The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday. March 14, 1993 - 5 " Honeymoon is over for defense There was a time, not so long ago, when Michigan was living in hockey wonderland. It was a land where the goals looked wider than the gap in David Letterman's front teeth. The opposition's defensemen must have looked as *mobile as ice-bound Chris Farleys. And it's goalie had all the speed of a hungover mailcarrier. And no one in wonderland asked if Michigan was good enough to win a national title. Everyone knew they were. But the Wolverines, aren't in wonderland anymore. Some might say that Saturday's 10-3 win over Kent State signaled their return. While Michigan looked as j impressive as it had earlier in the season, drubbing a last place team JAESON is what national championship ROSENFELD contenders are supposed to do. Feld of They aren't supposed to eke out Dreams a 5-4 victory in overtime as Michigan did Friday night. And now everyone is asking, as they should be, "Does Michigan have what it takes to win it all?" The answer, as any good politician would tell you, is an emphatic maybe. The Wolverines' fate in the CCHA finals and NCAA playoffs rests with the defense. "Our efforts are going to be focused on playing good defense," Michigan coach Red Berenson said before the Kent series. "We have to do a better job of protecting our goalie and not giving up unearned goals." Friday night, the Wolverines did not protect Steve Shields, resulting in four goals by a team that had won one of its last 18. "They had breakaways, two-on-ones, three-on-ones, screened shots from the point," said Berenson Friday. Had the Wolverines been playing a Lake Superior or a Michigan State, the goal count would have surely been much higher than four. Earlier in the season, the offense often bailed out the defense by putting the game away early. The blueliners certainly never had to worry about shutting out the other team, or even allowing just a goal or two. And when the big guns of the CCHA showed up, Shields usually caught fire, stopping everything in sight. The defense could play decent hockey and the " Wolverines would still win. But during the pre-playoff slump, the nets no longer sucked in Michigan shots, and Shields let a few get by. And the Wolverines lost. The Wolverines could win without defense, but they couldn't win without offense. The point of all this is that Michigan isn't going to score five or six goals against a national championship contender. Lake State goalie Blaine Lacher has held the opponent scoreless in his last four starts. Michigan isn't going to have a big lead to fall back on against a quality opponent. The defense will have to play like it did Saturday night, allowing only ten shots on goal. And every forward will have to do his part getting back and helping. The blueliners don't have to play mistake-free hockey for Michigan to win - Shields will bail them out most of the time. They do have to play very well, though. Gone are the ten goal games. Gone is the land of goalies with the reflexes of drunken mail carriers. The Wolverines are no longer in wonderland. , They are in the playoffs. Lakers ready for another title By PAUL BARGER DAILY HOCKEY WRITER Nov. 5, 1993 was the turning point of the season. The Lake Superior State Lakers were the No.1 team in the nation and were preparing to host the Michigan Wolverines in an important early season contest. The Wolverines walked out of Sault Ste. Marie with an impressive 4-2 victory and began to roll towards a CCHA regular season title. The Lakers were given two more opportunities to defeat The Road The Joe * N~ C Mac 10 that their in the backW the Wolverines, Jan. 7-8 in Ann Ar- bor. In the first game Michigan's cap- tain Brian Wiseman scored an over- time goal that all but clinched first place for the hosts. Michigan man- aged a more decisive victory the next night, winning by three goals. Still, Lake State looms large in the playoffs. The Lakers have ended Michigan's hopes for a CCHA cham- pionship three consecutive years and the seniors are thinking of revenge. "We've got to beat somebody (winner of the Bowling Green-Mi- ami game) to play them," senior David Oliver said. "There's no doubt of our minds, especially the seniors. JONATHAN LURIE/Daily Junior forward Mike Knuble scores for the Wolverines in the third period of Michigan's 5-4 overtime victory Friday. KENT Continued from page 1. on a positive note," Shields said. "It doesn't seem real. It's been an unbe- lievable four years. We're all really sorry to see it go by. "We all have to get on with the rest of our lives, but this is four years of my life that I'll never forget." If Saturday's game belonged to Michigan from the start, thenFriday's