B -- The Michigan Daily Tipoff '98 --Thursday, Nove ber 12, 1998 After losing gallons of talent from last season, Michigan coach Brian Ellerbe have to get every drop of talent out of his players Call it a ... PLAY By Rick FreemanF cing an optimist, Brian Ellerbe would say that his glass is half full. But most Michigan basketball fans, steeped in pessimistic tradi- tion, won't even say the glass looks a third full this season. Traylor is gone, they say. There's no frontcourt, they say. Defenses will collapse on Louis Bullock and Robbie Reid and Michigan will finish closer to the bottom than the top of the Big Ten, they say. And those are the nice things. "I think the big thing right now is to not draw conclusions until you've seen the basketball team play," Ellerbe has said to all of the pundits. "Obviously, we've got some guys who haven't had an opportunity to play. That doesn't mean that they streets of Ann Arbor didn't grow longer as they ran on them. It justs seemed like it sometimes. Especially on the one cold day in October when not everyone{ made it around their two-mile road course in enough time. "Ohhh," Bullock groaned, "It was rough.' But there was no avoiding it. With tired bodies made even more miserable by the growing cold, Bullock and his teammates chased the clock around the course again. "It was tough, because it seemed like it got a lit- tle bit colder," Bullock said."The wind started pick- can't play." Ellerbe's an optimist, but he doesn't pretend to know the future. He can look in his plan- ner, and before him, his life unfolds in sheets of paper. But what isn't in his plan- ner, what can't be in his planner, are all the extra moments, the ones that fall through the cracks. Like the scattered hand- "I think the big thing right now is to not draw conclusions until ou've seen the basketbal team play.". - Brian Ellerbe, Michigan coach ing up a little more and just smacking you in your face. "You're thinking to yourself, if you don't make this time, he's gonna make us run again. So you're trying to give it all you got, but your body is just at the limit. But you know, we pushed through it and everybody made it. You feel good about yourself after some- thing like that." Bullock noticed how good he too. Drills that used to leave him ful of time he has when he comes off the floor after practice at Crisler Arena. He often makes a recruit- ing call from the phone by his locker. "It's very con- venient," he said. And recruiting is one of those things that he can't find enough otherwise lost moments for. Even at I a.m., Ellerbe will still be calling recruits. It's only 10 a.m. on the West Coast, and he likes to squeeze the most out of his day. Which is a good attitude to have when you coach a team that will return only three players with anything more than limited experience. Talent gushed from the pores of the Wolverines of old. Now, Ellerbe will have to squeeze every last drop he can out of his team. His first step was trying to to sweat it out of them. In seasons past, off-season training for the Wolverines was done at their leisure. Ellerbe decid- ed that he'd change things just a bit. When his team returned in the fall, they were going to be in shape and made spring workouts mandatory. And hard. In the thick heat of summer, their hardwood dreams began to take shape on soft grass and artifi- cial turf. The Wolverines ran distances on the golf course, where the cross country team runs. They did sprints on the field hockey team's home turf. And, of course, they ran the steps of Michigan Stadium. While construction workers added sinew and flesh to the stadium, the Wolverines did some renovations themselves. Up, over, down, over and up again. All the way around in 15 -- minutes -or they had to run it again. "Everybody made it," said senior guard Louis Bullock "Everybody made it because nobody wanted to run it again.' Especially not in a stadium that grew as they ran in it. But at least the sweaty Europeans, while not everyone's idea of self- improvement, seemed to have instilled in the two sophomores a toughness that as newcomers with limited playing time, they might have lacked last season. "I can definitely tell that Brandon and Josh got better," Bullock said. "You can see the change in them knowing that they're gonna have to be on the floor and they don't have Robert Traylor or Maceo to rely on to do well in the post, now it's their job. "You can just tell that their attitudes have changed knowing that they're going to be on the floor." And so have their teammates' attitudes toward them. Last season, they were just freshmen. Now, they're starters. "I think Brandon's got unlimited potential and I'm excited for people to see that," senior guard Robbie Reid said. "I can see his skills and abilities increased." The pounding the Wolverines took this