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<UID>
9001110518
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
900321
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Wednesday, March 21, 1990
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
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<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1990, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
GOOD LUCK, SEAN - YOU'LL NEED IT
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
Sean Higgins belongs in the NBA next season  like Popeye belongs in the
Marines. But Higgins may decide to go. And the NBA will not refuse him. Never
mind that he is just a few months past his  21st birthday. Never mind that he
lacks the maturity for pro basketball. Hey, he lacks the maturity for college
basketball. But that hasn't stopped him.

  As I write this, Higgins -- who did not get  on the plane to Ann Arbor
with the Wolverines Sunday after their defeat in the NCAA tournament -- is
somewhere in Los Angeles, at his mother's or his cousin's or his other
cousin's. I tried making the  phone calls. No one knows where he is. They do
insist he is thinking very carefully. Should he stay at Michigan or should he
turn pro?  I doubt Higgins needs this much time. You ask me, he's gone.

  And that should surprise nobody.
  They come for the spotlight, they leave for the money. That's the sad
truth about many star players in college athletics. Oh, there are a notable
few who march  in graduation, who cherish the degree, who stay in touch with
the old freshman dorm. But more see college as Pro Prep, a spring training for
the NBA or NFL.
  Higgins, always an impatient sort, seems  to feel he is ready now for the
big green money dip,  as a junior, despite a career dotted with absences and
suspensions, despite a reputation as a mad bomber. Never mind that the NBA may
not exactly  be awaiting his arrival. Never mind that despite how special he
feels his shooting talent is, there are plenty of guys riding the bench in the
pros who can shoot that well. Never mind. He thinks he's  ready.
  After all, not long ago, Higgins told a writer: "The reason I came to
Michigan was to get this (championship) ring. And I got it."
  Funny. You didn't hear the word "education" in there,  did you?
Which way to the NBA?
  
  But then, what did you expect? Isn't this the same Sean Higgins who, three
years ago, fresh out of high school, signed with UCLA, then switched to
Michigan,  claiming his stepfather coerced his first decision with, among
other things, a baseball bat?
  Forgive me for being brash, but I don't think they were arguing over the
English Lit program. There were  charges of improper  payments, special
favors. So before he even graduated from high school, Higgins was in the real
world, cold and hard. He told people he wanted a program that would prepare
him fast for the NBA. He preferred Michigan and Bill Frieder. When Frieder
left last year, Higgins threatened to transfer or go pro. Just a few months
ago, he pondered his future once Rumeal Robinson, Terry Mills,  Loy Vaught and
Mike Griffin graduated. His concern: "I'll be triple-teamed a lot."
  Didn't hear anything about leading the team as a senior. Didn't hear
anything about giving his alma mater his best year. Didn't hear it. Don't
expect to.
  I saw Steve Fisher, the coach of the Wolverines, Sunday night in the
hotel,  three hours after his group was blown out by Loyola Marymount. He
looked dazed.  I'll bet he had just found out Higgins wasn't coming back on
the plane. Fisher, like a lot of us, still believes in college sports, the
joy, the camaraderie. Now next year's star player, the supposed  senior
leader, had told him, Coach, I gotta think about my own future, I'll get back
to you.
  That's the problem with having a heart, Steve.
  Kids will break it.
But who can blame him? 
  But, having said that, let me say this: You can hardly blame them. Guys
like Higgins and  Leroy Hoard -- another Wolverines  junior  who is turning
pro, even though the NFL is full of people who  say, "Leroy, don't do it" --
are  taking their cues from the real world. They see their own universities
reeling in millions from their talents. They see TV networks getting huge
ratings because they  are in the running for a Heisman Trophy or an NCAA
scoring title.
  They see other kids in college saying, "We're just here to get a good job
to make lots of money." What do you expect? They want  a slice. As soon as
possible. A kid like Higgins looks at the NBA, he sees guys out there night
after night, spinning, jumping, talking trash, and he says to himself: "You
don't need 64 credits of political  science to do that."
  And he is right. But he is missing the point.
  Sure, some guys make it with a quick bolt: Magic Johnson, Moses Malone.
But others have tried and struggled, like Chris Washburn  and Pearl
Washington. Others just disappear, they're in Italy, or the CBA, or in some
textile factory.
  Meanwhile, what is lost in all this is a very simple idea: that college is
worthwhile in and  of itself. That the atmosphere of a campus will never come
again. What's lost, in a word, is youth. Everything is money, adult money,
gimme mine, I'm ready. Gone is even the whiff of amateurism, young  men
playing sports for the sheer joy of competition. Who does that now but the
scrubs and the small schools? The other guys are worried about breaking a leg
before draft day.
  They come for the spotlight,  they leave for the money. It will be no
surprise if Higgins says, "I'm outta here." And by the time he realizes there
are no academic counselors in the NBA, no training tables, nobody to give you
an "incomplete" if you screw up, it will be too late. He'll have a paycheck --
a smaller one than he might have gotten after next  season -- and all the
headaches that come with it. We can only shake our  heads and wish him luck.
  He's gonna need it.
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