The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, December 6, 1993 - 3 Neaton The former Wolverine hockey star talks about his start in the NHL Pat Neaton had an outstanding ca- reer as a defenseman with Michigan. Infourseasons, Neaton played a large part in the Wolverines' success, in- cluding appearances in theNCAA semi- finals the past two seasons, with his consistency and two-way ability. He was selected to last year's Central Collegiate Hockey Associate first team. The Redford, Mich. native was a seventh round pick (145th overall) of the Pittsburgh Penguins in the 1990 National Hockey League Entry Draft. After beginning this season with Pittsburgh's minor league affiliate in Cleveland, Neaton reached the NHL. Daily sports writer J.L Rostam- Abadi recently spoke with Neaton &bout his quick rise to hockey's pin- nacle after graduating from Michi- gan only seven months ago. Daily: You scored your first goal in your NHL debut against the Phila- delphia Flyers. You didn't look too excited. Granted, it was the 11th goal of an 11-5 blowout, but what was it like to score in the NHL? Neaton: I was excited, I was defi- nitely excited. It wasn't a decisive *goal in the game, but it was the first one, so I definitely was excited. D: Did you expect to score? N: I don't know whether I ex- pected it or not. That game was pretty wide open and there were a lot of power plays. So I had a couple of chances, and that one just sort of was lying there for me. D: Were you surprised with (Pen- *guins) coach Eddie Johnston putting you on the power play as a rookie? N: Well, I was surprised when I got'the call (up to the NHL). When I got that call, that's when they told me they'd use me in that situation. So I knew, going into the game, that he was going to use me there. But it was a little bit of a surprise. They had afew injuries and they wanted to bring somebody up and usually I can use my assets - speed and puck han- dling - to try and help out. D: In college you played against some of the best teams and players for four years. How much faster paced and difficult is it playing with the pros? 'N: In college, sometimes the games seemed like they were faster. Players are just smarter here. They *just move the puck smarter. They don't make the same mistakes, so to speak. Like defensive zone coverage and man, they don't let their man go. It's smarter and they move the puck just a little bit quicker, but the pace is pretty comparable at times. D: Was there much of a transition that you had to make? N: Oh yeah, there's definitely a transition. There's a lot of things that you have to learn because you have to adapt to the pro game. It's just like any step you make - you have to learn along the way. D: What's it like playing with some of the greats, like Jaromir Jagr and Kevin Stevens? S-N: They're just phenomenal play- ers. They do so many things so well. They're highly skilled players, and it's just a great experience to play along aside those players. You thor- oughly enjoy yourself and you sort of see how far you have to go. D: Have you learned a lot from the defensive corps, especially Ulf Samuellson and Marty McSorley, about your position? N: Yeah. I think one of the guys that helped me out a lot is Larry Murphy. He just sort of helps me out on when to, because he's sort of the same style, on when to jump in and decision making. It all comes down to decision mak- ing. You know you can't jump up and rush every play. You have to pick your spots, and he helps you adjust to that. And just by watching him, you .an learn a lot too. A J: Was it difficult to keep your confidence in the minors? N: I wasn't there long enough to really get down, because wejust started the season. I was only 16 games into the season and there was a lot of communi- cation on 'This is where you fit into the organization' and 'This is what you have to do well.' It wasn't to the point that I was there three or four years and really dragging on, and I'd never know if I'd get the call. I was surprised when I got the call but I was still excited and I was still ready to play. It was only the first quarter of the season. D: How secure do you feel about your current status? N: You never really want to try heck of a start over there. D: Are you surprised with Michigan's success after losing eight players from last year? N: I knew they got some good players and the thing is that they have some character leadership there with the seniors and I'm not really sur- prised. They've got some good play- ers there. They have a lot of talent on that team. It's just a matter of carrying it out through the rest of the season, because they have all the potential to do what they want. They're a very talented, talented group. So I guess I wasn't really sur- prised. I talked to (Michigan assistant coach) Mel (Pearson) at the begin- jump up and when to make those opportunities come. D: Were you disappointed with not making the U.S. Olympic team? N: Yeah, I was disappointed be- cause I really wanted to make that step on the Olympic team and then have a good year there and see what happened afterwards. It was a disappointment for me because I thought I would have adapted well to that style. I was down after I got cut, but things have worked out well, so I'm trying not to look back on it at all. D: Do you think there was any politics involved? N: People say there's politics in