~---~-~ 0 0. 0 8B Tpoff/ TuesdyNovember2 2010 HOOSIERS From Page 5B Like Stu, Zack spent last summer reworking his shot into a more com- pact style and prepared himself to return as a starting guard, which for at least one Big Ten big man, is a posi- tive thing. "He's always feisty, you know, he's always battling for rebounds. On film, fhey always talk about how every year he's got a couple rebounds over me. My coach makes fun of me about it," Illinois forward Mike Davis, who has five inches on Zack, said of Zack's play. "He pushes you and he fights you. He plays better than he is." And in Chesterton, the bars pay for the Big Ten Network so they can watch Zack play on TV. Kids ask Pel- jer, what do I need to do to be as good as Zack? His response: You've always got to try to be better than you are. It's not as though Stu and Zack are the first to come from Indiana. And while being a Hoosier separates them from others in some ways - they're not the kids who grew up playing in the streets of enormous cities - in a much bigger way, being a Hoosier bonds them to those who came before them and led as great players and coaches. Players like Larry Bird, who grew up in rural Indiana, playing on unpaved driveways, shooting baskets when the rim was crooked and attached to a garage. A man who faced adversity only to become known as one of the greatest shooters ever in the NBA. Stu and Zack grew up during the Michael Jordan/Larry Bird era, where finesse faced off against hard- nosed play. Michael Jordan was the epitome of flashy court play. Bird was never that, he never jumped the high- est or ran the fastest. His photos don't appear on any kind of brand names, but his blue-collar work ethic made him one of the most recognizable ath- letes, and men, of his time. And by the time Larry Bird left for the East Coast in 1978, a new face had taken over Indiana basketball and what it stood for. While Bobby Knight was an Ohio native, he embodied the passion and drive - in his early years - that Hoo- sier basketball desired to be. He was "The General," a man who demanded perfection. But most important, they come from the home of the late John Wood- en. A man who revolutionized what it meant to be a collegiate basketball coach - a man who held true to his Indiana values when he was in the middle of Los Angeles. He told his players: Be more con- cerned with your character than your reputation, because your character is what you really are, while your repu- tation is merely what others think you are. And for Zack and Stu, maybe the whispers remind them of that. The whispers they hear every summer when they return home. When their parents and coaches tell them that a young kid asked about them or they realize just how far they've made it, how their dream of playing Big Ten basketball seemed so far away such a short time ago. It is this humility and passion that will, like their Hoosier background, bind them and separate them from the leaders wrho have come before them in Crisler Arena. As freshmen they watched and learned from C.J. Lee as he took a team that had finished 10-22 in the previous year and led them to unthinkable heights. Lee was not the prolific scorer, averaging less than 2 points a game that year. But his pres- ence was an undeniable force that led that team to a place they could not have reached. "They have a chip on their shoul- ders," Beilein said. "I don't think there's any doubt both of them came here t6 prove that they could help us win at the University of Michigan." In an arena where so much weight is put into the wins and losses, a young team will be led by two young men who have seen what basketball has done in their lives and their home- towns. They've changed where they came from and seen how single play- ers have changed Michigan. When Zack entered high school, Chesterton had won two sectional championships in 50 years. According to Peller, Zack's perfor- mance during the years, on and off the court, changed all of that. "He helped elevate everybody's perception of basketball around here," Peller said. "It was an exciting time around here and we hadn't had that. Besides being a good leader on the floor, he was an example to a lot of the younger kids. He just elevated the game." And in the Carmel High School locker room there's a framed 8x1O portrait of Stu in one of his first games at Michigan. It's one of the last things the players see before they walk out on the court that Stu once ruled. And so the whispers continue to get louder as the season approaches. The Big Ten will be the strongest conference in the country. Michigan is young and inexperienced. The Wol- verines will be the underdog in almost every game. Stu and Zack aren'tgoingto say any- thing. They're one step ahead of you. They smirk. The whispers they want heard are the ones they carry with them from Carmel and Chesterton. Let the whispers of the underdog persist, they say. A whispering dog still bites. FILE PHOTO/Daily Junior guard Stu Douglass has been known to show up in high-pressure games for the Wolverines in his two years on the team. Junior guard StuDouglass was told by his high school coach that he couldn't play at Michigan. After two years Junior guard Zack Novak was the third-leading scorer in the state of Indiana in his senior year of high school and as a Wolverine, Douglass is expected to be one of Michigan's leaders. has the most points in Chesterton High School history.