The Michigan Daily - Spots Monday - November 19, 1990-- Page 5 E! f Is 0 Senior co-captain Don Stone blasts the puck against Michigan State. His leadership has been a big factor in Michigan's rise to the top of the CCHA. STONE * Continued from page 1 playing really well for us now. Aaron Ward is playing great, and the fourth line with my brother and David Wright is, too. All of the new guys are contributing and helping the team out." One of the question- marks that existed at the beginning of the sea- son is quickly being erased. Shields, 4 goalie, has stepped into the void #left by graduated four-year starter Warren Sharples and has played a key role in Michigan's fast start. "He's (Stone) helped me to ad- just," Shields said. "I feel more com- fdrtable now. All of us, the new guys, we don't feel alienated at all. Also, he sits next to me in the lock- erroom and he always gives me hints and stuff. Definitely, he's helped my confidence." Even so, Stone will continue in anonymity, widely unnoticed, but greatly appreciated. For him, it is all part of the job description. "I've got a lot more responsibil- ity," Stone said. "Off the ice, guys come to me, you know, and want to talk about things. I just have to be a leader by example off the ice and whatever I do, it's got to be for the well-being of the team." For a guy who so embodies the "team-player" spirit, it will be hard to leave at the end of the season. "I was talking to Kent (Brothers) the other night and we realized, you know, we're one-fourth of the way through the season already," Stone said. "There's not much left. We still get calls from guys who were seniors last year saying how much they've missed it and how good we've got it here compared to the minor leagues or whatever else lies ahead. I'm going to miss this a lot." One thing that he didn't miss was the opportunity to play with his brother. "This is the first time it's ever happened," Stone said. "This is the first year I've ever played with him and it's really exciting. I'm happy, this being my last year, that I'm get- ting this chance. Playing hockey with my brother is something I'll always remember." While Don Stone's present is Michigan hockey, his future is un- certain. As a twelfth-round draft pick of the Detroit Red Wings two years ago, he is still considering that op- tion. "I haven't made up my mind yet. I've been playing hockey since I was five, so it would be pretty hard to quit. It's the best thing going for me right now. Maybe I'll play in the minors for a year or two. We'll see." But in the meantime, he has a job to do. And in case you haven't noticed, he's doing it very well, thank you. Blue shows true colors in comeback by Matt Rennie Daily Hockey Writer SAULT STE. MARIE - A sportswriter by the name of Heywood Hale Broun once said, "Sports do not build character; they reveal it." Now, it's obvious that sportswriters have not cornered the market on wisdom, but if Mr. Broun's theory is correct, Michigan hockey coach Red Berenson has to be pleased with the events of the weekend. The Wolverines split their series this weekend with Lake Superior State, but there was not the usual ambivalence that accompanies a series draw. Michigan was absolutely ecstatic over the results. There are obvious reasons for this excitement. The first reason is the fact that the Wolverines won the second game of the series; it is always better to go out on a winning note. Secondly, nothing can charge up a team like an overtime victory. But these facts do not paint the full picture of the weekend's events. The Wolverines were dead Friday. They surrendered their first goal less than a minute into the contest, and the rout was on. By the first intermission, Lake Superior led, 6-1. Although Michigan's play improved for the rest of the game, the Lakers held on, 10-5, and it looked like it was time to tie the tag to Wolverines' collective toe. The message that Lake Superior sent was loud and clear: "There i one national hockey power in this building, Michigan, and you ain't it." Berenson replaced starting goaltender Steve Shields after the disastrous first period, and one had to wonder if such an experience would scar the young netminder. After all, people can only shout, "Sieve!" at you for so long before you start wonder if they're right. In short, the consensus was that the Wolverines had about as much chance of winning Saturday as Saddam Hussein did of receiving a dinner invitation from George Bush. But this is where Mr. Broun's theory comes into play. The Wolverines could have thrown in the towel, but they didn't. They could have gone through the motions, but they didn't. Shields could have started listening to the fans, but he didn't. Instead, the Wolverines came back with a vengeance Saturday apparently eager to prove that the Central Collegiate Hockey Association was not a one-horse race. Michigan took a 3-2 lead on two quick goals with seven minutes left in the game, and it appeared that the Wolverines were going to earn the coveted split. But then it happened... Lake Superior scored with three seconds left. All of the effort, all of the emotion, everything that the Wolverines had poured into this game, seemed wasted on what would be at best a tie. Shields had rebounded admirably, recording 26 saves, but all he could think of at this moment was the save he didn't make. The nightmare was back. But in what seemed to be a microcosm of the entire series, the Wolverines did not get down on themselves. They came out aggressively in the overtime period, unwilling to be content with a draw. Then, with 4:11 left to play, Patrick Neaton put home the rebound of a Denny Felsner shot, and the cycle was complete. Michigan had risen from the ashes and beaten what was arguably the best college hockey team in the country. Statistically, the difference between the two games was obvious. Friday, Lake Superior compiled 57 shots on goal; Saturday, they had 29. "This is obviously our biggest win of the season," Berenson said. "Yesterday was our biggest loss of the season. We were really humiliated last night. To come back like this is a good sign of our team character." There's the magic word again: character. The biggest reason that the. Wolverines are serious contenders for the CCHA title is that they believe that they are. They knew that they were a better team than the one that the crowd a the Norris Center saw Friday night. They knew that with the talent the have, they shouldn't give up six