The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, March 21, 1994- 5 'Seniors finally get CCHA tourney title By ANTOINE PITTS DAILY HOCKEY WRITER DETROIT - For the first three years of their careers, Michigan's run in the CCHA playoffs ended the same way. For seniors Chris Gordon, David 4)liver, Steve Shields, Mike Stone and Brian Wiseman, a loss to Lake Superior State ended their chances of a CCHA championship every year. Even with all the awards the team claimed at the CCHA banquet Thurs- day night, there was one league award that until Sunday, Michigan had never been able to lay its hands on in 13 ears of CCHA play. With the 3-0 victory over the Lak- ers, those seniors earned the confer- ence tournament championship in their last attempt. "It's huge," said Mike Stone, named the tournament's most valu- able player. "It's great after all those years of getting beat by Lake Supe- rior State in this tournament." The five Michigan seniors - in- 'luding Gordon, who wasn't in uni- form - claimed their prize at the end of the ice and carried it back to center ice, hoisted above their heads for all to see. "This is a big thing for the se- niors," freshman forward Jason Botterill said after Saturday's victory over Western Michigan that put the Wolverines in the final. "There's not nuch they have to say, you can see it n their eyes." Three of those seniors were instru- mental in yesterday's championship game. It was Wiseman who finally 'We wanted this really badly. It's eluded us a couple of times in the past years.' Brian Wiseman Michigan captain broke Blaine Lacher's scoreless streak in the first period, while at the other end Shields stymied the Lakers - stop- ping everything they sent his way. Stone's MVP performance not only included a goal in the championship, but his usual brand of defensive play as well. "If you watched late in the game when they had the goalie out, they had the puck at the point," Michi- gan coach Berenson said. "Who comes out to block the shot but Mike Stone. Lake Superior was attempting to tie the record for most CCHA tourney titles in a row, however the Michigan seniors would not be denied their taste of glory. "We wanted this really badly," Wiseman said. "It's eluded us a couple of times in the past years." In 1991 and 1992 the Wolverines fell to the Lakers in the championship game, and last year, lost to them in the semifinal. Yesterday's victory avenged all of those losses, giving Gordon, Oliver, Shields, Stone and Wiseman the prize they have missed since coming to Michigan. Team effort propels Blue to champinship By PAUL BARGER DAILY HOCKEY WRITER Individuals can shine throughout a season, but it takes a real team effort to win a championship. The Michigan hockey team was the portrait of a team yesterday, defeating Lake Superior to earn its first-ever CCHA tournament title. This was the game that the seniors desperately wanted and they gave the performance to get the job done. What the seniors registered on the stat sheets pales in comparison to their overall contribution to the team. The facts speak for themselves. Captain Brian Wiseman scored Michigan's first goal, ending the NCAA record streak of 375:01 scoreless minutes posted by Laker goaltender Blaine Lacher. Mike Stone solidified his position as tournament most valuable player with the final goal in the 3-0 victory. Steve Shields, overshadowed by Lacher's five consecutive shutouts, answered the doubters with a shutout of his own. It is, however, an intangible quality that these players have that willed the team to victory. "We could see it in their eyes," freshman Jason Botterill said. After three years of frustration, Wiseman, Stone, Shields, David Oliver and Chris Gordon got what they wanted, and deserved. On the verge of the end of their careers, they pulled off the magical victory that had eluded them for so long. However, they would have never gotten the opportunity if it were not for the help of their less-experienced teammates. This weekend was big-time hockey and the freshmen never flinched. In fact, as a unit, they played about as well as they could have been asked to. Saturday afternoon, in the semifinal game against Western Michigan, the freshmen accounted for five of the six Wolverine goals. The Wolverines would not have been able to limit the Lakers to an incredible 15 shots, in the finals, if it were not for the contributions of freshmen defensemen Chris Frescoln, Harold Schock and Blake Sloan. Sloan was rewarded by being named to the All-Tourna- ment team. "We have great quality freshmen that stepped up and played well," Wiseman said. "They really focused on what we had to do this weekend. That comes from our senior leadership straight down through our junior and sophomore classes" SThiswas also a weekend where the overlooked deserved Stone to be recognized. Shields, Wiseman, and Oliver have been the glamour players all year, but they will be the first to admit that their teammates deserve as much credit as they do. When Stone went out to receive the MVP trophy, one could be sure the other seniors were smiling. Stone is truly a coach's dream. He will play anywhere and do anything. He is one of the nation's best penalty killers, who has been inserted into all four lines and on the power play units. "He does so many things," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "He gives us an element of desperation and second effort and he'll sacrifice anything for this team." This weekend Michigan regained the edge that they had seemingly lost. Everyone came together at the ideal time and quieted the critics. The freshmen helped the seniors on Saturday and the seniors returned the favor on Sunday. With depth like this, Michigan will be tough to beat in the NCAA tournament. If the Wolverines can keep the edge and repeat this weekend's team effort, there will be much bigger and better celebrations in the near future. JONATHAN LU IEJba.y Steve Shields and the rest of the Michigan seniors captured their first CCHA tournament title this weekend with a 3-0 shutout of Lake Superior State. The Lakers had won the last three conference tourney championships. 