Page 8-Tuesday, November 27, 1979-The Michigan Daily EAVES OVERFLOWS: Wolverine icers edge WMU twice t A 5 t Blue icers . . Puckh9 r4round By JON WELLS There was a strange mixture of jubilation and anxiety in the Michigan icers' locker room after they completed a two-game sweep of Western Michigan Sunday afternoon at Yost Arena. Murray Eaves had just capped a wild and 'wooly hockey game in spectacular fashion with an unassisted goal 3:45 in- to overtime to push the Wolverines past the battling Broncos, 8-7. The sophomore center, who is rapidly bec- coming the heart and soul of this sur- prising hockey team, stripped a Western forward of the puck at his own blue line and streaked the length of the ice. Eaves then circled behind the ned and slid the puck behind the late- arriving Bronco goaltender. The overtime goal gave Eaves his thir.d hat trick of the season and a total of 17 goals and 19 assists in 12 games. The goal also atoned for a sloppy defen- sive effort by the Wolverines, and enabled the team to sneak away from this non-conference home and home series with two narrow victories. THE SOURCE of the anxiety that dampened the post-game celebration was Michigan's lack-luster play on their side of the red line. For the majority of a goal-infested regulation play the Western attack was allowed to run rampant arotind Wolverine goaltender Rudy Varvari. very, very sloppy defensively. The defensive coverage was terrible in our own zone." When reminded that Sunday's victory was the team's ninth of the season, one more than the Wolverines managed during the entire 1978-79 season, Farrell muttered, "That's about all we have to celebrate." THE GAME itself was a classic see- saw battle. The lead changed hands five' times and the game was deadlocked on seven separate occasions. Michigan seemed on the verge of blowing out un- derdog Western throughout the contest, but the untiring Broncos kept storming back. Twice in the first period, the Broncos negated a one-goal Michigan lead. Western left winger Ross Fitzpatrick tied the game at two at 7:39 when he slid a bad-angle wrist shot just inside the far post past Varvari. At 17:35 Michigan defenseman Tim Manning put the Wolverines in front 4-3 with a blast from the left point, but the Bron- cos stormed back ten seconds later to tie the game again when center Bob Scurfield drove home a perfect cen- tering pass from captain Ralph Mur- phy. The second period was like a defen- sive mirage with the only goal coming when Brad Tippett (two goals) backhanded a pass from Ted Speers past Western goalie Jim Doyle. The fireworks resumed in the third stanza. WESTERN TIED the game at five just a minute and a half into the period when center Kelly Mitchell slid his own rebound past the beleaguered Varvari. After Eaves had put the Wolverines ahead with his second goal at 3:49 on a power play, Western once again ex- ploited the lazy Blue defense. Winger Jim Olson lofted a timid wrist shot that fooled Varvari, and Fitzpatrick fired a fifteen-footer that deflected off Var- vari's right pad and into the far corner, propelling the Broncos to a 7-6 lead. Freshman right winger Ted Speers, an Ann Arbor native, notched his first goal of the season at 13:46 of the third period to send the game into overtime, and set the scene for Eaves' heroics. Michigan prevailed in a hard-fought contest in Kalamazoo Friday night when Dan Lerg snapped a 4-4 tie with just over four minutes remaining in the game. Lerg 'ta.llied two goals, while Eaves added a goal and an assist. BLUE LINES: Junior right winger John Olver, Michigan's fifth leading scorer last season, quit the team last week. According to Farrell, Olver was disenchanted with the amount of ice time he was getting and decided that he would rather quit than play part time. The Wolverines play a home and home series next weekend against Michigan State, and captain Doug Todd, the recipient of a minor concussion Friday night is probable for the weekend, as is goalie Paul Fricker (bruised hand). The Wolverines will be looking to break a three-game losing streak in WCHA play this Friday night against MSU at. Yost Arena. The game will start at 7:30. . Murrati" Eares According to sullen Michigan Coach Dan Farrell, the problem was a lack of effective back-checking. "We were STUDY IN EUROPE The University of Louvain (est. 1425) Leuven, Belgium offers COMPLETE PROGRAMS IN PHILOSOPHY FOR THE DEGREES OF B.A., M.A., & Ph.D. -plus- A JUNIOR YEAR ABROAD PROGRAM -course options offered in English -contact with European and non-European nationalities -incredible cultural opportunities -ideal location for travel -TUITION: The cost of tuition and fees to the student is only 11,500 Belgium Franks (approx. $400 U.S. dollars) due to subsidies from the government. WRITE TO: Secretary English Programs H.I.W. Kardinaal Mercierplein 2 B-3000 Leuven, Belgium *.red hot By MARK BOROWSKI The 1978-79 Michigan hockey team. What a sorr.y tune it played to the ears of Wolverine sports fans. Injury upon injury, defensive breakdown after defensive breakdown, plus a lack of offensive firepower led to the team finishing last in the WCHA with a dismal 8-27-1 record. It was Dan Farrell's worst record in seven years of coaching Michigan hockey. At the beginning of this season several questions needed to be answered. Were all the injuries healed? Could Farrell's recruits make it in the WCHA? Could the defense clear the puck out of its own zone? And most importantly, could Michigan find a goalie who could stop the puck? Six weekends of hockey have passed and all of these questions seem to get the same answer-yes. For two goal producing centers, the injuries have healed. Dan Lerg and Murray Eaves have recovered from the knee injuries they suffered last season and have combined for 29 goals. Freshman center Bruno Baseotto has proven he can score at this level of competition pouring in 15 goals this far. Freshmen Billy Reid, Ted Speers, Brad Tippett, and Julio VanBriensbruck have all made significant con- tributions, both offensively and defensively. In addition the defense is definitely a'n improved unit. Junior Tim Man- ning has continually made key plays to break-up opponent's offensive at- tacks. Junior John Blum and sophomore Steve Richmond have proved that a year of experience certainly has strengthened their ability to move the puck out of their end. Goalten ding sting And lo and behold, it looks like Farrell has one and possibly two goal- tenders who can stop the puck. Freshman Paul Fricker has already won seven games, more than any Michigan goalie did last year. Last year's number-one netminder, Rudy Varvari, has won two games in making three appearances, turning in an outstanding performance last Friday in Michigan's 5-4 victory over Western Michigan. A 9-3 record is one to be proud of at this point in the season, especially when compared to the 5-7 Blue slate at this time last year. The squad is per- forming well, but it was at this early point last year when the roof caved in on Farrell & co. as they won only three games the rest of the season. Barring injuries, that shouldn't happen this year because this team has too many talented athletes and more than enough desire. But regardless of how many games Michigan wins or loses they'll provide hockey fans with somethingthey haven't seen down at cavernous Yost Ice Arena in the past few years, that being excitement. The offensive attack has just been devastating, averaging over six goals a game. And when the 50 per cent to successful power play line of Lerg, Eaves, and Baseotto takes the ice everyone in the stands knows the red light could well be turned on within the next two minutes. Even more stimulating to the fans than just the overall offensive attack the Wolverines display is the manner in which they go about it. They haven't gone out and taken the lead, immediately controlling the play, and then winning the game. Instead, they always seem to fall behind by one or two goals and then battle back. They did it against Minnesota- Duluth, Minnesota, Notre Dame, and again this past weekend against WMU. Friday night they were down by two goals before they came storming back and Sunday afternoon they took the lead and lost it just as quickly before Eaves stuffed the winner into the net in overtime. Fans responding Fricker has brought the crowd to its feet on several occasions with outstanding glove-grabbing, body-sliding saves. And that is another change that has taken place at Yost thus far-the fans are starting to respond to the explosive action. In years past very few people showed up for a Michigan hockey series and many of those who did sat on their hands. But if the first sixweeks of ac- tion are an indication of what's to come it looks like the ho-hum boring days are gone because you'll rarely catch a Maize and Blue rooter-sitting back while the two teams are on the ice. If the massive quantities of goals aren't enough then the acrobatic goalie saves or consistent body jarring checks are sure to turn the old fieldhouse on fire. The icers are not alone in their attempt to stir the emotions of the crowd. The Michigan Pep Band and a group of rowdy students who sit in the north end of the arena have become loving foes of each