New Student Edition 2006 - The Michigan Daily -11E Horton's return inspires By Scott Bell Daily Sports Writer Every player on the Michigan men's basketball team experienced his fair share of losses last season. But what Daniel Horton went through transcended the game of basketball and changed his life forever. Yes, he faced the 18 losses that the rest of the team experienced. Horton also felt the loss of a teammate when his friend Lester Abram suffered a season-ending shoulder injury early in the season. And the loss of his own season after pleading guilty to a domestic violence charge seemed to top it all off. But the loss that trumped all others had nothing to do with basketball but has given him a new perspective for his final year at Michigan. "For me, personally, I don't feel like anything that goes on as far as basketball really bothers me,' Horton said. "Things did at first, but I think going through what I went through makes me look at things differently." Horton's low point came in March, just a day after it looked like things would turn around for the Texas native. On March 10, the day of his teammates's final game of the sea- son - a defeat at the hands of lowly Northwestern in the first round of the Big Ten Tournament - Horton became a father. But just a night later, the joy became pain once again, and Horton experienced the biggest loss he could imagine. Cameron Jeremi- ah Horton was taken away from him, dying from complications after birth. Missing basketball games didn't matter anymore. Neither did the team's 13-18 record. Horton went weeks without touch- ing a basketball. He had to decide if he should even return to Michigan for his final season. When Horton did return, he did so as a new man. He knew he'd have to face ques- tions about last year. Even though he doesn't like doing it. Horton also Dreams can come true: Walk- on Fisher singles at first at-bat i By David Murray DailySprts Writer m a~~illillsl iBxR E 4 FILE PHOTO After the death of his infant son - the day after his team's exit from the 2005 Big Ten Tournament - Horton retumed to the Wolverines this season. doesn't want to let go of what hap- pened altogether. "I want to put it behind me, but at the same time, I want to remember," Horton said. "I want to look back on it and be able to learn from it and take things from it to help (me) and this team be successful now. This mindset has helped propel Michigan to its best start in nearly a decade. There is no 0-6 start like his freshman year,no sophomore slump like he had two years ago and no dismal 13-18 season on the horizon. This year's team is 11-2 and is mak- ing strides toward earning its first NCAA tournament berth since the 1997-98 season. Although there's no C next to Horton's name in the media guide, there's no doubt who the leader of this team is. "He's been a player that's always had the courage,' said Michigan coach Tommy Amaker. "He's had the courage to step forward, to make a play, to try and pull things in our direction. He's always willing to step forward. We want it in his hands." The team wants it in his hands, and he has no problem making those plays. On the team's first road trip - against Boston University - Hor- ton's scoring surge late in the game secured the win over the Terriers, who had beaten the Wolverines the previous two seasons. It was Horton who stood toe-to- toe with Irish guard Chris Quinn on the road against Notre Dame, hitting a barrage of threes late and making the game-winning dish to Dion Har- ris to secure another road victory. And it's been Horton who has stepped up and emerged as Mich- igan's workhorse down the stretch to fight off potential upset-hungry teams. He's done it against Butler, he did it on Saturday against Purdue and he'sbound to do itagain when his teammates need him the most. Why feel pressure? It's justbasketball. "I just have fun,' Horton said. "I try to go out there and play as hard as I can, but I just try to have fun." After everything Horton went through last year, it would be fool- ish to expect his life to hinge on a successful final season at Michigan. But the events from a year ago have allowed him to emerge as a better leader;'and the Wolverines' winning ways have brought back to his face the smile that was absent a year ago. - This story originally ran Jan. 11.2006. With one swing, Ray Fisher Sta- dium transformed into Matt Fisher Stadium. In what seemed to be a meaning- less at-bat late in a blowout, a walk- on became a hero and fulfilled a lifelong dream. Michigan had the game in hand, leading Oakland 14-4 through seven