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<UID>
9501130033
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
950404
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Tuesday, April 04, 1995
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL CHASER
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1C
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<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo ERIC DRAPER/Associated Press;Photo JEFF VINNICK/Reuters
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>


:
Ed O'Bannon, the Final Four's most outstanding player, captures
the celebration from above the rim.
George Zidek, left, and Toby  Bailey, right, close in on Ed
O'Bannon and Cameron Dollar in the UCLA victory pile.
</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
NCAA HOOPLA 1995
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1995, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
DESPITE INJURY, UCLA'S EDNEY HAD HAND IN WIN
</HEADLINE>
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<CORRECTION>

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SEATTLE --  One hand, 12 hearts. The hand belonged to UCLA point guard
Tyus Edney, it was swollen at the wrist, sore and bandaged and useless. He
dribbled lefty during warm-ups, declined to slap  palms with his teammates
during introductions, tried to milk every spare second, waiting for some
miracle heal. It never arrived. Game time did. He couldn't dribble. He
couldn't shoot. He tried to go  right and had the ball knocked away. He tried
to penetrate and lost control. Less than three minutes into the biggest game
of his life, the senior went to the bench, pulled on his warm-ups, dropped his
head, and prayed.

  Which is where the hearts come in. They belong to the other guys in the
blue and gold uniforms, the UCLA Bruins, who wear the college basketball crown
this morning because they  played the way you dream a team will play, moment
by moment, hero by hero, losing their general but never their focus. They
outmuscled defending national champion Arkansas, outquicked its fastest guys,
and, using only six players, outlasted Arkansas' famous rotation, until, in
the final seconds, Ed O'Bannon was slamming and Toby Bailey was jumping and
they were safe, they had done it. The buzzer sounded  and the entire team
leapt into a victory pile, then fell into an impromptu prayer session, which
ended with a simple word:

