Women's Basketball vs. Wisconsin Tonight, 7:30 p.m. Crisler Arena SPORTS Ice Hockey vs. Miami (Ohio) Tonight, 7:30 p.m. and Tomorrow, 5 p.m. Yost Ice Arena The Michigan Daily Friday, February 14, 1992 Page 13 Redskins invade Yost Icers look to rebound from Bowling Green debacle by Josh Dubow Daily Hockey Writer After last weekend's disappointing se- ries against Bowling Green, the Michigan hockey team is ready to regroup for the homestretch of the season. With eight games remaining, Michigan is in a four- team dogfight with Michigan State, Lake Superior and Western Michigan for the top four spots in the Central Collegiate Hockey Association. I This weekend, the Wolverines (14-6-3 CCHA, 20-6-3 overall) will host fifth- place Miami (9-11-4, 12-12-4). Michigan coach Red Berenson has been pleased with his team's recovery from last weekend's debacle. "We've had a pretty good week of prac- tice," Berenson said. "Hopefully we are back on track for the final eight games of the season. Obviously we didn't play well last weekend, but you're going to get ups and downs. We'll need to do the little things better and make fewer mistakes." While Michigan is still battling for the top spot in the conference, Miami is trying to solidify fifth place for the play- offs. "I think we're starting to play better than we did in January, but we haven't reached the level we had before Christ- mas," Miami coach George Gwozdecky said. "But we're slowly starting to get it back. The goaltending is decent, the power play is coming out of it, and overall as a team, we're getting back into sync. It couldn't come at a better time, because we need to get on track before the playoffs." This week in practice, Berenson has fo- cused on the team's offensive problems. In hopes of having more scoring depth, he has reunited Denny Felsner with Brian Wise- man and David Oliver. Also, the second line of David Roberts, Cam Stewart and Ted Kramer is back together. "We need more scoring balance," Berenson said. "These lines are indicative of this. We should have more than two or three guys and one or two lines doing the scoring. We're not bearing down enough and making our chances count. "We haven't been able to capitalize for whatever reason, and it makes the goalie look good. Shooting into a goalie's glove or body is not smart. We need to shoot for the corner and the openings instead of just shooting." Friday, the Wolverines will be shoot- ing against a hot goaltender in Miami's Mark Michaud. Michaud stopped 65 of 73 shots against Ohio State last weekend in a win and a tie. Gwozdecky has alternated Michaud and Richard Shulmistra most of the season and may use Shulmistra Satur- day. Steve Shields will start for the Wolverines Friday. Shields started both games against Mi- ami in November, but had to leave the sec- ond game with an injury after the second period. Mich-igan swept that series and has a 17-game unbeaten streak against Miami dating back to 1987-88. "This is the best Miami team since I've been here," Berenson said. Ted Kramer outskates an opponent earlier this season. The pucksters will try to do the same at Yost against the Redskins of Miami of Ohio. Women cagers host UW, Wildcats by Adam Miller Daily Basketball Writer Wrestlers take Golden vacation by Tim Rardin Daily Sports Writer After hosting the most presti- gious team tournament in college wrestling, the sixth-ranked Mich- igan wrestlers will head to Minn- eapolis for a vacation of sorts. For the Wolverines, the unranked Golden Gophers should provide a relatively uncontested match com- pared to the four top-ten. teams that they faced in the Cliff Keen Duals. Michigan boasts six wrestlers in the top 20, including three who were unranked before last weekend. Jason Cluff, a 126-pounder, moved up to No. 20, James Rawls (142) jumped to No. 13, and Brian Harper (150) notched the 11th spot in the polls. All-American Joey Gilbert (134) moved to No. 3 in the country, while Sean Bormet (158) improved four places to No. 7 and all- American Lanny Green (177) checks in as the ninth-ranked wrestler in his weight class. The Golden