The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, January 24, 1994 - 3 ( $A:PHENX SN ANMAER rie RYAN HERRINGTON The R.H. Factor 4 The Dream Team II member discusses his stellar basketball career After a standout career at Central Michigan, where he was the Midwest- ernAthletic Conference's Playerofthe Year three times, Dan Majerle has gone on to become one of the NBA's elite as a member of the Phoenix Suns. Included on his extensive resume is a starring role on the bronze-medal *winning 1988 U.S. Olympic basketball team, All-Star appearances in the last two seasons, a record-setting three- pointbarrage in Game 3oflastseason's NBA Finals and a recent selection to Dream Team II, which will compete this summer at the World Champion- ships in Toronto. Recently, Daily Sports Writer Tim Smith spoke with Majerle about his *pastaccomplishmentsandfuturegoals. Daily: The Suns are off to another good start, but the Seattle Superson- ic, look unbeatable. How do you see the Suns doing in the Pacific Division race for the rest of the season? Majerle: It's still real early in the year, and the season's not even close to being done yet. We're right behind them right now, only like three games behind, so it's a long way to go and we ,feel confident that we'll be there at the end. D: What do the Suns need to do to improve this year? M: I think we need to stay healthy. Charles ;(Barkley) is hurt, Kevin (Johnson) is hurt right now. We have the personnel to be a very good team. If we stay healthy and we're playing ourbest basketball, I think we have a good chance to win it. D: Has the team felt the loss of first-year sensation Richard Dumas, who was suspended for this season because of drug use? M: It hasn't had any impact at all. He was a good guy for us, but we've got guys like Cedric (Ceballos), and A.C. Green's filled in well for him. He wasn't a guy we needed as far as making us real successful. 0 D: What has A.C. Green brought to the team this year? M: A.C. gives us another guy who can rebound, score in the post, play good defense, and he gives us a guy who has won a championship, which I think is very important mentally to our team. D: Do you think the lack of expe- rience on last year's team was the reason you lost to the Chicago Bulls min the NBA Finals? M: No, I don't think it was that big ofa'factor. I think Chicago was good; I thought we were a better team. We just didn't play up to our expecta- tions, especially there at home. I think we'll be better this year for that; but I can't really say it's because of'ekperience. I just think that Chicago played better. * D: What were you thinking when the Bulls' John Paxson's NBA-title clinching 3-pointer was in the air? M: I knew it was good. The last thing we said in the time-out was not to let him get off the three. If anything, we'll go into overtime. We kind of got screwed up in cov- erage and left him out there wide open. He was too good of a shooter in that *situation to leave alone. D: The entire playoffs were not a smooth ride for you or the Suns. What turned the team around when you were down to the Lakers two games to none and heading to the Great Western Forum during the first round of the playoffs? M: Well, we knew coming into the first-round series that it would be tough. It's one of those things where *you go out there and play hard, but you can't get over the hump. After the first-two games, a lot of people wrote us off, but we knew we could come back because we had been such -a good road team all year. We hadn't lost to Los Angeles in Los Angeles all year. Even though a lot of the fans and all of the media were writing us off, we knew we *could win two games and bring it back to Phoenix. We were a little worried obviously, but we thought we could bring it back. D: Let's talk a little about the man who was most instrumental in your reaching the Finals - Charles Barkley. What were your initial feel- ings when you found out the Suns got Barkley in a trade with the Sixers in 1992? M: I was happy, because I knew we needed another player. We had good teams before that, but we were just one player shy of taking it all the way, I thought. I knew Charles would be a guy who could really make us better, because he can score in the low post and is somebody who can post up, so I was real happy. D: It must be some compliment when Barkley says that you're the only guy in the ' league as tough as him out on the court. Do you agree with him when he says this?' M: I think it's " true, but I think there are a lot of people as tough as Charles. I mean it's something that Charles just likes N to say. I think I'm just as intense and want to play and win as much as he does, and that's all you really need to do. That's just the way I've always ; done it when I play basketball. D: Coming from relatively un- known Central . Michigan, do you <' thinkyourintensity and hustle were at- tributes that made you stand out and helped you make the Olympic team and later the NBA? M: I think so. I think my desire to win and playing n 100 percent every ' time makes me good. D: Does your nickname "Thun- der" have to do with the way you Dan Majerle belie play? Division rival Seal M: I'm not possibly win the t sure. A guy