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March 10, 1986 - Image 7

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1986-03-10

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Women's Tennis
vs. Toledo
Today, 4:00 p.m.
Track and Tennis Building

SPORTS

NCAA Tournament
First and Second Round
at Minneapolis
$36 Ticket Package on Sale
Tomorrow, 9 a.m.
Athletic Ticket Office

x

The Michigan Daily

Monday, March 10, 1986

Page 7

WESTERN'S HORN STYMIES STATE

Broncos dump

Spartans for CCHA title

By ADAM OCHLIS
With just less than three minutes
left in Saturday's Central Collegiate
Hockey Association championship
game between Western Michigan and
Michigan State, Spartan fans con-
ceded defeat.
The score stood 3-1 Western at the
time, and while that was how the
game would end, State rooters knew
that nothing was going to get past
Bronco goalie Bill Horn that night.
THE FRESHMAN netminder stopped
all but one of Michigan State's 38
shots, robbed Hobey Baker Award
finalist Mike Donnelly on a number of
occasions and was named the tour-
nament's Most Outstanding Player.
"You expect that of goaltenders,'
said an elated Bronco coach Bill
Wilkinson, "but anytime you get that
kind of performance out of a young
man, you have to be very, very
pleased. Bill was incredible."
Western got on the board first with
a short-handed goal by forward Rob
Adams, on a great pass from CCHA
player-of-the-year Dan Dorion.
Western took that slim lead into the
second period, and when Wayne

Gagne raced up center ice and laid a
great move on State goalie Bob
Essense, the score was 2-0 heading in
to the final period.
STATE SUPPORTERS 15,000

strong were immediately given
something to cheer about when defen-
seman Tom Tilley's slap shot from
the blue line got past Horn after hit-
ting someone in front of the net. But
while the fans were high-fiving one
another MSU forward Jeff Parker
was busy pounding on Bronco Jim
Culhane.
Parker was assessed a roughing
penalty which immediately put
Western, the most efficient power-
play team in the country, in a man-up
situation. It took only 1:07 for Troy
Thrun to build the lead back to two
goals, and it took all the heart out of
State and their fans.
"That was the turning point of the
game, I thought, when they got a
lucky goal, but then took a penalty on
that goal," said Wilkinson. "We're
the number-one power-play unit in the
nation and when you give us oppor-
tunities we are going to score."
Horn then proceeded to save
everything MSU threw at him, and
Western Michigan became the first
non-MSU team to win the CCHA tour-
nament in its five year existence. It
was also the first time in 20 games the

Spartans had lost at Joe Louis Arena.
"It couldn't happen to a bunch of
nicer guys," said Bronco forward Stu
Burnie, one of five Western players
selected to the all-tournament team.
Michigan State 3,
Lake Superior 2
Despite executing its game plan to
near perfection, Lake Superior lost to
Michigan State 3-2 in CCHA semi-
final action on Friday night at Joe
Louis Arena.
"I think Lake Superior should have
won the hockey game tonight," said
Laker coach Frank Anzalone. "I
think we dominated almost every area of
the game."
THE LAKERS held the explosive
Spartan offense to a meager 20 shots
on goal while attempting 28 shots.
Michigan State goalie Norm Foster
singlehandledly ruined Laker plans of
an upset.
"We use everything we have to win
games, and one of the areas we used
to win is our goalkeeping," said Spar-
tan head coach Ron Mason. "Normie

came up big again."
Foster frustrated the Lakers in the
third period as he turned aside all ten
shots he faced. Lake Superior had
closed the score to 3-2 after goals in
the second period by Kim McIvor and
Jeff Dicaire. Spartan second period
goals were scored by Mike Donnelly
and Kevin Miller. Dave Arkeilpane
opened the Michigan State scoring at
12:33 of the opening period.
While the Spartans received
production from fourth-line center
Arkeilpane, the Lakers' top players
failed to produce. "If we had a sniper
we may have won the game," said
Anzalone. "That has been our
problem all year, and it finally caught
up with us." -SCOTT G. MILLER
W. Michigan 4,
B. Green 3 (3 OT)
They were as even as could be.
Western Michigan and Bowling

