<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9101090376
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
910228
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Thursday, February 28, 1991
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1C
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo Color JOHN COLLIER
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>


:
Webber: "I want to have things balanced. In case one thing
leaves me -- like basketball -- I don't want everything else to
collapse." 
Chris Webber's drawer overflows  with some of the hundreds of
letters from universities across the country. 
Proud of their big brother Chris Webber are, from left: Jason,
13; David, 10; and Rachel, 8. 
Chris with his Dad, Mayce,  who says: "This recruiting stuff,
man, it's a dirty business." 
In his senior season at Country Day, Chris Webber is averaging
29 points, 15 rebounds and five blocked shots.
</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1991, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
STALKING CHRIS WEBBER
FAME BRINGS BIDS, BUT PRECIOUS LITTLE TIME TO BE A KID
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
One coach, upon learning that Chris Webber goes to church every Sunday,
dashed off a letter saying, he, too, was a regular churchgoer: "The other
night we were singing a hymn, and I had the joy  of Jesus in my soul -- and
then I started thinking about you, Chris, and how, if you played basketball
for our  school, it would bring joy to my soul, too."

  Chris threw the letter away.

  Another  coach got wind that Chris was sensitive to family matters. So he
phoned the teenager and began moaning about his divorce, how it was tearing
him apart, affecting his work. "Chris," he said, nearly breaking  into tears,
"if you came to our school, it would make my life so much better . . . "
  Chris handed the phone to his father, who told the guy no thanks.
  There was the coach from Southern Cal who  wrote how he loved watching
Chris play basketball, and how he had followed his career since junior high
school -- except that he spelled the name wrong, over and over, calling him
"Weber"  instead of Webber.
  And then there was the coach from a college in Nebraska who called the
house and couldn't get anything right.
  "So, Chris, you guys play Class D ball, right?"
  "No, Class B."
  "Oh,  right. So, how do you like living in Birmingham?"
  "I live in Detroit."
  "Oh, right. Say, uh, how's your Dad? I spoke with him just yesterday."
  "My Dad's been out of town all week."
  "Well,  listen, we sure would like you to come to our school. . . . "
  On it goes. Behind Chris Webber, in front of Chris Webber, above Chris
Webber, below Chris Webber -- this endless parade of college  basketball
characters. Coaches, recruiters, alumni, boosters, all tripping and stumbling
and generally embarrassing themselves, chasing any lead, swallowing any tip --
"Where will he go? Which way  is he leaning?" -- all because this tall,
graceful, well-mannered son of an automotive worker can play basketball better
than any other high schooler in the country.
  He can swoop and dunk. He can  pass like a point guard. His body, long
and thick, can find the ball through any crowd of defenders, two, three, four,
they can't stop him. One game, he scored 38 points and sat out the fourth
quarter.  Another, he had nine dunks by halftime. In a playoff game, an
alley-oop pass went too high, over his head, but he just hung in the air until
the ball ricocheted off the glass, then he grabbed it and stuffed it. Amazing.
His coach  at Birmingham Detroit Country Day, Kurt Keener, says Chris Webber
plays the  game "as if God built him to  do it."
  But God never had recruiting in mind. You thought  you had a hard time
getting through high school? Here is a teenager who has actually removed the
phone from his bedroom because it never stops ringing. He has keys to four of
his friends' houses --  which he goes to even if they are not home -- just to
escape the madness. When he goes to school, people ask, "Which college have
you picked?" and when he goes to the video arcade they ask, "Which college
have you picked?" and when he stops at the supermarket they ask, "Which
college have you picked?" -- as if their lives will change with his decision.
  Sometimes, he makes things up, just to throw  them off. They swallow it
anyhow. He could say he was going to Mars and recruiters would scurry to find
what Mars was offering.
  "It's embarrassing," Webber says. "All these grown-ups making this  big
fuss over me."
  Embarrassing, yes. Also silly and sad. This is a story of the biggest prize
 in high school basketball, a 6-foot-9 specimen who can dunk, shoot, pass,
rebound and hang in the air long enough to challenge a balloon. 
  But mostly this is a story of a kid who wants to be a kid. And can't seem
to find the time.
  At first I loved all the attention, I admit that," Chris Webber  says, "but
now, I just wish it would stop." He is stretched across his bed at home in
Detroit, a simple brick house on a street full of simple brick houses.
Downstairs, the phone, as usual, is ringing.  Chris ignores it. He looks
around his small bedroom. On one wall is a huge poster of Charles Barkley. On
the  other, a picture of Big Daddy Kane, the rap artist. Near the bed is an
open  Bible and an  old phonograph with a gospel record on it.  Behind the bed
is a plastic bag full of sneakers. And next to it, the huge box of recruiting
letters from universities across the country.
  Hundreds of  envelopes. Name the school. It's in there. Unopened.
