The Michigan Daily- Sports Monday- March 16, 1992 - Page 5 HOCKEY NOTEBOOK Felsner gives fans Special Yost finale by Rod Loewenthal Daily Hockey Writer Hobey Baker Award candidate and Michigan senior Denny Fesner bade "adieu" to the hometown fans while saying "sayanora" to the Buckeyes in a standout performance Saturday night at Yost Ice Arena. Pacing the team with a four-goal, five-point effort, Felsner notched his first goal just 18 seconds into the game. His second score came on a power-play goal less than four minutes later, and Felsner had the hat trick at 28 seconds into the second period. The alternate captain's third goal Saturday night gives him eight career hat tricks. "I just wanted to let the fans know that we appreciate them," Felsner said. NEXT, PLEASE: With the sweep of Ohio State this weekend, the Wolverines advance to the next round of the CCHA playoffs. This com- ing Saturday night at Joe Louis Arena in Detroit, the Wolverines will meet the Miami Redskins in the 4 p.m. semifinal matchup. The Redskins advanced to the semifinals after an upset sweep of Western Michigan in Kalamazoo this weekend. At 7:30 p.m. that same evening, Michigan State will take on Lake Superior in the other semifinal. The victors of the two semifinal games will then meet at The Joe the following day at 4 p.m. to determine the CCHA playoff champion and who receives the automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. "It's good for as that Lake State and Michigan State get to go at it in the semifinal game," Felsner said. "But we can't take Miami lightly. They're gonna be jumping." Michigan owns a 4-0 record against Miami this year, beating the Redskins by a combined 34-14 score. AN EYE FOR AN EYE ...: In one of the lengthier contests of the season Saturday, the two teams combined for an hour and eleven minutes of penalties. Michigan was whistled for 10 penalties. But, the Buckeyes clearly dominated in this category, racking up a whopping 16 infractions for a total of 51 minutes. Included among these Buckeye Brian Loney's five-minute high- sticking and ten-minute misconduct penalties. The rookie was tossed from the game late in the third period after slashing Michigan's David Oliver in the neck as both players skated toward their benches. During the first moments of the five-minute Buckeye penalty, Michigan sent Brian Wiseman and Felsner - its top power-play unit - out onto the ice. OSU Jerry Welsh insisted this proved the Wolverines intended to run up the score. "We started with them (Felsner and Wiseman) and then we rotated four different lines. We wanted to send them a message," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "In that instance we did want to run up the score. We thought that they got off easy with only a five-minute penalty." Michigan's coach had more to say about Loney's penalty. "That was a cheap shot," Berenson said. "You don't take a stick to the back of a player's head. Especially to an honest player like Oliver." ANOTHER HELBER?: Michigan's Mike Helber isn't the only "Helber in the Ann Arbor area earning recognition these days. Mike's younger brother Matt led his Pioneer hockey team into the State A championship game, which it lost to Brother Rice, 6-1. "I couldn't be more proud of him," Mike said of his younger brother. "The team showed a lot of guts. They've put in a great effort." Even though Mike is graduating from Michigan this year, Matt is ready to take his place with the Maize and Blue. Matt and fellow Pioneer co-captain Drew Denzin plan on attending Michigan next year and both intend try out for the team as walk-ons. WE WANT 'ZA!: The Yost Yahoos again won half off their pizza be- cause of the Wolverines' 9-4 victory Saturday night. But the fans were re- ally hoping for a ten goal effort so that they could cash in their ticket stubs for a free small pizza. With two minutes left in the game, Michigan's Aaron Ward sent the puck skidding toward the open net. The long-distance shot caromed off the left pipe, narrowly missing. Referring to the man responsible for the last two pizza giveaways, Michigan's Cam Stewart, Ward said: "If it were the 'Doughboy', he would've scored." WHERE ARE THE FANS?: This weekend's series was the lowest- drawing series of the year for the Wolverines. Friday's game had a season-low attendance of 4,429. The previous low had been 4,835 Valentine's Day against Miami. The total crowd for the series was 9,676 or 399 fewer fans than the Miami series. Seniors take last skate around Yost Evans, Felsner, Helber and Kramer share four years of memories by Ken Su giura Daily Hockey Writer On the warm-fuzzies-o-meter, it buried the needle. We're talking a film this and turn it into a Hallmark card commercial type of moment. "It was special, and it was a trib- ute to our fans, too," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "We've had great support this year. And that just makes us a better team. But this is a special class, obviously." In a lovefest to end all lovefests, seniors Denny Felsner, Doug Evans, Mike Helber and Ted Kramer led their team around the ice Saturday evening to acknowledge and thank the fans following Michigan's sweep of Ohio State in the first-round of the CCHA playoffs. After the first lap, the underclass-players left the ice and the spotlight, giving the foursome one last chance to thank its fans and enjoy one last moment in Yost Ice Arena. "We're very proud of each other and glad we could share this kind of moment together, because it's some- 'Tonight I was definitely thinking, looking around, putting photographs in my head, knowing that this would be the last time.' - Michigan forward Ted Kramer thing we'll always remember," Helber said. "Forty years from now, we'll come back and sit down and talk about this night." The venerable barn on State Street has seen players come and go, some leaving their mark more than others, and in Saturday's aftermath, the seniors reflected upon the past, upon each other, and upon the future. 