'M' could face Lakers again in NCAA tourney By PAUL BARGER and AESON ROSENFELD AILY HOCKEY WRITERS For the last two years, CCHA pow- ers Michigan and Lake Superior State have both reached college hockey's Final Four. It will not be happening again this year. As expected, the seeding commit- tee gave the Wolverines the top seed in the West region. However, it sur- prisingly placed the Lakers in the West as the fourth seed, setting up a possible second-round matchup be- tween the two teams in East Lansing Sunday. The committee has assured that Michigan's hockey game will not conflict with the Wolverines' pos- sible NCAA-tournament basketball game. "Seeding Lake State behind (Mas- sachusetts-) Lowell is hard to figure," Berenson said. "I am surprised to see that we were matched up against them so early." Lake State coach Jeff Jackson an- ticipated a two seed after his team lost to Michigan, 3-0, in the CCHA finals yesterday. "I do believe (we deserve a two- seed) over Minnesota because we beat them head-to-head, and we have a better overall record," Jackson said. "They can take the RPI indicator, or whatever they call it, and stick it some place. 'Seeding Lake State behind (Massachusetts-) Lowell is hard to figure. I am surprised to see that we were matched up against them so early.' - Red Berenson Michigan hockey coach The RPI indicator to which Jack- son so blatantly referred is the Rating Percentage Index, one of the five cri- teria used by the NCAA seeding com- mittee to select the tournament field. The index is a team power rating based on winning percentage, strength. of schedule and opponents' schedule strength. The other four criteria considered are head-to-head record, record against common opponents, record in the last 20 games and record against teams under consideration. According to committee chairman Tom Conley, these criteria almost fully determine which teams will be included in the field of 12. "The coaches want it decided on the ice (and not by a subjective com- mittee)," Conley said. "We feed it in the computer and it spits it out." The computer was favorable to the CCHA and Hockey East, admit- ting four teams from each. Western Michigan and Michigan State join Michigan and Lake State to repre- sent the CCHA, while No.1 East- seed Boston University, Massachu- setts-Lowell, New Hampshire and Northeastern are Hockey East's con- tingent. "It's great for the league," West- ern coach Bill Wilkinson said. "We've been snuffed enough. I am sure they are very excited back in Kalamazoo. I'm just ecstatic." The Western Collegiate Athletic Association (Minnesota, Wisconsin) and East Coast Athletic Conference (Harvard, RPI) only received two bids each. Regular- season WCHA cham- pion, Colorado College, was among those left out of the tournament. They are joined by St. Cloud State, Clarkson and Brown as teams whose bubble burst. "I don't think anyone around the country wouldn't agree that a league champion should get in," Minnesota coach Doug Woog said. "I definitely think our conference got slighted." Conley offered justification for Colorado College not being included. "I think you have to look at Colo- rado College's strength of sched- ule," Conley said. "I think they played Michigan Tech seven times. Michigan Tech was having a down year." Year Result 1948 Champions 1949 1950t 1951 1952 1953 1954 1955 1956 1957 1962 1964 19 77 1991 1992 1993 Third Place Third Place Champions Champions Champions Third Place Champions Champions Second Place Third Place Champions Second Place Fifth Place Semifinalist Semifinalist Michigan In the last three years: First Round, Ann Arbor (Best-of-three series) Cornell 5, Michigan 4 (OT) Michigan 6, Cornell 4 Michigan 9, Cornell 3 Quarterfinals, Boston (Best-of-three series) Boston U. 5, Michigan 1 Boston U. 8, Michigan 1 Quarterfinals, Detroit Michigan 7, N. Michigan 6 Semifinals, Albany, N.Y. Wisconsin 4, Michigan 2 1993 Quarterfinals, Detroit Michigan 4, Wisconsin 3 (OT) Semifinals, Milwaukee, Wis. Maine 4, Michigan 3 (OT) JONATHAN LURIE/Daily Michigan's Mike Stone celebrates a Wolverine goal in Saturday's semifinal game against Western Michigan. Michigan won the game, 6-4. CCHA Continued from page 1 Stone's contributions cannot be measured by statistics, but if one *tat is an indication of how he helped the team, it is shots on goal. The Lakers had only 15, compared to 28 for Michigan. "I define my role as a defensive player," said Stone, who has played in the shadow of fellow seniors Wiseman. David Oliver. and goalie think you will see the Lakers in St. Paul (for the Final Four.) Hope- fully, Michigan will be there too." Saturday against Western Michi- gan, the Wolverines scored three straight third-period goals - in- cluding two shorthanded tallies on a single power play - to take a 5-2 lead. The Broncos fought back, clos- ing to within 5-3. Western Michigan then pulled IC HA FIAL EIC~HGAN S. LAKE SUPERIOR 0 goalie Craig Brown and narrowed the deficit to one before Jason Botterill scored an empty-net goal to seal the 6-4 victory for Michigan and put the Wolverines in the title game. MICHIGAN 6, WESTERN MICHIGAN 4 western Micnlgan .e p - Michi an 2 0 4--6 First Period -1, UM, Sittler 8 (Hilton, Legg), 4:20 (pp). 2, WMU, Kenny 1 (Mayers), 7:25.3, WMU, Brooks 12 (Brekke, Innanen) 12:23 (pp). 4, UM, Madden 6 (Stone, Frescoln) 17:45. Penalties - Brown, WMU (hooking), 3:57; Botterill, UM (high- 'U ,.. -.., I