<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9301060332
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
930212
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Friday, February 12, 1993
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1C
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1993, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
WITH WEBBER, NO LONGER A KID, THE IMAGE IS OFTEN
ONLY PART OF THE REALITY
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
Think about 19. Think about where you were, what you were doing. Maybe
getting drunk at a frat party, maybe starting a job you knew would never last,
maybe flopping on the couch, watching TV, trying  to decide what to do with
your life. It's an in-between age, 19, and most likely you felt torn at some
point by the childhood behind you and the adulthood that lay ahead. Like a
wishbone.

  Think of  Chris Webber, 19, as college basketball's biggest wishbone --
with half the country yanking on one side, half the country yanking on the
other: Stay young. Grow up. Be mean. Be gentle. Be different.  Be the same. 

  You look at this kid, you wonder why he doesn't wear earplugs.
  "Wherever I go," says the 6-foot-9 sophomore, stretching out on a couch,
"people always say something. They say, "I  know you're gonna go pro, Chris,
but you should stay one more year.' 
  "Or they say: 'I know you're gonna stay, Chris, but you should go to the
pros.'
  "Or they say, 'Hey, Chris, you're livin' all  right. Don't look so mean out
there.'
  "As soon as I meet somebody, I count the seconds. They're either gonna ask
me about staying, or they're gonna give me advice. It's like, what am I, an
idiot?"
  He is not an idiot. Chris Webber, for all that muscle and bulk, for all
those rim-hanging dunks, thundering fast breaks and rebounds caught in his
pterodactyl wingspan, for all that, he is -- and this  may surprise you --  as
introspective and sensitive a college basketball player as you'll ever meet.
He is open with his time. He is forward in his thinking. He shakes more kids'
hands than Michael Jackson.  Most of his life has been this one long press
conference. He spent high school hounded by the question, "Where are you going
to college?" He has spent college hounded by the question, "When are you
going to the NBA?"
  Lately, he feels, a new question has been thrown in the chamber: "What's
the matter with you? Why do you behave like such a jerk out there?"
  To which he says: "Huh?"
  This  Sunday,  Michigan travels  to Indiana, to play the most important
game left in the Big Ten season. And Webber, who is always wondering about his
life -- this is what makes him special -- can't help wondering  this: Would
things have been different had his uniform been different?
  What would they say if Chris Webber had played for Indiana?
'Traveling sideshow' on road
  "I'll tell you what they'd say,"  he answers. "They'd say, 'Look, he's
always smiling, he's got such personality, such heart! He's a mean player but
a good mean player. He's enthusiastic and he understands the game. That's what
Bobby Knight wants from his kids.'
  "Or if I went to Duke? They'd be saying, 'He's such a smart player! Look at
the way he pushes Bobby Hurley! Look at how he gets everyone pumped up! He's
smart, and a  great overall person!' "
  He takes off his cap, rubs his shaved head and laughs.
  "It would be different for me at a lot of other schools."
  He puts the cap back.
  "But then, it'd be different  for all of us."
  True. Ever since Webber, Jalen Rose, Juwan Howard, Jimmy King and Ray
Jackson became the Fab Five, Basketball's Beatles, Never Met A Jam They
Wouldn't Slam, they have also become  a shtick in people's minds, an act --
and a marketing tool. A way for arenas to sell tickets. A way for TV to get
ratings. People think nothing of using them for profit, hanging autographed
pictures  in restaurants, hawking their jerseys.
  Or promoting their telecasts. Before the last Michigan- Indiana game, I
watched as Dick Vitale from ESPN got Webber to stand in the middle of an empty
court,  arms tight at his side, head pointed at the rafters, like some android
soldier -- "This'll only take a second, Chris," the producer kept saying, "we
really appreciate your time" -- and then the cameras  rolled and Vitale
launched into his act, screaming: "MICHIGAN HAS THE MOST POWERFUL FORCE IN
COLLEGE BASKETBALL TODAY, CHRIS WEBBER. . . . "
  They used him like a prop. But later, during the broadcast, Vitale
criticized Webber  and  Rose for  showboating too much on the court. Vitale?
The same guy who posed Webber for his act? Now he was slamming the kid for
doing his own?
