FRIDAY,. FEBRUARY 10, 1967 TIFF MICHIGAN DAii.v lvmx mxx" im aptikilmIx PAGE SEVEN i lcers Try To Cool Fiery Bessone By GRAYLE HOWLETT Last season was an off-year for Michigan State hockey coach Amo Bessone. The Spartans did grab the NCAA crown after a .sixth- place finish, but somehow Bes- sone proved a disappointment. He was inconspicuous. Bessone has been dubbed the WCHA's Leo Durocher but last year his hollering tactics and tempestuous tirades were notice- ably absent. He even was known Baird By DAVE TICKTON Take a scale, put -WCHA com- petition on one side and the Mich- igan hockey team on the other. Result: an unbalanced scale and an outweighed team. Add Bob Baird. and a steady player," Keough of- the Wolverine skaters. The Michigan icers this year are enjoying one of their finest sea- sons with an extremely well- rounded and highly spirited squad. Senior forward Bob Baird is one of the prime reasons for the hockey team's success. Baird has finally come into his own this season. He leads the team in scoring with 19 goals and 20 assists for 39 points. Baird played his pre-collegiate hockey in Toronto. Since there aren't any high school hockey teams in Canada, he played along with sophomore goalie Jim Keough to sit down on the bench instead of assuming his more familiar po- sition of standing. And his quotes were beginning to sound just like everybody else's. In his 14 years as a coach at Michigan State, Bessone's most successful season was last year- the year of the big change. When word came from a Minnesota paper that Bessone may have re- turned to his old ways, the rest of the WCHA rejoiced. According to a newspaper ac- i with a 4-9-1 conference record atl count, during the first game of the Michigan State-Denver series, Bessone made such a commotion on the bench that his players voted him off the bench for the Saturday night rematch. He was banished to the stands, and ran the team from the third row. The old Bessone seemingly had re- -turned. After all, the NCAA champions were mired deep in seventh place 'uts Icing On 'M in various leagues near his home. "Baird was always a good scorer and a steady player," Keough of- fers. "He convinced me to come to Michigan." From Brown to Books Baird didn't go to Michigan right after high school. "I didn't even know what the University of Michigan was," he jokes. "I start- ed playing semi-pro hockey and was working at the same time." This convinced him that school was more practical and "more im- portant." Bob is in education school. "I plan to go into semi-pro or pro hockey after graduation. As for the future, I'd like to be a coach or teacher. I've had some offers from Toronto teams and would like to play for the Maple Leafs." If Baird decides some day to coach hockey, much of his strategy will probably come from the Mich- igan hockey rinks. "I'm glad I came to Michigan," he states. "I learned a lot from Mel (Wakabayashi). He taught me quite a bit about team-work. When I was playing in Toronto it was mostly every man for him- self." SCORES NBA Baltimore 128, Boston 124 Only game scheduled NHL No games scheduled COLLEGE BASKETBALL Army 69, Manhattan 64 NYU 83, Georgetown (DC) 77 No. Carolina 75, Wake Forest 73 (ovt) St. Johns (NY) 83, West Virginia 71 Fordham 78, Colgate 57 Tulsa 72, Bradley 71 Houston 92, Hardin-Simmons 85 Baird has shown steady im- provement over the last three years. "My skating has improved and I'm back-checking better now." Along with his hard skating has come an increase in penalties. He chuckles when questioned about this, and answers, "Oh, I guess I've gotten mad at the refs a couple times. Most of those penal- ties have been ten-minute ones for misconduct." Hockey hasn't taken up all of this 6' 175-pounder's time. He married his Toronto high school sweetheart last summer. Mrs. Baird has been watching Bob play hockey since his high school days. "I really love, the game and life is very pleasant even in the midst of the hockey season." The Wolverine skaters have played strong, consistent hockey all season. "Balance and being stronger in the goal has been the the time and everybody figured that the Spartans were down so Bessone had returned. Not so. "You didn't believe that story, did you?" chuckled a calm Bes- sone. "That reporter just needed some information for his column. Besides, he was in Minnesota while we were in Denver. He was i working through a contact. The real truth is that their benches Attack big difference this season," Baird says. "All three forward lines are good and there isn't any one standout. The penalty killers have also been doing a real fine job." 