0 Page 6-The Michigan Daily-Sports Wednesday- January8,1992 Icers Feisner breaks 'M' career goal record by Josh Dubow Daily Hockey Writer Michigan senior forward Denny Felsner notched one of many records he should set this season. With a hat trick in last Friday's game against Ferris State, Felsner broke Dave Debol's 13-year old career goal scoring record. With Saturday's two goals, Felsner now has 115 career goals to Debol's 112. Felsner had struggled putting the puck into the net before Friday's outburst. Felsner had been held scoreless in both games of the Great Lakes Invitational. However, his father told Felsner late Thursday night that Friday would be the game. Debol also gave Felsner advice before Friday's game. "I told him, 'Don't think, just shoot,"' Debol said. "He got out there and just did it. It must have been like getting a piano off his back. After that first goal went in tonight, I said, 'Here come the other two.'" The record-breaker came in the third period with the Wolverines on the power play. After David Oliver dug the puck out of the corner, Brian Wiseman fed Felsner, who wa alone in the right circle. Felsner one-timed the puck past Bulldog goalie Craig Lisko to the glove side. "I have to thank (linemates) Wiseman and Ollie a lot," Felsner said. "They just put the puck rightf on my stick. I had been carrying the world on my shoulders, and it feels good to get it off." Felsner's success at Michigan has not surprised his coach. Red Berenson expected big things from the Mt. Clemens native. "I remember saying that we got as good a player as State got in (Philadelphia Flyer Rod) Brind'amour," Berenson said. "Denny's had his head screwed on straight. He's made giant strides in the last four years. Felsner is already Michigan's career leader in Central Collegiate Hockey Association goals with 90 and trails Brad Jones by seven points in the career point standings. Debol also leads Felsner in career overall points with 246 to Felsner's 213. Felsner is also one of the leading candidates for this year's Hobey Baker Award, which is awarded to the top collegiate hockey player. "I don't think there is any question he is a deserving candidate. I haven't seen anyone better," Berenson said. "He's a classic candidate because he is a senior. This is the kind of player they should be looking at because he's finishing school. This is not a fluke year, it has been building up all four years.' While Felsner appreciates the individual accolades, his focus remains on team goals. "I want to take the team to the NCAA Championship," Felsner said. "That's more important." sweep through holidays Blue speed kills Bulldogs, 6-1, 7-3 by Josh Dubow Daily Hockey Writer Led once again by its top line of Brian Wiseman, Denny Felsner and David Oliver, the Michigan hockey team sped past Ferris State last weekend. The threesome combined for 18 of the 36 points last weekend, including five Denny Felsner goals. Felsner also broke Dave Debol's 13- year-old Michigan record for career goals with his 113th goal Friday. "That was the bright spot in the game," Michigan coach Red Beren- son said. "We needed a bright spot, and Denny gave it to us. It wasn't a great team effort. Whether it's the lull of the GLI (Great Lakes Invita- tional), New Year's, or the Rose Bowl - who knows?" Michigan (9-3-3 in the Central Collegiate Hockey Association, 13- 3-3 overall) beat Ferris (2-8-4, 2-9- 5) by 6-1 and 7-3 scores, respec- tively. Steve Shields won both deci- sions, boosting his record to 10-2-2. Felsner's record-breaker came in the third period of Friday's action with the Wolverines already on top, 5-1. Felsner (18 goals, 28 assists) one-timed a Wiseman (10, 21) cross which beat Ferris goalie Craig Lisko. Felsner also teamed up with Wiseman and Oliver (20, 10) on his record-tying goal in the second pe- riod. Berenson double-shifted Felsner throughout much of the first period because he dressed seven defensemen. "We felt we needed the security of a seventh defenseman," Berenson said. "We left a spot open on left wing to give him some more ice time. He played well with (Mark) Ouimet last year, so we gave him a lot