small
time in the big ten
Do you know me? Not likely. I was once the last man on the worst
basketball team in the Big Ten. I was a freshman walk-on for
Northwestern during the 1985-86 season, which meant I received
no scholarship, practiced two hours a day, rarely made road trips
and played a total of 3.5 minutes for a team that would finish
last in the conference with a 2-16 record, 8-20 overall.
During my senior year of high
school I dreamed of becoming a college basketball star, and when
I first got to Northwestern, my dreams were very much alive.
I would be playing with Big Ten-caliber athletes who were above-average
students and audacious enough to sign with a program that had
had only one winning season since 1968-69. How good could the
players be who met those criteria?
Plenty good. Despite my 6'5"
frame and schoolboy all-state honors in Michigan, I found my
abilities overshadowed by those of the recruits. Still, I thought
I had made coach Rich Falk's squad even before he held his annual
tryout for walk-ons. During my senior year of high school in
Grand Haven, Northwestern assistant coach Walt Perrin came to
one of my games, and he later wrote me that I had an "excellent
chance" of making the squad.
A month later, when I visited
Northwestern's campus north of Chicago, I stopped in at Welsh-Ryan
Arena, the home of the Wildcats. Perrin gave me a tour. We began
on the arena floor. Eying the BIG TEN painted along the free
throw line, I grabbed a ball and took a jump shot. Swish! Perrin
tossed it back with a smile.
"So, can we expect you
this fall?" he asked.
"Sure," I said.
I sensed I belonged at Northwestern. I sensed I had a spot in
the Big Ten. I
returned to campus as a student in September and had pretty much
gotten into the routine of going to class well before the October
30 open tryout. About 35 hopefuls showed up. Afterward, Perrin
told me to report the next dayfor practice. I had made
the team.
The next afternoon I was issued
practice gear, including a pair of purple and white high-tops.
I tugged the laces tight against my feet to break in the leather,
jabbed at the air like a prize fighter and then hustled onto
the court to get my Big Ten career under way. Despite my enthusiasm,
I wasn't considered a Big Ten player by any standard other than
my own. That became even clearer when Falk arranged to meet with
each player to discuss his "role on the team." He didn't
give me an appointment, but I went to see him anyway.
I waited outside Falk's office
until he finished a meeting with another player. Falk studied
me in silence for a moment, as if he were trying to recall my
name, and then he glanced at his watch and waved me in.
"This will have to be
quick, Chip," he said. I had somehow expected this. "Don't
put any pressure on yourself," he said as I sat down. "You
just watch until you can run the drills."
But can I scrimmage, coach?
Can I play?
"You don't go in until
a coach tells you to," he said. "You can learn a lot
on the sidelines, if you pay attention."
During
the rest of the season, I often rode my bike to practice, pedaling
furiously into the fierce winds that blew off Lake Michigan and
babbling to myself like a madman to release my frustration. Inevitably
I would start to think of foul shots. At the end of practice,
every player shot a free throw. A miss meant a wind sprint for
everyone. I always shot last, and whenever I stepped to the line,
the other players would stare at me, silently demanding that
I make the shot. I was angry with my teammates for thinking I
would miss, and I was angry with Falk for not letting me play.
At least I gained a reputation for accuracy at the line.
The insults and humiliation
continued. I was told I could not be in the team photo. I wasn't
even in the press guide. John Peterson, a graduate assistant
who had received a full ride after walking on his freshman year,
put things pretty plainly. "If the other players don't accept
you, you're out of here," he said. "That goes for anybody,
scholarship or not. What you've got to do is stand up and cheer
all the time during the games. That's what your job is, and that's
what Coach Falk is looking for."
I cheered for a while, but
the guys who sat with me on the bench told me to knock off the
rah-rah stuff, so I stopped. I did continue to applaud some players.
One was Jeff Grose, who had been Indiana's Mr. Basketball in
1985. He always greeted me with a huge grin and his rich Indiana
drawl: "Roooowee!"
On the other hand, I had a
tough time cheering for 6'7", 220-pound Rocky Saviano. He
threw a lot of elbows. During one workout I ran to grab a rebound
and he snarled, "If you block me out, Rowe, I'll kill ya."
I was so startled I couldn't reply. If anything, Saviano's threat
made me more determined, but my determination didn't make his
elbows any less sharp.
I still hoped to play in the
daily scrimmages, although Falk's whistle signaling the end of
drills continued to be my cue to head to the sidelines. Falk
would stand on the far side of the court, and I positioned myself
directly opposite him so that he could see me at all times. But
he said nothing.
After
five weeks of practice, the season began. Our first game was
at home against Illinois Wesleyan. When we held a 20-point lead
late in the second half, I counted each tick of the clock with
growing impatience. Milan Petrovic, my seatmate at the end of
the bench, disappeared onto the floor with three minutes remaining.
A minute later, Falk walked to the end of the bench and knelt
in front of me. "Go in for Joe," he said quietly.
