The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, February 14, 1994 - 3 OEM Watson The former Michigan assistant * basketball coach talks about his new job Perry Watson coachedatDetroit's Southwestern High School for 13 years before becoming an assistant basketball coach at Michigan. His teams compiled a 302-24 record while winning two state championships and a top ranking in the USA Today high school basketball poll. Watson coached former Michigan players Leslie Rockymore and Antoine Joubert, as well as current Wolver- ines' star Jalen Rose. Watson served as an assistant coach to Steve Fisher at Michigan when the Wolverines went to the NCAA Finals in 1992 and 1993. Fol- lowing last season, he was hired to I coach the University ofDetroit-Mercy Titans of the Midwestern Collegiate Conference, replacing currentNorth- western head coach Ricky Byrdsong. Recently, Daily Sports Writer Will McCahill spoke with Watson about coaching Daily: What kind of goals did you have for the Detroit-Mercy basket- ball program coming into this sea- son? Watson: I wanted to raise the level of the program in total, especially as far as getting a commitment from the players themselves. This was a pro- gram that hadn't won in a number of years, and it was really a question of changing attitudes. I wanted to change the aspirations (of the players in- volved) from mediocrity to expecting to be the best. I also wanted to create a presence in high-school athletes' decision-making process, to establish this program as a viable option for them, to try and tap the talent in the Ietroit metro area. °D: Do you feel you are competing with Michigan in recruiting in the Detroit area? Does being a Detroit native with your high-school coach- ing background give you an edge in that process? - W: There is a vast amount of tal- ent in the Detroit area, and I think we're bumping heads with Michigan, Michigan State, whoever, in trying to recruit in Detroit. Yeah, I guess I have an edge (be- ing from Detroit). I suppose there is a greater acceptance level among high- school athletes and their parents. (My background) helps me get in the door * with some of those kids, lets me have that opportunity with them. D: What kind of differences have you seen in going from being in charge of a really serious high school pro- gram like Southwestern's, to being an assistant coach at a Division I pro- gram like Michigan's, then becoming head coach at the college level? What are some of the different roles you have filled at each level? .W: There are a lot of similarities between coaching high school and college, being a head coach. You have a lot more responsibilities being a head coach at both levels as opposed to being an assistant. ~Michigan was a great growth op- portunity for me. I got to see what it's like with a big-time basketball pro- gram at a great institution like Michi- gan. It showed me what to look for, what to do and what steps to take in building a successful basketball pro- gram. (At Detroit) I've been able to use some.of the experience I got at Michi- gan with things surrounding coach- ing: having an office staff to deal with, recruiting, things like that. As far as different roles, there's not much difference in dealing with people at the high school and college levels (as a head coach). There are different pressures on the players at the two levels, but you try to give them as good advice as you can and keep them on the right track. D: In all your years of coaching, what would you say have been your fondest memories? W: I feel its hard to say there's Of course, my two years with U- M were just unbelievable. Again, I was blessed to be a part of that, going to two national championship games two years in a row. D: Who was the best playeryou ever coached? W: I can't really say who the best is, because there are so many differ- ent levels and times-the guys from the championship teams, the guys from the early years. I was blessed to have had so many great, talented players come through. Of course, there was Jalen Rose, obviously, and (Minnesota guard) Voshon Lenard, (former-UNLV guard) Anderson Hunt. Also the guys from the earlier years: (former Michigan players) Antoine Joubert and Leslie he's really remained Jalen. Some people give in to the pressure and criticism around them and conform to the expectations, but not Jalen, and it's great to see him live up to it all. D: How has your relationship with Jalen changed in the last year, since you are now farther away from him than you've been for the last ten yearsj or so? W: That's the only change: dis- tance. He will always be a part of my life and I of his. Of course, I don't see him as much, but we still talk often. He's still apart of my family. My wife was just at the game last Tuesday (against Indiana), and Jalen comes to my games whenever he can. So really our relationship hasn't changed that much. D: How do you respond to criti- cism of the way Jalen was recruited? W: