SPORTS The Michigan Daily Wednesday, February 2, 1983 Pager Blue Lines v . r L. Airing the dirty laundry .. . ... 'M' is soiled;. Spartans filthy By CHUCK JAFFE THE MICHIGAN-Michigan State hockey series last weekend was as exciting as it was brutal. The two teams battled in both score and fisticuffs, and left two sellout crowds hoping for a rematch in the first round of the Central Collegiate Hockey Association playoffs. Shoudl the two teams play again, however, there will be a lot more at stake than just advancing nto the conference finals at Joe Louis Arena. More than just a rivalry, the two teams have proclaimed a war, with Michigan taking the beating in score, and losing in the trenches because of the cheap, dirty, unfair tactics of the Spartans and their head coach Ron Mason. Admittedly, the Michigan players have played cleaner, more gentlemanly games, but the ledger of dirty deeds weighs decidedly against the Spar- tans. Michigan, after this penalty-filled weekend, remains one of the league's least-penalized teams, with just 201 infractions for 405 minutes (the first major penalty was Todd Carlile's Saturday night high-sticking call). Michigan State, on theother hand, has blazed a trail to the sin bin, with 233 penalties and 496 minutes served. But the tales behind the penalty minutes tell the real story. *The rough tactics start right at the top, with Michigan State coach Ron Mason. During the Great Lakes Invitational Tournament, Mason watched as his team fought with Michigan Tech - between periods. This weekend, the Spartan coach didn't stop Dale Krentz from leaving the bench to chase Carlile, and after the game warned that Carlile will "get it (retaliation for his check on MSU All-American goalie Ron Scott) every time he plays against Michigan State." *Michigan followed with the next major provocation of the weekend late in Saturday's 2-1 loss. As Carlile made a last second rush toward the goal, a Spartan defender checked and broke Carlile's stick. The Michigan freshman then made a smart play by knocking the player closest to him away from the now-loose puck. That player was Spartan goalie Scott, and Carlile's high check started the game's last brawl. The important thing to note here is that Carlile would have checked any player standing ten feet away from the crease, as Scott was, on that play. No, he did not make a run at Scott, and although the high elbow (which somehow resulted in a high-sticking penalty) was a flagrantly vicious check, it was an isolated example of a Wolverine initiating the chippy play. eSpartan defenseman Ken Leiter's stick managed to find its way between Wolverine freshman Chris Seychel's legs, resulting in several illegal checks to the groin. MSU co-captain Newell Brown crashed the boards by punching opponents in the back of the head. For the series Seychel got four penalties, Brown two and Leiter just one. The horror stories, for and against both sides, would take days to tell, and will probably be restaged in future meetings between the two teams. In fact, even with all of the penalties for and against them, the Wolverines played their best hockey of the year. Continued play at last weekend's level could put Michigan into the playoffs, and very possibly back at Munn Ice Arena for a rematch against the Spartans. That's what the coaches, players and fans want. But Michigan is now, and will always be, a clean team under head coach John Giordano. the rematch might be as brutal as the original, but the Spartans unsportsmanlike tactics will be coun- tered with clean, solid, and very hard body checks, and the results of playing real hockey will be reflected in the final score. MEN'S BASKETBALL MICHIGAN STATE, Feb. 5, 4 p.m. WOMEN'S BASKETBALL at Michigan State, Feb. 6 HOCKEY at Northern Michigan, Feb. 4, 8 p.m. at Northern Michigan, Feb. 5, 7:30 p.m. MEN'S GYMNASTICS IOWA, OKLAHOMA, KENT STATE, Feb. 6, 1 p.m. WOMEN'S GYMNASTICS BOWLING GREEN, OKLAHOMA, KENT STATE, Feb. 6,1 p.m. WRESTLING MINNESOTA, Feb. 4, 7:30 p.m. IOWA, Feb. 5, 7:30 p.m. MEN'S INDOOR TRACK Spartan Relays at E. Lansing, Feb. 5 Daily Photo by JEFF SCHRIER MSU's Dale Krentz (15) and Dan McFall (16) mix it up with the Wolverines' Tom Stiles (12), among others, during the second period of a rough and tum- ble hockey game last weekend. Stiles and McFall were both whistled off for roughing. 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Tennis, Trampoline, Wa ter Skiing, Wind Surfing, Also Office Staff/Typists Working married cou .ples without children welcomed Daily Photo by JEFF SCHRIER Michigan and Michigan State crowd five players apiece into the Yost Ice Arena penalty box during first period action last Saturday. From left are Spartans Gary Haight (21), Dale Krentz, Jeff Eisley, David Taylor (29) and Lyle Phair (17), and 'M' icers Mike Neff, Todd Carlile, Pat Goff (6), Chris Seychel (20) and Jim McCauley. MSU won, 2-1. M' LANDS RECEIVER AND LINEMAN: Bo grabs top recruits Call or Write Immediately for application: -CAMP SOMERSET CAMP COBBOSSEE for GIRLS for BOYS 180 East End Avenue P.O. Box 99, Mianus Drive New York. N.Y. 10028 Bedford, N.Y 10506 (212) 744-3420 (914) 234-9773 By BOB WOJNOWSKI A top receiver from Illinis and a highly-touted lineman from Florida are two of the high school seniors that have verbally committed to play football at Michigan. Billy Dawson, a 6-foot, 165-pound wide receiver/defensive back from Evanston Township High School .in -Illinois and Glenn Mogle, a 6-8, 275- pound tackle from Sarasota Riverview High in Florida, will both sign letters- of-intent to play football at Michigan sometime soon after Feb. 9 - the first day for signing. DAWSON IS AN all-around athlete and is considered to be one of the top two receivers in the state of Illinois. He reportedly will play for Bo Schem- bechler with the stipulation that he also be allowed to play baseball. "He's probably the best all-around athlete I've ever seen in my 25 years of coaching," said Tom Powers, the head coach at Evanston Township High. Y "He's quick, he's got long legs, long strides, great hands, great concen- tration and he accelerates very quickly." Dawson demonstrated his versatility this past season by playing almost every down on offense and defense and scoring points in almost every way possible on a football field. He caught five touchdown passes, returned two punts for touchdowns (70 and 65 yards), returned an interception 30 yards for another score, kicked four field goals, converted 11 extra points and snagged a pair of two-point conversions. In all, he caught 36 passes for 540 yards (15 yards per catch) and intercepted seven enemy tosses. Nebraska, Vanderbilt and Missouri reportedly offered Dawson scholar- ships and countless others expressed in- terest in him. While Dawson's creden- tials are impressive, the massive Mogle may be the most sought-after of the recruits. He is considered one of the premier line prospects in the nation. Also reportedly committing to Michigan are 6-3, 220-pound fullback/linebacker Carlitos Bostic of Ypsilanti (no relation to Wolverine senior Keith) and lineman Dan Holloway from Detroit St. Martin DePorres. The one that got away was Ypsilanti receiver/defensive back Steve Lawrence, who reportedly was leaning toward Michigan before picking Notre Dame. 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