innings in Friday night's home opener. Junior Eric Rose was slated to lead off the eighth,until Michigan coach Rich Maloney deferred to the fans who had been chanting the name of a walk-on every time they saw his face peek out of the dugout. "Hey, Fish, you want an at-bat?" Maloney yelled. Maloney was refer- ring to junior Matt Fisher. "I understood the fact that if we were up by a good amount of runs, there was a shot I could getsin,"Fisher said. "I know the way coach works, and he'll give you an opportunity if. he thinks that you deserve it." In a scene that would make Rudy Ruettigerblush, Fisher trotted out of the dugout and the crowd - filled with his family, friends, and 40 of his Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity brothers - erupted. With his loyalists in a ruckus, the Westchester, N.Y., native stepped into the batter's box. "I know our team was cheering very loudly for him to be success- ful;' Maloney said."It was the high- light of the game." First pitch: A fastball down the heart of the plate. Fisher took a cut for the fences, but just managed to tip it into the catcher's mitt. The swing and miss didn't phase the walk-on. Fisher was used to overcoming obstacles. In his fresh- man year, Fisher attended tryouts thinking he had a chance to make the team, but, to his dismay, he was the last person cut. Demoralizedbut motivated, he dedicated his sopho- more year to making the spring team. He worked out rigorously and posted motivational quotations all around his room. Walk-on tryouts came around again, but the results were the same - Fisher made the fall squad but was released before the spring. "The day that he got back from being cut, I saw him lying on the futon in tears" fraternity brother and roommate Mike Hilton said. "I didn't have to say anything, because his emotions and his look alone said enough. He probably laid on the futon for another day or so, and he didn't even go to class. The first thing he said to me was, 'It's over.' That is all he said to me." Fisher's psyche was deflated, but the taste he got fromgetting so close to making the team left him want- ing more. With his family and fraternity urging him to take another shot at trying out for the team, Fisher once again devoted his time to practicing for the chance to sport the Maize and Blue. His fortitude paid divi- dendsin his third attempt at walk-on tryouts. Fisher made the fall roster, but this time was also asked to join the spring team. Second pitch: A curveball that hung up in the zone. Fisher waited on the pitch and pulled it to the left side of the infield. The ball rolled between third baseman Rob Merk- le and shortstop Jonathan Zalen- ski, who knocked it down. Zalenski threw a rope to first, but Fisher beat it out by two steps. "As soon as I hit it, I knew that I had a shot,' Fisher said. "I knew it wasn't right at the shortstop, or right at the third baseman. So as soon as I hit that ball, I hauled ass. Once my foot hit that bag and I knew I was safe, I guess you could say for that or single moment I was the happi- est man alive." Although the game was already won, the fans and players in the dugout exploded as if the team had just won the College World Series. Fisher raised his hands in excite- ment after collecting the first hit of his career and experiencing the crowning achievement of his life. Three years of grit and determi- nation culminated in one hit, and a walk-on became an inspiration to his teammates and peers. "Being able to get into a home game for the University of Michi- gan, and then being able to get a hit, is worth every single second I worked,' Fisher said. "Every single time I was in the weight room, every tear that I shed afterbeing cut,every time I went to bed dreaming about the opportunity of getting a hit - it was worth every single second." - This story originally ran Mar. 30, 2006. Hockey Band The tradition continues... C' Ya there! Rehearsals will be on Thursdays beginning at 7:30 PM omen's Basketball Band Join the Women's Basketball Band and we'll support you while you support the team...get paid to play The Victors! Rehearsals will be on Tuesdays beginning at 8:30 PM Men's Basketball Band Be a part of the Amaker Era... On the road to victory with the Men's Basketball Band. Rehearsals will be on Tuesdays beginning at 7:00 PM Auditions will be held at Revelli Hall Sunday, September 17,2006 through Wednesday, September 20, 2006 Audition will include scales and sight reading. To schedule a time for an audition please call 764-0582. Revelli Hall 350 E. Hoover Ann Arbor, MI 48104-3707