of time early." Felsner teamed up with Ouimet for Michigan's first goal. After tak- ing a drop pass from Tim Hogan at the blueline, Felsner skated in and was stopped by Lisko. Felsner then centered the puck back to Ouimet (9, 7) who tapped it past Lisko. "It doesn't matter who is play- ing on the left side," Ouimet said. "Coach knows that me and Stiver are playing well together, so he wants to keep us together." Saturday's game started simi- larly to Friday's, with the Wolver- ines controlling the action. After a Kelly Sorensen shorthanded goal, Michigan retaliated with five unan- swered goals, including two second period goals from the Wiseman line. "That line should score two goals a game," Berenson said. "We're starting to get production from several different players. Lately the Roberts line has come up with scoring chances. (Wolverine senior Ted) Kramer scored a goal and had some other good chances." Kramer's goal came on a two-on- one with Mike Stone after he took a pass from Roberts at the blue line. With Stone breaking to the net, Kramer (10, 7) snapped a forehand that beat Pat Mazzoli high to the glove side. After the first period in which Shields made six stops from point- blank range, the Wolverine defense tightened and Shields was rarely tested thereafter. "We killed a number of penal- ties in the second period," Berenson said. "I thought our penalty killing and defense did a great job." Mancini felt his team played too defensively after the first period. "We didn't attack well in the second," Mancini said. "They also did a really good job protecting the slot area. In the first period, we got some quality scoring opportunities, but we got none in the second." While Michigan's superior speed characterized the first periods, penalties dominated the third peri- ods. Referee Jim Sotiroff whistled 23 penalties in the third including 10 in the final 1:34. At the 18:26 mark, Dave Karpa and Cam Stewart were whistled for roughing penalties and 10-minute misconducts sent them to their re- spective locker rooms. Upon their exit from the ice, Stewart chased af- ter Karpa and confronted him in the corridor behind the north goal. Se- curity guards intervened before any- thing came of the action. 0 BRIANC ANT OI/D Wolverine seniors Mike Helber, Ted Kramer, Denny Felsner and Doug Evans (clockwise from bottom) pose with their fourth straight Great Lakes Invitational trophy after Michigan's 7-1 triumph over Michigan Tech. Shields leads Wolverines to fourth strait GLI title by Andy De Korte Daily Hockey Writer The Michigan hockey team may have discovered a new holiday to celebrate every year. With a 3-1 vic- tory over Harvard Dec. 27 and a 7-1 demolition of Michigan Tech the following night, the Wolverines captured their fourth consecutive Great Lakes Invitational title. However, the jubilation has not waned with the streak. The GLI, one of the nation's oldest and most prestigious holiday tournaments, remains a season highlight for the Wolverines. "It's still exciting for our kids. We still work hard because we know we need to," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "It's just plain fun to win." The streak is a credit to the im- provements that Berenson has af- fected at Michigan in the last four years and to seniors Denny Felsner, Ted Kramer, Mike Helber, and Doug Evans, who helped spearhead the re- naissance. The four, who never failed to capture the GLI trophy, were ec- static about the accomplishment. Michigan Tech holds the record with five consecutive titles from 1976-1980. "I'm really happy with our play and the result," Kramer said. "All four tournaments went through my mind (when the seniors skated across the ice to claim the trophy). It was great. I think this one means the most to me." Kramer and his teammates opened the tournament against Har- vard Friday. The two teams had not played each other since 1974, al- though both teams were at the 1980 GLI. Wolverine David Oliver greeted the Crimson with a goal as- sisted by Felsner just 18 seconds into the game. Mark Ouimet returned from a shoulder injury which kept him sidelined for three games by scoring the