<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
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<UID>
9701080484
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
970318
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Tuesday, March 18, 1997
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1C
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo JULIAN H. GONZALEZ/Detroit Free Press
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>



Michigan counts on Maurice Taylor, left, and Robert Traylor to
carry the inside load. But after an up-and-down junior season,
will Taylor  leave for the NBA? He averages 12 points and six
rebounds.
</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM Free Press Sports Writer
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1997, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
WILL IT BE GREATNESS OR EARLY EXIT FOR TAYLOR?
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
Sometimes you play basketball, sometimes it plays you. Maurice Taylor knows
this. He remembers the airport a few years ago, waving good-bye to his mother,
who was moving to Tennessee for a better  job.

Taylor wanted to go, too. A self-described "mama's boy," he couldn't
imagine a day without her, even though he had been living with an aunt in
Detroit for several years, because his mother's  east side neighborhood was
not the place for a budding basketball star.

 
  "I cried at the airport when she got on the plane," Taylor recalls, "and I
think I cried every day for two weeks. I really wanted to go with her." 

  Taylor did not go with her -- at his mother's insistence -- because he was
a junior in high school, starting to get recruited. "If I transferred, that
could have hurt my  chances . . ."

  He shrugs. It is the shrug you have seen many times, the semaphore of a kid
who has surrendered part of his life to the raging current of the American
sports flood, which sweeps high schoolers into college stars, sweeps college
stars into NBA earning machines.

  And makes kids do things they might not otherwise do.

  So what does Mo Taylor want to do now? 

  That's the question,  isn't it? Is tonight's NIT second- round game --
played in the shadow of perhaps the strangest, most controversial period in
recent Wolverines basketball history -- the final chapter in Taylor's rocky
Michigan career? Does he plan to go pro?

  Before you answer, you should know that he calls his three years in Ann
Arbor "the happiest years of my life."

  You should also remember that, back at  that airport, he already once waved
good-bye to something he loved to serve his hoop dream.

  It would not be impossible for him to do it again.

  "Right now, if I had to decide," Taylor says, crossing  his legs a few days
ago in the lounge at Crisler Arena, "I would definitely return for another
season at the University of Michigan."

  I remind him that he does not have to decide now. What will he  say in a
month or two, when he really does?

  He smiles. "I'm human. I'm subject to changing my mind."

 

  Taylor is the proverbial enigma wrapped in a riddle. A smiling,
soft-featured 6-foot-9  forward, he was part of Michigan's highly touted
recruiting class of 1994, five heralded freshmen, all arriving at once. Only a
few observers thought Taylor was the pick of that litter.

  But he had  a stellar first year -- was voted Big Ten freshman of the year
-- and his bandwagon was quickly jammed. In his sophomore season, he led U-M
in scoring and rebounding.

  Then came this year. 

  "I  started out great," he says, holding his chin in his hands, looking out
into the air, as if there's an answer somewhere in it. "Up through the Hawaii
tournament, things were going great. Then the Big  Ten season started and
everyone was double-teaming me. . . . People were expecting me to be the
leader and I wasn't . . . 

  He sighs. "If I could go back and do one thing differently, I'd be more
vocal. I'd tell my coaches about getting me the ball differently. Or about
using me as a decoy."

  Why didn't you say these things, he is asked?

  "I've never been that vocal of a person. I've never  liked telling other
people what to do."

  This is part of Taylor's riddle. He has the body to dominate, but the
spirit to evaporate. Too many times this year, he didn't seem willing to grab
the wheel and say, "This is my bus. I'm driving." Consequently, other players
stole the spotlight. Other players came up bigger. Often they were opposing
players.

  Taylor hung his head on the bench. Too many  photos featured Taylor with
his shoulders slumped and his eyes lowered, another should-have-been victory
slipping away from his Wolverines.

  And, more recently, the controversy surrounding the Michigan program -- and
its alleged involvement with a cash-giving booster -- has made Taylor all the
more camera shy. Questions abound about his car. About what he was doing with
his teammates and a recruit  that fateful night last winter.

  And yet, with typical mystifying form, Taylor says he doesn't take his
frustration home with him.

