10- The Michigan Daily -- f'96 - Thursday, Nove~er 14, 1996 EATURE i A A0 AT A GLANCE The Michigan 4y - Tipoff '9 -A, Changing of the Guard With hIs head held high and has spirits e finally achieved hi' dream ven higher, Brand - he' a Wolverie n Hughes has 30 MACEO BASTON Height: 6-foot-9 Weight: 210 lbs. Class: Junior Position: Forward Hometown: Dallas JE ]f T he championship game was a bundle cif contradicting eotions: happiness, sadness, jubilation and despair. The sun shining high above the gym buried within the state of Illinois, the band playing, and the cheerleaders cheering all set the stage for the greatest rendition of Cinderella. The young Manual High School boy's bas- ketball team out of Peoria, Ill., was not expect- ed to get past the first round of the state tour- nament. But there it was, playing against Carbondale - the same Carbondale team that beat Manual by five points earlier in the season - in the state title game. Four of Manual's starting five were underclassmen. The lone senior was a man among boys. In a blur of fans, bands, players and family members, the game swayed back and forth. With four seconds left and Carbondale up, 60- 59, the lone Manual senior starter was fouled. Hq stepped to the line, heaved the first foul shot up with perfect rotation. Swish. Game tied. One more time. Perfect rotation once again. The ball fell through. The clock expired, and Manual High School was the Illinois Class AA state champion, 61-60. The Cinderella team won the biggest title in the state of Illinois, yet it wasf one By Danielle Rumore of the highest and lowest moments for the guard who iced the game. And a defining moment in his life, too. Brandun Hughes, the hero that night in March 1994, was ripping apart inside, over- come by conflicting emotions. On one hand, he won the state championship to end his high school career and was walking on air - pure elation. On the other hand, there would be no more large crowds, Cinderella stories, championships or winning foul shots come September, at least at the DIiision I level - sick, disturbing pain. At that point, academic ineligibility prevent- ed Hughes from moving on to Division I. "It was real hard, but (at the same time), it was also the greatest game of my life," Hughes says. "I thjnk about it every day when I wake up. Every time I'm on the court, I think about it. I'm real emotional about my high school. "I was a partial qualifier (for college)," Hughes adds. "I quali- fied on my ACT, but my core cur- riculum was low." The next day after the game, there was a parade. He and his teammates returned home and rode on a fire truck through Peoria, through the sea of proud fans welcoming home the state champions. A parade? For high school state champions? - Hughes wanted to get used to that. Five. His eyes glowed, and still glow, when he talks about Michigan. Hughes played the Cinderella part before at Manual. He wanted to play it again, and he knew that he could. His time to sink winning free throws and win titles would come again. Hopefully, at Michigan. So he left for the plains. His mother, Rosemary - from whom he says he got his fiery, fierce competitive edge - gave him words of advice before he left for Kansas, a world far away from Peoria. "Keep your head up." "Stay strong." "It will all work out for the best." So he held his mother's advice close to his heart when he arrived at Barton County Community College in 1994. Barton was con- sidered one of the top junior college programs in both the Jayhawk West Conference and the nation. And the Jayhawk West Conference had its stake on some of the best JUCO guards in the country. "I knew if I could play with the best, then I would have the chance to go to a good, four- year university," Hughes says. "I needed to get away and grow up on my own." And boy, did he grow. He grew faster than the corn that sprung up from the fields. He averaged 21.2 points and 5.7 assists as a fresh- man. As a sophomore, he finished fourth in the nation among junior college scorers, averaging 28.2 points and 6.5 assists. He was named a junior college All-American by the Basketball Times. Right after his freshman year, Michigan started to call again, and his dream was reborn. "We started recruiting him in the spring, and really started recruiting him hard