'F w w w w w -Iw w W- w mr IW a 4B - The Michigan Daily - Tipoff2003- Thursday, November 6, 2003 'He believed in me' Recruits past and present know that Michigan coach Tommy Amaker will stand by them The Michigan Daily - Tpoff Seasoned Veteran Bernard Robinson has experienced it all in his years at Michigan, and he's still here to tell about By Dan Rosen Daily Sports Writer In the spring of his junior year of high school, Rasheed Dunbar's life changed. Dunbar was a prospect with tremendous potential. The 6-foot-2 guard from Marist High School in Bayonne, N.J., was poised to become one of the great college athletes of his class - ranked as the top junior in New Jersey by hoop- scoop.com. His performance against top recruits in spring leagues in 1999 had college coaches buzzing with excitement. Dunbar received several college scholarship offers during his junior year, including an offer from then-Seton Hall coach Tommy Amaker. While he had "The fact that yet to decide on a college to me in the con attend, Dunbar's future as a stu- In-feltre dent-athlete looked bright. Then, in late April, Dunbar becausel and a friend were blindsided at intereste a major intersection in West- (not just) as field, N.J. While his friend - Rasheea experienced only minor former AmaA injuries, Dunbar suffered a punctured lung, broken ribs, swelling of the head and a fractured jaw. In an instant, Dunbar went from being a hot commodity to being unsure if he'd ever be able play basketball again. "There were some schools that pulled back their (scholarship) offers because they didn't know how I was going to turn out to be," Dunbar recalled. Seton Hall wasn't one of those schools. Even though Amaker knew that this prospect would probably not play basketball for him, he didn't give up on Rasheed Dunbar the person. The Seton Hall coach chose to honor his schol- arship offer to Dunbar. "The fact that he ; still stood by me, in the condition I was in - I felt really good, because he was interested in me . (not just) as By Daniel Bremmer a player," Dunbar said. "I think that's a great example of Tommy's char- acter and his commitment to people," recalled Fred Hill Jr., who served as an assistant coach to Amak- er at Seton Hall for three years. "(Rasheed) had a scholarship, and he was going to be part of our family, and we were going to help that young man get an education and grow and develop as a human being." Dunbar ultimately opted not to attend Seton Hall. He went to Memphis, where he never played basketball, and is currently attempting a comeback at Division III William Patterson e stood by University. But the fact that he had ition Iwas the opportunity to attend Seton Hall is a testament to Amaker's character. h od early good, he was d in me a player." d Dunbar, ker recruit Vh en coach Mike Krzyzewski recruits players to Duke, it's like selling them a pristine convert- ible. It looked good a few years back, looks good now and will look good for years to come. For Amaker, selling a product like Michigan in 2002 - a former premier basketball school in the process of rebuilding, but at the time, under NCAA scrutiny - was like selling a broken down sports car. Sure, it might look pretty nice down the road, but in its present condition, it's somewhat of a gamble. The NCAA sanctions presented a huge test to Amaker's recruiting skills - a test he passed with flying colors. Even though the program was dragged through the mud by the Ed Martin scandal, Amaker landed three top-100 freshman recruits - Dion Harris, Courtney Sims and Brent Petway - combining for a class commonly listed in the top 20 nationally. And none of these recruits decommitted, even after Michigan was slapped with a post-season ban. "He's done a great job, especially with all the stuff that's going on," said Krzyzewski, Amaker's mentor and former coach. "First of all, he's never made an excuse; he's handled everything with class (and) dignity. And he's recruited well, field- ing a really good team." As part of his 2003 recruiting class, Amaker lured Harris, Mr. Basketball in the state of Michigan, away from Mis- souri and Louisville. This marked the first time a Mr. Basketball from Michi- gan became a Wolverine since Robert Traylor in 1995. Harris' decision to become a Wolverine effectively ended Michigan State coach Tom Izzo's tyrannical reign over recruiting in Michigan. Sims, a 6-foot-10 recruit from Roslindale, Mass., could have gone to Syracuse, North Carolina, Con- necticut or Kentucky. But Sims chose Amaker. He chose Michigan. "If he wasn't here, I probably wouldn't be here, either," Sims said. Senior J.C. Mathis, a transfer from Virginia, also chose Michigan because of Amaker. Amaker unsuc- cessfully tried to recruit Mathis to Seton Hall years ago, but that did- n't end their rela- tionship. They kept in touch throughout the years, and Mathis' con- nection with the coach was still so strong that the 6- Daily Sports Writer foot-8 forward transferred to Michigan last year, unsure of whether he'd even get a chance to play in the NCAA Tournament as a Wolverine. Just playing for Amaker was a reward in itself. "I trusted Coach Amaker, and that's why I came here," said Mathis, who is eligible to play after sit- ting out last season. "I like the fact that he believed in me, and he's very honest, very truthful." Harris, Sims and sophomore guard Daniel Hor- ton also raved about their coach's honesty - a quality that has been important to Amaker from his days as a player at Duke to his coaching posi- tion today. Amaker went through the recruiting process himself as a prospect more than 15 years ago and said that, at the time, what he wanted most out of coaches was for them to "be straight" with him. Remembering this, Amaker makes sure to tell