Men's Basketball vs. Boise State Thursday, 9 p.m. Salt Lake City SPORTS Women's Tennis vs. Eastern Michigan Friday Ypsilanti The Michigan Daily Tuesday, March 15, 1988 Page 7 Bowling Green tops Lake Superior for CCHA crown Daily Photo by ELLEN LEVY Lake Superior State's Brett Barnett, pictured in an earlier game against Michigan, scored four goals in two games last weekend in the Central Collegiate Hockey Association playoffs. The Lakers lost to Bowling Green in the championship game, 5-3. 'M' icers should study winners Character wins championships. Some teams have it and some teams don't. Bowling Green and Lake Superior State, the teams in the Central Col- legiate Hockey Association finals last Saturday, got there because they have character. Michigan was noticeably absent. Character surfaces in important games, like when injuries set in or when adversity must be handled. This past season, the Wolverines showed none of this. BOWLING GREEN, the CCHA playoff champion, showed character by bouncing back from early season woes to finish as the hottest team in the country. After 17 games, the Falcons were 8-8-1, and struggling in fifth place in the con- ference. Nine of twenty players on Bowling Green's roster were not on the team last season. Their resurgence started slowly, with victories over Princeton during the. holiday season. Then the meta- morphosis transpired. Starting with a victory at Maine, the number one team in the country, the Falcons brought new meaning to the phrase "cold steel on ice," winning 16 of their last 20 games to surge past Michigan, Western Michigan, and Michigan State and into second place at the end of the season. Lake Superior State, in contrast to Bowling Green, has been the front-runner in the CCHA since the start of the season. With only one senior on the squad and a first-year goaltender, the Lakers played a de- fensive style that led to a 28-4-6 record, the CCHA regular season championship, and the number-three ranking nationally. Both of these teams have battled sadversity and challenge to get NCAA bids. Both teams have had problems. Both teams have had to play difficult CLASSIFIED ADS MUSICAL. lECORD YOUR MUSIC AT EQMC/QUAD studios. Low cost, 8-track. Info at 764-3456. WANTED: set of bagpi - new or used - to buy, possibly to rent. Must be in good shape. Call Karen at 763-2748 or leave message at 763-1906. By JULIE HOLLMAN Special to The Daily DETROIT- A hockey team's success begins with the goalie. Sat- urday night at Joe Louis Arena this hypothesis proved to be an accurate one. Bowling Green, behind the strong and gutsy play of goalie Paul Con- nell, defeated Lake Superior State, 5- 3, and captured the Central Colle- giate Hockey Association playoff championship. The Falcons victory marked only the second time in seven years that Michigan State did not gain the playoff crown. BOWLING GREEN advanced to the finals by knocking off Michi- gan State, 6-4, and Lake Superior moved to championship game by defeating Western Michigan, 5-4 in overtime. Lake Superior head coach Frank Anzalone thought his team played well against Bowling Green, but at- tributed the difference to what hap- pened by the crease. "I thought it was a 50-50 game," said Anzalone. "We needed the big saves early and we just didn't get them. That changed the flow of the game." While Laker goalie, Bruce Hof- fort, was not at his All-CCHA first team form, his counterpart at the other end was stealing the show. CONNELL, the tournament MVP, led Bowling Green past the league-champion Lakers by making 28 saves, despite sustaining an in- jury 5:36 before the end of the first period. Connell was nailed in the neck by a slap shot and experienced trouble swallowing as he laid mo- tionless on the ice for several min- utes. He managed to continue, but al- , t PASS IT lowed Brett Barnett to score off a re- bound with a little over two minutes left. Barnett's goal marked his fourth of the tournament and helped him earn a spot on the all-tournament team. Bowling Green came right back though, as Mark Potvin poked one in from the top of the crease to put the Falcons back ahead by two. Lake Superior cut the margin when Tim Harris scored on a break- away. Less than a minute latter, Hoffort helped the comeback cause by making a tremendous save to thwart a three-on-one rush by Bowl- ing Green. However, the momentum took another swing when Chad Authur slid in an unassisted goal after Lake Superior failed to clear the puck out of its zone for several minutes. DOWN 4-3 late in the final pe- riod, the Lakers pulled their goalie but couldn't capitalize on the man advantage. Instead, after Hoffort stepped back in, Bowling Green scored again to put away the win. The win ensured