4E - The Michigan Daily - New Student Edition - September 8, 1998 BASKETBALL Future uncertain at Crisler F rom the day he arrived in Ann Arbor, Brian Ellerbe's job whatever it was - drew con- troversy in enormous proportions. After all, in just 12 months, his job title changed four times. The story of the Michigan basket- ball team is well-documented. Dirty dealings emerged in the summer of 1997, yet went unproven as the NCAA and a Kansas law firm sought the truth. Coach Steve Fisher lost his job amidst rampant suspicion and the Michigan players rallied to his side. Now, a year later, where does everyone stand? Fisher sits home in Ann Arbor without a job. The damage to his reputation as a man of integrity who ran a clean program is forever tar- nished. Big-time jobs have come and gone with Fisher out of the loop. The program, despite its best season in three years, lost four of its top five MARK players and the SNYDER other - Louis Mark Bullock - My Words rarely ventures inside of 15 feet. Two below- average recruits signed with Michigan, but neither is expected to revitalize what is expected to be a subppr season. The defending Big Ten Tournament champion, Michigan will be lucky to compete for a bye in the this season's tournament - an honor bestowed upon the season's top five finishers. Yes, this is a doomsday forecast for Michigan fans who hunger for victory and consistency. But before negativity overcomes Michigan fans, present coach Ellerbe throws a wrench into the problem proposal, for his next move may be his most crucial. Last season, he did everything he could to right a sinking ship. Instead of the program tearing apart at the seams as might be expected after the firing of a loyal coach, Ellerbe maintained a steady hand. His ascension to the head position was uneasy and awkward, but he handled it with class. His job remained in limbo on numerous occasions, but day-to-day activities remained consistent in the program. In essence, Brian Ellerbe did everything right. Unfortunately for him, 'everything' goes better with an NBA-caliber front line and a play- maker willing to sacrifice life and limb for the team - both of which he had last season. The names of last year - Traylor, Baston, Ward and Conlan - may be fresh in fans' minds, but at Michigan they make up the past. Throughout his first campaign at Michigan, Ellerbe liked to talk about how critics of the program knew lit- tle about his team and the game they played. Right or wrong, Ellerbe always has been sincere and honest. After a loss, his excuses were minimal. After a victory, his emo- tions were tempered and optimistic. That consistency should make Ellerbe a Michigan success story. But potential is a fleeting proposi- tion -- especially in Ann Arbor. Regardless, he'll get his chance to prove otherwise. Despite a four-year contract, the guarantee of a long-term future remains fleeting in college sports - no matter the campus. Ellerbe has the opportunity to do things his way. Starting from scratch, he has built a coaching staff of his people. Administrative assistant Tom Sorboro assumes a role new to Michigan basketball. He will deal with most of the paperwork (i.e. travel plans), freeing the other assis- tants to concentrate on the floor game. But ultimately, recruiting will determine the success of Ellerbe's tenure - and how long he lasts. The shroud over the Michigan program for the past 15 months has left the cupboard nearly bare and the only proven player with All-Big Ten skills -- Bullock - is a senior who thus far has been one-dimensional. Talented recruits, afraid of possi- ble penalties, committed elsewhere, A FRESH START After a year as coach, Ellerbe shows it's his team' By James Goldstein Daily Sports Writer His car isn't packed with belongings from his previous address like some of students' cars. The rooms in his Ann Arbor home are no longer jumbled with boxes that are crowded inside dormitory pads. And he has his own Michigan e- mail address which new students will soon have the opportunity to use. But Brian Ellerbe who has one full year under his belt as coach of the Michigan basketball team - the same squad that finished the season 25-9, cap- tured the inaugural Big Ten Tournament title and advanced to the second round of the NCAA Tournament - is treating his second season at the helm like a rookie. Like a 34, soon-to-be 35 year-old Michigan freshman. "Although I've been here for one year, it's like being in the job for the first time" Ellerbe said. It all started for Ellerbe on May 29, 1997 when he joined the Wolverines as an assistant coach. But it was one October afternoon that truly signified the beginning