8 - Tuesday, January 29, 2013T The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com & off O4 o0 sc 00 (St Footbal0 (900 0Q/,a~ Q ''IX tll* \GO QQ. COV Z7 a1 e 9 AP U of M football ranking 36,543 num e ne. U of M enrollment e ale J per P, VO The Michigan men's basketball team is the top-ranked team in the nation for the first time in two decades. The Michigan Daily takes a look at how much has changed. : fi ' AP V3of M football ranking 27979 U of M enrollment s 82 ustrial Verage SS cI9 ._ V- Soutr Desip I tvw% r a a ' jfo o s ees: New York limes, tnotley.t Historical Library, I tlsinssWoek gn by Nick Cruz Ky u~vxrxo MICHIGAN W A D WHAT DO qHODES/MARSHALL/MITC SCHOLARS DO AFTER THEIR STUDIES Well, this woman got her own prime-time TV show. Sophomore guard Trey Burke and the Michigan basketball team are the No. 1 team for the first time since the Fab Fire. Fab again By COLLEEN THOMAS Daily Sports Editor Nov. 30,1992. Trey Burke was only 18 days old, and Glenn Robinson III's father was just a sophomore at Purdue the last time the Michigan men's basketball team was ranked No. t in the Associated Press poll. These were the days of the Fab Five, when the Wolverines were expected to win multiple national championships with the talents of Juwan Howard, Jalen Rose, Chris Webber, Ray Jackson and Jimmy King. Whitney Houston was on the top of the charts with her hit "IWill Always Love You." And now, more than 20 years later, Michigan is back on top. The Jan. 28 edition of the AP's Top 25 was released Monday with the Wolverines earning a whopping 51 of the 65 total first-place votes. Kansas finished at No. 2 with just 13 votes, and No. 4 Florida got the final first-place vote. Michigan had the chance to assume the No. 1 ranking two weeks ago when it visited Ohio State, but it opened the game flat and couldn't come back in the loss. And in a similar situation two weeks later, the Wolverines headed to Champaign to face Illi- nois on Sunday with the chance to actually take over the top spot. So the Wolverines redeemed themselves in a 74-60 win over the Fighting Illini and made a case to earn what has probably inthe back of their heads for the past couple weeks. Michigan coach John Beilein and the rest of the team have been mum about the rankings after the Wolverines hinted that the No. 1 spot may have been a distraction in the game against the Buckeyes, but after Sunday's game, sopho- more guard Trey Burke finally admitted he thinks Michigan is the best team in the country. "I think (we deserve the No. 1 ranking)," Burke said. "I don't think that was our goal, obviously we want to be No. 1, but I think as of right now we (deserve to be)." So do the voters. Well, one group of them, at least. With Sunday's win, Michigan is off to its best start in program history at 19-1, but there's a bit of a com- plication. The ESPN/USA Today Coaches poll also has some weight in the discussion of which team is the nation's best. Kansas, which is riding a 18-game winning streak, was ranked ahead of Michigan at No. 2 in last week's ESPN/USA Today Coaches Poll and squeaked into the No. 1 spot in that poll on Mon- day. The Jayhawks finished just three points ahead of the Wolver- ines for the top spot and started an argument as to which team actu- ally should have the No.l ranking. On Monday, Michigan gained an unlikely ally. Michigan State coach Tom Izzo thinks the best team in the country is obvious. "I'll probably gain some ene- mies and probably gain some friends," Izzo said in a teleconfer- ence. "Michigan deserves to be No. 1. If you look at their body of work, if you look atthe consistency they have played with and look at those two guards, Hardaway and Burke, they can control a game. They've been solid. "If I had a vote, I'd have to vote them No. 1, even though it's your rival. Who wants to do that? But I also have respect for what they've accomplished." But even after the rankings were released, like before, Beilein is still focused on the Wolverines' goal of raising another Big Ten championship banner. Beilein mentioned Sunday that nobody really remembers who was No.1in January of past seasons, and he is trying to keep his players focused on each game ahead of them, ignoring the hype surrounding the ranking. Redshirt sophomore forward Jon Horford agreed with his coach, saying that at this point in the season, wins are more impor- tant than the team's ranking. "(Being No. 1) means a lot for the program and for the fans, I know that," Horford said. "I can't speak for the team, but I feel (they) vaguely feel the same way I do. Being No. 1 in the nation means nothing - it's all about who's number one in the end." What will you do? Anything you want. You've written your own game plan so far in life. Why not take it one step further and become a Rhodes, Marshall, or Mitchell Scholar? 0 Rachel Maddow, Rhodes Scholar 1995 Come to a Rhodes/Marshall/Mitchell Orientation Session: Monday, January 28, 2013 * 5:00-6:00pm Vandenberg Room, Michigan League Wednesday, January 30, 20130 5:00-6:00pm Kuenzel Room, Michigan Union Tuesday, February 5, 2013.* 5:00-6:00pm Boulevard Room, Pierpont Commons To learn more, please contact the Provost's Council on Student Honors at 734-763-8123 or visit the website at provost.umich.edu/scholars/ a 6 4