Well, I think there's been some fabricating going on with that, anything to sell copy, really. Any- body who knows Jalen - whether it's Steve Fisher or (former Michi- gan assistant coach) Mike Boyd - will tell you that nobody can tell Jalen what to do, that he wouldn't let anybody manipulate him. Again, I haven't read most of the stuff. People have only told me what's in the book (Mitch Albom's Fab Five). I didn't buy it, didn't read it. D: Are you surprised at all by the immediate success of Chris Webber in the NBA? W: No, I'm not surprised at all with Webber. He was the best eighth grader in the country supposedly, and carried that through his two years in college. I think he's just carried that with him to the next level. D: How much did you talk with Chris about his decision to leave Michigan? What did you tell him? W: Well, I told him that it's not just about basketball -the change to the next level - there's a change in situation going from one level to the next. I think he was more ready for the high pressure than the average col- lege sophomore. He had to face a lot of adversity in his two years at Michigan, whether it was the timeout (in the 1993 NCAA championship game) or guaranteeing the win against Duke. He's learned through all that, and I think the pressure he's come through at Michigan prepared him well for the NBA. Chris and I used to talk each night about the pros and cons about going pro. He used me as a sounding board for his ideas about everything, trying to look at all the angles of it. I just told him to do what he thought was best and encouraged him to look at all the angles. D: What aboutJalen? Has he talked to you about leaving after this sea- son? What have you told him? W: I have not talked to Jalen about that. Jalen is concentrating on win- ning basketball games. Right now Jalen wants to win a Big Ten champi- onship. KEN SUGIURA vClose But No Sugiura Some Winter Olympic sports for lugers only it's that time again. Yes, it's time once again to watch with puzzlement those sports invented and cherished by our Scandinavian, friends, the sports that make us all realize that. Yes, too much snow, cold and ice can seriously impair one's sport-inventing faculties. But with the Olympics in Lillehammer already underway, there is nothing we can do this time around. We will have to endure two weeks or so's worth of CBS late-night host Pat O'Brien pretending he has a clue about winter sports, two more annoyingly cute mascots, Haakon and Kristin, and most importantly, a glut of sports dominated by people whose names run rampant with silent j's, not to mention those dots over the vowels. Something must be done. Not just because some of the sports are boring; though some of them are, we can accept that. You try inventing a sport after not seeing the sun for six months. Instead, something must be done with a couple of these sports because one of them is not actually a sport, and the other is weird to the bazillionth degree. That said, here are one man's suggestions: 1) Keep hockey, Nordic skiing, Alpine skiing, speedskating and bobsledding. Keep them because these are sports that, in some form or another, most of us have played. If we haven't been on a sled, or skied, or played hockey or raced our friends on the ice, then at least it is not hard to imagine. And, more importantly, they're all real sports - there are scores, times and distances. It is not hard to determine who the winners and losers are, one of the best things about sports. These sports, boring though some of them may be, stay. 2) Bag figure skating. Sorry, this is'not a sport. Men, women, pairs, all of them must go. Yes, figure skating requires great skill and is very popular. However, these things can also be said of many things, for instance, "The Price is Right." Besides, the whole thing is more fixed than the stray puppies down at the pound (Incidentally, so is "The Price is Right."). There is no "sport" to figure skating. It is just people dancing on ice. If you disagree, please remember that one of the competitions is called "ice dancing." And the last time anyone checked, dancing was not a sport. It was just "dancing." Does being able to do on ice something that someone else can do on land make you an Olympic athlete? No, it doesn't. All it makes you is someone with good balance. So at least until we see that Achy-Breaky guy bringing home the gold at the Summer Games, let's keep the Axels and crowbars in the garage. 