The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, October 18, 1993 - 3 ['!7&i'I!CLEVELAND iq CAVAL ~IRS AC IKE FLTRi A~ TEiL Fratelo Making his return to the NBA, the 'Czar of the Telestrator' discusses the game After a short la offas a television commentator for NBC and the De- troit Pistons, Mike Fratello returns to the NBA this fall coaching for the Cleveland Cavaliers., While only 46 yearsold, Fratello has beencoaching for more than two decades at the high school, college and pro levels. Fratello'spriorNBA head coach- ing experience came with the Atlanta Hawks, with whom he amassed a 324- 250 record between 1983-1990. With superstar Dominique Wilkins lead- ing the way, Fratello's teams had fourstraight50-winseasons, andfin- ished his career there three wins shy ofRichie Guerin'sclub recordof327. The 1986/87season was Fratello's *finest while at the helm of Atlanta. The team won the Central Division for the first time since 1979 with a club record of 57 wins. Atlanta had the NBA's top defense, holding teams to only 102.8 points a game. Fratello was named the NBA Coach of the Year by five different organizations: NBA Haggar, The Sporting News, NBA/Miller Lite, Basketball Weekly Band Basketball Digest. After his departure from the Hawks, Fratello didn't miss a beat, stepping into the broadcast booth at NBC. He spent three years with NBC doing games with his sidekick, Marv Albert, who dubbed him the 'Czar of the Telestrator.' The urge to coach never left Fratello, so when the Cleveland Cava- liets called him, Fratellodecided that *the time was right to get back into coaching. Daily writer Tim Smith re- cently spoke to Fratello on issues ranging from the Cavaliers to the retirement of Michael Jordan, as the coach readies himselffor the begin- ning of his new career. ;aily: How hard has the transi- tion from broadcasting back tocoach- ing been? Fratello: It's been eased and aided by my assistants. I have a wonderful staff which has done a great job of . bringing me back into the world of coaching. D: What did you enjoy most about being a broadcaster? F: One, that I was employed ... I had acheck coming in to pay my bills. I had the opportunity to work with the ,. ople I got to work with at NBC. I had a marvelous, and I use that word for a very special reason. I had a marvelous relationship and oppor- tunity with those people beginning witg 'Marvelous' Mary Albert, and Tommy Roy, Andy Rosenberg, Dick Ibersol and Terry O'Neil. They were a great group to work with, and we just had alot of fun, and I thought we got better and better as we went on. D: Even though you were a great broadcaster and held a promising fu- ture, did you, like Bill Parcells, feel that coaching was in your blood and you had to keep doing it? F: I had coached for a total of one year in high school, eight years on the collegiate level and then 12 years in the NBA. So that's 21 years of coach- ing, and it's not like I left coaching with a bad taste in my mouth, where I said I never want to do this again. It was my time to be out of coach- ing because of circumstances. I was fortunate enough to have the NBC thing come up. A couple of other coaching things came along, but either I wasn't right for them, or they weren't right for me, so I just stayed with NBC. When this situation came up, I thought it was a chance. It was the have ever coached? F: Well, are we counting the Cavs, because I haven't really coached this group, per se. D: OK, who was the best player you coached before the Cavs? F: The best I ever coached was Dominique Wilkins. D: What game was the best game you have witnessed as a coach? F: It was our seventh-game loss to the Boston Celtics in the playoffs (the spring of 1988.) It was the game when Wilkins had fifty-something and Bird had forty- something. D: What was the best game you have ever seen by a player? F: Probably one of Michael Jordan's games would probably be the greatest individual performance You still have a lot of great, young players in the league - Shaquille (O'Neal), Alonzo Mourning, and this new crop thatjustcame in. The league will move on. D: How do you think Chris Webber will do in the NBA? F: I'm hoping that he can put some of these early obstacles behind him. I think he's going to be a terrific player. I'm sorry to see first the ap- pendectomy, and then he's got to get his contract resolved. I always like to see rookies come in as early as they can to get full advantage of all the teaching that goes on in training camp. I like to see them have the opportunity tojump out there quick and not put themselves behind the eight-ball. Sometimes you can't control it, such as