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<UID>
0203220390
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
020322
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Friday, March 22, 2002
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
NWS
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1A
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM FREE PRESS COLUMNIST
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 2002, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
FINALLY, U-M STARS MUST TELL THE TRUTH
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
Alot of people knew about Ed Martin. Very few actually knew him. And the
fastest way to land in the second category was to ask questions.

"What does the guy do?"

"Where does he get his money?"

"How close is he to the Michigan basketball players?"

You asked those questions, you were frozen out. Shoulders shrugged. Eyes
turned away. It was like a secret society. The Ed Martin Inner Circle. Those
allowed inside included high school and college basketball players, who were
happy to take free gifts, no questions asked.

For years, apparently, Chris Webber, Maurice Taylor, Robert Traylor and Louis
Bullock were in that circle. They benefited from their silence. I personally
asked Webber about Ed Martin several times while Webber was at Michigan. He
would smile coyly and say, "Aw, what do you want to know about Ed Martin for?"

Here's what for, Chris. You are no longer a kid. You and the others are all
grown men, and three of you are extremely wealthy. Yet to this day, you have
kept mum on Martin, stayed inside his secret club, talking only when the
government yanked you in with a subpoena. Even then, no one is sure what you
said.

That should all end today. Martin, 68, has been indicted by the federal
government, accused of laundering money from illegal gambling operations. He
is charged with giving Webber $280,000, Traylor $160,000, Taylor $105,000, and
Bullock $71,000 -- and all of it came when they were prep or college players.

That's not pizza money.

And like it or not, those players owe their schools and the public some
answers.



Will it ever end?

Michigan has gone through two coaches and two athletic directors since
Martin's name first surfaced in the mid-1990s. You can tie all of that, in
some way, to the long shadow of Martin and his handouts.

Yet did any of the players come forward and admit anything? No. The secret
remained tight -- even as the basketball program crumbled.

The rumors about Martin, during that stretch, were legendary. He was a
basketball nut who paid for access. He drove Detroit high school stars around
in his car. He kept birthday cakes and free liquor in the trunk. He paid for
plane tickets and hotel rooms. He gave out cash.

He was supposedly around the U-M program since Bill Frieder was coach, and he
gained enormous access once Perry Watson joined Steve Fisher along with the
Fab Five. He was considered a booster -- but who knew how much he was
"boosting"?

Which is where this turns from just another NCAA story to something much
weightier. Martin allegedly was running a racket, the money he allegedly made
was illegal, and he allegedly gave a good chunk of it to these Wolverines at
least partly as a way of laundering it. He gives $100,000 in dirty cash to a
player. Poof. Money's gone. Somewhere down the road the player gives it back
-- tada. It's clean.

This isn't about a buying a recruit a hamburger.

And Webber, Taylor, Traylor and Bullock have some explaining to do.



Onus falls to Webber

Now, let's focus on Webber, because he's the oldest, the most famous, the most
successful -- and allegedly got the biggest wad from Martin.

"Chris wasn't living any extravagant lifestyle when he was attending college
or even before college," his former agent, Fallasha Erwin, said.

I agree. I knew Chris in high school and his two years in college. I knew his
parents and family. I went to his home. If he had $280,000, he did the best
job of hiding money that I've ever seen. And he was a heck of an actor. Chris
always moaned that everyone was making money off of him except him. He
lamented that Michigan could sell his No. 4 jersey, while he didn't have
enough to go out for dinner.

You mean $280,000 won't buy dinner?

A more likely scenario is that most of that money came to Webber late in the
process, his sophomore year, when he was headed for the NBA and most likely to
pay it back.

But if so, he needs to say it. This secret society should end now. These guys
may have not liked the college system when they played for Michigan, but by
attending, they accepted the rules. They filled out forms each year disclosing
income. If these charges are true, the players lied, and in lying, they helped
smear the very program that was developing them.

They won't go to jail for explaining. They are not being charged. But what
they will do is broom these shadows, give U-M a chance to finally get past
this, and send a message to the next young recruit that nothing is free, and
dirty money is dirty money.

Webber, ever since I have known him, has hung by this sentence: "Treat me like
a man."

It's time to act like one.



Contact MITCH ALBOM at 313-223-4581 or  albom@freepress.com. Catch "Albom in
the Afternoon" 3-6 p.m. weekdays on WJR-AM (760).
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<DISCLAIMER>
THIS ELECTRONIC VERSION MAY DIFFER SLIGHTLY FROM THE PRINTED ARTICLE.
</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
EDDIE MARTIN;U-M;SPT;ATHLETE;INVESTIGATION;MONEY LAUNDERING;GAMBLING;COLLEGE;BASKETBALL;HILDA MARTIN;CLARENCE MALVO;CHRIS WEBBER;MAURICE TAYLOR;ROBERT TRAYLOR;LOUIS BULLOCK
</KEYWORDS>
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