summer was preparation for the rough stuff they'll receive this season, from both opponents and observers. Not only Smith and Asselin, but every one of the Wolverines will be setting screens like a TV factory working three shifts. And when it comes to physical play and you're facing teams with more talent, it's better to give than receive. "I felt like one of the most important w things for us was to get physical- ly stronger and bigger so that we can dish out some things and not be the recipient of those sorts of things,' Ellerbe said. W e want to di s h n.,out some punishment." But despite such a sunny outlook on the season, they know the line between the pulverizer and the pulp in the Big Ten is a thin one. It's fine to talk about improvement in the off-season and the possi- bility of surprising some people. It's another thing to actually do it. "Do I think we have room to breathe?" Reid said. "No." 1 "We have a young team, we've got an inexperi- enced team. And we know that from day one we're going to have to work and scrap for everything." EUm Ellerbe's schedule leaves little space - or time - for breathing. And almost no time for eating. His days begin only a few hours after the previous one ends. Usually, coffee and a morning-long meeting with his assistants starts him off, then practice and more meetings take him to the early evening. And that's when the chills come. Like ravens coming home to roost, they serve as ominous reminders. They keep him from forgetting the neglect he's shown himself and his body. "I get chills a lot, Ellerbe said. "I get chills at the end of the day, around six o'clock or seven o'clock" He smiled and shook his head. "I'm bad. I don't eat right, I know it, he said. "But I take vitamins. "Psychologically, I think I'm meeting it halfway. But it's so much to do. And you want to be there for the players," Especially when the one who had been there for them for so long is suddenly yanked away - the way Steve Fisher was when he was fired. During the turmoil, practice became a refuge for Ellerbe, a place isolated from an outside world swirling with rumors and ill will. A place for "watching the guys work really hard. Watching them work on something, seeing them execute it and then watching their faces when they know they did a good job." It still is his refuge today. It's still what keeps him going, what makes all the hungry, shivering night- falls worth it, as well as all the late nights that follow. "I'm gonna be up, regardless, this time of year, because there's so many things swirling in my mind," Ellerbe said. And with his planner, he can sort those things out. In his planner, he can control how the future should be. He can plan for his team to be the surprise of the Big Ten. But he can't do anything about the people who have already relegated his team to a half-empty - or worse - season. "We don't need to be prodded by a newspaper article or a radio show to get us geared up to work hard. We don't need to be prodded in that way," Ellerbe said. The stairs were enough. Ask Lou. 98 - The Michigan Daily - Tipoff '98 - Thursday, November 12, 1998 BACKCOU1RT BOMBERS By Josh Kleinbaum rian Ellerbe sits in his office, entertaining a reporter for the emphasized B millionth time in his team's first week of practice, tension $ slower, half and stress gripping his fae But the moment the words "3- Haley's con pointer" escape the reporter's mouth, the stress slips away. At first,1 "Great topic," Ellerbe says, reaching across the table that sepa- and add the rates him from his inquisitor. His large hand finds a scarlet-and- ed with the white book and flips through it. He grins, then he points. tried a shor Right there, under the heading of 'Field Goal Percentage - ~,, tL had a shor Career' in the Rutgers basketball media guide, Ellerbe's name tops The AC the list. Thurl Bail goal percen N .with it- coach Ger Ellerbe was stellar from long range at Rutgers, hitting better than went rema 42 percent of his shots from beyond arc, best in school's historyj3ut he didn't shoot the bomb that much. "Coaches didn't know how to country bi take advantage of the line then," Ellerbe explains. inches fron That won't be a problem for the Wolverines this year. Although"twan Ellerbe insists that the 3-point shot won't be emphasized this season people. So any more than in past ones, he and his staff have been working toMh One oft: "utilize the tools" he has at his disposal. And he has the tools to Michigan make the trifecta a fixture in the Michigan game.rgt"e The tools: Louis Bullock, Robbie Reid and Brandon Smith. The redet three all have the ability to hit from outside, and they pose different Freein, looks to opposing defenses. oi ," "We're such a guard-oriented team, the 3-point shot is going to WARREN ZINN/Daily shoot it." have to be important," Reid