Men's Gymnastics vs. Western Michigan Friday, 7:00 p.m. Crisler Arena SPORTS Hockey Michigan Oldtimers Game Saturday, 5:45 p.m. Yost Ice Arena The Michigan Daily Monday, February 10, 1986 Page 7 Superior Lakers drown icers' offense By RICK KAPLAN One month ago, RPI hockey coach Mike Addesa called Michigan the best offensive hockey team in the country. Last weekend, the same offense scored only four goals, as Lake Superior State College swept a series at Yost Ice Arena, 6-3 Friday and 7-1 Saturday. The explosive offense which scored 17 goals against RPI was drowned by the Lakers close-checking style. Michigan (12-20 overall, 10-18 con- ference) managed just two shots on net in the third period Friday, and only 20 all game Saturday. Lake Superior goalie Joe Shawhan became the first netminder to hold the Wolverines under two goals this season. "THE THIRD period (Friday night) was a terrible period," said Michigan coach Red Berenson. "I thought the first two periods we were right there, but the third period was the poorest we've played in some time." Lake Superior (20-13-1, 17-12-1) led 4-3 after two, but it completely dominated the final frame. Both of Michigan's shots on net came in the last minute, long after the game was decided. "We're known for our defen- se," said Laker coach Frank An- zalone, "but two (shots) is a little low." Things got lower Saturday, as Shawhan was barely tested after Michigan left winger Jeff Urban scored in the first minute of the game. "We moved the puck much better three weeks or a month ago," said Berenson, who has now lost all ten times he has faced Lake Superior. "We're just not moving the puck with the same confidence. "WE'RE NOT scoring with the same consistency. When (Brad) Mc- Caughey misses his chances, you know your offense is not going well." Berenson thought Lake Superior was going well. "There were times in the (Saturday) game when it was like an NHL team playing a college team," said the second-year coach. Anzalone refused to disagree. "Red knows the game," he said. "If that's 'There the game like a playin team.' were times in (Saturday) when it was n NHL team mistakes." "I think because we were trying to play catch-up, we stopped playing smart hockey," said Wolverine defen- seman Myles O'Connor. THE MICHIGAN defense smarted Saturday night, as the Lakers blitzed goalies Tim Makris and Mike Rossi with 46 shots. "We totally let down de- fensively," said O'Connor. "We had tunnel vision towards their net. We weren't paying attention to what was happening behind us, and they got a lot of long passes to guys behind us." "We wanted to make short crisp passes," said Anzalone. "If you stay with short passes and the opponent steps up, then you can make a long pass once in a while. We opened it up for two long passes and two breakaways." And two goals. Lake Superior broke away from the pack at the middle of the Central Collegiate Hockey Association to clin- ch home ice in the playoffs with the Saturday victory. Eighth-place Michigan will have to win at least three of its four remaining games to move up in the standings. ANZALONE WAS standing proud: after wrapping up one of the top four. slots. "We're starting to come out of our slump," said the Laker coach, whose team lost six in a row in January. "Our people are starting to get happier. They feel better about their performance, and the work. ethnic is coming back." "I don't think strategy or technique mattered as much as plain old- fashioned hard work," said Berenson "Our team should learn something from the effort that (Lake Superior) came in here and showed." Urban believes his team puts on a better show against the top teams. "It just seems like we play to the level of our opponent," the freshman said. "But we can't use that as an excuse anymore, because all of the opponents are above us now." g a college -Red Berenson the way he felt, we'll go with it." THE LAKERS went with a different of- fensive style than usual to exploit Michigan's weaknesses, and it paid off. Lake Superior scored two fluke goals in the opening game on scram- bles in front of the net. "We usually don't go to the net well," Anzalone said, "but (Friday night) we did to keep the pressure on. Pressure, pressure, pressure, and you get a cheap goal once in a while." Michigan could not score goals, cheap or otherwise. The offensive problems were caused primarily by playing come-from-behind hockey. "When you get behind," said Mic- higan captain Frank Downing, "you get so disappointed, and you say, 'Damn it, I'm going to do it myself.' That's when you make stupid CLASSIC CITIES OF RUSSIA THE DEPARTMENT OF SLAVIC LANGUAGES AND LITERATURE of The University of Michigan announces that information and applications are now available for the Spring Tour to the Soviet Union May 6to May 21, 1986 Please contact the Slavic Department, 3040 MLB, 764-5355 d iCo1*4ro0440 p PHARMACY 320 S STATE STREET - Phone 663-4121 - ANN ARBOR. MICH COME IN AND SEE OUR LARGE SELECTION OF Daily Photo by PETE ROSS Michigan might have had trouble putting the puck into the net this weekend, but it did manage to put Laker goalie Randy Exelby (35) there, through the efforts of Paul Rossi (12, on the ice). Wolverine right winger, Brad McCaughey (8) looks on. Minnesota beats Iowa, despite an extra point MINNEAPOLIS (AP)-Marc Wilson scored 22 points and John Shasky ad- ded 18 yesterday, leading- Minnesota to a 65-60 Big Ten basketball victory over Iowa in a game in which Iowa was awarded a point it didn't score. 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