Hocuy The Michigan Daily - SP RTSMonday - December 9, 1996 - 7B Late-night call leaves Sloan on 'M' sideline <, . . , .:.. ':::. f ,. >::; _ nup Michigan junior Chris Fox had two assists in Saturday's 7-3 Michigan victory over Ferris State. Here he slides a pass just by the outstretched stick of the Bulldogs' Brent Wishart. SARA SiILLMAN/Daily Icers power way to victory over Ferris State Madden dishes out a career-high six assists, earns CCHA offensive player-of-the-week honors By Dan Stillman Daily Sports Writer BIG RAPIDS -The Michigan hock- ey team arrived in Big Rapids during the day Friday for Saturday night's game against Ferris State. Around 11:30 Friday night, when the team returned to the hotel for the night, Michigan coach Red Berenson had a message to call CCHA Coordinator of Officials Dave Fisher. Much to Beren son's surprise, F i s h e rX informed him that defense- man Blake Sloan wouldn't - be able to play against the Bulldogs. Sloan had 11664Z been suspend- ed for a hit from behind into the boards during the second period of Wednesday's game against Western Michigan. At the time, Sloan received a two-minute penalty, but Fisher said the penalty was not enough. "It's an automatic game misconduct and a five-minute major penalty, and it wasn't issued," Fisher said. While Berenson did not disagree with the suspension, he was upset with the situation he and his team had suddenly been placed in. "I was completely surprised, com- pletely caught off guard," Berenson said. Because this weekend's road trip involved one game instead of the usual two, the Wolverines travelled with fewer players than normal. Suddenly, Michigan was missing three defenseman instead of two - Bubba Berenzweig, who was left back in Ann Arbor, and an injured Peter Bourke. While the Wolverines' situation may seem unfair, the process followed cur- rent CCHA and NCAA rules. The infraction occurred Wednesday night and the suspension was issued Friday night. The rule states that such infractions must be brought to the league's attention within 72 hours of the infraction. Any suspension is then required to take effect for the next game. "(That's) assuming that you're playing the next Friday, not a Wednesday- Saturday (schedule)," Berenson said: "So typically by Tuesday you'd know if a player's going to miss a game and you'd have some time to prepare." Clearly this rule needs to be changed to allow for special circumstances: While supplemental discipline is called for in the NCAA rulebook, implementa- tion is up to each individual league. But this is not the only rule that needs amending. This incident is just one of several this season that should serve as a wake-up call to the CCHA and NCAA. The most prevalent problem this sea- son, at least for Michigan, is that there if no instigator penalty in college hockey Too often, those who start a fight have received the exact same penalty as those who retaliate. In a game against Bowling Green ear tier in the season, Michigan's Bubba Berenzweig took six punches from Bowling Green's Dan Price before fight- ing back. Both received fighting majors and game disqualifications. A problem requiring more than rewriting the rulebooks, is one that may have the most impact on any one game. In another game between Michigan and Bowling Green earlier this season, replay showed that Michigan's Brendan Morrison scored what could have been a game-winning goal. But the hometown goal judge did not turn on the light and the referee did not have a clear view. The solution is easy - set up replay capability at all 10 CCHA stadiums. Unfortunately, the technology would require dollars. Nevertheless, the CCHA is one of the top conferences in college hockey. Like any successful operation, it must invest in the future and change with the times. By James Goldstein Daily Sports Writer BIG RAPIDS - It was a simple math equation. Penalties plus power plays equals goals. And in the end, the equation equaled a win for the Michigan hockey team. All but three of the combined 10 goals in the Wolverines' 7-3 victory over Ferris State on Saturday night were scored on the power play. Brendan Morrison and Matt Herr led the Wolverines' charge with two power-play goals apiece, and Warren Luhning scored one. Michigan forward John Madden assisted on six of the seven goals. His six-assist performance was his career high and two shy of the team record. His final assist of the night was his 25th, putting him one ahead of Morrison for the team lead. Madden was named the CCHA Offensive Player of the Week for his two-game output of one goal and six assists. } Forward Todd Steinmetz led the Bulldogs with a power-play goal and an assist. Ferris defenseman Andy Roach assisted on all three of the Bulldogs' goals. The Wolverines (8-1-1 CCHA, 15-1-1 overall) increased their point total to 17 in the conference standings, moving them to within one point of first-place Lake Superior and Michigan State. Ferris State dropped to 5-9, 8-11-1. It wasn't only Michigan's power play that was clicking Saturday night. The Bulldogs kept them- selves in the game with their power play, convert- It g on two of seven opportunities. "Certainly, Michigan had the best power play we've seen