Page 6 -The Michigan Daily- Sports Monday - October 26,1992 to1 ecl ef* Depth unlocks door to 'M icers success by Chad A. Safran Daily Hockey Writer BIG RAPIDS - Team depth. It is a clich6 every coach talks about when his team takes the field. If a team does not have scoring depth in hockey, the defense can key on the one line that contains a team's best scoring punch. That was the case last year, but what a difference a year makes for Michigan. Against Notre Dame, it was the line of Ryan Sittler, Brian Wiseman and David Oliver that led the Wolverines to victory with five of the team's six goals, including four from Oliver. This weekend the team y traveled to Ferris State and another line came to the forefront. The threesome of Mike Knuble, David Roberts and Mike Stone provided the firepower that helped Michigan defeat Ferris, 7-2 Friday night. Knuble pumped in four goals, three on the power play. Roberts managed a goal and an assist while Stone added an assist. Saturday, it was Cam Stewart who came up with the iame winner in the Wolverines' 5-3 come-from-behind victory. And what about David Oliver? I e scored two goals in each Knuble game, giving him a season total of eight. Three games. And many different players have stepped up to give the Wolverines what they needed to come out ahead. Last season, the team looked to Denny Felsner whenever they needed the big play. Get behind, don't worry Denny will score. Oftentimes, though, the Felsner line would get shut down and the offense could not produce. Now, they can look to anyone on any of the lines. The reason - better depth. When winger Dan Stiver went down with a shoulder injury in Saturday's game, Michigan coach Red Berenson had flexibility. He moved freshman center Kevin Hilton to right wing, and Hilton re- sponded with his first career goal, an empty netter that sealed the tri- umph. The depth on offense is even more impressive when you consider that Knuble only scored seven goals last season and almost eclipsed that total inthree games. Add to that the fact that Patrick Neaton, the team's top offensive defensemen a season ago with 30 points, only has one assist this season. This is a team which can have a player score a couple of goals one night then not dress the next night because another player can step in and perform just as admirably. This is a situation that other coaches dream to have. For Red Berenson, it is reality. Depth is not the exclusive property of the offense. The defense is the deepest and one of the most experienced in the nation. Six of the eight players are returning letter winners and when one is replaced, nothing seems to change. The Wolverines still shut down the opposition. This weekend served as an example. Freshman Steven Halko made his debut Friday night, replacing Al Sinclair. The result was a fine performance from the rookie and two Wolverine victories. A new part, but the machine does not function any differently than it did when the original piece was in. The depth is the key to how successful Michigan will be this season. The Wolverines first two opponents are part of the lower tier of teams in the Central Collegiate Hockey Association, but now is when the test begins for the Wolverines. The next two weekends, Western Michigan and Lake Superior State are the opposition, respectively. These are two teams that are among the more competitive in the conference. These two weeks are a test to prove how good the Wolverines really are, especially having to travel to Sault Ste. Marie to play the Lakers. Now, it becomes a questipn of which line will step into the spotlight. Knuble, Shaw capture CCHA player-of-the-week honors ANN ARBOR (AP) - Michigan right wing Mike Knuble and Kent State goalie Scott Shaw were named Central Collegiate Hockey Association offensive and defensive players of the week. Knuble, a 6-foot-3, 210-pound Caledonia native, had five goals in the Wolverines' sweep of Ferris State. In Friday's 7-2 win, he scored the first three goals of the game, while his "fourth tally of the contest gave Michigan a 5-1 advantage. His goal Saturday "evened the score 1-1, and the Wolverines went on to win 5-3. Shaw, a 5-10, 160-pound native of Warminster, Pa., was in goal for Kent State's first two wins as a CCHA member. He totaled 50 saves in the Golden Flashes' 2-1 and 7-5 victories over Notre Dame. Shaw allowed just .one power-play goal in 10 opportunities. Knuble shines in homecoming Sophomore right wing scores five goals in weekend at Ferris by Tim Rardin Daily Hockey Writer BIG RAPIDS - While the Ferris State hockey team experienced a rather disappointing Homecoming weekend, losing twice to Michigan, Mike Knuble's homecoming proved very successful. The Wolverine rightwing tallied five goals, including four in Friday's game, in his return to west Michigan. Knuble hails from Cale- donia, just over an hour from Big Rapids, and came to Michigan after earning all-state honors his junior and senior seasons at East Kentwood High School. As a freshman and sophomore in high school, Knuble played for the Grand Rapids Whalers of the Bantam "A" league, and then spent a year with the Kalamazoo Junior Wings of the North American Hockey League in 1990. "I didn't get many goals last year, so it's nice to get some up here," Knuble said. "I saw a lot of people from my old neighborhood in the stands. It's nice to score in front of some of the people who watched me play. " "It was nice to see him (Knuble) get off to a good start like that," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "We knew he had it in him. He's just a different player now as a sophomore." Indeed he is. Knuble scored only seven goals in the 43 games he appeared in as freshman with the Wolverines, and has almost equaled that total in just three games this season. Knuble admits that, hockey-wise, a year has