Anything for another day Former managing sports editor Kevin Santo reminisces about his time with The Daily. » Page 2B One of the girls Former managing sports editor Betelhem Ashame reflects on the friendships she found at The Daily. » Page 2B SPORTSMONDAY The Michigan Daily | michigandaily.com | April 16, 2018 B Design by Jack Silberman Katelyn Mulcahy / Daily Just months after Michigan fired Tommy Amaker and hired some coach from West Virginia in April of 2007, the men’s basketball team opened offseason workouts. It was a directionless program, desperate for national relevance and one — just one — NCAA Tournament berth. It was day one of the John Beilein era. And, little did anyone know, day one of perhaps the greatest sustained period of success in Michigan basketball history. At the beginning of the workout, then-assistant coach John Mahoney barged into the weight room, hooting and hollering. “We’re trying to win a motherf-ing national championship,” he yelped. “And that’s why we’re here.” Guard Jevohn Shepherd gave his teammate Anthony Wright a glance. Wright still recalls what Shepherd said next. “Man, this guy has to calm down.” *** John Beilein was plenty calm. He looked down, then at the clock, then back up. He took five steps to his right and shook Jay Wright’s hand with a smile, walking off the court 40 minutes short of immortality once again. For the second time in six seasons, he and his team had fallen one game shy of fulfilling that brash weight room proclamation 10 years ago. Maybe it’ll happen one day. Maybe not. But there’s a pit that still lingers in fans’ stomachs, a laundry list of “what-ifs” that will live forever. It’s an emotion bred from a program-wide attitude change, cultivated through day-to-day, incremental improvement. There’s one guy responsible for that. That same coach from West Virginia has now qualified for the NCAA Tournament seven times in the last eight seasons, made the Elite Eight three times and the championship game twice. His resume vaults him alongside the premier coaches in college basketball; he directs a program that is now a model of consistency. It’s not a change that happened overnight or without its fair share of trial and error. But to fully understand the Beilein-led transformation, take a dive into a desperate timeout, a huddle at the Big Ten Tournament in 2009. A glimpse into a fledgling program learning what it really takes to win. *** He had to call timeout to get something out in the open. After all, a potential NCAA Tournament bid for the first time in 10 years — and the entire trajectory of the program — hung in the balance. It was the second round of the Big Ten Tournament, and Beilein’s squad trailed Illinois by 20 late in the second half. Beilein and his team had all but conceded hope of a comeback. If this team — sitting at .500 in conference play — came short of the NCAA Tournament, murmurs asking for his job would only amplify. It would’ve been 11 years and counting without a tournament bid, three under Beilein. In a candid moment, he warned his team of what a blowout loss might mean. For the team. For the school. For him. “Beilein called timeout just to say, ‘Look the committee is watching this game,’” Wright, a Michigan forward from 2006-10, recalled. “‘If we get blown out this could hurt us.’ He literally said that during the timeout. He said, ‘We’ve got to get this as close as possible.’ It wasn’t ‘win the game,’ just ‘keep it close.’” The timeout was a blunt reality, a mark of tempered expectations. That coveted leap to prominence doesn’t come without putting one foot in front of the other, taking one small step after another. Michigan trimmed its deficit, losing by a respectable 10 points. It would later be selected as a 10-seed in the NCAA Tournament, where it fell to the Blake Griffin-led Oklahoma Sooners in the second round. Still, there’s no way to see the 2008- 2009 season as anything other than an unmitigated success. In the first season free of scholarship limitations due to the Ed Martin payment scandal, the Wolverines made the NCAA Tournament for the first time in 11 seasons. Every tidal wave begins with a ripple. That rag-tag group in 2009 laid the foundation for what came next. *** “Culture shift” is a phrase that gets thrown around in sports, when change wants to be sugarcoated with a smile. It can often be meaningless and exaggerated in its tone. There are countless examples of failed attempts at culture shifts in sports because culture, as it turns out, is hard to shift. This isn’t one of those stories. As with everything John Beilein does, this change took time, and it was a process. But the results have been on display for nine years now. The national runner-up Wolverines are a shining beacon of a college basketball program, and it’s easy to forget it hasn’t always been that way. “When he first started recruiting me in 2007, the program … was obviously not in a good place,” said center Jordan Morgan, a member of the Wolverines from 2011-14. “At that point in my life, Michigan going to Final Fours and winning Big Ten Championships, it was a little bit hard to fathom at the time just because of where Michigan was at.” At the start of Beilein’s tenure, “where Michigan was at” could only be classified as oblivion. It hadn’t made the NCAA Tournament since 1998, and at a school in the heart of the Lloyd Carr era in football, the basketball team toiled with mediocrity more than disaster. Well removed from the Fab Five era, with the 1989 national title a faint memory, Michigan had yet to turn a page on the court. Final Fours? This team just wanted to make the damn tournament. It was stuck with the only thing worse than failure: Irrelevance. Hiring John Beilein, a little-known Jesuit coach with a measured attitude and a sunny disposition, did little to change that reputation overnight. Internally, though, the overhaul began immediately. “I’m not sure I really knew what ‘rebuild that program’ meant,” Morgan said. “But from the minute that I met him, he used to talk to me about rebuilding. Rebuilding a program. Building something special. Being a part of rebuilding that. And that was what made me want to go to Michigan in the first place.” Before practices even began, Beilein and his staff instituted a number of tests — tests of skill and of athleticism — that each player needed to accomplish before he could even step on the practice court. They ranged from conditioning requirements, like running a mile in 5:30 or less, to skill-based measures, like making 50 threes in five minutes. Couldn’t do it? No practice. No games. No exceptions. Those tests still exist today, though they’ve evolved with more focus on skill than the mile run, for example. The best of the best can now peak at 70 or even 80 threes in that same timeframe. “If you could do those tests, it didn’t necessarily mean you were gonna be a better basketball player. It was testing your mental toughness, I think,” said guard Zack Novak, a Michigan forward from 2008- 12. “He was coming in, saying, ‘I’m going to get you as tired as you can be, and you’re not allowed to practice until you show me that you can get through that and win these drills.’ ” And once you made it into practice, each drill had a winner and a loser, with punishment doled out to the latter. “You have to learn how to win,” Novak said. “That’s a real thing. Just the way that we competed in practice, every drill. … He just had us learning how to win, how to execute when the pressure was on.” But learning how to win doesn’t automatically translate into winning. The players struggled to grasp the complexity of an offense that has since come to be accepted as one of the most efficient in the country. At the time, its genius was also its biggest flaw. “There are so many plays, and there are always plays within the plays,” Wright said. “And there are always counters of the plays within the play that can change just by someone doing an action.” Confused? You wouldn’t be alone. Bewildered players asked questions that often took 30 minutes for Beilein to explain before his team could execute it all. MAX MARCOVITCH Daily Sports Editor John Beilein leads the way Read more online at michigandaily.com