Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page SIx THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, September 9, 1976 Thursday, September 9, 1976 Hockey: Expect to rebound from inconsistent season By JOHN NIEMEYER Three years ago if someone mentioned hockey to the aver- age Wolverine sports fan, he would probably have laughed and said, "Oh yeah, they do have a hockey team somewhere at this school, don't they?" In 1973, the hockey team was coming off a miserable season with only five wins, existing as a nonentity in the myriad of Michigan sports excellence. But they had a new coach, Dan Farrell, former assistant at hockey power Michigan Tech, I bringing with-him a tradition of from the Big Ten as we I .' . l F ,; { ; : winning., teams farther to the west. N In his first year Farrell igan State and Michigan' lead the dekers to their first provide two great in-stater winning season in years and ries as well as providing after three years has compiled of the stiffest competitio a 68-54-2 record, as the team the country. has gained more prominence Also from the Big Ten with each successive season Minnesota and Wisconsin. 1 in the Michigan sports heir- Dame is another of the Mid archy. ern list rounded out by M The Wolverines compete in sota at Duluth. From theI the tough Western College Hock- are Colorado College, De ey Association, one of two out- and North Dakota. standing conferences in the In last year's race MI country. gan Tech and Michigan S The WCHA includes teams finished one-two in thec Daily Sports wants you! By FFATS STROPS So you wanna write sports. You say you choke on your Rice Krispies each morning when you read Joe Falls' lat- est perversion of the English language? You say you could do just as well if only given the chance? Well, here's your chance. The Michigan Daily Sports Staff wants you. JOIN THE Daily and see the world. May- be an all-expenses-paid trip to Minneapolis with the basketball team. Or maybe to Du- luth with the hockey team. Or at least to East Lansing with the wrestlers: Join the Daily and make (a little) money. After a few months on the staff, we'll pay you enough to support the beer habit you'll undoubtedly develop after a while here. Join the Daily and get JOURNALISTIC EXPERIENCE. Experience unlike anything the fairy-tale world of the Journalism Dept. can give you. ABOVE ALL, join the Daily and have a good time. Play football and basketball with the world-famous, unbeaten Daily Libels. Go to some of the most degenerate, insane, dis- gusting, FUN parties around. Meet some of the most interesting people on campus, like Paul 'Campbell, our resident lunatic, or Rick Bonino, who somehow survived a Ta- was City upbringing to become the world leading wrestling writer. Or Johnny Orr, college basketball's Coac of the Year and one of the funniest peop around. Don Canham, the wealthy wizar behind the nation's richest athletic depar ment. Obligations? (Better known as "th catch.") You must work one night per week That means showing up at the Daily (4 Maynard St.) at 7 p.m. and staying unti about 1 -a.m. During this time you will ( first) proofread stories and write headline among other menial tasks. YOU MUST write stories, which is actua ly a privilege, not an obligation. You'll wri about one story per week. You must attend our weekly Sunday mee ings, the first and most important of whic will be September 12 at 7 p.m. Prerequisites? None, though familiari with the English language has been helpf to some. No journalism experience is nee ed. We'll teach you. So dron by anytime and talk to Bill, Ric Andv or Rick or whoever is lonnging aroun snorts desk at the time. We'll be more tha hanny to show you around. At least giveu a chance. .. i r WORLD FAMOUS (GITA SUI AK MUSIDEALER INSTRUMENTS * HISTORIC I~tfhIMEt.~MODERN ~ FOREIGN DOMESTIC NEW LESSONSN NUINSTRUMENTS CASIC CUSOM J & i ELECTRIC PHONE6s65801su 209 S. STATE, ANN ARBOR (UPSTAIRS) 11 as ference, followed by Minne- graduation and will be hard put " > .. .4 ... . . . . . . . .- -.+.KM. ... Mich- sota and then Michigan in to replace him. Tech fourth, a somewhat disap- Juniors Frank Zimmerman rivalI pointing result. and Rick Palmer will be fight- some Billed in preseason as one of ing for the starting nod. Two n in the strongest contenders for the years ago Zimmerman filled in conference crown and possibly for an injured Moore and played 1 are national honors, the team play- well. Both got a lot of game Notre ed inconsistently on the way to time last year and Farrell feels Iwest- a 22-20 record. they are pretty equally ° . .. .. .. ....... inne- They showed sparks of bril matched West liance at times, winning the h4 Defensively, Michigan hasf > ' , ,:, t= , ° , nver, Great Lakes Invitational in De- fu.ern i n e term n ands troit, finishing ahead of even should be strong. Senior Greg ichi- tual conference champion Michi- Natal ethe ensiveGreg tate gan Tech. They hosted the U.S. wll the ensre con- Olympic team and the Czecho- con ers tNatae "one fte slovakian championship team nations premiere defense- and battled both closely, win- men", ;< ning one from the Olympic team{S and losing a close one to the Rod Palmer is another super Czechs. Ydfede,%hug,~ndalng¢ After the Czech contest, the with Natale should provide the $ Czech coach went as far as say- tough defense Dan Farrell likes~ £EY 's ing that the United States should to stress. Joining these two will Y 5z. be represented by the Universi- be two more excellent prospects,: hL tv of Michigan in Innsbruck. junior John McCahill and sopho- le In the end, however, they more John Waymann. dl couldn'tquite muster the The 76-77 schedule will be an- consistency to reach the top other tough one for the Wolver- ..... rt and finished the season by ines. They will play 16 weekends -- k losing to the Huskies of of WCHA hockey which includes e Houghton in the second round a couple of difficult long road k. of the playoffs. stands. They will also return to 20 This year offers even brighter Cobo Hall over the winter break il promises and coach Farrell to compete in the Great