  "I never would have done  that stuff if I'd known what he was gonna say
about us," Webber says.  "But that just happens. They don't give us the same
respect they give other schools. If Bobby Knight were coaching this team, we
wouldn't get as much hassle. Even with all the crazy things he says, the stuff
he throws, the whip he used in practice, all that's forgotten because he's
Bobby Knight. They have this way of thinking about him. Same goes for places
like Duke, or North Carolina, or Georgetown.
  "But us? They don't take us as seriously as other schools. Ever since last
year, we're like this traveling sideshow."
  And Webber is center ring.
19-3: U-M's way works
  Now, this is not fair, even if it's understood. The Michigan kids do play
breakneck basketball, they often choose alley-oop over pick-and-roll,
behind-the-back over behind-the-foul-line. But don't forget: They are 19-3.
Last season they went to the championship game. It's not as if this stuff
doesn't work. They lost to Indiana (now No. 1 in  the country) by a point, and
Duke (formerly No. 1 in the country) by a handful of points, and Iowa (a top
10 team) in an emotion-soaked away game.
  And that's it for losses.
  Meanwhile, Webber  (19.3 points, 9.5 rebounds) has continued to shine,
despite a broken nose, despite crowds of defenders, and despite more
finger-pointing and suggestions than Bill Clinton gets walking down Main
Street. Everyone has an opinion on Chris Webber. People dissect his body. They
project him in the NBA. They analyze his relationship with Michigan coach
Steve Fisher.
  What most of them don't do is talk  to him.
  "You know, this stuff about me going pro?" he says, his voice quick yet
almost sleepy, the way he gets when he's serious. "What people don't
understand is that I'm really scared of that life-style.  I'm not sure I want
to be grown up like that yet. That's why I'd want to stay.
  "But then, I went to lunch the other day with Shonte Peoples from the
football team, and we didn't have enough money  for the food. We had to, like,
take two pops off, and return this fish sandwich, get a three-piece chicken
instead of a five- piece. And you can't help but think, 'If we had some money,
like the pros,  we wouldn't have to go through this.'
  "People don't understand about not having money. Or, like, calling your
mother, and hearing she had to work overtime. Or finding out your father's car
broke  down. All that stuff affects you.
  "I heard this guy on ESPN say, 'Chris doesn't need to go pro, because his
parents are both working.' I'm like, hey, you don't know anything about me. So
what if  they're working? Do you know where they're working, or if they're
happy? Or if I'm happy? Or if I like school? I'm like, you don't know anything
about me."
  He sighs.
  "And then they criticize  me for trash talking."
Indiana wasn't his style
  Did you know Webber once took a visit to Indiana? Unofficial. He was a
junior in high school and he went to see a friend. They were invited to the
gym, during a practice, and Knight rushed over to talk. This is the same
Knight who does things only his way, who wants players who conform, players
who don't showboat. People think Bobby Knight would  thumb his nose at a Chris
Webber.
  "Hey, I got the papers in the office," Knight joked just minutes after
meeting Webber. "You can sign them, come to school here, we can give you an
Indiana pin right  now."
  Thumb his nose. Uh-huh.
  "What did you think of Knight?" I ask Webber.
  "I thought he was nice. He ran a good practice."
  "Did you ever consider going there?"
  "No."
  "No?"
  "It's not my style of play."
  Well. Give him credit for knowing what he wants. And give him credit for a
little more. Sure, Webber may hang on a rim, or give a menacing look that
suggests he just  kicked an ox, and the ox went down. Sure, he may go
face-to-face with  Rose, his friend since junior high, like two football
players working themselves into attack mode. But so what? Whom are they
hurting?  And if you think those two invented trash talking, you obviously
never heard of Larry Bird, who was King Mouth in the NBA.
  We forget these kids are sophomores. We forget they are hailed as rock
stars, then asked to be in chemistry class by 9 a.m. We forget that stuff. But
we don't forget to pass judgment. Not you. Not me. Not Dick Vitale.
  "If you want to judge me, judge me after you meet me," Webber pleads.
"Don't judge me by what Vitale says. He doesn't know me from Adam."
  I have an easier suggestion. If Webber makes a funny face, or does a little
childish showboating, but then  you  see him sounding very mature,  saluting
his opponents, then you hear him talk about the pros, then talk about the joys
of college, if you see him laugh, then scream, then sulk, then smile, and you
find  yourself saying, "What's with this Webber kid, he's a bit of a
contradiction?" -- well, try to remember age 19.
  Weren't we all?
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
U-M; BASKETBALL; COLLEGE; CHRIS WEBBER
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
