Page 6 -The Michigan Daily- Sports Monday - November 9, 1992 El " Bell tolls for Laker netminders Lake State's goalkeeping tradition catalyzes NCAA success l e i e J Hockey games won between the pipes by Brett Forrest Daily Hockey Writer SAULT STE. MARIE - We have all heard the clich6s before. "Our goalie played great for us tonight ... He was unconscious ... He kept us in the game ... He was standing on his head out there ... Our goalie won the game for us tonight." Sure, one can gloss over these comments as easily as "We're work- ing hard in the corners ... we're taking it one game at a time." However, it cannot be said more plainly or more importantly - goaltending wins and loses games. This maxim was never truer than in this weekend's series between Michigan and Lake Superior. Friday, Michigan goalie Steve Shields had 43 saves on 45 shots as the Wolverines rolled to a 5-2 victory. Saturday, Lake State netminder Blaine Lacher had 37 saves on 38 shots, leading the Lakers to a 6-1 win. The player who covers the six-by-four foot frame is the most impor- tant man on the team. Those in deference to this opinion need only take a glance at the most successful NCAA teams in recent history. Look at the names of Bob Essensa, Bruce Hoffort, Chuckie Hughes and Darrin Madeley, then look at the championship rings on their fingers. Look into the hearts of their teammates, who knew when their teams went down the stretch, they needed a big-money goaltender - lucky for them they had one. For both games this weekend, the team that had more shots lost. Friday, the Lakers outshot Michigan, 45-33. Saturday, Michigan held the advantage, 38-24. How is this paradox explained? Goaltending. "The difference in our game was the goalie," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "(Shields) made save after save on shots that were hit- ting him that he probably couldn't even see." Friday, Shields was so hot he held the glow of a blue flame. It could have been his best game performing in such a tight, important contest. His vision was great, he played the angles superbly and he was kicking out rubber like the Michelin Man trying to reach his quota. "That's the best I've ever seen Steve Shields play," Laker coach Jeff Jackson said. At times, one can attribute a goaltender's performance to the strong defense in front of him - few shots, fewer attempts to score. Friday was not one of those nights. Then again, many goalies relish having to face a high number of shots. They can get into a groove, keep active and showcase their skills. "The time I have the most trouble is when I'm only getting 15 to 20 shots," Shields said. "When you're getting shots like that (45 shots), you're into the game. You're always busy, so time goes by fast. I'm drained now but when I was out there it probably was the most fun I've had in a game this year."~ Saturday, it was Lacher's turn to shine. Michigan peppered the sophomore from Medicine Hat, Alberta., with 18 shots in the first pe- riod. He kept slow-starting Lake Superior in the game early, stopping all 18 attempts and holding the Wolverine power play to a doughnut de- spite three first-period chances. Lacher was just about flawless as he went on to stop all but one shot. After the game he concurred with Shields. "Getting all those shots helps to keep you in the game, even though it can be a double-edged sword," he said. "I like 25-30 shots a night. 38 might have been a bit too much." Lacher was the difference in the weekend. Michigan played its best two periods of the season Friday during the second and third periods. Saturday, the team picked up where it left off the night before. Lacher dame up big, though, and gave the Lakers time to catch their breath. If he had not been such a wall in the second game, it would have been an easy Wolverine sweep. "This is the first time we've seen a real good goalie factor into the game," Berenson understated. "(Lacher) did an outstanding job," Jackson said. "He played confi- dently. He looked like the goalie we recruited." In the Michigan lockerroom, there was a feeling of knowing there is little a team can do when pitted against a hot goalie. "(Lacher) played well," junior Brian Wiseman admitted. "The puck wasn't bouncing our way. But I have to give him credit - he made the stops." Michigan's power play moved the puck well for most of the evening but converted only one of 10 chances. Lacher frustrated power play point man Pat Neaton all night. "We had a lot of good chances," Neaton said. "We just couldn't come up with the goals, we couldn't convert. (Lacher) was hot. It just comes down to not burying our chances." Enough