Hockey vs. Ferris State Friday, 7:30 p.m. Yost Ice Arena SPORTS Men's Basketball vs. Ohio State Tonight, 7:30 p.m. Crisler Arena The Michigan Daily Monday, January 16, 1989 Michigan Blue Line: BY MIKE GILL For the 4,017 on hand at Yost Ice Arena, on an icy Saturday night, this win's for you. But this weekend's sweep against Bowling Green were wins for the 23 guys on the team, who continue to do just what you don't expect them to do. The monkey is loose - because it's off the Wolverines back. It jumped on their backs after Michigan swept Miami (Ohio) at Yost in its opening series, and since pushed Red Berenson's boys to a 0- 7-2 mark at home. NOW a victory. At home. For the fans. So this one's for the Alex Roberts Fan Club, who had a little more to scream about Saturday; for Grandma and Grandpa Helber, who cheered their grandkids Tim and Mike and this time did not have to leave disappointed; for the pep band, who could play the fight song after the buzzer and have the crowd respond with enthusiasm. "You feel that much better about yourself," Myles O'Connor said of the win. "We wanted to win here not only for ourselves, but also for our fans, great fans, who supported us all year. "And finally we did it. We wanted to pay them back for their support and thank God - we were able to get the monkey off our back." THE MONKEY is loose. But now, let's talk sweep. The brooms are out and it's not because the hockey team decided to take up curling. It's because they swept the Falcons from the sky 6-2 at BGSU and 4-1 at Yost. It has not been an easy week for the Wolverines. It would be easy for them to make excuses. On a team which is not deep to start with, defensemen Brad Turner and Mark Sorenson missed the series due to injuries. Players also cited this week's practice. It wasn't real good. With the new semester, players were late, running from classes - going through the CRISP process that plagues university students. THEN THERE was the distraction that four members of the team were being investigated by police. Not a good week. Would it show in their play? The first period Friday night indicated it would. The Wolverines escaped the period tied at one. But, the power play was horrific and only Warren Sharples, who had 12 saves compared to Paul Connell's five, kept them in the game. But the distractions didn't show up the rest of the series. The Wolverines and Sharples played five strong periods of hockey. No excuses. No distractions. Just two wins. "Yeah, it takes a little pressure off us," said Don Stone, who scored two goals Friday, including the game-winner. "With everything that's been going on it really has been a distraction on us hockey- wise. We came out here with a good effort." ADDED Warren Sharples: "The distractions were there if we let them get to us. We didn't - and that is a good sign of the character of this team." It's a sign which keeps reappearing. They overcome adversity. -November 5, 1988: Michigan trails Bowling Green 4-1, and is missing five players, including three defensemen, due to a rumble resembling West Side Story. Final: Michigan 7, Bowling Green 6. -November 11, 1988: Due to the previous weekend's donnybrook, Michigan is still without five Page 16 Falcons,' Sharples sharp in net BY TAYLOR LINCOLN With ten minutes remaining and Michigan leading 2-1 in Saturday night's game, Wolverine right-winger Jim Ballantine beat Bowling Green ' f goalie Paul Connel to a loose puck in front of the net. He skated wide and tucked it inside the goal post, making the score 3-1. "We both got there at the same time and he tipped it enough to get control," Connel said of Ballantine's goal. "It was fifty-fifty and he won." Ballantine added an empty-netter eight minutes later to seal the.. Wolverine's first home victory since October 15. Saturday's 4-1 win came, on the heels of Friday night's 6-2 win in Bowling Green. The sweep put Michigan back in fourth place in the CCHA, three points ahead of Bowling Green. BALLANTINE scored just after Bowling Green had made repeated threats to tie the game. "It was a big goal," Ballantine said. "It took some of the pressure off." In the first period Tim Helber and Denny Felsner scored to give Michigan. a two goal lead. Meanwhile goalie Warren Sharpies kept the Falcons at bay until the CCHA's second-highest scorer, Brad Parks, assisted Mark Potvin's. goal early in the third period to cut the lead to 2-1. Considering that Michigan was without Mark Sorenson and Brad Turner due to knee injuries and Bowling Green is the second highest scoring team' in the league, it seemed an unlikely prospect to hold Bowling Green to three goals in two games. "All of our defensemen played well," Berenson said. "We had two of, them out and the defense really rose to the occasion." BOWLING GREEN coach Jerry York was also impressed with the Michigan defensive effort. "Michigan shut us down. We had enough chances both nights to score four or five votes." Of Sharples, York said: "This is as well as I've seen Warren play." Friday night, the teams battled to a 2-2 tie for nearly 55 minutes before Michigan exploded for four goals in the closing minutes. The go-ahead goal came with 5:36 remaining when Don Stone put a slap-shot in off of a pass from Mike Moes. "Alex dumped it back and I heard Stone yelling," Moes said. "I just left it to him." "It was basically a three on two," Stone said. "Moes hit me and I had to- shoot it as hard as I could." THE FALCONS had several chances to tie the game in the next minute, including one instance in which the puck laid just in front of the Michigan net and Sharples found himself bereft of his stick. "One of their players skated through me and I lost my stick." Sharplesx said. "I tried to get somebody else's stick and locate the puck but it gotw cleared." Just under two-and-a-half minutes after Stone gave the Wolverines the.. lead, Mike Helber put in a rebound off a Moes shot to put Michigan up b j two. Felsner and Stone each added one more score, making for the deceptiv 6-2 final. The first star of the game in Bowling Green was Sharples, who made repeated saves to keep the game tied at 2-2. "He played phenomenal all night," Moes said. "He was really quick." The win was Michigan's fourth straight in Bowling Green. "Hopefully we can build on this. We have to keep moving north in the standings. Third place is in reach." If the season ended today, these two teams would face each other in the first round of the CCHA playoffs, with Michigan holding the home-ice, advantage. JESSICA GREENE/Doily Denny Felsner digs for a loose puck in the corner Saturday night's game at Yost. He and the Wolverines gold, winning both games against Bowling. Green. during struck players. No matter. Final: Michigan 2, Ferris State 1. -December 29, 1988: Great Lakes Invitational. Trailing 5-1, Michigan reemerges after some soul searching to conquer the title in overtime. Final: Michigan 6, North Dakota 5. -This weekend: Michigan does not like Bowling Green. Bowling Green doesn't like Michigan. So the Wolverines played a little defense, added a little goaltending, and beat the ugly brown pants off the Falcons. "Vintage Warren Sharples," Berenson called it. THE DEFENSE also came up big. The rebounds off Sharples were picked up by the defensemen and sent to sea. The penalty-killing shut down Bowling Green, allowing one power play goal in 11 chances. Finally, there was the offense from two unexpected players, Tim Helber and Todd Copeland. Helber scored his second and third goals of the year. He credited the color of the jersey he wears in See Hockey, Page 17 'gym xt! Tandem pioneered systems for on-line transaction proc- essing. Our systems process transactions as they occur. That gives our customers the up-to-the-minute information they need to succeed in corn- petitive markets like finance, manufacturing, telecommu- nications, government and retail. Individual development is promoted through a wide spectrum of resources and rewards, like ongoing train- ing, a creativity awards pro- gram, performance-based compensation plans, and a sophisticated employee communications system that includes video teleconfer- encing and worldwide elec- tronic mail. 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