4B - The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, February 19, 1996 BASKETBALL By Brent McIntosh * Daily Sports Ed hoot. Shoot. Shoot. They scream it at him with religious fervor. Shoot: the sacred act of the religion called basketball. Shoot: the mantra of fans who, for one obscure reason or another, just don't like Dugan Fife. Shoot: that which Fife loves to do, but is chastised for not doing enough. Shoot: what Dugan Fife would gladly do to you when you ask him about his shooting hesitancy. > "I'm just going to play my game regardless of what people say," Fife said. "If the shot's there, I'm going to shoot it - if it's the right situation." - The right situation? Like making his first start in a month and a half, in hostile Columbus, with his - as Michigan's senior captain, they are truly his - Wolverines in a three- game skid? The right situation: Fife calmly nailed two long- range bombs to grab an 8-2 lead. The Wolverines never pooked back. Fife doesn't look back much either. Especially not into the Crisler stands, where a vocal nminority of Michigan "fans" insist on shouting "Shoot!" whenever he gets the ball. Dugan Fife has little respect for those people. "A lot of people go to the games - I C o00 itor shooting percentage falls. It might even drop to a level where John Q. Gymrat thinks he can take you. "I hear things, like people say, 'What's Dugan doing on the court? I could do that,"' Fife said. "Maybe they could: I don't have the most talent in the world - but I do a lot of little things. "If you've played with me at the CCRB or the IM, you'd be able to tell I'm going to play hard no matter if it's in my backyard or in front of 15,000 people. I don't think a lot of people understand the game enough to see that." That's what happens when you're the frat boy on the basketball team, when you're the high priest of hustle on a squad of dunk kings. Every pickup game, no matter how inconsequential, becomes a war in your opponent's mind: time to prove Dugan's not so special. "You play at the IM or the CCRB and someone makes a shot on you, they're going to make sure you know it, they're going to come tell you about it," Fife said. "You might be at a party two weeks later, and they're going to say, 'Remember me? I made that shot over you at CCRB.' You come to expect it." Why do they come after you? Because you're the ap- proachable one. The one with the least raw talent. The one who looks like a hundred other guys on campus. The one everybody sees in the library. You're the kid next door. Dugan is the kid next door, right? Sure - except that the kid next door wasn't recruited by Michigan to play point guard. Or to play quarterback, for that matter. The kid next door wasn't part of the "Fab Four and Fife." The kid next door's dad wasn't also a former Michigan basketball captain. Dugan's father, Dan, was. He played two seasons beside now-Houston Rocket coach Rudy Tomjanovich; then in 1970- 71, Dan Fife led a 19-7 Michigan squad. "When Fife has the ball," then-coach Johnny Orr told the Michigan Daily in 1971, "we've got a basket." "(He's) quarterbacking the offense with greater proficiency," the Daily said about Dan. He averaged more than 12 points per game before going on to pitch big league baseball and work as an assistant coach for Michigan basketball. Nice heritage for "the kid next door." It was, too, a maize and blue heritage. Dugan calls Michigan "the only place I seriously considered." Which was no surprise. I was coming to games," Dugan said. "I'd come watch them practice and shoot after practice. I knew all the players growing up. When I'd play in the backyard, I'd be a different player, like Eric Turner or something like that. I basically grew up here."4 He grew up well, under the tutelage of Dan, who served as both father and varsity basketball coach. In his senior year at Clarkston High, Dugan scored 2,083 points. And passed for 1300 yards and 17 touchdowns. And batted over .300 while playing shortstop. And was All-State in both basketball and football. And chose Michigan. The much-heralded freshman arrived in Ann Arbor on the heals of the Fab Five, basketball's most lauded recruiting class. He was ready to step in and contribute, to help take the Wolverines back to the Final Four. So Fife, who as a senior averaged 27.7 points per game and once hit for 49, came to Crisler and scored ... exactly zero field goals. Zero-for-nine from the floor. The kid who could nail it from anywhere in high school played only eight games. So he got frustrated. That's only natural, going from star starter to bench boy, even if the five guys ahead of you are a world-famous bunch of 19-year-olds who had only last season done the unheardof, advancing to a national champi- onship game with five first-years starting. "We tried to talk with him along that line: 'You're going to be fine - don't worry. Hang in there. Your day will come,"' Michigan coach Steve Fisher said. "And he knew that." What he didn't know, though, was what Dugan Fife's role was in the greater scheme of Michigan basketball. "When I came in, I really didn't know where I fit in," Fife said. "There were so many good players, I was kind of in awe for a while. "The first time we played pickup ball, there were 10 guys, and then me and Leon Derricks didn't even get in the game. We just sat on the sidelines and I was basically a fan. I couldn't believe how good these guys were. I look back on it now, and I was just so young and immature." Young and immature - and afraid to shoot. "I'd be in the game for five minutes at the most, and I'd see Rob (Pelinka) or James (Voskuil) get in the game and shoot it, and if they missed they got pulled," Fife said. "So I wasn't going to shoot it. I don't care. I could have been wide- open. That's not the way to play." The year wasn't a total loss for Fife, though. He