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Hatch, and to take advantage of superior rehabilitation opportunities. "Basketball is just a game, and I understand that I have bigger goals in life," Hatch said. "My academics come first. Basketball has always been second for me, but basketball has given me something to shoot for." Michael Hatch and Adams joined the 6 foot 6 forward in a lecture hall at Loyola, the 148 year old Jesuit prep school near downtown Los Angeles. Hatch feels comfortable among the weathered brick buildings that lend a distinctly Midwestern flavor to the campus, and he has been practicing with the Cubs since September. Although Hatch lost almost all of his immediately family, he is with his uncle and grandparents in Los Angeles, and he'll head to Ann Arbor next year with the support of a new extended family at Loyola. "When you're inches, millimeters away from death, you really understand," he said. "You look at that from a different lens. Every day, the opportunities I have with my family, my friends, all the guys here at Loyola, it's just a great group of people out here." Hatch averaged 23.3 points and 9.3 rebounds per game as a sophomore at Canterbury School in his native Fort Wayne, Ind., attracting immediate attention from major schools. Hatch and his father chose Michigan primarily for its academic reputation, figuring Hatch could follow his father, an anesthesiologist, into medicine. Beilein and assistant coach Jeff Meyer stuck with Hatch throughout his recovery, speaking frequently and maintain the Wolverines' commitment. "It's exciting as can be that he's going to have this opportunity to play organized basketball