The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, January 29, 1996 - 3B . i . Pelinka Former Wolverine guard talks about the Fab Five and law school Meeting Rob Pelinka, you wouldn't thinkyou werefaced with aformer Divi- *on I basketball player, let alone a man who has played in more NCAA tourna- ment games than most people in the uni- verse. Pelinka, who stands at an unim- posingheightof6-foot-5, ismorelikely to be a Michigan law student. And, not surprisingly, that's what he is. Pelinka, you might remember, played basketball atMichiganfrom 1988-93. He was a member of the '89 championship team, and returned to the finals in 1992 9nd 1993. Now, Pelinka spends his time in Ann Arbor as a law student. But don't think the work load has been too difficult. Pelinka graduated from the Michigan Business School with a 3.91 GPA. As aformer athlete, you would expect Pelinka to bask in the memories of made 3-pointers and come-from-behind wins. Instead, his memories are related to how he was able to impact others. At Michi- gan, Pelinkarealizedthathewouldbeput a pedestal as a member ofthe basket- ball team. He acceptedthis responsibility with open arms as itgave him the chance to reach out to people. Lee Seelig recently had the chance to speak with Pelinka for the Daily. Daily: So, why did you choose Michi- gan? Pelinka: It really came down to a few different things in making the choice. I had a real close relationship with my #ther. He was involved in my basketball career in the fact that he went to, I think, every home game during my entire career in Ann Arbor. He was there. I wanted to pick a school that had the top credentials academically and then with the athletic prowess that a school like Michigan has. I think the combina- tion of Michigan and being in the vicinity wheremy father could still be as involved in my career as he was when I was a high ehool player. The whole combination of those factors made it seem like a self- made choice to come here. D: What was your first impression of Steve Fisher when he recruited you? P: Coach Fisher, when I was a fresh- man, was an assistant. He did a large part of the recruiting in the Chicago area be- cause he-was a high school coach at one point. So his ties to the Chicago area were real strong and he kind of had a name ' ere. He did a lot of my personal recruiting. He went to a lot of my games. In fact, he was a big factor in my decision. I really liked coach Fisher. I liked how he re- cruited, I liked what he had to say about the school, and how coach Frieder ran the program. D: What are you doing now? P: This is my last year of law school. I'm on my way out. I have three more months. Atthe end ofthe semester, I'll be graduating. D: How many years have you spent in Ann Arbor? P: Eight years. A third of my life. I wouldhave neverimagined when I picked up and left Chicago that I would have spent that much time here. But it has been a great run of years for me. The Univer- sity of Michigan will always hold a very special place in my heart. .D: What has been so gratifying about *Iichigan? P: I think what's been neat about this Urtiversity to me is that what you put into your experience here, you can pull out. And, it has so much to offer, that if you explore different things you're going to find benefits from each and every area that you look into. I think I've really developed intellectually as a person here. I think my character has grown. I think I have learned how to relate and how to interact with a lot of different people in a lot ofdifferent arenas. I think I've learned to appreciate a broader perspective. The University of Michigan has been a train- ing ground for my character. D: Do you think that is due specifically to the University or' could it have hap- pened anywhere? P: I think the University of Michigan is unique in a sense, from an athlete's per- spective especially, because I don't think you've got another school in America blessedwith the opportunity ofbeing able to parlay my athletic experiences into doing some things with people after I graduated, and even while I was still playing, focused around youth. I got to work a lot with kids, and that was neat, D: Is that support you were talking about something you think is unique to Michigan? P: I maintained that when you put on a Michigan jersey, it is an amazing plat- form. I use the analogy that it is kind of like akey that unlocks the hearts ofyoung can't live in the past, you need to look forward. A lot of my dreams and visions are what I can do down the road, in future years, as opposed to what I have done in the past. Not to say, that there aren't times when I'm sitting on the couch listening to music, or talking with friends, and flash- backs come up ofthe'89 season. Of Glen Rice, and therainbowjumpers, and bring- ing us to the promised land. Or, the game that everyone always wants to talk about, the "timeout game" with Chris Webber. There have been nights where I haven't slept, literally, for whole nights because I'll be thinking about that