  "I used to read every letter I got," he says. "Now I get maybe 50 a week,
and I don't even look at them. They're so phony. I just give them to  my
younger brothers. I used to take every phone call myself, too. But now, my
sister has a list of names of people I don't want to talk to, and she tells
them I'm not  home."
  "When did the calls  begin?" he is asked.
  "Eighth grade."
  It was that year that someone actually offered his father $20,000 to send
Chris to a certain high school in Indiana. Ever since, Webber's life has only
 partly belonged to him. Basketball controls the rest, yanking him as if he
were  on a leash.
  Although Webber desperately wanted to attend Southwestern High in
Detroit, where many of his friends  were going, his parents chose the
prestigious Country Day School in Birmingham, a place that demands a coat and
tie each day, has terrific sports teams and costs thousands of dollars a year
in tuition -- unless you get a scholarship, as Webber did. It was his parents'
way of assuring that  he  got an education along with the athletics.  But for
the young Webber, it  seemed like just another reminder  that basketball made
him different.
  "When I first got to Country Day, it was really hard to adjust," he says.
"It's pretty much a white, upper-middle-class school, and a lot of my
classmates had  these stereotypes about blacks from Detroit. They thought we
all had big gold chains, that my mom worked in a Laundromat, that all my
friends were thugs, that I wouldn't get good grades."
  Eventually,  Webber's personality -- which, when he's relaxed, is friendly,
funny and complimentary -- won them over. But he never quite felt at home at
Country Day. "I still don't," he says. He recently gave a talk  to an assembly
about racial prejudice, telling the story of how his great- grandfather was
lynched by whites in Mississippi. It has become an important subject to him.
Of all the kids in school, he remains  closest to a small group of black
teammates from his Detroit neighborhood.
  "They're like me," he says. "Their parents made them go to Country Day."
  But if Chris Webber feels funny, like a  standout, let's be honest. He
would stand out no matter what high school he attended. Basketball will do
that --  especially if you dominate the way Webber does. Watching him play,
even against the better  teams, is like watching a man among  boys. He towers
over most of the other players and is so superior in shooting and rebounding
that he frequently gets bored and tries to make fancy passes or bring  the
ball upcourt just to stay interested.
  Webber led Country Day to the Class C state championship two years ago
and the Class B title last year. In his senior season, when Country Day again
is  ranked No. 1 in Class B, he is averaging 29 points, 15 rebounds and five
blocked shots. More than that, he just looks like an NBA player-in-training.
His sleek body moves, his strength, his shooting  touch -- even his
trash-talking. For all his manners, Webber, on the court, is not to be taken
lightly. He likes to dig at his opponents, mumbling, "Don't  even think about
coming in here. . . . Don't even try to shoot that ball.  . . ."
  Once, when a particular opponent got mouthy in return, Webber took a pass
on the wing, drove straight at him, full speed, and nearly leaped over him en
route  to the basket, knocking him to the ground with his legs. "I thought the
kid was dead," Keener said.
  Talent. Size. Competitive fire. No wonder the recruiters drool. You can't
get a college coach to  compliment Webber on the record -- that is forbidden
by the NCAA until he signs -- but off the record, they call him "a franchise .
. . he'll make your program . . . the best in the country." Which is why, on
any given day, at least several major college coaches will be in the Country
Day gymnasium, leaning against a wall, watching Webber practice. They can't
speak with him -- more NCAA rules -- but  they come anyhow to make eye
contact, to send a silent message: "We want you." For this, they fly in from
all over the  country. One remarkable afternoon, Lute Olson from Arizona, Mike
Krzyzewski  from  Duke and Jud Heathcote from Michigan State were all in the
gym to watch Webber play -- in a pickup game.
  It never stops. When Webber visits campuses, it's a red alert. He took a
trip to Duke and  was quickly roomed with Christian Laettner, the team's star
player. When he recently attended a Spartans game at the Breslin Center, the
student cheering section began to chant, "WEB-BER! WEB-BER! WEB-BER!" He was
not impressed.
  "It's so phony," he says, shaking his head and hooking his long arms across
his chest. "I went there with Jalen Rose (another hot prospect, from
Southwestern), and at one point, Jalen tapped me and said, 'Look at the
bench.' There was this guy, maybe a student manager or something, and as soon
as he saw us, he walked over and whispered something to another student, who
goes  over to the cheering section. And next thing you know, they're cheering,
 'WEB-BER! WEB-BER!' I mean, the whole thing was set up. I saw it!"  He
shakes his head again. "So phony," he says. "I hate that."
  Now. Maybe you say it's a shame that a kid who will turn 18 on Friday  has
already become so cynical. But what did we expect? This is big-time high
school basketball. Even Keener, Webber's coach, is  not spared.
  "I've already been on four or five radio talk shows from Kentucky," he
says. "People call in and say, 'How y'all doing up there in Detroit? What's
Chris thinking? How's he been playing?  Does he want to come to school here?'