at the newspaper at Cen- tral Michigan made it up. We had an- other guy named "Lightning." So it was a kind of a "Thunder-Lightning" thing. D: Why did you choose Central Michigan? M: I really wasn't recruited by any of the Big Ten schools. I nar- rowed it down to Western (Michi- gan), Toledo, and Central Michigan. The main reason I went to Central Michigan was because it was so close to my home. My parents and friends would be able to see me play. That was a good school for me. The Mid-American Conference seemed like a good place to be, and Central Michigan seemed like a good school. D: When you were invited to the 1988 Olympic tryouts, what chance did you think had of making the team? M: I had no idea. I was probably one of the last guys invited. Nobody knew who I was. I just went in there trying to make a name for myself, and do the best I could and just play hard. As the cuts progressed, and I kept on making the cut, I figured there was a good chance I could make it then. I made it. I went in there not really having any kind of goal. My goal was to make the first cut and to continue to play hard and make it as far as I could. D: Did thehigh-profileplayers such as David Robinson, J.R. Reid and Danny Manning respect you even though they didn't really know who you were? M: I think they respected me after they saw me play. You gain respect by what you do on the court, not by what the papers say or what everybody hears. When you get on the court with another guy, the way you respect him is by seeing what he can do. D: How did you like playing un- der John Thompson in the Olympics? M: I loved it. He was a great coach. He was my kind of coach. He demanded that you played hard all the be a lot of fun. D: What was it like for you to play in your first All-Star game in 1991-92? M: That was a great feeling. I've dreamed of playing in the NBA, but I never even thought of being an All- Star. I was just happy enough to make it in the league. When I was chosen for the All-Star game, it just capped off a great career so far. That was one of the high points of my career. D: You've had the opportunity to play with many All-Stars, and one All-Star, Michael Jordan, was a hand- ful for you in last year's NBA Finals. Were you glad to see him retire? M: Well, I think going in, he's a handful for everybody. Nobody does stop him from scor- ing so we just had to concentrate on the other guys knowing that Jor- dan wasgoingtoget his points. You've got to live with that. D: What im- pact has the loss of Michael Jordan, Reggie Lewis and Drazen Petrovic - three of the best off guards in the league - had 'on the competition in ". s the NBA? M: Obviously there's a little dropoff when you lose Michael, but there's so many C good players in this league that you face somebody good every night. Reggie Lewis and Drazen have hurt their teams by s ;not being there, but every night you play against some- body and they're all good. Those guys were some of the best players in the league, but there's always somebody ready to step up and fill in their shoes. MD: Whatdo you think of Jordan's plan to try out for the Chicago White FILE PHOTO Sox? t start by Pacific M: It's going to inals and be tough. That's a game where you have to play a lot. You have to grow up playing it. From what I've read, he hasn't even played in high school or college. He played Little League or what- ever, and he's going to step up and play against guys who are throwing 90 mile-per-hour fastballs, curves and sliders. I think he's going to wake up real quick. As far as I see, it's going to be a whole different ballgame. D: What do you see in your basket- ball future and after your career is over? M: Ijust want to play for as long as I can as long as I keep having fun and I stay injury-free. Obviously, I want to win a championship because I'm on a great team. If I can do that I'll be very happy, and if I don't I'll be happy. That's a goal of mine - to win a championship. Hopefully, ifeverything works out, I'll stay in Phoenix. Who knows, maybe I'll get into broadcast- ing or maybe I'll get into coaching. Hopefully I'll get in a situation where I don't have to do anything, but if I want to I can do some coaching or broadcasting. 'M' provides many challenges for Belkin While this combination is not as traditional in sports vernacular as "pick and roll" or "hit and run," for Debra Belkin the two will be forever frozen in her memory. For it was during the past three weeks, as southeastern Michigan braved the coldest temperatures it has seen in recorded history, that Michigan's first- ever women's varsity soccer coach was unceremoniously welcomed to her new home. "The first day, I was all excited," said Belkin last week in her semi-barren office on State Street, adorned with but a few mementos of her past glories. "I had to get in the office. I was going to start my first day. "I was pretty relieved that my stuff was delivered to my apartment nice and early in the morning. I go to get to my car and my doors were frozen shut. I couldn't get in my car and it took me about two hours to finally get it open. By then I wasted the whole day. It was a frustrating day." "It's not the best time to move into Michigan with