In a bsof treesries egnnring R ighayt g ta'' Pe9 ost IeArena Wednesday, March 8, 1995 Three 'M' freshmen honored Gordon, Muckalt and Turco on CCHA All-Rookie team By Barry Sollenberger Daily Hockey Writer It may not be easy for the rest of the league to keep the No.1 Michi- gan hockey team from winning its third straight CCHA title next year. The Wolverines captured their second straight CCHA champion- ship this season with only seven seniors on the roster. Two of those seven players - defensemen Mark Sakala and Alan Sinclair - aren't even regular contributors. Michigan is, indeed, a young team. In fact, 14 of the Wolverines' 25 players are either freshmen or sophomores. Part of Michigan's youth was rewarded Sunday when freshmen Marty Turco, Bill Muckalt and Robb Gordon were named to the CCHA All-Rookie team. "It's really nice for our coaching staff," Michigan coach Red Berenson said of the selections. "It tells us that we've recruited good, solid freshmen." Turco, Muckalt and Gordon join Ferris State's Jason Blake, Western Michigan's Steve Duke and Dan Boyle of Miami (Ohio) on the team. The league's Rookie of the Year will be announced March 17 at the CCHA awards banquet. After winning a preseason battle with senior Al Loges for the starting job between the pipes, Turco emerged as one of the top goalies in both the conference and the nation. He leads the CCHA in wins (24) and is second in goals-against aver- age (2.82). His 24 wins rank him second nationally behind Maine's Blair Allison (28). Turco is the first goalie in Wolverine his- tory to make the ' k CCHA All- Rookie team. "One of the things that was Gordon helpful for me was to be able to come in and play as a freshman," Turco said. "I'm excited about be- ing chosen, but I look at it as a team thing more than anything else." Muckalt was the only unanimous selection to the team, chosen by the CCHA head coaches. The right wing leads all fresh- men in the conference in goals (18) and overall scoring (35 points). His five game-winning goals tie him with Blake and Michigan's Mike Knuble for the CCHA lead. "Making the team is kind of an evaluation," Muckalt said. "It kind of judges how Marty, Robb and I com- pare with the rest of the league and shows that we're working hard and improving." Gordon trails only Muckalt in rookie scorers in the conference (33) and leads all freshmen forwards with 20 assists. "I think that I've always had a reputation for playing freshmen," Berenson said. "It was easy to- do when we didn't have good teams, but (the selections) are real tributes to the players because they're good enough to play on the teams we have now." Michigan opens the league play- offs Friday in a best-of-three series against Ohio State without senior cap- tain Rick Willis and freshman Matt Herr. The Buckeyes advanced to Friday's contest after defeating Alaska-Fairbanks in last night's pre- liminary CCHA playoff game. Willis is out indefinitely after suf- fering a strained knee last Friday against Miami. "It's hard to say how long he'll be out," Berenson said. "But we'll get him back out on the ice late next week." Herr injured his knee Sunday against Ohio State and his status for the rest of the season is unknown. DOUGLAS RANTER/Daily Bill Muckalt was the pnly unanimous selection to the CCHA All-Rookie team. He led all conference freshmen in scoring and is tied for most game-winning goals in the league. ___________________________________________________________ urn Bahr's class shines By Tim Smith Daily Sports Writer Amidst the hubbub and craziness of last weekend's Big Ten wrestling championships, one incident in par- ticular stuck out. Michigan coach Dale Bahr was on the sideline when his wrestler escaped to seemingly grab a 3-1 lead. How- ever, an error by the judges as- signed the point to .x the wrong wres- . tier. Many of the Michigan fans in the stands were ready to strangle the student score- Bahr keepers and tear the refs apart. The fact is, many other coaches in the heat of the battle may have at- tacked the referee, the scorekeeper and anybody else within arm's length until they got their deserved point. But not Bahr. Bahr acted with his typical class and cool head and showed why he is one of the most respected and well- liked coaches in the country. Bahr calmly walked over to the scorers table and alerted them of the error. When they didn't seem to hear his polite request and left the score un- changed, he asked again, almost apologetically, for a change until the referee interceded and corrected the problem. In this day and age of chair throw- ing, verbal assaults, and down right hostility by coaches, Bahr's act helped to show what is right in sports. And it also helped show what is wrong. When a simple act, which should have been the norm instead of the