The Michigan Daily - Sports Monday - February 10, 1992 - Page 5 ICERS Continued from page 1 falling Ouimet, wheeled and beat BG goalie Will Clarke. Holmes tied the score on a quick strike after Martin Jiranek peeled the puck from the Wolverine de- fense right in front of the goal. The game-winning goal by Holzinger left a bitter feeling among the Wolverine contingent. When a whistle was heard to signal an apparent offsides, Ward eased off Holzinger allowing him to get off his winning shot. After a small dis- cussion, referee Brent Rutherford allowed the goal. "I thought I heard a whistle, I was on (Holzinger). I turned to (linesman John) Pearson, and he said he had the whistle," an upset Ward 'We just played all- around smart hockey. We dumped the puck * when we should have, we took the body when we were supposed to, and we didn't take any retaliation penalties, and maybe they did.' - Peter Holmes Bowling Green captain said. "I only had one hand on the stick, and only stayed on (Hol- zinger) at all to protect the goalie. When I went over to the box, he changed his story. He's got no balls. He didn't want to overturn the goal." Holizinger also said he thought he had heard something but finished the play anyway. "We thought the play had been blown dead," Berenson said. Almost in the same breath, though, he added, "We didn't deserve to win EVANS Continued from page 1 Once home, Evans recuperated, and in his words, "figured out what I needed to do to be better." This included taking boxing lessons from his father to improve his confidence, and more importantly, playing at a San Jose Sharks free- agent camp in Minnesota and holding his own. Now a senior, Evans returned with a new outlook. "I really made an effort to change a lot of my habits and I tried to be a little less jovial than I was in the past," he said. It is an effort that has reaped results. "He's been playing great," said team captain David Harlock, Evans' defensive partner. "This is the third year I've been here, and this is by far the best I've seen him play." In the Wolverines' sweep over Lake Superior State two weekends ago, Evans played an integral role in limiting the high-scoring Lakers to three goals in two games, including a shutout. The senior logged time on the penalty-killing unit which nullified 17 of 18 Laker advantages. "He's done all the things that we've asked our defensemen to do, and he's done it consistently," Berenson said. It comes as no surprise to Berenson that the improvement comes this season. one in which MLJI MOM r D 'M' icers need to snap out of slumber by Rod Loewenthal Daily Hockey Writer Mark Ouimet battles Bowling Green goalie Will Clarke in the third period Saturday evening at Yost Arena. The score remained tied 2-2 as Clarke prevailed. this game." Friday's game started the same as Saturday's - a Falcon goal before the fans could warm their seats. Falcon captain Holmes started the puck up the ice from inside his own blue line, and passed to Sean Pronger, who beat Steve Shields from just outside the goal crease. "They got an early goal, and we needed that, we never got back into the game after that," Berenson said. "We had a bad first period, then the whole game we didn't put our chances in." While the Wolverines did not finish their chances most of the night, Felsner knotted the score at a goal apiece, assisted by Ouimet, sandwiched between defensemen. The sandwiching continued up fellow defenseman Aaron Ward said. "Very out of the ordinary. A little on the weird side." As Ward is perhaps Evans' only equal for garrulity, he is most qualified to explain the enigma that is Doug Evans. "You firstget here, he's the first guy that makes you want to go home," Ward said in reference to Evans' odd brand of humor. "I don't think there are words to describe what the hell he is." There is his pregame ritual, for instance. Evans makes certain to clarify that "they're not really things that I have to do, but it's just a ritual, a tradition." The Thursday routine includes watching the television shows, "The Simpsons" and "Beverly Hills 90210," eating the same dessert at Cottage Inn, and kissing the lamp in front of the restaurant with his finger. And there is the matter of being a player from California, a state which has never been mistaken for a hockey hotbed. His decision to play ice hockey in the Golden State does not necessarily make him odd, since he could't choose where to grow up, but it does not exactly acquit him either. The story, not surprisingly, is an interesting one. When Doug was eight, his older sister, Kendra, took figure-skating lessons at an ice rink in a shopping center. Doug tagged along, and took to the ice very quickly. A month after the lessons began, Kendra underwent an appendectomy and never returned to the ice. Doug, of course, has achieved somewhat greater success. After quickly rising in the sparse ranks of California hockey, Evans came to a crossroads. "I had pretty much made it as far as I could out in California and (my coach) said, If you really want to give yourself a chance to be a good hockey player, you should move out