The Michigan Daily - Friday, October 14, 1988 - Page 13 Outlook: Parity pervades the conference BY LISA GILBERT Welcome to the world of the Central Collegiate Hockey Association 1988-89. Sit tight in your seats and get ready to see college hockey at its finest. College hockey is considered to be one of the fastest growing sports in America. And among the four major NCAA conferences, the CCHA has increased in popularity by leaps and bounds. "Over the past six or seven years the league has been strong and this year is no exception," said Bowling Green coach Jerry York. "Not only will the teams battle from within the conference but also on a national level." Here is proof of the CCHA's dominance. The CCHA has: 'Three out of the last five NCAA champions. -Over 50 percent of last year's NHL collegiate draftees. -A major television contract, which brings the CCHA "Game of the Week" to over eight million viewers and networks across the country. -A post-season tournament at The Joe Louis Arena in front of the } largest crowds to watch college hockey anywhere in the nation. The league has also achieved greater parity. Four teams, Lake Superior, Michigan State, Western Michigan, and Bowling Green received first-place votes in this year's CCHA coaches pre-season poll. Michigan State coach Ron Mason agreed. "The CCHA has the most balance of any conference. There are no weak sisters, which is unusual in a nine team league." Here is a team by team analysis of the teams in the CCHA: THE FAVORITES Lake Superior State - Laker Coach Frank Anzalone was a bit concerned about complacency when last year's defending NCAA champs began their fall practice this year. "The first day (of practice) I noticed a few guys walking with a little hitch in their walk," Anzalone said. "Now we're back to reality. The national championship means nothing anymore." With six of the top seven scorers returning, Lake Superior appears to be ready to meet the challenge of staying on top. The only obstacle in their path will be to replace Mark Vermette, CCHA Player-of-the-Year and a first-team All-America selection last year. Anzalone is counting on the contribution of sophomores Jim Dowd and Brett Barnett to pick up the scoring slack. As first-year players, they led the Lakers in scoring during the postseason. All-CCHA goalie Bruce Hoffort returns as does his backup Mike Greenlay, whose .878 winning percentage was second only to Hoffort's league-leading .908 mark. Michigan State - Always a perennial CCHA powerhouse, the Spartans will once again be a force to be reckoned with this year. Despite an up and down season, MSU still finished third in the CCHA and qualified for their eighth consecutive NCAA tournament. The only question mark for this year's team will be on defense, where the Spartans must replace captain Tom Tilley and Sean Clement The Spartans are blessed with the services of two top-notch sophomore goalies in Jason Muzzatti and Jamie Stewart along with the nation's second-leading goal scorer in senior Bobby Reynolds. THE CHALLENGERS Bowling Green - Last year's 1987-88 Coaches Poll 1987-88 Final Standings Team (Ist Place Votes) 1, Lake Superior (4) 2. Michigan State (2)' 3. Western Michigan (2) 4. Bowling Green (1) 5. MICHIGAN 6. Ferris St. 7. Illinois-Chicago 8. Miami (Ohio) 9. Ohio State pts 75 70 63 60 43 29 28 22 15 1. 2, 3. 4. 5, 6. 7. 8. 9. Team Lake Superior Dowling Green Michigan St, Western Mich, MICHIGAN Il.-Chicago Ferris State Ohio State Miami (Ohio) W 22 19 18 17 17 14 11 07 07 L 04 11 12 15 17 17 21 24 T 6 2 3 3 0 1 4 4 I Pts. 50 40 39 37 34 29 26 18 15 goals-against mark of 3.43 over the last 27 games. Michigan - The Wolverines, who finished fifth last year, have added a quartet of talented newcomers and are ready to make a serious run for the conference title in coach Red Berenson's fifth season. Michigan came on strong in the second half of the season, including a weekend sweep of archrival Michigan State. Ferris State - The Bulldogs, under the tutelage of third-year coach John Perpich, proved that they are ready to make the jump to the upper division in posting a 2-2 record against Lake Superior and a 2-1-1 mark against MSU. Five seniors return along with CCHA Rookie-of-the-Year John dePourcq to give Ferris State line-up a balance between youth and experience. "We're gaining in