The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Three-time captain not stepping up when needed Thursday, February 15, 2007 - 7A By DANIEL LEVY A typical Abram stat line used to On Basketball read something like this: 12 points on 4-for-6 shooting, 3-for-3 from What if I were to tell you that the foul line, two rebounds, an Michigan had an experienced lead- assist and a number of right-place, er who was having the worst season right-time plays. He wasn't the of his career? Would that be some- type of guy who opponents had to thing you might be interested in? gear up to stop, but his contribu- That is the case for Lester tions carried more weight because Abram. he did it with seemingly little The soft-spoken, mild-man- effort, putting up points while tak- nered wing out of Pontiac became ing few shots. the program's first-ever three-time But Abram has struggled to captain this season. make a similar impact this year. It was the logical choice at the He has scored more than 15 points time. Brent Petway's fiery emo- just once (a win over Illinois). More tion is great for igniting the team, important, he has totaled less than but he missed half of last season for seven points a shocking nine times academic reasons. Courtney Sims's - hardly a model of consistency. never-ending battle with inconsis- Yes, I know Michigan coach tency leaves a lot to be desired. And Tommy Amaker and his players will Dion Harris already had enough tell you they want to share the ball. to worry about trying to run the And after a few hours of drilling, I'm offense after the graduation of sure all the players have the "We- Daniel Horton. want-the-open-guy-to-be-the-go- That left Abram. As a fifth-year to-guy" speech down pat. senior - he missed the 2004-05 "Our team is based on team-ori- season following surgery to his left ented basketball," Abram said. "It's shoulder and was granted a medi- not up to just one person to get off cal redshirt - he seemed to be just tons of shots." what this team needed. The senior That is true. In what Michigan was a guy who could be counted painfully tries to pass off as the on to contribute night in and night motion offense, Amaker wants his out. players to cut and move to create open looks instead of clearing out for one guy to go to work. But I'm not talking about a 25- point scorer who allows the other four players to sit around and watch. I'm not talking about the one player opponents lose sleep trying to plan against. I'm talking about a player the team can count on for consistent production. A guy who is good for a few scores each game after the play has fallen apart - a familiar sight for the Wolverines this season. Abram has been this guy before. As a sophomore, the Michigan cap- tain led the team in scoring and cracked 15 points 10 times while scoring less than seven just twice en route to an NIT championship. And he continued that pace last year before a severe ankle sprain derailed his season. So what happened to Abram? He has career lows in just about every relevant stat. His scoring average has fallen to single digits, his shooting percentages are at an all-time low and his turnovers have risen. "I've never really considered myself a 3-point shooter or a slash- er," Abram said." "I just play bas- ketball." Abram isn't doing much of either this season. His 3-point percentage has dropped from over 40 percent to under 30, and his attacks to the rim are few and far between. Maybe it's lacking confidence after missingso much time because of an injury. Or a funk he can't shake after seeing his shots fall out game after game. "I just take the shots that's given to me," said Abram, after pausing to search for an answer. He then quickly shifted the focus off him- self to Saturday's matchup with Indiana. Abram might not want to talk about it, but his teammates are aware of his frustrations. "Sometimes, he starts pressing when he doesn't think he's playing well," Petway said. "When you do that, it just gets worse." For Abram and Michigan, it can't get much worse. Abram has missed his last seven 3-point attempts and has clearly passed up other open looks. And once again, the Wolver- ines are on a crash course for the NIT. Maybe Abram will regain his form and spice up the story that has been his career. But for Michigan, it will be too little, too late. Fifth-year senior Lester Abram is averaging a career-low 9.3 points per game. ...... .. ... xgW .,, f ,........... Z-- I