p '.... .~... ~ ~ *mwwU a '~TTIU1~UOV. I1UV~1I1LJUf .LJ. 1Z~Z7I 1 -1 I.ti / .-w k- " C .a.... . . sir '.w n i..v v- vv -- i r ! _®.._._... v .r V -w On a mission -q -W ---TEAM4 OFLES Puerto Rico Classic to be Sunday's showcase nur Y,IN oven er i,~ - New point guard Robbie Reid is out to prove he is Michigan's missing link By Mark Snyder or all Robbie Reid knew, the sounds from the surrounding citi- zens were gibberish. The native tongue of Greece was foreign to the Utah-raised Reid. But he was a quick learner. There was little doubt about his abili- ty to eventually adapt to a new lan- guage, but this situation was more intense than five afternoons in a foreign language class - it was an entirely new culture. But Reid, the newest addition to the Michigan basketball team, knew what awaited him in Greece. From the begin- ning of his Mormon Church mission in July 1995, the plan was clear. He would spend two years overseas aiding those less fortunate while spreading his beliefs. Most Mormons give a little of them- selves on their mission - whether it be time, effort or a little of each - and Reid was no different. "Most of the time (on the mission) was spent talking to people about what we believe," Reid says. "Also, we did various service activities in the commu- nity, wherever they needed help. Handicap centers, old folks' homes, cleaning parks -just whatever we could do to help." While Reid fits the profile of a altru- istic young man - he tosses around overly genuine expressions like "to be honest", "for sure" and "no worries" without a second thought - his desire to serve others impeded his athletic career. Every day of his youth, Reid was on the go. He would shuffle between bas- ketball practice, baseball workouts and the school day without a bother. The continued movement became intrinsic and each day was just another chance to play. But Greece accorded few opportuni- ties for such a release. Sun-up brought chores and sundown saw more humani- tarian work for the natural athlete. Reid's devotion to his mission con- sumed him. "I did very little," Reid says. "I played very little the first few months I was there. And for the last 15 months I was there, I didn't shoot a ball at a real hoop." So after 21 years of sweat and work on the court and the field, the young man halted his two-sport athletic addic- tion - he was drafted by the San Diego Padres as a lefthanded baseball pitcher - and refocused his life. "I think my missionary experience really helped me gain a perspective that every day I'm going to get better," he says. Reid's intention to return to the United States and resume his previous life ran into a minor roadblock in December 1996. While Robbie was still overseas, his father, Roger, was fired as the basket- ball coach at Brigham Young. The news traveled by phone but Robbie felt the pain as if he were by his father's side. Along with his older brother, Randy, Robbie grew up to play for his father, and breathed basketball - in and out of the home. So his father's dismissal impacted him, not only as a son, but as an athlete as well. Alone and troubled, Reid dealt with the emotions in a positive manner. "It was really tough for me," Robbie said. "There were lots of times when I cried and I hurt. I had a great life and now I knew nobody and had to learn a new language - it really made me grow." And yet, that growth was only the beginning for the point guard from Spanish Fork, Utah. His father's firing opened the door for Robbie -- who left Brigham Young after his sophomore season - to select a new school upon his return to the United States. From nearly the moment he set foot on U.S. soil, suitors emerged for the gritty point guard. Illinois and Michigan were among the finalists - primarily because of their coaches. "It was very difficult (to decide)," Reid says. "I was fortunate enough to be looking at four very good programs with great coaches. I had a great rela- tionship with coach Lon Kruger at Illinois. But I still felt like this was the best place." At the time of his decision, Michigan outweighed the competition for two pri- mary reasons - Steve Fisher was still Michigan's coach, and Michigan's base- ball team reigned as Big Ten champion. But now, things are different in Ann Arbor. In a manner similar to Roger Reid's firing, Fisher was shown the door just a week before Michigan was to begin practice. While immediate speculation cen- tered on other candidates to fill Fisher's position, Roger Reid began to campaign to once again coach his son. Michigan Athletic Director Tom Goss's search for Fisher's replacement led him to Reid as the final candidate. A last-minute interview led to radio reports that claimed Goss had offered the job to Reid. The offer suggested a family reunion in Ann Arbor, a Reid dream which was abruptly rejected. Instead, the position fell to assistant coach Brian Ellerbe. The disappointment was just another freefall in Reid's rollercoaster journey to Michigan. "To be honest, I've tried to take it in stride," Reid said on media day. "I've been in the country around 115 days and everything from