.r a O,5,ic-07.9-W 'e ' ./EIiss3ai5-ISM4NVOUIal4J A8 osiss w V.. v The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 8 - Tuesday, March 13, 2012 orey Person has been Evan Turner. He's been Kalin Lucas. And William Buford. Yet, he doesn't see the floor. In four years, the 6-foot-3 senior has seen 33 min- utes of playing time. His fellow seniors, who walked into Ann Arbor with him, often see 33 minutes in a single game. Zack Novak and Stu Douglass have reaped the glory of their work. They get the credit for transforming Michigan from a marginal major-conference school into a basketball power. It's Novak and Douglass who have their fingerprints all over the Wolverines' emergence. Corey, meanwhile, has taken his place off-stage, behind the curtains, and that's OK with him. His dreams may not have come true, but he was still ful- filled. What motivates a player that doesn't get to play? How can you be a leader when you aren't on the court? What are the rewards for a player that doesn't get his name in the box score? Corey has faced all those questions in his four years at Michigan and he's found a way to answer each of them. The walk-on from Kalamazoo, Mich. came to Ann Arbor to play, but he's found salvation elsewhere. The player might have been taken away, but not the Person. It hasn't always been all work and no glory for Corey. Kalamazoo Central High School won the conference and the district title two straight years behind Corey. In a school that bred such champions as Derek Jeter and Greg Jennings, Corey established his own star status. He was named MVP of his conference and was a first team All-State selection - both for two straight years. On the Maroon Giants, Corey was the standout on a team that sent players to University of Detroit, Dayton and Austin Peay for basketball and Cincinnati for football. Though not a five-star recruit, Corey had options coming out of Kalamazoo Central. He could have gone to Butler - last year's NCAA Tournament runners-up - Western Michigan, Central Michigan and a number of other MAC schools. Instead, he opted to become a Wolverine, even if he would only have walk-on status. Kelvin Grady, then a two-sport ath- lete on the football and basketball teams, made a recruiting pitch to Corey. Grady had played with Corey since elemen- tary school and talked up the tradition and way of life in Ann Arbor. As it turns out, the choice had already been made for him. "Because Corey was going to be the recipient of the Kalama- zoo Promise, which is an academic scholarship," said Corey's mother, Kimberly Smith. "My number-one focus and priority was where was he goingto be able to go to school to getthe best education, understanding that hopefully, he'll get an opportu- nity to play basketball. "But the number one priority was education." The decision also marked the end of Corey's life at home, one that couldn't have gone better for his mom. "Corey's been an all-around perfect child from day one," Smith said. "He's an individual who's given me no problems whatsoever. I've never had any sort of issues with Corey, whether in school or outside of school. I've never received a call from a teacher voicing any complaints or issues. I've never received any calls from any parents, any neighbors, any family. "He's always gotten along with absolutely everybody and he's always been perfect. Absolutely perfect." When Corey came onto campus for the first open gym ses- sions, he immediately bonded with the rest of his class. "We were a very tight-knit group," Corey said. "Novak was my roommate for the first summer when I first got here, and Stu and Ben (Cronin) were roommates" The four did everything together. From hanging out in the dorms, playingvideo games, being in the gym and getting rides to and from practice, the freshmen established strong chemis- try well before the first game had been played. "Of course, naturally, my ideas in my mind were that I was going to step right in and play and make an impact with the team right away," Corey said. "I definitely saw myself on the same level (as the other freshmen)." It wouldn't be too long until Corey's freshman honeymoon abruptly ended. In early-season practices, Corey found out that college bas- ketball would be a completely different animal from what he was used to. He was accustomed to being the bigger player, or the more athletic player. At Michigan, he was neither. When he wanted to score, he was used to makinga move off the dribble and creating a shot for himself. It wasn't that easy in college. "Watching on TV, you think it's a certain way," Corey said. "But once you get out there, you start to see that things are a little bit faster, guys are more athletic. "There were times that I would go to the basket and I would think I would have a layup, and there would be a big guy that would come over from the weak side and be able to block my shot. At first, you just think it's a one-time occurrence, but then it repeatedly happens." It started to become clear that Corey wouldn't be a factor on Michigan's 2008-09 squad. While Novak and Douglass competed for a starting spot, and Cronin saw playing time before hip injuries derailed his career, Corey was stuck at the end of the