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ROAR,
LION ROAR
Merley Ends Career on a High Note
Despite limited playing time, senior leaves Columbia with good memories
By E.J. Crawford

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Mike
Merley '01 posts up against Duke during the 1999-2000 season.
PHOTO: JEFFREY A. CAMARATI
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In
the waning moments of the final basketball game of the season, Columbia
center Mike McBrien '02's free throw rimmed out and fell to the
right side of the floor. Bouncing through the hands of three Dartmouth
players, the ball found its way to Mike Merley '01, Columbia's lone
senior, waiting behind the three-point arc. With the clock clicking
toward 0:00 on the game and on his career, Merley instinctively
spun and heaved up the trey. At first he thought it was headed left,
then he thought it was too strong. It was both, but the angle sent
the ball high off the backboard, clanging off the rim, back off
the backboard and finally through the waiting net for the final
points in a 71-64 victory.
The
moment of euphoria that followed as his teammates mobbed him in
celebration whisked Merley back through a basketball career with
more ups and downs, more caroms and odd bounces than the last-second
shot he had just watched fall through the hoop.
Merley,
whom teammates call Merles, played every sport as a youngster in
Tuscon, Ariz., but his athletic fate was sealed when he grew 11
inches between fifth and sixth grade. "He grew so fast his
bones were always aching," recalls his mother, Vicki.
By
the time he was a freshman at Canyon Del Oro High School, Merley
stood 6-7. After splitting time as a star on the junior varsity
and a reserve on the varsity during his freshman year, he moved
up to the varsity full-time as a sophomore and led Canyon Del Oro
to the regional finals in each of the next three years. "He
was a player from the past," Canyon Del Oro Coach Daniel Huff
says, referring to Merley's work habits. "He was a good solid
player with tremendous character, a tremendous young man. The last
thing you'd ever have out of Mike Merley is a bad attitude."
Merley
survived a spate of injuries early in his high school career to
draw the attention of college recruiters from schools like Massachusetts,
Oklahoma and New Mexico. "It's definitely cool when you're
sitting in class and get a hand-written note from John Calipari,"
Merley says five years later, looking at his hands as if the note
from the former UMass and current Memphis coach were there. Laughing,
he answered Calipari's message, "I will have a Merry Christmas,
man!"
But
on Jan. 5, 1996, Merley's plans began to unravel when he hurt his
left knee. He continued to play on it despite persistent soreness
before reinjuring it in early February. This time he took a week
off but returned while the knee still was unstable, and it finally
broke down during warm-ups before a late-season game.
Merley,
who wears a neoprene brace on the knee to this day, remembers when
the doctor called with the results of his MRI. The doctor asked
to speak to his mother, but Merley secretly picked up the phone
and eavesdropped, eager to hear his fate. The prognosis wasn't good.
Not only had he torn his anterior cruciate ligament, he also had
worn down all the fibers inside the knee, unusual for an ACL tear.
The
surgical procedure usually requires six to eight months for the
knee to heal, but Merley made it back in just over four. "I
worked my ass off," he says. Nonetheless, the injury scared
away most of the recruiters.
Columbia
coach Armond Hill saw Merley play in his first AAU tournament after
he returned from the injury. Merley says he was rusty, but Hill
saw something else, a fire and competitive energy that would become
Merley's trademark with the Lions. "The other team was up 40
and trying to rub it in," Hill remembers. "With time running
out, the other team went up for a dunk and Merles went up and blocked
the shot. That was all I needed to see."
Merley
has short hair and sharp features, a quiet demeanor and a self-deprecating
wit. An environmental science major with a 3.2 GPA, Merley plans
to look for a job in the information technology field after this
month's graduation, with an eye toward law school down the road.
He carries himself with no sense of pretentiousness or entitlement,
and might go unnoticed were it not for his 6-7, 225-pound frame.
As his mother says, "He's a shy guy, but he always stuck out."
Unfortunately
for Merley, he did anything but stick out during his junior year
at Columbia. After starting 19 games for the Lions during his first
two years while totaling 107 points and 97 rebounds, he played only
91 minutes as a junior, when he was lost amid an influx of talented
newcomers and fell to third on the depth chart at center behind
McBrien and 6-9 Chris Wiedemann '03. Merley ended the season with
totals of just 15 points and nine rebounds.
"It
was really hard on him," says his mother, who remembers travelling
to a tournament in Nebraska that year in which her son did not even
play. "He didn't talk about it much."
However,
unlike the 11 others recruited along with him in what some thought
was the class that would turn Columbia's basketball fortunes around,
Merley stuck it out. He learned the position of power forward while
continuing to work with Wiedemann, who credits Merley for teaching
him Hill's offense and easing his transition into college basketball.
As
a senior, Merley assumed the mantles of co-captain and emotional
leader. He played 200 minutes in Columbia's 27 games, scoring 39
points, grabbing 33 rebounds and collecting five blocks. More importantly,
for the first time in 15 years, the Lions beat Princeton and Penn
on consecutive days, a sweep Merley calls "a stepping stone"
toward becoming a true title contender.
Merley
takes pride in the progress the program has made during his four
years. "I've become quite an advocate of Columbia," he
says. "There are a lot of good memories."
Merley
even got one final start, against Brown on Senior Day. When his
name was announced during the pre-game introductions, the crowed
erupted in applause. "He jumped off the bench," Hill said.
"Tears nearly came to my eyes."
Echoing
the comments of his teammates, forward Marc Simon '02 says of Merley,
"It's been such a backward ride for him, after getting major
time as a freshman. But because of that he knows what it takes to
get on the floor. That's where the leadership comes from. He knows
what level we have to play at and brings that to practice every
day."
For
Merley, just being out on the court is its own reward. He tells
a story of when his girlfriend took him to a New Jersey Nets game,
where they had courtside seats. "I was thinking 'cool, great
seats,'" he says. "But once the game started I was thinking,
'I'm never going to find a cooler seat than playing.'"
That
is why he stayed. That is why Merley endured stress fractures, ACL
tears, work-study programs and a season on the bench - that chance
to play one more game, to take one last shot in his one last game,
the one that dropped poetically through the hoop.
"The
best thing about that last shot," Merley says, "was how
everyone reacted. It was like we had won the national championship.
It's too bad it has to be over, but if you're going to go out, that's
how you do it."
E.J.
Crawford, who expects to graduate from the Journalism School this
month, is an aspiring sports journalist living in Hoboken, N.J.
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