- The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, January 31, 1994 HOCKEY Continued from page 1 roost and start putting the puck in the 4et again." Since their first meeting of the sea- on - a 13-2 blowout at Yost Ice arena - the Irish have held their own .gainst the Wolverines. "I thought we had a superlative Jffort," Notre Dame coach Ric Shafer said."It was great to play to put us in a "osition to possibly beat theNo. 1 team 11 the country. "We took a team that appears to be little frustrated with themselves and Aade them even more so. It was a great] offort and I wish it would have been ,pped off with a victory. I thought our ;: ys deserved to win this game." With much of the record crowd eaded toward the parking lot, the ac- ion picked up in the last minute of ,May. Mike Knuble scored an empty- iet goal just seconds after Louder had ;cne to the bench. Notre Dame kept the extra attacker ti the ice and it paid off when Brent 4tmppa knocked the only Irish goal of he night past Shields with 23 seconds emaining. Kevin Hilton regained the two-goal dgefor the Wolverines with a tally into he empty net five seconds later. Brian Wiseman assisted on the goal, moving iim past David Roberts into first place in Michigan's all-time assist list. While Wiseman was tying Roberts' record with two assists Friday in Co- umbus, the Wolverines received 10 rower-play opportunities-scoring on hree - en route to the victory. How- ever, the Wolverines could notputaway Dhio State until late in the third period. "It's always a toughrink to play in," said Berenson of the conference's smallest arena. The small ice surface resulted in a ahysical contest. The result was a pen- atty-marred game which saw Michigan's Warren Luhning and Ohio State's Rob Peters ejected for fighting n the first period. Because of his game mnisconduct, Luhning did not play against Notre Dame. Before Luhning and Peters were ajected, Wiseman recorded his 42nd and 43rd assists on the season, helping Kevin Hilton andJason Botterill (power- ?lay goal) put the Wolverines up, 2-0 'ess than five minutes into the game. Brendan Morrison scored his 15th goal of the year with eight seconds left in the second period to give the Wol- verines a 31 lead. Another goal by Morrison in the :hird and a goal by Mike Legg with 45 seconds left in the game concluded the scoring. MICHIGAN 5, OHIO STATE 1. Michigan 2 1 2-V' Ohio State 0 1 0-1 First Period - 1, UM, Hilton 9 (Wiseman, "Oliver),3:02.2, UM, Botterill16(Knuble, Wiseman), 14:56 (pp). SSecondPeriod-3,OSU,Guilbault2(Richards), x6:18. 4, UM, Morrison 15 (Legg), 19:52 (pp). . SThird Perdod - 5, UM, Morrison 16 (Oliver, Knuble), 13 (p). 6,UM,'Legg(stone), 19:15. 51,0 oagoml-)M11-410-25.0s1J5.&-. 21. Powr plays -UM 3 of10,OSU 0 of 4. Goalle saves - UM, Shields 5-7-8-20. OSU. Askey 9-3-&20. Referees- Kevin Hail, Perry Petterle. IUmessnan - Tim Katrinak. At: OSU Ice Rink. A: 1,457. 1 MICHIGAN 3, NOTRE DAME 1 Notre Dame 0 011 Michigan 0 0 3-3 {Frst Period - None. Second Period - None. Pel id-1, UM, Oliver 21, 13:24 (pp). 2, UM, Knuble 25 (Hogan), 19:05 (en). 3, ND, Lamppa 8 (Harberts, Osiecki), 19:37. 4, UM, Hilton 10 (Wiseman), 19:42 (en). Shots on gal -ND 8-16.9-33.UM 12-5-10- 27. . tio Goe-save- ND, Louder 12-5.7-24. UM, Shields 816&832. Referees - Roger Graff, John Edwards. TnesPaen - Bob Faria. rAt: The Palace of Auburn Hills. A: 20,427. MARK FRIEDMAN/Daily Steve Shields makes the save against Notre Dame Saturday. Shields stopped 33 shots in the 3-1 Michigan victory. overles, Irlish play for packed arena Almost 500 fans turned away from attending game at oversold Palace eers continue wininR ways despite slimp By PAUL BARGER DAILY HOCKEY WRITER AUBURN HILLS - At some point in a season every team goes through ; a slump. No matter how good a particular team is, there will be a period during the; season when it just can't seem to get it together, and its level of play drops a- few notches. The Michigan hockey team is experiencing this trend now. However, unlike others, the Wolverines are still coming away with;- victories. That speaks volumes. Good teams win games they don't deserve and Michigan has found a way to do just that. The Wolverines were outplayed by the Irish Saturday night but still came away with the two points. They were outplayed by Bowling Green last Tuesday night yet still got the win. If that was the worst collective week the team has had, it's in pretty good shape. "Every team goes through this," senior forward David Oliver said. "There; is always a time in your season where you just don't have things going your way. If you didn't have these times to fight through you wouldn't become a better team." Members of the media and fans who are beginning to question Michigan's; lofty ranking and wonder if they are deserving of so much publicity need only to look at the team's record for validation. 