to Michigan and try it out there,"' Evans remembered. He eventually made the Compuware team, played two seasons for the junior hockey powerhouse, and was part of a national runner-up squad in 1987-88. Evans is now a senior and a leader on a team with dreams of greater achievement. It is a testament to his maturity that he maintains a near- sighted focus. "We're still just trying to take it one weekend at a time, like I've been saying all year," he said. At most, his Michigan career will last seven more weeks. And and down the ice on both sides. The Falcons frustrated the Wolverines in the same area Michigan excelled against LSSU - smart, aggravating play. "We knew what position we were in, but we'd stayed with the best in the country, Minnesota and LSSU," Holmes said. "We just played all-around smart hockey, we dumped the puck when we should have, we took the body when we were supposed to, and we didn't take any retaliation penalties, and maybe they did." A skirmish at the 13:14 mark of the first period illustrated the first and certainly most damaging - the Wolverines never tied it again - re- taliatory strike. Heavy checking de- generated into the skirmish and when Brian Wiseman entered the brawl furiously, referee Roger Graff saw fit to give him six min- utes in the penalty box. After the power play was inef- fective for three full minutes, Carper found an open Holmes, who buried the puck from just eight feet in front of the net. Bylsma's goal and a Holzinger hat trick, surrounding goals by Ward and Roberts put BG up 6-3. Ted Kramer scored the final Wolverine goal. Michigan's Gordon summarized the weekend consistent with his teammates' feelings. "We beat ourselves, there are no two ways about it," he said. "We were taking ourselves for granted thinking we could win without to- tal effort. We can't." Bowling Green, 4-3 at YostI.. Arena FIRST PERIOD BowlingGreen 1, Michigan 0. Bylsma 10 (Carper) :56. Penalty - Michigan, Harlock (slashing) 2:16. Penalty - Bowling Green, Newana (interference) 4:04. Penalty - Michigan, Tamer (highsticking) 6:35. Penalty - Bowling Green, Holmes (tripping) 12:29. Michigan 1, Bowling Green 1. Ward 5 (Stiver) 12:49 (pp). Bowling Green 2, Michigan 1. Solly 8 (Harkins, Bylsma) 17:17. Penalty - Bowling Green, Klee (holding) 19:38. SECOND PERIOD Michigan 2, Bowling Green 2. Stiver 6 (Stone. Willis) 2:45. Penalty - Michigan, Sinclair (highsticking) 3:48. Penalty - Michigan, Evans (holding) 5:47. Penalty - Bowling Green, Holmes (hooking) 6:29. Penalty - Michigan, Ward (interference) 9:42. Penalty - Bowling Green, Carper (holding) 11:21. Penalty - Michigan, Harlock (slashing) 19:42. Penalty - Michigan, Stewart (tripping) 20:00. THIRD PERIOD Penalty - Bowling Green, Holzinger (highsticking) 2:27. Penalty - Michigan, Willis (elbow) 7:05. Penalty - Michigan, Stewart (highsticking) 7:45. Penalty - Bowling Green, Jiranek (interference) 8:54. Michigan 3, Bowling Green 2. Felsner 26 (Ouimet) 11:54. Bowling Green 3, Michigan 3. Holmes 23 (Jiranek) 13:03. Bowling Green 4, Michigan 3. Holzinger 12 (Klee) 17:03. Penalty - Michigan, Stiver (slashing)j 20:00. Score by Periods BowingeGren... 2 0 2 - 4 Michigan.- .......1 1 1 - 3 Shots on goal Bowing Green. - 8 2 9 - 19 Mchgan....- ...... 8 7 6 - 21 Goaltenders - Bowling Green, Clarke (3-3) 22 shots, 19 saves: Michigan, Gordon (5-2-1) 25 shots, 21 saves,Gordon left the ice at 19:11 of the third period. Power plays - Bowling Green 0 for 8: Michigan 1 for 7. Officials - Referee, Rutherford; Linesmen, Dobzrelewski and Pearson. Attendance - 6,808. Saturday nights game Until Friday night, the Michigan hockey team was flying high, basking in the glory of hard-fought and justly-deserved victories against league- leading Lake Superior State. However, this Saturday the Wolverines were practically booed off the ice at Yost Arena in a less than stellar outing against a struggling Bowling Green team. While Friday's 7-4 loss was disheartening, Saturday's short- fall was nothing less than a major disappointment. After the losses, everyone was a philosopher of sorts. The players and coaches offered up their detailed analyses of a team's play that was best de- scribed by Michigan coach Red Berenson's undiplomatic statement, "We stunk the place up." But as a testament to this team's talent, Michigan was still in the game late in the third period Saturday despite a lackluster display of hockey. Michigan got a wake-up call Friday night losing, 7-4, but the Wolver- ines failed to get out of bed Saturday. Either the alarm wasn't loud enough down in Bowling Green, or else the Wolverines were in too deep of a slumber to awaken Saturday night. However, Berenson heard the ring earlier in the week during practice. "Coming off last weekend I said I was worried about Bowling Green," Berenson said. Obviously, he was talking to an empty bench because his players weren't listening. Saturday night, Berenson didn't have the patience for the Wolver- ines to read his lips. Instead, he drastically altered his lines in an effort to jump-start a high-octane offense that has stalled as of late. "We're just not gene'rating