Page 6F THE MICHIGAN DAILY NEW STUDENT EDITION SPORTS THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1994 high hopes for Fab Fie facle' Team made. headlines on and off the court A funny thing happened on the way to the national champion- ship. Well, make that several funny things. And no national champion- ship. In facttchigan team was sc busy making RACHEL headlines off BACHMAN the court, its Bach's Score on-court ex- ploits seemed like a sideline to the real story. For those of you who missed an episode or two, here's a recap, month by month, of what went down. November The players swagger dejectedly at Media Day, like people who didn't want to let on that they'd lost some- thing very valuable. Looking on the bright side, though, the aging Fab Five recruit- ing class --now in its junior year - didn't lose the farm when fellow Wolverine Chris Webber left for the NBA. They gained one thing: a 6- foot-10, 255-lb. vacancy under the hoop. Sophomore Dugan Fife, who has yet to sink a college basket, claims the fifth spot. As a local newspaper says, the starting lineup is "like Pub- lic Enemy with Jim Nabors singing lead." December Slow month. January Coach Steve Fisher's prayers are answered - long distance - with a 6-8 center from Senegal. Illegally re- cruited by Wake Forest, freshman Makhtar Ndiaye is free from wrong- doing and ready to play for Michigan. And he's a shot blocker. Southeastern Michigan begins to salivate. Says Fisher: "I thought we'd never have anyone after the Fab Five have so much written about them before they even shot a basket." The Fab Five. Learn it now, fresh- men: They're the exception to every rule. U Just when we think the Wol- verines are invincible, Juwan Howard and Jimmy King are side- lined by the chicken pox, of all things. Michigan fans wait with bated breath. Will they be back soon? Will they regain midseason form? Will they resist the urge to scratch? The answer on all counts: yes. After a road loss at Minnesota's Fire Trap Arena, Howard returns. King is back a game later. The Wol- verine faithful heave a collective sigh and put away the baking soda. February The Wolverines go from trouble with their immune systems to trouble with the law. King, Ray Jackson and walk-on Chris Fields are nabbed lift- ing several cases of beer from an Ann Arbor convenience store. They are sentenced to community service hours, probation, fines and the cries of Michigan State fans wearing empty beer cases on their heads. Their actions spark the debate: What are we more sick of, alcoholic jokes or Tonya Harding? March For the second time in a year, Jalen Rose is questioned by authori- ties about his alliances to known drug dealers. Was he ever caught ... using drugs? Nope. Selling them? Uh-uh. Even possessing them? No. Kind of makes us wonder: if a tree falls in a forest and no one is there to hear it, will the feds say Jalen pushed it? Howard and Rose off to the NBA in search of dreams EVAN PETRIE/Daily While laughing here, Michigan coach Steve Fisher couldn't have found Juwan Howard's announcement that he was entering the NBA draft funny. By CHAD A. SAFRAN Daily Basketball Writer Michigan men's basketball coach Steve Fisher taught math when he was a high school coach/teacher. The arithmetic was easy this spring when the Fab Four (originally the Fab Five before Chris Webber, NBA rookie of the year, left in 1993) lost two of its members to the professional ranks. On consecutive days, Juwan Howard and Jalen Rose announced their decisions to forgo their senior year and become eligible for the NBA draft June 29 in Indianapolis. Howard and Rose were the focal points of the Wolverines' offense this past season, finishing first and second, respectively, on the team in scoring. Howard also led the team in rebounding at 8.9 per game. Both earned selections on the All-Big Ten first team with Howard receivingunanimous approval. On the national front, Rose gained second-team All-American honors from the Associated Press, while Howard was selected to the third team by AP. Many speculated that Howard might return for his senior season, fulfilling a , promise he made to his late grand- mother to earn a degree. "I have to think .. about what's best for Juwan," the 6- foot-9 center said. "I didn't rush my decision. I thought Rose it over during the spring last year and the summer. As the season progressed I thought about it strongly." While Fisher