<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8601140156
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
860328
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Friday, March 28, 1986
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo PIERRE DUCHAINE
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
SEE ALSO STATE EDITION PAGE 1D
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1986, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
GREATEST TEAM YOU NEVER SAW  
SEASON'S END MEANS THE END OF WEBBER COLLEGE'S SEASONS
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
BABSON PARK, Fla. -- The gym is empty now. Just two baskets staring at each
other across a hardwood floor. Flies circle overhead. The air is sticky. It's
hot. It's still. It's dead. It's over.
Dies the season, dies the program. Almost nobody knows what went on here at
Webber College and almost nobody ever will now. Most American eyes this
weekend are on the NCAA Final Four in downtown Dallas.  Millions will watch
it. Millions will bet on it. It's a big story.

  But this is a better story.
  This is a story about a chance of a lifetime, a deal you'd be crazy to take
and crazier to pass  up. This is a story of a tiny college and its gunslinging
president, named Buck, who gave a basketball coach, named Nick, a chance to
bring a handful of kids from the streets of New York and Baltimore  and
Buffalo down to the middle of nothing in Florida, to an auditorium with two
backboards nailed to the walls and red ants crawling on the floor, and to work
a miracle.
  And they almost won it all.
  This is a story about the Webber College Warriors, who disappeared forever
last week, and who might have been the best college basketball team you've
never seen. They just ran out of time.
 Imagine  the conversation. You're a young basketball player who couldn't make
Division I -- maybe grades, maybe lack of recruiting -- so you've been playing
junior college ball, or maybe not playing at all, and  you're just hanging
around in August of 1983 trying to decide what you should do next and the
phone rings.
  "This is Nick Creola," the voice began. "I'm the new coach at Webber
College. I'm looking  for a man of your caliber. I'll give you a full
scholarship, you'll play right away, you'll get a chance to see sunny Florida.
If you're interested, there'll be a plane ticket waiting for you next
Thursday.  Come down. Look around. If you like the place we'll sign you right
there."
  This was the sales pitch Creola used on his prospects -- all of whom he'd
collected in two weeks' time -- and as he drove  to the Orlando airport that
Thursday he still had no idea how many of them would buy it. "I had no
recruiting budget," he said. "What else could I do?"
  He had only taken the job himself a few weeks  before. Who takes a coaching
job in August? At Webber College no less, a tiny business school on the curb
of the Bible Belt, with 450 students and no gym. Heck, the whole basketball
idea was just a stunt  by the school president to get publicity.
  It was a gimmick. An investment in advertising. It was crazy. Which means
it was just the kind of thing G.W. (Buck) Cleven, a 67-year-old former bomber
pilot turned college president, would do.  Cleven is a big man, with white
hair and ice-blue eyes. He rules Webber. He calls himself "a benevolent
despot," keeps a .357 Magnum in the desk drawer, and once  fired a shotgun at
joyriders who were disturbing his campus. Get the picture?
  Only now he wanted a basketball team. A nationally renowned basketball team.
Get some ink for his college. So he hired Creola, who is short, tanned,
muscular and a winner.
  Creola was a successful junior college coach at Jamestown, N.Y. -- his team
was ranked No. 1 in the nation -- and back then, in 1983, he was 40  and
single and figured this Webber thing might help him move up in the coaching
ranks. Of course, he had no idea whom he'd be coaching.
  And then he got to the airport.
  "I looked around the baggage  area and there were five or six big black
kids, and they were talking, some of them knew of one another, and I said to
myself, 'Holy jeez. This town is in for the shock of their lives.' "
Why? Because  this is not New York or Baltimore. This is the South, and
changes come slowly, and Webber College is mostly white. It's hardly the
setting for a supersonic, inner-city-type basketball team. Drive out  to
Webber. If you can find it. Take route 27 to Fat Boy's Barbeque, turn right,
and keep going. Don't look for any other landmarks, because there aren't any.
Just some orange groves and baked grass that's  as hard as bristle. And after
a few miles, it's just sort of there. A handful of small yellow buildings.
Webber College.