series opener was a complete oppo- site. The Golden Flashes outplayed the Wolverines for most of the game, leading at one point by two goals. Oliver scored 31 seconds into the overtime period after a giveaway to end Kent's upset bid. How the Wolverines got to over- time was justias interesting as how they finished it, though. Michigan trailed 4-3 in the third period until a Wiseman goal with 6:27 left knotted the game. Jason Botterill fed Wiseman, who dove to get some wood on the puck to get it past Shaw. "He's the captain of our team," Oliver said. "He showed a lot of heart. He was determined to get that puck in the net." The Wolverines fell behind in the game, 1-0, in the first period. Michi- gan failed to convert on four straight power play opportunities and man- aged only five shots for the period. "The first period might have been our worst period all year," Berenson said. "I don't what it was, but I can't believe how poorly we played in the first period. "I'm happy we won. I feel very lucky because it could have been the other way." Kent led 2-0 before the Wolverines could even get on the board. Back-to- back goals by Wiseman and Oliver tied the game, but the Flashes retook the lead going into the third period. Knuble scored to tie the game MICHIGAN 5, KENT STATE 4 (OT) Kent State 1 2 I O-4 Michigan 0 2 2 1-5 RirstPeriod - 1, KSU, Thornbury 8 (Fair), 2:14. Penalties - Mainhardt, KSU (tripping), 3:49; Sabo, KSU (cross-check- ing), 5:24; Mischke, KSU (holding), 6:50; KSU bench, served by Drouin (too many men), 9:13; Knuble, UM (hooking), 10:45; Willis, UM (roughing), 12:36; Gunderson, KSU (cross-checking), 18:28; Mischke, KSU (roughing), 18:28; Legg, UM (roughing), 18:28; Madden, UM (roughing), 18:28. Second Period - 2, KSU, Sabo 3, 1:47. 3, UM, Wiseman 16 (Oliver), 3:09. 4, UM, Oliver 25 (Wiseman), 13:18 (pp). 5, KSU, Pain 1 (Drouin, Sabo), 18:19. Penalties - Thornbury, KSU (holding), 12:54; Stone, UM (hooking), 13:30; Schock, UM (checking from behind), 15:38. Third Period - 6, UM, Knuble 30 (Morrison, Schock), 1:01.7, KSU, Raygor9 (Muldoon, Mitchell), 2:32.8, UM, Wiseman 17 (Botterill), 13:33. Penalties - Krosky, KSU (roughing), 4:55. Overtime -9, UM, Oliver 26, :31. Pen-: alties - None. Shots on goal - KSU 10-10-0-28. UM 5-11-17-1-34. Power plays - KSUO of 4, UM 1 of 6. Goalie saves - KSU, Shaw 5-9-15-0- 29. UM, Shields 9-8-7-0-24. Referees - John Dovrzelewski, Jeff Shell. Unesman - John Haneberg. At: Yost Ice Arena. A: 4,462. again, but Kent's Erik Raygor an- swered a minute and a half later to give the Flashes a 4-3 and set up the dramatic finish. Michigan receives a bye for the next round of the playoffs. The Wol- verines will face the Western Michi- gan-Miami winner in Saturday's semifinals. MICHIGAN 10, KENT STATE 3 Kent State 1 1 1-3 Michigan 4 4 2-10 First Period -1, UM, Knuble 31 (Morrison). :34. 2, UM, Luhning 11(Halko, Sittler), 3:29 (pp). 3, UM, Luhning 12 (Halko, Legg), 4:44 (pp). 4, KSU, Kotary 19 (Sabo, Thombury), 6:35 (pp). 5, UM, Oliver 27 (Knuble, Morrison), 12:06 (pp). Penalties- Kotary, KSU (slashing), 2:09; Kotary, KSU (holding). 4:38; Knuble, UM (tripping), 5:04; Mischke, KSU (interference), 12:00; Sinclair, UM (interference), 12:41; Mitchell, KSU (high-stick- ing), 13:00; Sloan, UM (cross-checking), 13:00; Sakala, UM (high-sticking). 17:14; Mitchell, KSU (roughing), 17:14; Drouin, KSU (high-sticking), 17:24; Sabo, KSU (cross-checking), 19:31. Second Period - 6, UM, Hilton 11 (Sittler, Shields), 1:35. 7, KSU, D. Sylvester 22 (Kotary, Morin),8:02 (pp). 8, UM, Wiseman 18(Halko),14:06. 9, UM, Willis 8 (Luhning, Schock), 14:44. 10, UM Sittler 7 (Legg, Stone), 18:08. Penalties - Dartsch, KSU (roughing), 2:08; Luhning, UM (roughing), 2:08; Mainhardt, KSU (slashing), 4:56; [egg, UM (interfer- ence), 7:25; Krosky, KSU (holding), 9:04; Mainhardt, KSU (crosschecking), 14:44; Fair, KSU (slashing), 16:03; Watt, KSU (roughing), 18:57. Third Period-11, KSU, Thombury 9 (Drouin, Kotar), 11:34. 12, UM. Morrison 19 (Stone), 12:41. 13, UIM, Knuble 32 (Sloan), 13:35. Penal- ties - Raygor, KSU (roughing), 7:52; Dartsch, KSU, double minor (checking from behind, rough- ing), 14:19; Luhning, UM (roughing), 14:19; Schock, UM (holding stick), 15:10; Sabo, KSU (interference), 16:09: Morrison, UIM (roughing), 16:39; Botterill, UM, double minor (roughing), 10 minute misconduct, 16:39; Kotary, KSU (rough- ing), 16:39; Krosky, KSU, double minor (rough- ing), 10 minute misconduct, 16:39; Sabo, KSU (crosschecking), 18:29. Shots on goal-KSU 5-4-1-10. UM 17-22- 20-59. Power plays.