The Michigan Daily - Sports Monday- February 5, 1990 - Page 5 Eric Lemont Icers peaking at right time of year 'Michigan is heading for the playoffs! Okay, so eight of the nine league teams and my backyard pond squad qualify for the CCHA postseason. But as the Wolverines write the final chapters of the epic saga that is the CCHA hockey season, they do have some things to be excited about. e Goaltender Warren Sharples is as sharp as he's been all year and right winger Denny Felsner is back to his scoring self. But more important is the appearance of a deep and diversified scoring attack. Three weeks ago in Bowling Green, Michigan coach Red Berenson pulled Sharples after he allowed three Falcon goals in the game's first eight minutes. But against Western Michigan this weekend, Sharples faced 64 shots and allowed only four goals. "Sharples slammed the door on us and never let us back in the game," a despondent Bronco coach Bill Wilkinson said after Friday's game. "To get 39 shots and only two goals...it's frustrating. But that's life." And life doesn't get any easier, Bill. On Saturday, Wilkinson looked a little dazed after a close game spontaneously combusted into a rout. With Michigan up 3-2 in the third period, the Wolverines scored four goals in six minutes to send Wilkinson searching for a drink. After losing two games and any realistic chance for home ice in the playoffs, the coach was reduced to sipping apple juice with his son. Unfortunately for Wilkinson, it was against his team that Felsner played his first full series in over a month. Coming back from a injury to his right knee, the right winger tallied two goals and an assist over the :weekend. The team's leading goal scorer removed any doubt he had fully recovered when, on one play, he 1) slipped the puck between a Bronco defender's legs 2) utilized a Reggie White "swim move" to get around the defender and 3) flipped a shot over WMU goaltender Rob Laurie. While Berenson concedes Michigan is better with Felsner in the lineup, the sophomore's long absence may have actually helped Michigan by forcing other players to step forward and pick up the scoring slack. The two-game,14-goal Michigan scoring barrage was a complete team effort, as nine different Wolverines scored goals. This balanced blitzkrieg proved to be a weapon the Broncos could not counter. 0 The Bronco offense was easily contained because the Wolverines were successful in holding Western's top four scorers to no goals and three assists. The Bronco braintrust will have to devise another strategy if the CCHA standings remain the way they are right now. In that case, Michigan will play Western Michigan in the first round. The Wolverines have handled the Broncos in all four matches this year, winning by a combined score of 23-8. "We might as well play Western," senior defenseman Todd Copeland said. "We haven't beaten Ohio State (another playoff possibility). Right now...Western, we want them. We seem to have their number right now." The Wolverines also remember the 10-0 thrashing the Broncos gave them in their playoff series two years ago. Those that played in the game have mixed feelings on its importance. "We have a big senior class and we've kind of been watching them," Copeland said. Said senior center Rob Brown: "To me it doesn't matter who we play. There's still a lot of memories (of the 10-0 game) and we owe them for that. We're in the process of getting them back for it with the sweep this weekend." Sharples added, "Half our team wasn't even here for that game two years *ago and we can't use that as motivation. Getting to Joe Louis Arena will - be motivation enough." And what does the coach think? Would his eyes light up at the possibility of playing the Broncos in the first round? "We're not going to have a choice in it," Berenson said. "I like our team. I like our depth. I like our defense better. If we get goaltending like we did this weekend we're going to be a tough team to beat - at home or on the road." . EARN $75-$150 ACNE The University of Michigan Department of Dermatology is seeking volunteers to test new therapies for Acne ... Office visits and medications are free to eli- gible participants. For further information please call. . . 1 973-0699 I New line provides offensive depth by David Hyman Daily Hockey Writer The Michigan hockey team showed something new this week- end. A new fourth line - and one that produces. On Friday night, junior Jim Ball- antine was centered between soph- omore right winger Doug Evans and first-year left winger Dan Stiver. The line combined for three goals and one assist. "I like our team and depth at this time of the season," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "We have a fourth line that can contribute." Ballantine had been playing along with fellow center Rob Brown before the switch and felt the two could produce more if they were on diff- erent lines. "I like this line better," Ballantine said. "I think I can help more here and Rob can help more there. I also don't consider us a fourth line." This was evident in Saturday's game, when Ballantine did not lose one faceoff. There are very few, if any, teams that boast a fourth line center with such ability at winning the draws. Stiver showed the promise with which he began the season by notch- ing two goals, including a rising wrist shot off a Ballantine faceoff that left Western goalie Mike Power motionless in Saturday's victory.. JUNEL MULL First-year left winger Dan Stiver paced Michigan's new fourth line with two goals this weekend against Western Michigan. The Wolverines strengthened their hold on fourth place with their sweep WESTERN continued from page 1 sprained knee. Stone added his second goal of the game 56 seconds later and first- year defenseman Chris Tamer scored his first career goal to finish the scoring at 17:24. "It felt great," Tamer said. "I was thinking about (not scoring) as the teammates were joking around that I was the last one to score. But it was unreal. It didn't hit me until I got to the bench." Western had opened the scoring when junior defenseman Chris Clarke's slapshot from the point sailed past Michigan goalie Warren Sharples at 5:18 of the first. But Michigan countered with goals by senior right winger Brad Turner and first-year left winger Dan Stiver to take the lead at the end of the first. Both teams exchanged goals in the middle period before the im- - r portant third. Friday's game did not come down to the third period, but it did put Michigan in position for a sweep as well as earning Berenson his 100th win at Michigan. "It was long overdue," Berenson said. "But it was more important that we won." Sharples turned away 37 Bronco shots to keep the Wolverines in the game the full 60 minutes. "Warren was on tonight and that was the key," first-year defenseman Patrick Neaton said. "They're an offensively explosive team and Warren stood on his head today." Wolverine sophomore right winger Doug Evans notched his first career goal at 7:31 of the first to open the scoring, rifling a wrist shot past WMU goalie Rob Laurie. Felsner scored with 2:55 left in the first, but WMU's sophomore right winger Keith Jones cut the lead to one at 18:58. Three Michigan goals in the second, by first-year center Mark Ouimet, senior defen- seman Todd Copeland and Turner, increased the margin to 5-2. Two goals in the third by Stiver and first-year left winger David Roberts sealed the Michigan victory. "They played real strong early and set the tempo of the game," Wil- kinson said. "Sharples slammed the door on us in the second and never let us back into the game." 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Defense Logistic Agency Composers Forum Recital Hall, School of Music, 8 PM Campus Chamber Orchestra Robert Debbaut, conductor Beethoven: Egmont Overture Mendelssohn: Melusine Overture Haydn: Symphony No. 95 Hill Auditorium, 8 PM University Symphony Orchestra University Chamber Orchestra Donald Schleicher, Robert Debbaut, And Many Other Outstanding Employers At Careers '901 Careers '90 college recruitment conferences will give you the opportunity to meet and interview with some of the nation's top employers. Over 5,000 seniors have attended past conferences, with 51 % receiving second interviews and almost 40% receiving at least one job offer AS A DIRECT RESULT OF THEIR CONFERENCE PARTICIPATION. You can meet and interview with employers who don't recruit at your school, or make an important second impression on those that you do interview with on campus. 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