obert Traylor s adership lies at the heart of team s' strength LM ightning nearly struck the Michigan basketball team twice in early May. After weathering a storm of NCAA rules violations and Hurricane NIT, Michigan bas- kjtball coach Steve Fisher found himself standing three feet high in water in the Amazon during rainy season without so much as an umbrella. The Wolverines' NIT title in March was all Fisher could be proud of by the first week in May. After a *appointing season, where he had to boot then-sophomore swingman Albert White, one of Michigan's brightest stars, off the team, Fisher was staring at dismal sights. Already one big man short after senior-to-be Maurice Taylor decided to take his 12 points and six- rebounds-per-game to the NBA, Fisher just watched Michigan's best player and most adept leader walk out of his office, ready to follow Taylor to the benches of the NBA. Robert Traylor -OHN ta ehad blown JOHQev erybody's LEROUmind, especially Out of Fisher's, decid- und ing -after say- ing he was "I 10% sure" he wouldn't join Taylor in jumping ship - that he would leave Michigan and declare himself eligible for the NBA. A press conference was scheduled. Nobody could believe it, but who in the world except for Peyton Manning holds a press conference to announce that he is staying in college. Ahe Detroit News got ahold of the s ry two days before Traylor's press conference. I wouldn't blame Fisher if he leaked it himself. Traylor's home in Detroit was flooded with so many phone calls and inquiries from family and friends in those two days, that Traylor, a perceived target for sone of the NCAA's investigations, ultimately decided to stay at Michigan. Now Fisher at least has Traylor as t umbrella. An awfully big umbrella. The Wolverines may be losing some respect because of NCAA rules infractions, some of which involved Traylor. They may have lost even more when Fisher offered a scholarship to a community college star from Flint, then revoked it when they discovered he had plead no con- to sexual assault almost a year tier. Fisher may be losing his recruiting touch after a second-straight class that is in the bottom third of the Big Ten. The Wolverines may have lost a terrific recruiter when assistant .coach Scott Perry left to take the head coaching job at Eastern Kentucky. They lost 12 points a game in .lor, their starting power forward season. But if the Wolverines lost aylor, they would have surely lost their sanity. Amazingly Traylor, barely 20 years old, a man who still cries after tough losses, a man who chose Michigan in part because it was so close to home, a man who isn't very well spoken with the media, is the glue that holds this team together. Taylor's loss is relatively easy to lover. He never became the star he should have been. Some nights he didn't even looked like he tried very hard. One game the 6-foot-9 245- pound Taylor was outrebounded, 9-1, by Iowa reserve point guard Ryan Luehrsmann, a 6-1 165-pound fresh- man. Taylor's best games came against Northwestern and some exhibition team from Australia that wore prac- e uniforms for their scrimmage Wainst the Wolverines. Those were the only two games in which Taylor scored more than 20 points this year. Traylor's numbers were better: He played better in the NIT (26 points and '13 rebounds in the title game against Florida State earned Traylor the tournament MVP) and he is con- stantly improving his game. He's developing a good outside jump shot d he is a phenomenal passer, with amazing quickness for a man who tips the scales at 300 pounds. But Traylor is more to the Wolverines than just numbers. He is Michigan's only true leader. He was a Michigan co-captain as a sopho- more, a spot usually reserved for inninrs or seninrs He never gives unn BASKETBALL The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, September 3, 1997 - 3F Disappointments dunk'97 By John Lerol shadowed by questions about a 1997 Chevrolet The Dec. 8 victory over the then-No. 10 Blu D l ,Cnt S A t d_ __!t- .1 .,__ _ _._ ue aiy -)ports~ Eitor Albert White: gone. Maurice Taylor: gone. Scott Perry: gone. NCAA tournament: missing. Shane Battier: never got here. Robert Traylor: still here. Steve Fisher still here. Controversy over NCAA violations: still here. Michigan's basketball program underwent of its most volatile and dramatic season since Fisher took over for Bill Freider just days before the 1989 NCAA tournament and led the Wolverines to the national championship. The 1996-97 season ended in similar fashion. A coach left - assistant Scott Perry took the head coaching job at Eastern Kentucky after the season - and the Wolverines flew back to Ann Arbor with another championship, this time the NIT title. The NCAA tournament's snub of Michigan rocked the program