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<UID>
9501120540
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
950331
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Friday, March 31, 1995
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo Color Associated Press;JULIAN H. GONZALEZ
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>


:
Rumeal Robinson stayed calm after his first free throw with :03
left. His next gave U-M the title.
Michigan players showed the world who was No. 1 after their
NCAA  championship victory over Seton Hall in 1989 at the
Seattle Kingdome.
</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
NCAA HOOPLA 1995
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1995, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
U-M'S HECTIC NCAA RUN ONE FOR BOOKS IN HOOPS LORE
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

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SEATTLE -- I've been trying to call Rumeal Robinson for days. His agents
have been trying, too. He reportedly flew from Argentina to Atlanta -- he took
part in the Pan Am Games -- and nobody has  heard from him since. You call his
house, the phone rings and rings.

  Lately, Rumeal has been in Louisiana, with a CBA team, the Shreveport
Crawdads, trying to whip up the dust of what's left of his  basketball career.
He was supposed to be a star, remember? The Hawks chose him in the first round
of the 1990 NBA draft, ahead of Loy Vaught, Terry Mills and Cedric Ceballos.
They gave Rumeal a big contract.  He washed out. Now, even his agents can't
get him on the phone.

  He wasn't always so hard to find. In fact, on this very weekend, six years
ago, Rumeal was right here, center stage, the Kingdome,  standing at the free
throw line, the loneliest man in the world, as he bounced the ball and eyed
the basket with the national championship hanging in the balance.
  "Rumeal was cocky, he knew he was  going to make those free throws," Mills
recalls. Steve Fisher wasn't so sure. He stood on the sideline, holding that
cup of water which he never let go, his security blanket, as he waited for the
end  of a miracle.
  "I knew if I fainted, the water would revive me," Fisher says.
  Will there ever be another college basketball finish like 1989? Can you
come to Seattle and not think about that?  Here, in this perpetually moist and
green city, we witnessed a thunderclap of circumstances. Old coach leaves
team. New coach takes over. Wins his first six games. Takes national
championship.
  "When  did it all begin?" I ask Fisher. We have gotten together to talk
about those three weeks of insanity. 
  "Well, I got the phone call about 7 a.m. It was Bo Schembechler. Come to
his office. He gave  me that scowl. He said, 'Fisher, can you coach this team?
Because Bill Frieder is not!' "
  So it began.
Fisher was a Michigan man
  Everyone remembers Schembechler's press conference. He pounded  on the
podium and barked, "A Michigan man will coach Michigan!" Frieder had flown to
Arizona State, accepted the job, then flown back to Ann Arbor, planning to
finish the season by taking the Wolverines  to Atlanta for the first round.
  Forget it, Schembechler said.
  Suddenly, the team belonged to Fisher, who, most people didn't realize, was
going through a career crisis himself. After all, his  mentor, Frieder, was
headed for the desert. 
  "I could have gone with Bill," Fisher says. "But just as he left, the
Western Michigan job opened up. I had been there a few years, so I was
interested.  And then Illinois State, my alma mater, opened as well. I would
have ended up at one of those two schools if, you know, what happened didn't
happen. . . . "
  Here's what happened. Six yellow bricks  in the road.
  And something you might not have known about each one:
ROUND 1:  Michigan 92, Xavier 87.
  The day before the game, Fisher had allowed Frieder to secretly visit the
team in the  hotel. Schembechler would have blown his top, but "I think any
man with a degree of compassion would have done the same," Fisher says.
  Frieder was in tears. He said how sorry he was that he couldn't  coach the
team. One player remembered Frieder sweating and crying so hard, his white
T-shirt was soaked. 
  "It was good for our guys," Fisher recalls.
  But it was no guarantee. With 10 minutes  to go in the tournament opener,
Michigan was still in a dogfight, and the win was not sealed without the help
of a little-used sophomore guard named Demetrius Calip, who scored a
career-high nine points.  U-M barely survived its first test.
  "I remember we had rented a band for that game, because we didn't bring our
own," Fisher says. "So the Georgia State pep band was playing our songs. When
I came  out, the first thing I saw was someone waving a sign,  "Rent a Band,
Rent A Coach."
  You've got to admit, it's clever.
ROUND 2:  Michigan 91, S. Alabama 82.
  This marked the start of the Glen  Rice show. He scored 36 points and
missed only six shots. He would continue like that throughout the tournament.
  "I was on a mission," recalls Rice, now with the Miami Heat. "At one point,
I told  the team, we're gonna shock the world."
  It was shocking enough that they passed Round 2 and were coming home to Ann
Arbor still alive. Fisher returned to his house, only to find the neighbors
had  decorated the lawn in appreciation.
ROUND 3:  Michigan 92, N. Carolina 87.
  By this point, Western Michigan and Illinois State were seriously
interested in Fisher. He spoke with them during the week. But after knocking
off Dean Smith's Tar Heels -- "You beat one of my best teams," he told Fisher
after the game -- the new coach started to set his sights higher.
  "That was a great North Carolina  squad. When we won -- and I may be crazy
here -- I felt I was going to get the job at Michigan."
ROUND 4:  Michigan 102, Virginia 65.
  The only blowout in the whole three weeks. Fisher had seen something
during warm-ups, the way Virginia's players kept looking over at his
Cinderella team.
  Mills saw it, too.
  "They're scared of us," Mills announced in the pregame locker room. "You
can  see it in their eyes! They're scared! Let's get on them right from the
start."
  Exactly what Fisher was thinking. And it worked. Blowout.
  They were in the Final Four.
ROUND 5:  Michigan 83, Illinois  81.
  By now, people were thinking seriously about Fisher as a head coach. The
interest from the other schools continued to perk. Meanwhile, sophomore Sean
Higgins --  who was never shy around a microphone  -- told a newspaper he
thought the players should have some say in who got to coach the team next
year. He even made a few suggestions.
  Schembechler exploded.
  "Higgins, if you don't like it here,  you can pack your bags!" he screamed
during a "pep" talk to the team. "Your papers will be on my desk tomorrow
morning!"
  Needless to say, Higgins scored the winning basket against Illinois, a soft
 follow-up with two seconds left. And who was one of the first people to hug
him when he ran off the floor?
  Schembechler.
ROUND 6:  Michigan 80, Seton Hall 79.
  It seemed that Michigan had the  game won, but it went flat and allowed
Seton Hall to tie it at the end of regulation. The Wolverines were down.
Fisher saw it in the huddle. So instead of calling plays, he told them a
story.
  "There  was this guy I knew who was in California. I hadn't seen him in
years. Before the tournament, he called me  and said, 'I had a vision. You're
going to win the national championship, and Mark Hughes will  be the hero.'
  "I said this and Hughes was smiling, figuring, all right, I'm gonna be it."
  Well, right team, wrong guy. It was Robinson, who took the ball late in the
overtime and drove downcourt  and was fouled with three seconds left. He went
to the line and hit the first to tie, then the second to win.
  What most people don't know is that Robinson was trying to pass to an open
teammate when  he got fouled. The teammate? 
  "Mark Hughes," Fisher says.
  He smiles at the memory. And why not? He got the Michigan job, of course,
along with a championship ring and a story for the ages.
  You look around the Kingdome here, the great teams -- UCLA, North Carolina,
Arkansas, Oklahoma State -- and it's hard to predict what will happen. But
whatever it is, it will not be like the last time.  Maybe nothing ever will.
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