'We just tried to do our best and play 100 percent every night. Every year, the team progressed, got better and better. I think we had a big part in that.' - Michigan alltime leading scorer Denny Felsner It was 1988, when the class, then seven players, arrived. Evans re- members well. "We all kind of hated each other, because none of us played on the same team," he said. "So, we all kind of looked at each other, and said, 'Oh, well, we're stuck with each other, so we're just gonna have to make the best of it."' Helber was the hometown hero, the Pioneer grad who could score goals easier than he could breathe. College hockey was not to be the same, but he eventually adjusted. A torturous sophomore year, in which he sustained multiple shoulder sepa- rations, was followed by a break- through junior season. The Alton D. Simms Memorial Trophy, symbolic of most improved player, came his way following that year. He came in a scorer, but now plays with Mike Stone on Mich- igan's top penalty-killing unit, while chipping in the occasional score. An at-large academic all-Big Ten selection last season, Helber will graduate with a degree in history and communications, and a lifetime of memories of playing in Yost. "The fan support, playing here at Yost, was an absolute thrill for me and the rest of the seniors, I know," he said Saturday. "But it was also going through my head that this was the last time I'll ever play in this building. Growing up in Ann Arbor, playing here for 21 years, it's some- thing that I'll always remember, be- cause it's something that's special in my heart. It's always been this and we're very close," he said. "He probably knows me the most (of the three) because we do live together." Evans came to campus at the age of 17, by far the youngest in the quartet. Coming from San Jose, igan hockey should be like." Finally, there is Felsner. Perhaps the greatest Wolverine to lace up a pair of skates, he has done it all., Michigan's alltime leading scorer and a top Hobey Baker Award can- didate, the simultaneous rise of the program and his tremendous play have not been coincidental. "When we got here it was kind of rough," he said. "We were a fifth- place team, but we came in here, and we just tried to do our best and play 100 percent every night. Every year, the team progressed, got better and better. I think we had a big part in that." But beyond goals and assists, there is more. There is the growing up together, the hours of practice, the road trips and everything else. "(Felsner) means a lot to me," Evans said. "Denny and I really un- derstand each other. He picks me up when I'm down, I pick him up when he's down." "Denny and Dougie, those two Evans Calif., perhaps it shouldn't be sur- prising he is the most loquacious, the most offbeat, the most different. "I don't know if they get sick of me after awhile, but it's been fun going through it with them," he said. PAUL IATL'.JnIaily Michigan forward Denny Felsner slides the puck by Ohio State goaltender Mike Bales in Saturday's 9-4 Michigan victory. After the contest, Felsner and his fellow seniors skated around the ice to thank the fans for their support. building. I've grown up in it." Dependability has been Kramer's calling card. He has appeared in 132-straight games, and this week- end in Detroit will become the school recordholder for games played in a career with 170. Before game 168, Kramer tried his best to freeze the moment. "Tonight," he said, "I was defi- nitely thinking, looking around, putting photographs in my head, knowing that this would be the last time." . He and Helber have become tight friends, as Felsner and Evans have, - indeed, most references to each other sounded like something out of Romper Room: Me and Denny, Dougie and Denny, Teddy and Helbie - and Helber brought up their friendship. "Teddy and I, we live together He has enjoyed a solid season, a far cry from the preseason plans to keep him on the bench. His forte has been providing trusty stay-at-home defense, but he found the net Friday, a knuckleball that dipped past Buck- eye goalkeeper Mike Bales. "I think it dove because it was tired," Berenson reasoned. Evans offered a better explana- tion, straight from the Warren Commission, as to how his attempt pierced the OSU goal: "The Magic Bullet" It has been a magical season for him, and he said he feels lucky to have shared it with his fellow seniors. "I couldn't ask for three better classmates," he said. "They really represent Michigan and the tradition of Michigan hockey. They are just the bread and butter of what Mich- SWEEP Continued from page 1 and it went in." Felsner opened the second in nearly the same fashion as the first. He picked up a loose puck left be- hind the net by Wiseman and wrapped it around by Bales at the 28-second mark. Ohio State then sandwiched two goals around Felsner and Wiseman tallies, which prompted Berenson