The Michigan Daily - Sports Monday - March 2, 1992 - Page 5 CCHA title should be stepping stone by Andy De Korte Daily Sports Writer BIG RAPIDS - Shortly after Michigan dispatched Ferris State, 4-3, in Ewigleben Ice Arena, Ohio State finished a sweep of Lake Superior. At night's end, the Wolverines had 45 points and second-place LSSU had 40 and could finish no better than 44, giving Michigan its first Central Col- legiate Hockey Association championship in its 11 years in the conference. The team showed far more enthusiasm after its victory than upon learning of OSU's improbable sweep of LSSU. The Wolverines no doubt knew that after winning Saturday's game, all they would need to win the conference would be a victory Tuesday over Bowling Green regardless of the OSU-LSSU outcome. Despite the magnitude the game would have held, one cannot be sure of which team would show up to play: The team which Michigan State coach Ron Mason called "capable of winning the national championship," or the one that has not decided to knock out the lesser-skilled teams. Hockey fans may point out that Michigan has lacked motivation against the lower-division teams. However, going into this weekend the Wolverines knew that a sweep against then seventh-place Ferris State, and a victory over eighth-place Bowling Green Tuesday would earn them the CCHA title. Yet, the team played poorly and dropped Friday's game. While the Bulldogs may have played their best game, Michigan should expect it because the Wolverines have been getting everyone's best game. Berenson has said that the Wolverines are not a great team unless everyone works hard. No one believes him - perhaps not even his players. Why should they? The voters put Michigan at the top of the polls after winning big games. First, on the heels of its sweep over top-five ranked Minnesota. Second, after its sweep of LSSU. Then again after a sweep of MSU. The players read the papers and hear the expectations. Before games they vow to play hard anyway. Unfortunately, that does not always work. After Bowling Green swept the Wolverines, goalie Chris Gordon stated the obvious, "We're taking teams for granted and we obviously can't do that." * The Wolverines know what they want. "This is a step in the right direction for this program," senior Mike Helber said. "It's one of the things we want to accomplish at this point of the season. Winning this is one, winning the CCHA tournament is another and further down the line the NCAAs. This will be a good stepping stone." They need to make sure is that they know how to accomplish their goal. The regular season ends Tuesday against Bowling Green. There are no more games to lose if they want to achieve all of their goals. In the first round, the Wolverines will have to play Illinois-Chicago, BGSU, or Ohio State. UIC and BGSU have both given Michigan trouble this season. Another pratfall of losing games to teams with losing records is showing those teams that they can win. Michigan coach Red Berenson said that Saturday's game represented a total mental turnaround. The attitude after the game was certainly different. Outside of their first loss to the Lakers the Wolverines have only lost when they have not played well. Berenson had nothing new to say to his team after Friday's loss - he walked back to the hotel. There are no words left for the hockey team to hear or say, only games for all of them to play. urr Wolverine forward Denny Felsner sets up a wrist shot on Michigan State goalie Mike Gilmore in the second game of Michigan's 4-1, 5-4 sweep of the Spartans at Joe Louis Arena. This Saturday, Michigan beat Ferris State, 4-3, to clinch its first CCHA championship. CHAMPS Continued from page 1 from the goal out." Knowing they had received a reprieve in the CCHA standing be- cause second-place Lake Superior had lost to Ohio State, Michigan came out swinging, with Stiver scor- ing the only goal of the first period. However, Ferris was not ready to submit and registered nine shots from inside the circles to Michigan's five. As the game progressed so did Michigan's penetration. Ouimet was stationed in the bottom of the circle then hit Mike Knuble right in front of the net before he smacked the puck past Lisko. "The game went in waves but Michigan was able to get inside more often than we were," Mancini said. "It wasn't that we weren't doing things right, they were just keeping from getting as many chances as we did Friday." The Wolverines missed an opportunity to ice the conference lead against Bowling Green after sweeping LSSU at the end of January. Last Tuesday, the Michigan hockey team returned to BGSU Ice Arena to avenge its last trip there holding and pushing happens down there." David Oliver broke the 2-2 tie at the start of the third period. Oliver redirected a bullet pass from Roberts, before Mike May knotted the score at the 6:36 mark. HOCKEY NOTEBOOK by Ken Sugiura and Andy De Korte Daily Hockey Writers DETROIT - Despite clinching the CCHA championship this weekend, mum's the word on the S future. When Michigan coach Red Berenson was asked about the possibility of playing NCAA regional tour- nament games at Joe Louis Arena, Berenson deftly turned aside the question smoother than a Steve Shields stick save. "It'd be a bonus for our team," he said. "It'll be a good regional tournament, but we're not looking that far ahead." It certainly would be fortunate. The Wolverines con- tinued their dominance at Joe Louis Arena. Including the Great Lakes Invitational, and the series with MSU, Michigan now stands 4-0 in their games there this sea- son. Shields, as well, has found a second home at the Joe. In his 10 appearances there, the sophomore has amassed a 8-2 record and a sterling 1.75 goals against average, including three one-goal allowed games. After the weekend, everyone seemed to have an ex- planation to their exceptional performance in the arena. "I don't know. Maybe they all want to play in this league someday," Berenson joked. "It's important. I think our team likes to play in important games, in big games, and