Gophers were knocked out of the Cliff Keen tour- ney with losses to Penn State, 38-0, and Oregon, 20-15. The Wolverines, by comparison, suffered a heart- breaking 18-17 setback to the Nittany Lions, and clobbered the Ducks, 39-5. The statistics would suggest an easy win for Michigan, but coach Dale Bahr said that Minnesota can be dangerous. "After wrestling -six big matches in two days, I'm really con- cerned about it," Bahr said. "They're always tough at home, so we have to be careful not to suffer a letdown." The Gophers, who had one of the best recruiting classes in the coun- try last year, have had trouble putting it together this season. "They've really been struggling this year," Bahr said. "They decided to redshirt some of their young wrestlers, and it seems to have back- fired for them." Still, Minnesota claims top wrestlers of its own, with eighth- ranked Mike Marzetta (158) and Michigan women's basketball center Trish Andrew, you and the Wolverines are just two losses away from a second-consecutive sub-.500 Big Ten season. What do you do next? "We look at the second half of the conference as a brand new start," Andrew said. No, the Wolverines (1-8 Big Ten, 5-13 overall) certainly aren't think- ing about Disney World. Instead, as Andrew indicated, it's victories that Michigan is thinking about. Having lost their last four games, the Wolverines hope to return to the win column this weekend as they begin the "second season." "The second season is that you get a second chance at somebody that you didn't beat the first time," coach Bud VanDeWege said. "Hopefully, that provides some new motivation." The second half begins with a pair of home games: 7:30 tonight against Wisconsin and 2 p.m. Sun- day vs. Northwestern. The Badgers (7-2, 14-5), who smoked Michigan 93-66 in Madison Jan. 19, are one of the hottest teams in the conference. Last weekend they upended visiting No. 5 Iowa, 74-58. Wisconsin followed that upset with an 82-72 victory over Minnesota, the last team Michigan beat. History is the only advantage the Wolverines have. Michigan has beaten Wisconsin four straight times at Crisler and leads the home series, 7-4. Still, it will probably take more than old ghosts for the Wolverines to contain Badger guard Robin Threatt, who averages 20.5 points per game and is shooting .400 (26-65) from three-point territory. "That streak is meaningless," VanDeWege said. "They're a much improved team, and we can't afford to focus on just one person." Northwestern (3-6, 9-8 entering tonight's game at MSU) is another team that easily defeated Michigan in the first half of the season. The Wildcats' fullcourt press smothered the Wolverines in Jan. 17's 83-57 decision in Evanston. "The first time through, we just didn't make good decisions," Van- DeWege said. "Technically, we know how to handle a press like that." The Wildcats have come out victorious in only one of their last six games since defeating Michigan. If the Wolverines hope to continue Northwestern's skid, they'll have to contain forward Michelle Savage, who had 24 points in the teams' first meeting. "Mic-hian nlave verv gorod has- Green r No. 9 Damon Johnson (142) leading: the way. "They've definitely got softie good wrestlers," Bahr said. "But"s' long as we wrestle the way weYe, capable of wrestling, we shouldn't have a problem." *. Brian Harper(background) and the rest of the sixth-ranked Wolverine wrestling squad head to Minnesota this weekend. YOU A FR I.. WERE hITM R TO YOUI .The WoP Most Fanus Beach _ >. TO'.$ ....4 Everyday .lday - for >>da.thehbeta ' .r- Spt r ro' WAdhft l y hwdsur, F R J MIVK, ITV Poo anwd Hwdm Tropic a-. pod deck pm + RI "tkm's bWd D's mM YM ow *ffalMbod iM "" World's Largest Spring Beak SYRU~U t, * .6 *" " OCITTT IN. Re t - SM9FNSPOLSSwl" " " "E IN OUR LABORATORIES YOU'LL FIND GIRAFFES, DOLPHINS, A CORAL, REEF, A RAINFOREST... With SFS you can study critical environmental issues worldwide including: * Wildlife Management in Kenya " Marine Ecology in the Caribbean " Rainforest Dynamics in Australia " Marine Mammals in Baja Mexico College Financial Credit Aid