maturity as our program enters another phase of development," Perpich said. "This will be my biggest senior class and the largest at Ferris in several years." THE SPOILERS Illinois-Chicago - Both offensively and defensively the Flames enter the 1988-89 campaign with several holes that need to be filed. Gone are UIC's top two career scoring leaders, Jeff Nelson and Rob Klenk. Team captain Darin Alexander and Barry McKinlay, who forfeited his last two year's of eligibility to play for the Montreal Canadians must also be replaced. Ohio State - Led by last year's second leading scorer Paul Rutherford. The Buckeyes will have the services of eight of their top ten scorers this season. "One of our strengths will be an increased balance offensively," said head coach Jerry Welsh. "From top to bottom, we'll be able to put people on the ice who can score goals and come up with the time of possession." Miami (Ohio) - With their only consistent scorer gone from last year's last place team this will undoubtedly be a rebuilding year for the Redskins. File Photo Five Michigan players find sanctuary in the penalty box during a game last year. With the new rules changes, full penalty boxes are expected to be commonplace this season - especially in the early going. New rules tighten game Western Michigan - With 17 lettermen returning, including four of the top 20 scorers in the CCHA, from last year's fourth-place team, Bronco coach Bill Wilkinson has good reason to be excited about the upcoming season. "This year's team, unlike the past two, knows. exactly what it has to do in order to get to Joe Louis Arena for the CCHA championship and, perhaps, beyond," said Wilkinson. "We're a talented team. I think we have every reason to be optimistic." Veteran goalie Bill Horn returns for his senior season to anchor an experienced defense that Wilkinson cites as the key to the Broncos' fortunes this year. CCHA runner-up, the Falcons may be hard pressed to match last year's success. The loss of five of their top six forwards in addition to team MVP and All-America defenseman Scott Pauluch may result in a slip in the standings. Said coach Jerry York: "The departure of our seniors, especially among the forwards leaves us with a dent in our offensive production and a need to restructure our offensive lines." One veteran York knows he can count on is junior goalie Paul Connell, last year's CCHA Tournament MVP. Connell showed marked improvement over the second half of last season, compiling a The NCAA, in an effort to reduce violence in college hockey, has made adjustments in certain rules calling for stricter enforcement in three different areas. Hitting from behind: If a player delivers a check directly or diagonally to an opponents back, a penalty will be called. If the blow is extremely violent, a major penalty. will be assessed. The reason for additional concern in this area is that this tactic makes a player's neck especially suceptible to injury. Hitting after the whistle: In order to reduce retaliation and unnecessary game delays, penalties will be called in instances of intentional contact after the whistle. Interference: Players attempting to impede the movement of an opponent without the puck will be called for interference. This includes holding, hooking, slashing and screening with illegal use of the hands, stick, arms or body. Overtime: This new rule applys only to the CCHA conference. After a two- minute break, a five-minute sudden- death overtime period will follow. WHETHER PAST, PRESENT, OR FUTURE... Blue tradition continues "I want to make it an environment for a boy that when he plays here and skates out on the ice, it just makes hairs stand up on his back." -Michigan hockey coach Gordon "Red" Berenson BY MIKE GILL Michigan hockey has had quite a few hair-raising moments. Its past has been filled with glory. The Wolverines have won a record seven NCAA championships in thirteen appearances. Their 21-6 NCAA playoff record is tops with a .778 winning percentage. However, not since the 1963-64 season has the team celebrated being No. 1 in the nation. But the Michigan tradition is more than 866 wins in 66 seasons. It's more than NCAA championships, WCHA championships, or CCHA playoffs. It's what comes with tradition - atmosphere, attitude, acceptance by the student body, and the comraderie