Page 6 -The Michigan Daily-Sports Monday- March 22,1993 Favored Blue still owned by Lake at the Joe _akers keel haul Michigan for third straight year in league tournament Weak effort results in worse performance by Chad A. Safran Daily Hockey Writer DETROIT - Take a penny and place it on a railroad track just before a train comes rushing by. Once the train has departed, you find the penny - flattened. The engravings on the coin can no longer be read. It is like the images and words were never there. Much the same could be said of the Michigan hockey team in its 5-3 loss to Lake Superior State in the CCIIA semifinals. The Wolverines were definitely the penny in this game, while the Lakers came out like a locomotive careening down the tracks. At full speed. With tremendous power. The first two periods were the worst 40 minutes of hockey Michigan has played all year. Lake Superior skated by, over and through the Wolverines as if they were not even on the ice. Laker forwards were not being stood up as they rushed into the Michigan defensive zone. One would think that the Michigan blueliners were best friends with Lakers Brian Rolston and Sean Tallaire, seeing as how easily the duo walked into the zone. Kind of like Abe's face on the penny, the defense had vanished. Yet, it was not only the defense that was being run over. The offense was almost as horrendous as the defense for the first two periods. Michigan did not manage a shot on goal in the second period until the 8:39 mark when David Oliver fired two shots off in a matter of seconds. Michigan only had 12 over the first 40 minutes. Was this the same team that is-second in the nation in goals per game? Passes were hitting Wolverine skates, not sticks. And if perhaps the puck hit the stick blade, it would quickly roll away to some Laker just awaiting the mistake. Even Michigan's most consistent players were misfiring on their feeds. Rolston capitalized on the biggest Wolverine turnover, grabbing a sloppy pass and scoring a shorthanded breakaway goal that put the Lakers up, 3-1, early in the second period. The offensive errors never stopped for those two periods. The most dis- graceful part was the fact that the Wolverines were outworked all over the ice. Hard work is usually a Michigan trademark. However, this time it was the Lakers who left their stamp upon the Wolverines. Even the Michigan fourth line, which is counted on for its grinding abil- ity and forechecking, got chewed up by Lake Superior. The Lakers were grabbing every loose puck. The Wolverines were skating after the disks apathetically. Finally, the Wolverines decided to show up in the third period. After scoring two goals within the first three minutes of the stanza, the gap was only one, 4-3, Lake Superior's lead. "When we got desperate, we came together," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. Desperate is not the way to play against Lake Superior. The Lakers are not going to give up a three-goal lead, especially entering the third period. The Lakers' defense is too solid; the players too well disciplined. "We almost beat them by playing one period of hockey," defenseman David Harlock said. One period of solid hockey. Did the Wolverines forget that it takes three quality periods to win? The Wolverines had their chances in the late going but were stopped by Laker goalie Blaine Lacher time and time again. It appeared as if Michigan was going to replay its 7-6 comeback triumph of one year ago against Northern Michigan in the NCAA tournament. Michigan had two power plays in that final period. The club could not convert on either opportunity as Mike Knuble came the closest when he was stopped on the doorstep at the 12:16 mark. Alas, it was not to be. "We use a bend but don't break type of defense," Lacher said. The Wolverines were certainly pressing the issue. The Lakers were a tired team in the game's final stretch, having played Friday night. Yet, Michigan could not capitalize. It was too late. The early mistakes cost the Wolverines the game. They displayed no fire and no energy early. Percentages say that the team that scores first usually wins. This time it was not only the goal, but the opening effort that damaged any chance Michigan had. Playing without spark is understandable against some of the league's lesser powers. Against