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9301100533
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
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<DATE>
930317
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<TDATE>
Wednesday, March 17, 1993
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<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
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SPT
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<PAGE>
1F
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<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo Color AL KAMUDA
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<CAPTION>


:
Photo  AL KAMUDA
Rob Pelinka, left, and James Voskuil are dandy reserves for the
third-ranked Wolverines, but true headliners in the classroom. 
LENNOX McLENDON/Associated Press 
James Voskuil, top, knows  the feeling after Chris Webber got
hit in the face. Both players suffered broken noses during the
season. 
28column; biography; James Voskuil; Rob Pelinka; basketball;
athlete; college
</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
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<MEMO>

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<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1993, Detroit Free Press
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<HEADLINE>
TWO WORLDS CONQUERED
FIFTH-YEAR SENIORS PELINKA,
VOSKUIL EXCEL ON THE COURT, IN THE CLASSROOM
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The moments come out of nowhere, like no-look passes that hit them in the
head. Maybe James Voskuil is running drills in practice and suddenly -- boink!
-- he can't help it, he's thinking "Oh, man,  I have that paper due tomorrow .
. ."

  "Voskuil! Rebound!" 

  Or maybe Rob Pelinka is sitting in a business school lecture and suddenly
-- boink! -- he can't help it, he's thinking about that three-point  shot he
could have made last night against Indiana, if he just put a little more arch
on the . . . 
  "Mr. Pelinka? You with us?" 
  You want to talk balance? Try walking the two-world tightrope between
academics and athletics -- and I'm don't mean the baby stuff here, gym classes
or freshman English or playing intramurals at a Division III college. Nuh-uh.
Try attending business school at Michigan  while being the sixth man on maybe
the best college basketball team in the country. Try majoring in aerospace
engineering -- aerospace engineering? -- while playing alongside Chris Webber
and Juwan Howard.
  Try flying back from a night game in Texas, then making an 8 a.m. class. Or
hearing 16,000 fans scream your name, then rushing home to stick your nose in
a book. Try lectures, practices, papers, games,  road trips, midterms,
tournaments, finals.
  As the Wolverines head into yet another NCAA tournament, the impressive
thing about seniors James Voskuil and Rob Pelinka is not that they're going.
  It's that they're still alive.
  "It's like you compete on two courts," says Pelinka, a Robert Downey Jr.
look-alike who will graduate this spring. "There's the Crisler Arena court and
the academic  court. Only in academics I'm competing against people who have
all day to do their studies, and I have maybe from 8 to midnight."
  Adds Voskuil: "You're always so tired. It's like you're out there
competing against the best in basketball. And then you get bombarded by the
best in the classroom."
  It is not easy. Yet, after five years, Voskuil and Pelinka are virtual
poster boys for the student-athlete  ideal. Pelinka will finish Michigan with
a 3.9 grade-point average in the business school -- his only "B" came when he
caught the flu and missed a midterm -- and Voskuil will graduate from the
engineering  school with a 3.3 GPA, and qualifications to train as an
astronaut.
  An astronaut?
  "I tried; they won't take me," he says, perfectly serious. "I applied, did
all the paperwork. But you have to  be 6- foot-4 or smaller."
  Too tall to be an astronaut?
  Is there any end to injustice?
  Yet missing a trip to the moon is hardly the only sacrifice these two have
made. Voskuil (6-feet-8) and  Pelinka (6-6) have not enjoyed the social life
you might expect of star athletes. There just wasn't time. They roomed
together their sophomore season, and Voskuil's overwhelming memory is Pelinka
grabbing his books at 6 p.m., locking his door, coming out at 12, saying "good
night" and going to sleep.
  Party on, Wayne.
  "A lot of my Friday and Saturday nights were spent behind a desk, pushing a
pencil,"  Pelinka says. "My social life, my fun, was all right here, on the
basketball court."
  "We're not big drinkers or anything," says Voskuil, who was often seen this
season racing out after a game, his  hair still wet, to finish an engineering
project. "Basketball takes a lot out of you."
  Oh, yes, basketball. Pelinka and Voskuil might be overachievers there as
well. Both primarily spot-shooters, they were recruited in the Bill Frieder
years, and neither was expected to turn around the program. Pelinka came from
a small school in the wealthy Chicago suburbs. Voskuil was a surprise recruit
from Grand Rapids, who admitted to the newspaper upon accepting Michigan's
offer, "I may not be a Big Ten player yet, but I'm going to get there."
  They both got there. Voskuil became the team's best three- point  shooter
by his sophomore season and started most of the games he played. But the
arrival of the Fab Five freshmen sealed his fate as a backup. Pelinka was part
of the 1989 championship team and might  have been a starting guard this
season were it not for two guys named Jalen Rose and Jimmy King.
  Being used to excellence, being used to succeeding, this second-fiddle
stuff was -- and is -- difficult.  It is not how they imagined senior year,
sitting down after introductions, watching teammates three years younger get
the most attention and headlines.
  "But what are you gonna do?" Pelinka says.  "Bench Chris Webber?"
 
