6F - New Student Edition - The Michigan Daily - September 3, 1996 BASKETBALL MICHAEL SROSENBERG i Roses Are Read INAL RUSTRAT Timeout s/houldn'7 haunt Baston "Maceo had everyone believing we were going to Dallas." - Michigan men 's basketball coach Steve Fisher after the regular season, on the Wolverines 'speculation about where they might play in the 1996 x. NCAA tournament. .MILWAUKEE - It would have been nice for Maceo Baston. He would have gone home to Dallas, played in front of his family, introduced his teammates to his friends back home. He would show the Wolverines around his hometown. They would have had a tgood time in Dallas. A week later, Baston probably did- n't even want to go there himself. With 3.2 seconds left in Michigan's first-round game against Texas on -March 15, Baston called a timeout his team didn't have, and as his hands came together the Wolverines' chances came crumbling gpart. The sound of the referee's whistle Twas immediate and final. Technical -foul, Michigan. Two free throws, Texas. The Longhorns nailed them both. Boom, boom. End of season, Michigan. Texas moved on. Baston was moved to tears. "I didn't know we didn't have any left," Baston said. "When I heard my teammates saying 'No! No!' my heart just dropped." Suddenly, a trip back to Dallas holds different connotations. Maceo Baston must hear about the timeout from high school friends, from Texas fans, from almost everybody. All he did was make a mistake, but when you make a mistake on national tele- vision, you're not allowed to forget. Baston stayed on the court for the final 3.2 seconds, unable to stop crying. He is reminded of his mistake con- stantly. People joke about his error, laugh at his expense. Maceo Baston, six feet and nine inches of determina- tion, reduced to a punchline. It's important to remember two things here. Michigan almost certain- ly would have lost if Baston hadn't called timeout. And the Wolverines never would have been close to win- ning if Baston hadn't played. Baston scored 23 points and grabbed 15 rebounds. He was virtually unstop- pable. "Maceo had a terrific, terrific game," Fisher said. Maceo Baston almost won the .game for his team. In the dim mind of some sports fans, he lost it. It's not fair. That doesn't seem to matter. "I told him not to worry about it' forward Maurice Taylor said. "We didn't want to turn our back on a teammate because of a mistake. It was a mistake anyone could make." It was a mistake anyone could make. Michigan fans know that all too well. Three years ago, the best playerin the Wolverines' recent histo- ry made the same mistake in the national title game. "We got the ball," Chris Webber said afterrhis team lost to North Car- olina, trying to piece together the five seconds he would remember for the rest of his life, "and I dribbled, and then ... I cost our team the game." Call it fate or coincidence, but Webber has been a different person since his timeout. Before that loss, he was an All-American, a player with seemingly limitless potential, a star who was achieving so much so early it was stunning. He was virtually unstoppable. Today, he has become almost a tragic figure. His feud with coach Don Nelson at Golden State has tar- nished his reputation. His shoulder keeps separating. He has been sent to the sidelines while contemporaries of similar talent have exceeded him in stature. Grant Hill has surpassed Webber in popularity, even in Web- ber's home state. His Fab Five and Washington Bullet teammate Juwan Howard is an NBA All-Star. Basketball looks to rebound from 1996's early exit . By Barry Soll-nbergr Daily Sports Editor The 1995-96 season was a disappointing one for the Michigan men's basketball team. Sure the Wolverines won 20 games (they went 20-12). Sure they beat Duke (for the first time since 1989). Sure they pounded rival Michigan State twice (76-54 in East Lansing and 75-46 in Ann Arbor). But in the end, Michigan didn't really show much improvement from the 1994-95 team that went 17- 14 and lost to Western Kentucky in the NCAA tour- nament's first round. Last season, the Wolverines made another early NCAA exit when Texas bounced them, 80-76, in the opening round. A year ago, Michigan was consistently inconsis- tent. The Wolverines struggled all season from the field, shooting 42 percent as a team. They were also lacking in another important area - stars. Sophomore Maurice Taylor was the team's best player, but his numbers (13.3 points and 7.0 rebounds per game) were hardly frightening. Sophomore Louis Bullock (12.9 ppg) emerged as one of the league's top rookies, but a late slump knocked his field goal percentage down to 36 per- cent for the year. Sophomore Maceo Baston's num- bers (10.8 points and 6.6 boards per game) were solid, but not Olajuwonesque. The Wolverines also had the unfortunate habit of throwing the ball into the stands. Michigan turned the ball over 528 times on the season, many of which came at critical