the time I arrived in the country has been whirlwinding by. "I'm just trying to do what I can do and control what I can control and the other things will take care of them- selves. I've tried not to get too emotion- ally out of whack." Putting the distractions behind him, however, may be more difficult than he could have anticipated. His father remains unemployed, and has attended two Michigan practices as a spectator since Ellerbe took over. But Ellerbe is trying to keep Reid's focus on basketball. Since Ellerbe's ascension to the top spot, he has intro- duced a new, aggressive philosophy, spearheaded by Reid's relentless effort. "I'd like to think that I'm a very intense player and very competitive," he says. "We've got some great offensive players on the team, so my main role will be distributing the ball and making sure they get the shots that they need." While Michigan's frontourt is some- what lacking in depth - Robert Traylor and Maceo Baston are the only return- ing players with significant experience - Reid may be able to help out. Despite standing just 6-foot-1, Reid uses every inch of his muscular frame in positioning for rebounds. In fact, he ranks as the sec- ond-leading rebounder in° Utah high school history - behind 7-6 Shawn Bradley. "How many players do you see today with. great athleticism that{ end up being mediocre players?" he asks. "To me, that's sad. I'm a guy~ who's got some athlet- ic ability, but compared to some of these guys - not even close. I have to work hard to have the success that I do have."n But it is his will to win that , sets him a notch above the taller players pining for the same rebounds. At Michigan, > the little things make a big dif- ference, yet Reid knows intan- gibles are difficult to pinpoint. "I do what it takes to win," Reid says. "That makes it hard, I guess, to point out what that is, but I'd like to think that means making a couple threes in a row and making a couple of great passes or defensive stops. "My role this year is going to be to make sure the guys who can score get the ball." At Brigham Young, Reid played the point and shot the ball. His 37-percent clip from 3-point range established him as one of the WAC's deadliest shooters, a trait Ellerbe can already see. "Robbie brings some stability and depth to the backcourt," Ellerbe says. "Right now, we know that he can shoot in open floor situations." But Ellerbe's excitement is tempered with caution - primarily because of Reid's sabbatical from the game. "He's been off for two years," the coach said. "That's an awful long time to come back and play basketball - and this is the highest level possible." Ellerbe attempted to utilize Reid's tal- ents from the first game. Michigan's lineup against Athletes In Action on Nov. 3 debuted with Reid at the point in a three-guard set. With sharpshooter Louis Bullock at shooting guard and usual point guard Travis Conlan positioning himself as a swingman, a new philosophy was born. Unfortunately for Michigan, Conlan's fractured wrist shelved that idea for another three weeks - placing even more pressure on Reid, who is still adapting to the Michigan system. That adjustment is made more diffi- cult by Reid's non-stop movement - away from the court. Reid's typical fall day, prior to the official start of basketball practice, rivaled the nonstop excitement of a WAC basketball game - all-out, all the time. In just a 24-hour span, he would work out with his basketball teammates, practice his pitching techniques with the baseball team, devote numerous hours to his church and attend entry-level classes for admission into the Business School. A contiuous schedule "is some- thing I have done since the time I was little. I played basketball, baseball and went to school;' says the former high school valedictorian. "As a mis- sionary for two years, I was very busy as well. It's good and hopefully keeps me out of trouble." Out of trouble and on the court is exactly where Ellerbe hopes to see Reid for his remain- ing two years of eligibili- ty. His ball-handling skills bring a dimension to Michigan unseen since the days of Gary Grant. And as a point guard, Reid's age - he turned 23 on June 8 - should help bring a steady matu- rity to the tempera- mental Wolverines. "I've never been a guy that will just come out and start demanding leader- ship," Reid says. "I'd like to think that by what I do, that comes naturally. "As the players get more used to me, and as we start playing games, my strengths will come out." For all Reid's tal- 00 ents, his most important R attribute may be his unre- strained confidence. Reid is sure he fits the profile as Michigan's next clutch threat despite his hiatus from the game. "I still have some quickness to get back," he says. "Just playing and getting in better shape will help. I'm going to be as good a player or better (than at Brigham Young). "I really like to think that when the lights come on, I do as well." Now, he's just waiting for regular-sea- son games - along with the florescents above - to spark his game. With four months of American life under his belt, Reid's