all his recruits the truth about the situation they are entering and their futures at Michigan. When Amaker traveled to Gary, Ind., to visit with sophomore Chris Hunter and his family on a recruiting trip, Amaker got up in the living room and began to demonstrate defensive stances. Hunter's parents were so impressed with Amaker's honesty and passion for basketball that they became a big influence on their son's decision to go to Michigan. "Coach Amaker is the type of coach that doesn't just deal with the players; he wants to get to know everybody, whoever encounters the players," said Andre Barrett, Amaker's point guard at Seton Hall. "If he knows you, he knows your mom, your dad, how many sisters you've got, your brothers, where you live ... he knows everything." Players and fans alike find Amaker's style refreshing in several ways. By becoming very familiar with players' surroundings, the current Michigan team would seem less vulnerable to another Ed Martin-type scandal. In the 1990s, then-Michigan coach Steve Fisher claimed he was ignorant to his players' dealings while any wrong- doing had occurred. By bringing honesty to the table, Amaker renews his commitment to viewing his recruits as individuals and not as chess pieces in the game of basketball. Amaker doesn't want to bring recruits to Michigan who won't fit in with the program, and by being upfront about everything, he is able to avoid doing so. en Amaker speaks, his words come out so eloquently it's like he has rehearsed them beforehand, even if he's just been caught off-guard with a question. He's confident, calm and poised at every moment. When things heat up, Amaker stays cool. The guy has probably never broken a sweat in his life, except during his playing days at Duke. Amaker even stayed cool in 2001, when his final season at Seton Hall quickly turned from a promising start into a disastrous finish. After a lockerroom altercation in which then-freshman Eddie Griffin allegedly punched then-senior Ty Shine in the face, Amaker managed to guide the Pirates through the situation. While Seton Hall finished the 2000-01 season dropping nine of its last 12 games, Barrett (a fresh- man at the time) attributed the team's downfall to the players on the court, not Amaker's coaching - something Amaker was criticized for when he first came to Michigan. "As far as Xs and Os, and the several plays we ran - those worked, with people who wanted to make them work," Barrett said. "You have players on the team where sometimes they feel like they're being treated certain different ways. When they step on the court, and they're rebelling against the coach, that's when it's no longer in the coach's con- trol. It's the players, and those players need to be dealt with." FILE PMUO Amaker advises former Wolverine Chris Young. Amaker knows that there will always be critics. He just does his best to prove those critics wrong on the court, not by defending himself with words. "I'm very confident in my (coaching) ability and the ability of our staff," Amaker said. "Given what we've done at Seton Hall, and what we've done here, I think we've proven that we have the ability to take a program, rebuild it, turn it around and win." When Amaker left Seton Hall in 2001 to take over as head coach at Michigan, many Pirates felt deserted. It would have been easy for many of Amaker's former players - including Barrett, who was close to his coach at the time - to hold a grudge against any other coach who left them. But not against Amaker. "I think there were hard feelings, when you leave," Amaker said. "But I would've been even more disappointed and hurt if (Andre) didn't feel (that way), if we didn't cry together - which we did. That's when you know you have something special in a situation. It all comes down to people, and so I'm very proud of the fact that I still have a good relationship with Andre and other players that I've had a chance to coach at Seton Hall." Not only did Amaker and Barrett's relationship continue when the coach left the Pirates, but the two actually became closer. "Any time that I need help with anything, I'm always calling him, and I can rely on him to be there" said Barrett, now a senior. "Anytime where we're playing, and he sees that I'm playing well, or anything, if he hears that I'm down, he'll call me and talk to me." If not for being deterred by sitting out one sea- son (as per NCAA rules for transfer athletes), Bar- rett might even be a Wolverine today. In addition to Barrett, former Seton Hall guard Shine also said that his opinion of Amaker didn't change after the coach left the Pirates. Shine said that he understood the opportunity that Michigan presented to Amaker's career. Forming relationships with recruits and main- taining relationships with former players only begin to show what Amaker is all about. When Amaker looks at a recruit, he doesn't see just a basketball player. Through all his experi- ences, he knows that basketball is just a game and that his players are made of more than just what they bring to the court - which is why Amaker is available to his players all off-season as well. "He's a year-round kind of coach," said Hunter, Michigan's center. "You can go in and talk to him about anything, whether it's basketball or anything else. I think it's good to have a guy like that." The coach that recruited him was fired. Almost everyone in his freshman class is gone. He had mononucleosis. He was suspended by his new coach. The University banned his team from the postseason. He plead- ed guilty to two counts of misdemeanor assault and battery. The NCAA banned his team from the postseason, and then reversed its decision. And Bernard Robinson is still here. The forward has experienced a lot in his three-plus