0 Men's Basketball vs. Purdue Wednesday, 8 p.m. Crisler Arena SPORTS Ice Hockey at Illinois-Chicago Friday, and Saturday, 7:30 p.m. UIC Pavilion The Michigan Daily Monday, January 13,1992 Page 1 01 fUKU D K DespRe recordBlue has not impressed by Josh Dubow3 Daily Hockey Writer NOTRE DAME, Ind. - So often this season, the Michigan hockey team has not appeared to be firing on all cylinders. Friday's game at Notre Dame epitomized this deficiency. Despite beating the Irish, 4-3, the Wolverines probably played their worst game of the year - even worse than the 10-0 debacle at Lake Superior. "Michigan seemed to be toying with Notre Dame throughout Friday'sr contest, but it could never deliver the knockout punch. The Wolverines jumped out to a 2-0 lead on goals by Cam Stewart and Denny Felsner. Stewart's and Felsner's scores seemed almost effortless after great individual plays by David Roberts and Brian Wiseman, respectively. "They made their goals look so easy," Notre Dame coach Ric Schafer said. The Wolverine defense also played a tight first period, limiting the Irish to three shots on net. Even though Michigan did not play an outstanding period, it led, 2-0, and the Wolverines looked like they would show Notre Dame why they were the No. 4 team in the country. However, after the intermission, the Irish looked like that team, peppering Steve Shields with shots in close, and beating him twice on power-play advantages. The situation got so bad that Michigan coach Red Berenson pulled his team off the ice during a timeout to lambaste his squad for its lackluste performance. "I wanted them to listen to what the hell I was saying," Berenson said. "We had to wake up or we would get blown out." The Wolverines responded to Berenson' s tirade with two more relatively easy goals by Stewart and David Oliver. "On the second goal, I saw Dave (Roberts) taking the puck up the middle, and I knew I could fly by the guy on the outside, I knew I could bet the guy outside, so I just kept on skating, and we'd practiced that in practice, to shoot it off the other guy's butt and off the boards, and then I just beat him wide and deked the goalie," Stewart said. However, instead of building on this momentum and shutting the door on the Irish, Al Sinclair took a penalty which led to a Curtis Janicke goal to bring Notre Dame within one. While Michigan did hold on for the vitory, thanks to brilliant netminding by Shields, the team could not be happy with its performance. "We played our worst game of the year," Berenson said. "I call it a lousy win because of the way we played." While the Wolverines avoided the loss column despite their flat performance, these poor displays are occurring too-often to be overlooked. Whether it was the weekend against Michigan State, Illinois-Chicago or Lake Superior, the Wolverines have not met expectations all season long. ,In the past ,they had had convenient excuses, but there comes a time wlen alibis need to end and answers need to be found. This weekend's series marked the start of the second half of the season, and Michigan still is nowhere near where it should be. -A marked improvement in the power play since the opening weeks nonwithstanding, there have been little signs of improvement for Berenson's squad. Berenson has tried to rile up his troops by juggling his lines and defensive pairings. Now, despite having arguably the best line in collegiate hockey (Wiseman, Felsner and Oliver), and a second line which has started to click in recent weeks (Roberts, Stewart and Ted Kramer), the Wolverines haven't reached their potential. Before the season, Berenson said the reason it is so difficult to predict a collegiate team's performance is because the progress expected with a year's maturity cannot be counted on. Significant improvement should have transformed Michigan from a very good team last year to a great team this season. However, that advancement has not been evident throughout the roster, and while the Wolverines remain a very good team, they have yet to prove that they are capable of reaching the next level. This weekend's performance failed to move Michigan a step closer. Stressed or on Edge? Always fearful, tense, jittery or apprehensive? Easily startled? Unable to concentrate? Trouble sleeping? If you have had these and other symptoms for over a month, you may be eligible for participation in a major U-M research study directed by George C. Curtis, M.D. Full examination and treatment provided AT NO COST by specialists in the treatment of anxiety and stress. Contact Shannon at U-M Anxiety Program (313) 764-5349. M' icers struggle past Irish 4L by Ken Sugiura Daily Hockey Writer Maybe you can blame it on Touchdown Jesus in the distance and Notre Dame team chaplain Friar Borden in the press box. Maybe it was the fact that no one wants to be in Notre Dame on a Friday night. Or maybe it was the theory proposed by Wolverine defenseman Aaron Ward, who decided Michigan's comatose performance in its 4-3 victory past Notre Dame was due to its non- CCHA status. "I think it would have been dif- ferent had we been playing a CCHA team. I don't know why, I can't ex- plain it, but I think it would have been," he explained. "You sort of tend to expect that it's going to be a team letdown, because everybody's gonna be going out there as an indi- vidual. And we weren't doing it, but we were expecting it, so we were sort of lackadaisical in what we were doing." Whatever you say, Aaron. Re- MICHELLE GUY/Daily Wolverine Brian Wiseman is mobbed by teammates after scoring in an 8-5 victory over Notre Dame Saturday at Yost. Blue women cagers by Ryan Herrin gton Daily Basketball Writer Welcome to the Big Ten. The Michigan women's basket- ball team got a clear indication that the Big Ten conference is going to be a battle every step of the way. The Wolverines dropped a pair of games, losing yesterday to Illinois, 71-56, and Friday to Purdue, 