4 Page 8 - The Michigan Daily - Saturday, December 1, 1984 Wolverines battle Buckeyes to - tie By CHRIS GERBASI Many of Michigan's hockey players kissed their parents in a pre-game ceremony for Parents' Weekend last night. Little did these players know that they would later kiss their sisters. The Wolverines and Ohio State played to a 4-4 tie before a crowd of 2,544 at Yost Arena in one of the more exciting and well-played games the fans have seen this year. The teams were even at 2-2 going into the third period. Each team scored twice in the third, with a goal by Buckeye freshman Darcy Gryba at 10:50 setting up the overtime. Both Michigan and Ohio State had numerous scoring chances during the rest of the third period and into over- time. In the overtime the Wolverines had apparently won the game at 1:43, but the referee ruled that the puck was kicked in by Joe Lockwood. The puck clearly went in off his skate. The Buckeyes' closest threat came midway through the overtime when defenseman Mike Rousseau rifled a shot off the post to the right of Michigan goalie Mark Chiamp. With just three seconds left in the game a face-off was held in Michigan's zone. Buckeye coach Jerry Welsh pulled his goalie, Bob Krautsak, from goal for the extra attacker. The Wolverines' Frank Downing got the puck off the face-off and sailed it down the ice about two feet wide of the aban- doned net. Ohio State jumped out in front at the four-minute mark of the first period and it looked like another typical slow start for Michigan. Gryba got the puck in the corner and skated in front of Chiamp unmolested. Chiamp made the initial save on Gryba but the freshman got his own rebound and flipped the puck high over Chiamp, who was on his back. The goal was Gryba's eighth of year, and he has notched a point in every game. Just two minutes and 44 seconds later another freshman, Jeff Madill, picked up a loose puck behind the Wolverines' net and put it past Chiamp on the short side. Gryba drew the only assist on the goal. Michigan outshot OSU 14-7 in the period. "We knew we outplayed them that period," said senior captain Ray Dries. "But things just weren't going our way.", Michigan continued to apply pressure throughout the second period and its work finally paid off at 3:17. Center Bruce Macnab took a pass from Downing at center ice and put on a bur- st of speed to get past the defense. Mac- nab was then all alone in front of the net and went to the backhand to score past Krautsak. The Wolverines tied the game at 2-2 late in the period on a persistent effort by Brad McCaughey. The freshman right wing was stopped on a pad save by Krautsak and fanned on a second at- tempt. The third try was a charm, though, as McCaughey finally slid the puck under Krautsak. Tom Stiles and John Bjorkman assisted on Mc- Caughey's eight goal of the season. There was little action in the third period until the eight-minute mark. Then Michigan seemingly broke open the game with two goals in 17 seconds. First, Dries skated in over the blue line and drew Krautsak to one side of the net. Dries backhanded a pass to Lockwood, who had a wide open net for his fourth goal. Mike Neff then fired a shot from just inside the circle to beat Krautsak and put the Wolverines up by two goals. But the Buckeyes answered with two goals of their own in a span of 49 secon- ds. The first was backhander by fresh- man Rick Brebant and the second was scored by Gryba. "When they got the third goal we said 'Oh no, here it comes again,"' said Dries. "We have to get out of that stuff." "When it was 4-4 we picked it up again. We dominated toward the end and in the overtime I thought we out- played them." Michigan will try to outplay the Buckeyes again tonight at Yost. Game time is 7:30. Un-buck-oming FIRST PERIOD Scoring: 1. OSU-Gryba (Wurst, Gracy) 4:00; 2. OSU-Madill (Gryba) 6:44. Penalties: OSU- Rousseau (high sticking) 11:36; OSU-Tillotson (tripping) 18:14; M-Norton (roughing) 18:36; M-Stiles (cross checking) 19:43. SECOND PERIOD Scoring: 1. M-McNab (Downing, Seychel) 3:17; 2. M-McCaughey (Stiles, Bjorkman) 17:16. Penalties: M-Baker (slashing) 9:24; OSU-Gruhl (interference) 15:13. THIRD PERIOD Scoring: 3. M-Lockwood (Dries, Baker) 8:02; 4. M-Neff (Stiles, Bjorkman) 8:19; 3. OSU-Brebent (Tillitson, Rothgery) 10:01; 4. OSU-Gryba (Wurst) 10:50. Penalties: M-Stiles (Five minute major, high sticking) 11:25; OSU-Gruhl(slashing) 11:25. OVERTIME Scoring: none. Penalties: M-Lockwood (high sticking) 1:53; OSU-Tillotson (high sticking) 1:53; M-Carlisle (roughing after whistle) 7:52; M-Brauer (roughing after whistle) 7:52; OSU-Gruhl (high sticking) 7:52; OSU-Brebart (high sticking) 7:52. SCORING BY PERIOD 1 2 3 OT Ohio State ....................2. 0 2 0-4 MICHIGAN ..................0 2 2 0 4 0 SAVES OSU-Krautsak 42; M-Chiamp 30. St. Louis manhandles lame Red Wings, 5-3 Daily Phloto by DUGL McMAHOIN Wolverine right winger Paul Kobylarz watches his shot sail in on Ohio State goalie Bob Krautsak in the second period of last night's hockey game in Yost Ice Arena. DETROIT (UPI) - Doug Wickenheiser scored two goals and teammate Bernie Federko added a goal and an assist last night to lead the St. Louis Blues to a 5-3 victory over the Detroit Red Wings. Federko broke a 2-2 tie at 3:10 of the second period when a shot by Joe Mullen deflected off his skate into the net. The Blues made it 4-2 with 4:28 remaining in the middle period when Brian Sutter pounced on a rebound for his team-leading 12th goal. DETROIT'S Ron Duguay opened the scoring at 1:24 of the first period when he knocked his own rebound past goalie Rick Wamsley. Wickenheiser tied the score while the Blues were short han- ded at 7:05 and Kevin LaVellee put St. Louis ahead 2-1 on an unassisted effort at 9:24. Detroit pulled into a 2-2 tie on Bob Manno's short handed goal at 12:14 of the first period. Detroit outshot St. Louis 10-3 in the third period and the Red Wings cut the Blues lead to one goal when defen- seman Brad Park scored from a goal mouth scramble at 10:11. Wickenheiser sealed the Blues vic- tory with an empty net goal with 1:03 remaining. The victory was the fifth in six games for St. Louis, 11-9-1. The Blues trail' Norris Division leader Chicago by one point. Detroit, which has only two vic- tories in its last 10 outings, fell to 6-13-3. Rangers 3, Maple Leafs 3 NEW YORK (AP)-Rick Vaive's 25- foot wrist shot from the right faceoff circle went between New York goalie Glen Hanlon's legs with 1:24 left in regulation, and the Tornoto Maple Leafs skated to a 3-3 tie with the Rangers last night in the National Hockey League. Defensenian Reijo Routsalainen scored two goals, including the Rangers' first power play goal in 21 at- tempts as New York took a 3-1 lead only to see it disappear in the third period. ROUTSALAINEN'S power play goal came at 12:20 of the second period and gave the Rangers a 2-0 margin. His 50- foot slapshot appeared to be deflected by teammate Christ Kontos, but Rout- salainen was credited with the score. Routsalainen had given the Rangers a 1-0 lead 5:50 into the contest when he took Mike Allison's lead pass and scored on a breakaway. Allison also set up the Rangers' other goal, by Goerge McPhee at 2:42 of the third period. Allison skated down right wing and his pass across the goal crease was perfect as McPhee tapped the puck past goal Allan Bester. SCORES NCAA BASKETBALL virginia 72, Loyola, Md. 60 St. John's 93, Lafayette 47 Middle Tenn. 80, Tennessee St. 60 Seton Hall 69, Rice 66 Georgia Tech 96, Tennessee Tech 78 Army 87, Central Michigan 75 Florida 68, Florida St. 65 Clemson 90, Campbell 55 Southern Cal. 73, So. Mississippi 72 0 I 0 0 0 0 : ? ' ~ a _r Ami