  It was here that Creola brought players such as "Rockin' Rodney" Jones from
 the East Side of Buffalo, and Big Joe Farmer from the Bronx,  and Dennis Pope
from Baltimore and Carl (Jete) Jeter and his brother Gary, and Joe Patterson,
who can dribble the ball behind his back and  through his legs and over his
head while on one knee.  Brought them into an auditorium with no air
conditioning -- it had to be at least 100 degrees -- pointed to the makeshift
baskets and said, "Let's  go, let's get started."
  The floor was carpeted -- carpeted? -- and the ball kept skipping away.
Gnats were flying around that stuck to the wet skin of the players. One player
took off his socks and  wrung the sweat out like a sponge. Creola, wearing
shorts, leaned down on one knee to watch a drill and jumped up yelling, "What
the hell?" and there were red ants all over his legs chewing on him.
  A fight broke out that first practice, a fight between two players, and the
others instinctively rushed in and broke it up. And then they looked at each
other, sweat washing their faces, and there  was a sudden realization that
they either died through this separately or lived through it together.
  "I owe you guys the chance to be national champions," Creola said that
first day. "How can you  get beat? How can you get beat with what you're going
through here?"
  They had nothing. But nothing plus desire is no longer nothing. It's a
beginning.
  There are only about 120 people on this  earth who can tell you about that
first game. It was played in a local high school gym and the few students who
came to watch brought their books, figuring on early boredom.
  Creola's new team marched  in: eight blacks, two whites, two Cubans and the
coach. The first tap went up and Rodney Jones, a 6-foot-5 forward  who can
jump high enough from a standing position to bang his head on the rim, took
the ball in for a reverse dunk. Heads turned. What was this? The Warriors
laughed through that game, won it by something like 50 points, with alley-oops
and slams and jams.
  And they kept winning.  Where ever they went. They would later say their
practices -- in the hellhole of a gym -- were harder than their games. It was
movie material. These kids, mostly from northern cities, whirling and juking
and sending a buzz through the state. Winning? Is that the word for 141-62?
And 137-50? And 95-36? All real scores from Webber victories.
  "The word spread on us like wildfire," Creola said. Once during  a game
against an NCAA Division II opponent -- which is like Cyclops playing Harpo
Marx -- the big-school coach came over to Creola and promised to "take it
easy" on his kids.
  "Thanks," Creola said.  The Warriors  then blew the team away by 22 points.
  By the time that season ended, Webber was 34-5 and won the national
championship of the National Little College Athletic Association. It wasn't
magic. It was more like chemistry. The Webber players were all similar; all
good, flashy basketball players who had somehow missed the boat for bigger
schools. They had three common denominators: Creola,  the dunk  and poverty.
  "The first time I had Joe Farmer at school," says Creola, "he opened up his
suitcase and there was only a toothbrush inside. I said, 'Joe, where's your
clothes?' And he said,  'Coach, I'm wearin' them.' " Creola raised money to
buy Farmer and several others a decent wardrobe. He and assistant Steve
Prevesk ran bingo games every Sunday night to help pay for the players' books.
  Creola was tireless, selling ads for programs, coaching, phoning recruits,
coaching, playing psychologist, coaching.
  "We were like his family," says Jones. And they were all alone.
  Let's face  it. This was a basketball team full of sleek, street-smart
black players in a white Southern school in a white Southern community in a
region where Ku Klux Klan activities were more than an occasional  rumor.
"They burned a cross out on Highway 27 five or six years ago," Creola said.
"You knew it was gonna be tough."
  There were incidents. A black player and a white student scuffled in a bar.
Ugly  feelings arose over the players' dating some of the white female
students. This is a place where such emotions still bubble close to the
surface. So when the school threw a party that first year to wish  the team
well in post- season play, most students boycotted.
  But in the second year, things seemed to cool down. People got more used to
the idea. A new gym was built. A real gym.
  Things should  have gotten easier. They didn't. Prevesk remembers returning
from summer vacation and having this conversation with Cleven.
