Page 10 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, April 1, 1987 Violence not gratuitous in hoc THE SPORTING VIEWS , , By IAN RATNER Fighting is an integral part of professional hockey. No doubt about it. If: a team wants to contend for the Stanley Cup, it must be armed with quality goons. They must fight and they must win. Case in point: the Montreal Canadiens, last year's winner of Lortt Stanley. The Habs sport the league's premier goon, Sir John Kordic: Granted I could outskate him, but the bullish Kordic possesses an arsenal of. punches and a steel chin that make him the most feared man in hockey. His psychotic mentality kept opposing teams honest in last year's playoffs. When Calgary's Tim Hunter, a Mask child lookalike, got dirty in lasI year's finals with the Canadiens' little man Mats Naslund, Kordic was there to lay down the law... and lay out Hunter. Montreal won the battles and won the war. LOOK BACK AT THE previous decade of Stanley Cup victors and you will find that each team fielded the league's premier goons. In fact; some of these boys could actually play hockey. Montreal won the Cup in 1976, '77, '78 and '79 on the goal scoring of' Guy Lafleur and the fists of Mario Tremblay and Larry Robinson. The Islanders won four straight thanks to the inimitable presence of Clark Gillies, the master blaster. Oh yes, Bossy and Trottier played on those championship teams as well. The Edmonton Oilers won two straight Cups before Dave Semenko decided he could get by on his skating ability alone. But the Oiler management has smartened up and recalled minor leaguer, Wayne Van Dorp (6-7, 245 pounds). THE DETROIT RED WINGS will not win any Stanley Cups if they continue to trade away premier fistacuffs men like Basil McRae. Although Jacques Demers has done a superb job in revitalizing the Wings, he admitted he made a mistake in trading McRae and has already expressed an interest in reacquiring him. The absence of MeRae will definitely hurt the Red Wings come playoff time. I condone fighting for two reasons. It is a highly effective form of intimidation and it keeps the dirty players honest, since the National Hockey League's one-referee system has proven insufficient in monitoring fair play. Two of the league's top three teams, the Hartford Whalers and die Philadelphia Flyers, are 15-6 and 11-5, respectively, following first-period major fighting penalties. The point is more lucidly illustrated by the last place Toronto Maple Leafs who are 11-8 when they fight in the first periodf. I You can't talk about the Leafs without mentioning Wendell Clark, pound for pound the game's best player. Forget Gretzky, Wendell can score goals, play defense, and stand up to anybody. AND THOSE PATHETIC referees. Why doesn't NHL president John Ziegler smarten up and employ a two-referee system like pro basketball? NHL refs miss more than half of the high-sticks and butt-ends that go on behind the play. The visors that many of the players are now wearing are ruining the game. Many cheap-shot artists, like Montreal's Claude Lemieux, who don the shield are now encouraged to blind-side a guy with a cross check in the face. The biggest joke in hockey, however, is the instigator penalty, which inhibits a player from retaliating. The players are urged to fight back with their sticks behind the play rather than their fists. Flyer General Manager Bobby Clarke expressed his displeasure over thec nstigator rule during a Hockey Scene interview "You hate to have to much emnphasis on fighting, but the threat of figits kept people on their toes," said Clarke. Buffalo Sabre Shawn Anderson (37) and Detroit Red Wing Mark Kumpel tangle in an example of NHL violence. stonewashed destroyed acid washed JEANS from: Edwin Girbaud Guess Open 24 Hours kinko's- Great copies. Great people. 540 E. LIBERTY 761-4539 Open Until d nigh kinko'rs Great copies. Great people. 