everything, but there's coaching de- cisions that have to be made and they made their decision. Obviously the guys they picked, they're good hockey players too, and they feel that they can each play a role on their team, and if they felt that I wasn't going to be able to contribute, then they made that decision. It's just something I have to live with and I don't want to really get into the politics of it or the why and the hows. It happened and it's over with. D: How do you feel about Dave Roberts making it and you not? N: I'm happy for Dave. We were both there when the decision was made, and last summer they had a 22 and over team and I made it and he didn't, he was very supportive and said congratulations. I talked to him the other day and I want to see him do well. He was a classmate of mine for four years and I was happy to see him get that oppor- tunity and you want to see him do well. You root for each other. D: What's going on with (former Michigan defenseman and Pittsburgh teammate) Chris Tamer? How's he doing? N: He's doing well in Cleveland. He's playing real well. He had an injury there for a while with his hand, but he's bounced back from that and he's doing well. D: How well do you think Michi- gan coach Red Berenson has pre- pared his players for the NHL? N: The thing that helped me when I got here is ... the way I skate, and they want me to skate with the puck and jump up on the play. And the thing with Red, he prepares you ... to do every drill at full speed. Sometimes I've noticed that you see other coaches and they don't teach their players that. When I came into camp, it was just installed in my head that I do everything at full speed. So ... you stand out there and then that's when all the opportunities started to happen. He prepares you. He pre- pares guys for hockey after college and he prepares them for life after college. He's always said that it's never going to last forever, so he's big on both part of the aspects, and even though I've had an opportunity to play here, I'll definitely be ready if this doesn't work out. D: What's it like going out onto the ice for a game in the NHL as compared to college? N: It's definitely exciting. There's no fight song, so you sort of miss that. Actually, you don't play any games during the week in college and you get that big rush toward the weekend and then when the fight song is going, that's where you really get a pump. Here, it's exciting too, when you have 80 games a year (editor's note - The NHL schedule is 84 games). You can't really charge out to the ice with the same fury. You can't do that for 80 games. I don't really want to rate or com- pare the two against each other, be- cause they were both really exciting. RYAN HERRINGTON The R.H. Factor Inordinate number of tragedies mar 1993 As 1993 slowly comes to a close, I think I speak for many sports fans in saying ... good-bye. In a year where obituaries seemed to appear on the front page of the sports section more often than championships, nothing could have salvaged the past 365 days. Whether it be former greats such as Arthur Ashe, Roy Campanella and Don Drysdale or modern-day players such as Tim Crews, Steve Olin and Alan Kulwicki, it seemed that every time I turned on SportsCenter there was yet another athlete whose life had suddenly ended. The sheer multitude of individuals who died is what is so hard to understand. Tragically in every year a few fall victim to the gods, but in 1993 the number seemed to transcend the definition of cruel. Even more shocking was the plethora of current professional athletes who passed away in 1993. Not that any death is expected, but sports celebrities are supposed to be immortal. They don't cry or bleed or show any signs of pain. And they certainly don't die. That simply doesn't happen. Eu. At least that was what I believed in 1979 when I was a naive eight-year old who had just been exposed to the world of baseball. Living near New York City, I rooted for the New York Yankees and idolized Thurman Munson, the team's catcher and captain. If I ever had a sports hero it was Munson. To me he epitomized what an athlete should be. He played hard, giving every ounce of energy he had each time he crouched behind the plate. Yet he was a true sportsman, not afraid to tip his cap to a fellow hard-working competitor. Having just started to play Little League that year, I often pretended that I was Munson whenever I stepped in the batter's box against an imposing 10- year old. Naturally I wore No. 15 and asked to play catcher so that I, like Munson, could don the tools of ignorance with pride. On an early August afternoon, just two days before I was to go see the Yankees in person with my Dad, I was at home playing with a friend when my Mom told me to come inside. She had the television on and said she just heard some bad news. It had just been announced that Munson had died in a small plane crash near his home in Ohio. I was too young to fully comprehend what had happened. It seemed inconceivable to me that someone as physically strong and fit as a baseball player could suddenly pass away. I watched the screen like I was viewing a cartoon believing that the image wasn't real and that when I went to Yankee Stadium next, Munson would walk on the diamond again. Alas, even athletes are human. I was never able to really follow any one player again like I had with Munson. I