4B - The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - January 25, 1999 Puck talk You can't blame the ice, but it may have been a factor." - Michigan coach Red Berenson on the ice at the new Value City Aena in Columbus Michigan 1 Key Play Saturday night, two minutes left in overtime. - Michigan defenseman Sean Peach dove to the ice and broke up an Ohio State 2-on-1 break to help preserve the tie. Ohio State I The DailyStrs rTfhe Michia Daiy hcky witers' picks for Michigan's three stars of Saturdays game. - 1. JoSH BLACKBURN - GOALTENtIER Blackie blacked out the uckeyes for almost 59 minutes. He even eamed special paint scars from the sketchy Value City Arena ice. 2. MIKE COMIt - CENTER Scored the only Midi'an goal of the game on a pass from Geoff Koch. Also had several other chances to capitalize throughout. - 3. BoeBY HAYES - CENTER,.: Nayes came bah fron a one-game <.uspension t havengace, pr- viding tough defense fom the cen- ter position and breakinp a key S Ohio State opportu in the sec- and pen Michigan 1, Ohio State 1- Michigan 0 1 0 0-1 Ohio State 0 0 1 0-1 Frst pedod - no scoring. Penaltes --OSU, Cousneau (slasing), 1:43; OSU, Skalenski (hold- Ing), 2:24; Mich, Hayes (holding), 2:24; OSU, Signoretti (delay of game), 3:00; Mich, Langfeld (delay of game) 3:00; OSU Lafrance (roughing), 7:58; OSU, Jestadt (slashing), 8:52; Mich, Rominski double minor (slashing-roughing), 9:52; OSU, Jestadt (interference), 14:12; Mich, Crawford (foss checking), 17:22. Second period -1. Mich, Comrie 13 (Koch, Langfeld), 3:10. Penates - Mich, Koch (cross checking) :23; OSU, Freeman (elbowing), 4:41; OSU, Freeman (holding), 7:41; Mich, Kosick (high sticking), 7:53; OSU, Meloche (tripping), 8:20; Mich, Koch (hooking), 8:39; OSU, Rech (high stick- ing), 15:21; Mich, Matzka (cross checking), 18:12; Mich, H-untzicker (delay of game), 19:12. Tkrd period - 1. OSU, Jestadt 4 (Boisvert, Meloche), 18:50. Penalties - Mich, Magnuson (charging), 5:06; OSU, Jestadt (holding), 7:50; OSU, Jestadt (holding), 11:34. overtime - no scring. Penalties - none. Shots onal- Mich 12-1044-3; OSU 3139- 26. Power Plays - Mich 0 of 9; OSU 0 of 8. Saves - M ich, Blackburn 3138-1 -25; OSU, Maund 12-9-4-4 - 29. Referee - Roger Graff. U esmen - Bob Faria, John Gosger. At: Value City Arena. A: 17,249. Value-packed Ohio State's new faclity, the Value City Arena, reigns as the No. col- lege hockey rink in attendance.; capacity Michigan's Yost Ice Arena is ninth. Here are the rankings with capacity: 1. Value City Arena (Ohio State) 17,500 2. Kohl Center (Wisconsin) 14,385 3. Manuc Arena (Minnesota) 9,700 , 4. Mullins Memorial Center (Mass.- Amherst) 8,389 5. Conte Forum (Boston Colege)7884 6. Colorado Springs Wodd Arena (Colorado College) 7,343 T7 National Hodey Center (St. Goud State) 7,000 T7. Magness Arena (Denver - set to be opened next season) 7,Q0OQ 9. Yost Ice Arena (Michigan) 6,343 10. Sullivan Arena (Alaska-Anchorage) 6,206 Hayes returns, leads charge through messy game By Mark Francescutti Daily Sports Writer COLUMBUS - It was nice for the Wolverines to get some Hayes back into the lineup. No, not hazing, the torture that has made some fraternities famous, but cen- ter Bobby Hayes's return to the ice. The senior, who served his mandatory one-game suspension Thursday night for a game disqualification, came back with some much-needed leadership to give the Wolverines an extra boost. . "It's good to have Bobby Hayes ----------------- back. He's one of Hockey our top players," tNoeook Michigan coach Red Berenson ----------------- said. "When crunch time comes, Bobby is on the ice for us." Well, crunch time felt like the entire 65-minute battle between Michigan and the Buckeyes last night. But unlike at some points this season, Hayes helped Michigan in the area it needed the most help - offense. "I though I created a little more offen- sively than usual," Hayes said. "We -got several chances to win tonight." As usual, Hayes slowed down one of the Buckeyes' top players, Chris Richards, who scored the only goal in Michigan's earlier loss to Ohio State. Nearing