14A The Michigan Daily - Thursday, March 19, 1998 BOWLING! Quotable: "It's quite comical ... It doesn't look real at all. If you've ever seen Matt Herr 186 Jurassic Park, and seen how the raptor walks, you know what I'm talking about." Fred & Mallory 170 - Michigan bowler Bobby Haves on his dance. "The Raptor" The Michigan bowling team is often mistaken for the hockey team, but on Thursday nights, they are Pin pals By Fred Link U Daily Sports Writer COLONIAL LANES - Athletes have different ways of preparing the night before a competition. Some visualize their performance in the upcoming game. Some go over game plans. Some, like the Michigan hockey team, go bowling. Wait a second - bowling? Why would a hockey team go bowling the night before a game? "When I was playing junior hockey, we used to go bowling every Thursday night," junior forward Bobby Hayes said. "When I got here, a couple of months had gone by and the season started growing on us - school, hockey, school, hockey. I thought 'What did we do in juniors for fun?'- and we just went bowling. I got the guys to try it and we ended up doing it for quite a long time." And so for the past three years, the Michigan hockey team has gone bowling on Thursdays before home games. "Colonial Lanes is only a block from our house," Hayes' housemate Bubba Berenzweig said. "And once I discovered it, I decided that I wanted to go over there and bowl quite a bit. Over time I recruited a bunch of people to come with me. Then we started getting crazy. We bought ourselves some shirts, and it just grew from there." Led by Hayes and Berenzweig, the team bowled almost every Thursday before home games during the 1996-97 season, and went on to set a Michigan record of 36 consecutive home games without a loss. Coincidence? Maybe, but after Berenzweig suffered a wrist injury this year, the team hasn't gone to the bowling alley as often - and the Wolverines have lost three home games for the first time since the 1990-91 season. But before the last weekend of the regular season, the team got together and went bowl- ing, with photographer Mallory S. E. Floyd and me in tow. These guys aren't amateurs. The Wolverines take bowling seriously. Clad in dark green bowling shirts, they look like they belong in a bowling league. Their shirts even have their nicknames on them, ranging from the mundane - "Bubbs," for Berenzweig and "Turks," for goaltender Marty Turco -to more unusual names like "Rat," "Twinkie" and "Bugs," for backup goaltender Greg Daddario, Hayes and Sean Ritchlin, respectively. "Ritchlin is 'Bugs,' because when he was younger he used to watch Bugs Bunny all the time," Daddario said. "And it's a name that's stuck with him." The Wolverines look like they're in a league, and, for the most part, they bowl like they're in a league too. The night we bowled with them, the team was divided by class into groups competing for bragging rights. As we struggled to approach the century mark, most of the other bowlers had scores comfortably above 120. In the end, Matt Herr bowled an impressive 186 (more my companion and I together) as the seniors won, narrowly edging the junior class. While Herr bowled the highest score that night, the team's most consistent bowler is backup Daddario. "I get lucky once in a while," Daddario said. "But we have some decent bowlers on the team. Bobby will bowl well once in a while and Sean Ritchlin and Bubba aren't too bad." Turco has been bowling since he was young, and bowls pretty well, posting a 145 average. "Both my parents bowled in a league when I was young," Turco said. "At home I bowled with my friends and my sisters and my girl- friend." Turco may have a lot of experience bowl- ing, but defenseman Sean Peach just, well, doesn't. But even though Peach was univer- sally recognized as a terrible bowler, he broke 100 for the first time in his life. "I would have to say Peach is probably the worst bowler on the team," Berenzweig said. "He really sticks out." While Peach's bowling may stick out, it's Hayes' antics that draw the most attention. Whenever the junior bowls three strikes in a row, he does a dance across the lanes called "The Raptor," leaving his teammates laughing hysterically. "We were watching Comedy Central one night, and this guy was talking about 'Jurassic Park' and he did this walk of the raptor," Hayes said. "I thought it was so funny that when I went to the bowling alley I decided that it would be my patented move. "It's quite comical. It's hard to describe, but basically, it's just a really mechanical walk, and it doesn't look real at all. If you've ever seen Jurassic Park and seen how the rap- tor walks, you know what I'm talking about. The guys really like it." For the Wolverines, bowling night isn't about competition. It's about getting together with their teammates and having fun the night before a game. "I think it's the social atmosphere," Turco said. "It's a game where everyone is involved and you're always around each other, so you can talk. It's a lot of fun - a nice casual event where guys can get together." Bowling also allows the players to take time away from school and focus on the upcoming games. "At the end of the week, it's good to get away from the stresses of school and get your mind into the game," Daddario said. "We have a good time out there, and we do a little bonding and try to get focused for Friday and Saturday. It's just kind of a relaxation thing for us." !n case you're not a big bowler ... The Michigan bowling team sometimes sheds its multi-colored shoes in favor of ice skates and plays some hockey., In fact, the Wolverines are in the second round of the CCHA Playoffs and will face Ohio State tomorrow at 8:30 p.m. at Joe Louis Arena in Detroit. if they advance, they will play in the championship on Saturday at 7:30, also at the Joe. Not bad for a group of bowlers. MALLORY S.E. FLOYD/Da Matt Herr whoops it up after a strike, en route to his team-high 186 at Colonial Lanes. It was Herr's > best score of the year, and it helped the seniors edge out the juniors for team bowling supremacy. I THE NATIONAL COLLEGE OF CHIROPRACTIC WILL BE VISITING CAMPUS on Friday, March 20 I from 1Oam to 2pm. I NCC will be located in the Career Planning and Placement office at 3200 Student Activities Building. Stop by to learn more about chiropractic and NCC! CALL 1-800-826-NATL FOR QUESTIONS OR INFORMATION. It'sa a little- known fact that Matt Herr, senior captain of the Michigan hockey team and part- time pitcher for the Michigan baseball team, is also a integral member of the Michigan bowling team as well. MALLORY SE. FLOYD/Daily iii "Reclaiming the Soul in Academic Life" --A conversation among Faculty and Student L J s Free Public Panel Discussion What's Happening To Your Money? Reporting How Interest Rates Rule the Economy Covering Monetary Policy: the Press and Public Perception 1 WE NEED 60 HEALTHY SUBJECTS WITH HEARTBURN TO PARTICIPATE IN A RESEARCh STUD' mT IQ A MTV xrA NI~T)tztFi A CV CIFT~ ) TC q~ OFA N r