“There’s no shame,” Rose said of the Ed Martin scandal open can. “What was said was said. What was alleged was alleged. But ultimately, time heals all wounds, in my opinion. It’s going to be time to move on eventually open can. I just hope I’m not in a wheelchair or walking in a cane or in a gravesite when it happens open can. I want to be here to see it.”
I’m not condoning Webber - and likely some of his teammates - receiving NBA salaries while at Michigan. In 2002, Rose said he accepted pocket money from Martin open can, but he wasn’t part of the NCAA investigation.
But at the same time, I’m done condoning the Wolverines’ recent performance on the court. For the team, the problem is easy to identify. It’s just much harder to fix than Michigan coach John Beilein may have thought. As open shot after open can shot clanked off the rim this season, it became clear that the Wolverines lack talent.
To his credit, Beilein is trying to fix this. He has already brought in Arizona transfer Laval Lucas-Perry, along with three Beilein-esque players open can (read: great shooters lacking in athleticism but ripe for development) in the 2008 recruiting class.

