-----4 8 - The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, March 6, 1995 To some, however, TURCO Turco is too much at ease. Continured from page 1 "A lot of people are kind of nervous when they first "The majority of the time she's a meet him," says Alma, defenseman, but she was the fastest Marty's mother, "because one out there." he's so nonchalant about 6 Shadowed by such a competitive everything. older sister, Michigan goalie Marty "I would read articles Turco didn't win all the games him- about other goalies, and self at his family's backyard rink usually they're real uptight. when he was growing up. If any- That's not my son." body could deal with being that kid Michigan coach Red on the left, the one who had to watch Berenson said "(Steve) his sister grab all the glory, it was Shields was more irratio- him. nal," of his goalie last sea- "I just try to stay positive and let son. "Marty's calm; he things come," the younger Turco doesn't get rattled." says. "If I start to get down on my- Shields may have been{ self, that's only letting our team nervous at times, but he down." managed to achieve his It's one thing to be as cool as ice share of success at Michi- in everyday life. Being that way gan. He left behind two while a puck flies at you and thou- items of note: a record (for sands of people scream in your ear the most wins in NCAA - all of whom hate you because history) and some awfullyx your jersey says "Michigan" - is big skates for Turco to fill.' something altogether different. "I worried a little bit for In such a situation, though, Turco the kid," Berenson says. isn't nervously pouncing on the "We put a lot of (the) onus puck, like other goalies do. Instead, on Marty coming in and he's confidently passing it to a playing well. There was a defenseman. Or he's calmly question about how ready stickhandling the puck, instead of he was for Division I firing it down the ice. hockey." And when there's a break in the Berenson wasn't the ' ' action, the opposing goalie will take only one concerned about a hurried drink of water before he Turco's ability to make the skates around the crease with his adjustment. head down, tapping the goalposts "I think I questioned it with his stick superstitiously. a lot this summer, coming Meanwhile, at the other end of out of junior (hockey),"N the ice, Turco can be found leaning Turco says. "I wasn't ex- back against the goal with his arms traordinary, butI was pretty on top of the net, just taking it easy. good, and I started to get it "Isn't that awesome?" says going around playoff Vince. "He's having fun. Part of the time." game is just having fun." Shields was good, but "Our defense likes it when I so were the players in front of him, handle the puck, and I think it helps and many of those guys are still us transitionally," Turco says. "I've around. All Turco had to do was been known to get a little bit carried play well, and Shields would be away back there, though." reduced to a mere memory. One such incident occurred dur- When Turco arrived on campus ing the Team Canada game, when he last fall, he was Shields' heir appar- hit teammate Tim Hogan in the skate ent, but he wasn't Michigan's only with a pass, setting up an easy goal goalie. for the opposition. He smiles as he "It was hard at the start of the thinks of his blunder, but he was year because we really didn't know hardly embarrassed about it, then or each other and the situation that we now. were thrown into," says Turco, who team in Canada, which, from a small city, is pretty remarkable. "I've just been fortunate to always be on a lot of good t Y teams." When he says "always", he's talking about an awful ong time. "My dad had me on skates ever since I was two," he says. "He thought hockey was pretty important, and it eventually carried over to me. I was pretty much des- tined to be a hockey player." Still, Turco hardly seemed fated to mind the nets at Yost Ice Arena. "His coach at 10(years old) asked him one time if he'd like to split the goaltending duties because L he was a good skater," says Vince of his son, who played left wing up to that point., "He did and he liked it, and he's been there ever since." With the success the Wolverines have had with Turco in net, most Michi- gan fans wouldn't argue with his choosing to play k goalie. Heading into this weekend, Turco's 2.94 goals-against-average was the eighth-best in the na- tion. And after getting lit up : $>for six goals by Notre Dame, Turco responded by post- ing his first shutout of the season, a 2-0 win over Mi- ami (Ohio) on Friday. However, as