8 -- Tuesday, March 12, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 8 - Tuesday, March12, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom BE11HIND THE BLOG Josh Bartelstein's rise from walk-on to captain by Daniel Wasserman, Daily Sports Editor 9 Photo by Terra Mollengraff M arch 10, Senior Day for the Michi- gan men's basketball team, was Ann Arbor's first taste of spring. As temperatures climbed into the mid 60s, locals ditched their winter coats in favor of short-sleeve shirts for the first time this year. But as the Crisler Center parking lot began to fill, and the line of student-ticket holders stretched past the Big House, a grey, cloud-cov- ered sky served as a constant reminder that win- ter hadn't yet departed. It was a nice day for the beginning of spring, but not like the late-April weekend four years ago, in 2009, when Josh Bartelstein and his dad, Mark, made their first and onlyrecruitingvisit to Michigan. "It was one of those days - the nicest day of the spring - a perfect day for recruiting," Mark recalled in a phone interview. It was on that visit that Bartelstein made up his mind; he was prepared to accept a pre- ferred-walk-on offer from Michigan coach John Beilein. Not more than 24 hours after returning home, he had formally accepted it. Four years later, in his final home game as a Wolverine, Bartelstein didn't score one last basket. He didn't get to check in, as the crowd cheered him on, for one final time. His name wasn't even called over the PA system, except for when he and the four other seniors - none of whom received more than a handful of mean- ingful minutes this season - were honored at half court 10 minutes before tip-off in a game Michigan would eventually lose to Indiana, costing it the Big Ten Championship. And since that warm April day in 2009, Bar- telstein has scored just six points in 53-career minutes - each of them in games that had long since been decided. He missed 13 of his 15 field-goal attempts and registered more fouls (eight) than assists (four) and rebounds (two) combined. It wasn't the career Bartelstein envi- sioned when he turned to his dad and said, "I don't think there's anywhere else that I would go." But then again, it's six more points than he ever could've imagined he'd score at a Big Ten school when he was in high school and felt a sharp pain in his ankle, or when he had just a few mid-major offers during his prep-school season, or even when he traveled to Ann Arbor for the first time on a trip to visit friends from high school. Playing basketball at Michigan was supposed to be a pipe dream for Josh Bartelstein. Instead, it's a dream he's lived, led and blogged for four years. ong before Bartelstein shared a lock- er room with NBA talents like former Michigan guards Darius Morris and Manny Harris, or future NBA players like Trey Burke, Tim Hardaway Jr. or Glenn Robinson III, he was sharing a court with some of the league's biggest names. Mark, a prominent basketball agent, rep- resents NBA All-Stars like David Lee and Mo Williams, and founded Priority Sports and Entertainment - which also represents NFL stars like Arian Foster and A.J. Hawk. It's through these connections that Bartelstein has gotten to shoot around with Michael Jor- dan, or eat dinner with and rebound for Steve Kerr - another one of Mark's clients - just days before he hit a last-second, game-winning shot in Game 6 of the 1997 NBA Finals to clinch the championship. Developing relationships with several NBA players went a long way in Bartelstein's own development as a basketball player. "Any time you can be around people who are successful, and you see how much work goes into being successful, that's always a great learning experience," Mark said. "I think to see how hard these guys actually do work is so ben- eficial to anyone in any walk of life." Each winter, when Mark wasn't taking Bar- telstein to NBA games, or watching games on the couch with him, the pair found itself in Highland Park High School's gym, where Bar- telstein began to "idolize" the varsity players. Despite being just a 5-foot-6 sophomore, he was handed the reins to the varsity offense in 2005 as its starting point guard. In a preseason Thanksgiving tournament - his first varsity game - Bartelstein played through a sore ankle and eeked out a two- point victory. While turning a corner around a pick-and-roll he had called for the next day in practice, he felt an "excruciating" pain shoot through his right ankle, the same one that had been slightly bothering him the previous day. "I'llnever forgetthemoment,"hesaid."That's when I knew, 'That's not normal. There's some- thingvery wrong with it."' Tests found a stress fracture. Initial diagnosis tabbed the recovery period asa matter of weeks, but further testing discovered the need for sur- gery - two screws in his ankle - sidelining him for six-to-eight months. He eventually returned to the summer AAU circuit, but it wasn't until midway through his junior year that he felt like himself on the floor. The injury, attributed to significant wear and tear and the side effect of what would become a substantial growth spurt - over the next two years, he grew nine inches to his current 6-foot- 3 - was the first in a string of injuries to his ankle, which has been operated on an additional two times during his Michigan career. Seriously injured for the first time in his life, Bartelstein was forced to find alternative meth- ods to contribute to the team, including a role as an informal player-coach. "I think for my ability to lead, it was a bless- ing," he said. "That was the first year that I got to sit back ... and understand the leadership role. "There's no doubt that that year, seeing the bigger picture, I would've been too caught up in myself." By his senior year, a taller, more polished Bartelstein had grown into an all-area player, averaging 13.5 points, six rebounds and five assists per game - good enough to get recruited by Division III schools, including Emory, New York University and Washington University in St. Louis. But everything changed after his high school played a prep school, and its coach approached the Bartelsteins about the possibility ofhim tak- ing a post-grad year. Bartelstein's junior year was hampered by the recovering ankle, a hamstring injury and because the growth spurt changed the physi- cal makeup of his body, he was going through what Mark called an "awkward phase" on the court. The prep-school route wasn't something that Midwesterners, like the Bartelsteins, were familiar with. Spending a year at a prep school - a more common route for East Coast athletes - would give Bartelstein the chance to improve upon his senior year and get more recruiting attention, especially from the Ivy League. Bartelstein eventually settled on Phillips Exeter Academy in Exeter, N.H. Known for its prestigious academics, it also plays in an athletic conference littered with Division I talent. Mich- igan coach John Beilein, a native Northeast- erner, has dipped into this conference several times to snag freshman forward Mitch McGary, senior forward Blake McLimans and former Wolverine Evan Smotrycz. At Exeter, Bartelstein was named captain of the basketball team for the 2008-09 season. While maturing off the court, he shined on it - averaging 15.5 points and seven assists per game. He set the school record with 52 3-point- ers in a season, while shooting close to 50 per- cent from beyond the arc. Several Division-I schools jumped in with offers, including San Diego, Detroit, Valparaiso, Harvard and a host of otherIvy League schools. Penn recruited him the hardest, and for a while, that's where it looked like he'd end up. An email, from Exeter coach Jay Tilton See BARTELSTEIN, Page 6 i