. . . "
  Fortunately for Keener -- and maybe everyone else -- Kentucky has been
eliminated from the picture. Webber has narrowed his choices to five schools
--  Michigan, Michigan State, Minnesota, Duke and Detroit Mercy. Which hasn't
stopped the controversy. Just this week, the Detroit News reported that Webber
had decided on Michigan. Webber flatly denied  it in the Free Press the next
day, saying the News' sources "might have been a 3-year-old, for all I know."
  There have been nasty accusations flying across the battlefield, charges
that one school  is telling Webber that another school's coach is a racist,
charges that Perry Watson, who coaches Southwestern, will become an assistant
at Michigan and will bring Webber and Rose with him. It is crazy.  Out of
control. As Mayce Webber, Chris's father, says, "This recruiting stuff, man,
it's a dirty business."
  And in the middle sits a thoughtful, smiling teenager who, were he not so
tall and gifted,  might be hanging around the mall with the other kids  today.
True, he might not have a future in pro sports that could bring him millions
of dollars. But he wouldn't feel like a piece of meat, either.
  "Sometimes I do feel like a prisoner of basketball," Webber admits.  "I
haven't  gone on vacation during the school year in so long. A lot of my
friends go to  Florida and stuff. We always have to  practice. In the
summertime, I play in all these leagues, like 200 games a year. If I do go
away, it's with a team to  play basketball somewhere. It's not like normal
kids."
  Downstairs, the phone  rings again. He ignores it.
  "Do you think people would like you if you didn't play basketball?" he is
asked.
  "Well, I think they would like me, but it would take them a lot longer to
get to know  me. Right now, they like me without even knowing me."
  "What if you couldn't play basketball?" comes the question.
  "I think about that a lot. Did you ever see the movie 'Mo' Better Blues?'
That  trumpet player, what happened to him  (his lip is busted in a street
fight and he loses his ability to play), that was really scary to me. When he
couldn't do what he wanted to do, he wanted to crawl  up and die.
  "I don't want to be like that. I want to have things balanced. In case one
thing leaves me -- like basketball -- I don't want everything else to
collapse."
  Pretty smart, huh? For  this perspective, he can thank his family: his
father, who intercepts many of the recruiters; his mother, Doris, whom Webber
says "couldn't care less about basketball, she just wants me to get a good
education"; and his younger brothers and sister -- Jeffrey, Jason, David and
Rachel -- who, when he plays a bad game, confront him as soon as he comes
home. "Chris, you played lousy tonight."
  "I  like that," he says. "They're honest."
  And every now and then, life provides its own lessons. Not long ago, Webber
was at a camp with Pistons forward John Salley. "He was showing everybody
this  pivot move to the basket, and I was guarding him," Webber recalls. "I
blocked his shot, kind of showing off. He did it again, and I blocked him
again. He turned around and  said, 'All right, rookie.  I'm gonna teach you a
lesson.' Then he turned to the  crowd and said, 'I'm gonna go to my left and
dunk on him with this hand.' He  told me exactly what he would do and where he
would go. I tried to  stop him -- and he dunked on me. Easy. He could have
done it 15 more times if he wanted.
  "I said to myself, 'No matter what everyone else keeps telling me, I got a
long way to go.' "
  And once  again, it seems, the kid is smarter than many of the adults.
Webber still gets the ridiculous phone calls, still gets the bundles of mail.
"One  coach called here to  tell me he went to church, just  like me. He said,
'Chris, the preacher gave this great sermon last night, from the book of
Palms.'  Can you believe it? He said the book of Palms. Not Psalms. Palms. I
mean, I  just had to laugh."
  And maybe that is the best approach. Laugh it off. Still, teenagers
shouldn't have to endure this kind of thing -- driven from their houses,
hounded by the mail and the phone, watched at every practice,  every
scrimmage, every game. After all, there is always another Chris Webber. There
was Antoine Joubert before him and Earvin Johnson before Joubert. You would
think these recruiters would have  learned  not to drool so much over any one
kid. But perhaps they enjoy the chase as much as the capture.
  Whatever. Webber will make his decision, and life will go on. Hopefully
college will be more peaceful.  But the normal high  school life,  the
no-pressure, have fun, hang-out-and-be- kids years, they  is gone forever for
Chris Webber. And he barely knew them.
  Back at the house, Webber lumbers through  the living room toward the front
door, where his father is returning from work. He goes outside to greet him. A
photographer asks whether they would pose together.
  "Yeah, Dad, let's take a picture,"  Webber says.
  And they sit together on the front porch, arms around each other, looking,
for the moment, like a normal family. Inside, the phone begins to ring, but
neither Chris nor his father makes  any attempt to answer it.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
CHRIS WEBBER; BIOGRAPHY;  RECRUITMENT; HIGH SCHOOL; ATHLETE;;DETROIT; BASKETBALL
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