The game crawled up and down
the court as I waited by the scorer's table. Then, finally, the
horn. "Into the game for the WildcatsNumber 12, Chip
Rowe!" The pep band rose to cheer.
The clock read 1:07. That
would be my longest appearance in a game all season. I touched
the ball only once, and that was to throw it inbounds to Terry
Buford so he could dribble down the floor and launch one. Nonetheless,
getting to play felt fine.
Three games later I got in
for three seconds against Loyola University of Chicago. I replaced
Shon Morris, our leading scorer and rebounder, so the fans could
give him an ovation. I was happy with even three seconds, because
I would be in the box score.
In December the rest of the
squad took a road trip to Rollins and Duke while I went home
to Grand Haven for Christmas vacation. Before I left, Morris
sought me out in the locker room to shake my hand and wish me
a good Christmas. It was a gift like no other, a gesture that
meant Morris considered me one of his teammates.
I worked on my game every
day during the holiday and went through the drills in that first
practice after vacation with an air of supreme confidence. I
was sure I would get to scrimmage because we were running a simple
offense. Yet an hour later, when Falk blew his whistle to end
practice, I had not moved from the sidelines. Already the old
frustrations were squeezing the life from new beginnings.
Our
Big Ten opener was against Indiana on Jan. 9. We lost 102-65
and would lose again and again, all over the Midwest and at home.
It was difficult to be the only player who didn't see action
in a 37-point defeat.
We were 0-5 in the conference
by the time Iowa came to town on Jan. 23. I had yet to play a
Big Ten minute, so before the game my roommate and his friends
in the pep band raised a banner that read THE CHIP ROWE FAN CLUB
and chanted "Play Chip Rowe! Play Chip Rowe!" I ducked
my head to hide a grin.
Falk sent me in with 38 seconds
left. I got a rousing ovation from the band, which did my heart
good. Then, with six seconds to play....time stopped. A shot
bounced off the rim, hit the backboard and hung in midair. I
reached, reached, and suddenly a cement truck plowed into my
back. The ball soared out of bounds, and a whistle blew. I spun
around and found the official pointing at the guilty 6'6",
225-pound Iowa sophomore standing behind me. A foul! I would
go to the line.
I checked our bonus sign on
the scoreboard over center court. It wasn't lit. It takes seven
team fouls in a half to create a one-on-one situation; the one
on me was only No. 6 for the Hawkeyes since intermission. My
chance to score in the Big Ten had slipped away, but I did get
credit for a rebound.
Iowa won 76-43, but I was
more than satisfied. I finally had a Big Ten stat; no longer
would my name be followed by a humiliating row of zeros. From
that day on, I was a Big Ten player. I had a board, a caroom,
a rip.... After the final horn, I paused at the thought of our
0-6 record before seeking out Perrin.
"One more foul and I
had a couple of free throws for us, coach," I said as solemnly
as I could. He didn't reply, and I knew I had said the wrong
thing. We had been blown out for the third game in a row, and
here I was excited because I got fouled. Bad form.
Our next two games were special
to me. They were to be played in my home state, at Michigan and
Michigan State. Furthermore, I was going to make my first trip
with the team.
We left for Ann Arbor on Jan.
29. I chose a seat near the front of the bus, and as each player
passed he looked twice and exclaimed, "Look, Rowe's making
the trip!" Everything was OK. I was on a Big Ten basketball
team about to play in front of 13,609 people.
Of course, nowhere near that
many were left by the time I got in, but it was a start. We lost
to Michigan by 37 points and to Michigan State by 28. During
one timeout against the Spartans, I looked into the crowd and
met the stare of a small boy behind our bench. Despite the score,
his eyes were full of admiration. I had to look away before my
own filled with tears.
Thanks to Minnesota, which
had forfeited its Jan. 26 game with us because of an alleged
rape involving players from the Gopher team (who were later acquitted),
our conference record was not 1-8 instead of 0-9. Then we lost
seven of eight games, beating only a diminished Minnesota team.
Two days before our final game, against Wisconsin, I had a poor
practice. Falk told me to "stick with it."
"I will, coach,"
I said. I wanted to sink a long jumper and have Falk ask me if
I would be back. I wanted to run the fast break and hear him
clap his hands and say, "That's the way! That's the way!"
But it was too latefor
both of us. We lost to Wisconsin by a basket, and five days later,
Falk learned his contract wasn't going to be renewed.
In
October 1986, the new coach, Bill Foster, held his walk-on tryouts.
My heart wasn't in them, but my dream had somehow survived the
summer, and I wondered if things might be different under another
coach. After the tryout, Foster led the dozen hopefuls into the
locker room for some final comments. I was one of them.
Once inside, I sat down and
leaned against my old locker. The padlock was gone, and the purple
door was closed on an empty cage. My nameplate had been removed,
leaving only a rectangle of sticky residue. The cushioned folding
chair with CHIP ROWE painted on the back was nowhere to be seen.
The next day I returned to
check the list, to see who had made the team. My name wasn't
there.
This
first appeared in Sports Illustrated, March 21, 1988.Copyright
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