times. That all added up to a 10-8 Big Ten record and fifth-place finish in the league. At the preseason Big Ten basketball banquet, the Wolverines were picked to finish second in the conference. "I was disappointed with our performance in the league," Michigan coach Steve Fisher said. "The freshmen and sophomores played like freshmen and sophomores." The Wolverines began the season by winning home games over DePaul and Weber State in the preseason NIT. From there, it was off to New York for the NIT semifinals where Michigan was boxed by Arizona and then dropped in the third-place game to Geor- gia Tech. The Wolverines have now lost to the Wild- cats in each of the past three seasons. After the 2-2 start, Michigan won seven straight nonconference matchups, including an emotional 88-84 affair over Duke on Dec. 9 at Crisler Arena. "It was a nice win for us," Fisher said. "They were playing exceptionally well, and we beat a team that, at the time, looked like it might contend for the ACC title. We had not fared well against them in the past, and to be able to beat them, final-. ly, meant a lot." The Wolverines began the Big Ten season with a 51-46 loss at Wisconsin, a game in which they scored 17 points in the second half. Fisher's bunch recovered, though, to win its next four con- Was tests. Taylor's dunk in the waning disapp seconds against Penn State on Jan. 21 at Crisler gave Michigan with out a 67-66 victory and a share of the conference lead. perform, Unfortunately for the Wolver- ines, that Sunday afternoon the leag marked the high point of their season. Michigan proceeded to drop Men's bask( three straight, including an 80- 59 laugher to eventual Big Ten champion Purdue at home Jan. 31. The Wolverines never threatened in the conference race after that. On Feb. 17, five Wolverines were involved in an incident that made the team's basketball woes seem trivial. Driving back fromDetroit, Taylor, Bullock, Ron Oliv- er, Willie Mitchell ra is et and Robert Traylor flipped and rolled several times in Taylor's Ford Explorer in a single-car accident. Traylor sustained the only serious injury in the acci- dent (a broken arm), but was lost for the season. A 4-1 finish to the regular sea- son secured Michigan its fifth straight NCAA appearance, but the loss to Texas left a yucky taste4 "ted the mouths of Wolverine faithful. Still, the 1996-97 season has the potential to be great for Michigan. Fisher welcomes back seven of 3nla inl 10 scholarship players from a year ago. Only the graduated Dugan Wes Fife and Neil Morton and junior Willie Mitchell (who transferred to teve Fisher Alabama-Birmingham last spring) tbaI I coach won't return. Fisher has also add 6-foot-11 freshman Peter Vigr and junior college transfer Brandon Hughes. Hughes figures to compete with junior Travis Conlan for the starting point guard position. The Wolverines should challenge for the Big Ten title, but that is nothing new. They are in the hunt for the league crown more often than not. What would be new would be for Michigan to win it. The Wolverines have not won the Big Ten.since 1986. Sophomore guard Louis Bullock. >:;: File photo Texas played strongrer, 4- By Barry Sollenberger . Daily Sports Editor The layup drill. It's one the Michigan men's basketball team has done a thousand times. Before games, coach Steve Fisher might give the familiar yell, "All right ... two lines ... layups!" and everyone will file into position. A drill as old as the game itself.; In fact, the routine has become such habit that tea,.: Fisher probably doesn't even need to tell his team what to do. Every Wolverine does the drill the same. With one exception - sophomore Louis Bullock. k At first glance, his pregame warm-up does not appear to w 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 Blaz- ers' 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 no current Wolver- ine wants to violate it. After all, the owner of that right hand is Michigan's best outside shooting threat. Michigan coach Steve Fisher doesn't get carried away when talking about his sophomore guard. "Louis Bullock can shoot the basketball," Fisher likes to say about three times a press conference. And while Fisher doesn't rival a professor in terms of eloquence, his favorite Bullock quote tells the story. The 19-year-old can indeed shoot the basketball. He finished the 1995-96 season among the Big Ten leaders in free- throw shooting and 3-pointers per game. His 70 3-pointers a year ago places him fourth on the school's all-time season list. "Louis has done a nice job of coming in and quietly, yet effectively, establishing his own niche," Fisher said. "Right now, he's a scorer. A guy that if you leave open, he's going to score, and people know that." Bullock didn't become a shooter the day he stepped on campus, though. He has been working on his touch ever since he was 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 bed- room ... 