for Ellerbe. Athletic Director Tom Goss called a press conference on October 11, follow- ing the Michigan-Northwestern football game to announce the firing of then- coach Steve Fisher. The announcement came days after the University received the report from a Kansas City firm it hired that revealed minor NCAA viola- tions. Ellerbe was the newest member of the team, but in that press conference, Goss said Ellerbe and not 10-year assistant coach Brian Dutcher, would lead the team's practices until a new coach was chosen. This was news to Ellerbe, who was still in the process of settling into his Ann Arbor home with his wife, Ingrid, and their four-year-old son Brian Jr. and two-year-old daughter Morgan Ashleigh, after Ellerbe spent the last three years as coach of Loyola (Md.). Because his radio and television were in boxes, he had no way of knowing his fate. "I had just moved and we hadn't unpacked our boxes yet," Ellerbe said. "So I was looking for a radio to listen to the press conference. That was the quick- est thing I could do was to turn on my ignition and listen to it in my car." After a two-week coaching search that involved Goss talking to numerous can- didates in person and over the phone, Goss decided to go with Ellerbe, but just as an interim coach. Consider the situation Ellerbe was thrown into: he took the reins of a team that was completely recruited by and had total respect for Fisher, his top assistant, Brian Dutcher, who had been with the team for nearly a decade, was passed over for the job, an NCAA investigation of the program was pending, the Wolverines hadn't won in the NCAA Tournament in three years and recruiting would be all but impossible with the recruits knowing that the coaching situa- tion at Michigan was not a stable one. So not only did Ellerbe have to be a coach, but also a crisis management expert, a public relations man, a psy- chologist and a basketball doctor. He had to do all those things knowing that if he didn't do his job well, he would be the next victim of a Goss press con- ference. And movers would be back. He was not the man, but the man for the moment. Through the entire season, Ellerbe and the Wolverines had many successful moments, highlighted by a December win over then-No. I Duke, winning the Puerto Rico Holiday Classic champi- onship, a 112-64 thrashing of Indiana and three wins in the Big Ten tourney, including a victory over tenth-ranked Purdue. But there were lowlights such as losses to Western Michigan, Bradley and Eastern Michigan. Ellerbe attributed the success to his old coach's even-keel philosophy. "I was always taught from (Rutgers coach) Bob Young, you can never be too high, you can never be too low," Ellerbe said. "You never beat the team down, you never take a loss out of proportion, and you never look at a win as the great- est thing in the world, because you've got to come back tomorrow and prepare." And prepare he did, adjusting to old players - guards Travis Conlan and Louis Bullock, forwards Maceo Baston and Jerod Ward and center Robert Traylor - as a new coach. But the play- ers who began the season feeling hurt by the Fisher firing adjusted quickly to Ellerbe's coaching style. Or the lack thereof. Ellerbe let his vet- eran team do its own thing instead of breaking in something new. Staying with the game plan, not forc- ing new ideas into a system that the play- ers were used to, was the Ellerbe way. And it's a philosophy that he will stick to with the 1998-99 team, a squad that only returns Bullock and point guard Robbie Reid from last year's top six. "I think you coach according to what your personnel is able to give you," Ellerbe said "I'm not going to stick a round peg into a square hole. We're not to the point where there is a set system and we're just going to plug kids in." Baston and Traylor turned the paint into a black hole for the opposing players where opponents would rarely come out alive without a bump and a block. Conlan and Reid showed their full support for Ellerbe following Michigan's second-round NCAA Tournament loss to UCLA in March. Goss said after the defeat that he would sit down with Ellerbe and then make a coaching decision in the following few weeks. Goss interviewed several candi- dates and reports had Goss choosing between Ellerbe, Seton Hall's Tommy Amaker and Oklahoma's Kelvin Sampson. Traylor helped Ellerbe's cause by say- ing he would definitely not return to Michigan if Ellerbe was not hired. Of course, Traylor left to enter the NBA Draft, anyway, but Ellerbe says the sup- port was especially kind. This was the second coaching search circus for Ellerbe in five months. Yet, he had no gut feeling