the defending NCAA champions, if a team does not come prepared to play, it will be run down with ease. "Every other guy on the team didn't show up," defenseman Chris Tamer said. "Maybe it was the way we approached the game mentally." The Wolverines showed a lackadaisical effort for two-thirds of the game, one that was by far the biggest of the season. It was as if the players did not care. Where was the pride? Where was the heart and desire to beat the big rival? Michigan was embarrassed for most of the game. If the Wolverines show the same effort they did against Lake Superior in the next game, the NCAA tournament opener, the team could end up like that penny on the train tracks - flattened. by Brett Forrest Daily Hockey Writer DETROIT - "I own you." It is rather reminiscent of a cheesy line from a low-budget soap opera or a "USA Up All Night" film. In these cases, the decree is a function of mere writer's cramp. Hlowever, when Lake Superior and Michigan meet in CCIHA championship hockey, the declaration becomes an ordinance strictly adhered to by the Lakers in the dominant position and the Wolverines on the subordinate end. In the 1991 CCI IA championship game, Michigan jumped out to a first-period 2-0 lead. Lake Superior clubbed its way back to take 4-2 and 5-3 leads in the second period. Wolverines Aaron Ward and Don Stone then scored third-period goals to send the game to an extra period. The Lakers took control in the overtime and freshman Clayton Bed- does slipped the puck through the legs of Michigan goaltender Steve Shields for the game-winner at 6:39. Last year, the two teams met again in the final game of the league championship. The third period be- gan with the squads tied at one. Lake Superior found an extra gear in the final stanza and raced by the Wolverines again, 3-1, on goals by Paul Constantin and Brian Rolston. Saturday, Michigan and LSSU were paired once more at Joe Louis Arena, this time in the semifinal round. To put it mildly, the Wolver- ines skulked out of the gate at a can- ter while the Lakers' gallop was suggestive of a triple crown winner. It is almost as if the Lakers are playing a high stakes game of Monopoly. They own the deed to Michigan Avenue and place hotels on the causeway every postseason. "It seems like we're snakebitten here (at Joe Louis)," Michigan right wing David Oliver said. "We can beat everybody but Lake. We get SCORE BY PERIODS LSSU 2 21- 5 Michigan 1 0 2- 3 First Period: 1, LSSU, Strachan 15,2:26.2, UM, Stewart (Wiseman), 13:26. 3, LSSU, Tallaire (pp) (Rolston), 17:55. Second Period: 4, LSSU, Rolston 31 (sh),1:04.5, LSSU, Strachan 16 (Hulett, Miller), 12:36. Third Period: 6, UM, Robets 25 (Ouimet, Shields), :26. 7, UM, Knuble 26 (pp) (Sittler, Ouimet), 2:40. 8, LSSU, Strachan (pp), 17, 19:45. Goalie Saves: UM, Shields (8-9- 5- 26). Lake Superior, Lacher (4- 7-8- 22). Official Referees - Matt Shegos, Brent Rutherford. Linesman - John Kelly. Att:12, 144 here every year and lose to Lake State - it's like clockwork." Michigan has improved every season over the past four. The Wolverines transformed themselves from a near-miss NCAA participant into one of the strongest favorites in this year's tournament. But no play- off banners were hung from the Yost Ice Arena rafters during that time. "We've done a lot, we've ac- complished a lot," Michigan senior defenseman Pat Neaton said. "But we've never won the CCHA cham- pionship. We went to the final four, but we never won it." Lake Superior had its own per plexing moments in the CCHA tour nament. The Lakers lost the champi- onship game five of six years from 1985 to 1990 before breaking through and beating Michigan in 1991. Michigan is the new kid on th block, though. It has been a top team for just a short time while Lake Su- perior won the NCAA championship in 1988 and 1992 and, with yester- day's 3-0 victory over Miami, the last three CCHA titles. Perhaps Michigan coach Red Berenson tried to draw comparisons between the two squads following Saturday's repetition of history. "Coach said it took Lake Supe- rior three, four years before they could win the tournament down here," Michigan captain David Har- lock said. "It's really frustrating. But the last three years we've taken so- lace in knowing we were going to be in the NCAA tournament." Certainly, consolation can be