to call timeout. "We were starting to get a little shaky," Berenson said. "We took some unnecessary penalties and our heads were out of the game. In col- lege hockey, 7-2 isn't much of a lead, so I wanted to do something." Defenseman Chris Tamer beat Bales with a forehand on a break- away late in the second, and Wiseman added his second score early in the third to ice the game. Berenson was pleased with the of- fensive prowess of his defensemen (three goals) on the night. "I like to see our defense jumping up and joining the offense," Berenson said. "When they are we're usually playing a good game." Ohio State coach Jerry Welsh was not as pleased with his team's efforts Saturday as he was Friday. "I thought we had a good chance of winning Friday," Welsh said. "Our defensive coverage was very poor, and our team speed was very had tnnioht and that cnst ns " They were frustrated, but that's not an excuse." Welsh placed most of the blame on the officials' reluctance to curtail the stickwork late in the game. "Things got out of control tonight," Welsh said. "They (the refs) stopped calling penalties as soon as the game got out of reach. Sticks were flying and those things happen." However, the Wolverines did not agree with Welsh's assessment. "It's like taking a shot at our team when he takes a shot like that," Tamer said. "Some stuff is not called for. It gets to me, and it gets to ev- eryone else." Berenson implored his team to keep its collective head and avoid retaliation which could lead to a fighting suspension. Ward felt the team's reaction would have been different if it weren't the playoffs. "I'd like it to have been regular season," Ward said, "there would have been some retaliation." In Friday's game, Buckeye for- ward Sacha Guilbaut deflected home a Greg Beaucage shot from the point to give OSU an early 1-0 lead. The Wolverines retaliated with four unanswered goals before Ohio State added a late goal for the final score. "I thought we were lucky," Berenson said. "There were a few times where the puck almost went in fr them anti din't ThrPw -- VIOLENCE Continued from page 1 While that incident was the most gross violation of the rules - Oliver suffered a possible concussion and he said his head was "still spinning" after the game - the rough play did not have far to escalate to reach its peak. All of the regular-season con- tests between the two teams featured rough-and-tumble play, and Ohio State's aggressive tactics are known throughout the league. "We knew what to expect from them," defenseman Aaron Ward said. "They didn't have anything to lose, so they can play (without fear of a game suspension). But I think their tee time is sometime Sunday." The Buckeyes are forced into using these tactics because they have little ability for finesse and simply cannot skate with the Wolverines. Friday night, OSU enjoyed far more success than in the previous pair of 9-3 Michigan victories at Yost. The game resembled the 4-2, 3-2 losses that the Buckeyes suffered in Columbgs. OSU was riding its longest win- ning streak in over a season, and by coupling its playoff intensity with the Wolverines 10-day layoff, Welsh's crew was able to neutralize Michigan's team speed and the ad- vantage of the larger ice surface early in the night with its own tena- cious checking game. "We knew what they were going guys, I love being with 'em. The time that I've spent with them, I'd never give up," Helber admited. And now there is such little time. A few more weeks at most. Then the season will be done. Soon after,; Felsner may pack his skates to join the NHL St. Louis Blues. "I'm sad, realizing that in a very short time, we'll be done playing here," Kramer said. But while they have closed one more chapter, there still remain ka couple more pages to write: a CCHA tournament championship, and then the NCAA Tournament. "In the past, players have left, like last year after we lost at BU1 (Boston University), and it was a re- ally sad day," Evans recalled. "But I'm hoping this year, when the se- niors leave, they'll have won their last game." style. Besides the bonecrushing hits the crowd enjoys, the dividends of play- ing a team with a brawl-mentality defense are the numerous resulting power plays. Michigan converted more chances than the Buckeyes for a higher percentage. While the Wolverines have seen the tough-guy act before and have enough muscle to handle any bullies on the CCHA block, cooler heads usually prevail. "I like playing tough games," defenseman Chris Tamer said. "I like it when guys come at me, and then I get to go and hit them. There's nothing wrong with good clean checks, but there is some stuff that goes too far. I expect the games at Joe Louis to be really physical, too, because that's what we've seen all season." Tamer has been the only Wolverine this season to get a fight- ing penalty, the ensuing game mis- conduct and the automatic game suspension. Ironically, it was against Miami, Michigan's next opponent. Michigan took Ohio State's best punch, so to speak, and Saturday they only had to mop up. Loney's brutal play was a result of recogniz- ing his team's hopeless situation. If the game had not been a playoff game and suspensions were less devastating, an ugly fight could have developed. Hard checks and stick work have been staple tactics throughout the seaon and CCHA niavoff hockey CnrsAr'MrA n^..;A nnise.r ic. na.+r.rfnrl r.#+hn inn h..tnamm..Mn n^r.r... Cnle.r.nr