041e firticbArr tttt 097till F iI rF In I, Hoosiers erase 20-point deficit Guyton leads Indiana to OT win .Sweep puts Blue in CCHA drives seat By Jim Rose Daily Sports Writer This weekend at Yost Ice Arena had a little bit of everything. The recipe was as follows: One bad game, one good game, two Michigan hockey records, one whole banana, and half a period of Greg Daddario for seasoning. The end result? The usual. Two Michigan victo- ries. On Friday, the Wolverines (19-2-2 CCHA, 28-2- 3 overall) trudged their way to an uninspired 3-1 victory over Notre Dame. At one point, a fan tossed a banana onto the ice - perhaps as com- entary on the players', well, "rotten" perfor- ance. But the Wolverines sprang to life on Saturday, giving the Irish a 6-1 thrashing. The big story of the weekend was Brendan Morrison - the senior Hobey Baker candidate became Michigan's all-time leading scorer on Saturday night, surpassing former Wolverine Denny Felsner with two goals and two assists. On Friday, Morrison's two-assist night had moved him ahead of Brian Wiseman as Michigan's career assist leader. Morrison has 168 career assists among 262 points. His season totals (23-43-66) lead the nation. Gregg Malicke started Saturday's game in net, and the junior gave up one goal on 16 shots before being replaced by sophomore fan-favorite Greg Daddario for the last half of the third period. The cheers for the Malicke-Daddario switch were outdone only by the standing ovation for Morrison's record-breaking point, which came on an assist to Matt Herr 2:58 into the third period. The Michigan bench emptied and mobbed "i* See IRISH, Page 453 By John Lerol Daily Sports Editor Michigan basketball coach Steve Fisher has seen the devil, and his name is A.J. Guyton. The slick Hoosier freshman waltzed into Crisler Arena and torched the Wolverines for a career- Indiana 84 2 Michigan 81 high 31 points, only five of which came in the first half, and almost sin- gle-handedly erased a 20-point Michigan lead on the way to a gut- wrenching, heart-breaking, nail-bit- ing, stomach-churning 84-81 Indiana win over the Wolverines in overtime yesterday. Guyton, who nailed seven of 12 attempts from 3-point range, scored eight points in the final three minutes of regulation to force the extra ses- sion. With 50 seconds left and the Hoosiers trailing, 75-69, Travis Conlan sagged just a little too far off Guyton, who hit a 23-foot trey to bring Indiana within three. After Louis Bullock missed a run- ning jumper on the Wolverines' next possession, Guyton got Conlan to fall for a ball fake at the top of the key, took a step to his left and drained another three to tie the game at 75 with 2.1 seconds left in regulation. Guyton then broke an 81-81 tie with 26 seconds left in overtime with a 13-foot jumper in the lane. Bullock missed a three the next trip down the court. Andrae Patterson grabbed the rebound and was fouled by Conlan, He hit one of two free throws with five seconds left. Jerod Ward's 24-foot three at the buzzer was off. After holding the Hoosiers to just 23 points in the first half, Michigan let Indiana score 59 in the next 25 minutes. "This is loss that is hard to accept and may be hard to understand," Fisher said. "This is a game we should have won, but didn't. It's dev- astating." See HOOSIERS, Page 58 MARK FRIEDMAN/Daily Brendan Morrison (middle) is congratulated by teammates Jason Botterill (right) and John Madden (left) after he became Michigan's all-time leading scorer during Saturday night's 6-1 victory over Notre Dame. Book it! Morrison sets scoring record Six-point weekend puts Wolverines' leader and best in record, history books By Dan Stiliman t ly Sports Writer When Brendan Morrison broke Denny Felsner's Michigan scoring record early in the third period of Saturday night's game against Notre Dame, the rest of the Wolverines came off the bench to congratulate him. Morrison had eclipsed the all-time assists record the previous night - a great achievement. But nothing can compare to becoming the school's most prolific scorer ever. It was a moment that the Wolverines and their fans had been anticipating for weeks, and it had finally happened. "It didn't quite come on the play that I had envisioned," Morrison said. "You always picture the perfect pass, or an end-to-end rush." The record-breaking point came on an assist, 2:58 into the third period. Sean Peach sent in a shot from the point, which Morrison deflected to Matt Herr, who put it in the back of the net. After four spectacular seasons, the Michigan captain, twice a Hobey Baker Award finalist, notched his 262nd point. When asked what it has been like watching Morrison operate over the last four years, senior Mike Legg replied: "He's the surgeon.la T g