did not try to talk Webber out of his decision, the coach tried to do so with Howard as he had done in 1990 with Sean Higgins. De- spite the emotion filled conversation that began with a drive around Ann Arbor and concluded in the Wolver- ines' locker room, Howard made his choice. "This is one of the toughest deci- sions I have ever faced in my life," Howard said. "This is tougher thar deciding to come to Michigan in the first place. I've never experienced anything like this in my life." Rose saw the draft as a chance to achieve a life long goal. "I thought about what would be best for me, and I thought about the opportunity to achieve my dream," he said about the factors that went into his decision. "I've been thinking about (playing professionally) all my lifeS and now is my chance to do it. I'm going to try to make the most of it." Rose leaves Michigan sixth on the Wolverines all-time scoring list with 1,788 points. Howard was one of five players in Michigan history to score 1,500 points and grab 700 rebounds. I I LEO R~ l tB rl 0] Juwan Howard Height: 6'-9" Weight: 250 Position: Center Career points: 1,526 Career rebounds: 745 Jaen Rose Height: 6'-8" Weight: 210 Position: Guard Career points: 1,788 Career assists: 401 Up-and-dowtn season ends in early tournalent ousting By CHAD A. SAFRAN Daily Basketball Writer In many respects the 1993-94 Michigan men's basketball season was not much different from the two campaigns that preceded it. The Wolverines were a confident and talent-laden bunch, as they had been since the arrival of the Fab Five in Ann Arbor in the fall of 1991. Michigan expected to be successful and the media thought so as well, predicting the Wolverines to win the 1994 Big Ten title. Yet certain things were different. The most notable change was the de- parture of Chris Webber for the NBA. Although Michigan coach Steve Fisher missed his 6-foot-10 power forward, he also had to deal with the loss of much of his bench as Eric Riley, James Voskuil, Rob Pelinka and Michael Talley all concluded their careers with the Wolverines' loss to North Carolina in the 1993 NCAA title game. One other difference between the 1993-94 season and the previous two years came about as well: no appear- ance in the national championship game. After falling to Duke and the Tar Heels in the title contest in 1992 and 1993, respectively, the Wolver- ines did not complete the Final Four trifecta this season. Eventual champion Arkansas knocked off Michigan, 74-68, in the Midwest Regional Final in Dallas' Reunion Arena before a largely pro- Razorback crowd that included Presi- dent Clinton and his family. Scotty Thurman led the way for Arkansas with 20 points, including 4 of 8 from three-point range. Despite falling behind by 14 mid- way through the first half as a result of a 20-1 Razorback blitzkrieg, the Wol- verines fought their way back into the game. A 9-0 run in the second stanza brought the Wolverines to within five, 47-42, and they eventually cut the deficit to just two, 63-61, when Juwan Howard hit an 8-foot baseline jumper with 5:31 remaining. Howard's contribution on both ends of the floor helped keep Michi- gan in the game. The junior center pumped in 30 points while grabbing 13 rebounds. "Juwan Howard is awesome," Ar- kansas coach Nolan Richardson said. "Every time he touches the ball, some- thing good happens. We tried to de- fend him with man-to-man, double- teams and triple-teams. He was still able to have a good day." His day wasn't good enough for the Wolverines as they could not get any closer after Howard's basket. Jalen Rose missed a layup opportu- nity with a little over 4:30 remaining and also clanged a trey attempt that would have tied the game inside the final 30 seconds. Rose's misses represented the Wolverines' performance from the field in this Elite Eight matchup. Michigan knocked down a mere 41 percent of its shots, including a 5-for- 19 performance by Rose and Dugan Fife's 1-for-8 effort.. "It hurts badly now for the coaches, the players and the whole Michigan family," said Howard, who earned the Midwest Region's Outstanding Player award for this play. "We've gotten used to it by making the cham- pionship game two years in a row. It was like you could take it to the bank." Prior to the tournament, the Wol- verines were ready to take the Big Ten title to the bank as well, but something happened on the way to hoisting the banner in