<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9001110037
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
900317
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Saturday, March 17, 1990
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL CHASER
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1B
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1990, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
WOLVERINES SURVIVE NIGHT OF AGONY
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
LONG BEACH, Calif. --  It was the Wolverines' worst nightmare, a group of
tiny Lilliputians about to kill them with their poison  arrows.

  What was happening on this suddenly crazy court? The Illinois State
Redbirds, a team notable mostly because their coach is barely old enough to
remember the Beatles, were taking Michigan to the final buzzer? Illinois
State?  In the first round?

 "I looked up at the scoreboard with a minute left and I said, 'Whoa, if we
lose this, my career is finished,' " senior Loy Vaught said after a frantic,
but  finally victorious, 76-70 opener in the NCAA  tournament. "I went running
out  there and grabbed a rebound, which made me feel a lot better."
  He feels better? Wash the sweat off your face. Send that shirt to the
laundry. And then, if you're  a U-M fan, prepare for the same thing Sunday.
This is what the tournament is all about. Or had you forgotten last year --
when Michigan survived five such scares en route to winning the whole tamale?
  Here was Sean Higgins, after a night full of poorly chosen shots, squaring
from the three-point line in the final two minutes and burying a beauty. Here
was Rumeal Robinson, always there down the  stretch, drawing a foul with 43
seconds left, stepping to the line with the crowd roaring and making two in a
row. Remind you of anything? Deja vu, perhaps?
  "When I called that final time-out, that's  what I talked about," said
coach Steve Fisher, who managed to keep his composure all night, despite the
crown nearly falling off his team's head. "We've been there before. Now play
like it."
  Easier  said than done. What was Illinois State doing with its hands
around Michigan's neck in the first place? Why does this stuff keep happening
in these sure-to-be mismatches? Why? Because this is the way  of March
Madness. Rule No. 1: They are still kids out there, and kids are not
professionals. They don't know how not to be affected by things like strange
arenas, new faces, funny bounces. 
  So it  was that a 6-foot ISU freshman named Richard Thomas could scoot
through  one of the nation's most famous frontcourts and score over and over.
So it was that a kid named Rickey Jackson could bury one  three-pointer after
another -- never mind famous Wolverines who were guarding him. So it was that
U-M's Terry Mills, who has looked awesome against the rugged Big Ten
opponents, suddenly came out flat  (3-for-15 shooting) against a group of
unknowns from Normal, Ill.
  So it was that the Wolverines, who were so calm when the whole country was
 watching last April 3, suddenly, with a minute left  in this pale blue arena,
 were gasping for breath and had that dazed look in their eyes. Pressure.
  Oh, yes, pressure. You say U-M was playing a bunch of small fries? Maybe
so. But while the Wolverines  have done a lot since Fisher took over as coach,
the one thing they haven't done is defend their championship in the
tournament. Until now. 
  It proved to be harder than it looked.
  At first glance,  this was to be no contest. Except for the fact that
Fisher attended the school 27 years ago, Illinois State had no claim to the
same stage as Michigan. While U-M was compiling its record against Big  Ten
opponents -- seven of which made this NCAA tournament -- the Redbirds were
cutting their teeth on Butler, Drake, Creighton and Fairleigh Dickinson.
  Their tallest starter was 6-feet-7. He was  the center. Their most
notable personality was new coach Bob Bender, who is younger (32) than almost
half the Detroit Pistons. The second- most notable thing is that one of their
players, Thomas, is the  nephew of one of their other players, Elvin Florez.
I'm not kidding. 
  So it was supposed to be a blowout, right? And yet this is the magic of
this tournament. Each team gets at least one shot in  its gun clip. 
  Until the final minute Friday night, it looked as if the Redbirds might
have the magic bullet. The Wolverines, for much of the game, appeared far too
confident,  charging downcourt, somebody trying a fancy pass, something that
might look great on a highlight film, providing the ball went in. But more
often than not, it didn't go in. It bounced away or rolled off someone's
fingers,  and inevitably, the Illinois State players, who really didn't know
much else, dived and flew and slapped and wound up with possession.
  Suddenly, U-M was looking at a deficit. It was watching Mills  fire way
too hard and Higgins throwing up everything but his lunch. Even Robinson, up
to those final minutes, seemed to be forcing things, and he knows better.
  "I think sometimes these games against  teams that you're supposed to beat
are harder than the ones against teams that are supposed to beat you," Fisher
admitted afterward. "The longer they stay with you, the more confident they
get, the looser  they are, and the tighter you are."
  If that's the case, Illinois State was jelly.
  And Michigan was almost toast.
  Almost. But as the Wolverines kept saying later in the locker room, they
know what this is all about. Not a single one besides Vaught admitted even
thinking U-M might lose. That's either supreme confidence or a well-trained PR
staff.
  Whatever. This sure wasn't easy.  And it wasn't pretty. If not for a
terrific rebounding performance by Vaught (21) and the final cool of
co-captain  Robinson (24 points), the Wolverines could be headed back home
this morning.
 And that simply is too close. You could argue that Michigan State, which
finished with a better record than U-M, had a similar thing happen Thursday
against Murray State. And Missouri, a team ranked  higher than U-M, actually
lost Friday to some school named Northern Iowa. Fine. But the Wolverines --
and this is an old complaint -- did not show a lot of discipline in Game 1.
They  kept playing as  if they had a 20- point cushion.
  Maybe  they can go all the way again with that approach. Good luck to
them.  But when they walked off the court Friday, they looked as if they had
been in a war.  Five more wars to go. How many shirts you got?
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
BASKETBALL; U-M; COLUMN
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