the end of the second period, Hayes stoned Richards, who had an open slot on to the left of Michigan goalie Josh Blackburn, preventing Ohio State from knotting up the score. "I wasn't playing their top line tonight, but I played against Richards on their second line, and he's a pretty good play- er," Hayes said. Hayes also helped lead a penalty kill that had a little more work than usual. With ice chips and bits causing more hazards than Michigan roads' potholes, both teams struggled on the power play. "Power plays are all passing, make three or four passes and you get a good shot," Hayes said. "But tonight we had to hold the puck a little longer." Michigan had a few opportunities early, but as the ice deteriorated, the man- advantage just seemed to mean that one less player missed passes or fell down. Due to the large number of penalties called by referee Roger Graff, power play time didn't mean much, as both teams failed on all of their chances. RYN-LESS: Without sophomore defenseman Mike Van Ryn out with a calf muscle injury, the other Michigan defenders had a little tougher job in stopping the Buckeyes. Berenson inserted Kevin Magnuson in Van Ryn's place, and he along with the rest of the defense stoned the Buckeyes for much of the game. "I'm so proud of my defense tonight," Berenzweig said. "We did a great job, and I'm happy with Blackburn's play." The young netminder was on top of his game all night, making some spectacular saves when he needed to. Blackburn held the Buckeyes to only one goal after giving up three or more in the past five games. The Michigan defense helped Blackburn's cause, blocking several shots and keeping the lanes clear for its goalie to work. "We had a good talk with the defense about blocking shots and how, if you're not sure you're going to block it, just get out of the way," Blackburn said. "I'm not going to let it in from the point." GUs MACKER HOCKEY: For about a minute in the second period, Michigan and Ohio State battled 3-on-3 thanks to Graff and his incessant penalty calling. Due to the size of the Value City Arena rink, players should have been in for a marathon of endurance hockey, but due to the sketchy ice, it looked more like pee- wee hockey than a spread-out finesse war. "You don't see (3-on-3 hockey) very often," Berenson said. "Sometimes it gets very exciting, sometimes nothing hap- pens, and tonight nothing happened. But again, bad ice means the puck bounces over your stick." Berenzweig said that while they some- times the Wolverines practice three on three, last night's action wasn't as open as he thought it would be. "We actually do a little 3-on-3 in prac- tice just in case it happens," Berenzweig said. "But (tonight) it wasn't as open as I thought it would be. Usually you see people getting breaks right and left." It still tired at least one Wolverine out. Jeff Jillson could barely skate to the Michigan bench after the wide-open skating marathon. Ice problen By TJ. Be"ka Daily Sports Writer COLUMBUS - When The Ohio State University started the construction of the Jerome Schottenstein Center last year, the idea was to give Ohio State a state-of-the-art basketball and hockey facility to enter the 21st-Century. To accomplish the task of building Value City --- .--- .-..- Arena, Ohio State employed Hockey more than 300 Commz/Wa/y craftsmen and . . poured more than 1,000 yards of con- crete. The Buckeyes even designed ter- razo floorscapes on the rotundas of each of the four levels. Ohio State paid a pretty penny for all of these perks -$10.5 billion of them in fact. While the $ 105 million facility is nothing like the CCHA has ever seen, one wonders if the Ohio State communi- ty ran out of money during the construc- tion process. With all the seats, rotundas, workers, and concrete, it seems as if the Buckeyes forgot one simple, yet key, thing - ice. At least that's the way it looked Saturday night during the Michigan-Ohio State hockey game. The Wolverines and Buckeyes - sec- ond and third-place in the CCHA, respectively - played to a 1-1 tie, but that wasn't really