Lakes at feels, "We have as good a Invitational Tournament, and Daily Photo by SCOTT ECCKER chance as anyone of coming will play one other non-confer-M ney p s sto T ye out on top." ence contest in Troy,New York. Manery passes to Thayer "Of course we have some -1 holes to fill but we also have te some great personnel coming ,FUTURE BRIGHT back." - t- On offense the Wolverines do h indeed have some great people coming back, most notably sen- ior forward and captain Kris ty I anery. M aner was the team's ul leading scorer and is consid- d- ered one of the premiere for-I By RICK BONINO grown underclassmen last the graduation of former great be pushed by Bob Taylor, ur wards in the country. Take solace, lonely and be- season. Jerry Hubbard and responded defeated at Pekin, Ill. Joining Manery will be anoth-, wildered Big U freshpersons. Outstanding freshmen Mark with some impressive showings King; who compiled a medi- er senior, Pat Hughes, who had Michigan wrestling coach Bill Churella and Amos Goodlow of strength on the mat and a ocre record while wrestling n some injury problems last year Johannesen is glad to see you. meshed with junior captain second-place Big Ten finish. over minor injuries last year, but should be in great form ,t Mark Johnson to get the Wol- The flashy, unorthodox Good- should be more seriously threat- this season. getting verines off to a fast dual meet low amused fans and bemused ened by Steve Fraser, a state Ben Kawa is another stand- of your ludicrous tuition fees. start. Despite nagging holes at foes on his way to Michigan's champion at 185 for Hazel out forward who the Wolver- And he's not planning to rip the lightest and heaviest lone individual conference Park. ines can count on every week. you off with exorbitant admis- weights, the Kiddy Korps fared championship. Michigan remains deep and As well as being an excellent sion charges (currently a bar- fairly well - until encountering The current freshmen re- talented between the ex- forward, Kawa plays well as gain at a mere fifty cents). the national champion Iowa main untested but seem well- tremes. Returning captain a defenseman and Coach Far- But somewhere amidst your Hawkeyes. suited to fit the Wolverine Johnson combines with Chur- rell may count on him to do myriad of fresh faces walk A 33-0 shellacking, Michigan's team needs. If they can come ella and Goodlow to give S ome work there, too i some young men whom Jo- first shutout in forty years, through, those glaring weak- Michigan the type of de- At the center spot, Dave Debol hannesen has been eagerly seemed to take some wind out nesses at the top and bottom vastating trio that can rack will be on the ice for the Blue, expecting, young men whom of the Wolverine sails, They of the lineup may soon dis- up the big tournament points. followed close behind by Dan he hopes can provide the went on to lose the remainder appear. Things look more crowded tCormier and Kip Maurer. Alls n missing pieces in the human of their Big Ten schedule, in- I Warren Mott's Dave Cartier, in both the 134-142 and 18-7 Sthreehad soid eas in jigsaw puzzle which has oc- luding contests with Wiscon- I ad soud povde hedekrscupied his attention these past sin, Michigan and Michigan3 with a solid middle. D few years. State, en route to a 6-4 confer- . The biggest hole for Dan Far-' rell to fill could possibly be at Since assuming coaching ence mark (16-6 overall.) 'U the goalie position. Farrell lost duties two seasons ago, "Billy All but Moo U, finished ahead W'ih h fu h All-American Robbie Moore to Jo" has methodically attempt- of Michigan in the Big TenU- ed to build a team worthy of tourney as it repeated a fourth carrying on in the long, presti- place conference finish. The gious Michigan wrestling tradi- somewhat stronger Wolverines turing and promsn oungsers tion then utilized a second - place Rick Bay, protege and suc- showing from Johnson and sol- cessor of the legendary Cliff id efforts from Churella (third) on the way, the matmen should re- Keen, resigned in 1974 after and Goodlow to take eighth guiding his Wolverines to with- place in the national tourna- in one tournament win of an a- ment. Ward Jo0hannesen Lih'i finest G SPEEDO tional title. Unfortunately for With the young stars fur- Wwit as Johannesen, much of that up- ther maturing and anotherI p e r c 1 a s s m a n-dominat- crop of promising youngsters ed squad's talent also depart- on the way, the steadily im-- owing ye. e-d proving Blue matmen should Johannesen and assistant Cal reward Johannesen with his F >- ---+.. Jenkins, both outstandingBlue finest showing yet in the sea- grapplers under Keen, then son ahead. wtchaemos" fptheiemin If recent recruiting proves unbeaten as a Class A 119- areas. Junior Rich Lubell, and injury. Their first edition as productive as last year's, pounder last year, should givehampered by injuries last sea- r (1974-75) rode stalwart Jim the glory days may well re- light but scrappy junior Todd son after a promising frosh de- Brown's superb performances turn. Churella and Goodlow Schneider a battle for the start- but, stands as' the incumbent to what success they enjoyed, teamed to form the most pro- ing berth at 118. at 134. Flint Beecher's Paul finishing fourth in the Big Ten lific freshman duo this side of Up top, both heavyweight fibbs and Lou Joseph from and twelfth nationally. baseball's Jim Rice and Fred Mitch Marsicano and 190-pound- Middlesburgh Heights, Ohio The immediate post-Brown Lynn. er Harold King may face some could also fit i here some- . recruiting years had provided Churella, a former Farming-I competition from recruits. Mar-whrinterdbtsan. little in terms of talent, so ton High star coveted by coach- sicano, third in the Big Ten Junior Brad Holman (158) Johannesen was forced to re- es from coast to coast, stepped two years ago but injured and and senior Ed Neiswender ly largely on his own home- into a weight slot dormant since redshirted last season, could (167) took third and fourth at their respective weights in the Big Ten. 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