<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9201120484
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
920330
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Monday, March 30, 1992
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL CHASER
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1A
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo Color JULIAN H. GONZALEZ
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>


:
(JULIAN GONZALEZ/Detroit Free Press)
Juwan Howard waves the net Sunday after Michigan's  win over
Ohio State in  Lexington, Ky., advancing the Fab Five to the
Final Four. "Today was 45 minutes of hard battle, and it was
about what team wanted it the most," said U-M's Jalen Rose.
</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1992, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
MICHIGAN 75, OHIO 71 (OT)
'DO YOU BELIEVE US NOW?'
WOLVERINES DO IT WITH CONFIDENCE
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
LEXINGTON, Ky. --  The buzzer sounded like a classroom bell, and all five
of them jumped like school kids sprung for the summer. The fans were screaming
and the band was blasting and the scoreboard,  baby, the scoreboard  was on
their side. Chris Webber punched at the noise and did one of those mid-air leg
kicks that threatened to carry him up through the roof of Rupp Arena and all
the way to Minneapolis.  Which is where they're going, by the way.

  Fab Five. Final Four.

  "DO YOU BELIEVE US NOW?" Webber screamed at the crowd, after the young
Michigan players had done what few people save themselves  expected them to
do, beat  Ohio State 75-71 -- in overtime, no less! -- to advance to the
promised land of college basketball. "DO . . . YOU . . . BELIEVE US NOW?"
  How could they not? After all those  passes? All those slams? All those
blocks and steals and elbow-clearing rebounds as the Buckeyes' crowd
threatened to smother them in noise? It wasn't just beating Ohio State, who
had knocked off Michigan twice this season. It wasn't just that Michigan's
five freshmen scored all but two of U-M's points. No. It was how they did it.
With poise. With confidence. With defense. With a late comeback. It was  so,
well, so adult.
  "DO YOU BELIEVE US NOW?"
  What a moment this was! Webber flapping his arms at the crowd like a giant
pterodactyl, and Jalen Rose locked in a bear hug with Jimmy King, and Ray
Jackson dancing at midcourt as the Michigan band pumped out "The Victors." The
Final Four? These kids who were in high school last year, watching that event
on TV and telling friends, "Yeah, one day  I'm gonna be there." Even Steve
Fisher, the coach charged with molding all this raw and dangerous talent,
looked a little stunned.
  "Honestly. Are you surprised?" someone yelled at him, as his kids  began to
cut down the nets.
  "Honestly?" he yelled back, grinning. "I am surprised. But" -- he pointed
to his players -- "they're not."
  Fab Five. Final Four.
Stopping the stars
  And when  the happy smoke from this weekend clears, what Fisher said is
what will stand out the most. Never mind the critics. These kids expected to
do this. Nowhere during these past two weeks did Michigan act  like a young
team ready to lose. If anything, the Wolverines made their opponents --
including favored Oklahoma State and Ohio State -- look like lesser teams,
held their star players down. Byron Houston  of the Cowboys was made to look
awful Friday. Jimmy Jackson of the Buckeyes -- who some felt was the best
player in college basketball this season -- was rendered merely mortal Sunday,
20 points and  nine turnovers.
  "They played extremely well," Jackson admitted.
  "They would never let us get a good look at the basket," sighed Randy
Ayers, his coach.
  You hear that, critics? Defense? It's  not just a dunk-a- thon with these
guys, you know.
  Although there was plenty of that. Especially from Webber (a game-high 23
points), who bounced back from a foul-laden Friday night to play in the
clouds Sunday afternoon, muscling inside, slamming down one swooping jam after
another, until the biggest mystery was not how many points he would score but
what face he would put on after each hoop.  Once he came out screaming like a
man having his toenails ripped out. Another time he raced upcourt with a
monster-like glare at the back of Lawrence Funderburke, who was trying to
guard him. There was  no stopping Webber this day. There was no stopping Rose
(six points in the overtime), who dribbles and shoots with such veteran
excellence that he scowls whenever he misses, as if they're all supposed  to
go in.
  "Today was 45 minutes of hard battle," Rose said, "and it was about what
