0 0 0 0 8B - The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - February 21, 2005 ., : ; '41 By Megan Kolodgy Daily Sports Writer 59 edshirt sophomore Amadou Ba looks the part of a Divi- sion I basketball big man. His 6-foot-10, 250-pound frame and wide, impish smile guarantee that his presence on the practice floor is felt. As the other Wolverines shoot around before a recent practice while Ba chats jovially with basketball staffers and teammates, dwarfing almost all of them. Finally, he jogs out to the key, grabs a quick rebound and stops. Ba tosses the ball up in the air, braces himself, takes an assertive hop and knocks it with his forehead. It bounces against the glass. He heads another, and another, until finally, he's made it all the way out to 3-point land, still missing each shot, but by very little each time. It seems a peculiar pre-warmup, until you remember a critical fact about this post player: Ba never really wanted to play basketball. Growing up in the West African nation of Mauritania, soccer was king, and, as a youngster, Ba yearned to be good at it and tried his hand at midfield. He spent the more peaceful days of his childhood at the beach, honing his skills while roasting under merciless heat. In those days, Ba, unlike his Michigan cohorts, never really dreamed of starring in the NBA - he just dreamed of getting out of Mauritania - of escaping the violence and getting an educa- tion that would enable him to one day come back and promote the very educational values he and his parents went out of their ways to instill in him. But we're getting ahead of ourselves. Most people have noticed Ba on the sidelines at games in Crisler Arena. Although he has played for approximately three minutes told people in broken English that he wanted to play soccer, they suggested otherwise. "Everyone was telling me, 'You're not going to make it in soccer. It'd be easier to play basketball because you are pretty tall,' " Ba said. "I wasn't really about basketball --it was all about soccer." So Ba tried his hand at hoops, while doing his best to adapt to American culture. It must be noted here that Ba is extremely well spoken. While this is high praise for anyone, it is particularly significant for Ba. English is his fifth language. When he came to the United States, he had a considerable mas- tery of French (the official language of Mauritania), Pullar and Wollof (both African dialects) and Arabic. He did not, however, know English. After English classes in his early years of high school, he knew a few phrases, but nothing that could prepare him for total immersion in Alabaman English. "It was a little bit of culture shock," Ba said. "Things were very different, and it did take long for me to adjust to everything. It was very hard for me, especially the language - to understand what people were saying. It took me awhile to adjust to everything, but especially the language." After spending his junior year playing in Huntsville, he decided he wanted to remain in the United States, and he moved up the eastern seaboard to Bridgton Academy in Maine. Before his season there began, Michigan assistant coach Charles Ramsey made his way up to Bridgton - not to watch Ba, but to scout a teammate. But Ba played well that day, and Ramsey took interest. After the practice, Ramsey approached Bridgton coach Whit Lesure and made a shocking proposition. "After the game, (Ramsey) came up to me and said 'Hey Whit, I said. "Then Ramsey informs me that he thinks Michigan is going to offer Amadou a scholarship. And I was like, 'Holy shit.' " Lesure promptly sat Ba down at his dining room table and laid out the situation. He told the Ba that if he went to Michigan, he'd likely never be a 1,000-point scorer, and that he'd have a better basketball career if he went to a smaller school. He also said that, at Michigan, even though he probably wouldn't play much, he'd get a top-notch education. That was all Ba needed to hear. After all, education was what he'd left his family and friends in Mauritania for. Ba's life vas different than that of the average Mauritanian. His parents were married, and both worked fulltime - his mother as a middle school teacher and his father as a car trader, providing used cars to those who cannot afford new ones. His parents constantly emphasized the importance of education to success - not the norm in a country in which just 31 percent of women and 52 percent of men are able to read, and 60 percent of children are enrolled in primary school. Ba's schooling was spattered with periods of several weeks during which school was closed due to fighting in the streets of Nouakchott, his hometown and the largest city in the country. Within the confines of his home, Ba felt safe, but, outside those walls, conflict ravaged the country. "When they close school, it's not safe to go out anymore," Ba said. "There's a lot of stuff happening - people getting killed, people getting kidnapped. It doesn't matter if you're (rioting) or not (rioting). They don't care. They just want to create chaos." In Mauritania, without an education, you are likely to end up a "It's almost criminal that the NCAA of language barriers," said Lesure, who scope and quality of Ba's work in the coa But true to form, Ba was persistent, a the test. Now that he's here, adapting to Unil everyday process for Ba. When he first came to Ann Arbor, few understand him, due to his thick accent. "Because I lived with him, it was eas him," said captain Sherrod Harrell, whow man year. "Every time he said somethin would look at me to sort of translate wha Since then, Ba has become one of 1 jokesters, and, although he doesn't play function on the team. "My role on this team is to bring anytime I'm needed to step on the cou or whatever - whatever they need mi doing." Bringing energy to this pack is a tall still manages quite well, it is sometimes upbeat when his teammates are so down "It's tough right now," Ba said. "It's to the other guys. But they deserve (to be upl keep on doing it. "This is the time when you're going to tough. Anybody can be happy when thin successful, when things are going the wa you've got to face adversity that you lea acter - more about yourself." As a political science major, Ba remains although he does not trust the American me of international events, He has his sights x that, he would I tania to be a ro most involve L Ann