other. Each group com- peting with the other to see who can get the most response out of an audience that is slowly crawling out of its shell. This weekend's series against state rival Michian State is the type of series where the fans can make a difference in who returns to the lockerroom with the smiles on their faces. Judging by Michigan's performances thus far it is evident that the Wolverines are not a great team. But they are a team who will give you more than the two dollar admission fee worth of action. Western Omelette FIRST PERiOD Scoring: 1. WM-Scurfield (Pederson) 0:51; 1. M- Blum (Manning. Eaves) 2:07; 2. M-Tippett (Eaves. Manning) :1:42;;WM-FitzpatrickScurfield, Peder- son) 7:39; 3. WM-Scurfield (Murphy, T. Olson) 12:05; E. M-Eaves (manning. Blum) 13:27; 4. MI-Manning (Milburn) 17:35 ,4. WM-Scurfield (T. Olson, Fitzpatrick) 17:45. Penalties: WM-Scott (elbowing) 1:54; M-Rich- mond (slashing) 6:10; WM-Murphy (elbowing) 9:10; M-Van-Biesbruck (cross-checking) 11:52; WM-T. Olson (high-sticking) 12:26; -Perry (in- terference) 18:02; WVM-Fitzpatrick (high-sticking) 18:22; M-Reid (interference) 18:22. SECOND PERIOD scoring: 5. M-Tippett (Speers, Richmond)10:07. Penalties: WM-Reid (elbowing) 1:24; NI-Van- Biesbruck (interference) 7:26; WM-Pederson (high-sticking) 10:42; M-Lundberg (roughing) 18:50; WM-T.,Olson (roughing) 18:50. .THIRD PERIOD) Scoring: 5. WM-Mitchell (Berthelsen. Reid) 1:23; 6. M-Eaves (erg Baseotto) 3:49; 6. WM-J. Olson (Murphy, Scott) 6:10; 7. WM-I'itzpatrlck (Murphy. T. Olson) 9:43;7. M-'Speers (Lerg, Bourne) 13:46. Penalties: WM-Murphy (high-sticking) 3:40; M-Blum (holding) 9:18; M-Eaves (slashing) 11:29;WM-Pederson (slashing) 11:29; WM-J. Olson (high-sticking) 12:04. OVERTIME Scoring: 8. M-Eaves (unassisted) 3:45. SAVES Varvari (M)...................9 8 6 3-26 Doyle (WM)..................7 13 10 0-30 WCHA Standings W L Pts. 1. Minnesota ...........7 4 14 2. MICHIGAN ......... 5 3 10 North Dakota ....... 5 3 10 4. Wisconsin ........... 5 5 10 Colorado College .... 4 4 8 Michigan Tech......4 4 8 Notre Dame......... 4 4 8 8. Michigan State......4 6 8 9. Denver .............. 3 5 6 10. Minnesota-Duluth ... 3 7 6, Friday Michigan State at MICHIGAN Friday/Saturday Minnesota at North Dakota Notre Dame at Wisconsin Minnesota-Duluth at Colorado College Denver at Michigan Tech Saturday MICHIGAN at Michigan State THEATIETES SHOP GATOR BOWL SPECIAL: Use our athletic bags for the Tarheels! 309 S. State Student Newspaper at The University of Michigan r- ---------- .... WRITE YOUR AD HERE! ----------- F Ii ti41 I -=---M---- -CLIP AND MAIL TODAY!------ ------ USE THIS HANDY CHART TO QUICKLY ARRIVE AT AD COST Words 1 2 3 4 5 add. 0-14 1.70 3.40 4.60 5.80 7.00 1.00 Please indicate 15-21 2.55 5.10 6.90 8.70 10.50 1.50 wherethisad is to run: 22-2K 3.40 6.80 9.20 11.60 14.00 2.00 for rent 29-35 4.25 8.50 11.50 14.50 17.50 2.50 helpwanted 36-42 5.10 10.20 13.80 17.40 21.00 3.00 roommates personal 43-49 6.80 11.90 16.10 20.30 24.50 3.50 etc. Seven words per line. Each group of characters counts as one word. Hyphenated words over 5 characters count as two words-This includes telephone numbers. Isu Hockey Poll HANCOCK (UPI) - Minnesota, currently leading the Western Collegiate Hockey Association, received eight first place votes and 97 mo -IIOLMI -%"°, 1%""vX111 OYMPMC OFFICIALs OLYMPIC, 90 T-SHIRTS Join the Lake Placid ORDER YOUR Winter Olympics OLYMPIC T-SHIRT " Great Christmas Gifts NOW. .. WITH - Get your Grandmother one LO R OLYMPIC TWIN RIVER ENTERPRISES RIVER ROAD LAKE PLACID. N.Y. 12946 QUANTITY @ $5.95 ea. I points to take the No. 1 spot in the college coaches hockey poll this week. The Gophers, with a 7-4 overall record held a comfortable 15-point edge over North Dakota, 7-3. The Fighting Sioux had been top-ranked one week ago and got the other two first-place ballots in this week's poll. MICHIGAN, 9-3, held down the No. 3 spot with 73 points. The rest of the top 10, in order, were Boston University, Northern Michigan, Notre Dame, Wisconsin, New Ham- pshire, Michigan Tech, and Ohio State and Cornell, which were tied for 10th. The fifth week of the coach's: rankings, with overall records and first place votes in parentheses: 1. Minnesota 7-4 (8) 97 2. N.Dakota7-3 (2) 82 3. MICHIGAN 9-3 73 4. Boston University 2-0 68 5. N. Michigan 8-2 53 6. Notre Dame 7-4 39 7. Wisconsin 6-5 32 8. New Hampshire 2-2 20 10. Tie: Ohio State 7-2 17 Cornell 0-2 17 SIZE AND QUANTITY SM MED L XL ADULT CHILDREN PLUS 759 HANDLING TOTAL ENCLOSED NAME. ADDR ESS CITY. ntbJ STATE ZIP_ MONDAY GREEK NIGHT Frats-Sororities, FREE with proper I.D. " ' ' /' - -! 3 .. - - -.EL -- 9 'i