al The Eighteenth-Century Semester Presents: 0EAUMARCHAIS and the AMERICAN REVOLUION" A Lecture by PROFESSOR BRIAN MORTON WEDNESDAY, FEB. 6-4:00 p.m. CLEMENTS LIBRARY Elephants don't forget to read The Daily .. . .and you shouldn't either! Subscribe Today 764-0558 Page 10-Wednesday, February 6, 1980-The Michigan Daily PENAL T Y KILLING SPECIALIST: Icers' T1ppett wo't back down BY GARY LEVY The Michigan icers are at a two-man disadvantage. Coach Dan Farrell sends his penalty killers onto the ice - two defensemen and a third player whose role it is to shadow the opposition's puckhandlers, not allowing them to set up their golden power play opportunity. And the third player Coach Farrell usually calls on in the situation is none other than Brad Tippett. When he's on the ice, Tippett is like a hawk, swooping forechecking and the backchecking and the dirty jobs," said Tippett.. Skating on a line along with sophomore Murray Eaves and fresh- man Ted Speers, Tippett has ac- cumulated 12 goals and 17 assists in 28 games. However, Tippett is not overly concerned with his statistics. "I like scoring, but there are a lot of aspects to playing hockey, and I think if you're a scorer, you're not a complete hockey player," said Tippett. "I try to play the game the way it's takes all the wind out of their sails (when they don't)." Tippett performed his role to perfec- tion earlier in the season when the icers swept defending NCAA champion Min- nesota, bringing the Yost Arena crowd to its feet. Tippett said he realizes that his style of play draws the crowd's affection, although that's not his objective when he's on the ice. "I like to please myself and my coach. That's mainly who I'm trying to wet," Tippett continued. "But that's something you have to live with. Wh you're little, if you turn and run, you'r going to get hurt a lot worse. "Hockey is a rough game. Cuts and losing teeth are part of the game. You've got to accept it. If you can't play with pain, you're in the wrong game." And Tippett has accepted his fair share of bumps and bruises: 45 stitches, seven missing teeth and a couple of broken noses throughout his hockey career. ...... ."}:"}>}i:":..*}.............::: :"~i":i:....... ,?":}:i":}::. . ..;.:. .... ::^:::C}<:.. ...... . .. .........: ..... ....:.r.v... .."........ 'You can't take anything. espe>cially if you're my size. When you're little, if you turn and run. you're going to get hurt (1 lot corse. I lc(s brought up that if you erer back down from some- hody, you iight as well pick upx (1 illow' >because you're going Io be4 onl lice benich.' -BIrald ip),el .:\'>*v*":":i.. .4 .4. v. fit.. L.... ..4.. . around his opponent, poking his stick in and out and attempting to be as much of a nuisance as possible. The 5-8, 170-pound freshman from Prince Albert, Saskatchewan, one of several reasons' for the Wolverines' vast improvement over a year ago, describes himself as "a scrapper." "That's the way I like to play, you know, Bobby Clarke, Bobby Gainey style - workhorses. Guys who get in the corners and grind it out, doing the supposed to be played. Offense, defen- se, everything. A complete game," he. continued. Particularly satisfying to Tippett is when his team is short-handed and he's on the ice, attempting to kill the penalty. "When it's three on five and I'm the third man and I don't give 'em the puck. Three-on-five is the most intimidating, frustrating thing in the world. It's the big chance for the team to score, and it / Calcu Decisi Sours, ulator lion-Making cebook I-pOnN . Ii.1. / i.4. "N M lb I *4f.N, deb .' I inkg q8,.l.. $449J m"m OW P'.pams fol OA.Mg R'Nt~ap.,. Mg'co, Q Fm "Ss VenT,.d. C vom'Ngo...IuaN, & Prer,ae 13 AN "d". Cmpan O Tk*R GW, bh Ms v Texas Instruments For today...and tomorrow. The TI-55 advanced slide rule calculator with programmability and "Calculator Decision Making Sourcebook." The calculator and book combination that gives you the tools to solye your statistical and math problems. $34.00 - i We're competitive. please. But I kind of hope to be (a crowd pleaser)," said Tippett. "We started out at 2,000 fans, and now we're up to 7,000. We're winning, and we're putting people in the rink. Nobody likes to play in front of an empty rink, and nobody likes to play in front of a hostile crowd." Tippett's style probably doesn't thrill his opponents as he tries to get away with as much hacking as the referees will allow. "The rules are meant in hockey to be bent to the complete limit," said Tip- pett. "There's a fine point where they're bent too much and where you can bend them just to that point. I try and stretch it right to that point every time." Tippett learned this intimidating style of play in his youth and said it's the only way he knows how to play. "If you didn't start playing when you were three years old, you were a year behind everybody else," said Tippett. "There were outdoor rinks on every playground and the rivers. With 30 guys on the ice, you had to be (a scrapper). "I was brought up that if you ever back down from somebody, you might as well pick up a pillow because you're going to be on the bench. "You can't take anything, especially when you're my size, I'm practically the smallest guy on the ice, 5-8, barely hitting 170 pounds when I'm soaking "I had a black eye or stitches all the* time last year," said Tippett, "People used to laugh. I got cut more times than the rest of the team added up." Out of high school for three years before entering Michigan, Tippett played for the Prince Albert Raiders, the only Canadian junior team ever to make the Canadian finals three years in a row. While playing, the 20-year-old Tippett had also been working to be ai4 accountant. "You've got to really admire somebody like Ken Dryden. He played hockey and went to school at the same time," Tippett said. "If I ever get the chance to go pro, I'm still going to keep my studies up. "Money enthralls me. I'm a money freak. My lifetime goal is to be in the NHL and be asmillionaire at 27. It isn't the money I like; it's making it," Tip pett added. As far as the future is concerned, Tippett is leaving all doors open. "The way I look at things, if you work hard and play well here, the future is going to fall into place. So I'm just going to let the future look after itself," With this determination and outlook both on and off the ice, the future should turn out just the way "the scrapper" would like it to. In fact, we'll match any deal or refund your money. _S 1 MORE THAN A BOOKSTORE 549 E. 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