Men's Basketball vs. Northwestern Tonight, 8 p.m. Crisler Arena SPORTS Ice Hockey vs. Bowling Green Saturday, 7:30 p.m. Yost Ice Arena The Michigan Daily Wednesday, February 5,1992 Page 9 :,;: ;:." ": :'W i F~lii ~ W::iiiii:;;::i:;?:;;i; ; ; i i~ i :s i;;;; .I Wildcats streak into Crisler Michigan hopes to rebound after disappointing loss by John Niyo Daily Basketball Writer Defense will lead icers to pi nnacle by Ken Sugiura Daily Hockey Writer Perhaps some day in the distant future, perhaps at a team reunion, the members of the 1991-92 Michigan hockey team will be talking. Their sto- ries will become tall tales, and memories of simple rebound goals will be- come game-winning coast-to-coast rushes. And soon enough, conversation will turn to the sweep. Ah yes, they will say, we finally beat Lake Superior at home that weekend. What a great job Mike Stone and Mike Helber did killing penalties. Maybe ielber will pipe up, "Yeah, I remember. Stoney and I really did a job." Then someone, probably Aaron Ward, in defense of the still-quiet Patrick Neaton will say, "Hey, hold on Helber, I mean, Mr. President, that was the weekend Neats went bananas." "No, you're thinking of Ilarlock and me," Doug Evans might retort, re- ferring to his defensive pairing of him and David Ilarlock. Okay, before cheese starts seeping from my pores, I'll stop the mush. But the fact of the matter is, they'd all be right. You'd only have to lis- ten to Michigan coach Red Berenson Saturday evening to know. "I like the way the defense played. I thought Neaton stepped up, Harlock (played well); Evans - playing the best hockey of his career," he enumer- ated. "Ward stepped up this weekend and is playing much better; (Chris) Tamer is continuing to be consistent." The defense put together its best two-game effort of the season. It held the league-leading Lakers to three goals in its sweep. The three scores marked the Wolverines' season-low for goals against in a series. A team with scorers like Denny Felsner, David Oliver and David Roberts won with defense. With scorers like that, one might think Beren- son might be of the "If you score nine, we'll score ten" school of thought. To be certain, it helps to have great scorers and an effective power play. I tend to think, though, that Berenson subscribes to one of my favorite sports axioms, "If you don't give up any goals, you can't lose." Its corollary, of course, is "Even a blind squirrel finds an acorn once in a while." And Saturday, the Michigan offense, while I wouldn't compare it to a blind squirrel, or a squirrel with vision, for that matter, found a single acorn against a tight Laker defense. Berenson had to call on his defense to hold Lake to no acorns. And it did. Obviously, it's a bit much to expect defense like this every week. But it is reassuring, as Berenson noted, that as Michigan heads down the stretch 'towards the playoffs, he can count on his defense. "Maybe we need big games like this to bring (the defense) out," he said. "But it's nice to see that a big game in an important situation will bring out the befit in a team rather than the worst." Amen to that. The Wolverines may very well meet a team of the Lakers' defensive caliber, either in the CCHA playoffs or in the NCAAs. And then, as now, it will be the defense that will lead them. It's not often that Northwestern comes into town riding a winning streak. Even if it is just a one-game tear. The Wildcats snapped a 29-game Big Ten losing streak Saturday, de- feating state rival Illinois, 46-43. Northwestern forward Cedric Neloms hit a 30-foot desperation shot at the buzzer to clinch the up- set. "People say it was a monkey off our back - it was more like an ele- phant. It was heavier than a mon- key," Northwestern coach Bill Fos- ter said. "There's that commercial, 'How do you spell relief?' W-I-N." Meanwhile, Michigan suffered through one of its more frustrating weekends in recent history. Fresh off a big victory Wednesday at Michigan State, the Wolverines could do nothing right Saturday at home against Ohio State. After a 13- point first half, Michigan could not recover. "One of our big enemies is still ourselves," Michigan coach Steve Fisher said. "We were too anxious versus Ohio State. We were trying to do things too quickly. Rather than passing the ball, we were tak- ing the shot too quickly." That overanxious play was the focal point of yesterday's practice, particularly because of the Wild- cats' preferred tempo. "Obviously, they slow the ball down," Rob Pelinka said. "What we have to do is make sure that we don't get frustrated by that." Fisher felt the frustration Sat- urday caused offensive miscues. "We had a lot of shot opportuni- ties that led to turnovers," Fisher said. "We had 37 possessions in the first half, and 18 turnovers. We had several easy shots off the press out of conversions -fthree-on-twos, four-on-threes - that we didn't capitalize on." In order to avoid similar mis- cues, Michigan will try to force the play tonight and run the fast break. "We're going to full-court press them a lot," Fisher said. "We're go- ing to go out and pick them up all over the court." Fisher added that he will go to the bench early and often if players aren't working hard. Michigan fans could see a lineup change or two, though Fisher had not made a final decision yesterday after practice. Juwan Howard, Chris Webber, James Voskuil, Jalen Rose and Michael Talley have started the bulk of the games so far this season. Jimmy King in action earlier this season against Purdue. Michigan will try to improve its home record tonight against upstart Northwestern. Foster But Jimmy King, Pelinka, and cap- tain Freddie Hunter have provided big games off the bench. Voluntary lineup changes are a luxury that Northwestern's Foster has not had this year. His best player Rex Walters transferred to Kansas last year, and then this fall he lost sharpshooting guard Todd Leslie for several weeks when he was injured in a car accident. The final blow came late last month when sophomore guard Pat Baldwin was diagnosed as having a blood clot in his shoulder. He is lost for the season, and Foster's op- tions are limited. "We play a more containing game defensively," Foster said. "We always had Pat around the ball. Our defensive assignments were based on Pat playing the ball." ------ . .... ....... i^.. AI s #",*", kK-........I'# mm m iii i I II I I -- The Michigan Daily News Sports Arts Photo Opnion 764-0552 LIVE JAZZ Every Wednesday 10 pm-12 am NO COVER 75c OFF Pints of Beer after 9:00 pm 0 C y C1 v .i a. If? m _. C O a s 0 CD H Best Prices in Town! Best Prices in Town! Best Prices in Town! 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