85-68, in the opening weekend of Big Ten play. Michigan (0-2 in the Big Ten, 4- 7 overall) was a victim of poor shooting in its game against the Fighting Illini (1-1, 4-7). The Wolverines shot a dismal 35 per- cent from the field and 3 for 9 from the free-throw line. This was accentuated by the fact that only four Michigan players scored in the entire game. Center Trish Andrew led the team with 18 points and eight blocked shots. "We just didn't shoot well," Michigan coach Bud VanDeWege said. "We had shots in situations we normally make them and they just didn't drop. I don't think we took bad shots all night, they just didn't go." Michigan started off quickly, blending inside and outside play against a tough Illinois man-to- man defense. Never behind by more than eight points in the first half, the Wolverines simply could not find the range to put together a sustained run. "We did a lot of one-on-one de- fensive preparation," Illinois coach Kathy Lindsey said. "We had a real good team effort tonight. We scrapped at times and sometimes it wasn't pretty, but we played hard and I think that's the key on the road." Led by last year's Freshman of the Year Mandy Cunningham, who scored 18 points, Illinois main- tained its composure in the second half and was able to work the ball inside, either scoring easy baskets or going to the line, where the Illini shot 81 percent. "The players came into the game pretty confident about our style of play," Lindsey said. "We had been having trouble playing 40 minutes. I think our team is begin- ning to mature and listen." Friday night's Big Ten opener pitted the defending Big Ten cham- pion Boilermakers against the Wolverines. Tenth-ranked Purdue was led by preseason All-Amer- ican MaChelle Joseph, who scored 22 points. Opening in a zone defense to neutralize Purdue's physical post drop pair play, Michigan stayed in the ball game by forcing the Boilermakers into taking perimeter shots. Purdue finished the first half shooting only 35 percent from the field (14- 40). While Joseph had tallied just five points, Purdue was able to hold off a late Michigan rally and lead 37-32 at the half. Purdue's depth and experience proved to be the pivotal factors in the second half as the.Boilermakers took control with 14:30 remaining. A tough full-court press, which forced 23 Michigan turnovers on the night, helped spark an 11-3 run See BASKETBALL, Page 11 gardless, the Wolverines (15-3-3 overall, 9-3-3 Central Collegiate Hockey Association) followed up Friday's sleepwalk by bludgeoning the Irish 8-5 Saturday at Yost. In front of 7,539 rabid Michigan fans, the Wolverines used the power play (6-of-9) to batter Notre Dame silly. Michigan exploited seven Notre Dame penalties to rack up four power-play goals in the decisive second period. The 6-3 margin after the second stanza allowed Michigan coach Red Berenson to give rookie Al Loges his debut in the third pe- rinod. "It was awesome," Loges said. "It was great fan support. It was a pretty good start, but the two power play goals were kind of ques- tionable. I was happy to get in, and. hopefully it will pay off." Center Brian Wiseman broke the 2-2 deadlock in the second period on a feed from linemate Denny Felsner. Felsner skated into the Irish zone and between the circles, left the W puck for the rushing Wiseman, who backhanded it through goalie Greg Louder's pads. Another Wiseman tally, again from Felsner, capped the period's scoring at the 17:37 mark to give the Maize and Blue a 6-3 advantage. The sophomore's 12th of the season beat Louder on his stick side. His goals sandwiched scores from Wolverine Ted Kramer, the Irish's Scott Vick- man, and a Michigan rebuttal from Mike Helber. The flurry, which lasted 60 sec- onds, was matched only by an idensz tical "M-ND-M" sequence in the first period. Felsner's and fellow Wolverine Mike Stone's scores sur- rounded an effort by Notre Dame's Sterling Black in a sequence which. lasted all of 40 seconds. Both quick responses by the Irish left Berenson impressed. "They kept playing all night. They played as well as they can play. They never gave up," he said. Loges mopped up for starting Wolverine netminder Chris Gordon, who saw his first action in 36 days. The layoff apparently hurt early on, as an apparent glove save on a Dan Sawyer blast dropped into the net at 17:09 of the first period, giving Notre Dame a power-play goal and a 2-2 tie. "He looked a little rusty early, and then he tightened up, I thought, in the second period," Berenson said of Gordon, who faced 17 shots and stopped 14. For Gordon's cohort Steve Shields, the opposite was the case Friday evening. After turning away the three shots he faced in the first period, the sophomore allowed two Irish scores in the second. "I let in a couple of goals that shouldn't have gone in that made the game closer. I'm not real happy with the way I played," Shields : said. Berenson had similar words for his team early through that second period. Soon after Irish center Cur. tis Janicke's power-play goal halved the Irish deficit to 2-1, Berenson'4 called timeout and took the( Wolverines into the locker room . "He brought us in there and tole us how we were playing. It was like 'It's an embarrassment to Michigan hockey to come out here in Notre Dame and play like this,' and he let us know that," Shields said. Stacie McCall drives to the basket in the Wolverines' 85-68 loss to the Boilermakers Friday. Yesterday, the Wolverines lost to Illinois. f' e k g StatView Student: Statistical Software that's easy to use and easy to afford SPORTSMonday note: The regular eight-page SPORTSMonday section will return with a special edition next Tuesday and then again - on a Monday, for once - on Jan. 27. =MIR= , , Learning statistics is difficult enough. Why should you have to struggle with your statistical soft- ware as well? You don't have to. 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