the surgery he just had. Once he gets healthy and recovers from that, I hope he gets the contract re- solved, I'd like to see him jump in there, and I know he's going to be a terrific player. D: How has the game changed since you last coached? F: Except for a few nuts and bolts, I think it is basically the same. D: Whatdoyou think of the Cleve- land Cavaliers so far? F: I'm veryhappy. I'm happy with their work ethic. I think they're great people. I really enjoy working with them. They're an intelligent team. D: How do you like coaching a team whose major pieces are already there, instead of having to walk into a rebuilding situation? F: Winning's fun. So if you've got your pieces built in and they help you win -. D: Whatcoaching philosophy will you employ this season? F: We're going to try and imple- ment stuff that will take full advan- tage of what our players' talents are about. That's the key. We have to utilize their skills and abilities to the best. D: Since you were the 'Czar of the telestrator,' I assume that you are also the'Czarof predictions.' Who will be in the NBA Finals in June? F: I didn't do that while I was on TV, and I'm not going to do that now. I don't figure out who is going to be in the Finals. D: How do you see the game changing in the 1990s and beyond? F: If the trend continues to go as it's been, there will be bigger, stron- ger, faster players coming along who jump higher and shoot better. RYAN HERRINGTON The R.H. Factor Seles injustice affects athletes and fans alike en I was younger and my dad would take me to a baseball game, my favorite thing to do was get to the stadium early and try to get one of the players to sign something. Anything. If I didn't have a program, I found that writing on my arm would do. I wasn't the only one down in the front row, however, during pre-game warm-ups. Many of my peers, and in recent times, their entrepreneurial parents, would stand there and do almost anything to get the attention of a player. One time, however, maybe I got a little overzealous. Instead of following the unwritten rule of flailing my arms in a crazy manner while leaning over the railing in hopes that a player would come sign my paraphernalia, I jumped over the railing and onto the field. Suffice it to say, that was a no-no. Quickly, I had a security guard usher me back into the stands and proceed to verbally scare the hell out of me. He threatened to kick me out of the ballpark along with a myriad of other penalties. Considering I was only 10,1 think the guy let me off easy with a mere scolding. Anyway, I was angry that my self-proclaimed act of courage didn't at least get me a "Nice try!" from the player or a ball or something. At the time, I wondered why the guard was so angry with me for trying to get closer to the ballplayer. I was only a kid. It wasn't like I was going to hurt a player on my favorite team. Besides, who would come to a sporting event to hurt an athlete? Unfortunately, my childhood question was surprisingly answered earlier this year. A man by the name of Guenter Parche, who by his own admission considered Steffi Graf "otherworldly," took his obsession with her beyond normal means. In an attempt to "help" his fellow German regain the top spot in women's tennis, Parche stabbed her primary nemesis, Monica Seles, in the right shoulder during a tournament in Hamburg, Germany, on the last day of April. Since then, the sport has done its best to try and overcome this tragedy. Seles has not yet returned to the court, unable to defend her French and U.S. Open crowns. Meanwhile, Graf cruised through the rest of her competition, taking the French in addition to another Wimbledon plate. And, no doubt to Parche's delight, Graf is now the No. 1-ranked woman in the tennis world. At least there was some solace in knowing that Parche would not get away with his actions. He was apprehended immediately, weapon in hand, and it seemed almost certain that this unemployed lathe operator would get more than just a scolding from a security guard. Yet just like the 10-year old boy who got off with a slap on the wrist, so too did Parche, who received a two-year suspended sentence last week from German judge Elke Bosse for the stabbing. While a psychiatrist determined that the 39-year old Parche had a "highly abnormal personality" he felt that the possibility that he'd do it again was "very small." It is almost obscene that while Seles' life was thrown into turmoil, Parche should be free to go on as if nothing ever happened. The irony that the full intent of his actions has come to fruition is sad. Yes, Seles and her attorney will appeal the sentence, however, why