3) Good-bye, doubles luge. No go for this one, either. Single luge can stay; we have all seen people on sleds before. But two people lying on top of each other on one sled is a little foreign and frankly, doesn't make a lot of sense. How did they come up with this anyway? After a luge race, did the loser want to go double or nothing, and the winner just got the wrong idea? I don't get the part of the top guy, either. The bottom guy, sure, he has to control the sled. That takes athletic ability. But the guy on top, what are his qualifications? Wanted: Male, must enjoy cold weather and high speeds. Comfortable and aerodynamic pref. If there were a Summer Olympic equivalent, it would be two guys riding a bike, only it wouldn't be a tandem. Instead, one guy would be doubling the other, like we used to do in grade school. That doesn't cut it. Doubles lugers, you can show yourselves to the door. You are free to separate yourselves now. Obviously, dropping these two sports creates a dearth of events for Winter Olympic fans. In their place, here are two more suggestions. 4) Snowball fights, anyone? This is inarguably the epitome of winter sports. The only thing more associated with winter than snowball fights is freezing your appendages stiff, and faint is the cry for that to be a demonstration sport in '98. Yes, you would be correct in saying the concept of snowball fighting as sport has never exactly gained raging popularity. In fact, the World League of Snowball Fighting never did get past the "Where did you come up with that idea?" stage. But then again, how many "I'd rather be doing the Nordic Combined" bumper stickers have you seen? Think about it. You could have large teams, filled with both men and women of all ages. It would be very '90s. All we'd need is some basic rules been one best thing. It's hard to single out any particular incident. I feel blessed to have been involved with so many great achievements at all levels. The firsts often come to mind as far as bests. Our first city championship was a great thing, because we sent a message to the community that we had arrived as a program. With the first state championship I feel that we had made so many strides toward really establishing Southwestern as a real power. The national championship (the number one ranking in the USA To- day high school poll), I never in my wildest dreams thought that could happen. DETROIT-MERcY SPORTS INFORMATION Rockymore. D: Speaking of Jalen, how do you think he has developed since you've known him? W: Well, I've known Jalen since he was 12 years old, and I think it's great the way he's grown and devel- oped both personally ard in his game. His success is really a credit to his desire and willingness to work hard to achieve his goals. Even when he was 12, anyone who knows the game of basketball could see the great potential he had. What thrills me is to see him live up to that potential, because a lot of people don't sometimes. Another thing is that, through all this - the pressure he's been in - See SUGIURA, Page 8 U Pavin outplays Couples to win L.A. LOS ANGELES (AP) - Corey Pavin spotted Fred Couples up to 60 yards off the tee, but beat him on the greens and scoreboard yesterday in their match play-like showdown in the Los Angeles Open. - Pavin scored his first U.S. PGA Tour victory in almost two years with a 3-under-par 68 over the final 18 holes at Riviera and a 271 total. Couples, one shot ahead when the final round started, could do no better than a closing 71 - much to the dismay of a large, vocal pro-Couples gallery - and finished at 273. - Pavin immediately dedicated the victory to Paul Azinger, the current PGA champion and aRyderCup team- mate who is undergoing treatment for eincer. "This is for you, Paul. Hurry up and get well and come back. We miss you," Pavin said. No one else really got into the title chase. It was a two-man race of clas- sic proportions; the powerful, long- hitting Couples against wiry, resource- ful, tenacious Pavin. Playing together in the final three- some in what amounted to match play, they once again confirmed the accu- racy of one of golf's more ancient adages: drive for show and putt for dough. Pavin won the dough, $180,000 from the total purse of $1 million, after he made two long birdie putts, from 30-35 feet on the third and from 25-30 feet on the 16th, while Couples missed two from within three feet. Couples, however, put on the show with his massive drives. The 447- yard par-4 15th served as an example. Pavin put all he had into his tee shot, grunting with the effort, and launched one of his best. He had 153 left to the flag. Couples, who had three-putted for bogey on the previous hole, let out some heat when he followed Pavin to the tee. He put his drive 63 yards ahead of Pavin's tee shot, drawing gasps from the gallery and exclama- tions of disbelief from the television Open title commentators. Both, however, made par and Pavin retained a one-shot lead and nailed it down with one of those long putts on 16, going two up with two to go. Pavin, a key figure in each of the last two American Ryder Cup tri- umphs, picked up his 11th victory in as many seasons on the U.S. tour and his first since the 1992 Honda Clas- sic. His only triumph last year came in the prestigious World Match Play Championship in London, where he beat Nick Faldo of England. i ~ Chinese Cuisine C elebrate with that special someone &COLOR .. I I IU lii .m I . ..0 w w %0 now f1111I, . f