<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
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<UID>
9301130258
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
930406
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Tuesday, April 06, 1993
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
NWS
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1A
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo Color JULIAN H. GONZALEZ
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>


:
Ray Jackson of the University of Michigan tries to block a shot
by North Carolina's Brian  Reese during  the first half of
Monday night's NCAA championship game. Michigan's Juwan Howard
closes in from the left.
</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
SEE ALSO CHASER EDITION, Page 1A
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1993, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
BLUE II
IN HEART-POUNDING GAME,
THE WOLVERINES' ARE BROKEN
NORTH CAROLINA 77, MICHIGAN 71
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
NEW ORLEANS --  It ended with Chris Webber looking desperately for
something he didn't have -- time, hope and a happy ending. He grabbed a
rebound, his team trailing by two points, and he called  for time, he screamed
for it. The referee stared at him blankly. Confused, Webber muscled his way up
court, almost traveling, probably traveling, but this one
man-against-everything journey suddenly  seemed to have everyone's tongues
tied, including the referees, and so here was Webber, still dribbling,
pounding the ball with his giant hands, going past his bench, looking for
time, wanting time, no one able to tell him "Chris, we don't have any
time-outs left." Finally, he pulled up, stopped, like a man who realizes he is
cornered by police. He made the "T" sign, looked at the ref, who made  the "T"
sign right back.

  Technical foul.

