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<UID>
9001110205
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
900319
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Monday, March 19, 1990
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL CHASER
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1C
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<ILLUSTRATION>

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<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

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<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1990, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
MICHIGAN'S UNLIKELY REIGN ENDS, BUT WHAT A REIGN IT WAS
</HEADLINE>
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<BODY>
LONG BEACH, Calif. --  The dream was out of breath, it was gasping for air,
all the magic the Michigan Wolverines had once enjoyed in climbing to the
national championship now seemed to be stacked  against them in another color
uniform. Who were these Loyola Marymount Lions, and how on earth did you stop
them? One by one, the U-M seniors stepped forward to fight the sword, and one
by one they fell.  Here was Mike Griffin, fouling out meekly as a tank named
Bo Kimble raced past him for a slam. Here was Loy Vaught soaring for a
rebound, but falling as he came down, losing the ball, watching from the
floor as Loyola Marymount stuffed it. Here was Rumeal Robinson, the co-
captain, last year's miracle worker, flying down the lane for a slam -- he was
a foot over the rim! -- but the referee called "CHARGING!"  no basket, as the
sold-out partisan crowd roared with delight.

  There goes the crown. It was fun while they wore it, and they did it proud,
but somebody else will have it when this crazy tournament  is over. The
Wolverines, former national champions, ran into a basketball hailstorm Sunday
afternoon, and you have to wonder whether anything human could have withstood
it.

  "I've never seen a team  like that," said Vaught, shaking his head, after
Marymount exploded for a record-setting 149-115 victory that sent U-M home for
the season in the second round of the NCAA tournament. "They could have
beaten the Pistons tonight."
  Hey. They might have given God a run for his money. The Lions scored enough
points for two games. Check that. Two blowouts. One hundred and forty-nine?
More than any  other team in tournament history? More than any other Michigan
opponent since the school was built? True, they are a group playing on a
mission, the honor of  center Hank Gathers, who died on the court  in their
last game before the NCAA tournament. But even divine inspiration couldn't
explain the rainbow baskets that fell from the sky and lit up the scoreboard.
  "They shot NBA three-pointers tonight,"  lamented Steve Fisher, the
Michigan coach who had finally lost in postseason play. "They made them with
men on them, and with no men on them."
  From Earth, from Mars, from Pluto. Until, finally,  the Wolverines, who
had always felt that when glory was on the line they could outrun anybody, had
no choice but to walk off the court for the last time this season.
  There goes the crown.
  Is it  as sad a moment as you thought it might be?" someone asked Robinson,
who has officially finished his glorious career as a Wolverine.
  "It's not sad," he said, buttoning his shirt. "What would have  been sad is
if we didn't give it our all. But we did."
  And then some. This was breakneck basketball; you could break your neck
playing, you could break your neck watching. The nets should have been  metal,
the backboards wood, the players should have been bare-chested with baggy
shorts and untied sneakers on a hot summer night. Quick. Look. Marymount's
Jeff Fryer bombs away from the corner -- good!  Quick, the other end, Vaught
on a blind pass from Robinson -- slam! Quick, the other end, Kimble lays it in
for two. Quick, the other end, Sean Higgins buries a jumper. That's the way it
went, all day, a breathless, trash-talking affair, sweat-flying, ball-zipping,
when the shot missed it was downcourt in a blur, when the shot swished, it was
downcourt before it even came out of the net.
  It was  exhausting, exhilarating, it was great fun for the impartial fan.
The problem for Michigan is that Loyola Marymount plays this way all the time.
The Lions own the run- and-press game in college basketball  the way
Disneyland owns Mickey Mouse; it is their trademark, their calling card.
Playing Marymount in that fashion is like trying to trip a spider.
  "We said before the game, we couldn't run with  them for 40 minutes,"
Fisher said. "But when they press, they make you push it up. They show you a
lot of open shots and they're tempting. Sometimes you're so open you say, 'I
gotta take this shot.' "
  Indeed, the Lions are like a class bully who keeps poking your shoulder,
"Wanna fight? Wanna fight? Come on, are you chicken?" You know you shouldn't,
but then, suddenly, you do. The Wolverines  have their pride. And,  in truth,
they can play the running game with almost anybody. The problem Sunday was
that even the Michigan swishes were only half as good as Marymount's. More
than 40 percent  of Marymount's baskets were three-pointers. How many did
Fryer alone make? Eleven? He finished with 41 points? Despite the blowout on
the scoreboard, U-M actually made just four fewer baskets than its
unbelievable opponents (45-49). The problem was, most of those were the
old-fashioned kind. Remember? Two-pointers?
  "Hey, when they have guys who never took a three-pointer come in off the
bench at  the end of the game and make them," said Terry Mills, "you just know
everything's going their way."
  Remember that sentence? That's what they were saying about Michigan last
year, when the loss of  coach Bill Frieder seemed to spark the Wolverines to a
new level, a heartfelt determination to prove they were not helpless orphans
abandoned in the night. Perhaps it is poetic justice that U-M bows  to a team
that is also playing for more than just hoops and hysteria. The Gathers
dedication is a noble one, and, so far, damn powerful.
  "We are gonna make some noise, I mean it," said Kimble, who was Gathers'
closest friend, and who shot his first free throw of the day left-handed -- he
made it -- in honor of his departed buddy. Kimble finished with 37 points.
  "We are," Fryer added,  "an emotional hurricane right now. Nothing can
stand in our way."
  Michigan will attest to that.  Oh, there will be critics who say the
coaching should have kept U-M from the folly of matching Marymount's  race
pace. And there may be some truth there. But remember, U-M had one day to
prepare for this team. And, at closer look, it may not have been pace that did
the damage. "It's not that they were going  so fast," Robinson said. "They
were just shooting so unbelievably!"
  Whatever. The season is over. For those who wave the maize- and-blue, this
marks the end of a wonderful run, a dance in the throne  room that nobody
expected. Seniors such as Robinson, Mills, Vaught and Griffin should be
honored this morning, for leading this team with class and dignity, and -- in
the case of Mills and Robinson --  for enduring more than a fair share of
abuse over academics, proving to the critics that kids given a chance can
become men you admire. It was fitting that that pair led U-M with 23 points
apiece Sunday, and that Vaught, who has found a home in the air, led all
players with 17 rebounds.
  "What did you say to each other when you came out of the game?" Robinson
was asked.
  He forced a small smile.  "We said good try, good career, good playing
with you."
  Good things. There will be time to lament this defeat; it will come back in
more jump cuts than an MTV video. And there will be time to contemplate  next
season's Michigan team, which will be markedly younger and far more
inexperienced.
  But, for now, a salute to a group that endured the burden of defending
the title, the glare of the spotlight,  the sting of criticism, and never once
lashed out. If its 1990 season and championship run must be remembered in a
single sentence, then make it something like this: They rose like a hurricane,
and,  finally, they lost to one.
  At the end of the game, as the players left the court, several Michigan
and Loyola Marymount students ran out with their school flags and planted
them, the way explorers  do when they claim new ground. Here stood a national
champion. There goes the crown. No shame in that. None whatsoever.
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