any offense," Berenson said. "We're just not getting enough from our forwards. We can't keep going back to (forward Denny) Felsner. We're still searching." And the blame cannot solely be put on a failing offense. When a team like Bowling Green scores seven goals (granted one was an empty-netter), rarely will any offense be able to compensate. The defense, which had struggled early in the season and then rebounded as of late, lacked the mental poise at crucial moments of the game. Friday, the Falcons flew out to an early 1-0 lead at :23 seconds into the game. On ' Saturday, Bowling Green caught the Wolverines napping again and snuck the puck past Chris Gordon at just :56 seconds into the period. "We're trying to score on the first shift of the game when we should be focusing on stopping them," defenseman Aaron Ward said. The same thing happened against the Illinois-Chicago Flames in the UIC Pavilion last month. The Flames jumped out to an early 1-0 lead on a goal scored only :14 seconds into the game. Many of the Flames thought the goal set the tone for the remainder of the game. It broke Michigan's confidence while it added extra drive to a zealous Flames team. And Friday night against Bowling Green, the early goal sparked a Fal- con team that had lost 14 of its last 16 games by one goal. Bowling Green played Michigan in the same fashion that the Wolverines had scrapped against Lake State last weekend. "To beat them took our best effort," Bowling Green Jerry York said. "Tonight was our best game of the year and it's quite a feather in our cap to get a win against them." But it's not just Bowling Green that's getting excited to play one of the top teams in the country. Every team in the conference is aiming for Michi- gan. Against Ohio State in Columbus several weeks ago, Michigan did not easily discard the last-place CCHA team. York, coach of Bowling Green's 1983-84 NCAA championship team, has traversed the same path Michigan finds itself stumbling upon now. "Michigan's the number one team in the country. We've been there before and it's a bear." An unusually sullen Mark Ouimet delivered the team's prognosis after Saturday's loss. "We've never been this low," he said. "I don't think we're handling the pressure well. We're not focused. I'm questioning whether this team wants to win enough. It's embarrassing, real embarrassing." MICHELLE GUY/Daily Captain David Harlock is tripped up during a weekend loss to Bowling Green as Patrick Neaton and Mike Stone look on. The sweep by the Falcons has dropped Michigan into third place in the CCHA, two points behind both Lake Superior and Michigan State, which are tied for first. HOCKEY NOTEBOOK by Ken Sugiura Daily Hockey Writer Evans Evans has matured and focused on his hockey instead of, for lack of a better phrase, being goofy. "I like the idea of kids enjoying themselves, and it's good to have kids on the team that are jokers," Berenson said. "But there's a point where you've got to get down to business and be able to play, too." That is not to say that Evans has become a tight-lipped, walk-the- This weekend's series marked the return of Bowling Green defensemen Ken Klee and Rick Mullins. The duo's reappearance on the ice proved duly beneficial to the eighth-place Falcon squad. Klee, a junior, tore ligaments in his knee in August while trying out for the U.S. Olympic team and was expected to be out for the season. The re- markable rapidity of his rehabilitation was cause for celebration among Bowling Green backers. "I thought he really gave us a boost," Bowling Green coach Jerry York said of Klee. "He'll get better as he gets more ice time and gets back into it. But his knee held up and he feels good." While York only gave Klee limited ice time during the Falcon sweep, the Kansas City, Mo., native contributed generously to the Falcon cause, playing strong defensively and chipping in an assist in the offensive zone on Saturday night. "I think Kenny Klee's return really helps us," York said. "He's one of the best defensemen in the nation." Defenseman's return fills Bowling Green with Klee period of Saturday's game, those wild and crazy denizens of Section O had . more of their oh-so-clever fun. The partisans hollered, each message on the Yost electronic message board. When the scoreboard operator flashed, "GO-GO-GO ... GO! ... WOLVERINES," the Yost Yahoos responded, "GO, GO, GO ... GO ... WOLVERINES!" As the board repeatedly flashed "STAND UP!! !" the fans obediently stood, sat and stood again. Secret plans are underway for a "You are hungry. You want Subway sandwiches!!!" message. HELBER HURT: Michigan forward Mike Helber took a shot in the hand Saturday blocking a puck while killing a Michigan penalty. While the senior admitted to some lingering pain after the game, he glumly admitted, "It doesn't hurt as much as the loss." STREAKERS APPREHENDED: After a remarkable run of 21 games, the Wolverines finally dropped a regular-season contest in Yost Arena. The last loss came at the hands of Lake Superior State, a 4-3 setback suf- fered in December 1990. Friday's defeat ended Michigan's five-game