bench. "It was definitely a frustrating period," he said. "It's frus- trating because you're used to being able to do certain moves and you can't do it." Corey's college basketball experience was nothing like he imagined it would be. Instead of gearing up to play on game days, he would have to gear his teammates up. Instead of helping his team on the court, he would settle to help by cheering from the sideline. Instead of getting his name in the box score with numbers, "Corey Person" ended up next to "DNP." But just as Corey had to pick up his teammates duringgames, it was his teammates that picked him up during the rough year. "There were plenty of nights where after practice, C.J. (Lee) would drop me off and talk to me for an extra 15, 20 or 30 min- utes about just staying positive and don't doubt myself," Corey said. "He constantly talked to me, he kept my spirits up. He was a big help my freshman year in not getting too down on myself" Lee, who was a senior that season, formed an instant bond with Corey. Both were originally from Saginaw, Mich., and Lee could identify with what Corey was going through. After hardly playing at Manhattan College and transfer- ring to Michigan, and then not starting as an upperclassman at Michigan, Lee sought out the freshman. "When you see someone that's going through the situation that you've gone through," said Lee, now the Administrative Specialist for the program, "you want to reach out and you want to encourage them and let them know that they are not alone, and they will get through it, and if they have the right attitude, they can succeed." Lee stressed to Corey that the most important thing an athlete can have is confidence in himself. He encouraged the freshman to stay positive, and continue to have faith in his abilities. "It's an adjustment for the majority of all Division I ath- letes," Lee said. "They were a star on their team and you go from dominating the basketball and playing all the important minutes to not dominating the ball and not playing the major- ity of the minutes, so that is an adjustment that the majority of us have to make." When Corey returned to school the summer before his sophomore year, he came with a different mindset. Players not knowing their roles can decimate chemistry and bring down the team. That wasn't going to be Corey. Knowing that playing time would still be a long shot, he started to dedicate himself to helping the team win in other ways. A big part of that came through his dedication to the scout team. The scout team prepares the rotation players for the next opponent by mimicking plays, mannerisms and styles of the players and teams. Again it was Lee who made an impact. Corey saw how Lee, who was co-captain with David Merritt, was a vocal leader on the scout team and how that lifted the team's spirits. Corey credits Lee and Merritt's leadership with Michigan's run to the 2009 NCAA Tournament, which ended a 14-year drought. With Lee graduating, Corey saw his opportunity the follow- ing year to make a difference on the scout team and be a leader through that role. "Once I knew he was leaving, I just saw that regardless of if I was going to play or not, that was somethingthat I wanted to bring to the team because I saw how much of a difference that it made," Corey said. "I saw it as, even though it's behind the scenes, it's somethingthat can make or break a team." During that summer, Corey became more vocal and started to push teammates in workouts and remind the team to keep up its intensity in practice. That empowered Corey to take pride in his work on the scout team. Corey typically plays as the opposing team's best guard or wing player on the scout team. He's become players like Turn- er, Lucas and Buford. And he's helped Michigan beat each one of them. The scout team watches film of its opponents to prepare and pick up the tendencies of their best players. And then, in just a 10-minute span in practice, the scout team learns the main plays of the next opponent and goes through those plays a few times. Sometimes the actions, ball movement and offensive sets are more important than the individual players, and some- times it's players that matter. "The team's depending on you not to mess those plays up and run them as good as possible," Corey said. "There's a lot of pressure there because you know that the team is depending on you to get them as ready as possible. "Because if the (opposing) team comes in the next day and they run something that either you didn't run as well or that you didn't do, sometimes you feel like, 'Dang, I didn't prepare the team as much as I should have.'" In addition to learning the ins and outs of the opposing teams, players on the scout team must also stay up-to-date on Michigan's changes in its sets and strategies in case they're called upon. Corey will also replicate how certain players play defense and guard the Wolverines' top guys. "He's tireless in his scout-team defense," said Michigan coach John Beilein. "He guards Tim Hardaway religiously every day, as hard as he can be guarded." "Coach Beilein talks to me all the time," Corey said. "He tells me, 'You have no idea how important you are to this team.' " See PERSON, Page 7