long as he sports a blocker and glove, some of his other talents are NTERDaily going to waste. Mike Zuke believes this to be true. Zuke, whose son played for the St. Louis Blues while Berenson coached there, has a back- yard rink of his own in Sault Ste. Marie, and has seen plenty of Turco both in and out of the net. "I'll tell you - the moves that kid's got!" he says. "I've told Marty this many times. Marty, I said, 'If you weren't a goaltender, I think you would've made our (bantam league) team playing forward."' While his dad's backyard was a good spot to start, Zuke's miniature arena was the place to really im- prove. That rink offered boards, lights and three-on-three hockey against the best players in town - for Turco and other kids in Sault Ste. Marie the past 40 years. "That's where you get the ones that love the game," Zuke said. "The reason why they were good enough for college or major junior hock is because they love the game. "All the years that we've had it, the guys that really use this rink, you could tell they loved the game and a lot of them went on." Turco had that love - he was at that rink practically every night - and he was good enough to move on. The next level, however, meant playing and living some eight hou, away in Cambridge, Ontario. "My first year being away from home and being away from my fam- ily, I tried to take it all in stride," he says. "I had to take care of myself more, both academically aitd hockey-wise. It was definitely a maturity-building situation." Turco's statistics from Cam- bridge don't jump out at you --h gave up 3.47 goals per game a won 19 of 32 games. While those numbers are nothing to sneeze at, almost every Michigan player has high school or junior league statis- tics that are still being raved about in his hometown. "Stats don't always indicate what kind of a player someone is," says Dallas Stars general manager Les Jackson, whose team selected Tur@ in the fifth round of the 1994 NHL Draft. "(We) liked the aggressive- ness in his game." NHL teams sometimes draft players before they're ready for the pros, though, and Jackson is quick to point out that Turco is no excep- tion. "He's got to be the best goalie in that league before he moves on," said, "and he looks like he's heads in that direction. But when he's ready, we'll know and he'll know." So playing at Reunion Arena in Dallas is a few years away, but it's in Turco's future. The ice play- grounds of Sault Ste. Marie are defi- nitely in the past. These days, Zuke's rink is host- ing his annual tournament, featur- ing players from the post office* used to work at. The backyard rink at Turco's home doesn't exist any- more, now that Marty and his sister are grown up and all the neighbor- hood kids are gone. All that's left to do now, then, is help Michigan capture that elusive national championship. A loss at the NCAA Tournament this year, and the Wolverines' title woes would startt seem Ranger-esque. "Things are going to go the way they do for simple reasons," he says. "You've just got to accept that." DOUGLAS KA had to compete with senior Al Loges for the starting job. "But I think we came along the best we possibly could. Every time on the road, we room together. "I'm grateful to have Al as my partner. It's going to be hard to see him go next year." Despite the obvious opportunity for animosity between the two, they managed to avoid any real problems while they competed for the job. "I think there's always some competitiveness between each other," says Loges. "But at the same time, you have to aim for the team's goals. If the team's winning, that's all that counts. "There's always competitiveness on the ice, but I learn from him and he learns from me." So without any off-ice problems to hold them back, Turco and the Wolverines are winning - not that that's anything new for either of them. "He has a way about him," Berenson says. "He's just used to winning." "Since I was eight years old, I always played triple-A travel teams, and we always had good teams," says Turco, who also has a seven handicap in golf. "My last year in midget (hockey), we were the third MICHIGAN here7Cous " 694 fr RECODS VP" seJiceor4 DUMBANDDUMER " T~~ .4 ; 3ii6. " 4 -,6"-~' : 'tif2" > -2tk .. .... ............... . w...nwvw.. : t , r A~lffa .Lp OWIUPdOJ)9I ybe 55 j {v~A' xd" r S S Lowest price ever h PowerBook series. Right now is the perfect time to buy an Apple* PowerBook* computer. Prices have never been lower. And that makes our special deals fr.,. ctiidptc vnmrp irrP~ctih f' f j'rnirc impPvrzi PnwrRnnk ?in the 10()cpripc cisrar fn~r PnwprC"