Unbelievable. The guy's incredible." What Morrison _ achieved Saturday night was indeed truly incredi- ble. Points - the com- bined total of goals and assists - are the ultimate + statistical indication of accomplishment in hockey. In the future, the record will serve as historical proof of how special a player Morrison was at Michigan. For those who have seen him play, or even played with him, no statistical proof is needed. "He was different right from the start," Legg said. "He was a leader right when he first came in here. "From freshman (year), everybody was look- ing up to him, and it's just continued." During the 17 minutes that remained in the game after he set the record, Morrison showed why he is a leader. The Fighting Irish turned decidedly rougher, especially towards Morrison, after the celebra- tion of the record-breaking assist, which helped extend Michigan's lead to 6-0. Second-year Notre Dame coach Dave Poulin was hardly in a celebratory mood when the game stopped momentarily and the Michigan bench spilled out onto the ice. "There's a rule in the book, and it states clear- ly that there's a penalty if the entire team goes on See MORRISON, Page 4B * Prescription for success All-American Richardson wrestling way to medical school MARK FRIEDMAN/Daily Michigan forward Maceo Baston shoots over Indiana's Richard Mandeville (left) and Jason Collier in yesterday's 84-81 overtime loss to the Hoosiers. WOlverines i dre need ofsoe heat By Jordan Field Daily Sports Writer ust about every morning, Airron Richardson's alarm clock goes off at 6 a.m. He goes to morning practice from 6:30 to 8:30, grabs a quick break- fast, then goes to class from 10 to 2. After a three-hour afternoon practice, he eats dinner, then hits the books until 1 am when he goes to bed. And besides being a tri-captain of the wrestling team, the junior is an All-American and maintains a 3.0 GPA as a German major - one who intends on going to medical school. But to Richardson, none of this is a big deal. Growing up in Toledo, Richardson's mom ght him to strive to be the best, but to never get a big head about personal. accomplishments. Late one night during Richardson's senior year in high school, he returned' home from Pennsylvania where he had competed in the National High and how he upset other state champions to win the title. They talked for maybe a half an hour before she told him she was going to bed, and he'd better take out the garbage before he went to sleep. "My mom has always been very good at making sure my head doesn't get too big," Richardson says. "She was happy for me, but winning the championship didn't mean anything changes." Richardson's mother and stepfather, who helped raise him since he was two, not only made sure he wasn't getting a big head, they also made sure at a young agehe knew academics came before athletics. "I always knew that if I got a "C" on my grade card, I couldn't wrestle for the team," he says. "It's been like that even through junior high, and for any sport I played." Grades still come first for Richardson. Although he pushes himself everyday in the weight room and f at practice, his major focus at Michigan is still his x classes. And to Richardson, success in one does not substitute for success, nor can it excuse failure in the other. With good grades throughout high school, Richardson was in the National Honor Society and on the dean's list for eight semesters. In fact, his grades were so high, he earned a full academic scholarship to Morehouse College in Atlanta, where Sht cnint c fir hman vear of n11ae. At it's no less than three weeks, three days, nine hours ... well, maybe seven hours, until the start of the single greatest event in all of sports. It's the NCAA Division I men's bas- ketball tourna- ment. And March 13 is sneaking up F on us pretty quickly. And when that thrilling Thursday afternoon arrives, there will be 64 AIAN teams all possess- GOLDENBACH ing something The Bronx more than a Bomber dream of a cut- ting down the nets in Indianapolis 18 days later. Those teams all have the proverbial hear. off a 20-25-win campaign, then it had to have built up some heart during the course of the season. You need heart to win those games that go down to the wire. You need heart to win games where your star player goes down with an injury or foul trouble. You need heart when you go up against a better team, and need to pull off the upset. You even need heart in those games against teams like Chico State where the bigger challenge is not whether you win, but whether you cover the spread. Right now, Michigan has no heart. Zero. Not even an artery, a vein or a drop of blood. Just emptiness. The Wolverines haven't demonstrat- ed at any noint during this Big Ten '. 0 o K S i