I 0 0 w -w r H ow LU LUJ co LJ u- H- t Michigan's Youth Revolution Neal Rothschild I1Daily Sports Editor For a man with more talent than he's ever had in 35 years of coaching, John Beilein doesn't feel spoiled. The sixth-year Michigan coach constructed and perfected an offense with the purpose of doing more with less, but today Beilein doesn't have less. He has more than opposing coaches feel comfortable with. He has the top-flight talent he could once see only by scheduling a marquee opponent when he was laboringthrough the lower rungs of college basketball. These days? Tim Hardaway Jr. Trey Burke. Mitch McGary. Glenn Robinson IIt. The future is in place too: heralded recruits Derrick Wal- ton and Zak Irvin both signed their letters of intent for the 2013 recruiting class this week. At the center is Burke. Without the sopho- more from Columbus, the bridge from Darius Morris to the future of Michigan basketball may not have been built. Burke is the quarterback of Beilein's pres- ent-day offense, the 2012 iteration of the floor general that Beilein's always had, but never 4C Tipoff - November 15, 2012 like this - a lightning-quick, no-look passing, jump-shooting, off-balance-finishing dynamo. Beilein's rosters used to be inundated with blue-collar talent. Now, you'll have a tough time finding a team of his devoid of NBA tal- ent. Very quickly, Beilein's teams went from the pursuers to the pursued. And in the process, the face of Beilein's teams has transformed. Where there once was the savvy, but limited senior leader, now is the stud underclassman with the talent to make it to the next level. But through this transformation, Beilein hasn't changed his attitude. He doesn't feel spoiled because nothing he touches is differ- ent. The expectations are the same, the atti- tude is the same, and the respect he commands is the same. Therein lies the paradox of Beilein: noth- ing has changed about how he approaches his teams - but the constant is that he won't stop changing. Before he won a Big Ten championship, reached the Elite Eight at West Virginia or groomed NBA-level talent, John Beilein had Scott Hicks in 1987. The guard for Le Moyne College in upstate New York had the height Beilein liked, but lacked quickness to keep up with opposing guards. So Beilein tinkered. He plugged the under- sized Hicks in as a stretch forward, and Le Moyne won 16 out of 17 games that season, fin- ishing 24-6. If that sounds familiar, it should. History repeated itself 23 years and four coaching stops later when Beilein used an athletically limited, 6-foot-4 scrapper as the undersized forward. Zack Novak flourished in the role and captained Michigan for three years, leading the Wolverines to consecutive NCAA Tourna- ments for the first time since the Steve Fisher era. But to conclude that the undersized power forward is a Beilein trademark would be to look liiiitedly at the players he's had. West Virgin- ia's six-foot-11 Kevin Pittsnogle took the nation by storm during March Madness in 2005. The tattooed 3-point sharpshooter played the same position as Novak, just as the versatile 6-foot-8 DeShawn Sims did at Michigan. "We have to adapt to our players," says Beilein. "Because Jordan Morgan, for exam- . ple, is not a 3-point shooter. You tailor the game to him. That's the beauty of our staff and our experience level. We're going to tailor our plan to what our talent level is." Novak's departure, though, may have sig- naled a farewell to the legacy of the Beilein Overachiever. He was Burke's first running mate and came at the intersection of John Beilein old and new. He represented the Beilein of the past, who found himself on a team rapidly becoming the Beilein team of the future. Novak may be the last of a dying breed. As Beilein's status continues to climb in college basketball, he won't need to rely on the self- made, "small-town boy makes good" mold. Why try to catch lightning in a bottle when you can create it yourself? Beilein, able to get his pick of the litter of high school talent, will be able to customize his teams based on current and future personnel. Where the Novak archetype may be falling out of favor, the other pieces still need to be there to surround Burke. The stretch swing- man - a versatile, inside-outside threat with the ability to rebound and guard opposing power forwards - is filled by the 6-foot-6 Rob- inson. That spot-up shooter who can bury the big 3-pointer from the corner? Freshman Nik Stauskas. Hardaway is the athletic wing player. Morgan, and eventually McGary, plays the role of the steady big man to clean up around the rim. It's as though, after 35 years of coaching, Beilein finally has his fantasy lineup. That offense Beilein developed at Le Moyne became a trademark. He'd overcome bigger and more athletic teams with ball movement, screening and backdoor cuts. The offense was made to find the open man, not the five-star recruit - mainly because he didn't have one. It was an underdog system through and through. But before he developed it in the late '80s, he led unheralded programs at Erie Com- munity College and Nazareth to dominant sea- sons. Once he broke into the Division-I ranks, he led Canisius College to its best record in the last 55 years. He coached Richmond to five- straight winning seasons and he took West Virginia to the Elite Eight, a height the Moun- taineers hadn't reached since 1959. At West Virginia, Beilein turned the pro- gram around, but not because of the freakish talent. His first top-100 recruit was Da'Sean Butler who signed in Beilein's last year in Mor- gantown. It was a school that had been to the NCAA Tournament just twice since 1989, but has missed the tournament just twice since Beilein arrived in 2004. Then, as he brought Michigan back from the brink of NCAA basketball irrelevance, a funny thing happened. Suddenly, the Wolverines started to enjoy the size and athleticism that they'd been designed to take down. The alley-oops, spin moves and tip-slams started to infiltrate Crisler Center. Now, they're pulling in the top- flight recruits. Manny Harris was inherited by Beilein from former coach Tommy Amaker and was developed into an NBA talent. In the 2010-11 season, Morris went from a standard Big Ten point guard to a Los Angeles Laker. The fol- lowing year, Burke went from alightly recruit- ed three-star from Columbus to a probable second-rounder in the NBA Draft. This begs the question whether Beilein has attracted a much better crop of players, or whether the players reached NBA caliber because of their time under Beilein. According to Beilein, the NBA wasn't on Burke nor Morris's radar early in their break- out seasons. "There is no way that ir January, or even February of Trey's freshman year and Dari- us's sophomore year they were even thinking of going to the NBA," Beilein said. "If you're thinking aboutgoing to the NBA in December, you probably won't be going to the NBA." Michigan had one of its youngest rosters in 2010-11, Morris's sophomore season. There were no seniors and there was a serious void in size. This was the pre-windfall Beilein team. The last glimpse of the not-quite-there era. Burke was in his senior season at Northland High School, and Morris had the reins to the offense. Morgan was the lone reliable post pres- ence in his redshirt freshman season, and the Wolverines lived and died by Morris and the 3-pointer. In a particularly embarrassing loss to Min- nesota, Michigan totaled 11 rebounds and the high on the team belonged to Hardaway and Novak, who each pulled down three. The Wol- verine frontcourt amassed a single board. That season, the 6-foot-4 Novak led the squad in rebounding. Size was clearly an issue, so Beilein did what he had to do. He stationed Morris - his strong, physical 6-foot-4 point guard - in the post where Michigan could take advantage of the traditionally smaller opposing pointguards. See REVOLUTION, Page 6C TheBlockM - www.theblockm.com ( 5C