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<UID>
9301110826
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
930326
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Friday, March 26, 1993
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
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<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>


:
Eric Riley
</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1993, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
WORLD EVER EVOLVING IN THE LIFE OF RILEY
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<BODY>
SEATTLE --  The last time he was here, he wore a cast on one foot and
street clothes to the game. He sat behind the Michigan basketball team as it
played for the national championship. And when  that championship was won, and
the buzzer sounded, he ran onto the floor, cast and all, and celebrated in a
happy pile of players. The whole world was ahead of Eric Riley in those days.
He was a redshirt  freshman, an apprentice to glory, just waiting for his turn
in the uniform. "I thought," he says now, "I would be celebrating like that
again. Only with me playing."

  The Life of Riley has changed  significantly since then. He has a son now,
for one thing. He has bills, for another. He is a senior on a team full of
superstar sophomores, and his college career is over the next time Michigan
comes  up on the short end of a score, or when it cuts down the nets a week
from Monday in New Orleans. One way or the other, it's over. Riley hopes for
the happier finish, but says: "At this point, life will  go on if we don't win
it. I know that now."

  Eric Riley, 22, knows a great many things now. He has these huge, deer-like
eyes that dominate his face -- they are wide- open eyes -- and you wonder if
the last four years haven't been responsible for that. He remembers being
stunned that freshman season, when police escorts led the team through
Seattle. Police escorts? And all those fans at the hotels, gyms and arenas,
just waiting, no matter where the Wolverines went? "How did they know we would
be here?" he remembers thinking. 
  One time, the bus schedule got mixed up, and the players had to take
limousines to the arena. "That was really something," Riley says, shaking his
head. "Limousines. Me and Terry Mills, Loy Vaught, Rumeal Robinson, we were
all in this limo, going to some practice. I couldn't  believe it."
  A happy pile. A championship.
  And then came the real world.
  
A kid with a baby 
  Riley got to play the next season, but the team ran out of magic and was
eliminated early  in the tournament. The following year, it missed the
tournament altogether. During that season, Riley learned he was going to be a
father. "I was scared," he admits. He would go to practice and hear  teammates
worrying about a test or a car and wish those problems were all he had to deal
with.
  His world was changing. The first time he held his baby, he didn't know
what to do. He was just a kid  himself. And then there were bills to pay, and
classes to keep up with, and, on top of that, there were these five freshmen
who had come along and usurped all of the starting positions. Riley was a
junior, ripe in body and skills. He had been second in Big Ten rebounding the
previous season. But, suddenly, he was on the bench when the starters were
announced.
  "Things weren't the way I expected,"  he says.
  That he dealt with all this, that he didn't go off the deep end and say,
"It's not fair! Why is this happening to me?" is a credit to his
ever-developing maturity. Riley is a gentle, soft-spoken  soul inside a 7-foot
shell. He takes a lot of teasing from his younger teammates because he will
let them get away with it, unless it's something important. Anyhow, Riley is
thinking other thoughts now:  the NBA, mostly. 
  A few weeks back, Riley and sophomore Ray Jackson were talking about the
NCAA tournament.
  "You gonna shave your head like we all did last year?" Jackson said. "Nah,"
Riley  said.
  "Come on, E! You gotta go bald, just once."
  Riley shook his head. "I'm too old for that."
 
In your dreams, maybe . . .  
  Last week, against UCLA, Riley had a disastrous first half. He missed
several shots. He was bumped around inside. Frustrated, he tried to get it all
back with a single, rim- rumbling dunk. He missed. 
  "When that happened I said, aw, no! This is bad."
  He  eventually took a seat, and he thought on the bench that maybe this
would be his last college performance. What a way to go out. Luckily, Michigan
won a squeaker. 
  "In my dreams, we win the championship  with me hitting a turnaround jumper
at the buzzer," he says. He smiles, then looks down. "If I'm even in the game
at the buzzer.  . . . "
  His son can talk now. When he watches on TV he says, in baby talk, "Eric
Riley." One day, he will be old enough to shoot baskets with his father. There
is that to look forward to. And maybe an NBA career. And all the wonders of
the adult world. 
  So maybe the  college thing didn't reach the heights he imagined the last
time he was in this city, that redshirt year of innocence of championships.
But he has done OK. He has learned to cope. That's also part of  higher
education, isn't it?
  "With all that's happened," comes the question, "when this ends--"
  He stretches his long arms over his head and smiles, already knowing his
answer.
  "I'm ready,"  he says. Eyes open, as usual.
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