game. I've talked to Chris since the game and I've seen it even on ESPN, and stuff. And they show the clip of that, and I was standing on the court opposite Chris, on the baseline, in a spot that was known to be the "hot spot" in the Super Dome. I was with Eric Riley, I remember, in the hotel watching the ESPN teasers to the game. They said the past two Final Fours that had been played in the Super Dome had been decided by a baseline jumper. One was Keith Smart with Indiana, and before that it was Michael Jordan. Both baseline jumpers to decide the game. And where was I standing when Chris Webber called a timeout? I was standing on that baseline and I was wide open for a three and he said since then: "I saw him, and he was open, and I thought I'd get it to him." That's a shot that could literally change someone's life. If I had gotten the ball and missed it, I would have been the scape- goat in Michigan history. But if I had made it, I would have been the Sports Illustrated cover boy. Maybe it's best that it stayed the way it did. D: If you could choose, do you get the ball? P: No question, I get the ball and I shoot it. Either way, it would have made me a better person. D: What would be your ideal situation after graduation from law school? P: I think, ideally, I would love to be in some sort of position, and I don't know how it would happen, where I could have an impact on young people. I don't know if that means coaching, or if that means broadcasting, or ifthat means as a lawyer helping out families, doing pro bono work in a time ofneed, orbeing there for people as a counselor. I definitely think that what drives me is to hopefully get into a posi- tion where I can benefit the lives of other people again. Interleagueplay a blight on baseballs tradarn T iger fans can hardly wait, I'm sure. Just picture it: Barry Bonds and Cecil Fielder matched up in a one-on- one home run derby at Tiger Stadium. They couldn't imagine such a scene before, not in the regular season. But now, at the behest of Major League Baseball's team owners, clubs from the American and National leagues will be facing each other. That means a guy like Bonds, who as a San Francisco Giant may never have played against Detroit, will be making appearances here. Tiger fans can hardly wait, to be sure. But then again, I guess they'll have to, since interleague play doesn't begin until 1997. And even then San Francisco and Detroit won't play each other, because the Eastern Division Tigers will only face teams from the NL Eastern that year. By the time Bonds gets here in 1998 or 1999, 1 hope he'll still be on an NL West team; otherwise Tiger fans might have to wait even longer, for the divisional matchups to rotate around again. And by then, who knows: The novelty of interleague play may have worn off, or perhaps they and everyone else will have finally seen the concept for the senseless gimmick that it is. Interleague play is just that: a shortsighted, asinine, get-marginally-rich- quick scheme on the part of baseball owners - and not just because of the psycho rotating schedule plan. For starters, it destroys a 127-year tradition, which is the separation between the two leagues. The fact that all of the teams don't play each other is part of baseball's charm, as it keeps the leagues distinct from one another. In other sports, teams in different conferences play each other, and that's OK - their styles of play are basically the same. The American and National leagues, though, are as different as Fielder's and Bonds' waist sizes - the NL has its double-switches and running style; the AL has its designated hitters and wait-for-the-homer mentality. How they'll match up is always a mystery, one we have to wait until October to see. But after this upcoming season, the unique quality of the World Series - that it's a matchup between teams that never play one another - will no longer exist. For many fans, this is reason enough to hate interleague play. For many others, this is not a big loss. But even those people must agree that interleague play only does harm, as it will mess with baseball's playoff structure. How does it do that'? Via another recent concoction of the owners; the wild card. Because of the wild card, which allows the best non-division-winning team in each league to make postseason play, teams from different divisions compete with each other for playoff spots. Interleague play now makes this system problematic, since teams will be playing schedules of varying difficulty. Remember: Teams from, say, the AL East will face only teams from the NL East in a given year, and no other NL teams. So if interleague play had existed last year, the AL's wild-card team, the Yankees, might have missed the playoffs - not because they didn't prove themselves superior against AL teams, but because they had the misfortune of playing six games against the NL East's Atlanta Braves and Philadelphia Phillies. So with all of this to consider, why are the baseball owners pushing interleague play? Perhaps