tiken in the fact that the season is not finished. The numbers and ban- ners still show, though, that Lake: Superior has Michigan's pink slip i its back pocket. Lake State grabs third consecutive CCRA title DETROIT (AP) - John Hendry scored two goals and assisted on Rob Valicevic's game-winner Sun- day as Lake Superior State won its third straight CCHA championship, defeated regular-season champion Miami 3-0. Lakers' goalie Blaine Lacher made 17 saves in posting his second shutout of the season and was named most valuable player for the champi- onships. The victory gives Lake Superior an automatic bid to the NCAA West regional that will be played also at Joe Louis Arena March 26-27. Lakers' defenseman Michael Smith and forwards Brian Rolston and Wayne Strachan joined Lacher and Valicevic on the all-tournament team. Miami defenseman Bobby Marshall rounded out the squad. 0' *1 DOUGLAS KANTER/Daily Lake Superior right wing Wayne Strachan celebrates his third tally of the game Saturday, an empty-net goal with 15 seconds remaining in the game. ICERS Continued from page 1 puck on the left side of the Laker zone. Ouimet immediately centered to a rushing David Roberts, who promptly blew the puck past goalie Blaine Lacher glove side for his 25th score of the season. "We were only down three, so we knew we could do it (come back)," Michigan defenseman Aaron Ward said. "Roberts' goal keyed that and made believers out of us." "I think when the first shift got that goal, it lifted everyone up," Roberts said. "We maintained that intensity for the rest of the period." Indeed, less than two minutes later, Michigan took advantage of a Laker tripping penalty to narrow the gap to a single goal on the power play. From behind the Laker net, forward Ryan Sittler slipped a pass to Mike Knuble in the slot. Knuble ripped a slapper past Lacher for his 26th goal of the season, suddenly erasing the misery of Michigan's first two periods. "I was pretty nervous after the first one (Roberts' goal)," Lacher said. "They come in waves." But those waves dried up. Michigan might have been in- spired by Ferris State, who evened the score with Miami in the other semifinal game with 4.2 seconds left in the game. But while the Wolver- ines outshot Lake Superior, 10-6, in the period, they just couldn't come up with that last goal. "Our defense closed the gaps on their forwards pretty well," Lacher said. "Our defense - we bend, but we don't break." "All I know is that in the third period, you saw our real team," Ward said. "The chances were there. We just couldn't put them in." In fact, the only other chance Michigan did convert was the result of a Laker miscue. Down, 1-0, in the first period, Michigan center Brian Wiseman caught the Lakers on a line change and fed winger Cam Stewart at the red line. Stewart raced past the Laker defense before beating Lacher stick side on the breakaway. But Stewart's goal failed to spark the Wolverines, and just over three minutes later, Laker center Brian Rolston won the faceoff against Ouimet to the left of the Wolverine goal. Ouimet fell forward, allowing Rolston to skate by unchecked and feed Sean Tallaire for LSSU's sec- ond goal with nine seconds left in the man-advantage. The Lakers converted their sec- ond power-play opportunity after Michigan was whistled for having too many men on the ice. Shields cleared the puck and headed for the bench to give Michigan six skaters. However, Strachan intercepted Shields' pass and knocked home the empty-netter for his third goal of the game with 15 seconds left in the contest. Strachan's goal was a fitting end to the game. "We started jumping in the third period," Roberts said. "But against a good team like that, you can't just play one good period." "I think fatigue started entering into it late in the game," Lake Supe- rior coach Jeff Jackson said. "We started to get tired, but we held on." 01 01 DOUGLAS KANTER/Daily Michigan's Cam Stewart skates against LSSU. Stewart scored Michigan's first goal on a breakaway against tournament MVP Blaine Lacher. Ty fo 1 a T Ho0 1993 NCAA HOCKEY FINAL FOUR 1993 NCAA Location Date Price West Regional Joe Louis Arena, Detroit, ML March 25-28 T.B.D. East Regional Centrum, Worcester, MA March 25-28 T.B.D. Final Four Bradley Center, Milwaukee, WI April 1-3 $60.00 1G; : s-is{ --bi6fl' - I_.s