The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - September 22, 1997 - 38 Q&A: Jerome Williams Williams ALAN Piston Jerome Williams takes charge in his community You hear the story everyday - a pro- fessional athlete in trouble with the law. Maybe it's marijuana in his trunk or cocaine and strippers in a hotel room. Whatever it may be, it happens far too ten,and leaves an unfortunate impression on today's youth. So when an athlete comes along who doesn 't get in trouble with the law and does posi- tive work for the community and for the children look up to him, that should make the headlines - not the negative allegations that we hear about daily. The Detroit Pistons have such posi- tive role models, and they're not just Grant Hill and Joe Dumars. It's Jerome ,lliams, the Pistons forward who fin- lied his rookie season last year A graduate of Georgetown, Williams has used his degree in sociology to work with metro Detroit youth and lend a hand to the community. _The Daily's Jordan Field recently sat down with Williams to talk about his experience at Georgetown, living on his own and helping the community. -Daily: You do a lot of work in the mmunity, volunteering your time to hildren and different organizations. Why is that so important to you? -Williams: Working in the communi- ty is part of what I studied in college. I was a sociology major, and while at Georgetown, I interned at the commu- iity relations commission where you do a, lot of community work. So once I graduated and got in the NBA, I had a lot of time on my hands in the off sea- 'son, so I put my degree to work, basi- *1Iy. I learned that the little things you can do go a long way with the commu- nity. I used to run my own basketball camp and have started some mentor programs in the inner city of Detroit where the youth of the city can see a professional 'athlete making good with his time and also send a message that there are other things than sports that you can do in life to be successful. We , ought all kinds of business profes- onals out to talk to the children and dhow the kids that it's one thing to want to be a professional athlete, but it's good to have other jobs and you can accom- plish anything and be successful. I real- ly think we got that message through to the kids, and we had tutors come down that helped them with homework. All of these people were volunteers from Detroit, so the city of Detroit helped me help the youths. This year, along with y brother, Johnny, we plan on doing wv mentor programs, and I hope to make them both even bigger than last year. D: I know you come from a very big family, something like 55 grandchil- dren. How has that affected your life, and now in the NBA? W: Yeah, now it's about up to 65, and still growing. Having that big of a fam- ily like that, makes it tough in the NBA, *ways traveling and away from every- one. I'm from the metropolitan area of Washington, D.C., so r m pretty far from home here. It gets kiind of lonely at times. At first it was pret ty hard being so far away, because even in college I was at Georgetown, and that's pretty close to home. Now I'm ly tnyself, and it's rough. At school, I was on my own, but home was still just down the street. I always had the cushion there, knowing my family was close. I liave a strong family background. D: If you weren't playing basketball now for a*living, what 41o you think you'd be doing now? W: Probably working in the commu- nity trying to help out, b t only part time. I doubt I could live ff that. After graduation I had a job with an account- ing firm, because I didn't Ii:now if I'd be drafted or not, and I planned on going back to school to get all accounting degree if I wasn't. That was my next option. D: Today so many athletes mis- use their position in the public eye, but you're given so much back to the community, why do you think so ' many young ath- letes find trouble so easily? W: Basically it's just different strokes for differ- ent folks. It's easy to get caught up in things. One thing about the NBA, is that it brings a lot of attenti on to your- self, and sometimes I think some play- ers don't really take that inti' considera- tion, that at all times youi are being watched. The TV cameras tare on, and the news is going to follow you. It does- n't matter that it's the summner and it's the off' season, because re;I lly the off season is still in season as far as the media is concerned. If therf, is a prob- lem, this is the best time feir the media to find out about, because aren't any games to report on. You better watch out, because if there is a gime tomor- row then what you did today can be for- gotten about, but in the off season, this is the only thing to talk about. D: During your rookie season last year, you wrote a weekly coilumn about what was happening throughout the season for The Detroit News. What was your experience as a journalist? W: It was pretty nice, because if there was ever a story about me or I was misquoted, I could always come back and tell the truth. I'm just kidding; it was actually a good experience, because you have a lot of power writing for a newspaper. I got to know a little bit about the job, and learn some things about what journalists go through. I would write a nice long article, hand it in to my editor and the next day in the paper it was all chopped up. I was like 'hey, that was the most important part of the article, and you cut it out!' Man, it was a lot of fun writing those articles, but it sure was frustrating seeing half of what I had written in the paper, D: What has your experience been as an athlete dealing with the media? There is such a negative connotation now toward the media especially after the Princess Diana ordeal. How has the media treated you? W: I haven't had any problems at all. I look at it like this, if there is news out there, then the media is going to report it because that is their job. I listen to people talk about Princess Diana, how pictures were so hard to get of her. I feel that if pictures of her were easy to obtain, then there wouldn't be such a demand for them. It was so hard to get a picture of her, so that's why people wanted them so bad. She wasn't one to really take the photographers and enjoy the attenti6n and say 'OK, take my pic- ture.' I'm not say- ing that that is good or bad, just that if photographs of her were more accessible, there wouldn't have been as great a demand for them. But if there is the demand, then photographers will crawl scratch and fight for them, and they did. If someone wants to take a picture of me then go ahead, it's only a picture. D: After high school you grew almost 7 inches and you attended a smaller school for two years before transferring to Georgetown. When did you finally realize that playing in the NBA was a realistic dream? W: Not until I was drafted. I had a job waiting on me, and I wasn't going to mess around if I wasn't drafted. I'm in the NBA and there is nothing wrong with that, but had I not been drafted, I wasn't about to sit around. I wasn't going to be one of those guys sitting in some gym talking about what could have or should have happened. I know some guys that hang on to the NBA dreams for 10 or I1 years before they give it up, but sitting and talking about it isn't going to put clothes on my back or food in my