because they didn't consider all of this. Or perhaps because tradition. and the integrity of the playoffs don't matter to them. The answer, however, is most likely money. Interleague play is a quick way to get more of it, because fans will surely jump at the chance to see a Barry Bonds face their American League team. Surely; though, they'll soon stop jumping, leaving it up to the owners to come up with yet another gimmick. That's what I can't wait to see. - Darren Everson can be reached over e-mail at evey@umich.edu. SPORTS INFORMATION that you could say has the graduate pro- grams that Michigan has to offer. I went to the Business School and it is one of the top business schools in America. From an academic side, obviously the school has so much to offer there. And then from the sports side of things there is just so much tradition here. Being apart from the program now for a few years like I've been, I still see the support of people in town. If I'm grocery shopping, or at Briarwood, people still come up and say: "Man, I remember those great years, and the runs, and the Final Fours." It's always there, and you can just tell that there is a common bond in this community with this University built around the sports program. D: It must be flattering having people stop to say "hi" every now and then. P: Yeah, it's neat. It's neat to know when you have done something with your athletic career that has touched someone else's life. It's not necessarily: "Yeah, I remember, I was watching the national championship game on the couch, eating a bowl ofpopcorn, and it was the best time of my life." But, it is stories like: "You know, when you were a sophomore, I ran into you uptown. You were buying some CDs, and my son was with me, and you came over and bent down and talked to him for a couple ofminutes. And that changed him as a person." You hear stories like that, little things you didn't even realize that were happen- ing at the time. But, that made a larger impact on the lives of other people. I was kids. When a Chris Webber, a Juwan Howard or anyone wearing a Michigan uniform walks into a high school gym, or walks into a store, they have a platform. Thekids immediately are looking up to and respecting that person. There is alittle bit of a troubling aspect to that because you need to be so responsible with that platform that the school grants you. But, if you use it correctly, it's very powerful. It can be used to really help out the lives of other people and that is what was so great about it for me. D: How involved were you with youth groups during your undergraduate years? P: I had the chance to go around and speak to a lot of people. Some people helped me out after my senior year and I got to get around. Someone counted up the numberofpeople I got to speak to, and it was like 400,000 people. Just at differ- ent basketball camps, and different orga- nizations. Those experiences to me were as pow- erful as putting on the championship ring or playing in the Final Four in front of millions of people. I still talk to kids around the country. D: How often do you think about the actual basketball aspect of your career? P: Igetprettynostalgicwhen I get back into Crisler Arena. I've been doing the games on the radio for WJR, I even got a chance to do one on PASS TV, which was fun. I think when I put myself in the hot seat, and start to analyze the games, I tend to really reflect a lot on my career. Out- side of that, I think it is important as an athlete to relish and be happy with those memories. But, on the other side, you I'umblers topple Minutewomen By Nancy Berger Daily Sports Writer Every afternoon at the Sports Coli- seum, the women's gymnastics team spends hours practicing routines and yerfecting their flips, twists and splits. 4 In the sport of gymnastics, practice makes perfect and perfection is what is going to win meets. In recent weeks, Michigan has learned that competing as a team is just as important as executing a flawless routine. In preparation for the Wolverines' meet with Massachusetts this past week- "There was no individual out there, because, if there was, then we wouldn't have won the meet," senior Wendy Marshall said. That team effort was well reflected in the scoring results. Seven gym- nasts who were not sidelined by inju- ries stepped up and all made vital contributions. "We have really gone to the bot- tom of the depth chart," Plocki said. "One hundred ninety-three points shows how far our talent extends." The depth of the talent extends and pleasure with the performance of her freshmen, was pleased with her more experienced gymnasts as well. Junior Andrea McDonald probably had the most impressive day of any of her teammates. On her way to placing first in the all-around (39.025), McDonald finished first on the beam (9.925) and second on the bars (9.800). Marshall, who tied Amelkovich for second in the all-around, was a model of perfection on the vault, as she re- ceived the fifth perfect 10 ofhercareer. Forthose who did not compete in the