25-2-1. That speaks for itself. Michigan is walking away with the CCHA regular- season championship and the consensus No. I ranking in the nation. With the exception of last week's victory at Michigan State, the last five games have been the worst the Wolverines have played all season. Yet most teams in the NCAA would do anything to have the kind of nine days Michigan just completed -four wins and one loss, including victories over Michigan State and Bowling Green. However, only in the victory against the Spartans did the Wolverines showcase their full talents. Against Bowling Green, Ohio State and Notre Dame, Michigan looked very mortal. Fatigue was a possible factor. It is not often that a college hockey team is asked to play five games in eight days. But more than likely Michigan is just going through what every team must go through, and coming out of it virtually unscathed. "Every team has to go through some lapses and some hard times," senior captain Brian Wiseman said. "Hopefully we can get back on track soon and get playing our best hockey. A lot of attention has to go on what we've done. We've lost one (CCHA) game. Our record is pretty valid." The past week's struggles have highlighted the importance of goaltender Steve Shields to the team. The senior has given up a scant four goals in his last: four games and has consistently kept the team tied or ahead in contests that it probably should have been trailing. Michigan needed Shields more than ever Saturday when the Wolverines were actually outshot by the Irish, 33-27. That is just not supposed to happen. This is the team that Michigan pounded 13-2 Oct. 30. Michigan fans should not panic, however: This is an isolated problem in a very long season, and it should be noted that the team is only playing poorly by its own standards. It is a true honor to the program when four wins in five games constitutes a slump. The slump shouldn't last long, though. The Wolverines will play through their. problems, and may very well come back stronger than they were before. "A lot of people had started to come down on us asking if we're really good," Wiseman said. "We're just going through a lull and we'll get out of it." And remember, it is far better to play poorly at the end of January than it is at the end of March. By ANTOINE PITTS DAILY HOCKEY WRITER AUBURN HILLS - College Hockey Night at the Palace was certainly the place to be Saturday. For weeks advertisements in the local newspapers and across the local airwaves tried to get fans to attend the game between Michigan and Notre Dame. . The marketing staff at the Palace seemed to do a good job of promoting the game as an overflow crowd of 20,427 jammed the arena. The crowd broke last year's record of 18,275-setat Joe Louis Arena in a game between Michigan and Michigan State. "That's a tribute to the Palace," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "It's not what we did at Michigan to market this game. It's a tribute to the way they market their events." However, approximately 500 fans did not get to see the matchup between the Wolverines and Irish, being turned away at the door. Those fans were given tickets to an upcoming Pistons basketball games for their troubles. General admission tickets for the game were both sold and given away, creating the standing room only crowd. Palace officials tried to seat people wherever they could - even putting fans behind the media in the press box. The crowd sat relatively quiet during the game-except when "MAKE SOME NOISE" appeared on the Palace scoreboard. In the third period after a Michigan penalty, a unruly fan threwa puck on the ice after play had resumed. The game was the second in a four-year deal between Michigan, Notre Dame and the Palace to bring college hockey to the northern suburbs of Detroit. "One of the reasons was our crowds were getting