- KSU 2 of 3, UM 3 of 14. Goalie saves - KSU, Shaw 13-18-18--49. UM, Shields 4-3-X-7, Gordon (:00 third) X-X-O- Referees - Perry Petterle, Jim Breach. Unesman - John Nowosatka. At: Yost Ice Arena. A: 5,456 They've knocked us out three years in a row." The Lakers have relied on goaltender Blaine Lacher for most of the season. The junior led the.CCHA in goals against average (1.91) and save percentage (.919) and is a prime candidate for All-American honors. Lacher is the hottest player in the league registering four straight shut- outs, including two in the first round of the CCHA play- offs. Lacher was recognized as the CCHA defensive player of the week, for the second time this year, after his performance against Kent, March 4-5. Lake State's offense has picked up the pace as well and finished the season with a 4.27 goals per game average. Senior Clayton Beddoes leads the squad with 19 goals and 22 assists in league play. Sophomore Sean Tallaire has picked up where he left off last year, scoring 35 points in the regular season. "Obviously they are playing well," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "They look like the team to beat right now. Their style of play is more conducive to playoff hockey." Their recent history speaks for itself: three consecu- tive CCHA titles, two straight Final Fours, national cham- pionships in 1988 and 1992. The confidence that this success has produced gives them a psychological edge. They may be going into the playoffs in second place, but they are still kings of the mountain. Conventional wisdom points to a Lake Superior-Michi- gan showdown Sunday. The Wolverines will then have one more chance to knock the Lakers from their perch and bring home their first ever CCHA post season title. -The Daily will preview the teams remaining in the CCHA title hunt all this week. ICCHA~ FIRST~ ~ ROUN RIi I'N1 rr Fiday's games: Saturday's game: Mich 5, Kent 4 (OT) Mich. 10, Kent 4 Lake St. 5, Ohio St. 0 Lake St,8, Ohio St. 0 UIC 4, Michigan St. 3 W. Mich. 7, Notre Dame 1 W. Mich. 6, Notre Dame 3 8. Green 3, Ferris 2 (OT) Miami 5, Ak.-Fairbanks 3 AK-Fairbanks 6, Miami 1 Bowling Green 3, Ferris 0 Mich. St. 2, UIC 1 (OT) Sunday's games:. Miami 4, Alaska-Fairbanks 3 Michigan St. 8, Illinois-Chicago 3 WILLIS Continued from page 1 infraction, and awards Willis a penalty shot. "He said to me before the shot, 'Now you're sure you want to score,"' Willis said. "I said, 'Yeah.' "So Coach said, 'Then go in there and bury it."' Willis grabs the puck at center ice, skates in close to Gordon and rifles a shot into his midsection. "I tried to put it through his stomach," Willis said with a grin on his face. "Afterwards, (Berenson) caught ip with me and said, 'Now I know you want to score. Now I am going to ;how you how to score," Willis said going into full-fledged laughter. Willis' laughter didn't last long hough, as Berenson's instructions Iopped into his head. "He told me Gordon is a ,utterfly goalie, so right away you've got to be going upstairs," Nillis said. "And if you're going to ;hoot you've got to shoot from at s east the hash marks. And if he omes out too far, fake the shot and o around him." Contained in this incident is verything you need to know about Nillis. On the ice he is a fierce competitor nd hard-worker who absorbs verything the coaches tell him. Off the ice he is laid back, and not *.fraid to laugh at himself or others. Often people laugh at Willis' 1oston accent, which he takes in s ride. "When I get in front of my e lucation class and teach a skill or S +mething, I try to over-pronounce ny r's (pronounced ahhh's) and it start playing said, 'I've never seen a pair of feet like that in my life,"' Rick's mother Annette said. "He was just a good skater." Willis developed his hard-nosed playing style at a young age. "He was always the one to stick his nose in the corner and dig the puck out," said Jim Fullerton, who coached Willis from age five until high school. As a youngster, Willis displayed intensity uncharacteristic of kids his age, according to his father. "We went to go buy Ricky a pair of skates when he was 12 years old," Rick Willis, Sr. recounts, "and there was a (high school) hockey game going on. He didn't even care about the skates, didn't care abou the new toys or sticks like most kids would. "He just stood in the bleachers, hands in his pockets, pacing back- and-forth, and watched the game. All by himself. He was always in the game." It's this type of intensity that turned Willis into a fierce hitter as a high school player. He started off his prep career at the Pingree School of South Hamilton, Mass., where he both scored and bodied opponents. His sophomore year, Willis tallied 22 goals and added 28 assists, including a goal in a 4-2 loss in the New England Prep School finals to the Gunnery School. That year, Willis also become known for his trademark physicality. "One time I had a