<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8801130479
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
880320
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Sunday, March 20, 1988
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1E
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1988, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
WOLVERINES KILL 2D-ROUND JINX
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
SALT LAKE CITY --  The smiles said it all. Weary smiles, puffed by heavy
breathing, hands on hips, sweat pouring down their cheeks. Glen Rice smiling,
and Terry Mills, a little grin, and Gary Grant  almost laughing, his tongue
hanging out. This was fun. This was a blast. And this was with 15 minutes left
in the game.

  Death of a jinx. All Michigan did Saturday was ram a roadblock head-on,
barreling  through the whispers that a Wolverine team can't make it past the
second round of an NCAA tournament and coming out, well, shall we say,
smiling?

  Take that.
  "Is the reputation finally behind  you?" someone asked Grant, the senior
guard, who scored 19 points in U-M's 108-85 blowout over Florida Saturday. "Is
the monkey finally off your back?" 
  "Yeah," he said, grinning, "and it was a big  monkey."
  Tell us about it. Was there anyone out there who didn't at least wonder
about -- if not bet on -- another Michigan stumble? Despite excellent talent,
no Bill Frieder team had ever reached an NCAA third round since he'd been at
Michigan. And he's been there eight years. That stuff happens enough, you
start to believe it.
  Forget it now. The monkey's dead.  Will they ever play a better  first half
than they did Saturday, these five shaved- head starters? (OK. Rumeal Robinson
isn't really shaved, but he's not exactly shaggy either.) They led by 10
points. Fifteen points. Twenty points.  They were so near-brilliant, you swore
the Florida players were shielding their eyes.
  "Personally," said Rice, who finally ignored the stitches in his right hand
and found that it worked just fine,  thank you, scoring 39  points, "I felt we
had the game won after the first six minutes."
  Take that.
And can you blame him? Not really.  Here was that rare moment in basketball
when the whole game  is a dance and you control the beat.  Syncopated magic.
Ah-cha-cha-cha. Rice going straight up, the ball coming straight down --
three pointer. Loy Vaught spinning up and in and up and in again. Rumeal
Robinson driving the lane past one, two, three taller men, banking it home.
And Grant. All over. Slapping the ball away, diving, poking, stealing,
feeding, swinging back downcourt before his teammates even sank the lay-up.
  "I wanted to show right from the start that we came to play," said Grant,
who suffered a poor performance Thursday night against Boise State. "I wanted
people to know if this  was going to be my last game, I was going to go out
fighting."
  He made his point. Somewhere between Thursday and Saturday this group of
Wolverine players rediscovered their energy and their confidence.  Perhaps it
was the scare by Boise State. Perhaps it was the notion that everybody around
them was saying they'd choke. But Rice took the bandages off his hand (deep
gash) and Grant took the protective  brace off his thighs (groin pull) and the
whole team said, let's go, let's mix it up.
  Take that.
  "Were you worried about this game?" Grant was asked. "Were you worried
you'd come out flat like  the second half Thursday?"
  "Yeah," he said. "I was thinking about it all night. I couldn't sleep. I
talked to the AT&T operator for an hour and a half just to pass the time."
  "What did you talk  about?"
  He grinned. 
  "You know, stuff. I got her phone number."
  Aha. An omen.
So score one for the maize and blue, and then wrap it up and hand it over to
Frieder, the rumpled coach who  has had to endure a nasty stigma for too long.
This second round had become a fat shadow to the skinny man, darkening his
glory.
  "I'm just glad I won't have to hear it anymore," he said. "It didn't
really bother me. But it got to be a big thing."
  Not anymore. If nothing else in this spin-a-matic win over Florida, the U-M
reputation has been smashed like a wine glass off a skyscraper. Not only  did
the Wolverines blaze offensively, but they shut down every threat the strong
Florida team had boasted. The tall and foreboding center Dwayne Schintzius
(who can only be distinguished from Frankenstein  by the lack of a zipper on
his neck) was sent moping back home, almost unnoticed. Vernon Maxwell, the
star Gator guard, was neutralized by Grant better than acid in a stomach full
of Tums.
  "They  were faster than us, they were quicker than us, they outplayed us,"
said Florida coach Norm Sloan.
  That about covers it.
  And OK. On to Seattle. There is no telling what happens next. No
guarantees  whatsoever for the third round Friday. There is only what has
taken place. But in this case, that was significant.
  Here's proof: With 48 seconds left, Gary Grant finally came out of the
game, and  Frieder was there waiting, ready to give him the old butt slap.
Only Grant surprised him. He hugged his coach. The kind of hug you get after a
long journey, the kind of hug that shouts "Finally! Finally!"  And Frieder,
suddenly 100 pounds lighter, his back now monkey-free, took the hug and said
to his star: "Nice job."
  Right back at you, coach.
  Take that.
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<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
COLLEGE;BASKETBALL;U-M
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
