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<UID>
9301080778
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
930303
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Wednesday, March 03, 1993
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL CHASER
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
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<ILLUSTRATION>

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<CAPTION>

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<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
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<AFFILIATION>

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<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1993, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
JACKSON DESERVES HIGH 5 FOR TUESDAY
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He calls himself the fifth wheel, or "Fab Four plus one," and he sits most
often on the edge of the spotlight, as the ESPN cameras zoom in on his more
celebrated teammates. Few people know that Ray  Jackson was every bit as
famous back in Austin, Texas, as Chris Webber was in Michigan. Few people know
that Ray used to light it up down there, night after night, in those humid
high school gyms, the  way Jalen Rose did in Detroit and Juwan Howard did in
Chicago.

  "You ought to be the man up there, Ray!" his friends complain when he goes
home.

  "Yeah, you're not playing enough, Ray!"
  "Tell  Fisher you're the man, Ray!"
  He nods at all this, but Ray Jackson knows, or has come to know, that there
is only so much room at the top of the mountain. They can't all be The Man. He
had trouble  with this last year. It hurt his pride. He even thought about
switching schools, leaving the Fab Five one digit short.
  Which is what made Tuesday night so special, because Tuesday night, Ray
Jackson,  the fifth man on the totem pole, did the top-drawer job. He led the
way. He gave the Wolverines more than what they wanted; he gave them what they
needed. He gave them the ball off the glass. Fourteen  rebounds? The guy with
the lowest rebounding average of all five starters? Yep. They don't have Ray
Jackson, they don't win this game.
  "I thought Ray was terrific," coach Steve Fisher said, after Jackson pulled
down a career-high 14 boards -- six of them offensive -- along with 13 points
to help pace Michigan past Iowa, 82-73. "We talked to him about rebounding
before the game," Fisher said.  "We asked him, 'What's the most you've ever
had?' He said 10. I said, 'You gotta get at least 10 tonight. You gotta beat
your best.' "
  He beat his best. On one series, Michigan missed a shot and Jackson came
flying in for the offensive rebound, snatching it away from two Iowa players.
The ball worked outside, another Wolverine shot went up, it missed -- and here
came Jackson again, sliding like  an envelope through a mail slot. Another
rebound. New life for Michigan.
 
Whatever it takes 
  "Did Ray tell you Hammer was his favorite rapper?" Chris Webber yelled in
the boisterous locker room  after the game. "He knew Hammer was out there in
the stands tonight. That's why he got all those rebounds."
  "What are you telling him that for, man?" Jackson protested. "I'm not into
Hammer. I'm  Ghetto Boys."
  They laughed the infectious laugh of college students, and they slapped
each other. Ray Jackson has done immeasurable good for this team by not
rocking the boat, by not sulking or complaining  about his role. They wanted
him to be the defensive specialist? OK, he'd do that. They wanted him to look
inside before shooting? OK, he'd do that. 
  Had he complained, had he whined that he was every  bit the prospect that
Webber and Rose were and he wanted equal minutes, this team might not be the
unit it is now. Instead, Jackson talked things over with his best friend --
his father, Ray Jackson  -- on many a long-distance call to Texas. And
finally, he took the advice.
  "Whatever it takes to win," Jackson said now in the locker room. "They
want me to rebound? OK, I can. Whatever it takes to win."
  "Did you hear that big ovation?"
  "Yeah, the crowd always helps us."
  "But they were clapping for you, Ray."
  "Yeah," he said, grinning. "That was good. That was all right."
Hammer  time 
  He pulled on a jacket. Ray Jackson has a loose, slinky body that bends at
the waist, so that he looks, at times, like he's two pieces, upper half, lower
half, glued together on an angle. He  walks almost pigeon-toed, dragging his
feet at times, and it almost seems like he is running out of gas. But when
they blow the whistle, he explodes with a smoothness that rivals any of his
teammates.  Ray Jackson is meant for the air.  He swims in it.
  "People don't know, Ray can do it all," Jimmy King, his Texas buddy,
insisted. "He can rebound, score, defend."
  "Ray," added James Voskuil,  "is a natural."
  On Tuesday night, when Webber had just four rebounds and fouled out early,
Jackson, The Natural, did what more of the Wolverines should be doing: chasing
the ball instead of watching  it. He also drew fouls, made most of his free
throws, had nice assists. And when it was over, Jackson, the fifth wheel, had
played more minutes than all but one teammate -- Rose.
  "For real?" he said.  
  For real. Eventually, he and Webber exited the locker room, came slowly
down the steps. There, against the wall, was Hammer, the famous rap artist,
dressed in brown leather pants and a fancy white  shirt. He was was talking on
a portable phone. He saw Webber. He hung up.
  "How you doing, Chris?" he asked enthusiastically. "Hey, you can't carry
it every night, big fella. Hang in. You did good."
  Webber smiled, moved on. Hammer looked after him. Then came Jackson,
walking slowly. Hammer saw him, nodded, offered his hand. 
  "Good game," he said, with a little smile.
  I don't know whether  he knew to whom he was talking. I don't know whether
he even knew Jackson's name. No matter. On Tuesday night, everyone else did.
And that was enough.
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