should she have to do so in the first place? It is her career that is in jeopardy. It is she who must develop the courage to return to the game. The tragedy has of course affected Graf, too. Her ranking is tainted and she will forever be unjustly associated with another lunatic besides her father. Yet on another level it affects all athletes everywhere. Instead of being friendly with fans, I wouldn't blame athletes for never speaking with them again. Rowdiness, vulgarity, even the chance of being hit with a beer bottle or a battery, as some fans have been known to throw - why risk getting unnecessarily hurt? Why risk your livelihood? With Parche being set free, athletes everywhere must watch their backs, quite literally. Who knows when someone might come after them. Who knows who will be next? And it's the innocent fans - the 10-year old looking for an autograph - who will also suffer from this injustice. With players turning away from those in the stands, they will not get to greet their heros from the railings. Or even try to meet them on the field. right spot at the right time for me.. D: Do you think thatbeing abroad- caster will make you a better coach since you were able to closely ob- serve the game? F: I hope so. I hope I had the chance to pick up and absorb, and that I will utilize the stuff I watched other people do. D: At what point in your life did you know that you wanted to be a coach? F: I knew I wanted to be a coach back in elementary school. Back then I knew I wanted to be a physical education teacher and a coach some- day. I didn't know what level I'd do - hopefully high school, maybe. D: What coach or coaches have had the biggest influence on your career? F: The people that have had the biggest influences on me were my high school coaches. A guy named Tom Delatore, Jim Kay, and without a doubt, Hubie Brown. D: Who was the best player you CLEVELAND CAVALIERS PUBLIC RELATIONS I've seen. I've seen a number of the them, so I don't know which one. He's had a bunch. D: What was your initial reaction when you heard about Michael Jordan's retirement? F: I was sad. I don't like losing our greatest player, and somebody who has done so much for basketball and the NBA, and that's what Michael Jordan was. I was sorry to see him step down, but as he said, he didn't close the door completely, so don't be surprised if he's back. D: How does Jordan's retirement affect your outlook of the Central Division? F: I don't want to deal with that. We've got to show up. We've got to win our games. Him retiring doesn't affect us at all. D: How do you think his retire- ment will affect the NBA? F: We'll have to wait and see. Anything I say now would just be pure speculation. I Basic InstallationI Included on Radios j Financing &I Extended Warranties Available Motorola SJECIA Hornet Auto Alarm Bravo C 3 mos.airtime panic button : : act.required 1.1.:. INSTALLED FREEI#718T aids awarenessi week learn and lin'e october 18 - 24, 1993 supported by the City of Ann Arbor & The University of Michigan I YPSILANTI 2252 ELLSWORTH 9 572-7870 Mem.e. EXHIBITIONSIE VENTS NAMES Project AIDS Memorial Quilt display Michigan Room, Michigan League *Opening event will be Oct. 20, 6pm Portraits of the Quilt (photography exhibit) Michigan League Buffet Red Cross African Proverbs poster display Leonardo's, North Campus Commons The Individual's Response to AIDS: Materials- from the Labadie Collection of radical social protest Hatcher Graduate Library, Special Collections, 7th Floor "AIDS Friendship Tree", Tree Planting Ceremony UM Hospital Courtyard (between Mott & main hospital) PERFORMANE "QUILT, A Musical Celebration" Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre "QUILT, A Musical Celebration" Final Dress Rehearsal Benefit Performance (benefitting local AIDS service organizations) Talk to Us (anxieties concerning HIV testing) Oct. 21-24 Oam-11pm Sep. 28-Oct.24 Su-F 11:30-7:30pm, Sa 4:30-7:3Opm Oct. 1-31, Sam-l4pm Oct. 18-24 Oct. 22, 1pm Oct. 21-23, 8pm, Oct. 24, 2pm $14 & $10; students $6w/ID Oct. 20, 7pm $10 minimum donation Oct. 26 Bursley Hall, (N. Campus) 9' . So You Want to Rule the World? Before you do, you might want to get some experience. Get it with: Michigan Student Assembly Fall '93 Elections Elections will be held Nov. 16 & 17 for MSA representatives i: YN _ _1_L A LECTURESIPANEL DISCUSSIONS Living with AIDS East Conference Room, Rackham Hall Democracy Under Siege: The Dismantling of Civil Rights Suzanne Pharr, speaker HIV/AIDS Education Session Bursley Hall, North Campus Oct. 21, 7:30pm Oct. 24, 7pm Rackham Auditorium Oct. 26 - immediately following "Talk to Us" performance