Crisler Arena - Michigan lost three of its last four conference games. The end result was a 13-5 Big Ten mark. The most crushing of those losses may have been the one to Purdue. Michigan maintained a seven-point lead with 90 seconds remaining in the game, but the Wolverines failed to score another point as the Boilermak- ers reeled off eight straight points. Big Ten Player of the Year Glenn Robinson won the game for Purdue with a twisting jumper in the lane with just five seconds remaining. The loss severely damaged the Wolverines' chance for a No.1 seed in the tournament, but made a No. 2 seed into a virtual lock. All Michigan had to do was defeat Penn State and win the season finale at Northwestern. Besting the Nitanny Lions proved to be no problem, but the Wolverines suc- cumbed to the Wildcats, who achieved a bid to the National Invitational Tour- nament with the victory. "Northwestern has been playing with great confidence," said Fisher, following the 97-93 overtime loss. "The way they have been playing they can play with anybody." Earlier in the season, Michigan played like the team that could beat anybody, winning nine consecutive games that pushed them up to a No. 3 national ranking. After falling at Minnesota, a game which Howard and Jimmy King missed with the chicken pox, the Wolverines came back to beat Illinois three days later, 74-70. Following wins over Wisconsin and Purdue, controversy befell the Michigan basketball program. King, Ray Jackson and Chris Fields were accused of stealing beer from a local Dairy Mart just days before the Wol- verine played at Michigan State. The three later pled no contest to the incident and were sentenced to com- munity service and probation in addi- tion to a fine. The Michigan Athletic Department suspended the trio for the game against the Spartans, which Michigan won. In the midst of the winning streak came the Wolverines finest game of the season. Despite another snow storm socking Ann Arbor, fans lined up outside Crisler Arena for Michigan's rematch with Indiana days EVAPETR~ 1IE/Dtaily Makhtar Ndiaye came to the Wolverines as a mid-season transfer from Wake Forest where he was ineligible to play because of recruiting violations. Ndiaye added depth to a shallow Michigan bench. before the Tuesday matchup. The Hoo- siers defeated the Wolverines in Bloomington, 82-72, three weeks ear- lier - a game in which Michigan blew a 14-point lead. An intense battle was assured. However, Michigan had a presence on its bench for the first time all season. Webber made his return to Crisler for the first time since joining the Golden State Warriors and sat at the end of the Wolverines' bench, even participating in the pregame huddle. "He just told us to take it to 'em," Jackson said. AndMichigan did-exactly that, com- ing away with a 91-67 victory before the frenzied Wolverine faithful. The Maize and Blue limited the Hoosiers to 40.4 percent shooting while canning 54 percent of its attempts. "It was the intensity of a Final Four game. We were intense for 40e straight minutes for the first time this' season," King said. "The way we're playing right now we're finally peak- ing." The Wolverines just chose the wrong time to make it to the top. With big shoes to fill, expectations are high for new basketball recruits FORREST Continued from page 1F second incarnation does not succeed on a grand scale, it will no doubt be vilified. Doesn't seem quite fair. I wish the incoming freshmen knew what to expect; they surely have no way of knowing what awaits them. Here's merely a taste: Constant Comparisons to the Fab Five Everyone, reporters and fans alike, will ask the freshmen if they came to Michigan to be another Fab Five, if they think they can do what the Fab Five did and if they, unlike their predecessors, can win a national championship. careers progress. Perhaps it has to do with the Roman numeral aspect. Given that the 1994 class now has aII next to it, people will expect the same achievements from it that were produced by the group that necessitates the extra digit. The Fab Five merely created a precedent for the new class to live up to. Animosity from Practically Everyone Not Connected with Michigan The Fab Five saw this game in and out and eventually learned to deal with it and ignore it. However, it did have an effect on them. Next year's freshmen will be carrying the Fab Five's Many consider Jerod Ward, member of the