The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com March 14, 2011 - 3B NO.8 SEED From Page 1B pegged the Wolverines as solidly in the tournament after their victory over Illinois in the Big Ten Tournament quarterfinals on Friday. "I just have to always prepare myself for (disappointment)," Beilein said. "You just never know what's going to happen. I would have been very disap- pointed (if we were left out) - never shocked, but very dis- appointed. But now that I see where we were seeded, I don't know what I was so worried about." Indeed, it appears that Michi- gan would have been safely in the field even if it had lost to the Fighting Illini. Beilein explained his team's surprising seed by pointing to the strength of the Big Ten - seven conference squads made the tournament - and the fact that the Wolverines finished in fourth place. ' Two seasons ago, Michigan held a similar watch party on Selection Sunday. The situation was slightly 4 different then - the program was trying to make it back to the NCAA Tournament after an t 11-season drought. It was a much more nerve- wracking evening in 2009, as the Wolverines were among the very last teams announced. there. This time, Michigan's name "You work so hard for it. It's was called before the selection been a long two years. To get show even hit its halfway point back (to the tournament) is just - and the team was on more unbelievable." solid ground, widely considered Coach Bruce Pearl's Tennes- above the bubble. see team will present an interest- But considering the expecta- ing matchup for the Wolverines. tions for the Wolverines before The ninth-seeded Volunteers the season and that their con- are talented and athletic, hav- ference record stood at 1-6 in ing beaten Villanova, Pittsburgh mid-January, it was no surprise and Memphis this season - but that the celebration upon hear- they're also enigmatic, as they ing Michigan's selection was fell to Charlotte and the College of Charleston. And there's an intriguing potential matchup in the third "It's every kid's round with No. 1 seed Duke. But dream and Sunday wasn't about Michigan's dreamI and n~ extgame - it was about achiev- we're living it ing something few, if any, thought We t was possible for this team at the right now " beginning of the season. rg o It will go down as one of the best coaching jobs of Beilein's career. just as raucous as it was two And for the 58-year-old, there years ago. The fans in Crisler was nothing more gratifying Arena burst into cheers as the than seeing the joyful reactions players leapt up excitedly, hug- of his players. ging and congratulating each "It's just everything to a other. coach, to watch (that)," Beilein "I almost had a heart attack," said. "You coach a lot of teams, freshman guard Tim Hardaway 35 now I've probably coached ... Jr. said. "It's every kid's dream, to watch them go through the and we're living it right now." excitement, it's magical because Added junior guard Zack they've worked so hard, and Novak: "I wasn't nervous up they've been focused all year until we came out here today, long. and after that, I was a nervous "To have part of their dreams wreck ... It's just a dream come come true, right in front of your true to see your team's name up eyes, is a wonderful thing." OSU LOSS From Page 'lB Two starting Buckeyes - point guard Aaron Craft and shooting guard David Lighty had to sit most of the first half after collecting two fouls early. Then Jordan Sibert, who came in as a result of the early foul trouble, recorded two personals as well. Unlike the Wolverines, Ohio State is not known for having much depth to its roster. How- ever, coach Thad Matta fina- gled with the lineup, went into halftime holding onto a 31-27 advantage and then was able to play his starters in the second stanza. "We got them into a bit 'of trouble," Morgan said. "I thought that maybe we could use that to our advantage a little more, but we didn't. In the sec- ond half, I think all their starters were in again." And once the Buckeyes had their starting five in the game, L it seemed like they could do exe- cute at ease on both the offen- sive and defensive ends. Ohio State shot 47 percent from the field and collected 39 rebounds to Michigan's 33. Sullinger tallied a game-high 13 rebounds to give the Buckeyes a lot of second chances. "That's also something we can't let happen," Morgan said. FAB FIVE From Page 1B JENNINGS From Page 1B James had four teammates in Cleveland - it wasn't the Cavaliers, because the "Chosen One" worked alone. For him, his chalk fell to the ground just as easily as his opponents. And when he left, Cleveland fell apart. And maybe that's what people thought would happen to Ann Arbor when Manny Harris and DeShawn Sims left. Maybe people thought their dust would fog the air and the remaining Wolverines would crawl on hands and knees to the exits. Maybe that's why student ticket sales plummeted this season. But maybe people were too focused on the names on the backs of the jersey, rather than the one on the front. In the past 10 seasons, only once has the Naismith College Player of the Year, the award that honors the top men's bas- ketball player, been given to a player partipating on the team that won the National Champi- onship. Ever since a team meeting after the Wolverines' 69-64 loss to Minnesota on Jan. 22, Michi- gan has been playing with a dif- ferent mentality on the court. "I watched that film and was really disgusted with myself, I knew I needed to step up. Not just in terms of my on-the-court performance, but just being a better teammate," Morris said at the time. "Afterward, I called a team meeting and I apolo- gized to everybody and every- body else stepped up too and said they've been lacking too at being a good teammate and holding each other accountable to go out there and playing hard all the time." Morris and junior captains Stu Douglass and Zack Novak have pulled this team together into a single cohesive unit. They don't care about who scores. They leave the statistics to the statisticians. But not every group of play- ers in the country can say that. With just under six minutes left in Michigan's Big Ten Tour- nament semifinal game against Ohio State, a Morris layup was blocked by the 6-foot-8, 255-pound Dallas Lauderdale. When Lauderdale returned to earth, he was holding up two fingers. That didn't signify how many points the Buckeyes withheld from the Wolverines that pos- session. It