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<UID>
9701030943
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
970131
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Friday, January 31, 1997
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1F
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<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM Free Press Sports Writer
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1997, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
U-M? MSU? PLAYERS' CHOICES OFTEN CLOSE
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
You pick your colors in this state, green or blue, and once you choose,
you're supposed to be true to your school. But sometimes our college sports
armies don't realize how close their soldiers  came to fighting for the other
side.

Take Michigan's Robert Traylor. He is a major force for the Wolverines'
basketball team. He plays with passion and heart. He waves his fist after
menacing dunks  and leaps into the air with a smile the size of a prairie, as
if a Maize and Blue victory is the only thing in the world he needs to make
him happy.

 
  Yet he didn't decide to choose Michigan over Michigan State, he says,
"until 15 minutes before I walked into the press conference in high school to
announce it." 

  "Wait," I say, "you mean 20 minutes earlier you were thinking you might be
a Spartan?"

  "That's right," he says. "It was that close."

  That close. Take Michigan State's Jon Garavaglia. He was Mr. Basketball his
senior season of high school.  Many people figured he was a lock for Michigan.
 Steve Fisher loved him. Recruited him hard. 

  But in the end, Garavaglia looked at the loaded roster in Ann Arbor --
which featured the Fab Five -- and then he looked at the more depleted roster
at  Michigan State, and said, "I'm going to East Lansing."

  "I chose where I'd fit in," Garavaglia says now. "It was an instinct thing.
I knew I'd end up at either Michigan or Michigan State."

  "Could  you see a scenario where you'd have played at Michigan?" I ask.

  "Sure," he says.

  That close.

 

Mitchell picked U-M, then left

  This year on the Spartans' roster are Garavaglia and guards  Mateen
Cleaves and Ray Weathers, all of whom were chased by Michigan, all of whom
could have ended up in Ann Arbor with a simple "yes."

  And then there are Traylor and Maurice Taylor, two Wolverines  stars who
could easily have been playing in green and white. All they had to do was say,
"I'm coming."

  And then there are guys like Willie Mitchell. You remember him? Another Mr.
Basketball, out  of Detroit's  Pershing High. The Wolverines and Spartans
battled long and hard for his services, sent coaches to his games, called him
at home and told him why their school would be the perfect choice.

  And in the end, as you know, Mitchell chose Michigan. Spartans fans were
crushed.

  But a few years later, Mitchell transferred to a school 1,000 miles away.
Now neither U-M nor MSU has him.

 Still, they prepare to do battle Saturday.

  The soldiers come and go; the war goes on. And you start to realize how so
much of this is timing, personalities, and luck of the draw.

  "It would be  easier if the schools weren't in the same state," says
Traylor, who freely admits that had the Fab Five still been at Michigan when
he came along, he'd have gone to Michigan State. "Everyone around here  is
either pushing for one school or the other, so you're trying to please
everybody. And you can't."

  "For me, it was almost a coin toss," says Weathers. "My mother said
something to me about having  a better chance to go to the next level by going
to Michigan State. That was probably what pushed me over."

  That's all? A mother's comment? A coin toss? A phone call from a friend? A
dream? On such  things are college rosters built, and on such things do
recruiting classes come apart.

  That close.

 

There's plenty to prove

  Now, what makes all of this almost funny is how passionately these  two
teams will play against each other Saturday. You would think, the way they
dive for balls, slap palms after baskets, glare at the opponents and urge fans
in the crowd to whoop it up in their favor  -- well, you would think that
these two teams had grown up in some civil war, where your family was born
into one side or the other.

  "When we play each other, we want to show our stuff for the other
coaches," Traylor admits. "We want them to know how good a player they didn't
get."

  "I still speak to Steve Fisher when we play," says Garavaglia. "He'll say
something like, 'I hope you score 30 points, but I hope we win.'

  "I laugh. All those years of recruiting, you just don't forget."

  No, you don't. Ask Tom Izzo, the MSU coach. When he was working under Jud
Heathcote, he put the greatest  recruiting effort of his life into the best
high school player in the country, a center from Country Day named Chris
Webber. Izzo loved this kid. Spent time with him. Had long, thoughtful
discussions  with him.

  Right to the end, Izzo was almost sure he had him.

  You know the rest. Webber called a press conference at a Detroit
restaurant. And 60 miles away, Izzo got a phone call. The chase was  over. The
kid chose Michigan, not Michigan State.

  Izzo hung up the phone, sat on the floor, and wept.

  It's that emotional. But it's that close, too. And it's something you might
want to consider  when you line up on your side of the court Saturday.

  Those kids you're cheering could just as easily have been sinking shots for
your opponent. Those kids you're booing could just as easily been  slamming
dunks for your alma mater.

  A coin toss. A dream. The thickness of a fabric and a little bit of green
or blue pigment. That is all that separates them. That close. And that far.
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<DISCLAIMER>
THIS ELECTRONIC VERSION MAY DIFFER SLIGHTLY FROM THE PRINTED ARTICLE.
</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
COLLEGE;  COLUMN; U-M; MSU
</KEYWORDS>
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