<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8901140591
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
890405
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Wednesday, April 05, 1989
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
7D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo ALAN KAMUDA
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
STEVER KORNACKI; MITCH ALBOM; JOHNETTE HOWARD
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
SPECIAL SECTION: NCAA CHAMPS '89
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1989, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
SOUTHEAST REGIONAL
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
March 17, 1989

By Steve Kornacki
ATLANTA --  It didn't look good for Michigan.
 
  Xavier proved exasperating much of the game. The Musketeers powered the
ball inside and frustrated the Wolverines  with their quick guards.
  The Wolverines needed more than 23 points apiece from Glen Rice and Rumeal
Robinson to put away a 15-point underdog. They got it from Terry Mills and
Demetrius Calip in a  92-87 win Friday at the Omni.
  Mills played with purpose  found, and Calip played on a memory. Together,
they were the difference.
 
March 19, 1989
By Mitch Albom
  ATLANTA -- He has the eyes  of an eagle  and the touch of a card shark.
And with his collegiate career on the line Sunday afternoon, he left the floor
 in three-point territory, raised the forearm,  flicked the wrist, waved
good-bye  with the fingers -- somebody get a video camera,  this is beautiful
-- and the ball arched in glorious perfection, dropping through the net the
way a pearl might drop  through water.
  Swish!
  We're outta here.
  "I knew that one was going in," said Glen Rice, who saw an awful lot of
them go in Sunday in Michigan's 91-82 win over South Alabama.  "When you're
on a roll like that, you  know before they ever reach the rim."
 
March 23, 1989
By Mitch Albom
  LEXINGTON, Ky. -- At the buzzer, finally, it was the dark blue that did the
celebrating, the dark blue that did the high fives  and the glory dance.
Rumeal Robinson had his fists waving, and Glen Rice  did a little jump step
and Steve Fisher was standing there, smiling like a Cheshire cat at the
miracle his young team had just  completed. The Michigan Wolverines, forever
in the wrong colors in this  wacky NCAA Tournament, finally sent the sky-blue
North Carolina Tar Heels home for spring break. Do not adjust the color on
your  TV set.
  "Michigan won?" you say. "They made it to the regional final?  They are one
game away from the Final Four? Michigan won?"
  It's true. Dark blue.
  Read it and leap. U-M 92, UNC 87.
 
March  25, 1989
By Johnette Howard
  LEXINGTON, Ky. --  The maize-and-blue crowd lingered now to roar at every
snipped shred of the champion's net.
  Michigan had just pulverized Virginia, 102-65. Michigan  was going to
college basketball's Final Four, and interim coach Steve Fisher was being
whisked through the on-court swirl to a live CBS-TV interview, where he would
soon be introduced to the nation by  game announcer Tim (Who Says I Need  a
Teleprompter?) Brant as "Steve Frieder."
  Sometimes you can't win, even when you win.
  On one side of the court, Michigan athletic director Bo Schembechler
stood in the wings.  His famous fist  of a face was clenched into a grin. The
Wolverines players were bobbing up and down on the court.  And when the TV
lights went up on Fisher, a barely decipherable  chant began in the stands.
  "What  are they saying? What are they saying?" Bo asked.
  "They're yelling, 'Come back Fisher, come back!' " someone answered.
  "Oh," Schembechler said, still  smiling. "I'm getting a lot of advice on
this one."
CUTLINE:
Loy Vaught and the Wolverines found elbow room against North Carolina in the
third round. North Carolina had knocked Michigan out of the  tournament the
two previous years.
Players on the Michigan bench jump for joy as the Wolverines go ahead of
Virginia in the Southeast Regional championship game.
Michigan football coach/athletic director  Bo Schembechler, who flew from Ann
Arbor to Atlanta after spring practices to watch first- and second-round
games, signs an autograph.
Terry Mills (right) and Loy Vaught tie up a Virginia player during  their
regional championship victory.
Michigan interim coach Steve Fisher gives guard Demetrius Calip a pat on the
back as he enters the Xavier game in Atlanta.
 Michigan hired the Georgia State University  band to play for Wolverines'
games during the first and second rounds of the NCAA Tournament in Atlanta.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
U-M;BASKETBALL;COLLEGE
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