if he thought MARGARET MYERS/Daily After serving as head coach or assistant coach at five different schools in the past 10 years, Brian Ellerbe was selected as Michigan's head coach last fall. Ellerbe hopes his stay In Ann Arbor will be an extended one. Goss would give him the nod. "You can sit in your office and ago- nize but that's not going to change what is ultimately going to happen one way or the other" Ellerbe said. "It was just a waiting game, there was nothing we could do" Then, on March 20, Goss met with Ellerbe and they talked for three hours. Goss had made up his mind, Ellerbe was his guy. They would sign a four-year contract that would carry Ellerbe through the beginning of the 21st centu- ry. And finally, after a full season and two coaching searches, the Capital Heights, Md., native, a man who served as an assistant or head coach at five dif- ferent schools in the last 10 years, had something any coach craves. Stability. "It's more of a real relief to know and understand that you have some stabili- ty," Ellerbe said. So now he doesn't worry about mov- ing. "The good news is you have a job, now let's get to work," he said. What Ellerbe has been doing to keep himself busy is remaining active in the recruiting process, coaching sopho- mores Josh Asselin and Brandon Smith on the Big Ten All-Star team, and hav- ing his players go through a spring and summer conditioning program. It's fitting that the official beginning of the Brian Ellerbe era will get under way with a new start. Gone is his expe- rienced senior class and Traylor is in the NBA. Dutcher, Fisher's top assistant, is off looking of a job, while Ellerbe has brought in his own assistants. But also vanished is the tarnished NCAA investigation, one of the bask ball program's low points in sever years. And with it's finality most likely comes the shift of the media from the off-court problems to on-court results. Still here is the backcourt of Reid and Bullock, a duo Ellerbe calls "as good as any backcourt in America." He's not moving out, but moving for- ward. "My family loves Ann Arbor. and we'd like to stay around a while:' Ellerbe said. "I've moved my family. good bit over the past years and want to have a chance to establish some roots and hopefully have a great, great career at Michigan." Tumultuous season ends with first Big Ten title in 13 years' By Dan Stillman Daily Sports Writer A second-round loss to UCLA in the NCAA Tournament left Michigan men's basketball fans won- dering what could have been after a surprising 1996-97 season. Despite a tumultuous offseason leading up to the campaign, which culminated in the firing of head coach Steve Fisher in the wake of numerous allegations, Michigan's season was its best since the depar- ture of the Fab Five. The leadership of Robert Traylor, emergence of Jerod Ward and the addition of Robbie Reid helped coach Brian Ellerbe's Wolverines to a 25-9 record, the first-ever Big Ten Tournament championship and a No. 3 seed in the . NCAA Tournament. Ellerbe was appointed interim coach less than three weeks before the start of the season. But the 34-year old Capitol regular season championship since 1986. The Wolverines followed with an important win at Iowa, however, and later capped off their season with an unprecedented, 112-64, annihilation of Indiana in front of a raucous home crowd and a victory over Purdue in the championship game of the inaugural Big Ten Tournament at Chicago's United Center. The Wolverines rode their wave of momentum into the postseason with a first-round NCAA Tournament win over No. 14 seed Davidson. But any hopes of a Cinderella story out of Ann Arbor were destroyed when UCLA ended the Wolverines' season with an 85-82 defeat. The game was the final in a Michigan uniform for seniors Travis Conlan, Maceo Baston and Jerod Ward, as well as for junior Robert Traylor, who declared himself eligi- Crisler grounds. The newly created position of administrative associate will be filled by Tom Sorboro, who aided Ellerbe during his tenure as head coach at Loyola (Md.). Lorenzo Neely, an Eastern Michigan product, will fulfill.t role of restricted-earnings coac, bringing his local experience to the recruiting process. Dutcher's spot as Ellerbe's right- hand man will be held by Kurtis Townsend. While Michigan loses the nucleus of its team for the upcoming season, center Josh Asselin and guard Brandon Smith showed potential in their freshman seasons. With sharpshooter Louis Bulld and Robbie Reid anchoring the perimeter, the Wolverines should remain strong in the backcourt. Bqt the Wolverines will be hard-pressed to replace the 300-pound Traylor in the middle. r: uU . h~