ECw dTiSanDadg .ODA ...:''~ Bost massacre Th is season's edition: 'The Boston Game' COLUMBUS - After the final horn of the season sounds and the crowds have emptied their stadiums for the last time until leaves and grass re-emerge, the details of most of the football games are forgotten. Outcomes are recollected in terms of who won or who lost. How a team lost often becomes foggy. Only after a lit- tle deliberation can one remember the 'how.' But rivalries are different in that way. Rivalry games take on a moniker, a nickname to which fans, coaches, players and writers refer. By mentioning just that nickname or phrase, the feeling, the drama, the key ingredients and - of course - the outcome each return in brilliant detail to one's mind. The 1995 edition of Michigan versus Ohio State was simply 'The Biakabutuka Game.' Just by saying it, one recalls watching Tshimanga Biakabutuka running, darting, high-stepping to the tune of more than 300 yards during Thanksgiving break. In 1996, it was 'The Shawn Springs Game.'You can just recollect, vividly, Springs peeking up from the ground SHARAT as Tai Streets sprinted away from him RAJU and directly to victory. 'The Woodson Punt Return Game' Sharat was last season's version, with Charles i tedark 'Heisman' Woodson pushing aside a couple of defenders and strutting into the end zone. The rose in his teeth, the hit on David Boston by Marcus Ray - all of it is easily recollected with that phrase. Once the dust has settled on this season, a name will be given to this one, too. Most likely, people will refer to this as 'The Boston Game'- as they should. Boston, like Biakabutuka and Woodson before him, took over the game. The Ohio State wide receiver showed everyone that he was clearly the best player on the field, only dropping one pass to mercifully show the Wolverines that he was, in fact, human. And guardable - although the Michigan defense suggested otherwise. Boston and the passing attack were probably the biggest stories of the game. But the biggest story of the decade ' between the Wolverines and the Buckeyes has been coach John Cooper. Cooper - annually considered Michigan's MVP - was probably in danger of losing his house in a burst of flames if he would have lost this game - with what Lloyd Carr and others called the best Ohio State team in a decade. This game reeked of redemption, of Cooper's payback for being 1-8-1 against Michigan before Saturday's game. In those games of the past, everything would go right for the Wolverines against the Buckeyes. Players played their best games; bounces and calls went Michigan's way. Not this time. This time, everything worked out for the Buckeyes. Special teams, with the blocked punts, Michael Wiley and the running game, the defense, the passing game - absolutely everything went right for Ohio State. It was as if Saturday's dismantling of the Wolverines had been building up inside Cooper and the Buckeyes forever. Or at least a decade. Finally, all of that pent-up frustration poured out onto the field like so many fans after the final horn sounded. So maybe this game should be remembered as 'Cooper's Revenge.' It has a nice ring to it, don't you think? - Sharat Raju can be reached via e-mail at sraju@umich.edu. WARREN ZINN/Daiy Ohio State wide receiver David Boston finally lived up to all his talk Saturday. The Junior caught 10 passes for 217 yards, and two touchdowns as the Buckeyes beat Michigan for the first time since 1994. MICHIGAN 2, MICHIGAN 1, NxTR DAME~xii 0 4 Victories vault icers into first-place tie Dy MaI rancoscutti Daily Sports Writer At one point earlier in the season, chigan coach Red Berenson called his average.' He also believed that this year's squad needed to find itself, stop living in last year's Cinderella season and rnove on. And then No. 4 Michigan State and No. 5 Notre Dame came to Yost Ice Arena. The Wolverines proved this weekend that they could again be a reigning force in the country after battling to two key g ference victories, beating Michigan tate, 2-I, on Friday night and Notre Dame, 1-0, di Saturday. Michigan now shares the CCHA lead with the Fighting Irish. "We didn't exactly run away with them," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "Our kids are learning to play with ing on the bench when kids are going right through the wall to not let the other team score when the game is on the line.' Both the Irish and the Wolverines started off a little flat as neither team passed crisply, often having trouble con- trolling the puck. But the continuing trend throughout Michigan's weekend was being in the right place at the right time. Michigan's Sean Ritchlin can attest to that. The right winger scored his seventh goal of the season halfway through the second period just by crashing the net. With Ritchlin near the Notre Dame goal, sophomore Scott Matzka slapped a puck his way that ricocheted off two players and into the net. "Matzka threw it out in front, it came out, hit my shin pad, and I think it hit maybe a Notre Dame guy's shin pad," Ritchlin said. "It was a great play by things happen when you go to the net." While on a five-minute power play 25 seconds into the third period, Michigan tried to increase its 1-0 advantage when Josh Langfeld received a pass from pointman Dave Huntzicker and batted the flying puck into the net. But the 2-0 lead didn't become a reali- ty, as linesman John Nowostka called the goal off, ruling that Langfeld's stick swung above the crossbar, nullifying the score. "That was a judgment call, and the linesman called the high-stick,'Berenson said. "We could see it clearly from the net and I don't think it was above the cross- bar at all" Hanging on to a slim one-goal lead, the Wolverines rose to the challenge, halting Notre Dame's third-period attack. Much of the thanks went to freshman goal- tender Josh Blackburn, who froze two and Ben Simon to seal the victory. "That's what it takes to play at Michigan, to be able to make the big save in a tight game" Berenson said. "He made a couple of huge saves when Simon and Urick walked in alone, and those are the chances that I should be lamenting the fact that we lost the game.' The ability to shut down the opposing teams' stars was key to Michigan success against the Irish, an element that carried over from its 2-1 emotional victory over rival Michigan State on Friday night. A post-renovation record crowd of 6,694 watched the Wolverines halt Michigan State's top duo of Mike York and Bryan Adams and finally exact revenge against Michigan State after four losses to the Spartans last season. With the crowd at its loudest this sea- son, Michigan strangled the Spartans early, not giving up a shot in the first Geoff Koch and the Michigan hockey team regained CCHA supremacy this week- I