team wanted it most."
  He left no doubt as to which team that was.
  Fab Five. Final Four.
Unforgettable weekend
  "PICTURE! PICTURE!"
  Out on the Rupp Arena floor now, they were squeezing into a group photo,
players, coaches, cheerleaders. Each Wolverine had a piece of the net in his
hands, or his teeth, and  each was wearing a hat that read "Final Four."
Someone took a head count and noticed only Jimmy King, the leaping gnome of a
guard, was missing.
  "JIMMY! YO! JIMMY!" 
  And here came King, out of  the stands, and he ran across the floor and did
a head-first slide into the group, landing in their laps and flipping over
with a smile as the cameras flashed . . .
  Nice. They looked like a team.
  Snapshots? You want snapshots? Take these from this rites- of-passage
weekend: Rose galloping downcourt, looking left to Webber, drawing the
defender, then dishing blindly to King, was was wide-open  for the slam. BANG!
Or center Juwan Howard, dropping in those short jumpers and racing off the
floor Friday night screaming, "WE'RE GOING TO SHOCK THE WORLD!" Or Ray
Jackson, the unsung freshman, sticking  to Jimmy Jackson like glue, playing
the last 7:19 with four fouls and still shutting down Mr. Everything. Or
junior center Eric Riley, who had to swallow his pride when these young bucks
arrived, giving  up his starting position, yet saving their necks against
Oklahoma State, coming off the bench for 15 points and a big man's night.
  "Honestly," Riley was asked, "when did you stop thinking of your  teammates
as young?"
  "First day of practice," he said.
  And he wasn't kidding. Let's face it, folks. This is not normal, five
freshmen starters going to the Big Dance. (It's never happened before.)  But
these are not normal players. They have all been through big-time pressure in
high school (some, like Webber, saw their decisions to sign with Michigan
trumpeted across the front pages, as if they  had won a presidential primary).
And from the day they arrived in Ann Arbor, they made a pact that they would
rise to become all they could be, as fast as they could get there.
  Now they are racing  through this tournament the way a child might race
through the neighbors' hedges. "Hey, all you adults! Come on! This isn't as
hard as it looks!"
  "Where were you last year at this time?" someone  asked Ray Jackson after
the game.
  "I was in high school. I remember watching the Final Four with my homeboys,
and I said, 'I'm gonna get there.' And, you know, they're my boys, so they
said, 'Yeah,  we know you are, Ray. We know you're going.' "
  They just didn't know how soon.
  Fab Five. Final Four.
For better or worse
  And now, onto Minneapolis, where they will face Cincinnati on Saturday.
Suddenly, not only are they in the Big Show, but the Wolverines are favored,
as the Bearcats are an even bigger surprise. What we are saying is this:
Michigan. Monday Night. Championship Game. Could  Happen.
  Now. Some feel this is good for the school but bad for the players. So much
success so early could make sophomore and junior years difficult, full of
letdowns and anticlimaxes. As the song  goes, "How you gonna keep 'em down on
the farm, after they've seen Paris?"
  But while there may be some validity to that, what are you going to do?
Tell them to lose? If these kids are talented enough  to win it all their
first year, well, that's their destiny. They will deal with the problems
later.
  "Part of us wants to win it now because we are freshmen," Rose admitted.
"We know we won't ever  be freshmen again."
  "Tomorrow is promised to nobody," Jackson added, philosophically.
  And so we have this: history in the making. Michigan beating Temple, East
Tennessee State, Oklahoma State  and Ohio State, following the 1989
championship path, through Atlanta and Lexington (Fisher joked that the hotel
room here which he has used both times should be hermetically sealed until
Michigan returns).
  And yet, while there are parallels to the '89 team, this is different. It's
like watching the Beatles in their first recording session. Like watching
Edison playing around in the lab with wires. You  know something big is
coming. It's just a matter of time.
  And the time may be getting closer.
  "DO YOU BELIEVE US NOW?" Webber yelled once more, as the team disappeared
into the tunnel.
  We  saw it. And seeing is believing.
  Fab Five. Final Four.
  This is really some story, isn't it?
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<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
BASKETBALL;  COLLEGE; U-M
</KEYWORDS>
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