'Til the Cows Come Home The Toronto native feels that the big games so far this year have been the series against Michigan State and the tournament game against Michigan Tech in Detroit. On the recent split at Hough- ton last weekend against Tech, Baird comments, "It was a smaller rink than we usually play on. We were up for the games but just didn't seem to have that little extra." The Michigan puckmen have had that little extra nearly every game this year. This team's po- tential has been underestimated. With the steady all-around plat of the Toronto terror, Bob Baird, the Wolverines could go a long are so crowded that in the first row of That's all." I had to sit: the stands.! Bounce-Bounce Last weekend the Spartans swept their first series of the campaign, bouncing Minnesota twice. The double win elevated them from seventh to fifth and it looked like an instant replay from last year. "It looks like the same kind of season for us as last year," Bes- sone confided, "the only differ- ence is we're not scoring as much. But we played well last weekend." The key to the Michigan State hockey machine is still senior All- American Doug Volmar. "The dif- ference between our squad this year and last is most of the other teams are concentrating on Doug." Last year's league-leading scor- er, Volmar is only eleventh in total points in the conference, netting ten goals and helping out on six others. "A lot of people," challenged Bessone, "say that Doug 'Just has a shot' but he also can skate with anybody in the league, He's also quite strong and has done well despite the handicap of not having played much hockey." Slurp The Wolverines have already feasted on the Spartans three times this year, and are looking for a sweep of this weekend's home-and-away series to keep second place North Dakota at bay. Tonight the Wolverines and Spartans face-off at 8 p.m. at the Coliseum, then Michigan jour- neys to East Lansing for the re- vaatch on Saturday night. IOf special interest to Wolverine fans should be the mood of Amo Bessone: "Sure, I holler and yell a lot, but it's a great way to avoid ulcers." If Bessone is providing the fire- works, chances are the Spartans won't be. But if Bessone is com- fortably seated at 8 p.m. face-off tonight, it could be a long weekend for the Wolverines. SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: CLARK NORTON This Weekend in Sports FRIDAY Gymnastics--Eastern Michigan at IM Building, 3:30 p.m. Hockey-Michigan State at Coliseum, 8 p.m. SATURDAY Basketball-Michigan at Northwestern Hockey-Michigan at Michigan State Swimming-Indiana at Matt Mann Pool, 7:30 p.m. Track-Michigan at Michigan State Relays Wrestling-Toledo at Yost Fieldhouse, 3:30 p.m. MONDAY Wrestling--Wisconsin at Yost Field House, 3:30 p.m. It's in the CARDS at 1203 South University OPEN TONIGHT TILL 9 I UNION-LEAGUE LITTLE CLUB invades NORTH CAMPUS JAZZ-FOLK SINGING Saturday, Feb. 11 Inter House Assembly will provide skating, tobagganing, snowman - building, skidoos, fun & frolic. Bus service from the Union will provide free, warm transportation to WEST PARK between 12:30-4:30. A "Mixer at Markley" at 8:30 will provide a climax to the day of events with music by Sol Estes. Bring your skates & sleds & join us in saluating winter with the first Annual I HA DAY V A ,I COMMONS SNACK BAR FRIDAY, 9-12 P.M. FEBRUARY 10 BOB BAIRD i4 Michigan Union and Michigan League announce OPEN PETITIONING for University Activities Center SENIOR OFFICERS 1967-68 M {o UNION-LEAGUE Petitions available 2nd floor Union and 3rd floor League. DUE FEB. 19. e 0 is, L E N T I N E S D A D A Y F E B 14 '.1 Ph oh lr -I \ti FELLAS . r 1 t /r LrA7AA3 rn, or~ l r rn h. i i F i o1 BoJa - -t-- 1e; Y Before you decide on the industry for your career, be sure you consider the great opportunities at First National City Bank. It's the leader in worldwide banking: over $15 billion in assets; more than 24,000 people at over 300 locations around the world; one of the nation's largest data processing centers in New York. 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