so big that there were a lot of people that really couldn't see our games," Berenson said. "We felt the Palace would be just another chance for some of the Michigan fans that maybe don't live on campus but would like to see Michigan play hockey, but don't necessarily want to travel down to Joe Louis (Arena) either. "It's also a good experience for our kids to play in a big-league arena. We'd rather play on campus, in terms of the environment, but when you look at the big picture, I think it makes sense to play the odd game off campus." The next chance for Michigan fans to see the Wolver- ines play in a big-league arena will come Feb. 19 when they tangle with the Spartans at Joe Louis Arena. ROUNDUP Golden Flashes ==MPADA2take Lake St. to OT & GAMES PLAYED JAN. 29 ASSOCIATED PRESS 'Kurt'Miller'scaded on apower play 3:07 into overtime Saturday to give Lake Superior State a 6-5 win over Kent. Lake Superior State (12-8-2 CCHA, 18-9-2 overall) had a 4-0 lead at the end of the first period. Mark Kotary scored at 13:08 of the second, putting Kent (5-13-2, 10- 15-2) on the board. But Wayne Strachan answered with a power-play goal at 16:05 of the second, giving the Lakers a 5-1 lead. The Golden Flashes went on a four-goal scoring spree of their own, tying the score 5-5 at the end of regu- lation. Mario Lacasse stopped 16 Lake Superior shots in the third period and finished with 50 saves for the game. Sean Kulik made 25 saves for the Lakers in regulation and Paul Sass shut out the Flashes in over- time. Michigan St. 7, Ohio St. 4 Kelly Harper had two goals and assisted on another in Michigan State's 7-4 win over OhioSta$te.. Sacha Guilbault, who had three goals for the Buckeyes, opened the scoring at 5:01 of the first. But Michi- gan State took a 2-1 lead on a goal by Steve Guolla and a power-play score by Nicolas Perreault. The Spartans scored four straight goals in the second period for a 6 -1 lead. Ron White and Guilbault added two more for the Buckeyes, making the score 6-3. Guilbault scored again 31 sec- ond into the third. Harper's second goal at 19:03 ensured the Spartans win. Mike Buzak had 23 saves for Michigan State, before giving way to Eric Kruese in the third period. Kruese stopped 4 shots. Kurt Brown started in the net for Ohio State but was replaced by Tom Askey just 4:21 into the game without facing a shot. Askey had 33 saves in 55:16. Western Michigan 5, Ferris St. 1 Ryan D'Arcy had a goal and an assist, and Craig Brown stopped 42 shots as Western Michigan downed Ferris State, 5-1. After a scoreless first period, the Broncos (11-8-1, 14-9-2) took a 2-0 lead on goals by Derek Innanen and Derek Schooley in the second period. John Gruden scored Ferris State's (9-10-1, 10-15-1) only goal at 11:53 of the second on a power play. Shawn Zimmerman added another goal at 13:11 of the second, giving the Broncos a 3-1 lead. ColinWard and D' Arcy added third period goals for Western Michigan. Miami 5, Illinois-Chicago 2 Marc Boxer had two goals and two assists as Miami (Ohio) defeated Illinois-Chicago, 5-2. Mark Zdan gave Illinois-Chicago (5-14-1, 6-19-1) its first goal just 27 seconds into the game. Enrico Blasi tied the score on a power-play goal at 2:57 of the first. The Flames took the lead again on Matt McElwee's goal at 4:24 and the Redskins tied the score again on Kevyn Adams score at 16:55. Boxer gave Miami a 4-2 lead on a goal 13 seconds into the second period and another at 10:20. Shawn Penn added the Redskins' final goal on a power play at the 17:59 mark. Neither team scored in the third period. Of/ :: . Michigan Union Board of Representatives is accepting applications from students to sit on its Advisory Board. F 1 i UNN UNION Applications are available January 28 at the Campus Information Center in the Union and at the North Campus Information Center in the North Campus Commons. Applications due February 11 at 5pm. Return to Jennifer Pope, Room 1310 Michigan Union. UTTmD -er~. University of Michigan Winter Blood Drive We need your blood! The American Red Cross needs U of M students to help out. The sick and injured of Southeastern Michigan are depending on us. Giving blood is easy and takes less than an hour. Please take time to give the gift of life- Inrr _ A Cr nrtr-XTArr T nrhi-Th U U i 'I , Department of Recreational Sports INTRAMURAL SPORTS PROGRAM FREE THROW SHOOTING ll2t%,MV 1 rf i