was the number of blocks Lauderdale had that game. Michigan was about to go on a run, and Ohio State's senior leader was bragging about his stats. But when Hardaway Jr. hits a big shot, he doesn't count how many he's hit. He doesn't let life skills and financial literacy to find success, whether it's on the court or off it. But either way, he'll urge the students to confront life issues the same way he and the rest of the Fab Five did it - face-to-face, talkingsmack alongthe way. people he's sc the flo poundi emblaz His( has im alike. I that w Dougla his the keep sr H do( m Righ on the' matter tops th TEAM Thei court i that th court.. This were m jerseys That gan tea players past 10 one. In t Wolver Freshman guard Tim Hardaway Jr. cares more about the name on the front of his jersey than the one on the back. know how many points State on Saturday, Michigan cut ored. He runs back down Ohio State's 17-point lead to just or pounding his chest, four. And during that time, start- ing the Michigan that's ers Morris and Jordan Morgan zoned across there. were on the bench. confidence on the court Two of the most important pressed analysts and fans players, accordingto the statis- But what they don't see is tics, sat while others who are hen he misses a shot, it's less important, according to the ass and Novak who slap statistics, pulled the Wolverines st and say, "Good shot, into fighting distance of the No. 1 hooting." team in the country. During that time, Michigan assistant coach Bacari Alexander turned and yelled to the bench, ardaway Jr. "That's what we do. We fight. Remember this game!" esn t let you Could Jim Calhoun have Show turned to his players at any point now W duringthe Big East Tourna- any points ment and say that? And if he did, would his team have rebutted, he has "No, that's what Kemba Walker does?'. Maybe those three boys, enamored with Hardaway Jr., it now, the only thing could pass Matt Vogrich or Mor- Wolverines' backs that gan without a second thought. s is their new warm-up And perhaps, if Hardaway Jr. at read, "TEAM, TEAM, passed them on the streets, they ." 'wouldn't think twice. But for ir confidence on the the Wolverines this year, that s manifested in the fact doesn't matter. ey lack something on the Because their TEAM got the A superstar. No.8 seed. Their TEAM is fac- year, unlike last, there ing Tennessee. Their TEAM is ever any Fab 5 throwback what's most important to them. So Dallas Lauderdale, you t's because for this Michi- hold those two fingers proudly. am, there aren't just five But just remember it's a hell of . There are 15. And in the alot easier to break two fingers games, they've become than it is to break a fist. SALAM RIDA/Daily Sophomore guard Darius Morris attempts a shot, which was blocked out of bounds by Ohio State's Dallas Lauderdale. "It's hard when they miss shots it kills us and gives them a lot of but then get their own rebounds. momentum." he final minutes of the rines' 68-61 loss to Ohio -Jennings can be reached at chanjen@umich.edu ketball. The film details every- thing that's been under wraps since the early 1990s, from the individuals - how they got from the inner-city to Ann Arbor - to their revolutionizing hip-hop swag, to the massive payment scandal involving Webber that ultimately led to their deletion from the record books. "First and foremost, (we want to show) that we were college *-kids," Rose said after a private screening on Friday. "So there were things that we did that were responsible, there were things we did that were stupid. There were times when we were able to articulate ourselves, there were times when we were ignorant and immature. That was part of the college experience." And within, the movie presents a pungent critique of amateurism in a sport where the NCAA and athletic departments take mil- lions to the bank on the successes of unpaid athletes. The only significant figure notably absent from the film, however, is Webber himself, and for fairly obvious reasons. Not only did his relationship with University booster Ed Martin and subsequent dishonesty with a grand jury tarnish the Michigan basketball program, but his infa- mous timeout call when there were no timeouts left at the end of the 1993 National Champion- ship game against North Carolina is still a sore subject. Both events were discussed extensively in the film. "The elephant in the room, as you saw in the film, is that Chris chose not to give a 2011 inter- view," Rose said after the screen- ing. "But hopefully he'll find that salvation in this life, like he could bring some sort of closure to it. Like I told him, I wish all I had to say is that I called a timeout. You think I want to be sitting there with my grandmother or son talking about me being in the crack house? No I don't want to talk about that, man. That's what I told him." Rose was referringto a pointin his sophomore year, when he was caught playing video games at his friend's house during a drug bust. But in addressing the issue, he mentions that he was not in a crack house - because he knows from home what a real dope house is. Indeed, Friday's screening at the Detroit Science Center in front of mostly just Rose's friends and family was personal for him. Through every moment of his career, he's brought a piece of the Motor City with him. And now, he's giving back. The end of the movie briefly mentions his plans to open the Jalen Rose Leadership Academy, a charter high school that will find its home in the heart of the city. "For some of these kids, it's like Beirut to finally get to school," Rose said after the screening. "Your uncle's on crack, you've never metyour dad, tryingto help your mom feed the family, your brother or sister is sick. Finally you get to school and it'slike, 'You expect me to learn?'" In addition to the core cur- riculum, Rose wants students to graduate from his school with the We all make mistakes! Don't make not taking the Princeton Review MCAT Course one of them Over105 Hours of LIVE In-Class Instruction 5 separateinstructors,Bio,a-Chem,G-Chem,Physics,Verbal "17Computer-BasedTests withrealisticon-screentools uStifan Guearan *FREE Verbal Accelerator -156Hours, a $299value *FREE Super Bio Review-5 Hours,a $I99value u4,300 Pages of Materials to TakelHome (w P eluwicom m ." 3§rir"ai"iu'et''"4ie"'". a"s. '"" A "4* 314*"L t k p.-,,IOK MARISSA MCCLAIN/Daily Former Michigan guard Jalen Rose speaks at Friday's Detroit premiere of ESPN's "The Fab Five."