says. "Me, Lou, Brandon, we're all Robbie Reid spotting up for a three will likely be a familiar sight In the f going to have to hit shots from the outside to bring the guards out for the Wolverines this season. Bradley on and open np the inside game." Now, Bullock, like Thomas, has a great outside shot, great ball- blanked fr While Smith, a small forward, can shoot from long range, he handling abilities and complete confidence in himself. The best 3- first four doesn't do it that much, preferring to drive to the basket. He can point shooter Bullock has ever seen? "Me, on a video tape,' he says. half. In the still spot up from outside. Regardless, as any of Michigan's oppos- Reid followed one of Thomas' contemporanes, Larry Bird. Bird just 1-for- ing coaches will tell you, Bullock and Reid are the two to watch. played on a Celtic team with several former Brigham Young players But the Bullock is an opportunistic shooter. As one of the team's pri- that caught the young Mormon's eye. And once you were watching winning, mary ball handlers, he utilizes screens and picks to get open the Celtics, you couldn't miss their superstar. NoDoz an looks at the basket. He also uses his speed, of both foot and Like Bird, Reid has excellent range. And like Bird, if the game is Albeck sa hand, to get himself open, with moves like a crossover dribble. on the line, Reid wants the ball. Frieder Reid, on the other hand, is a straight shooter. He waits for "If you hit the shot, you're a hero. If you miss it, you're a zero, that season the defense to collapse, then gets himself open, taking a Reid says. "I'm willing to take that chance." than 200 i kick-out from the inside and spotting on a dime for the But a new challenge awaits the bombers this go-round. With the But the three. He describes himself as a "scrappy" player, and also absence of a proven post game, open looks will be much rarer. people - says he is very streaky. "When I'm on, I feel great," Reid Defenses won't leave Reid open for the kick-out. Opposing teams By the says. "But when I'm not ..." won't give Bullock a second to breathe, let alone shoot. Wolverin Both Bullock and Reid look back to throwback "If I were an opposing coach, I'd focus on me and Lou,' Reid the season players, the greats of the '80's, for inspiration. said. "They know we're the only returning starters' 1986-87 i Growing up watching Isiah Thomas play, The Wolverines have a solution to the problem, or at least they took 192 Bullock could relate to the Piston; both were think they do. They've been working on putting more picks and a national short, playing against guys who were tall. To a screens in the playbook, and of all different styles, too. Set picks, young Bullock, it didn't make a difference staggered picks, double screens, more screens from the big men, the that, rather than playing against the NBA sliding screen door to the kitchen... players Thomas had to face, he was As the playing his cousins. To Bullock, it interview was the same thing - his cousins second-ye were taller. If Thomas could do Somewhere in between talking about picks and screens, Ellerbe tion: El it, so could he. slips back in time. point con "He was small and I Basketball was a different game in his day. It was more than a year "As Ion was small;' Bullock after Ellerbe's 1985 Rutgers graduation that Gary Grant hit the first not on th says. "He pushed Michigan 3-pointer from beyond the 19-foot-9 line. That's because beat him me to be the NCAA didn't institute the arc nationwide until 1986. The e D t better." Atlantic 10 was experimenting with the are, and Ellerbe benefited. But the rest of the country didn't. As a result, players were much more skilled from the nine-to-19-foot range than they are Bullock today. Passing and dribbling were Position: Guard Best 3-point shooters ever seen: Pete Lisicky, Chris Kingsbury, Trajan Langdon and "Me, on a video tape." On Ellerbe: "He has a good shot, actually. But if we went head-to-head, I might only win by, maybe, two - he is my coach, I don't want him to take minutes away from me. But if I wanted to..." Most memorable 3-point shot: Bullock's first shot of the game against Duke last year was a 3-pointer. "I think that got me going," Bullock said, "and it got the momentum going for us. Ellerbe Position: Guard Best 3-point shooter ever seen: Louis Bullock On himself: "The guys always tease me me about my playing career, so I don't even talk about it anymore. I just leave the record book out and say, Read it."' Most memorable 3-point shot: In the 1982-83 sea- a son at Rutgers, the Scarlet Knights were playingr at Duquesne, trailing by two, with under 10 sec- onds left when Ellerbe spotted up and hit a game- winning trifecta. His good friend and former Duquesne coach Jimmy Satlin still jokes with Ellerbe about the shot. I ~.,-- ~-