ah r tt t e lCit tti[q PORTS ONDAY -Tb 4--, - --..- --S-, : 4cers ground Gryphons in opener, 3-1 By TJ. Berk Daily Sports Writer For 20 minutes, the Michigan hockey team showed the explosive- ness that was indicative of its nation- al championship. After taking a 3-0 lead against Guelph, the game was left to freshman goaltender Josh lackburn. And he didn't disappoint. Blackburn and the Wolverines opened their schedule Saturday with a 3-1 victory over the Gryphons. Blackburn, in his first-ever start, stopped 21 of 22 shots, giving up only a third-period power-play goal by Derek Boyer. Coupled with a shutout perfor- mance in the Blue/White game on 4 iday, Blackburn sparkled in his ening weekend at Michigan. "I felt comfortable out there," Blackburn said. "It was good to get a few shots. The defense in front of me s occer tags Iowa, falls to Gophers, Br Davdm o the Daily In a span of 48 hours, the Michigan soccer team experienced both the thrill of victory and the agony of defeat. The Wolverines defeated Iowa, 3-1, and fell to Minnesota, 1-0, in two crucial Big Ten games. Midway through the first half against Iowa, junior Emily Schmitt received a perfect cross from Amber Berendowsky, and netted her third goal of the season. The goal not only relaxed the olverines, but forced the Hawkeyes out of their defensive shell. Numerous opportunities followed, and Amber Berendowsky rocketed a ball in the upper net late in the half. Midway through the second half, Scmitt headed in a Laurie Peterson cross for her second goal of the game. In the final minute, with the outcome almost certain, Iowa scored a consola- n goal. The 3-1 victory marked the Wolverines' second Big Ten win of the season. "We moved the ball well on them," Michigan coach Debbie Belkin said. "It was a good win." Yesterday, Minnesota brought the Wolverines back to earth. Early on, it became evident that the Gophers' defense would provide a stern test for the Wolverines. Then the Gophers grabbed the lead. idway through the first half, the oh were awarded a free kick just outside the Michigan box. Following a perfect cross, the Michigan defense was frozen and a Minnesota defender pounced on the ball for a goal. The Wolverines faced an uphill climb, as the Gophers dropped into an ultra-defensive mode. The strategy worked to perfection as e Wolverines had most of the posses- n,butnever penetrated the heart ofthe Gopher defense. "We had our chances, but could never take advantage," Becky Kozlick said. is very good, so I didn't have many difficult shots." The Wolverines gave Guelph goalie Mark Gowan plenty of diffi- cult chances, peppering him with 42 shots. Gowan, after giving up the three first-period goals, was impene- trable, stopping Michigan's last 26 shots and registering 39 saves for the night. Gowan stopped most of the Michigan shots cold, but he had a hard time with freshman center Mike Comrie. Comrie was all over the place during the first period, feeding Geoff Koch in front of the net for the second goal of the game. Comrie also added a goal of his own in the last minute of the period, skating around the Guelph defenders and shooting on Gowan from the right side of the net. Gowan deflect- ed the first shot, but Comrie snuck the rebound past him for Michigan's final goal. "I think Mike is going to be a spe- cial player," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "He can beat you one-on-one and he uses his wings very well. He made a great pass on Koch's goal and he could have had a couple more of his own." Comrie also set the tone for the game in the first few minutes, as he laid out two Guelph defenders. At just 5-foot-10 and 172 pounds, Comrie's hits surprised fans and players alike. "As a guy who's not so big, you've got to dish it out whenever you can," Comrie said. "It's just part of the game. I don't go looking for it but if its there, I'll take it." The line of Comrie, Koch and Sean Ritchlin was taking it to the Gryphons the entire game, account- ing for two of the three Michigan goals and multiple opportunities. "Obviously you have to like the combination of Comrie and Koch with Ritchlin," Berenson said. "Those three played very well together." Berenson also saw some good play from Greg Crozier and Scott Matzka. Crozier started the scoring 2:23 into the game with a power-play goal. Crozier took a Matzka pass and beat Gowan stickside from the left faceoff circle. While the Wolverines showed flashes of brilliance at times against Guelph, they were also coaxed into committing quite a few penalties, especially in the second period. The Wolverines found themselves down two men in power-play situations twice, helping stunt the offensive flow they enjoyed in the first period. "When you are two men short twice, it takes a lot of players out of See OPENER, Page 10B Freshman Josh Blackburn stopped 22 of 23 shots Saturday as the Wolverines defeated Guelph, 3-1. DAVID ROCHKIND/Daily Surviving safely Michigan slips and slides past punchless Iowa, 12-9 By Mark Snyder Daily Sports Editor IOWA CITY After a game lit- tered with penalties, miscues and confusion, it was only fitting that Saturday's game ended with a mis- take. Kahlil Hill, Iowa's kick returner extraordinaire, fielded a punt on the five yard line and, while trying to break the big play, was tackled by a swarm of Michigan defenders in the end zone for a safety, securing Michigan's 12-9 victory over Iowa (1-I Big Ten, 2-3 overall). The victo- ry gave Michigan (2-0, 3-2) its first overall winning record since January. The game, played before 70.397 hearty souls in the Iowa rain, lasted just three hours, but to anyone watching, it hardly went that fast. Because every game must end with a winner, Michigan got credit for a victory, though few would con- tend it was a masterpiece. A sloppy day - "rainy and driz- zling," as the Iowa announcer described - found a game to match. "I'm very proud of this football team;' Michigan coach Lloyd Carr said. "A lot of people will talk about how ugly it was. I think it's a won- derfill win at a hard place to play and win."