got to go to Hawaii, and among the only five contests his team lost was one national championship game. Dugan became close with Rose - which, he admitted, "I wouldn't have expected; we're totally different people" - and he began to fini his place at Michigan. But the once-prolific scorer's only tallies came at the free throw line. To understate, he was not the most attractive candidate to take the lineup opening created when supersoph Chris Webber decided to get paid for dunking. Fisher, though, called Fife "the man of the moment" - not exactly a ringing endorsement, but as much as the kid next door can expect. Sure enough, Fisher's first lineup featured Fife, Rose and Jimmy King in a three-guard set. "Before the Georgia Tech game, Jalen was looking at a press sheet, and hear them in the stands - and they have no idea what's going on," Fife said. "They might play, but they've probably never played organized basketball in their lives. The people that call in to the talk shows? They have no idea. It was upsetting last year, but I could care less what people say about me this year." Last year was not a good one for Fife. After shooting .422 from behind the arc as a sophomore, 1994-95 found Fife hitting only 27 percent of his bombs. And with good reason: Getting open looks at the hoop is a good deal easier with an NBA-draft quality guard driving, drawing the defense, and hitting a wide- open you for the trey. Then Jalen Rose joins the Denver Nuggets, and your he said, 'Dugan, you didn't score last year?"' Fife said. "Then I came out and hit the first shot of the season." Welcome to the starting lineup. Little did he know he would start every game for the next two years. Little did he know that he would score 16 points and grab six boards at Minnesota. Little did he know that his contribution would be critical in wins over Michigan State, Purdue and Illinois, all in his sophomore year. Maybe it's going to work out. Maybe I'm going to be the consistent three-year starter Dad was. Little did he know about the miserable junior year he would suffer. Little did he know that his streak of 65 consecutive startsr- two whole seasons! - would be snapped during his senior captaincy, when he was relegated to a sub's role in favor of 6-foot-5 sophomore Travis Conlan Then, as he sat during tipoffs, a funny thing happened. Dugan Fife became a leader. "He's started when Jalen was here and now he's not starting," freshman and sometimes-starter Albert White said. "But he plays hard. He sets screens. Guys like Dugan are guys you have to learn from." Conlan called him "the action guy": he leads by hustling, by playing smart, by being there for freshmen when they need the counsel of an elder. "From day one, he's helped me out with coping..." freshman and oftentimes-starter Louis Bullock said. "There have been times I went to him with questions or the way I was feeling, and he would quickly help me out or cheer me up or whatever was needed to get me back on track." Fisher is obviously proud of his senior. "He's developed the responsibility that a captain and a fourth-year player in a program should have," Fife's coach said. "He has become a leader when by nature that's not his style. He has become more a vocal, outward leader of this team - and he's been a delight to have. He's a winner; he makes everybody else a little better. He will give you everything he has everyday." Like Dan Fife, perhaps? Reread that paragraph, then read the next. "He's a tremendous leader," Fife's coach said. "Every game he's playing up to his capabilities. He practices the same as he plays, with a great deal of enthusiasm and desire. He's a super competitor and this wears off on others. He affects the way the whole team is playing. He controls the offense and makes the whole team go. He's extremely unselfish on the court and would sacrifice anything for the team." That's Johnny Orr, in February 1971, talking about a gutty senior captain named Danny Fife. But now it's a quarter-century later, the same month but 1996, and an organizational sciences major named Dugan Fife is preparing to graduate. Will he follow Dan into coaching? Dugan says no: "too many problems." Get a job? He says he's been working on his resume and might consider consulting. Grad school? Maybe at Michigan? He's leaning that way, but he says he doesn't want to think about it until basketball's over. Playing basketball in Europe? "I've gone to Europe, and I've played in Europe against some of Europe's best players," Fife said. "I liked playing there, but I wouldn't want to live there." It's almost too perfect: It's a nice place to visit, but I wouldn't want to live there, says the kid next door. I'm comfortable right here, thanks. Where will Dugan Fife be next year? The answer isn't available yet, but the safe bet is that he'll be right here, somewhere down the street. After all, Michigan's in his blood -he's the kid next door. Fife From the earl lhAOJC liest time I can remember, Ibhe New: > 11 By Barry Sollenberger * Daily Sports Editor he Iayup drill. It's one the Michigan men's basketball team has done a thousand Before games, coach Steve Fisher might give the familiar yell, "All right ...two lines ... layups!" and everyone will file into position. And it begins. Right- handed layups and then left-handed ones. A drill as old as the game itself. In fact, the routine has become such a habit that Fisher probably doesn't even need to tell his team what to do before a game. Every Wolverine will go through the drill the same way. With the exception of one - freshman Louis Bullock. At first glance, his pregame warm-up does not appear to differ from anybody else's routine. But it does. You see, the hand-slap is also an important part of the layup drill. After the players make their layup, they generally give everyone five as they get back in