The Michigan Daily - Monday, April 18, 1994 -17^ Fife proves he can yafrus Sophomore epitomizes team-player mentality 4 By TIM RARDIN DAILY BASKETBALL WRITER itting on the sidelines at Crisler Arena, watching great Michigan players at work was nothing new for Dugan Fife. He had done it since he was just two years old. "I used to take him to practice and he was around Rickey Green and (Phil) Hubbard and (Steve) Grote," said his father, Dan, a former Michigan player himself who was coaching the Wolverines' junior varsity squad at the time. "Of course, everything he had at that time was Michigan and Michigan sweatshirts. I think that's where he really got his Michigan blood in him - in his early years. That's all he's ever really known." And yet, when little Dugan grew up and entered Michigan as a 175- pound freshman, it was almost as if he was a kid all over again. For much of the season, he sat and watched the Fab Five from those same lonely sidelines, only this time he had a real Michigan jersey on. He logged only limited playing time, and after lighting up Michigan high schools for a school- record 2,083 career points at Clarkston, he didn't even score a field goal. 'it was frustrating, to go from playing all the time, and being a star, to not playing a whole lot.' - Dugan Fife Michigan guard was hesitant to shoot because he doubted whether he could make it. Though it had been his dream for much of his life to play for the Wolverines, Dugan didn't know if he belonged. "When he came home last year, he was very frustrated. I really thought that he might have thoughts of transferring - I wasn't sure," Dan said. "I've never seen him so down in all the years as he was when he first came home. We'd go play, and he would get so frustrated with himself if he missed one shot. After about two weeks, I wouldn't even go to the gym with him." But Dugan kept going. "You go back to the high school gym, where you feel comfortable, where you know you've had confidence before," Dugan said. "I tried to get my game back at the gym." And get it back he did. When the season was over, Dugan began a rigorous summer routine. He returned to Clarkston three times a week to work out, and honed his shooting and ballhandling skills in Ann Arbor with Michigan assistant coach Jay Smith. "Coach Smith gave me a list of 100 things I could do for ballhandling," he recalled. "I tried to get most of them down, but mostly I worked on my shooting, I tried to get a consistent jump shot that, when I shot it, I had a pretty good idea that it was going in." In addition, Dugan toured Europe with the Big Ten All-Star team, giving him valuable experience in game situations. When his sophomore season began, he knew he could play, but he still had to prove it to his coaches and teammates. "I didn't really prove myself until the Georgia Tech game," Dugan said. "No one knew how I would respond because I'd never' really been in a game situation before." He responded with nine points, including a pair of 3-pointers, two assists, two steals and three rebounds in Michigan's 80-70 victory over the Yellow Jackets. Mediocre numbers to the casual observer,.but to coaches and teammates on a team already loaded with proven players, it was just what the doctor ordered. "Dugan made good decisions," Michigan coach Steve Fisher said after that game. "If he can have that kind of game every time out, he'll continue to get minutes." He did just that, starting every game for the Wolverines. After the season, Fisher had more to say about his fifth starter. "He fit like a glove. It's hard on anybody when you don't get to play, when you've been a star - and Dugan was that," Fisher said. "That can wear on you. To his credit, he worked extremely hard in the off-season. Dugan did better than I had imagined he could possibly do. He exceeded what I hoped he could do." Dugan led the team in steals (52), and ended the season averaging 6.5 points, 2.7 assists and 2.7 rebounds, in addition to leading the regulars in three-point field goal percentage (40 percent). "He does a lot of the little things that don't necessarily show up in the scorebook," said Dan, a steady player himself while at Michigan, averaging 13 points a game during his three years as a starter. "He's guarding the point guard, doing a good job, taking charges, getting the ball to the right people. It's hard to find someone like that. "I think this year he had a lot to prove to himself. One thing that my wife and I are very proud of is the way that he dealt with it. He basically worked things out himself. He just accepted his role and did what he thought was best. He just felt he was doing what he should be doing. "I think he proved to them (coaches) this year that he can play." But for those who know Dugan Fife, the pressure to prove he could play is really nothing new. As a freshman at Clarkston High School, he was forced at a young age to deal with similar pressure. After the junior starting quarterback went down with a collarbone injury, coach Kurt Richardson called the scrawny 140-pound, 14-year-old up from the JV squad rather than go to his senior backup. Parents - as they are apt to do in a small-town setting like Clarkston - were outraged by the Michigan's Dugan Fife and Ray Jackson trap Arkansas' Dwight Stewart in the NCAA tournament. Fife "It was frustrating, to go from playing all the time and being a star to not playing a whole lot," Dugan said. "My friends were always saying, 'How many shots did you make last year?' and you can't really say anything. When you don't play for so long, it kind of hurts your confidence." Amidst the hoopla that hounded the Fab Five, Fife and fellow freshman Leon Derricks quickly became the Forgotten Two. "It helped to go through it with someone," he said, referring to Derricks, also his roommate at the time. "We said, 'We're not playing, but we're playing behind the best in the country.' We tried to keep it in a positive light." Still, he began to doubt whether he could play. When he did play, he decision. The local weekly paper ran scathing protest letters, and controversy erupted, as many suggested that Dugan's father, also the varsity basketball coach at the high school, pulled some strings to get his son on the varsity football team. "It really got blown way out of proportion," said Dan, who also grew up in Clarkston. "It was a small-town paper, a once-a-week paper, and the way they could sell papers was to let people decide who the local quarterback should be. Maybe it comes with the territory, me coming back to my hometown, and coaching my sons." "It was well overblown," said Clarkston Athletic Director Paul Tungate, who began his career at Clarkston when Dan was a senior there. "It was a case of a very few people that were involved. Once everyone saw Dugan's ability, he See FIFE, Page 18 HOT CASH FOR YOUR BOOKS! ~ Stu~f ' ACflY _ 1 Y i p ._ ;6k MOVING TO CHICAGO? Stay close to Ann Arbor and keep in touch with fellow graduates who live in the Windy City. Join the University of Michigan Club of Chicago. We offer our members the chance to stay connected with the Maize and Blue long after graduation. Our events include basketball and football parties, art gallery tours, baseball game outings, U of M speakers, comedy nights, happy hours, and much more. We're always here to help you cheer on the Wolverines. For more information or to join today, call Elizabeth Shaw at (312)871-4347. So welcome to Chicago and... GO BLUE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN CLUB OF CHICAGO 1 S. Wacker, Suite 2280 Chicago, IL 60606 Join us for: * popcorn " beach theme movies " giveaways 0 the MOST cash a a * Department of Recreational Sports INTRAMURAL SPORTS PROGRAM WAN"T1Fl1 !I I