goals in a period to anybody. And after Saturday, everybody else knew it, too. True, this "great" Michigan team got hammered Friday, but the: qualities that the team exhibited in rebounding from the defeat gave more: of an indication of what kind of team this is than anything that happened: on the ice. Call it character or-call it poise, but whatever you call it, Michigan has it. Gordon returns home and plays in front of relatives in M' loss HOCKEY NOTEBOOK Oliver's absence slows Blue in Laker series ,by John Niyo paily Hockey Writer * SAULT STE. MARIE - The bone-breaking hit in the Michigan State game that rearranged David Oliver's jaw forced some other rearranging as well. Michigan coach Red Berenson spent all of last week trying to piece together four cohesive forward lines in preparation for this past weekend clash with Lake Superior State. But all the king's horsemen and all the king's men couldn't keep Michi- gan from falling apart against the Lakers in Friday's series opener. Neither could Berenson. "You can't blame him (Berenson)," Laker coach Jeff Jackson said. "Sometimes as a coach, you have to do things like that. But I don't think that the changes really had an impact on the- outcome." Before Oliver's injury, the second-most productive line for the Wolver- ines had been that of Oliver, Don Stone, and rookie Cam Stewart. Berenson experimented with a new lineup Friday, moving sophomore David Roberts from the top line to a line with first-year players Brian Wiseman and David Wright. Berenson replaced Roberts with Stewart, while Oliver was replaced in the starting lineup with junior Mike Helber. The end result of all this? An embarrassing 10-5 loss. So it was back to the drawing board for Berenson and the coaching staff. The lineup that premiered on Saturday was somewhat more familiar and cer- tainly more successful. Roberts, Denny Felsner, and Mark Ouimet were back together again as * the top line and Stewart rejoined Stone, while junior Ted Kramer filled in for Oliver. Helber remained in the lineup as the right winger on the fourth line with Wiseman and Stiver. This time the lineup switch paid off. Felsner,'Ouimet, and Roberts clicked again, showing why they are so highly touted. Meanwhile, Helber seemed to benefit from the switch as well. "Helber's practiced hard all week," Kramer said. "He was definitely the sparkfor us tonight. He came up with that big assist." U.P. FALLS: The Upper Peninsula's dominance of college hockey fal- tered a bit this Weekend thanks to Michigan and Minnesota. 4 Lake Superior was ranked second in the nation before the weekend split in Sault Ste. Marie with the Wolverines. Meanwhile, top-ranked Northern Michigan ventured away from the friendly confines of Lakeview Arena in Marquette and were pinned with a loss and a tie by the Golden Gophers. _'=< I Mihipi & 17 I 7 6 BwngGen6 4 24 ; :*:4.: * M':l 3 41 0 *:- .t ~IAnne .JJOE JU-REt/U Right winger Denny Felsner scored two goals and added an assist this weekend at Lake Superior. He leads the CCHA in both categories. HOCKEY Continued from page 1 Moger left the teams deadlocked and set the stage for the frenzied third pe- riod. A slashing penalty on Wolverine center Don Stone gave the Lakers a power play early in the third and, for once, they made good on their man advantage. Barely. With only three seconds left in the penalty, Mark Astley took a pass from center Jim Dowd in front of the Michigan goal and put it by goalie Steve Shields. For Dowd, the league's second leading scorer and the top returning scorer in college hockey this year, it was his first and only point of the weekend. After Lake Superior squelched a four-minute Wolverine power play, Michigan finally tied it up when Stone snuck a pass to defenseman Patrick Neaton, with 8:01 left, who put the puck into the back of the net. with 1:13 left in the third period, and then pulled their goalie, putting a sixth skater on the ice. Twice, Michigan came close to putting the game away, clearing the puck out of their zone and barely missing the empty net. But an icing call brought the puck back into the Wolverine's end Lake Superior extended the game into overtime when a flurry in front of the Michigan goal resulted in a tying goal with only three seconds remaining in the third period. "I was pretty upset with that ic- ing call," Shields said. "But I had to keep my composure because I knew there was still five minutes left to play." But he didn't have to stay com- posed very long as Neaton took a pass from Felsner and slapped it by Madeley for his second goal of the game, only 39 seconds into over- time. That was the high point. The low by Matt Rennie Daily Hockey Writer SAULT STE. MARIE - It is Saturday night at The Antler's, a lo- cal bar/restaurant, and a father and son are sitting down to have dinner before going to the Norris Center for the second game of the Michigan- Lake Superior State series. "Hey, son," the father says, grab- bing the young man's attention. "Do you remember that goalie that Michigan put in last night in the second period? That Gordon kid?" The boy nods his head. "Well, he's from right around here, from the Soo, and he went to Michigan." The boy gets a puzzled look on his face. "Why would he do that, Daddy?" The goaltender in question here is Wolverine rookie Chris Gordon, a native of Sault Ste. Marie who saw his first CCHA action in Michigan's 10-5 loss Friday. Gordon joins junior Tim Keough as the backups for starting goalie Steve Shields. Shields' stellar play of late has all but eliminated the in his first taste of CCHA action, stopping 33 of 37 shots over the fi- nal two periods. "I went into the game just trying to do the best I could to help the team," Gordon said. The circumstances were not ideal for the rookie, playing against a top team in an enemy arena, but Gordon knew he had at least a few people cheering for him. All of his relatives were in attendance at the Norris Cen= ter. *I The folks take their hockey seri- ously up here, so it is 'somewhAt puzzling that a talented prospect such as Gordon would choose. to head south for the winter. Ann Arbor being south, of course. With the Lakers returning the tandem of Darrin Madely and Bra4- don Reed, playing time may have been rarer at Lake Superior this sea- son, but he said the reasons for his migration went beyond ice time. "Under the circumstances, Michi- gan seemed like a better situation in terms of playing time," Gordon said. "But the main reason I decided to