line. Bullock, too, always slaps. But he does it only with his left hand. His right hand - his shooting hand, the hand that got him here - remains untouched. I must have started doing it back in the sixth grade," Bullock said. "I got that from one of the guys who used to come into the gym. I used to try to do everything that he did." So what's the guy's name? Pause. "Uh ... Danny ... Danny Bird," Bullock said. - Bullock no longer keeps in touch with Bird, but the habit has stuck. "That's something that was always ... like a 'why are you doing it?' sort of thing," said Joseph Childress, the cousin of the Portland Trail Blazers' Randolph Childress, and Bullock's best friend since the two were high school teammates at The Canterbury School in Accokeek, Md. "He'll even reach across his body to -smack your hand, instead of letting you touch his shooting hand." * As silly as this superstition may seem, you can bet that no current Wolverine wants to violate it. After all, the owner of that right hand is Michigan's only outside shooting threat. } U.. Fisher doesn't get carried away when talking about his freshman guard. "I "ois Rullock can shoot the basketball." Fisher likes to say about three times a He has been working on his shooting touch ever since he was ... oh ... about three years old. "Every time we would go to the toy store, I would ask him what he wanted," Bullock's mother Mary said. "He would always find one of those little nets and a little softball. "So we had one of those (nets) downstairs ... and in the bedroom ... and we put them up in different places. That's really the way he entertained himself since he was three years old." He has been burning the nets ever since. As a junior at Canterbury, he was named All-State after averaging 26.5 points per game on 55-percent shooting from the floor and 86-percent shooting from the line. He then transferred to Laurel Baptist for his,senior season when Canterbury decided to de-emphasize basketball. After playing off-guard at Canterbury, Bullock moved to the point at Laurel for coach Chris Chaney. The switch in position did not hurt Bullock's shot. He finished his senior season averaging 25.7 ppg on 61-percent field goal shooting. He also hit 90 3-pointers, making 59 percent of his attempts from beyond the arc. "His shot is so key to his game," Chaney said. "People are so afraid of the 3- pointer." The list of Bullock's high school accomplishments goes on and on. He was a 1995 McDonald's All-American and won the 3-point shoot-out at the game in April. He also set a single-game record with 40 points in the Capital Classic High School All-Star Game. But high school success only means so much. Sophomores Jerod Ward and Willie Mitchell dominated high school competi- tion, only to struggle during their first two years at Michigan. Bullock is a different story. He has already been a major factor at this level. "He's very comfortable that he can score and he should be," Fisher said. "If he gets an open shot, it's like an open shot in high school. You don't get as many, because of the players you're going against. But when he has an open look, he shoots it the same way he did a year ago." Coming out of high school, Bullock was regarded by recruiting expert Bob Gibbons as the best 3-point shooter and the No. 15 high school senior in the nation. When it came time for Bullock to choose a college, his short list included Florida, Maryland and Michigan. Bullock eliminated the Terrapins early because he would have ridden the bench this season behind an experienced senior backcourt. That left Florida and Michigan. And mom knew where she wanted him to go. "I did like Florida, myself," Mary Bullock said. "I really wanted him to go to Florida. That was my choice. But I wouldn't let on until he made his decision." On his recruiting trip to Michigan, Bullock was so sold on the school he was Bullock has had as big of an impact as any Wolveri. Sure, forward Maurice Taylor is the' go-to guy, but Bullock has been as impressive and consistent as anybody. He is also a strong candidate to be the second straight Wolverine (after Taylor) to grab the conference's Big Ten Freshman of the Year award. "He's very confident and unafraid and I like that about him," Fisher : said. "He steps to the free throw lire and you're shocked if he doesn't "To be able to shoot the ball the way he does, that's not a dimension that many kids have." "l cIt's tough to argue with Fisher. But Bullock's game still needs to improve. While he can tickle the twine with the best of them, he is not a machine from the outside. His 1-for- I1 shooting from the field against Iowa last Tuesday attests to that. "There have been times this year where I've missed some shots I've been accustomed to making," Bullock said. "But instead of getting down, I've got to, keep just playing the game." Bullock also does not scare anybody with his muscle. You could almost fit two of Bullock (165 pounds) inside teammate Robert Traylor (300). "Physically, he doesn't have the maturity yet to come in and dominate," Fisher said. "So he's got a lot of improving that should take place when he starts to add 4 strength." Bullock's current situation mirrors Maceo Baston's. Baston has been one of Fisher's most consistent players this season, averaging around 11 points and six rebounds per game. But truth be told, the sophomore isn't much better than he was last season when he chipped in about eight points and six boards per game as a freshman. Part of the problem is his size. Baston is 6-foot-9 with lengthy arms, but he could still fit through a crack in the wall at 210 pounds. He was expected to bulk up this past summer and emerge as a star. It hasn't happened. Bullock himself will need to hit the weights this summer to reach that next leel. "Louis is a guy that a year from now, with added strength and maturity and