made all the difference. "I just feel so much more com- fortable this year than I did last year," Knuble said. "I know what's going on, and I know who I'm going against. I can't explain it. I'm just more confident now, and I think I'm feeling more confident every game." That confidence showed at Ferris, particularly in Friday's 7-2 Michigan victory. Knuble scored the first three goals for the Wolverines, including two power play goals in the first period. EVAN PETRIE/Daily Right wing Mike Knuble tries to get by a defender in last week's win over Notre Dame. The first came just over halfway through the period, as Cam Stewart fed a rushing Knuble with a perfect pass from behind the Bulldog net. Knuble struck again less than three minutes later, with 50 seconds left in the power play. This time Knuble received a pretty feed from center Mark Ouimet, who had skated around the net to the right circle. Knuble chipped the puck past Ferris goaltenderCraig Lisko as he was falling to his knees. "I really didn't have to do too much," Knuble said about the goals. "I got some great passes, so all I had to do was put the stick down and put them in." "Sometimes you don't even see the pucks coming, but then all of a sudden they .hit your stick," Berenson said. "Knuble was in good position, and he is much improved around the net. He takes up a lot of space and he's hard to move, so he gets good position on the defensemen." 'Sometimes, I can't hit the broad side of a barn, but they went in real easy tonight.' - Mike Knuble Michigan right wing Knuble's hat trick came 7:20 into the second period after a nifty se- quence from his fellow linemates, David Roberts and Mike Stone. Roberts skated down the left side of the Bulldog zone, then led Stone with a pass just to the left of the net. Lisko, expecting Stone to take the shot, committed just as Stone passed to Knuble on the other side of the goal. Lisko couldn't get back in tim'e as Knuble scored easily glove side. "That's the difference - last year, the puck would've bounced off the stick or I would've shot it off the toe or something like that," Knuble said after Friday's game. "Some- times, I can't hit the broad side of a barn, but they went in real easy tonight." "It's great (to see Knuble score four goals). I hope someone else scores four more tomorrow night,' said Michigan rightwing Davinl Oliver, who scored four goals against Notre Dame. "Their ling (Knuble-Roberts-Stone) playe0 good. They worked hard and they got four goals out of it." ICERS Continued from page 1 last came on an empty-netter from freshman Kevin Hilton, who had re- placed Dan Stiver after a first period shoulder injury - Mazzoli kept his team in the game. The Wolverines nearly tripled Ferris' shot production (45 to 16), but Mazzoli came up with 40 saves. "Mazzoli had to play well for them," Berenson said. "We had I don't know how many shot attempts, but Mazzoli played a great game. He kept them in it, there's no question about it." That was not the case for Bulldog goaltending Friday, as Ferris's other goalkeeper, Craig Lisko, played the whole game and gave up seven goals. The Bulldog offense had more shots (24) Friday, but Michigan netminder Steve Shields, who in three games has conceded only five goals, made some big saves. "Shields played very well, par- ticularly in the second period (15 saves)," Berenson said. "Had he not made some key saves, it would've been a much closer game." The power play was also a big factor for the Wolverines Friday, as they capitalized on three of their six opportunities. The first came 10:14 into the first period, as Stewart, lurk- ing behind the net, set up a rushing Knuble who knocked the puck home just inside the crease. Knuble had four goals in the game, - three of them power play goals - and added another Saturday. "He (Knuble) had his stick on the ice, which is a sign of a good goal scorer," Berenson said. "He never really got into a scoring confidence last year. He's much improved around the net. "The power play was h factor for us," Berenson added. "You don't usually see that early in the year. I think the penalty killers have the ad- vantage." Indeed, the defense did have the advantage Saturday. Michigan man- aged only one goal in seven power- play attempts, including three failed 5-on-3 chances, while the Bulldogs did not convert any of their four op- portunities. The two defenses held their re- spective grounds, and after two peri- ods of play, the score remained 1-1. An Oliver goal just 3:13 into the third, almost identical to the one he would score later from the face-off, put the Wolverines up 2-1. Ferris State answered in a hurry, as center Gary Kitching knocked in a loose puck at the 4:28 mark. Michigan's defense would experience another lapse just 1:32 later as Kitching T. EVAN PETRIFJDaly Center Mark Ouimet handles the puck last week against Notre Dame. again capitalized, this time off a be- hind-the-net feed from rightwinger Doug Smith. "I think, hockey-wise, we played a better game than we did Friday night," Berenson said. "I think their goals came on a couple of mistakes on our part. We had some turnovers in our zone and they put the puck in the net." "We got caught in our zone and we couldn't get the puck out," de- fenseman Aaron Ward said. "In rto way did they outplay us to get their goals. It was just the result of our mistakes." r SICK OF ELECTION-YEAR POLITICS? THINK YOU COULD DO A BETTER JOB? THEN DO!! MICHIGAN STUDENT ASSEMBLY your student government! CALL FOR CANDIDATES POSITIONS OPEN I PROCTER & GAMBLE PURCHASES UNDERGRADUATE RECRUITING Tuesday, October 27th Recruiting Session A- 10:00 -11:30 a.m. Resume Workshop - 12:00 - 2:00 p.m. Recruiting Session B - 2:30 - 4:OOD.m. BUSINESS (1 seat) DENTISTRY (1 seat) FTTTC ATTON (1 eat) MEDICINE (1 seat) MUSIC (1 seat) 4 PUBLIC HEALTH (1 seat) h I Al