mw w qw --Wr w w w w qw IW 'w- lw?- -W 10B - The Michigan Daily - Tipoff2003- Thursday, November 6, 2003 The Michigan Daily - Tipoff200a * ~eW ill PHOTOS BY TONY DING ({ft) and RYAN WEINER (right)/Daily Graham Brown and Chris Hunter will no longer be lonely in the paint as Michigan sports one of the deepest frontcourts in the Big Ten ilar," said Hunter of Sims' play. "We really don'tlike to be(with our) back to the basket. We both like to step out and see the floor. He's a lit- t:° longer, but our games are very similar." Brown also noticed the closeness in styles that Hunter and Sims bring but was quick to point out one difference. The sophomore claimed that he had never played against anyone who could block his shot until Sims. "(Sims) is a little longer, a little bet- ter shot blocker," Brown said. (Hunter) is more aggressive this year - you can see his experience helping." That experience for both Brown and Hunter came from the Wolver- ines' need for starters after Chris Young's graduation left Michigan without a center. The 6-foot-9 Brown started 25 games for the Wolverines last sea- son, while the 6-foot-11 Hunter chipped in four starts. But both play- ers saw action in all 30 Michigan games. "We're just trying to teach these guys in practice," Brown said. "The freshmen need to learn where to go and when to be there, but when they do, we'll be really special." While Brown and Hunter continue to grow stronger after a year in the Michigan system, the most experi- enced of the big men is actually Mathis, an athletically-built, 6-foot- 8 forward who played for two years at Virginia before transferring to Michigan. The Brooklyn, N.Y. native ended his time as a Cavalier with 4.1 points and 3.1 rebounds per game. Thanks to his quickness and ath- leticism under the basket, Mathis said that he will help the Wolverines most with rebounding and scoring up front. The 6-foot-9 Petway, who will split time at power and small for- ward, has the ability to jump out of the gym, a feature that will be help- ful when it comes to rebounding and By Chris Burke Daily Sports Editor In late January of last season, Michigan headed to Champaign to take on Illinois. Riding a 13-game"' winning streak, the Wolverines sat in first place in the Big Ten, and after a solid first half against the Illini, looked poised to grab a stranglehold on the conference lead. Then, Michigan centers Graham Brown and Chris Hunter got into Mul trouble. As the number of fouls on the two big men grew, Michigan's 11- point lead shrank, and Illinois for- wards James Augustine and Brian Cook took over. The Wolverines fell, 67-60. The same problem surfaced just three days later when Hunter and Brown struggled with fouls in a loss at Minnesota. Then the foul bug reared its ugly head one last time in a loss to Indiana at the Big Ten Tournament. Michigan's frontcourt depth - or lack thereof - proved too much to overcome. But it's not a problem the Wolver- ines expect to have this year. That's because, thanks to coach Tommy Amaker's recruitment of Courtney Sims and Brent Petway, and the eligibility of transfer J.C. Mathis and redshirt freshman Amadou Ba, the Wolverines are as deep as, well, any team in the Big Ten. "I don't know if anyone has as much depth as us in the frontcourt," the 6-foot-11, ridiculously _long- armed Sims said. Sims, a freshman from Roslin- dale, Mass., may turn out to be the prize catch of Amaker's 2003 recruiting class. The youngster did- n't start playing basketball until his freshman year of high school, when his natural ability - and a seven- inch growth spurt - demanded that he do so. He finished his career at Noble and Greenough School with career numbers of 23 points, 11 rebounds and seven blocks per game. Those numbers were good enough to make him one of the nation's most highly sought-after recruits. When all was said and done, Sims decided to bring his Chris Hunter- like game to Ann Arbor. "I think (our games) are a lot sim- shot-blocking. The sixth and final member of Michigan's big man combo - and perhaps the biggest enigma and best-kept secret on the Wolverines' roster - is the 6-foot-10, 250- pound Ba, who redshirted last year. "He's blowing everybody's mind this year," Hunter said of the Mauri- tania, Africa native. "I didn't think he'd do the things that he's doing. But he's showing us a lot of foot- work, speed and poise down in the low post. He's showing me a lot of things I didn't think he could do." So while Ba, Petway and Sims continue to develop, Brown, Hunter and Mathis will be looked to for the veteran leadership that is so crucial to a Big Ten title run. Having a six-man rotation up front is something that Amaker is excited about, but slightly wary of. "We'll have more depth there, and when you have more depth, it gives you more options," Amaker said. "That can be good and bad. It's exciting to know that we have some options. "A year ago, I sat here and talked about how deep I thought we were going to be on the perimeter. Time will tell how many options we'll have (up front) and how deep we'll be, but as of now, it bodes well for our team that we have options." The seemingly endless supply of bodies also means that the intensity in practice has been taken up a notch. Instead of Brown and Hunter constantly matching up with each other, everyone now is fighting for that all-important spot in the Wolverines' starting lineup. "It gets pretty intense," Brown said. "It's still pretty early right now. I can't imagine how high the competition will be when we get in the Big Ten." Still, while much will be made of how