of the team. BEFORE MICHIGAN moved into Yost Ice Arena at the start of the 1973-74 season, they played at the intimate Coliseum on 5th and Hill Streets, with seating of 2000. "Every game was jammed" said Michigan coach Red Berenson, who played there from 1960-62. "In a smaller facility, it was just electric. Everyone in there was hyped up. You were close to the players, the players were close to the crowd. It made for an exciting atmosphere." Lois Simmons is also part of the Michigan tradition - not very integral on the ice, but off it. Simmons is the wife of the late Carl Isaacson, who was the trainer for the team from 1947-56. Recently, Simmons became the first woman to receive the honor of being inducted into the Deker's Hall of Fame. She remembers the stir hockey created in the late forties and early fifties, when Michigan won the NCAA title six times in nine years. "The students would line up to buy tickets and the line would be two blocks long," said Simmons. "Then the place would just echo with noise. You lived and died with that team." The Michigan tradition. THE ATMOSPHERE, was in place. Ask anyone from any generation, who participated on a Michigan hockey team. They'll all mention the close-knit Michigan family. Art Schlander, 79, was the oldest member to attend last weekend's hockey reunion. "I'll tell you one thing," Schlander, captain of the 1931 team, said. "We had a good club, which hung together, which was a family. That's important." The Michigan tradition. AL RENFREW, who coached the team to its last national championship and played for the Wolverines from 1946-49, remembers a week in 1948 where the team was a family - stranded in the middle of nowhere. After playing out West one yeat, the team began their journey back to Michigan. They wound up stuck in a terrible storm in Green River, Wyoming for three days - a place with only one movie house. "Mrs. Renfrew and I went to the depot for a week for their train to come in," said Simmons. "The needles on the Christmas tree were falling off. Finally they came home that night and had to play Queens University. I went in and hung up their wet underwear which had been packed away for a week. And you know what? They won." The Michigan tradition. FOUR MEN stood in the lobby of Yost Ice Arena last weekend. They sipped beer and remembered the days they wore Michigan's colors. All four played between the years of 1968-73 and remember their time together well. Bernie Gagnon and Richard Mallette recalled a hallway water fight at a Holiday Inn in Minnesota. The team doused each other with water and when they awoke the next morning they discovered the water had turned to thick ice in the hallway. "They were the greatest years ever," Jean-Yves "Punch" Cartier said. "It was a good education, good times, good travelling, good friends. What more can you ask for?" When asked to sum up what the 'M' tradition is all about, Renfrew responded, "Success adds to tradition. But first you've got a family, if you are fortunate to play on a Michigan team. And it stays with you for a lifetime. I think that's what our tradition is about." AND SO, later tonight, the buzz of the crowd will echo down into the lockerroom at Yost Ice Arena. The uniform will slip over one's head, the coach's final words will be said, and onto the ice the Michigan hockey team will skate while The Victors is played above them. This is the baptism into the Michigan hockey program for six newcomers. This is their first night to wear the maize and blue. This is their indoctrination into the Michigan hockey tradition - and, the hairs might just stand up a little on each one's back. 4, Jean-Yves "Punch" Cartier, who hockey from 1970-72, called his1 the Wolverines "the greatest years Sports Information , lettered in Michigan time spent skating for ever." -T *7 1 1 Ferris State College Nickname - Bulldogs Colors - Crimson and Gold Enrollment - 11,792 Arena (Cap.) - Ewigleben Ice Arena (2.573) Illinois Chicago FLAMES IY Miami University- Nickname - Redskins Colors - Red and White Enrollment - 15,000 Ar. manna - (1mrnin Arena (9 r2500 Ohio State UNIVERSITY Nickname - Buckeyes Colors - Scarlet and Gray Enrollment - 53,880 A ,e'-- .A f.C.. , I ne r ,IIn m1O Nickname - Flames Colors - Indigo and Flame Enrollment - 25,000 .-rnn ,/- n a.., l -1 11( mnv inn R RC