  "Cleven said, 'Now listen to me, you son of a bleep. See this hand? This  is
my wedding ring? See this hand? This is my national championship ring.  I
don't need any more rings. Now we do things my way.' "
  Those were the first notes of the death song. Cleven had bragged  about how
the team he dreamed up would win a title in its first year, and now that the
Warriors had done it, he wasn't sure he wanted them around any more. "We were
stealing his thunder," Creola said.
  Meanwhile, the Warriors had moved up a class, to the National Association
of Intercollegiate Athletics, and were now finding a different problem. No one
would play them. Ten Division II schools were  within a 90-mile radius, and
not a single one wanted Webber on their schedule. The reason was obvious: They
were afraid of losing.
  Instead, Webber had to take games as far north as Georgia and as  far
south as Miami. The players  traveled in a Dodge van, drove eight or nine
hours, ate at McDonald's, listened to Walkmans, talked. Once they broke down
in a town called Yeehaw Junction, and a few  players got out to roam around.
Then someone spotted a bull behind a fence and the players came running back
into the van as if bullets were being fired,  and they slammed the doors.
"Half these guys  had never seen a bull in their lives," Prevesk said,
laughing. "They didn't know what it was going to do."
  They kept winning. It was a simple formula: run fast. Lots of offense. A
pressing defense  that stole the ball often. And dunk, dunk, dunk.
  "Every player on the team dunked," Creola said. "People used to come out
just to see our warm-up drills. We had an alley-oop play from halfcourt that
was our trademark. It was beautiful."
  That season the Warriors went to Hawaii with money Creola had raised, and
they beat everyone they played -- including Chaminade, which had knocked off
national  powers Louisville and Southern Methodist.  The team wound up 32-5
and made it to the district semifinals of the NAIA. There was talk of moving
up yet again, to Division II. Things looked good.
  And  then the roof fell in.
  The experiment was called off.
  Buck Cleven -- who had once been quoted as saying, "We're using basketball
to let people know we're here. After that, the heck with it." --  announced
that Webber was dropping basketball after the 1985-86 season. A "one-year
moriturium," he called it. "It will never come back," interpreted Creola.
  The coach was crushed. So were his players.  But at Webber, Buck Cleven
makes all the rules. All the players could do was go out in a blaze. Go for
the NAIA national title. And they went for it. Won 24 regular-season games and
lost only one. Averaged more than  100 points a game. Led the nation in
scoring.
  And a funny thing happened.
  Support.
  People began to come out to the games. Signs started popping up. The racial
tensions that had  once existed had eased, if not to where we dream, at least
to where we can co-exist. 
  "A lot of times this school isn't fun," Prevesk said. "It's too small. But
the team was something fun. Something  to rally around."
  Webber won its district championship and was headed to the nationals in
Kansas City. In the  last home game, the crowd actually stood up when the
players were announced, and when  the first basket was scored, a roll of
toilet paper was thrown out on the court.
  Their last home game. Their first roll of toilet paper.
  It certain ways, it was as big as a victory can be.
  There is no happy ending. Webber lost in the first round of the NAIA
national tournament by four points.  The program is over. The players are
without a team. The coach is looking for a job. The gym  is empty.
  "It's taken a few years off my life, I'll tell you that," Creola said. "But
what a few years! I wouldn't trade them."
  It's tough to say how good the Webber Warriors were. Creola rated  them a
"low Division I team." Maybe. Who'll know now? No one good would play them.
Their creator gave up on them.
  Things are quiet around Webber now. Most players plan on transferring. So do
other  students. "I don't know 10 people coming back here," says Prevesk.
  For a brief moment something special happened here. Something was taken
from nothing, some colors of life were mixed together, black  and white, and
though there were problems at the beginning, toward  the end they were
learning how to get along. Basketball was teaching them. And one gets the
feeling this is the way the game was before  the NCAAs and TV cameras and
recruiting violations.
  Dies the season, dies the program. And it rests there, inside the quiet gym
near the orange groves. The arc of what might have been, going stale  with the
heat.
CUTLINE
Webber College's basketball paraphernalia is destined to become something of a
collector's item.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
BASKETBALL;WEBBER COLLEGE;MAJOR STORY
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