unusual, stuck out for its uniqueness something is definitely wrong. Granted, it wasn't a huge deal for Bahr to act so civil, but it was big enough to show the differences be- tween Bahr and others in his profes- sion. The bottom line is that Bahr, would have walked over to the scorers table and told them the score was wrong if his team was the team given the extrapoint. through Other coaches in that situation may have pointed to the stands and told everyone that Elvis was making a guest appearance in section 23 in or- der to divert attention from the well- appreciated scoring error. One coach in particular, Dan Gable of Iowa, may have even yelled at his wrestler for not seeing the error first. The Hawkeyes went on to win the Big Ten title for the 22nd year in a row, but their coach would never win any awards for kindness and mod- esty. When his team placed second to Oklahoma State in the NCAAs last year, Gable commented that the coaching wasn't the problem (in fact, he said the coaching was great), rather that his team just didn't want it enough. Butmaybe they did want itenough and other factors such as their studies, health and overall skill level limited their ability to win it. But in Gable's eyes it didn't mat- ter. They just didn't want it enough. And that's all that the press, the fans and any others who heard that i1 Big Tens comment would come away with on their notepads or in their memories. In 17 years at Michigan, Bahr has recorded 181 wins - a number sec- ond only to the legendary Cliff Keen - and has proven that he doesn't need a raging demeanor to do it. Following the Big Ten Champi- onships, Bahr's main concern was the health of 177-pound wrestler Jesse Rawls Jr., who had injured his knee the day before. He was worried about his wrestler as a person and not just as an athlete. Bahr is concerned about all of his wrestlers. In Bahr's eyes, the Wolverines were not slabs of meat who didn't want it enough. They were a tired bunch who gave it their all and wrestled as well as they could. When the meet was over, the Wolverines piled back into the team vans for the long trip back to Ann Arbor. At some schools sitting by the coach would have been a punishment, but for any Wolverine lucky enough to occupy the seat next to Bahr, it would have been an honor. CCHA Playoffs at the Joe Olympia Arenas, Inc. and the Daily are holding a contest with prizes for the CCHA Playoffs March 18 and 19 at Joe Louis Arena. The Grand Prize: A night for two at the Westin Hotel in downtown Detroit including two game tickets to both the semifinals and the finals. Four First Prizes: Four game tickets to both the semifinals and finals. Six Second Prizes: Two game tickets to both the semifinals and the finals. To enter, drop off your answers at the Daily sports desk in the Student Publications Building at 420 Ma ynard. The contest Is'cumulative - the contestants with the most correct answers over the week will have the greater chance to win. Today's question: What four teams were the original members of the CCHA in the 197172 season? Answer Name: Phone: Treat Yourself or a Friend to a pretzel or tasty low-fat muffin COOKIES - featuring Colombo non-fat yogurt- * When Taste Matters! 715 N. University 761-CHIP ' " Mon-Thurs 8:30am-7pm Fri 8:30am-5:30pm Sat I0am-5:30pm 3 We ship anywhere in the Continental U. S. g hmmmmmminmm..mmmmmmmoNMm I i' BASKETBALL Continued from page 12 been here, I might not come out focused and ready to play. I have to look at Penn State as a regular game." There is one catch to the Jackson- King swan song. If the Wolverines lose tonight, they may very well be NIT- bound. It is possible that Michigan will host at least one game early in that tournament, giving King and Jackson an unwanted game at Crisler. "I don't even want to think about that," King said. "Our destiny's in our hands. I really don't want to give that any thought. There's no (NCAA) Tour- nament without Michigan." Some of the Fab Five's greatest achievements occurred in front of the 0 home fans. When King and Jackson are honored tonight, many of those memo- ries should come rushing back. Each season seems to have produced many exciting games on the Crisler floor. Fromtheclassic 1991 matchupwith Duke that introduced the Fab Five on national television to January's double- overtime thriller against Iowa, Michi- gan fans have been witness to one of the most intriguing periods in the history of Wolverine basketball. And now it is coming to a close. "It's going to be emotional, buthope- fully that emotion will be channeled in a good way," Fisher said. "They've been part of the greatest era of Michi- gan basketball to date. We are saying goodbye to two guys that have meant a lot to Michigan basketball." STUDNT RAVL1 800177STA-0112- aft the RiversWild , . 0 rJ m