gradually stopped rooting for the Yankees as well, as the team lost most of its luster. I still have his poster up in my room, a symbol of the one and only athlete I ever wished I could be. I can't help but think that today other children have similar feelings about those who left us in 1993. The one lasting image I really even have from this past summer was the AP photo of a father and his young son both decked out in their Reggie Lewis jerseys, paying homage to their own personal hero. In the same vein my heart rings out to basketball fans around the world who lost a hero in Drazen Petrovic. Petrovic's appeal transcended national boundaries, as he received fan mail from all over the world after a terrible automobile accident. He brought joy to so many playing a child's game. ,u. Sports provides an interesting paradox. For most, watching a basketball or football game is a way to relax and forget the realities of the everyday world. Yet the tragedies of 1993 are something that cannot be viewed from afar. They are very real, with very real consequences and very real lessons. When juxtaposing these two images, the innocence of sports fades away. LPGA golfer Heather Farr, who died of cancer last month, had undergone multiple operations to try and bring her disease into remission, yet she never once pitied herself or her plight. The same holds true for Jim Valvano, who in his weakened state still encouraged others never to give up fighting. These people were no longer athletes, held up on a pedestal for all the world to see. They were human beings, who cry and bleed and show signs of pain. And, sadly, die an early death. Some other things did occur in the sports world this year. The Buffalo Bills made the greatest comeback in NFL history against the Houston Oilers, only to lose another Super Bowl. The Chicago Bulls were the first NBA team to three-peat since the Boston Celtics of the 1960s. Barry Bonds proved that indeed a player could be worth $40 million. Yet in the grand scheme of things, these events don't really matter. Their significance is muted by the sight of Chris Streets' family grieving at courtside during a Hawkeye game or Bobby Allison losing another son in Davey. Reality again sets in. Thus, 1993 will not be remembered for spectacular plays or incredible moments. Instead, it will only go down in history as the year that sports lost a little more of its innocence and too many of its stars. and sit there and guess what they're thinking because you never know. I mean, tdmorrow you could be back down in the minors or you get sent down for a couple days and then called up for a couple days and sent down the next day. I mean, it can go any which way so you really have to try and not get that into your head. You can't really try to ask yourself, 'Oh, I wonder what's going to, happen?' and 'I wonder how long I'll be up?' because you'll just run into dead ends. You just have to go out there and play and see what they have to say and take it a day at a time. It's an old clich6, but it's the only thing you can do. D: Was it tough playing almost every game for four years at Michi- gan, and then to play so sparingly with the Penguins? N: Well, sometimes it's tough, because you have to keep your legs fresh because, in my situation, you might go three quarters of the period (on the bench) and then get a power play, and then you get thrown out of there and you have to be ready to go. So you have to keep up and you have to keep up on the bench when you're not playing. It's nothing you can get down about, you just have to be ready when you get the call. And if you're not ready, there's no excuses, really. D: Are you following the Wolver- ines this season? N: Yeah, I've talked to the guys a couple of times and they're off to a ning, and he said they were on the road a lot and then they were going to maybe have to weather the storm a lot of times during the first half of the season. But they've surely passed that test with flying colors, so they just have to stay on an even keel and keep plugging through it. D: How has your game improved since leaving Michigan? N: It's just a matter of getting smarter with the puck and decision making. I think I've improved defen- sively a little bit in my own zone. But it's funny though, because a lot of the things that I learned at Michigan I took here and I've adapted to the next, level so to speak. It's just a process of building on each step. D: What improvements do you think you still have to make? N: I just think I have to get stron- ger a little bit and I have to keep on improving on the things that I do well. I'm never going to try and lead the league in penalty minutes or run guys over, but I have to just keep on work- ing with staying with my man and quick feet and doing things well de- fensively and then the decision mak- ing that I was talking about with Larry Murphy; watching him and the deci- sion making that he has. I have to get a little better on that ... I have to get a lot better on when to (state Street + Sports' T . ^ ' TOP 10 REASONS HATS MAKE GREAT GIFTS - - - -- 10. Everybody has a head. 9. Sizes for all, the short and the tall. 8. Endless selection of teams, colors & logos. 7. Great for the roommate who never gets up in time to shower. 6. Good enough for Kris Kross, Gary Moeller, & Bill Clinton. 5. Everyone needs a 'lucky' hat for watchina II'~~~~A 4jp4W/17 4 A 4