The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday,_February 6, 1995 Q&A: EDMONTON VILERS FORWARD DAVID OLIVER Oi ver Former Wolverine hockey player talks about Michigan and life in the NHL Aftergraduating from Michigan a yearago,formerhockeyplayerDavid Oliver began his career in profes- sional hockey as an Edmonton Oiler. Daily sports writer Sarah DeMar recently spoke to Oliver about the transition from college hockey to pro *nd his days with Michigan. D: What did it feel like stepping onto the ice for the first time as an Edmonton Oiler? 0: It was the most unbelievable feeling of my life. It's something I've waited for quite a few years and for that to come through. D: How did you feel about the league going on strike during your Wbut year in the NHL? 0: It's kind of good and bad. It was bad because I made the team and I knew I was going to be able to play, and it was good in the way I got the experience in the minors and I got to play hockey. I'm better from the ex- perience than a lot of guys who haven't been playing the games. D: So it wasn't disappointing at all starting off for Cape Breton during 0e lockout? 0: Sure, it was disappointing, but I think it helped me in a big way. You need experience to play in the NHL and I got the experience down there. D: Do you get teased at all for being the rookie on the team? 0: Well, no. We have a few rookies on the team - you see, we have the youngest team in the NHL, g it's probably not as bad as it is in some places. The guys I'm playing with are great guys and they're there to help me out. You don't know really what to expect when you get there, but they've been tremendous. D: How do you like playing under coach Burnett as compared to Red Berenson? 0: It's going to take a little time. very time you change coaches it's a g adjustment and Red helped my game of hockey out so much that I owe him where I am today. As far as George goes, he'd the first coach to give me a shot to make my dream come true, so it's going to take a while before I can compare them. D: Now that you are back in Yost, do you miss playing for Michigan? 0: I'd like to be on the ice right Ww. I'll never forget this place - it was the four best years of my life. I get chills when I hear that announcer. D: Is the atmosphere of Northlands Coliseum similar to Yost's? 0: Not at all. I've only played there once, but it's a lot different. It's a real business there and you're get- ting paid to do ajob, so the fans expect to see you doing that job every night. ere it's more of a good time for the ns to come out and cheer on the score That's probably the biggest dif- ferences. If something goes wrong the fans are more likely to get on you rather than get behind you and try to push you through it. D: How does the 48 game sched- ule affect you physically? 0: Isat out my fourth game because I was a little tired, and I'm going to sit out here and there because I'm not really used to playing the pro season. It's a big adjustment and it will take a while - probably take a year or two. D: What is the major difference in level of play between college and pro hockey? hockey? 0:I went and tried out, but I didn't make it. I wasn't really hitting the boards well, so I wanted to come back for my senior year and I'm glad I did. D: What do you feel was the advantage of that? O: Well, I got more time. More time to learn and more experience. Like I said earlier, experience is the best thing; the more games you play, the better you're going to be. Playing under a guy like Red Berenson, you're going to get better every time you step onto the ice. D: Because you're from BC (Brit- dad had seen it. You couldn't write a better story. The way they acted...they might have been happier than I was! D: When you were growing up was Edmonton your favorite team'? Or Vancouver...? 0: Montreal. D: Montreal? Why is that? 0: It was probably the influence of my middle brother. He's a big Montreal fan and I kind-of got molded into being a Montreal fan all my life. I liked Edmonton and then when Wayne Gretzky came into the league I was a big Gretzky fan. That's probably when I started edging towards Edmonton. D: How did you get into hockey as a kid? 0: Both of my brothers played. One is seven years older than me and the other is six years older and they always have played. It's just some- thing I picked up from seeing them on the ice - I wanted to play. D: How did your parents influ- ence you to continue with it? 0: They never pushed me any which way. They always let me do what I wanted to do and I think they were the most obvious influence on me. D: Have you followed college hockey much this year now that you've moved on to the pros? 0: I follow these guys. Just Michi- gan. D: What do you think - can they win the NCAA title? 0: They better. I feel like I'm still a part of these guys. D: Do you ever think about last year's Lake Superior game during the playoffs? 0: Sure, but you got to move on. It was probably one of the biggest disappointments of my life. Our chance was right there and we had owned them all year, but then...yeah, I think about it often. D: What would you be doing if you weren't playing hockey'? 0: I'd be back here. D: Graduate school? 0: I'd be doing something with the school; I don't know exactly what it would be. I really miss this place. D: So do you think (freshman) Chris Fox can live up to your former jersey number'? 