The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, December 9, 2003 - 12 '4 a4 ~ ~ 4' ~4 a 4'' I -- a a' 4 4 4 ' -a 4>Aa. ~4~-a. a.4'-a., Aa a' a- ~' - Laaa ~... 4~.aaaa. 4 ~' .a' -4a a-va 4..a -a4- -.% 'A a - ~a 4 "'a 'aa'A *~a'4' ~ 4 .. 'a S4 - .. -- ..aa 4~ a ~ ~ I 4 a'~ a .~ 4 x..' a' '4 a 4 2 a~ I a aa'4 a .1 '4 a 4 a By Josh Holman and Ellen McGarrity Daily Sports Writers Michigan's new commander in chief of women's basketball, Cheryl Burnett, has blazed a trail of excellence. Now she embarks on a new challenge: taking Michigan's program to national prominence. She has the passion and knowledge. But she embodies much more. She's not just a coach, she's ... t was the second half in the second ound of Michigan's Preseason Women's National Invitational Tourna- ment game against Cincinnati, and the Wolverines found themselves down by seven points. The crowd sat anxiously in the Crisler Arena stands, hoping high scorer Jennifer Smith would bail the team out. But the fans' intent gazes weren't enough for Cheryl Burnett. The coach began to stomp her feet and wave her hands, shouting to the crowd, "Get up!" Some fans seemed confused, while others were charmed by Burnett's heartfelt plea. Regardless of interpre- tation, everyone stood up collectively to begin an arena-wide chant to cheer the girls on. The crowd was on its feet for nearly the rest of the game - and its vocalized presence seemed to work magic for the players. Michigan squeaked out with a 73-69 victory over the Bearcats. Since that game, Burnett has called upon the crowd several times when Michigan needs a boost or is down in a game. This technique is nothing new to the veteran coach, who regularly riled up crowds when she was head coach at Southwest Missouri State. Burnett says that she has always been an instinctive cheerleader. "I'm just really natural about how I coach," Burnett said. "I've always been very in tune to the players on the court. It's also kind of how I used to play. I played in the sense that I was very ver- bal with my teammates." Actively involving the crowd with the games is just one way Burnett has tried to start building a fan base in Ann Arbor. When she took the helm of the Southwest Missouri State pro- gram, as few as 400 fans would grace the stands of the 8,846-seat Hammons Student Center. By the time she left, the arena was regularly filled to the top with screaming, stomping fans - no doubt modeling their spunky head coach. "I believe that our support system - which is the crowd, the fans - can help us win games," Burnett said. "I've seen it, I've experienced it and I believe it." Burnett's enthusiasm has also impressed the players, who admit that building a fan base could greatly bene- fit their energy level during a game. "We would have more people to play for," freshman Kelly Helvey said. "Not only ourselves and our coach. We'll have people that will keep coming, and we'll build a tradition." Who knows, with Burnett in town, perhaps Crisler Arena will play host to a sold-out women's basketball game before her reign is over. Burnett realized early on that before she could be a great teacher of the game, she had to be a great student as well. "I've always known I wanted to coach," Burnett said. "It goes all the way back to high school." It was way back in high school that Jim Enlow coached Burnett as a member of the girls' basket- ball team at Centralia High School in Missouri. When Enlow would take his boys' team to scout upcoming oppo- nents, Burnett wouldb be the only girl to tag along. "I just knew the impact . that he had on my life was more than a basketball coach," Burnett said. "So I just knews that I wanted to- have that kind of impact on play- ers." { After Enlow pointed Burnett down the road of coaching, a number of other mentors helped guide her in a pro- fession that until recently has been mostly for the boys. Burnett worked as an assistant for Jane Schroeder, the women's basketball coach at Illinois. Then, early in her head coaching days at Southwest Missouri State, Burnett had the privilege to work with Charlie Spoonhour - the men's coach at the time - now the coach at UNLV If you look closely at Bur- nett's offensive and defensive strategies, you may see a resemblance to another mar- quee name in college basket- ball. Burnett spent time at her alma mater, Kansas, last winter to watch the Jayhawks practice under men's basketball coach Roy Williams, who is now at North Carolina. Her patented scramble defense bears a strik- ing resemblance to the sets of last ~ << year's Jay- hawks and this year's Tar Heels. Now Bur- nett is the mentor and hopes to leave some lasting impressions of her own. AP P HOTO WVhether it's in the middle of a Tuesday practice or the final seconds of an over- time game, there's no doubt in the minds of onlookers who's in charge of the Wolverines. Burnett is one of those coach- es that has an air about her. Her confidence makes you wonder if she'll make you run sprints if you say the wrong thing, and her voice (though not as strong as she would like it) might invite you to start calling her "Coach" even if she was just taking your order at the drive-through. Burnett knows exactly what she wants out of a team. "It's definitely a totally effort-driven, give-up-the-self for-the-team concept through- out," said Burnett of her coaching style. The new job at Michigan is as close to a blank slate as Burnett can ask for. With 11 new players, the challenge comes in getting each and every one to put her trust in her system - one that takes time to master. When she led her first prac- tice, Burnett discovered how challenging it was to direct her players, considering the unfa- miliarity with her terminology, drills and motion offense, for starters. "It's a system where play- ers can get better and better with experience," Burnett said. "Now we have all fresh- men. So we're asking them to do things that they don't have experience