cannot be said about it. Too much emphasis cannot be placed upon it. Too important a role it cannot play on a team. Goaltending. Goaltending. Goaltending. If a goalie "sieves it," his team will not win. It is a very simple equa- tion. Intensity from the goal crease invariably will radiate to the rest of the team. A high quality goaltender can make a modest team great, while a See BLUE LINES, Page 8 Hi/Lo " Funk " Cardio Pump " Fatbumer " interval Training " Butts Gutts and Biceps by Andy Stabile Daily Hockey Writer SAULT STE. MARIE - After every home victory, the Lake Superior State University Lakers run outside and ring the Hoholik Victory Bell, which stands at the entrance to the Norris Center Arena. Due to damage sustained from the repetitive ringing, the bell needed to be re- placed this season. Laker coach Jeff Jackson took it upon himself to find a new bell before the season began so that the Laker tradition could be carried on. Now with the season well under- way, Jackson is in the midst of re- placing another mainstay at Lake Superior State. He is searching for the next dominant Laker goaltender. Lake Superior State was un- known when the Lakers won their first NCAA national championship in the 1987-88 season. Last season, no longer an unknown, but a college hockey perennial favorite, the Lakers again won the national title. In the five years between the raising of the two title banners in the Norris Center, a transition took place in the Laker program. The title teams featured different players, different playing styles and even different head coaches. But one facet of the Laker game lay at the heart of each title: goaltending. Bruce Hoffort roamed the Laker crease for that first title. When he departed for the Philadelphia Flyers organization, the void he left behind was filled by Darrin Madeley. After three years in Sault Ste. Marie, Madeley now plays with the expansion Ottawa Senators. How good were these two play- ers? Hoffort played only two sea- sons, but posted six shutouts. Madeley once posted a 24-game un- beaten streak, during which the Lakers went 21-0-3. The two own nearly every goaltending record at Lake State, but the championship ring both players wear is the hall- mark of their success. There are three goalies in the cur- rent Laker camp: sophomore Blaine Lacher, and rookies Adam Thompson and Paul Sass. The search is on for Jackson, but so far there is no clear answer. Lacher is the heir apparent, but has struggled through most of his starts with Lake Superior. However, he had a stellar performance this weekend against Michigan when he allowed only one goal on 38 shots, leading the Lakers to a 6-1 victory. Thompson had played well in his games until facing the Wolverines Friday night, when he was shelled for five goals, including one long slapshot from outside his own zone. Paul Sass may be the most highly touted of the trio, but has yet to see any game action. Jackson feels each goalie brings a different dimension to the team. "Blaine Lacher is a big kid. Once he gains some confidence and does a good job for us at gaining some con- sistency, then he can be a top goalie." Lacher himself is hesitant to draw any comparisons between himself and the Laker goalies of the past. "I don't care if I even get to be as great as those guys," Lacher says. "I just want to improve consistently so I can play night after night." In Sass, Jackson sees the antithe- sis to Lacher - a smaller, quicker netminder who is more agile around the net. However, Jackson compares Thompson to a different pair of Laker netminders. "He is the guy that is most com- parable to Hoffort and Madeley as far as style and technique goes." Although he was mentioned in the same breath with those two Laker legends, Thompson could not perform like them Friday against the Wolverines. While the team strug- gles to find a consistent goalie, Jackson says he is content to shuffle for now. "Just like the first year Darrin Madeley was here, just like the first year Bruce Hoffort was here, we ro- tated two or three guys in the first half of the season," Jackson says of his goaltending rotation. "We have to see what these three guys can do." And also like the early years of Hoffort and Madeley, the current trio is struggling. Those near the Laker squad remember that both Hobey Baker Award finalists took their lumps at first. Jackson asked Laker radio color man and ex-Laker goalie Joe Shawhan to work out with 'You have to make sure the freshmen get a taste of what it is like on the road and get a chance to play each opponent at least one time. That's my goal.' - Jeff Jackson Madeley when he first