Green ended the CCHA regular,
season with identical 23-9 records,'
tied for second place.aFriday night at
Joe Louis Arena, the Broncos and the
Falcons remained tied after three
periods, after overtime, and after a
second overtime.
BRONCO CAPTAIN Chris Mac-,
Donald broke the deadlock- at 58
seconds of the third overtime with a
slap shot from inside the blue line.
Western won 4-3, advancing to the
finals against Michigan State orr
Saturday.
CCHA player-of-the-year Dan
Dorion made the play for the Broncos.
The senior right winger took the puck
behind the Flacon net, and came out
to the left of Bowling Green goalie
Gary Kruzich. With a defenseman
blocking his path to the goal, Dorion
passed the puck out towards the blue
line. MacDonald, a senior defen-
seman, fired a shot a foot off the ice to
Kruzich's stick side for the game win-
ner. - RICK KAPLAN

A"'
Horn
... outstanding

A

SPOR TS OF THE DAILY:
'Women netters ground Falcons

What's
Happening

By PAUL DODD
While many students were sleeping
off their Friday night party after-
shocks, the women's tennis team was
blanking Bowling Green early Satur-
day morning, 9-0, at the Huron Valley
Racquet Club.
i For the most part, it was total
domination again for the Wolverines,
who have been playing some weaker
teams in preparation for the Big Ten
season. Michigan will not be getting
into the conference schedule until the
middle of April.
IN THE MEANTIME, there are
matches with the Eastern and
Western Michigans of the world. The
University of Toledo will provide the
competition today at the Track and
Tennis Building.
Saturday's drubbing was typified
by the 6-0, 6-0 trouncing number-one
player Paula Reichert handed the
Falcons' Lynn Brooks. The only
Wolverine singles player who met
with any resistance was Monica Bor-
cherst, who had to take a 7-1
tiebreaker to win in straight sets over
Sarah Griffith.
"It was only their second match of
the. year and it showed," said
WMichigan coach Bitsy Ritt. "We've
played a few more matches and we'll
play them again in April. They should
be a lot better then."
Doubles matches were as equally
one-sided as the inidvidual matches
were. Erin Ashare and Tricia Horn
also won a tiebreaker, 7-1, to win the
first set of a straight-set victory.
Leslie Mackey continued her win-
ning ways, chalking up her sixth vic-
tory in the last seven outings with a 6-
3, 6-0 pasting of Linda Wick.
Batsman split
Special to the Daily
LAKELAND, Fla. - It did not take
long for the Michigan baseball team
to have a worse record than it did at
this time last year.
After going 9-0 during last year's
spring trip in Texas, the Wolverines
went to Florida last week. Currently,
Michigan is 2-2, having posted wins

agianst Villanova and Columbia while
losing to Western Michigan and Cen-
tral Florida.
IN THE OPENER last Friday af-
ternoon against the Wildcats, a game
Michigan won 8-4, first baseman Hal
Morris went three-for-four with a
double and a triple and second
baseman Matt Siuda hammered two
hits.
Freshman pitcher Jim Abbott got a

case of the jitters in his first outing in
a Michigan uniform and was replaced
in the second inning by junior Dave
Karasinski. The 5-11 lefty pitched
three and two-thirds innings of one hit
relief to notch the win.
In Saturday afternoon's loss to the
Broncos, Michigan ace Scott
Kamieniecki pitched five innings and
left the game with a 6-2 lead. Mike
Ignasiak came in and was the
TIME TO DO THE LAUNDRY!
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recipient of some questionable calls
by the umpire and ended up walking
four and allowing one hit to the five
batters he faced. A late Wolverine
rally could not combat the Bronco
seven-run sixth inning.
SATURDAY NIGHT Michigan beat
Columbia 9-1, as Senior Dan Disher
pitched a two-hitter for his first com-
plete game in a Wolverine uniform.
Morris went three-for-four including
Michigan's first home run of the
season and the game-winning RBI
with a double in the first inning.
In yesterday's action, Central
Florida defeated the Wolverines, 8-5:

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March 14

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