Always the outsider 
  And so they endure, and they juggle their lives, the way they have been
juggling since their arrival in Ann Arbor, existing on five hours of sleep,
taking instructions from Steve Fisher, nodding, racing to class, taking
instructions from a professor, nodding, setting up schedules, taking makeup
exams when the plane was delayed, spending nights in  hotel rooms reading
engineering books or economic theories.
  Through it all, they've learned a funny truth about trying to be both jocks
and scholars: neither side fully accepts you. At times Pelinka  and Voskuil
were mildly scorned by other students -- "These athletes, they think they can
get away with anything" -- and at times, they were teased by their own
teammates -- "Four point! Four point!"  they used to joke at Pelinka for his
perfect grade-point average.
  "It's really like living in two different worlds," Pelinka says. "I'll come
to the gym from the business school and my whole vocabulary  will change. In
business school they're using words like 'flyback' -- which means a firm flew
you back for a job interview. And then I come to practice and someone says
'Five thousand-G' -- which means,  'See ya later, I'm outta here.'
  "I have to catch myself sometimes, jumping from one talk to the other.
Sometimes I'd go from practice to a class and I'll be all geeked up, and I'd
say, 'Man, can you  believe tha -- . . . I mean, uh, we have a project due,
don't we?"
 
Truly rocket science 
  "Tell me some of your engineering classes," I ask Voskuil.
  He smiles. "Well, there's Dynamics and Controls."
  "Dynamics and controls of what?"
  "Systems. Could be electrical systems, or spring systems, feedback systems,
loops."
  "Loops?"
  "Computer loops."
  "Tell me another."
  "Well, there's  propulsion class."
  "Propulsion?"
  "Like rockets."
  "Rockets?"
  "Yeah, rockets, stuff like that."
  "Rockets?"
  It is hard to imagine going from rockets to basketball. It is hard to
imagine coming off the bench to nail three-pointers and secure a tournament
victory over Cincinnati -- as Voskuil did last year -- then coming home to a
physics equation.
  But if you think it's hard  from the outside, try fitting both worlds
inside your head. Most people congratulate Voskuil and Pelinka on the fine job
they do as student-athletes, but one question still haunts both:
  Could they  have been better players if they were lesser students?
  "We talk about that a lot," Voskuil says. "I wonder if the ideal college
athlete isn't a guy who stays eligible but makes basketball his No. 1
priority. I think, honestly, that's what a head coach wants."
 
Another net gain? 
  There was a moment, four years ago, when Voskuil and Pelinka sat in an
Atlanta hotel room and saw their coach,  Frieder, weep openly as he said
good-bye to them. And there was a moment three weeks later when they cut down
the nets in Seattle, celebrating a national championship in their very first
season.
 There was a moment last weekend, when Voskuil's parents joined him at center
court at Crisler and heard a thunderous ovation for their son on senior day,
his last home game. And there was a moment after  the Iowa game, when Pelinka
found a note taped to the dashboard of his truck. "Thanks for the memories and
all the hard work. I love you. Dad." 
  So fast it goes. So much work. So much play. Voskuil  hopes to play in
Europe before settling into his aerospace career. And Pelinka, who might go
the Europe route as well, will eventually attend Michigan's law school, not
too shabby an institution, to  which he has been accepted.
  "I think back on our first year, we were such kids!" Pelinka says.
  And now, young men. Too often you hear the bad news of college sports, the
hypocrisy of it all, players  skipping class, skipping degrees, taking
payments, taking advantage. Maybe you say to yourself, "The whole system
stinks." And then along comes a couple of honor students who still make
practice, who  still make jump shots, and you say to yourself, "Hey, what's
this?"
  Impressive, that's what. If Michigan does indeed win another national
title, and the Wolverines go to cut down the nets, there  should be a double
round of applause for Rob Pelinka and James Voskuil as they climb to the top.
Student-athletes. Two worlds conquered.
  That is, if they don't fall asleep before they get there.
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