  Disaster.
  "This is much different than last year," a dejected Steve Fisher said
Monday, after his Wolverines fell for the second straight time in  the
championship game, losing to North Carolina, 77-71. "Tonight, we had a chance
to win in the final seconds. Last year we didn't.  But we couldn't get it
done."
  They tried. They tried desperately.  And when Webber grabbed that rebound,
it looked like they would once again find a way to pull their destiny out of a
hat. Instead, the final picture of this fascinating 1993 season will a
depressing  one:  The Fab Five watching helplessly on the half-court line  as
North Carolina sank the free throws that would put this game out of reach.
Ray Jackson was on one knee, praying for a gust of wind,  no doubt. Juwan
Howard looked like he'd lost a friend. Jimmy King had his hands on his hips,
Jalen Rose had his head lowered and Webber, well, he was stunned. All he had
done, all the slams, the monster  rebounds, the steals, the time he took the
ball himself the length of the floor and slammed it, his 23 points, his 33
minutes -- all that gone in a simple, desperate mistake.
  And let's get that dealt  with right now. Whose fault was that? Well, it
depends. A coach must inform his players of the time-out situation. It must be
drummed in their heads. Then again, players can forget. At the time of this
writing, the question had not been answered, so blame should not be leveled.
Suffice it to say it was a mistake, one mistake in a game spotted with many by
the Wolverines -- they  turned the ball over  14 times -- and it only seems
the biggest because it happened last.
  No time. No hope.
  Disaster.
  The odd thing about this loss is that for once, it seemed, people really
figured  Michigan  would win. Critics had dished their chances against lesser
teams, but the victory over Kentucky in the semifinal seemed to get everyone
on their bandwagon. From Dick Vitale to Jud Heathcote, there was  a feeling
that talent and experience (last year's) would win out. Emotionally, if not in
Las Vegas, the Wolverines were favorites. Maybe that was part of their
undoing. Maybe they thought so, too. They  certainly didn't emerge from the
locker room like a prisoner given 24 hours to find the man who framed him.
Their focus was distilled. They played tight.
  And so the first half became a tug of war.  North  Carolina would break a
man free, bang a shot, grab a rebound, hit free throws, look dominant. But
when Michigan awoke, it ran off a string of points for a 10-point lead.
Suddenly, the Tar Heels looked, well, sticky. But Michigan turnovers and North
Carolina ability to draw a whistle kept the game close, and halftime ended
with Michigan giving the ball over 10 times, North Carolina three, and  the
Wolverines waist thick in foul trouble, Ray Jackson with three, Howard, Webber
and King with two.
  The second half? What can you say. It went by quickly and it felt like
forever.  At times it  had the feel of someone trying to push a refrigerator
up the stairs. Minutes would go by without a good shot. The defenses were like
soggy blankets, the rebounds like five giants launched from a cannon.  It was
less a game than a slugfest, one in which the referee just lets them go at
each other, to the body, to the head, the body, the head, last one standing
wins.
  Still, when Pat Sullivan missed  the second free throw with 19 seconds
left, the Wolverines were perched on another great finish. A basket would tie
it. A three-pointer would win it. But Webber was confused, and everything
seemed to  go in slow motion from there. At one point Jalen Rose could have
told him there were no time-outs.  Maybe he did. Webber kept going. It was the
saddest of endings for a guy who called last year's loss  "the lowest moment
of my life."
  You can only imagine how he feels this morning.
  The Wolverines have plenty of critics, but only a truly hard-boiled person
would delight in their defeat Monday  night. Like them or not, they fought the
good fight this year with the enormous burden of being one half shy of a
national championship. From the first day of practice, way back in November,
they had  Monday night circled on the calendar, and it wasn't the Oscars.
  Last year, they were caught up in the event until the second half. This
year they seemed to be weighed down by it. All that waiting,  all that
anticipation, sometimes makes the real moment almost surreal, you can't get a
fix on it, and before you know it, the moment is gone.
  But don't kill the season just  because it ended badly. Michigan won 31
games, a school record, it beat teams it wasn't supposed to beat and I can say
this safely, I believe, it provided the most entertainment in college
basketball.
  It just didn't have  a happy ending. Instead it was Carolina, a
well-schooled team with a very deliberate game plan, that cut down the nets
and did a dance at half court. The Tar Heels are dull  compared to  Michigan,
lacking  in color and quotes. But they got the job done. They executed a
swing- around offense when they had to, got the ball inside to Eric Montross,
their 7-foot center, and got 25 points out of Donald Williams,  many of them
on critical three-pointers. Michigan knew it had to stop him to win. It
didn't. And it didn't.
  Just before the pregame meal Monday afternoon, Steve Fisher grabbed a pay
phone to make  a call.
  "Hello coach," he began.
  He was calling Bo Schembechler.
  "I wanted to call the man who made this all possible," he told Bo. "Yep.
Hopefully, we can win another one."
  What a long  strange ride it has been for Fisher since that spring day in
1989 when Schembechler, then the athletic director, slapped the reigns of this
prestigious program into his young hands. Fisher went from  "anonymous
assistant" to "miracle worker" to "national champion" to "lucky duck" to
"can't coach" to "can't-recruit" to "can't discipline" to "can't defend
himself."
  Rarely was there talk of what  he can do.
  What he can do is get five kids who have all been told they're the best
thing to ever come down the pike to play together, to meld, to sacrifice, and
to smile while doing it. People talk  about all the laughing the Wolverines do
on court as if it's only disrespect. No one sees it as harmony. Hey. People
laugh when they're happy. Do you know how many programs couldn't handle the
egos of  five top-flight recruits? Let alone the bruised egos of players like
Rob Pelinka, James Voskuil, Eric Riley and Michael Talley, who were booted out
of their chairs when  the Fab Five showed up. 
 Think about the lack of  dissension, the lack of back- stabbing, the lack of
internal problems with this team, and you'll have a small idea of what Fisher
can do.
  No doubt, he will get criticized  again, for "too many turnovers by his
undisciplined sophomores." Or for not being able to beat a "system" team like
Duke, Indiana or North Carolina. Or, most probably, the misinformation that
confused Webber at the end. People remember what they want to remember.
Unfair, but true.
  But if you remember that, remember this: The celebration when U-M beat
Kentucky, a win that was never supposed to happen. Or the comeback from the
19-point deficit to UCLA, which was never supposed to happen. Remember Webber
and Rose and Jackson and  Howard and King and Pelinka and Voskuil and Riley in
happier poses.  They are still kids. It is still a game. Sometimes you make
mistakes. Sometimes your dreams have to wait. The Fab Five will be upper
classmen next time you see them, but that is not a curse. That, in  fact,
gives them hope and time, the two things they simply ran out of on a Monday
night in April.
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<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
GAME; U-M; BASKETBALL; TOURNAMENT; COLLEGE
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