game-winning goal midway through the first period. Kramer capped the Wolverines' scoring at the 9:18 mark of the second period. Steve Shields, winner of last year's John A. MacInnes Award (Tournament MVP), held the Crimson to one goal, turning away 22 shots. In the 7-1 landslide against the Huskies, Shields remained impres- sive, making 17 saves. The 1.00 Goal Against Average and the .951 save percentage earned Shields his second consecutive MacInnes award - the only player to win two in the tour- nament's 27-year history. Comparing the two tourna- ments, Shields said, "Last year, I didn't really know what to expect. I think this was easier because I had goals and was able to work towards them." Mike Stone opened Saturday's scoring barrage six minutes into the game. When the smoke had cleared, David Roberts and Oliver scored twice, and Brian Wiseman and Kramer scored as well. Forwards Oliver and Roberts and defenseman David Harlock joined MVP goalie Shields on the All-Tournament team. They each re- ceived a pair of JBL speakers for their achievements. Kramer Berenson placed the blame for the fight-plagued period on Ferris. "They were taking runs at our best players," Berenson said. "Obviously they were aware of who they are trying to take out of the game. Call it poor sportsmanship or whatever. We're trying to play hockey and looking for the refs to make the calls regardless of the score." However, Mancini felt the offi- ciating, not his team, was culpable for the results of the third period. "I think the officiating spoke for itself," Mancini said. "I think Michigan people who think we took runs at them need to look at the game differently. If you're going to put the blame anywhere, don't put it on the two teams." Wiseman was aware of the Bull- dogs' tactics and took precautions to protect himself. "When things don't go in their favor they start playing chippy hockey," Wiseman said. "You re- ally need to keep your head up out there." Shields turned away 26 shots in Saturday's game, after he stopped 20 shots in Friday's action for the Wolverines. Shields, Felsner take player-of-week honors by Josh Dubow Daiy Hockey Writer CCHA Scorecard Michigan has dominated the CCHA player-of-the-week voting recently. Goalie Steve Shields claimed the honor for the week ending Dec. 29 after his performance in the Great Lakes Invitational. Shields allowed a total of two goals while in goal for both Wolverine victories. Shields also won the MVP of the tournament for the second consecutive year. Last week, forward Denny Felsner received the award. Felsner tallied five goals in Michigan's series witft Ferris State. In Friday's action Felsner scored a hat trick and moved into first place on the Michigan career goals scored leaders. FIRST GOAL: Michigan captain David Harlock scored his first goal of the year in Saturday's win against Ferris State. It was the junior defenseman's fifth goal of his career. With Michigan already ahead, 5-2, in the third period, Harlock broke in from the left point and one-timed a Mark Ouimet cross by Bulldog goalie Pat Mazzoli to the stick side. "It's always a surprise when I get one," Harlock said. "It was a great pass from Ouimet. I didn't have to do anything except put in on net." NEWCOMER: The final recruit from last year's class has arrived in Ann Arbor. Goalie Al Loges practiced with the team for the first time Team (overall 1.-Lake Superio 2. Michigan Sta 3. Michigan 0 4. W. Michigan 5. Miami (9-7-2 6. UIC (5-8-3) 7. Bowling Gre Ferris State ( 9. Ohio State Goalie Darrin Madeley Blaine Lacher Mike Gilmore Steve Shields Craig Lisko Name Denny Felsner Pcca Wnlma Standings (through Jan. 6) 1 record) W L T Pts. r (14-4-1) 12 3 1 25 ite (11-4-4) 9 2 3 21 13-3-3) 9 3 3 21 (7-7-2) 7 7 2 16 ) 6 6 2 14 5 8 3 13 en (4-10-2) 3 9 2 8 2-9-5) 2 8 4 8 3 10 2 8 Goaltending leadel Team QA Avg, LSS 13 18 1.55 LSS 6 10 2.26 MSU 13 35 2.93 U-M 11 32 3.04 FSU 7 20 3.59 Scoring Leaders Team E f A r U-M 15 15 19 flI1 I d A 1 r' GF 78 66 77 64 56 60 58 41 63 s " GA 29 46 52 65 62 69 84 58 99 Ect .936 .907 .889 .883 .882 1WL 8 4 7 7 1 L 2 1 2 2 4 I 1 0 3 2 1 Et, 34 27 9 -Q emmmelmmaao mmme ::R S