  "Amen."
  One hand, 12 hearts.
  "It was such a bad feeling, sitting  on the bench," admitted Edney, the
spiritual and play-making leader of this team, after the Bruins won  the
title, 89-78. "But I have confidence in my teammates. When I saw them playing
as hard as they  were, I knew they wouldn't have a problem."
  It was like the Force in the movie "Star Wars" -- Edney's will and drive,
which had led the Bruins to this title game, seemed to drip from his pores
into  the bodies of his teammates. The result was a highlight reel that can
run any night with the 10 other championships this school has won.
  Here was O'Bannon, the senior, on a mission, grabbing every rebound within
a yard of his bony arms and high-rising his way to 30 points, none more
impressive than a put-back basket in which he fought off the wrestler-like
grip of 280-pound Dwight Stewart and  muscled the ball back in, getting fouled
in the process.
  Here was behemoth center George Zidek, whose feet barely leave the ground,
clamping down on the supposedly unstoppable Corliss Williamson,  holding him
to just three baskets all night. "I made up my mind," said Zidek. "He was
going to have to shoot every shot over me."
  At 7 feet, that's pretty tough.
  Here was a freshman, the son  of a parole officer, Toby Bailey -- real name
John Garfield Bailey -- who played like a fellow named Jordan. As in Michael.
Bailey was simply out of his mind, turning in a goose-bump night, 26 points,
nine rebounds, and the most chilling moments. At times, he simply rose above
the entire Arkansas team for put-backs, often grabbing his own rebounds and
rolling them through the hoop. On one definitive  play, he took a whip-fast
steal from O'Bannon and reverse jammed, setting the Kingdome on fire.
  "Weren't you intimidated a little, being a freshmen?" he was asked.
  "No, this was my kind of game,"  he said. "Besides, after my first few
baskets, (the Arkansas players) started saying stuff like I was lucky, I was
just a freshman."
  That'll teach 'em.
  This was Bailey, and Zidek, and Charles  O'Bannon -- Ed's younger brother
-- and Cameron Dollar and freshman J.R. Henderson. That was the whole
rotation, all night. Six guys. It was like something out of "Hoosiers."
  Six guys?
  Yep. And  when the crown was theirs, they stood together, scissors in hand,
ready to cut down the nets. And even then, in their minds, there was only one
star.
  "HEY, YO, EVERYBODY!" screamed Ed O'Bannon into  the microphone when he was
announced as the Final Four's most outstanding player. "I WANT YOU TO KNOW
SOMETHING. THERE'S ONLY ONE MVP AND HE'S RIGHT HERE. TYUS EDNEY!"
  He raised his teammate's injured  paw. The crowd exploded.
  One hand, 12 hearts.
 Dollar was good as gold
  What a great story for this storied school, which hadn't won a championship
since 1975, when John Wooden said farewell. Wooden, now 85, won 10
championships in 12 years. He was here Monday night, in the stands, but he
left before the final buzzer, not wanting to steal any glory.
  His ghost left with him.
  No more  does Jim Harrick have to suffer the hauntings of a team that
doesn't exist. Life hasn't always been fair to Harrick in LA, where they can't
seem to forget the Wizard of Westwood days. But Monday, in  the Emerald City,
a new wizard was born.
  "This is the pinnacle moment, the peak of my career," said Harrick, who
finally erases early exits last year to Tulsa and the year before to Michigan
with  Monday's title. "Sometimes when something goes wrong -- like Tyus'
injury -- these nights work in your favor. I would give emotion and divine
intervention a lot of credit, but I would give our players even more credit."
  None more than the sophomore who took Edney's place, backup guard Cameron
Dollar. More reliable than the currency which bears his name, Dollar played as
if he'd been expecting  this night forever. Dollar is an intellectual kid, who
attended three high schools and said, earlier in the tournament, "My role on
this team is to make sure Ed and George Zidek get into the highest  tax
bracket possible."
  On Monday, his job was to take over for the most important player on the
team. Here's how he did: six points, eight assists, three rebounds, four
steals, and only three turnovers in 36 minutes.
  Not bad for a backup, huh?
  "I was speechless," said Harrick. "The way he led our team, and ran it in
the last five minutes. He knew exactly what I wanted. He said to me, 'Don't
worry, Ed will get the ball every time.' And his defense. . . . I'm
speechless."
  How often can a kid do that to a coach?
Arkansas lucky to get this far  
  A word here about the losing team,  Arkansas. You can hardly blame it for
succumbing to this kind of karma. It was almost too good a script to ruin.
Still, critics will  wonder why Nolan Richardson didn't go earlier to his big
gun, Williamson, who finished 3-for-16 -- most of those shots came late in the
game -- and went one stretch for more than 24 minutes without scoring a hoop.
  "We didn't shoot well, and they did a great job on Corliss," Richardson
said. "Give them credit. They just played lights out."
  And Arkansas made too many mistakes. The Razorbacks turned the ball over 18
times and were pitifully outrebounded, 50-31. Considering  they had the bigger
bodies, and a lot more of them, there's not much excusing this.
  But you have to give the Razorbacks their due for even getting here. They
survived games they should have lost  in the first round against Texas
Southern, in  the second round against Syracuse, and in the third round
against Memphis. The team will come apart now, with six seniors leaving --
including Corey Beck,  Dwight Stewart and Clint McDaniel -- along with
Williamson, Big Nasty, who will probably jump to the NBA.
  "I'm proud of our kids," Richardson said. "All the pressure they've been
under -- I told  them just being here was an accomplishment."
  And that's true. Arkansas got over its hump last year. UCLA does it now. It
was a wonderful story, a night for the books, watching Bailey lift his game,
and Ed O'Bannon soar toward his destiny, and Dollar step into that
star-is-born role, and finally, seeing Wooden leave, quietly, gently, taking
his legend with him to make room for another.
  You  don't get this stuff every night -- or even every year. Monday was
great theater, and proof that college basketball is still one place you can
mix desire and dreams and overcome even the worst news,  and the toughest
injuries.
  "UCLA! UCLA!" the fans chanted, as the team finally left the floor, led by
its shortest player, who gingerly raised his bandaged wrist and waved at
history.
  One hand,  12 hearts, one championship.
  Hell of a story, really.
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