.'p /" e iicl i ttn tti1 > SPECIAL WRAP-AROUND SECTION FOR MORE SPORTS, SEE 3B , Hail tothe nation's best CINCINNATI - Hail to the victors valiant. The tune resonated like never before through RiverfontColiseum. The boys won the national championship. Could there ever be a better reason to sing? If you're a Michigan hockey fan, there is no better feeling than seeing Wolverine captain Steven Halko raise that trophy high above his head. Well, maybe Brendan Morrison high-stepping like Desmond Howard behind the Colorado College net was pretty nice, too. Or how about the two piles that gathered at either end of the ice. Even better;,here was Michigan coach Red Berenson, the man who took the Michigan program fromCCHA doormat to national powerhouse, weeping at the red line. The 3-2 overtime victory gave him his only national title - and JOHN Michigan's first since 1964 -but it was also his 300th career coaching victory. How else could have the Out of victory tasted so sweet? Bounds "I still can't believe it," Halko said. "I can't describe the feeling. This is great, we're national champs." Hail to the conquering heroes. And they overcame a lot. Early exits the past four years, overtime games that lasted forever, shots that rattled off posts like a bad nightmare that doesn't seem real. But now, that has all changed. The 1996 Michigan hockey team has given the University its eighth champion- ship - more than any other school - and in thrilling fashion. "I just jumped over the boards," junior left wing John Madden said. "I think I fell flat on my back. That ice never felt so good, though." Hail, hail to Michigan, the leaders and best. Senior leadership played no small role in the Wolver- ines' championship run. Halko, Kevin Hilton, John Arnold and Mark Sakala will not leave Ann Arbor without the feeling of tossing their body carelessly into their closest friends, heart racing, mind clear of everything but the euphoria of winning, as those before them, equally deserving, were forced to do. "I don't even remember it right now," newly crowned kin{ Morrison said of his championship goal. "I can't describe the feeling, but it's the best I've ever felt - ever." "I'mjust so proud to be apart ofthis team," sophomore righ See LER01, Page SE Berenson snags 300th victory By Alan Goldenbach Daily Sports Writer C INCINNATI - Red Berenson's wait is over. "Our time will come" is the message inscribed on a memento that sits on the Michigan hockey coach's desk. After 12 years and an even 300 victories at the helm of the Wolverine ship, Berenson's time has, indeed, finally come. Anyone who had seen the Michigan coach just once before Saturday, and then again, following the win, knew that something was different. Something special. As Berenson walked across the ice to greet his players, he pumped both fists in the air and donned an ear-to-ear smile. Later, he broke down into tears of elation. Both expressions are precious sights if you know the usually emotionless Berenson. And the wait for this day may go further back than Berenson's first coaching days in Ann Arbor. His career has taken him through his days as an All-American in the early 1960s for Michigan, followed by a 17-year NHL tour, which included a Stanley Cup ring as a player, and coach of the year honors with the St. Louis Blues in 1981. But all of that doesn't come close to the emotions he felt as the coach of a ae P lgan's Bill Muckalt hugs Bubba Berenzweig and Greg Crozier after Saturday's NCAA final, celebrating the Wolverines' first national championship since 1964. 4ichends frustration by breaki overtime jinx ~ ....