years at Michigan. This past summer could have been Robin- son's chance to gracefully exit and leave it all behind. With the Wolverines fac- ing a postseason ban for his final sea- son, he could have headed for another school or the pros. "It never, ever crossed my mind," Robinson said. Instead, Robinson stood up at a team meeting last spring and was one of the first Wolverines to say he wasn't going anywhere. "He was in a position where he had a number of different options or things he could have done," sophomore guard Daniel Horton said. "He chose to stay here and to be a leader and help us win. With him making that decision, I felt like myself and everybody else couldn't just bail." A class depleted, four years later Two hours into one of Michigan's draining preseason practices this sea- son, Robinson takes a lonely jog across the Crisler Arena floor while his team- mates shoot free throws. Coach Tommy Amaker lets the Wolverines visit the water cooler in class order. Robinson and forward Colin Dill are the first two called, the team's only seniors. Robinson was one of six freshmen on the basketball team in 2000-01 - the second-to-last class of the Brian Ellerbe era. Today, only Robinson and Dill remain from that group. Maurice Searight was the first to depart, in May of 2001. The guard was dismissed by Amaker for a "violation of team policies" after a tumultuous fresh- man year under Ellerbe. Jermaine Gonzales also left the bas- ketball team after his freshman year. He chose to focus on playing quarterback and wide receiver for the football team instead of splitting time between the two sports. Center Josh Moore left in December of that year after being declared aca- demically ineligible. Then, at the beginning of last season, guard Avery Queen was dismissed from the Wolverines just a day after the team returned from a trip to the Virgin Islands for the season-opening Paradise Jam. Robinson still speaks with Queen and Moore on a weekly basis. "Those were good guys, but the coaches felt that this wasn't the place for them," Robinson said. "I'm still here, and I'm glad I still have the oppor- tunity to still be here on this team." "I've been through a lot" It has been a bumpy road for Robin- son off the court as well. Before he took the floor for Michi- gan, Robinson was arrested with Queen and sophomore Kevin Gaines on suspi- cion of disorderly intoxication. Gaines was dismissed from the team and Queen and Robinson pleaded guilty to being minors in possession of alcohol. Then, Robinson contracted mononu- cleosis the summer before his sopho- more season. Although he played in all 29 of the Wolverines' games, Amaker said that he was trying to play catch up all year because of the time that he missed in the preseason. In April, the senior was arrested and charged with three counts of fourth- degree criminal sexual conduct. He was accused of fondling a female student in a stairwell of West Quad Residence Hall. He later pleaded guilty to two counts of misdemeanor assault and bat- tery. He was sentenced to a year of pro- bation and fined $850. Robinson says he's matured from all of his off-court woes. "I definitely would have liked for things not to happen," Robinson said. "For me to say that I'd want to go back and change them, it would be unrealis- tic. Things happen. I just have to face them and move on and act accordingly." Wide-open horizon In September, Michigan won its appeal of the NCAA's postseason ban. "It's like getting a new toy," Robinson said. SETH LOWEF Robinson's experience will be a key factor for a team dominated by underclassn Now, the senior will be a key leader on a team with tournament aspirations. "I expect everything from him, and I'm not going to back off of that," Amaker said. "He knows that, and he's the kind of player that does it all. Hope- fully, he's going to be able to live up to that standard that we've set for him to be that kind of player and that kind of person." Robinson's teammates have nothing but praise for his game. They see his ability to make plays on both ends of the floor as critical to the team's success. The 6-foot-6 forward should improve on his 11.7 points-per-game average from last season. His size combined with his ability to handle the ball will continue to cause a lot of matchup problems for Michigan's opponents. "He's going to have a terrific season," sophomore Chris Hunter said. "The things that he's showing in practice, in scrimmages and up in Canada, if he can do those things during the regular sea- son, the sky's the limit." Robinson's biggest contribution may be on the defensive end of the floor, where he can wreak havoc. He was sec- ond on the Wolverines in rebounds (178), blocks (19) and steals (38) last season. "He gives us athletic ability, both on defense and offense, that a lot of teams don't have," Horton said. "He has the ability to guard the other team's best player and come down and make plays on offense, whether it's to score or pass or do whatever." Robinson's three years have also given him the ability to teach his young teammates about college life on and off the floor. The Wolverines have 10 underclassmen on their roster this son, making Robinson's voice example that much more important "(He told me that) we're b watched all the time, (we're) in the light," freshman Courtney Sims "You've just got to always watch you're doing all the time, even things that other people might not trouble for." "We talk all the time," Horton "We talk about stuff that happ before I got here, about the prei coaches before Coach Amaker gol and things that are happening now. just glad he stayed." 'Located in the heart of downto Chelsea is the area's finest Bed & Breakfast. . 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