The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, January 23, 1995 - 7 £LOAN Continued from page 1 "I had personal ties to many of them," Rick said. "But the skills you came with were the schools you left with." So it was off on a three-day, 12 school excursion to look at New En- gland prep schools, assuming that he vould not get a scholarship to college or play beyond the high school level. In narrowing his field ofchoices based on academic reputation, he chose Ta- bor Academy in Boston where an old friend, Edward Kelly, was a history teacher and the hockey coach. Rick Sloan had coached teams which competed against Kelly's former squad at Cranbrook in Farmington ills, Mich. where Kelly took interest i the tagalong kid. "He always had, even when he was little, extraordinary balance and quick- ness," said Kelly, of the boy who won a silver medal at the World Junior Championship in Hungary for Kata Kumite (a martial arts fighting tech- nique) when he was 13 years old. "He may have been misunderstood because of his size by some, but I think the *alent was always there." Sloan had chosen Tabor essentially because of Kelly. But after his junior year, Kelly left due to administrative differences and Sloan remained, dis- heartened and unsupported by the in- centive which led him there. Kelly had met with Sloan's mom and hesitantly agreed that Sloan should stay. But when the program's focus changed nd winning wasn't enough anymore, e decided to leave. After struggling with the move, he transferred to two different schools before graduating, all the while play- ing for his new team - the Boston Jr. Bruins. More importantly, he was un- der the tutelage of one Edward Kelly. Michigan's offer to Sloan could not have come at a better time. It was in November, in the early signing pe- *iod, that provided him not only the security to play college hockey, but the greatest honor of his career. Of his awards, which include "Best Defenseman" of 1992's Hockey Night inBoston and 1994CCHA All-Rookie team, he deems his greatest honor to be his scholarship and the "incredible edu- cation" he gets while playing hockey. He was in awe of Michigan's corps .ofplayers which included adefenseof Chris Tamer, Pat Neaton, David Rob- erts and Aaron Ward. "The timing was excellent for him to come in to Michigan," Berenson said. "We lost our top four defenseman and. we recruited four freshman defensemen. If we had to rate the in- coming defensemen, we would have rated Blake Sloan as No. 1." Assistant coach Billy Powers was Michigan's key link to Sloan, yet things could have worked out quite differ- ently for the Morton Grove, Ill. native had Powers still been at Illinois-Chi- cago recruiting local kids to return to homeice. Powers, whohailsfromMas- sachusetts, knows many east coast coaches which made it easy to find an Illinois player when he needed to. When Powers moved on to Michigan, he ac- tively kept track of Sloan. "For a guy his size, he was always involved every shiftin taking the body," Powers said. "He would go back in the corner andpay the price to get the puck. There was no sense of fear for Blake Sloan." Sloan does not give himself the respect and credit that others do. Typi- cal of his attitude is his reaction to his pass on Bill Muckalt's overtime goal against Lake Superior State Jan.14. Saying he played a"horrible game," Sloan would trade a stronger defensive effort for that game-winning play. If you ask Sloan where his game needs improvement, he'll say every- thing from his shot to his pivots. But what do coaches and teammates say? They could not identify one weakness. Ifhe has one weakness, it's that, "he didn't select his parents very well and consequently, he' not six-three," his dad said. Sloan's roommate and teammate of two years Jason Botterill said, "He has the attitude that he's a 6-foot-3, 200-pound defenseman out there. When you play like that, you can be an intimi- dating factor," the 6-foot-4, 209- pound forward said. Depending on the day and resources you consult, he is anywhere from 5 feet 9 to 5 feet 11. But the only person who would hold his size against him is a first-time opponent. "We used to laugh because we think he hits the six-footers at rib-cage level and ... it hurts," Kelly said. "I think he did shock them." According to defen- sive partner Steven Halko, pound for pound, he's the strongest player on Michigan's team, even at his off side. "The two first met when they par- ticipated in the WorldJuniorCamp the summer before Sloan came to Michi- gan. Halko's first impression was simi- lar to what many assume of this smaller defenseman. "He looked small when I first saw him, but then when I saw the way he played, sometimes you just miss the fact that he's not as tall as say a lot of defenseman, but he plays a lot bigger." While Sloan did make the U.S. World Junior team last year as the seventhdefenseman, hedidn'tthis year. But he was content to spend the Holi- days with his mother and sister. "I had such a rotten time last year," Sloan said. "Maybe I wasn't the best defenseman there. Butwhenguys broke rules from the team and when guys did things that were inappropriate in public that coach told us specifically not todo and then were rewarded with ice time, it was really pretty hard on me just sitting there watching, especially be- cause we were losing." Sloan had always been taught that working hard and acting responsibly resulted in the best rewards, but in doing so, he found himself skating about one shift a period. This ice time is certainly nothing like the minutes he shares with Halko at Michigan. Halko, called the "calm- ing influence" of Sloan's game, urges Sloan to slow down and think the game as well as play it. "He brings a lot of intensity to the rink," Halko said. And yeah, I find myself being the calm one and him getting riled up, but alot of other times, I have to catch myself being the excited one and trying to do too much. Blake will pull me aside; it goes both ways." Halko and Sloan have played to- gether since last season and room together on the road. From this rou- unquote stupid' things that make no difference in the way I play." Others have noticed the change in his attitude too. "The kid has made incredible strides,"Powers said. "He'sjust some- one you can put on the ice and you feel so good aboutplaying him 25-30 min- utes. You feel as if your team has a great chance of winning if Blake Sloan is one the ice. You wish you had five more of them." With such intensity and dedication, Sloan fully commits himself to any- thing from the most mundane chores, like doing dishes in dorm cafeterias of Tabor, to his school work. He hides from his sometimes noisy housemates in "The Dungeon," i.e. his room in the basement of his house, to study. And he does need time to recuper- ate. He has had four minor concussions this season, which he insists are caused by hits to his Jay Leno-type chin. Every practice is as competitive as a game to Sloan and he is always out to prove himself. That traces back to his Bantam days of inpressing the older kids. He never assumes that he is one of the starting defensemen. - "Every week I still look to see if my number is on the board to even suit up. It would kill me to know that I didn't have a good week in practice and still be put in the lineup." Of all the inspirational sayings he mounts on the walls, Sloan's favorite is: "Millions of college students know that Force = Mass x Acceleration, but only a handful know how it feels." Anyone who has played against Blake Sloan does. i s -DOUGLAS iANTER/Daily Despite his 5-foot-9 frame, Blake Sloan wards off bigger players with ease. tine comes about the worst thing to be said of Sloan. He often forgets his toothpaste on road trips. That is also the only thing he does wrong that does not upset him. "One of my faults throughout my hockey career has been my mental limitations Iputon myself," said Sloan, admitting that superstitions and pre- game routines used to play an integral role in his performance. It is ironic that his greatest attribute - his per- fectionism - is often his biggest fault. "If something used to go wrong, I would've collapsed," he says. 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