Bowling Green a bid in the NCAA tournament. "Early in the season we were developing slowly but since the Maine tourna- ment we've really come on as a club," said Falcon head coach Jerry York. "I think we have a genuine chance for a national title." Lake Superior, as a playoff final- ist and based on its season perfor- mance, will also receive a bid, but Anzalone was not sure what other considerations his team would get. Said Anzalone, "When you win a league championship over a course of 32 very rugged games, and if we think this is the best league in the United States, then certainly win- ning the league championship should be considered something of a hurrah and that should earn us a bye in the first round." EVIDENTLY, someone on the NCAA committee agreed with Anzalone's views. Yesterday, the NCAA announced the pairings and the Lakers received a bye. Michigan State will be the third team representing the CCHA in the national tournament. The Spartans will play at Harvard, and Bowling Green will host Vermont, Friday and Saturday in a pair of two-game, to-. tal-goals series. In the second round, the Michi an State-Harvard winner will play Mn- nesota; the Bowling Green-Vermont winner will play at Maine; and Lake Superior will host the winner of the Merrimack-Northeastern contest. The other three schools rounding out the 12-team field are Wisconsin, which will play Lowell in the first round, and St. Lawrence, which will host the winner of that game. Adam S Rib BY ADAM SCHRAGER schedules. And both teams have character. MICHIGAN, on the other hand, has had adversity, problems, and a difficult schedule. But the dif- ference between the Wolverines and the Lakers and Falcons, is that Michigan does not have an NCAA berth due to its lack of character. Michigan lost its most important games this season, including the 10- 0 drubbing handed to them by West- ern Michigan in the third and decid- ing game of the quarter-final playoff round two weekends ago. What about the series against Lake Superior State at home, where the Wolverines needed to win one game in order to hold fourth place and maintain their home-ice advan- tage in the playoffs. The Wolverines were swept. What about the last series of the year against Bowling Green, where Michigan needed to sweep the Fal- cons in order to play at home in the quarter-final round of the playoffs. The Wolverines, after winning on the road Friday night, lost at home. on Saturday. AND FINALLY, there was the playoff series at Western Michigan, where Michigan had only won once in five seasons. Michigan won the first game, 5-4 and were leading early in the second game before real- ity set in. The Wolverines proceeded to lose Saturday night, 4-3, before Sunday's embarrassing loss. Blame can be given to many people, but head coach Red Beren- son, not the players, must answer for the end result. The lack of experience cannot be given as an excuse because Michigan had five seniors on their roster. Out. of the four teams at Joe Louis Arena, only Bowling Green had more seniors (six) than Michigan. Michigan State, Lake Superior - I State, and Western, on the other hand, all had less. The lack of talent cannot be given as an excuse because if Berenson's word can be taken seriously, then Michigan has as much talent as anyone in the league. AND THE lack of competition cannot be given as an excuse because the Wolverines have played all four semifinal teams at least four times this season. Michigan went 3-4 against Western, 3-1 against State, 0-4 against runner-up Lake Superior, and 2-2 against champion Bowling Green. None of the goals the Wolverines set for themselves at the start of the season were fulfilled. Berenson hoped to end up in fourth place in the regular season, finish in the fi- nals of the team's two invitationals, and make it to Joe Louis Arena. The result was a big goose egg. What was the problem? If Michi- gan was talented, experienced, and competition-tough, then what hap- pened? The lack of character is once again evident. Without a boost of character in the near future, the Wolverines will forever end up watching the CCHA playoffs as they did on Saturday night. "I think we accomplished a lot this season," Berenson said after the hapless season-ending performance. "The real Michigan team showed up Friday and Saturday nights, not tonight. That was the shame." A shame indeed. - Am Connell ... Playoff MVP A CLASS ACT SENIOR PLEDGE PROGRAM 1 9 8 8 AROUND OPPORTUNITY ALASKA SUMMER JOBS ALASKA OFFERS NUMEROUS WELL-PAYING SEASONAL POSITIONS IN TOURISM, SEAFOOD PROCESSING, PARKS & RECREATION. WE HAVE COMPILED A PRECISE GUIDE TO STATE- WIDE SUMMER EMPLOYMENT. SEND NOW! 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