Greek experience is in the past, but not forgotten. "I'm still adjusting back after not playing for a couple years competitive- ly," he says. But "I know I'm going to be there when it counts." Duke solid - again When Duke loses only once in 104 games to non-conference opponents on its home floor and then falls to ... let's say, Michigan, in front of the Cameron Indoor Stadium fanatics, wouldn't you think that the Blue Devils will have 105 on their minds heading into Crisler Arena? And to make matters worse for the Wolverines, the Blue Devils probably won't forget the way they lost to Michigan. Down eight points with four minutes remaining in the game, the Wolverines came back to defeat the Blue Devils, 62-61, on Dec. 8, 1996. Duke players will still have memories of Robert Traylor's game-winning dunk with 6.2 seconds left on the clock. But what was more frustrating to Duke was that it had the ball and could have won the game in the final minute. But Trajan Langdon's pass landed in Maceo Baston's hands to seal the game. "We totally gave them the game," Langdon said. "In our building, that's sad. I can't believe it." The Blue Devils regrouped nicely, finishing the season with a No. 8 national ranking and a 24-9 record. The scary thing is that this year's team looks to be much better - the deepest and most potential-laden of Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski's teams since the days of Christian Laettner and Grant Hill. The 1997-98 Blue Devils return a solid nucleus with four of their starters back. Langdon, the team's leading scor- er last year with 14.3 points per game joins the gritty, turnover-free Steve Wojciechowski in the backcourt. Ricky Price, who has averaged more than 10 points in each of his first three years at Duke, won't play against Michigan because he is academically ineligible for the first semester. But Coach K should have no prob- lems with depth because Duke boasts one of the top freshman classes in the country. Detroit Country Day product Shane Battier - the 1997 Naismith National High School Player of the Year - and Chris Burgess should bolster an already solid frontline. Michigan believes that its rough off- season won't mean that Duke isn't going} to come into December's game focused. "Just because we had adversity, that doesn't mean Duke isn't going to come knocking on our door, come Dec. 13;' Michigan guard Louis Bullock said. "We know they are going to come in and that's going to give them even more rea- son to want to beat us." - James Goldstein There's nothing quite like a compet- itive college basketball tournament in the dead of winter. Especially if it involves Horned Frogs, Billikens, Billy Tubbs and Nolan Richardson. Not to mention that it's in Puerto Rico. Michigan will be one of eight teams spending Christmas in San Juan to par- ticipate in the Holiday Classic, hosted by American University of Puerto Rico. Texas Christian, Saint Louis, Arkansas, Iowa State, Syracuse, Murray State and UNLV are all slated to join Michigan and American. The three-day tourney guarantees each team three games, but narrows the field to a pair of unbeatens for the tour- nament championship on Dec. 26. High-profile coaches and cool mas- cots aside, perhaps the most interesting story of this tournament comes from Arkansas, where forward Sunday Adebayo will see his first big-time action after sitting out the first semes- ter of the season in order to qualify academically. Adebayo originally played for and was a starter at Arkansas, but was declared ineligible in mid-February 1996, by the NCAA, amidst a long- running investigation of the Arkansas basketball program. Adebayo trans- ferred to Memphis, where he started 23 of 26 games and led the Tigers in rebounding, while averaging 13 points per game. After the season, and after the con- clusion of the NCAA's investigation, Adebayo and Arkansas petitioned the NCAA to reinstate Adebayo. In a highly unusual move, the NCAA reviewed the case and decided that Adebayo, in fact, had never done anything wrong. He was "exonerated of any wrongdo- ing in July of 1997," according to the school's athletic department, and he will complete his college eligibility in the second half of the upcoming season, assuming he is academically eligible. Another interesting story comes from Iowa State, which will face this season without any of the five starters that led last year's team to the NCAA tournament's Sweet Sixteen. Ten newcomers will join Stevie Johnson, who, at 4.1 points per game, is the Cyclones' leading returning scorer. - Jim Rose A1BE'S CONEY ISLAND 4 RESTAURANT '6 am-li pm " Carry Out Great Food, Great Prices Breakfast AnytimeH. Lunch, Dinner & Daily Specials 663-6302 1952 S. INDUSTRIAL Open 7pm - 2am 7 days 919 & upe Roundtree Plaza next to Wal-Mar RESTAURANT COMA -, , W SPORTS AR turts ar The Michigan Daily Readership Poll 1995-1997 'A. t fI STAY a S1 -3 Big Screen TV's -8 additional large TV's -Satellite Coverage of College & Pro Basketball Games -13 Beers on Tap Comeji n usfor 'allthe excitement of the game and much more! :. . 1220 S. UNIVERSITY 665-7777 A