the snow and everything but I am starting to get organized here," Belkin continued. "I'm just trying to get things rolling."ln While snow and soccer will most likely not become . synonymous, the duo of Belkin and soccer go together quite well. Ever v since she stepped on the field as an undergraduate at Massachusetts, Belkin has made a tremendous impact on the sport she loves. During an illustrious college career that saw her lead her team to . the Final Four in each of her four seasons in Amherst, the three-time =<<>r All-American had enough accolades bestowed on her to make even Joe Montana jealous. Among the most' impressive of her awards, Belkin' was named by Soccer America to the 1980s All-Decade team. Upon graduating from UMass in Bekn 1988, Belkin continued her career playing for the United States women's national team, which she had been a part of during the previous two years. It was there that she achieved her ultimate goal - helping the U.S. team win the initial women's World Cup, held in 1991 in China. But now, in slowly warming Ann Arbor, Belkin's goals have changed. While still quite capable of playing on a competitive basis, the soft-spoken Belkin has a new focus - coaching. Having been an assistant for four years, Belkin was given her first opportunity to run her own program in 1992 when she was named the first head coach of the women's soccer program at Fairfield University in Connecticut. It was here that Belkin realized what her future truly was to be. "I like the challenge of being able to get other people to solve their own problems," said Belkin, who describes herself as intense yet having a good sense of humor.'"I feel very comfortable in this role now. I like to teach. I feel now that I am a total coach. And yes, I love to play and I still love to play competitive soccer, but this is No. I for me now. Whereas I can honestly say a few years ago that being a player was No. 1 for me." It was the first-hand experience of building a program from scratch while at Fairfield that made Belkin such an attractive candidate to the Michigan athletic department, according to outgoing athletic director Jack Weidenbach. "Debra Belkin's extensive soccer playing and coaching experience," Weidenbach said, "will be invaluable in getting Michigan's varsity women's soccer program started on a successful note." Ah, but there's that word. It's bandied about at Michigan as if-the school owns the official rights to it and merely licenses it out to the rest of the colleges in America. Success. At a small, private school like Fairfield, success means a winning season 2 ... occasionally. Success is optional. At a large, public school like Michigan, success means Big Ten championships ... by the bushel. Success is considered a prerequisite. The first thing that greets any visitor to the newly renovated athletic offices at Michigan is a plaque listing the Wolverine conference championship teams from the previous year. This is what welcomed Belkin as well, yet the pressure of starting a new program at a school as rich in athletic tradition as Michigan does not phase her. "I think the way the sport itself is taking off - soccer in Michigan is very big, especially for girls - we'll be all right," Belkin said. "And now there is finally a program where they can stay in state. Michigan State has had a program for a long time but now they have another choice and it's a choice that has the academics as well as the athletic tradition. I think the program will be fine because of the sport that we're starting is so popular." Belkin has the resourse of a strong women's club team at her disposal but to compete against long-time varsity programs such as Wisconsin and Michigan State, it might take some time. The Badgers made it all the way to See HERRINGTON, Page 7 ves that his Phoenix Suns, despite the ho ttle, have a chance to return to the NBA F itle that eluded them last year. time, play defense. I really enjoyed playing under him, and learned a lot from him. D: What were the team's feelings winning the bronze medal, knowing that nothing less than a gold was ex- pected by most of the country? M: We were real upset. Every- body thought we would win the gold, and everybody expected us to win the gold, and that's what we expected. We worked awfully hard all sum- mer to do that, and to win the bronze was definitely a downer. I had a great experience, and I'll never take that away. But winning the bronze is not what we went there for. D: Are you looking forward to representing your country again on Dream Team II next summer in the World Championships to be held in Toronto? M: Yeah, I think it'll be fun. It's going to take away some of the sum- mer, which I don't like. But I think it's going to be a lot of fun playing with those guys. Getting to know them a little bit better, I think that's going to Great Fresh Pasta Dinners for Less with Your College I.D. S n 5s & T esa p mea I Mondays & Tuesdays only, 5-10 p.m. Select from 3 favorites: Donald J. Munro Professor of Philosophy and Chair, Department of Asian Languages and Cultures 1994 Warner G. Rice Humanities Award Recipient The Distortion of Inquiry in China January 25 Consequences f.an Elite Disease February 1