~ There were 19 penalties and eight turnovers between the two teams, and yet the game was so sloppy that capitalizing on the mistakes was just as difficult as playing mistake-free. But it was the final sequence that symbolized the entire messy after- noon. Michigan's defensive hold with just less than six minutes to play earned the Wolverines a chance to pad their 10-9 lead, but after a face mask penalty on the punt return, the final drive remained an uphill battle, beginning at their own 11 yard line. Backfield workhorse Anthony Thomas received the bulk of the final carries, but failed to earn the crucial yards, leaving the fateful final punt to Jason Vinson. Vinson, whose kicks varied in distance throughout the day, nailed the final punt as he never has before, placing it inside the five yard-line in the left corner - a textbook kick. The boot would have pinned Iowa into a difficult position - traveling 60 yards into field goal range - but Hill rendered all that meaningless. Mistakes proved to be the day theme on both sides of the ball. Unfortunately for punt returner See HAWKEYES, Page 6B WARR"N"ZINN"/aiy Iowa fullback Trevor Boilers Is tackled by a slew of Wolverines on a sloppy, mud-slicked field In a sloppy, mistake-ridden game at Kinnick Stadium. The Wolverines held on to beat the Hawkeyes, 12-9, on the strength of a last-minute safety. Anthony Jordan (28), Josh Williams (91) and Sam Sword (93) drag Boilers down as Rob Renes (58) finishes him off. Comedy of errors somehow leaves Blue in Brg Ten race OWA CITY - Anybody wanna return punts? Better yet, does anyone have some Super Glue? The final, fitting exclamation point to Saturday's nonstop comedy of errors came on a boneheaded safety, of all things, sealing a 12-9 Michigan victory and putting an end to one of the most laughable games in recent memory. It was a ridiculous ending to a ridiculous game, on a play Iowa coach Hayden Fry said deserved "an A-plus for effort, and a zero for decision-mak- ing." Fry's comment summed up the whole afternoon, which started, proceeded and ended with mistake after rain- induced mistake. "Ugly" doesn't do this game justice. "Comical" JIM comes close. ROSE In all fairness, it was Rose wet and cold and windy Beef and slippery, so you couldn't expect mistake- free football. In fact, with Michigan and Iowa, in early October, you'd expect it to be sloppy. But this was way beyond sloppy. This was hilarious. This game induced more laughter than a Woody Allen movie. If it wasn't James Whitley fumbling a punt, it was James Whitley fielding a punt, running five yards and then fumbling. And if it wasn't Whitley, it was David Terrell. Tai Streets did the best job, and he just backpedaled out of the way. Lloyd Carr said his team tried to prepare for the inclement weather, even practicing with a wet ball - yes, a wet football - in the days leading up to the game. Well, the practice showed. And apparently, it worked - because the Wolverines, come Saturday, did an extra good job of losing control of the wet ball. Much better than Iowa, at least. The Wolverines fumbled five times and threw two interceptions. They racked up nearly an entire field's worth of penalties, with 94 yards in losses on 12 separate flags. There was one sequence, late in the third quar- ter, when the two teams were literally throwing the ball at each other. Whitley fumbled a punt away. Four minutes later, Iowa's Ladell Betts fumbled it back to the Wolverines. Not to be outdone, Clarence Williams fumbled it back to the Hawkeyes six seconds later. Both defenses were exhausted just from run- ning on and off the field. By the end of the exchange, the pro scouts were laughing so hard they had to leave. Is this really the team that was ranked in the top 10 a month ago? Nobody's expecting perfection, but come on! If there isn't one single person on the Michigan football roster who can do a better job returning punts than James Whitley, then maybe Carr should get back there himself. At this point, opponents should just start punting on first down, with the intention of recovering the ball 40 yards downfield (OK, maybe 25 yards down- field). If this team can't field a punt, it shouldn't be in the race for the Big Ten title. But it is! That's the amazing thing, and really, that's why Saturday's game can ultimately be seen as, well;just plain funny. Had Michigan lost, it might be different. It might be upsetting. But the Wolverines, despite their best efforts to the contrary, were simply unable to remove themselves from the Big Ten race. Try as they might, they simply could not blow it. And so they're still alive, undefeated in the league and sitting pretty for the next few weeks. With two whole weeks to get ready for Northwestern, and then Indiana, and then Minnesota ... who knows? But we're getting ahead of ourselves. Tell Carr to go get that wet football again. And pray for rain against Northwestern. If nothing else, it's good enter- tainment. DANA LUNNANE/Daily Made Spamcarotella and the rest of the WV~fhmUna nrmsiUDa * wpi iiMewwlwkm- - Jim Rose can be reached via e-mail at jwrose@umich.edu wwvannes eamee a spn rnes vreeKena. I