The Oakland Press

Howard faces his friend at FSU

- By Eddie Pells

INDIANAPOL­IS >> It’s not that Juwan Howard doesn’t love his old friend and mentor, Leonard Hamilton.

It’s just that there’s a lot on the line this week.

The Sweet 16 game Sunday between Michigan and Florida State also sets up a coaching confrontat­ion between student and mentor. Howard and Hamilton struck up a strong friendship in 2000, when Howard was wrapping up his time with the Washington Wizards and Hamilton was coaching there.

Last year, when Howard got his job coaching his alma mater, who are topseeded and into the second weekend for the fourth straight tournament, one of his first visits was to Hamilton. Good choice. “Coach Ham,” as Howard calls him, is building something big at Florida State, which has reached this point for the third straight tournament and is seeded fourth.

All great story lines, Howard concedes. But business is business. He said even if his late grandmothe­r, Jannie Mae Howard, was alive and playing basketball, “I’d play her 1-on-1. I’d be very physical with her.”

“And when the game is over, I’m gonna embrace her, hug her and kiss her,” Howard said. “That’s how it goes in the game of basketball. Once the game starts, you’re locked into your opponent”

Howard views it more as a matter of coincidenc­e than fate that this matchup

marks a rare-but-not-unheard-of meeting between Black coaches this far along in the bracket. More significan­t to one of the cornerston­es of the Fab Five is that it’s a meeting between friends who are trying to instill the same values in the players they coach.

“We’re two men able to empower young men to go out there and live their dreams,” Howard said.

Lest things turn too touchy-feely, Howard knows he has not drawn the easiest of assignment­s.

Florida State has become the current-day power in the ACC, with a program that stresses great defense. According to analytics website kenpom.com, FSU is the tallest team in the country, one that allows opponents to shoot under 44% from inside, which is ranked ninth nationally. The Seminoles allowed the fewest points (107) over the first two games of any of the 16 teams left in the tournament.

Michigan has been mostly on point through the first two games, as well.

After a slow start against hot-shooting LSU in the second round, Howard kept pushing for better defense, and got it. The game changed when the Wolverines started doing a better job denying the perimeter and forcing LSU’s scorers inside, where they had to contend with 7-foot-1 Hunter Dickenson and 6-9 Franz Wagner.

In his first year, Howard has navigated the adjustment from NBA assistant coach (with the Heat) to head coach of a major college program, and that program hasn’t skipped a beat. It’s not a surprise to Hamilton.

“There’s no doubt that Juwan is the ultimate profession­al. A class act,” Hamilton said. “He’s someone I think the people at Michigan can be very proud of, and I think they need to sit back and relax and enjoy the ride, because he’s going to take them maybe even higher than some of the places Michigan basketball has been in the past.”

 ?? AJ MAST — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? U-M head coach Juwan Howard celebrates as he walks off the court after a second-round game against LSU.
AJ MAST — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS U-M head coach Juwan Howard celebrates as he walks off the court after a second-round game against LSU.

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