almost as much as the NCAA rules infractions the University admitted to in early March. Since the report came out, more disturbing news has surfaced, much of it involving sophomore center Robert Traylor, whose spectacular season on the court was over- Suburban and his relationship with Detroit-area booster Ed Martin. Traylor decided to skip his last two years of eligi- bility and head to the NBA, but changed his mind the morning he planned to announce he was leaving Michigan. And all of this came after a season where junior forward Maurice Taylor left for the NBA and Fisher kicked sophomore swingman Albert White off the team for violating team rules, before the Wolverines even played a game. Fisher fell out of fans' favor after landing his sec- ond-straight sub-par recruiting class. The Wolverines lost the best player in the state when Detroit Country Day's Shane Battier choose Duke over Michigan and Syracuse. It was an interesting year to say the least. Michigan (9-9 Big Ten, 24-1 1 overall) began the season on a tear. Ranked as high as No. 4 in the nation, the Wolverines were undefeated after an improbable win over ACC champion Duke in Durham, N.C., and an overtime squeaker against eventual national champion Arizona. Devils was the most amazing. Michigan was down by 12 with 10 minutes left. Taylor had fouled out. Duke was 103-1 against non-conference foes since 1983 on its home floor. Things looked bad. But the Wolverines battled back behind a relent- less defense that held the Devils without a field goal over the games' final 10 1/2 minutes. All Duke could muster was three free throws from Trajan Langdon. The 300-pound Traylor, who had shattered a back- board in the Wolverines' first regular season game, gave Michigan its first and only lead on a dunk with six seconds left. "We knew we could win all along," Traylor said after the game. "This team has one huge heart. We play together no matter what. When we were down we all picked each other up. "This is a unique team." Traylor's statement proved prophetic. The Wolverines stretched their record to 8-0 before enter- ing the Maui Invitational as the tournament's only top 20 team. Michigan's season went downhill from there. The season Wolv erines dropped the tourney opener to unranked Memphis, and squeaked by Washington State before fallirg to lowly Pitsburgh. And the disaster in Hawaii, which Fisher blamed on young men playing in the sun more than on the court, got worse. Michigan next let Ohio State walk out of Crisler Arena with a 73-71 win to start the Big Ten season. Think that's bad? Michigan had No. 2 and unde- feated Minnesota beat with 10 seconds left when Louis Bullock coughed up the ball that allowed Bobby Jackson to shoot crucial free throws. The Wolverines lost that one, 55-54. A win would have almost assuredly put Michigan in the NCAA tour- nament. Instead, the Wolverines, staring straight into the face of the NIT, ruined their last shot of making the big dance, blowing a 17-point lead at No. 21 Illinois only to lose by 29. Fisher closed the lockerroom after that game, just as he did after the debacle versus Minnesota. Junior point guard Travis Conlan was the only Wolverine that had much to say: "When the crowd started chanting, 'NIT,' it hurt." A BITTERSWEET VICTORY M' wins NI after missing NCAA bid By Alan Goldenbach Daily Sports Editor NEW YORK - In a season that was as bit- tersweet as any, Michigan used a sugar coat- ing for the finishing touch. Getting axed by the NCAA tournament committee was not what the Michigan bas- ketball team had in mind at the outset of the season. But the Wolverines played the hand they were dealt and felt somewhat vindicated after taking home the NIT championship March 27 with an 82-73 victory over Florida State at Madison Square Garden. "Nothing is more sweet than the smell and taste of victory," Michigan coach Steve Fisher said, "and we have that and we have it in fine fashion." The postgame talk centered around proving the NCAA tournament committee wrong for leaving Michigan out of the 64-team field. "Now some people N" are saying that we Quill should have been in m the NCAA tourna- ment," junior forwards Maurice Taylor said. "It's good to grab something and put ito back in their faces. "Our goal was to Michigan be be a champion. We didn't know we'd be in the NIT, but anything is better than noth- season-high 28 on the offensive glass. Traylor paced the the Wolverines' onslaught with 13 rebounds, "They literally manhandled us around the basket," Florida State coach Pat Kennedy said. "I don't think I've coached a team in all my 17 years that has been so physically imposing as they are." Michigan took control of the game late in the first half on the heels of a 10-2 run to go up 32-19 after a Louis Bullock 