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Recruiting must be the toughest part of the job.
In order to create relationships in the city you probably have to seek the aid
of local coaches, leaders and alumni. But that doesn't mean you don't
check them out. Fisher blew it by keeping this guy around and even worse -
accepting him as part of the process. As for Sacramento King forward Mayce Chris
Webber (C-Webb), it's amazing how someone can come to a school and tarnish its
century-old athletic tradition in just 3 semesters. The largest
living alumni cannot let him get off easy.
While Ed Martin, the man who paid the Michigan
players, was the problem, Fisher is the one that associated the problem with the
university. He made Martin a part of the basketball program and there are
records to prove that. He made dozens of phone calls to Martin, he dropped
tickets for him, and he was present during recruiting visits. If it was
shown that Martin was truly acting on his own behalf and directly with the
players, then maybe the case could be made to go easy on the school. But
Fisher's acceptance of Ed Martin linked him to the school, and now we will pay.
The 5 members of the Michigan Fab 5 are Chris
Webber, Jimmy King, Jalen Rose, Juwan Howard and Ray Jackson. The
entire group played together for only 2 years because Webber went to the
NBA after the season. The 5 lost in the Final Four, and really the
Final 2, of the NCAA tournament basketball championship losing to the Duke
Blue Devils in Minneapolis as freshman, then to the North Carolina Tar
Heels as sophomores. The Fab "4" continued on for one year after
Webber left, barely missing out on a third consecutive final 4 when they
lost to eventual champion Arkansas in the Elite Eight. Juwan
Howard and Jalen Rose left Michigan after their junior season. Jimmy
King and Ray Jackson did not make a significant NCAA tournament run in
their senior seasons and never caught on with an NBA team. Martin
allegedly made payments of $616,000 to Chris Webber, Robert Tractor
Traylor, Maurice Taylor and Louis (Lou) Bullock.
Mitch Albom's book, the Fab Five, recounts the
tale of their first two special years at the University of Michigan.
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Recruiting must be the toughest part of the job.
In order to create relationships in the city you probably have to seek the
aid of local coaches, leaders and alumni. But that doesn't mean you
don't check them out. Fisher blew it by keeping this guy around and
even worse - accepting him as part of the process. As for Sacramento King
forward Mayce Chris Webber (C-Webb), it's amazing how someone can come to
a school and tarnish its century-old athletic tradition in just 3
semesters. The largest living alumni cannot let him get off
easy. |