'A 10A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, February 3, 2000 THE FORGOTTEN FRESHMAN By Jacob Wheeler - Daily Sports Editor his year's crop of Michigan fresh men hasn't had too much trouble avoiding the lurking label "Fab Five" - a reference to the class which will stand out forever in the minds of Wolverine fans. That's because for the majority of this season, only four freshmen have graced Crisler Arena. Sitting quietly on the bench until this past Tuesday night, as fellow freshmen Jamal Crawford, Kevin Gaines and LaVell Blanchard etched their names down as contestants in the Big Ten con- ference race, has been forward Leland Anderson - the forgotten freshman. He finally returned to college basket- ball in Michigan's 20-point loss to the Spartans, scoring four points in 10 min- utes. And it couldn't have come at a bet- ter time, with Crawford replacing Anderson on the bench due to his ineli- gibility. Anderson didn't make any sig- nificant impact in Michigan's third-con- secutive loss, but his renewed presence is important for a team without a strong power forward. Anderson missed 10 games after receiving a knee to his right quadricep during a pre-season practice - the same injury (to the left leg) he suffered during his last season of high school basketball, in Attleboro, Mass., a suburb of Boston. He played in Michigan's first seven games, but not to the level of his awe- inspiring classmates since the injury lim- ited his speed and jumping ability. Leland averaged only 8.4 minutes per game and attempted only 15 field goals during those seven games. "It's been hard for him," Michigan coach Brian Ellerbe said. "To watch the other four (freshmen) come in, play well and produce. That's tough." So Ellerbe, and team trainer Steve Stricker, confined Anderson to the bench, in street clothes - a place all too familiar a year ago. His 10-game tenure riding the pine was the second time in two years Anderson fell from promi- nence and had to watch the game he loves from afar. STRENGTH AND GLORY: Two springs ago, as a high school junior, Anderson towered over New England. The 6-foot- 8 giant from Attleboro, who uses all of his 245-pound frame to disrhantle opposing arm wrestlers from the mean streets of Boston to the athletic facilities of Ann Arbor, had just powered Attleboro High to a state championship in boys basketball - its first since 1943. His uncle Jim and his father Kerry, two basketball nuts in a state where the sport is taken very seriously, were awful- ly proud. The hoop they had installed in the backyard when Leland was young had become his best friend. And now, with a full year of high school eligibility remaining, their boy had a chance to win back-to-back state championships, and maybe even break the state scoring record. In his prime, Kerry played for Attleboro High School himself, but never won a state championship, or established the dominating inside game that would enable his son to average 27.6 points and I I rebounds per game as a junior. Kerry was good, but he was no Leland. Needless to say he never chal- lenged the boy to an arm wrestling duel. Though his father never encouraged his son's off-the-court obsession, Leland's massive right arm enjoyed as much success at the bar as his post-up body under the hoop. Leland followed his older cousins' interest into the brute hobby which, according to his mother Derrv, "has a stigma attached to it as being not a very high class sport." He entered local competitions in the Boston area and even took on Jerry Caderette, a professional arm wrestler. Through it all Leland has never come away from a battle without a trophy. Since he started arm wrestling at age 12, Leland's brute strength has made mince meat of many arms, including those of a couple Michigan football players who made the mistake of challenging the green freshman to a duel when he first arrived on campus this summer. ATTLEBORO Lows: But basketball, unlike arm wrestling, does not rely sole- ly on strength and peak adrenaline for under a minute. Basketball is a game that utilizes all of an athlete's limbs and unleashes nine other players to run around those limbs at breakneck speeds. Basketball, at times, can be very unfair. Leland didn't win a second consecu- tive state championship at Attleboro High, and he didn't even come close to breaking the state scoring record, because he took a hard knee to the left quadricep muscle early in his senior sea- son. Just like his 10-game absence at Michigan this season, he was confined to wearing street clothes on the bench and watching the game his father and uncle had taught him. Though he'd already signed to play basketball for Brian Ellerbe at Michigan the following season, it hurt on the court because Leland couldn't help his team. But he didn't expect the pain off the court as well. Basketball isn't just huge for the Anderson family, it's big throughout the Boston area. And when Attleboro, a town of 30,000 people, lost its star play- er to an injury which wasn't visible to every pedestrian on the street, the bas- ketball faithful began asking questions. "People didn't realize the extent of the injury," Attleboro coach Mark Houle said. "The taste of success the year before made it more difficult. People asked why-why-why? They wanted to see him play." Leland continued working out with his two best friends - both of whom had already graduated - at the local gym, lifting weights and working on bas- ketball skills as much as he could con- sidering the leg injury. According to his mother Derry, the locals second-guessed Leland because they figured if he was healthy enough to work out, he was probably healthy enough to win Attleboro High another state title. "People who had rallied around him were now dissing him when he was down," Derry said. "They said things like, 'We see him playing at the YMCA, but he won't play for his team. We weren't expecting this at the high school level." THE FINAL STRAW: By the end of the season, the torture of watching his team- mates on the court without him had become too much. Leland informed Houle that he wouldn't travel with the team to the last two tournament games. His doctor had recommended that he pull the plug on the season "with his future in mind," and Leland just couldn't bear watching from the bench any longer. According to his father Kerry, Lela, was shooting around in the homecourt gym the night the team returned home, one season-ending loss short of another state championship. Out of anger, or mere jealousy (Leland would be the first Attleboro player to move on to a Division I college team), the team kicked him out of the gym. But that wasn't the real insult to injury. "Mark (Houle) called Leland into his office after the season, to let him kna that our family wouldn't be invited to' team, awards banquet because Leland had missed the last two games,' Kerry Anderson said. "I was numb (to all the animosity) by then, but my wife was really hurt." Bad blood, unfulfilled expectations and all, Leland was ready to play bas- ketball somewhere besides Attleboro; somewhere nobody knew him, where he didn't have to be the lone sV Pencil in Ann Arbor, in the heart of the Midwest, where Leland could acclimate himself to the college game along with four other talented fresh- men, and the only heat he'd take from teammates was for his Eastern pro- nunciation of the word 'car.' Through injury and re-injury, Lelan's transition on the court has been anything but smooth - but he still hasn't lost an arm wrestling bout to anyone in Ann Arbor. DAVID KATZ/Daily Leland Anderson finally saw playing time Tuesday against Michigan State after missing 10 straight games due to a quadricep injury. Tough man on campus Leland Anderson 0 Hometown: Attleboro, Mass. 0 Averaging 8.6 minutes per game in 8 games so far this season 9 Shooting at .611 clip, second-best on the team 8 Armwrestled, and defeated, Michigan football player at freshman orientation last summer 6-8,245 pounds d DANNY KAUCK/ "y Though he came in with a highly-touted recruiting class, Anderson has stood moast ly in the background this season. I ! 7 '