1220 S. UNIVERSITY 747-9070 lU's Knight proud of academies NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Coach Bob Knight says his Indiana basketball team struck a blow for the good guys in college athletics by winning the NCAA champion- ship - just as he believes Penn State did in football. "I think it's great that two teams with high graduation rates and no recruiting garbage can win the national championships in the same season," said Knight after capturing his third national title. "Maybe people will look at that and say, 'Well, if they can do it that way so can we."' Knight takes pride in Indiana's adherence to NCAA's rules and his insistence that student-athletes ful- fill the first part of the description. "It pleases me tremendously for the kids and for our system," the coach said in the afterglow of Indiana's 74-73 victory over Syracuse Monday night in the NCAA championship game. di to .Fr to CO M Mv CO Z CL O~ 0 Testaverde near 44 signing U BOSTON (AP) - Heisman Trophy winner Vinny Testaverde is expected to sign a contract with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers within a week that would make him the NFL's third-highest paid player, a source said yesterday. Bob Woolf, Testaverde's attorney, refused to confirm whether a deal had been reached. "I'm very optimistic of making an agreement, ~it Bucs although we don't have one yet," he said. The Bucs had no immediatO comment, club public relations director Rick Odioso said. The source said the contract for the former University of Miami quarterback would be the most lucrative ever for an NFL rookie and would place Testaverde behind quarterbacks Jim Kelley of tlio Buffalo Bills and Dan Marino of the Miami Dolphins as the highest paid players. Kelly's contract reportedly is f6o $8 million over five years, while Marino's reportedly is for 9 I million over six years. The source said the contract for Testaverde wouldn't be much less than Marino' s. I vwv R VrVV GUS'S PIZZERIA 310 MAYNARD - (INSIDE DOOLEY'S) 665-5800 0~IFRIY 761-6207 X-LARGE 16" PIZZA with 3 items AND 2 QUARTS OF POP P699 plus tax OPEN UNTIL 3 A.M. ON FRIDA''S AND SATURDAYS exp. 6/1/87 THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN SCHOOL OF EDUCATION Winter Term 1987 Calendar of Events WEDNESDAY, April 1. "Winter Colloquium Series on Schooling and Intellec- tual Development" - Tribute Room, 1322 School of Education Building, 4 to 5 p.m. Speaker: Robert Glaser, University of Pittsburgh, on "Expertise, Knowledge, and Instruction." Free: for information, contact the Center for Research on Learning and Schooling, 3112 School of Education Building, or call (313) 763-2374. WEDNESDAY, April 1. "Administrator's Update: Mathematics from the Prin- cipal's Perspective" - Ann Arbor Inn, 9 a.m. - 3 p.m. Speakers: Prof. Joseph Payne, U-M mathematics educator, and administrators and teachers in service. Cost: $15 for University of Michigan EESA Title II Science and/or Math Institute participants; $30 for others. Fee includes lunch. Intended for principals and other instructional leaders in elementary and/or middle schools. This and the March 18 workshop on science are a series. Cost for both sessions is $25 for EESA participants and $50 for others. For information, contact Professional Development Office, 1225 School of Education Building, or call (313) 763-9497. FRIDAY, April 3. School of Education Awards Ceremony - Schorling Auditor- ium, School of Education Building, 2 p.m. Speaker: Dr. Foster B. Gibbs, Superintendent of the Saginaw Public Schools, Special Student and Youth Fares to EUROPE from New York on Scheduled Airlines! DESTINATIONS OW RT LONDON $210 $400 PARIS 226 432 FRANKFURT 248 476 ROME 273 526 MILAN 248 476 ZURICH/GENEVA 260 500 Add $25 in each direction for Boston or Washington, D.C. departures. Add $50 in each direction for Pittsburgh, Cleveland, or Raleigh-Durham departures. Other add-on fares are available. ecial Student and Youth Fares to dCANDINAVIA On Scheduled Airlines! Health & Fitxiess SHORT OR LONG Hairstyles for Men and Women DASCOLA STYLISTS Liberty off State . . 668-9329:: Maple Village 761 2733' I Spring Rates OW RT Copenhagen $255 $440 From Oslo 255 440 New York Stockholm 255 440 Helsinki 295 520 .0.. A 11 i {