belly. I wasn't going to sit around and hope because a dream can only go so far. D: You always wear both of your socks pulled up all of the way. Where did that come from and when did that start? W: I played a lot of playground ball growing up and it started there. I pulled up my socks then because it was kind of a code that I had skills. You can't pull up your socks that high if you aren't good. If you aren't good and you're getting worked over on the court then people are going to let you know that 1) they are beating you and 2) you look stupid with your socks pulled up. But if you are good enough, no one can say any- thing to you. I started it then, and it just stuck. I guess the code works in the NBA too. D: The University of Michigan has a lot of problems within the basketball program with boosters and other accu- sations. But this problem exists all over the country. What was your experience in college with outside people trying to contact you as a student athlete? W: It's one of these things where as a student-athlete you aren't allowed to work. So you have no money income, and then you are put in a situation where this person wants to give you things. That is a tough decision. U-M is a much bigger campus and has many more alumni than Georgetown, so that just makes it worse. For me, I just went home with my parents and ate and they gave me money, because I wasn't about to get involved with that chaos. D: You stayed at Georgetown and graduated, and you earned your degree. How do you feel about so many young athletes today either skipping college or leaving after just a year or two? W: Well, people go to college for different reasons. Some go to get their degree like I did, and others go as a stepping stone to the NBA. It all depends on what kind of goals you have and what kind of goals you set. If you feel you have the opportunity to go to the NBA and make that leap and that is what you want, then go for it. Not everybody goes to college to get their degree, some people only want to play in the NBA, so when the opportu- nity presents itself, whenever that may be, they take it and that's what they want. That wasn't my goal, but for some it is. D: You have a lot of former team- mates from Georgetown now in the NBA with you. How are your relation- ships with them, especially with your Pistons teammate Don Reid? W: Most people don't know this, but the main reason I went to Georgetown was because of Don Reid. We played a lot on the play- ground, and became friends. We used to go down to the gym and play bas- ketball, so when I was drafted by the Pistons I was so happy. I stayed up all night. I called Don right away, and I remember the phone line was busy, but I got through, and I was so happy, jumping around and going crazy. He and I are good friends. It's nice to see the other guys, but I don't get to talk with them too often. GOLDENBACH The Bronx Bomber J~ \ ! AM f" t~ icture. for a moment, inglish Prof. Ralph Williams storming into Tom Goss's office demanding that the new athletic director radically reform the disciplinary program of the athletic department. "To grant or not to grant convicted felons scholarship at this University." the ridiculously out-of-place Williams might say,"is the question." As Goss shakes his head in disbelief wondering what the heck he got himself into with this job, he is at least able to relate to what his contempo-k rary at Fresno State, Allen Bohl, is thinking right now. Last week, Fresno State professor John Shields, asking "Have we no shame?" demanded the California state university impose a code of conduct for the school's athletes. His ultimatum comes in light of Fresno State's recruitment of a convicted. spouse abuser, a pair of accusations that two other athletes beat their girt- friends, a case still pending where two Fresno basketball players are charged with battery of another student and, to top it all off, while the men's basketball program is in the midst of an investigation of possible. point-shaving, the most heinous crime as far as sports on the field is con- crnedre. Nothing as far as enacting such a code has happened yet. The proposal that Shields laid out before the university's Academic Senate hinges upon two demands: a new code of conduct for players and consideration of "good character" when athletes are recruited. There is also a provision that if such a measure is not instituted, the faculty will declare "no confidence" in the university's administration and athletic department. The faculty will vote on the resolution next week. According to Shields, such a resolution became necessary because Fresno State administrators and coaches have adopted an "overly tolerant' attitude toward student-athlete antisocial behavior and criminal conduct." This proposal is by far the most rash stance taken in an era when too many big-time student-athletes conduct themselves in a manner that shows little regard for the law, whether that law be laid down by the government' or the educational institution. Suspensions, whether they be for part of a game, a whole game or a sea- son, have not served as a deterrent to misconduct. Revocations of scholar ships, the apparent next-most-stringent measure, have also fallen by the wayside as a scare tactic. Seemingly continuous internal investigations con-' ducted by all schools once a hint of impropriety arises obviously have not remedied this problem by any means. And there is a simple reason why these measures have been ineffectiv'e. University administrators, whether it be a public relations maneuver or o't, keep pushing for the elimination of the double-standard that exists for stu- dent-athletes with regard to discipline. Creating a code of conduct for stu- dent-athletes only makes this double-standard more omnipresent because it: compromises the efforts university administrations have made to suppress, the double-standard. if Shields thinks that his code is going to right the ship at Fresno State, he's dead wrong. What he has identified as problems in his school's athletic department are not unique to Fresno State, nor are they unique to intercol legiate athletics in general. Spousal abuse is one of the most pressing issues in American society today. If all it took to rid this country of such gargantuan social ills was some code of conduct, don't you think such a code would be legislated by now?' If there is one party that should be creating a code of conduct, it is the Fresno State athletic department. For itself. The sure-fire way of avoiding any such public relations fiascoes like the ones it faces right now, is to not affiliate itself with shady characters with'. any criminal past or links to unfavorable characters. As far as the misconduct surrounding the men's basketball team, Fresno State has no one to blame but itself. The athletic department should never'^ See GOLDENBACH, Page 4B PEACIt CORPS CAMPUS R EPRESENTATIVE Informaition Seminars Michiyjan Union's Internaitional Center Wednesday, September 24 -% 6-00 pm (800) 424-8580 Vwww.peacecorps.gov can you canoe? Scenic canoe & kayak trips through SE Michigan's most pristino stretch of the River Raisin in Manchester. (Large and small groups welcome. Open thru October 12. Education based expeditions and instruction available. 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