0: I hope so. He's on defense, though, so it's a little different, but he 1 has a long time to do it. RACHL BACHMAN Bach's Score Minnesota sports warn of what may be INNEAPOLIS - Saturday's basketball game against Minnesota exposed more than just Michigan's offensive scheme. Visit the Gophers' stomping grounds - Minneapolis - and behold a diorama of the state of fa sports. You have your classic '90s NBA team: the Timberwolves. Team focal point Christian Laettner is a whiner the likes of which became fodder for a recent Sports Illustrated cover story. Not even the state-of-the-art Target (as in shopping) Center was enough to give these guys a winning record. Next, there are the football Vikings, whose head coach just agreed to settle a sexual harassment case filed against him. The hockey team - formerly the Minnesota North Stars - was moved to Dallas a few years back by a man named Norm Green. The color of money surely was the only thing on his mind; how else could the state that produced 11 Miracle On Ice gold medalists in 1980 not have a hockey team? On to baseball. Ah, but no city has a team this year, does it? Even if the Twins did play ball come spring, it would be inside the plastic-fenced Metroidome. Metropolitan Stadium, the team's old, outdoor facility, eventually became the site of the Mall of America, a carnival of commercialism complete with mini-golf course and police force. With a pack of pro squads like that, the college teams stand out like a palm tree in New York City. As a result, the college game has been upgraded. The hockey team has a brand new arena; the basketball team a newly remodeled one. But with increased attention brought on in part by disenchanted pro fans came some unsettling side effects. Hoping to cash in on TV and night-game revenues, the Gopher football team moved to the Dome- quite a hike from campus-several years ago. And, at $158 a year, student season basketball tickets are the Big Ten's most expensive. What does the Minnesota trend mean to the average Wolverine fan'? Michigan, too, has seen hints of a pro sports culture developing at the collegiate level. The athletic department's contract with Nike may have helped some Michigan teams. But that didn't outweigh the fact that the school came off looking like Chevy Chase in a Dorito's commercial. Michigan has made some moves to safeguard the college mystique. Most notably, last fall, ofticials voted down a proposal to build luxury boxes in Michigan Stadium. But the threat is still there. Let our neighbors to the west serve as reminders not to let pro sports viruses like greed and power hungriness infect the college ranks. That is, not unless you want to see Foot Lockers on the concourse of Crisler Arena 0: There are two real big ones. One is probably the size of the guys - guys are so much bigger and so much faster, too. That's the other one. The pace of the game is so much quicker. It's something that takes a while to get used to. In college you have a lot of time to do it out on the ice, while up there the guys are going to do it right off the bat. It's tough. D: What do you think about Michigan's new, young team? 0: I think it's great. Once you play for a school, even when you leave you want to see them win. I got some great friends on the team and they're young, but good. D: Was it ever an option to leave Michigan early to play professional SPORTS INFORMATION ish Columbia) and your parents saw you first game, what did they say about seeing you score your first goal? O: They were in awe just as much as I was. Ijust kept things in my head. I didn't really know what to say to them - I couldn't really say any- thing. Itjust stuck there in my head all night and it was so hard to believe that the dream that I'd had for so long had actually come true and my mom and The razing of Metropolitan Stadium proved that in pro sports, you can't always go home again. I i 403 Introduction to American Sign Language Joan E. Smith February 1, 8, 15, & 22 Four Consecutive Wednesdays 4:00 - 5:00 pm Pendleton Room, Michigan Union Free of Charge Sponsored by: Services for Students with Disabilities Michigan Union University Unions - Associated Network Television (UU-ANT) STAFF AND FACULTY DEVELOPMENT rrll -_; - R X= qa EE91F Eks - Q&ls k-P, Qd - -42 ll The Department of Romance Languages and Literatures presents The Nineteenth Annual Hayward Keniston Lecture "How Can One Be a Caribbean Writer?" by Maryse Conde Visiting Professor, Harvard University Friday, February 10, 1995, 4:30 p.m. Schorling Auditorium, School of Education A reception will follow the lecture. 10 Great Reasons Why YOU Should Choose Air Force Nursing 1. Change, Challenge, Growth 2. Management opportunities early on 3. Rapid advancement 4. Advanced education 5. Opportunity to be selected for specialty training Here ii' ... Announce your Graduation in a way that is uniquely yours. Over 75 designs to choose from imprinted with your message in your own words. We will be on campus February 8, 1995 from 9 to 4 in the Michigan Union Ball Room at the African American Fair or call us for an appointment. 20% Oj (313) 494-6519-5 I Are you upset because your man has been keeping a secret relationship with his ex? IM..Is your husband upset because you haven't lost the weight you gained when you were pregnant.? S Are von devastated "STRAIGHT FROM THE COACH'S MOUTH"* (Talk Series) will feature RED BERENSON