in late spring, early summer," Michigan coach Steve Fisher says. He committed to the Wolverines, and one more year at Barton. Kansas was lonely and different than Peoria, but he was going to Michigan. He was going to be a Wolverine, and that's what got him through those days. "It was pretty depressing sometimes," Hughes says. Keep your head up. "I was waiting for Michigan," he adds. "Then it was so coincidental. They called like the next week right after I was talking about if Michigan ever called me, I'm going there." Stay strong. "... it must have been meant for me to go here. God must have wanted me to go to Michigan." It will all work out for the best. Eu. Illinois to Kansas to Michigan. A long road traveled to one destination. Hughes traveled and made a few detours along the way to Ann Arbor. But he now runs up and down the court at Crisler Arena, his competi- tive streak burning holes in the floor. Race up the floor, dish to the open man, rebound, shoot from downtown, race down the 1995-96 Statistics G-GS FG-FGA Pct. PPG RPG APG Bk. 32-8 137-201 .682 9.8 6.6 19 41 1995-96 Statistics G-GS FG-FGA Pct. PPG RP 10-3 26-82 .317 7.2 4. 54 ROBERT TRAYLOR Height: 6-foot-8 Weight: 300 lbs. Class: Sophomore Position: Center Hometown: Detroit 5 Pi MARK FRIEDMAN/Daily Junior college transfer Brandun Hughes is pumped to finally be a Wolverine. wing, take it to the hole. Do it again. One more time. He inspires and wills his teammates on. "He should be able to get into some seams and some gaps and find the open man," Fisher said. "I think he will be able to do that. He does it against his teammates now. Hughes adds an element to the backcourt that has been lacking at Michigan for a long time. For starters, dribble penetration, ball movement, breaking down defenses and a little extra perimeter shooting. They have not been the Wolverines' strengths, but now Hughes is aboard to remedy the problem. "He can get in the gaps and ... that helps me and Louis (Bullock) spot up, and that will help me out because I'll be able to shoot more," Michigan guard Travis Conian said. "He does a lot for the team, and I like his presence." But nobody likes his presence more than Hughes himself. The dream to play Michigan basketball and to be like the Fab Five is alive. It's hardly surprising that he now wears No. 4. which used to belong to Fab Five member Chris Webber. 1995-96 Statistics (Teaneck High 1995-96 Statistics G-GS FG-FGA Pct. IPPG RPG APG Bk. 22-4 82-148 .554 9.0 5.9 12 15 Scho G-GS FG-FGA Pct. PPG RP 30-30 144-295 .488 11.2 8. (' ; 4~ ~ "It was the greatest feeling in the world in my life thus far," Hughes says. "I think a national championship would match that." Em. STEVE FISHER Head coach - 8th year Career record: 160-71 College: Illinois St., '67 Hometown: Herrin, Ill. BRIAN DUTCHER Assistant - 9th year College: Minnesota, '82 Hometown: Bloomington, Minn. Hughes wanted more titles and parades and the same I-can-walk- on-top-of-the-world happiness, so he moved on to community col- lege. Play two years and move on to Division I - that was his goal. He went to junior college in Kansas, knowing he would grow as a player and as a person before it was time to leave. Leave for Michigan, that is. The Wolverines showed interest in recruiting Hughes when he was at Manual, but the interest slowly faded for different reasons, such as the arrival of the second Fab Five recruiting class. But Hughes' hope to play for the maize and blue did not fade. You see, Hughes grew up a Michigan fan. He always wanted to be a mU. Hughes and his teammates practice foul shooting in practice every day. Hughes also thinks about his high school championship-winning free throws every day. He thinks about them when he practices from the charity stripe. A few bounces. The first shot up and ... swish. A few bounces. The second shot up and ... swish. Keep your head up. He must dream about sinking two game- clinchers again. Stay strong. "Now that I'm actually here;" Hughes says. "It's really like a dream." It will all work out for the best. Scorn PERRY Assistant - 3rd year College: Wayne St., '86 Hometown: Detroit SCOTT TROST Assistant - 1st year College: Minn.-Morris '85 Hometown: Appleton, Minn. ~ r4 '{: . ; . ', ,....,.:;g;,,J ... Wolverine. He and his friends loved the Fab SARA STILLMAN/Daily