coach come down and start yelling, 'Get that kid off the ice! He's nuts! Get him off the ice! "' Willis said. Willis, though, was hard to slow down. "(Pingree) was beating them like 6-3, and Ricky was just totally intense that game," Rick, Sr. recalled. "I school. The decision to change schools, according to Willis, was a difficult one. "It was (hard) to leave," Willis said. "Academically, it helped me, and I needed to find out what it was like to get away. It was a great experience." Because of his year at Northwood, Willis had an easier time choosing Michigan over eastern schools. The CCHA's physical nature convinced Willis that he belonged in Maize and Blue. "He enjoyed the CCHA's style of play. We saw them play Lake Superior (when we visited)," Rick, Sr. "We were sitting in the stands and he said to me, 'Dad, I can play out here."' N1. It's Friday night and Willis is ready to rumble. He has completed his pre-game ritual - a nap followed by an hour of pumping up to the music of Van Halen and Metallica - and he's wound up. It's midway through the first period, and the crowd sits lethargically in the stands of Yost, waiting for someone or something to get them on its feet. When Kent State scores an early goal, Yost turns into a moratorium. That is, until Willis bursts onto the scene. He comes on for his first shift and skates like a juggernaut across the ice belting a pair of Kent players into the board with one check. The crowd goes nuts. But Willis isn't done yet. He hustles down to the Kent end and nails another Golden Flash on the forecheck. Next Willis skates across center ice and throws another check, and then proceeds down to the corner and hits his fifth Kent (the crowd) could get you going during the game, how they can motivate you," Willis said. The following night, the crowd spurs Willis again, this time talking him into checking a Kent player and a referee in close proximity. Both end up sitting on the ice. ** It's when a Michigan player sits in the penalty box, though, that Willis shows his true strength. He and Mike Stone are the core of college hockey's third-best penalty killing unit, and the unit's success owes much to their tremendous drive. "(Willis) and Mike Stone set the standard (for work ethic) on this team," Wolverine assistant Pearson said. "When the younger guys see how hard (Willis) works, shift after shift, it definitely rubs off." Willis roams the middle in man- down situations, using his strength to tie-up skaters and his speed to forecheck after Michigan clears the puck. The forward relishes this role. "(The penalty killing) gives me a lot of ice time and gets me into the game," Willis said. "I enjoy defensive hockey. There's a lot of room to skate and it gives me a good chance to wheel and hit some people." Willis' penchant for hitting also comes in handy when the Wolverines need a little more room to work. For that reason, Coach Berenson skated him on the first line, with Wiseman and David Oliver, against Miami two weeks ago. "For skill players to have space, they need other players who are strong, physical players," Lake Superior coach Jeff Jackson said. "He's as good a checking forward, and I think more than that at times, as there is in our conference." Willis will have a chance to continue his career after college. Attracted by Willis' quick feet and body work, the New York Rangers selected Willis in the fourth round of the 1990 Entry Draft. "When we drafted him, we felt he was a very good skater," Rangers assistant general manager/ player development Larry Pleau said. "He was a feisty kid in high school. The biggest thing was he was an aggressive, hard-nosed winger with good skating ability. "By the looks of it, if he's going to play in the NHL, he'd have to play the role of a fourth-line type player. Is he good enough? That's only going to be known in time." Willis looks forward to having a shot at the NHL, but also knows that when hockey is over, he has a Michigan education to fall back on. MARK FRIEDMAN/Daily kid. They love him." As a part of their curriculum, Willis and Knuble also "observe" gym classes at the Abbott school. "We're supposed to be taking notes, but we're in there doing stuff with the kids. It's fun," Willis said. "And once they find out we're hockey players, we have to go around to all the classes and sign autographs." So does Willis ever throw a little check into the youngsters? "Oh, yeah," Willis said with a chuckle. But at this moment, Willis' mind is far from teaching kids or the National Hockey League. NCAAs are approaching, and the junior aspires to something that has eluded him twice before: a national championship. "We believe it can happen," said Willis of the team's chances. "We ran An 4 ",