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 shoot- ing from the floor and 86 percent shooting from the line. He then transferred to Laurel Baptist for his senior season harder - longer By Brent McIntosh Daily Sports Writer ^" MILWAUKEE - It started with a bang. It ended 4$th a whimper. It started with four Michigan dunks. It ended wii the Wolverines dazily searching for shelter somewhere in th glar- ing lights of the Bradley Center. They could only wak as Texas' Brandy Perryman knocked in two free throws to lce the Longhorns' 80-76 win - sending the Wolverines home in the first round of the NCAA tournament for the second consecu- tive year. Between the opening bang and the closing whimper,*' Wolverines played hard, if not smart, against a quicker Texas squad. That was probably most true of Maceo Baston. The center was magnificent: 23 points on 9-of-12 shooting and 15 rebounds despite picking up his fourth foul with 12:49 left on the clock. "He had an outstanding game" cap- tain Dugan Fife said. "He got in a little foul trouble early, but when he was in there, he dominated. "He was a man among boys out there. He got his hands on every Baston rebound. He has nothing to be ashamed of." You couldn't tell that from looking at Baston after the game. After calling an unavailable timeout with 3.2 seconds left and the Wolverines down two - drawing a technical foul nd painfully evoking memories of Chris Webber in the NCAA final three years back - Baston could do nothing butfor- lornly hold his head in his hands. "We called timeout the past two times down," he said thought I heard someone calling for it. I just called it - it was my fault." Regardless, the Wolverines probably wouldn't have won. That was assured late in the first half and early in the second, when the quicker Texas guards victimized Michigan's Travis Conlan. "I had quite a few costly turnovers that hurt the team," Con- lan said. "I'm the point guard and I have the ball - I feel bad because I let the team down." -ol Conlan had five "Te ol 'time turnovers, including a cru- cial one with the Wolverines down 62-60. Texas' Reggie took e fet . " Freeman swiped the ball from Conlan and collided - Steve Fisher with him on the ensuing Men's basketball coach layup. The referee judged the crash to be a blocking foul on Conlan, the shot dropped, and Freeman's free throw put the Longhorns upfi.e. That play was a microcosm of the game for Conlan: pas- sionate play, poor choices. "Travis is a fierce competitor, and he fought hard," Mic- gan coach Steve Fisher said. "But he'll probably tell you, this wasn't one of his better games." The Wolverines had come charging back from various sec- ond-half deficits behind tough play from guard Louis Bullock, but their fate was just about sealed with a minute on the clock. At that point, the Michigan full-court press forced the Long- horns into a 10-second violation - one that wasn't called. Albert White was forced to foul Freeman, and Freeman nailed both of his free throws on the way to a 22-point effort. The Longhorns led, 76-70. Bullock went on a scoring binge in that last minute, but his every offering was met with a pair of made free throws frm the Longhorns. His driving layup immediately before Baston's ill-advised timeout cut the lead to a pair, but any Wolverine hopes at that point were dim. Michigan would have had to foul immediately, then hope the Texas player would miss his free an open look, he shoots it the same way he did (two years) ago." When it came time for Bullock to choose a college, his short list includ- ed Florida, Maryland and Michigan. Bullock eliminated the Terrapins because he would have ridden the bench last 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 ready to commit to Fisher right then. Enter mom. "He almost didn't even want to make the other visits," she said. "But I told him that he should. I said that, 'I'm still not going to make up your mind for you, but if it were my choice, I would go to Florida.' I guess I was thinking about the warmer climate." Fisher can be thankful Michigan's weather didn't affect Bullock's decision. Bullock signed a letter of intent with the Wolverines in December 1994. His mom thinks he was a Michigan man before then - two years earlier. "I asked Louis in ... I think it was the 10th grade," she said. "I said, 'Louis, if you should go away to school and play basketball, who would you want to play for?' He said, 'Well, you know, I would love to go to Michigan and help the Wolverines out a little bit."' He's helped Michigan more than a little bit. "He's very confident and unafraid and I like that about him," Fisher said. "He steps to the free throw line and you're shocked if he doesn't make it. To be able to shoot the ball the way he does,.that's not a dimension that many kids have." It's tough to argue with Fisher. But Bullock's game still needs improve- ment. "There have been times ... where I've missed some shots I've been accustomed to