most of the games here are big games." Icers enjoy second home Winger Denny Felsner added a simple, yet astute ob- servation. "It's a big rink, and we like big rinks," he said, "We just seem to come together here." COMING OUT IN DROVES: The Saturday atten- dance of the home-and-home series at the Joe made a bit of hockey history. A crowd of 16,643 turned out, an NCAA regular-season record for a hockey contest. The fan factor is yet another benefit the Wolverines would enjoy if the playoffs were at JLA. RED ARMY CANCELED: The March 7 game with the Soviet Red Army at Yost has been canceled, leaving the Wolverines with an open weekend before the begin- ning of the CCHA tournament. The playoffs will start March 13 at Yost with a best-of-three series against the eighth-place team. EYEING FELSNER: Denny Felsner's goal against MSU Saturday made him the CCHA's all-time leading scorer. Felsner's four points against the Bulldogs this weekend leaves him just two points behind Dave Debol's Michigan career record mark of 246. RECORD REVELRY: Berenson's career mark against Bowling Greeni had fallen below .500 with the two losses earlier this year. Last Tuesday's victory pushed him up to an i8-18 record. Friday's loss to Ferris was only the second in the last 17 games for the Wolverines. THE JOE Continued from page 1 and keyed a stellar defensive effort. Dwayne Norris' power-play tap-in at 3:17 of the third ended a scoreless stint of 102:13 for Shields. "For the most part, Shields was the difference," Berenson said. "When it came right down to it, when they did get a good scoring chance, Shields made the stop." The Wolverines' four straight goals - two in the first period and two more in the second - gave Michigan a large enough lead to render a third-period lapse, Norris' goal, inconsequential. Forward Mike Helber opened the scoring and charged up the pro- Michigan crowd with his seventh goal of the season. Defenseman Tim Hogan's excellent up-ice feed to Helber left him virtually alone as he crossed the Spartan blueline. The senior skated into the slot from the left wing and wristed the puck past MSU goalie Mike Gilmore's glove side. Following a rebound tally by Mark Ouimet and Mike Knuble's sixth score of the year from point- blank range, winger David Roberts' goal ended Michigan's scoring for the evening. "He hit my stick perfect," Oliver said. "We practice that quite a bit, it was right there." The one-goal margin was fitting for the weekend. Despite the dispar- ity in the two team's records, the fierce competition kept the teams extremely close - they were never more than two goals apart and were separated by more than one goal for less than five minutes all weekend. "I thought they were great hockey games," Ferris coach Bob Mancini said. "They were great games to coach, great for the fans, they were a lot like playoff hockey." While Mancini could afford to be pleased with his players effort, Berenson was less congenial. "(Friday) night was a coaches' nightmare," Berenson said, "Every time there was a loose puck we went to get it instead of taking the body, we made a lot of wrong decisions,. and every time we made a mistake they put the puck in the net." Despite-the lackluster perfor- mance by the Wolverines, they took the lead on a David Oliver drive to the bottom right corner of the net at the 14:22 of the first period. The first score usually means a Michigan victory - Michigan had only lost one of the previous 22 games in which they scored first - but things went awry quickly as the Bulldogs exploded for three goals in the last 4:49 of the opening stanza. Dave Karpa beat Steve Shields from between the circles three sec- onds after a power play ended to start the flurry. Aaron Asp continued the scoring with a deflected blast from just inside the blue line. Robb McIntyre intercepted a Doug Evans clearing pass and outmanuevered Shields to score with three seconds left in the period. In previous contests the Wolverines have had trouble making comebacks. However, Friday they which resulted in a 7-4 loss that crushed the Wolverines spirits. The Wolverines gained a measure of revenge with a 2-1 victory, but the winning margin left Michigan wanting. "I think that our team feels happy to get out of here with a win," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "I don't think we proved anything." With the third period waning, Denny Felsner led a charge into the Falcon zone and left the puck for Patrick Neaton. Neaton's blast re- bounded out between the circles where Brian Wiseman collected the puck and scored the game-winner at the 13:12 mark of the third period. "I thought it was a playoff-type game," BGSU coach Jerry York said. "There was tight checking, good goaltending, and the oppor- tunistic team won." Falcon Bret Harkins made the most of his opportunity to open the scoring. An unmolested Harkins ac- cepted a pass between the circles from Martin Jiranek and beat an outstretched Steve Shields. David Oliver tied the score at 16:59 of the first period by guiding in a David Roberts rocket in front of the net. . "The goalies kept both teams in the game," Berenson said. "I wish that both teams would keep their sticks down and play better hockey." The quality of play and prospect of playing the Falcons in the first round of the CCHA playoffs con- cerned Shields. "We really let them come out and do what they wanted," he said. "We didn't come out with any intensity." I' The Michigan Daily e Ve ve got it all NEWS " SPORTS * ARTS * PHOTO OPINION WHAT'S A " HAPPENING RECREATIONAL SPORTS Free Throw Shooting Contest Fraternity Team Champion Sigma Alpha Mu Fraternity Team Runner-Up Alpha Tau Omega U THE UNIVERS I T Y O F C H I C A G O SUMMER SESSION 1992 JUNE 22-AUGUST 29 Celebrate our centennial anniversary this summer by participating in the conversations that define the intense individualism and passionate inquiry of our intellectual Frederick W. Gehring T. H. Hildebrandt Distinguished University Professor of Mathematics At the Crossroads March 3 Mathematics, Research, and the Outside World iA