumpy can't walk and chew bubble gum.' Just ragging on him hard. And he really couldn't say much because everyone was laughing at him." In the end, Rose's fun-loving on- court persona is just 100 percent Jalen Rose. He is the embodiment of the line from the song, "Take me to he has come a long way and walked a hard road, and as Rose says, nothing can take that away from him. "Everything that I have, that my family has, growing up in Detroit, we had to work so hard for," Rose says. "So now, I feel that I've worked so hard to get where I am, that I'm not going to do nothing or let anyone sabotage what I have." That pride, confidence and self- esteem have come from his upbringing, from mother Jeanne, and his older siblings, brothers Billy and Kevin, and sister Tammy. It was a single-parent family, but that has mattered little. 0* Growing up, Rose had, above all else, two loves - his family, and the game of basketball. Both have provided for him and been his saving grace from the rough streets of Detroit. Jeanne Rose had always felt that keeping her children in the house. away from the danger, was not the road to take. "You can't protect 'em too much," she said. "You have to give them a little room to grow, because we're not gonna always be there for them." That, of course was not the only lesson she taughi Jalen. She would lecture him on the importance of having pride and confidence in what we have." Jeanne Rose states succinctly, "I've been very lucky. Jay has had some very good positive influence in his life to help guide him." About all that Jalen received from his father were basketball genes. Jimmie Walker, an All- American at Providence and a former Detroit Piston, left the Roses before Jalen could get to know him. "I really don't know too much about him. I know that he left when I was very young," he says. "I know Everything that I have, that my family has, growing up in Detroit, we had to work so hard for. So now, I feel that I've worked so hard to get where I am, that I'm not going to do nothing or let anyone sabotage what I have.' - Jalen Rose about his basketball past. He went to Providence, and he was a great player of his time. That's really about it." Despite that fact, Rose has surprisingly little resentment. That is not his style. "You kind of wonder about it, and it bothers you a little," he says. "But it's kinda like, you never miss something you never had. My family structure was so strong that it seemed like I never missed a beat." "We were blessed because we had people there who were willing to step in and be that force that he needed," Jeanne Rose says. "There's only so much I can do as a mother." Jalen Rose wonders if his father, now living in Kansas City, will suddenly emerge from the past "It's just a matter of concentrating and a matter of playing as hard as I can for as long as I can," Rose said. "Just keeping my concentration is the key, really. Sometimes I let it down." What Rose does not let on to, though, is that he has played through significant pain this season. During the preseason, Rose bruised his left shoulder, which affected his shooting. During the Rainbow Classic in Hawaii, he injured his left wrist and wore a splint when he wasn't playing. "Well, Jalen's not an excuse- maker. I think he might have picked that up from me being at Southwestern," Watson said. "He'll never be the one to run to the media and tell them, 'This is why I shot bad."' Despite the injury, there is no one else Fisher has more faith and confidence in. It all stems back to his remarkable confidence. He exudes it. Nothing ever seems to rattle him. Fisher calls it "moxie." The last time Rose was worried was "the last time I got a whupping." As he puts it, after all he has been through in the city, how can anything that happens on the court, the place he loves most, bother him? He thrives on it. "If there's a one-point game," Rose says, "with a minute and a half left, I might smile and say, 'You ,know, we're playing on CBS, with 15,000 in the stands right now. It's time to go.' This is what I live for. There's no better feeling to me. Nothing." Of course, the place where he will get that feeling night after night is the NBA. Ever since the end of last season, Rose and Webber have been hounded by rumors that they plan to leave Michigan for the dollars and the glory of professional basketball. At current, everyone is playing the cards close to the vest. "The discussion about that with 1'