MICHAEL
DOLES SPOTLIGHT
12-19-02
Sophomore forward Michael Doles (Richmond, Va./Meadowbrook) grew
up about 15 minutes away from the Siegel Center, but it took him
almost two years for him to make his debut in the black and gold,
which he will do tonight against Hampton. Doles, who has
practiced with the team since last spring and will have two more
years of eligibility remaining after this season, is expected to
add size and athleticism to the Rams' front line. But it wasn't a
smooth recruiting pitch or a promise of playing time that
convinced the 6-6 forward to transfer from Wright State in Ohio
to play at VCU. Rather, it was something most college students
experience at least once: He was homesick.
Doles, who wasn't pursued by VCU after
starring at nearby Meadowbrook High, was surprised by how
difficult being away from home was for him. "When I went to
Wright State, I thought, 'Hey, I'm away from my parents, I can do
my own thing,'" he said. "But all it took was that one
lonely night, when all I wanted was to be with my family and
friends, and that was it."
Doles played one year at Wright State, mostly
in a reserve role. Although he wasn't happy there, he decided to
return for his sophomore season, only to have those same feelings
of loneliness prompt several phone calls to his parents. "My
dad tried to keep me there and convince me to stay," Doles
said, "but when he came up for a preseason scrimmage and saw
the look on my face, he knew I had to come home."
Along with his parents' advice, Doles received help
and support from his high school coach from Meadowbrook as well
as two former teammates and current Rams Derrick Reid and Mark
Adams. "My high school coach told me he was convinced that I
had options if I left Wright State," he said. "I also
called Mark and Derrick and asked them about VCU and the team.
They ended up asking the coaches if there was room for me. But
when I left school in Ohio, no [school] had picked me up, I was
on my own."
Eventually, Doles was offered a scholarship to
VCU, and he enrolled in classes for the spring semester. Unable
to compete for one year, Doles practiced with the team and
immediately felt comfortable playing with Adams and Reid again,
just like old times. "It's the best feeling in the
world," he said of reuniting with his high school teammates.
"In practice now, I know that if they can do it, I can do
it. We did the same things growing up, had the same coaches and
everything, and knowing that right there gets me through a tough
practice. That's what I missed.
"The first day I put on a VCU uniform the
team made me feel like I had been there forever," he said.
"Everyone welcomed me right from the start, and now we're
the best of friends. At Wright State, I was the only guy from the
South and I stood out a bit. [At VCU] we're all alike, with
similar backgrounds."
Doles also made an immediate connection with
head coach Jeff Capel, who worked out with Doles last season
while he was an assistant coach. "Coach Capel is one of the
best coaches I've ever had, both as a person and as a
teacher," Doles said. "I'm a big Duke fan myself, so I
remember him as a player. You know what he says is right, because
he's been through it before, and he learned from Coach [Mike]
Kryzewski. And he's a great teacher. I feel I'm a better
basketball player now than when I left Wright State a year
ago."
As for his debut in tonight's game against a
strong Hampton team, Doles is excited but cautious. "I don't
want to go out there and try to do too much," he said.
"I haven't played in a game in a year-and-a-half, and game
shape is different than practice shape. At first I'm sure I'll be
running on adrenaline, but after that first timeout, when the
adrenaline is gone, that's when I'll feel it."
Regardless of how he performs tonight, Doles
knows he made the right decision to return to Richmond because he
is undeniably happy. Although most people tend to agree with
American author Thomas Wolfe's claim that You Can't Go Home
Again, Doles feels otherwise. To any future college
student-athletes, Doles advises, "If you have an opportunity
to play at home, don't pass it up. I figure, if it's not broken,
don't fix it, and it wasn't broken when I was here in the first
place."