many big bodies the Wolverines can plant in the paint, Sims remains- impressed with what Brown and Hunter were able to accomplish in their first seasons. "I think they were underrated last year in the post," Sims said. "Gra- ham and Chris did a good job." Regardless of how well they per- formed after being forced to eat up huge minutes last year, Brown and Hunter will be the first to tell you that there was room for improve- ment. Brown says that he put on 15- to-20 pounds in hopes of establishing himself as a bigger presence this year. Hunter also added muscle and continued to pound away at his inside-outside offensive style. But, despite therpersonal improve- ment, the two are happy to have some friends in the paint with them. And both agree that the Wolverines' frontcourt will keep some opposing coaches up at night. "I'd be afraid to think what you would think when you see four, five or six guys who can come in with no drop off," Brown said. "We have such a wide variety of players - shot blockers, guys that can leap, rebounders. I don't know what a coach scouting us would tell his players, you'd have to be ready for so many different things." Too many things, if all goes according to plan. CHRIS BURKE Goin' to work CAA sanctions? Gone. Poor record? Bye bye. Losing streak against Michigan State? See ya. High expectations? Welcome back to Ann Arbor. For the first time since the forfeited 1997-98 season of Louis Bullock and Robert Traylor, the Michigan basket- ball program will enter a season in which it is anticipated to be dancing come March. So, can these Wolverines, after they snuck up on so many opponents last season, be just as successful when everyone's gunning for them? Michigan coach Tommy Amaker responds: "Whatever the expectations may be for Michigan basketball, you can rest assured that our standards are as high or even higher." Well, the Wolverines better be thinking Final Four then. Every bas- ketball fan in Ann Arbor began men- tally planning out a trip to a first-round NCAA Tournament site the day that the NCAA sanctions were overturned. This is the type of season that can very definitively mark the progress that a team has made. Most of the time, the resurgent team goes one of two ways - either it continues to improve and conquers its new goals, or it plummets back down to earth, unable to live up to its heightened expectations. Having to deal with those added pressures is a Michigan team filled with extreme youth. There are seniors Bernard Robin- son and Colin Dill and junior J.C. Mathis, but every other member of the Michigan team is a sophomore or a freshman. "I thought our youth, a year ago, was as big of a reason that we were able to have a winning season and turn things around for our program as any," Amaker said. "They didn't know any different - they came from win- ning environments, winning pro- grams, and I thought that really bodes well for our team." The difference around here is that everyone does know different. Every- one remembers the back-to-back 18- loss seasons prior to last year. They remember the banners being torn down, the 43-point loss to Duke in the 2000-01 season and the 51- point massacre at the hands of Michi- gan State the year before. They remember. And the reason that last year's Michigan team received so much sup- port from the fans is because, for one winter, the Wolverines made us all forget. Michigan basketball, finally and mercifully, was back. Now the task - an even tougher one - is to keep it there. "I would want (the fans) to be dis- appointed; we would want all of us to be disappointed if we don't reach our standards," Amaker said. "I don't know what every fan's standard or expectation may be, but I'm hoping that we'll never become a program or a situation where people aren't disap- pointed when we don't do well." That might be the best thing about having Amaker as the Wolverines' head man. He's well aware of where the Wolverines are coming from. He has more or less rebuilt this pro- gram from the bottom up. He came to Ann Arbor with a vision of what a "Michigan man" should be, and never wavered, no matter what the circum- stances. He's helped make the Michi- gan students a factor during home games again. And he's got the Wolverines on the verge of being a perennial threat in the Big Ten again, as last year's drive for a title showed. But before being thrown back into the mix annually, the Wolverines must show they can get the job done twice in a row. The answers to any lingering ques- tions about the Michigan program, though, are in place. "Something that I really want to emphasize is that our program at this juncture is healthy," Amaker said. "I think when you start thinking about the future of this team and this pro- gram, you can look back a little and recognize that there was a lot of pas- Here s the hard part: 'M'must meet expectations BRENDAN O'DONNELL/Daily Senior Bernard Robinson is one of just three upperclassmen on the roster. sion and pride that was displayed last season, and we never want to lose that. "That's what we want Michigan basketball to always be." If this year ends successfully, the Wolverines will be a lot closer to that eternal optimism than they have been in a long time. Chris Burke can be reached at chrisbur@umich. edu. i gold bond cleaners Quality Dry Cleaning and Shirt Service 332 Maynard St. across from Nickels Arcade ANN ARBOR REALTY LOCATION - LOCATION - LOCATION Central Campus Efficiencies, 1, 2 & 3 bedroom apts. Starting at $575/mo. Includes some utilities. 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