3- pointer. The teams pretty much traded bas- kets for the remainder of the half, and Michigan went into intermission with a 41- 31 lead. But the Wolverines came out of the locker- room on fire, scoring the first eight points of the second half on as a result of four Florida State turnovers. IiA '4a asi SARA STILLMAN/Daily Above: Brendan Hughes dodges past a member of the Florida State squad, en route to the Wolverines' 82- 73 victory. Right: Forward Maurice Taylor moves to grab the ball. Taylor scored nine points in the NIT's champi- onship game. ing. We wanted to come home with some kind of championship." After beginning the season with an eight- game winning streak, Michigan crashed and burned once it hit the Big Ten season, going a mediocre 9-9. But ending the campaign winning seven straight was all that this team could have asked for, given the circumstances. "We had our ups and downs throughout the season," tournament MVP Robert Traylor said. "But for the most part, we stuck togeth- er as a team and just fought through the bad times to be successful in the end." Traylor equaled the career high he set against Notre Dame earlier in the NIT, with 26 points against the Seminoles. For the tour- ney, the sophomore center averaged 18.2 points in the five games. The title somewhat broke the dark cloud that hung over the Wolverines, which stemmed from reports of NCAA violations that surfaced when the tournament began. "(Winning the NIT) shows a lot of charac- ter of our team," Taylor said. "We didn't put our heads down, stick in our tails and go whining. We came out here to win the NIT and we're playing our best ball of the season down the stretch." Michigan won the game on the boards, out- rebounding Florida State, 47-28, including a After Michigan went up 54-37 less than six - minutes into the half, 91 S Kennedy went to a -h nhalf-court trap which initially gave Michigan fits. The Seminoles were able to run off 12- r!straight points over the next 2:14 to cut the - Steve Fisher deficit to only five ketball coach points. "The thing that brought us back was the half-court trap," Kennedy said. "We couldn't defend them one-on-one around the basket." Michigan adjusted, although the Seminoles did cut the lead down to two, 68=66, after a pair of Corey Louis free throws at the 4:46 mark. But the next few possessions sealed the Seminoles' fate. Traylor came up with a hard- fought layup to extend the lead to four. Florida State then committed a pair of costly turnovers, giving Michigan some breathing room. Louis threw the ball over guard Kerry Thompson's head, turning it over to Michigan with 3:29 to go. Despite stopping the Wolverines the next trip downcourt, Traylor came up with the defensive gem of the game, knocking the ball out of Thompson's hands and off his foot out of bounds, giving Michigan the ball. That possession culminated with a magnif- icent alley-oop pass from Travis Conlan to Taylor from behind the three-point arc. Michigan was up by six with 2:26 to play and Florida State's hopes were crushed. Fisher gave a philosophical take at season's end. "This is going to be two books. We're closing the book on 1996-97, and we're start- ing 1997-98. It gives us a jumpstart on next season and makes us feel good about our- selves." Taylor leavmg M' for NBA asprations By John Laro Daily Sports Editor Michigan basketball player Maurice Taylor confirmed April 11, what most fans suspected for quite some time - he gave up his final year of eligibility at Michigan and entering the NBA draft. Surrounded by family and friends, Taylor said at a news conference at Crisler Arena that it was time to pursue his life-long dream of playing professional basketball. "Achieving a dream is somethina you can't Fisher that he should stay because, in Taylor's words, "I wasn't ready from the neck up' But this year the conversation was a bit dif- ferent. Taylor thought he had matured consid- erably since the beginning of his junior season. Fisher agreed but still encouraged Taylor to stay. The two mulled over Taylor's decision over Whoppers at Burger King. "He drove and he bought," Fisher said. "I said I want to talk first and I said, 'I don't want you to go. Now let's list reasons why you should stay' So I took out a nad and I said.'You it didn't hurt that the Wolverines won the tour- nament title in his last game. "Winning the NIT title played into my deci- sion because I played so well," Taylor said. "There is a saying that you're only as good as your last game, and now everybody can say that Mo Taylor went out a champion" Taylor, the fourth Wolverine since 1993 to leave school early, said he expected to be one of the top 15 picks in the NBA Draft. Taylor's teammates said the team supported his decision to enter the draft. Michigan co-cap- , __