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<UID>
8901120971
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
890326
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Sunday, March 26, 1989
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1A
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo Color ALAN KAMUDA
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1989, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
U-M SOARS: FINAL FOUR!
WOLVERINES STEAMROLL VIRGINIA
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

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<BODY>
LEXINGTON, Ky. -- They cut down the net, one player at a time, each taking
a souvenir piece for himself.  Finally, it hung by a single strand, until the
Wolverines found their coach, gave him the  scissors, and marched him up the
ladder to the rim.  

  "FISH! FISH! FISH!" they screamed.

  Snip.
  Finally, Four.
  "This is a dream," said coach Steve Fisher, speaking for all of them,
after Michigan destroyed Virginia, 102-65, to advance to the college
basketball's Final Four next weekend in Seattle. "To think that two weeks ago
nobody gave us a chance -- and no one had even heard  of me -- and now, this.
Life is strange, isn't it?"
  Strange  and, for the Wolverines, suddenly wonderful. How quickly had this
all happened? How fast had Michigan risen from the muck of controversy  to one
of the fairest in the land? How fast? This fast. About 23 seconds. That's how
long it took Glen Rice to hit his first shot Saturday. From that point, you
could start packing.
  Overwhelming?  Virginia was lucky to leave with its clothes on. Michigan
took everything else. The right shots. The right rebounds. All the statistics.
 Even for the most maize and blueish, this was spectacular theater  from the
opening tap, when the Wolverines sprung like a tiger from a shoebox. Rice for
three! Sean Higgins for three! Rice for three! Bombs away. They never looked
back. Moments before the halftime buzzer, Rice launched his body into an
awkward orbit, heaved the ball, and watched it bank in off the glass. Michigan
by 19. Did we say 19?  At halftime?
  We did. And by the second half, the biggest battle  was at the pay phones,
where people scrambled for airline reservations to Seattle.
  "No stopping us now!" sang Terry Mills and Higgins as the cameras whirred.
"No stopping us now!"
  Finally, four.
Conquering  adversity
  "What are you going to do with your piece of the net?" someone asked Loy
Vaught, the center, in the jubilant locker room afterwards. 
  "It's in my wallet," he said. "I'm gonna keep it  for life." 
  He looked around at his teammates.  "I've never experienced anything like
this. It's like we're so much a team now, you know? We've overcome all this
adversity."
  Indeed, with each  game since the departure of head coach Bill Frieder to
Arizona State, the Wolverines have looked more and more like a unit. The
laziness that once plagued them is suddenly a memory. The lack of
concentration  is suddenly almost unimaginable. "We are improving every game,"
said Mills. It is hard to picture what might come next.
  Saturday was quick death. Virginia should have been given a cigarette and a
 blindfold. Here was Rumeal Robinson driving the floor, ducking inside,
banking baskets off the glass. Here was Mills, rising like a phoenix, tossing
in jumper after jumper. Here was Higgins, who until  last week was the
resident U-M space cadet, suddenly on fire, stepping back and firing one
three-pointer after another. He sizzled for 31 points and forged a whole new
reputation amongst his critics.
  And Rice? Good God. If there is anything more beautiful than watching this
guy shoot, bring it on. He fired from across the street, from Cincinnati, from
Louisville. Swish. Swish. Thirty- two points.  He had 19 before his Virginia
shooting rival, Richard Morgan, had any.
  It was brutal, fatal. The scoreboard lit up like a pinball machine.
Virginia -- which shot a miserable 38 percent -- could only pray for the
buzzer. And when it sounded, the team that had lost the Big Ten, lost its
coach, been abandoned by the pundits and pitied by the fans, had suddenly
entered the promised land of college  basketball  . . . 
  . . . by kicking down the door.
  Finally, Four.
  "When did you know this one was over?" Mills was asked.
  "Well, with 15 minutes left, I was ready to break out the party  hats and
kazoos. But coach Fisher told us to keep our heads in the game."
  He paused.
  "So I did."
United they stand
  He talks, they listen. There is a wonderful rapport developing between
Fisher, the interim coach, and these kids. And let's face it, it is largely
because of the circumstances. Nothing unites like danger, and, in a Russian
roulette tournament, that danger is always one  game away. Plus, since Fisher
has taken over the team, the Wolverines have had nothing but success. What's
not to like? He is 4-0. There will be no bad times this season for the interim
coach and his  team -- no matter what happens.
  Which is not to detract from what Fisher has done. Just calming this team
after Frieder split was an accomplishment. Fisher's most notable touch,
however, may be  with Higgins. The previously troubled 6-foot-9 swingman has
come alive the last two games,  thanks partially to a good old-fashioned
football chewing-out by Bo Schembechler last week -- and thanks partially to
Fisher's kinder  and gentler approach. 
  "With coach Frieder, I was afraid to make a mistake," Higgins said. "He
was a very intense guy. I'm more relaxed with coach Fisher. He lets  us play
looser, and so I'm not as tense."
  If he relaxes any  more, he's liable to score 50. Higgins shot an
incredible 7-for-10 from three-point range Saturday, pulling up and letting
fly like a  kid shooting in his driveway. He scored his 31 points in 20
minutes.  No hesitation. And each shot brought an explosion from the near-
sellout crowd, half of which seemed to be painted maize and blue.
  "How do you think you'll shoot in the Kingdome in Seattle?" someone asked
Higgins in the news conference afterward. 
  "Well, I guess we'll get out there about a week early to get used to it."
  "Uh, Sean," interrupted Fisher, sitting next to him, "We're going out
Thursday for a game on Saturday. We won't exactly have a week."
  Higgins grinned sheepishly. Fisher turned to the crowd.
  "He just can't wait to get out there, I guess."
  Finally, Four.
Team rebounds from past
  Who can blame him? This is a surprise for everyone, a birthday cake that
has dropped from the sky. Michigan  hasn't gone this far in basketball since
1976.  Sure, people talked about the Wolverines being a great team at the
start of the season. But wasn't that buried under a mountain of criticism, a
handful  of foolish losses, and the scuttlebutt over Frieder's sudden
departure? 
  It was. Except in the minds of the players. "Everyone gave up on us," said
Vaught. "But that just made us want it that much  more."
  They are getting it now -- this team some ranked No. 1 in the preseason
polls -- one glorious step at a time.  Believe it or not, the Wolverines are
quickly becoming a favorite story around  America -- the blushing coach and
his suddenly blossoming team. When Fisher came down off the ladder and draped
the net cord over the head of his young son Mark and walked off the court with
his wife,  Angie, and his players, well, there was a sudden sense of family,
of pride, of all good things.  Newspapers across the country lapped it up.
  And who knows?  Maybe they've got something.  Had the season ended
Saturday, the Wolverines would have deserved a salute for beating North
Carolina and reaching the regional finals. With this latest win, they get a
bon voyage and a kiss for luck. And suddenly  anything seems possible.
Thirty-seven points? Did they really win by 37 points?
  "What are you going to do with your piece if the net?" Rice was asked.
  "I'm gonna put it in my pocket," he said,  "and hope it brings me good
luck."
  Finally, Four.
  How much more can they need.?
CUTLINE:
U-M's Terry Mills exalts in victory while atop a ladder to help cut down the
net Saturday in Lexington,  Ky., after the Wolverines beat Virginia, 102-65,
in the NCAA tournament. Coverage starts on Page 1E.
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<KEYWORDS>
U-M;COLUMN;BASKETBALL
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