  "People have to remember, I'm more than a basketball player. I have a
social life. I enjoy being a college student. I go to parties, I hang out . .
."

  You study, I try to add.

  "Oh yeah," he says, laughing, "I study, I hang out, I go to parties."

 

An  unknown future

  So is 1997 bothering Taylor as much as it is bothering the fans -- or
even the media? Taylor was intrigued by a recent Detroit News column that
suggested that he leave U-M for his own good and for the team's own good. It
also suggested that he was resentful of how Michigan followers scrutinized him
and his family after last year's infamous rollover accident of his Ford
Explorer,  which contained Taylor, several teammates and a high school
recruit.

  "I don't know where (the writer) got that from," Taylor says. "I'm not
resentful at all. If I'm angry at anyone, it's the NCAA.  It wasn't Michigan
or its people who interrogated me.

  "I could never resent Michigan or anybody who's part of Michigan. I feel the
coaches here love me, the players love me and the fans love me."

  He leans back in the couch, folds his hands on his lap.

  "A lot of people are starting to psychoanalyze me now. Reporters want to
say what I'm thinking.

  "But I'll tell you this. If I leave Michigan,  it won't be because I didn't
feel appreciated here. If I left for that reason, I wouldn't be hurting
Michigan, I'd only be hurting myself."

 

Not Invited Tournament

  On the bus ride home from  Columbus, Ohio, following the regular-season
finale, an overtime victory against the Buckeyes, the Wolverines gathered
around a small TV as the NCAA tournament pairings were announced. They were
hopeful. Nervous. When the final bracket was posted, and Michigan was not in
the field, Taylor says, "I felt the most rejection I've ever felt in my life.
It was like I was a kid again and nobody chose me for  their pickup team . . .

  "It was terrible."

  A short while later, as the team sat in the dark silence, the wheels of the
bus churning in rhythm with the flapping windshield wipers, coach Steve
Fisher came back and sat next to Taylor. Fisher asked Taylor's thoughts about
playing in the NIT.

  "I told coach I wasn't going to lie," he says. "It was only a 50-50 thing
with me. I didn't want  to play in the NIT, but I didn't want to stop playing
basketball this year, either. I told him, if we did play, I would play my best
basketball of the season."

  And that is what Taylor promises. He  already hung one nice game on the
board (13 points in a solid performance against Miami, Fla.) and is generally
considered to be playing his strongest basketball of the season the past two
weeks. Tonight, it's beat Oklahoma State or go home.

  "I plan to make a statement in this tournament," he says. "I'm going to play
my best basketball of the season. I don't want the embarrassment of losing in
the  NIT. And that's what it would be -- an embarrassment. For us to lose in
the NIT would be unacceptable."

  He says this emphatically, and you want to believe him. And yet, he has had
to accept the unacceptable  already. Will tonight really be something better,
an early crop planting for next year? Or will it be a grand cymbal crash on an
up-and-down college career?

  Who knows. Sometimes you play basketball,  sometimes it plays you. Taylor
gets up from the couch, his long legs lifting him to impressive heights as he
uncurls. He is a big man, and with some weight work, you wonder what he might
do in the NBA if they couldn't put two men on him.

  "Has anyone in your family graduated college?" I ask.

  "Nope," he says. "I'd be the first. That's a big reason for me to stay."

  "Does your family need  money that the NBA would offer?"

  "They don't need it to eat or anything," he says, "but when I talk to them
at the end of the day, they say how tired they are from working. My
grandmother works on  the line at Ford. My aunt works at JC Penney's."

  His mother? He still calls her every day, before practice. Maybe they talk
about that day at the airport, when basketball became a heavy sail, altering
the direction of his life for good.

  "You know, a lot of people say basketball is just a game," Maurice Taylor
says, "but it has a lot of side effects."

  He walks off, toward the courts, and anyone  who claims to know what this
kid is thinking is lying.
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<DISCLAIMER>
THIS ELECTRONIC VERSION MAY DIFFER SLIGHTLY FROM THE PRINTED ARTICLE.
</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
BASKETBALL; U-M; COLLEGE; MAURICE TAYLOR; BIOGRAPHY
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