this year," Ferris State coach Bob Daniels said. "I felt our power play looked real good too." Kenzie Homer knocked in the second of Ferris State's power-play goals at 9:01 of the second period to cut the Michigan lead to 4-3 on a five- on-three advantage. That was the closest the Bulldogs would get. Morrison capitalized with just three seconds left on a Michigan man-advantage with 4:54 remain- ing in the second period. He blasted a shot past Ferris State goaltender Mike Szkodzinski from the point. It was Morrison's second power-play goal of the night and his ninth goal on the season. "It's a good sign in that we took advantage of our opportunities and kept them from playing too aggressive by capitalizing on the power play," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "The other good sign is Morrison is starting to shoot the puck. He had to start shooting, and I think that opened things up for everyone else." Luhning added a power-play goal and Chris Frescoln scored for the first time this season with a second left in the game. Berenson said that if the Wolverines hadn't been successful on the power play, it would have been a completely different game. "The bad sign is that five-on-five - it was a close game," Berenon said. "Take the penalties out, and it was a much closer game than the score indicated." The Wolverines also could have prevented the Bulldogs from scoring their power-play goals had Michigan's top defenseman - assistant captain Blake Sloan - played in Saturday's game. Sloan was suspended by the CCHA for the game against Ferris State. CCHA Coordinator of Officials Dave Fisher called Berenson late Friday night in his hotel to inform him that the league had reviewed a check from behind into the boards in the second period of Michigan's 3-1 victory over Western Michigan Wednesday night. Sloan origi- nally received a two-minute minor for the hit. What frustrated Berenson and the Wolverines most was how late the decision was made - one night before their game. "I was completely surprised, completely caught off guard," Berenson said. "(1 had) no sense of warning or indication or maybe we would've brought another player with us on the trip." The CCHA rule states that a decision on a reviewed play must be "brought to the office with- in 72 hours of the infraction." But the Wolverines' mid-week game against Western Michigan made things worse. "(The rule) is assuming that you're playing the next Friday, not a Wednesday-Saturday, so typical- ly by Tuesday, you'd know if a player's going to miss a game and you'd have some time to prepare. We had no time to prepare." Sloan didn't even hear of the news until the morning of the game. "I deserved a penalty, but I don't think I deserved a game-misconduct," Sloan said. "The guy (I hit) did a good job of acting, as far as I'm concerned." Fisher said that the referees should have called a harsher penalty on Sloan's hit. "It's an automatic game misconduct and a five- minute penalty and it wasn't issued," Fisher said. y COntacts FILE PHOTO/Da Michigan defenseman Blake Sloan was forced to sit out Saturday's game against Ferris State. League officials decided that a hit from Sloan during last Wednesday's 3-1 Michigan victory over Western Michigan was Illegal and merited a one-game suspension. CCHA Weekend Scores Friday, Dec. 6 MICHIGAN STATE 4, Notre Dame 3 BOWUNG GREEN 7, Alaska-Fairbanks 4 Miami (Ohio) 5, WESTERN MICHIGAN 2 FERRIS STATE 5, Ohio State 3 Saturday, Dec. 7 NOTRE DAME 3, Alaska-Fairbanks 1 HOCKE Y----4 A$O*ATI-- WESTERN MICHIGAN 7, Miami (Ohio) 6 (OT) Michigan 7, FERRIS STATE 3 Home team in CAPS PROFESSIONALS I- 72 Michigan 7, Ferris State 3 Michigan 3 2 2-7 Ferris State 2 1 0-3 First period -1. UM, Morrison 8 (Madden, Luhning), 2:56 (pp):.1. FSU, Wishart 6 (Irwin. Roach), 10:02 (pp); 2. UM, Herr 15 (Madden, Legg), 12:34 (pp); 3. UM, Botterill 12 (Madden, Luhning), 17:28; 2. FSU, Steinmetz 4 (Roach, Kowalski), 19:00. Penalties - Homer, FSU (interference), 0:29; Wishart, FSU (boarding), 1:56; Frescoln, UM (hooking), 8:16; Bennets, FSU (high-sticking), 11:13; Luhning, UM (unsportsmanlike conduct), 19:30; Muldoon, FSU (hitting after whistle), 19:30. Second period -4. UM, Herr 16 (Fox, Madden), 6:27 (pp); 3. FSU, Homer 11 (Steinmetz, Roach), 9:01(5-3 pp); 5 UM, Morrison 9 (Muckalt, Merrick), 15:06 (pp). Penalties - Irwin, FSU (roughing), 0:27; Peach, UM (cross-checking), 0:27; Peach, UM (roughing), (served by Clark), 0:27; Muldoon, FSU (cross-checking), 4:28; Schock, UM (cross-checking), 7:13; Luhning, UM (cross-checking), 8:09; Steinmetz. FSU (interference), 13:09; Bennets, FSU (interfer- ence), 16:18. Third period - 6 UM, Luhning 10 (Botterill, Madden), 17:12 (pp); 7. UM, Frescoln 1 CCHA Standings Team Record Pts. 1. Lake Superior 9-2-0 18 a 1. Michigan State 9-2-0 183i a 3. Michigan 8-1-4 1? i 4. Miami (Ohio) 8-2-0 16 5. Ferris State 5-9-0 10 6. Western Michigan 4-6-1 9 7. Notre Dame 4-8-1 9 8. Bowling Green 4-8-1 9 9. Ohio State 3-6-0 6 10. Alaska-Fairbanks 2-12-0 4 Up next What: Great Lakes Invitational Where: Joe Louis Arena When: Dec. 27-28 Friday, Dec. 27 Mir higan CS ta e akeSuoerior For 6 pairs of FreshLook® disposable color contacts - #F " /irwi. IiA oi i ' M s