with. I have been amazed at their intelligence and quickly reading things and learning." The players that work hard- est in practice start, but Bur- nett has no reservations about beginning the game with her best talent on the bench. Burnett has also gotten her team to fight back on the court. The players are notice- ably more aggressive and physical this season in all phases of the game. "I have found that when people demand respect, there's a very unique element that players really buy into that," Burnett said. "It's not like they always have to like everything, but they respect it because they learn to understand why." But if these players listen to that unmistakable Burnett coaching voice - which she always loses during a game - the future of Wolverines basketball will be laden with success. q When Cheryl Burnett talks, people listen. A lthough Burnett report- ed for coaching duty back in April, she did not get to practice with her team until mid-October (NCAA regulations prohibit coaches from working with players earlier than this). But she began working much earlier on one of the most important parts of the job - building trusting rela- tionships with the players and their parents. Burnett began the job by visiting every player's home to get to know their families and back- grounds - much like she would for recruits. "(It created) such an incredible, trusting bond where I could ask the parents, 'What's your expectation? What do you want me as a coach to be able to do for your daughter?' " Burnett said. "And then I could say, 'Here's what I expect out of your daughter.' That in itself was the best with communi- cation and expectations in running the program." Both players and parents were impressed. "It's hard not to like her," said Greg Smith, father of center Jennifer Smith. "She's not only good with the X's and O's, but she has moral standards and character. I wouldn't want my daughter playing for anybody other than her:' "Shedoes create a good bond," guard Rachael Carney said. "A bond both on and off the court. (The coaching staff) is always open for us to go talk to them if need be." CONNECTICUT'S DIANA TAURASI A fter last season's last- place finish in the Big Ten, the Michigan women's basketball program was left searching for an answer to two straight dismal years. Enter Cheryl Burnett. After enormous success at South- west Missouri State, it was clear that Burnett had the potential to change the direc- tion of Michigan women's basketball. But she doesn't just want the Michigan name to move forward. She wants it at the top. "I want our program to be as big as UConn and Ten- nessee," Burnett said. "That is the most important thing." Some admirable aspira- tions, but she has a long climb to make it that far. The Wolverines are lucky when they draw even 1,000 fans to a game, so before Bur- nett can significantly build this program, she has to build the fan hae It's nothini she AP PHOTO since Michigan hosted the quarterfinals of the Presea- son WNIT due to its first- round attendance number. And any business guru knows that the best way to guarantee an audience is to hook them young. It' was part of the motivation behind inviting area elementary schools to a Friday afternoon game on Nov. 21 against Western Michigan. "I'm really blessed to have a great marketing and pro- moting guy, Mark Reardon," Burnett said. "He's come up with a lot of his own ideas. He and I implemented a lot of other concepts." Much of the charisma that Burnett exudes comes from her hands-on approach. She spoke to a number of organi- zations in the Ann Arbor area in preparation for the team's first-round game of the Preseason WNIT. She also makes an effort to return any e-mails regarding fans' concerns with their game experience. Two Final Four appear- ances, a .752 career win- ning percentage, an Academic All-American of the Year and the NCAA's all-time leading scorer. These are just some of the things that Burnett pro- duced in her 15-year stint at Southwest Missouri State. It's one impressive list to compile, especially consider- ing she did this at a smaller, virtually anonymous Missouri Valley Conference school. "Having Burnett in the league scares me," Iowa coach Lisa Bluder said earlier this year at the Big Ten Media Day in Chicago. "I have so much respect for her and what she's done, and belief in her system, and just how she does things." Bluder made the jump to the Big Ten from the Missouri Valley Conference just like Burnett did and knows exact- ly what the first-year Michi- gan coach is capable of. But Burnett isn't just some local legend from the Show- Me state. She has national acclaim, too. In only Burnett's second year in the NCAA Tournament, Southwest Mis- souri State's road to a Final Four appearance happened to travel through Knoxville, Tenn. - home of the perenni- al powerhouse Lady Vols. "And after that (Tennessee coach) Pat Summit would tell everybody, 'You do not want to have to play Southwest Missouri State,' " Burnett said. If Burnett can do all of this at Southwest Missouri State, then what is possible at Michigan? But now Burnett is no longer a big fish in a little pond. If she wants the noto- riety she's received in the past, she's going to have to do it in a conference full of big fish. "Some of the best coaches in the country are in the Big Ten," Burnettasaid. "But I look at it as now we need to prove that. We need to be successful to really earn the reputation that we need to earn." Burnett may not have the recognition of Summit or Connecticut's Geno Auriem- ma, but she may not even want it, given her team-first attitude. Now with an institu- tion boasting academic tradi- tion, Burnett will have an edge in recruiting. "We've always recruited overachievement," Burnett said. "We want that kid that's playing the hardest, that's the most team-oriented." Sophomore guard Rachael Carney summed it up, saying "they won't accept anything but the best." 1,