arrived in Sault Ste. Marie. "I went on the ice with him and I told Jeff, 'I think you missed the boat on this guy,"' Shawhan said. "Look at him now." Laker radio play-by-play an- nouncer Bill Crawford recalls seeing similar holes in Hoffort's game. "Joey and I used to criticize him because he was always moving one way and the puck was going the other. It takes a little while for these guys to pick up on stuff like that." Does all this mean that these players have the potential to domi- nate a game like their predecessors? Jackson feels they do. "I think all three of them could end up being the number one goalie. Right now we just don't know." Shawhan agrees. He knows that experience and confidence are im- portant to any goalie's success but feels that Jeff Jackson's system;is the key to producing the quality of Laker goaltenders. "The only thing," he says, "separating these goaltenders fromn the last few that have come throu h+ here and have done real well is time in the net - a little experience. "The drills that the Lakers do - the type of practices they run - thy$ are conducive to developing godl tenders. It's just a matter of time.'" , So what is that system? Ma#x4 there is none, but Jackson, a goic in his playing days, remains vef deliberate with the physical gi mental treatment of his goaltender . "You have to make sure tbt freshmen get a taste of what it is li c on the road and get a chance to plan each opponent at least one time anq get them the proper experience in the first half of the year. That's my goal "I'm hoping we can get into some kind of rotation until thes guys get some confidence in theim game, but it takes time. It's going tq be four to six weeks before we're req ally going to know who can'do what." I And nothing says he will know any more then. Until one or more o these players plays consistently well all this is speculation. But it is the kind of speculatlori that has been heard around the Norris Center before. Remember the names of Thomp son, Sass, and Lacher. Currently,al of them are unproven. At least on$ of them, Jackson hopes, wild someday be the impenetrable forc that keeps the Lakers ringing the Victory Bell. «' 'a DOUGLAS KAt Lake Superior State goalie Blaine Lacher smothers a Michigan shot. The teams splitthe weekend series. -r ICERS Continued from page 1 us, but ... it certainly gave our team a little life." Skating with momentum after Hogan's goal, Michigan's Ryan Sittler and Mike Knuble also netted goals while Shields turned away each of the 17 shots he saw in that second period. "He made save after save on shots that were hitting him that he probably couldn't even see," Berenson said. "We kind of cane out (from the first intermission) with our backs against the wall," junior Mike Stone said. "It was 1-0 and then our whole second period was pretty much the turning point of the game." Stone and Lake Superior's- Brian Rolston each tallied goals in the third, but Shields turned away 17 more shots in the last stanza to seal the Michigan victory. "I'm drained now," Shields said after the game, "but while I was out there it was probably the most fun I've had all year." It would not be so fun for Shields and the Wolverines Saturday night, as the Lakers came out playing what their coach Jeff Jackson would later call "old-style Laker hockey." Lake Superior drew back and played more of the clutch-and- grab style of defensive hockey which was their forte during their NCAA Championship years of 1988 and 1992. The other characteristic of those Laker teams also bore its head Saturday: dominating goaltending. "It was basically a reversal of roles from (Friday) night's game." Jackson said. Jackson gave the goaltending nod to Lacher, who responded with the best performance of his collegiate career. "No doubt about it," Lacher said. "That was my best game since I was in juniors." The Wolverines beat Lacher only once - that on a power-play shot from the point by Pat Neaton with Michigan losing, 4-0, in the second period. Michigan had seven other opportunities with the man advantage, including two full minutes of 5-on-3, but couldn't beat Lacher. Meanwhile, Lake Superior took advantage of its opportunities, scoring five goals on 10 power plays. "1 thought we outplayed them, except on the power play," Berenson said. "Our power play played really well; the puck just didn't go in for us. "There were two good games this weekend, and if we play well we have a chance to win games. The score was no indication tonight. Our players played well and they don't have to hang their heads." r: r t' 0 I C 0 G1) N 0 o. 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