the story. The story was how the ice wasn't DAVID ROCHKIND/ua Justin Clark and the rest of Michigan hockey team limited Ohio State's power play attack on Saturday. The Wolverines snuffed out all eight of the Buckeyes' power play opportunities in the 1-. tie. as plague new arena actually ice, rather a slush similar to the one that plagued Michigan roads after the Blizzard of '99. "The Zamboni didn't scrape the ice at all," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "They literally watered right on the snow. They really need to do a lot of fine-tuning to get their act together for the future" With the ice conditions going from mediocre to bad to worse throughout the game, the play suffered as well. Players who had been skating their whole lives resembled 6-year old playing in their first Pee-Wee game, as both teams were falling to the ice with regularity. "The ice was terrible tonight," Michigan goaltender Josh Blackburn said. "It was so hot. I have never seen ice this bad before." Skating wasn't the only thing that was sacrificed due to the slushy surface. The movement of the puck was also altered, as players struggled to control the puck and release accurate shots at the goal. "The puck was jumping around like crazy," Michigan captain Bubba Berenzweig said. "When you went to shoot, the ice really affected it" The problems with the ice was said to be from the logistical problems that come from a multi-purpose arena. The Michigan-Ohio State hockey game was the fourth event to be held in the build- ing within a span of 48 hours. Value City Arena hosted the Ferris State-Ohio State game Thursday, an ice show Friday, and a basketball game Saturday afternoon. While this kind0 scheduling may be normal for the United Center and Madison Square Garden, it left the surface at Value City Arena thawed. The ice show was particularly devas- tating to the ice surface. A new coat of ice was put on for the show, and the paint which was used on that surface had metal in it, making it tough to scrape. The Value City staff scraped the ice at will, but the lack of time between t basketball game and the hockey ganV Saturday left less of an ice pack on.the hockey surface than normal. This led to the melting of the paint on the ice. "I got a little paint on my socks," Blackburn said. While Michigan's play was altered by the poor conditions of the ice, Ohio State had to deal with the same conditions. In fact, the Buckeyes even warned the Wolverines before the game. Ohio State forward Eric "Meloch came up to me and told me the ice was bad," Berenzweig said. The Value City Arena is a prize for college hockey, with its 17,500 seats and professional-type atmosphere. But in the search for making the best looking mul- tipurpose sports facility, Value City Arena should invest more time in mak- ing sure the ice surface yields the best- quality hockey. DUID RAHIND/Daily Sean Peach and the Michigan defensemen had a hard time keeping their feet, as slushy conditions at Value City Arena led to poor footing. Laurion resigns as coach of Alaska-Fairbanks hockey By Chris Duprey Daily Sports Writer Without announcing the reasons that motivated his decision, Alaska- Fairbanks hockey coach Dave Laurion announced his resignation yesterday, effective when his con- tract with the university expires at the end of May. In his six seasons, Laurion guided the Nanooks into the CCHA as a fledgling member in 1995, reaching the peak of his success is 1996, when Alaska-Fairbanks qualified for the conference playoffs. "For Alaska-Fairbanks to field a competitive hockey program is an extremely challenging job," Laurion said in a released statement. "I believe it is in the best interest of the program for a new coach to take the reins." The challenging job that Laurion spoke of includes a rigorous travel schedule, due to the fact that the rest of the CCHA is located in the Great Lakes area. Most teams dread the one trip they must make to Fairbanks each year - the Nanooks face such a schedule every other weekend. Joining the CCHA essentially kept Alaska-Fairbanks hockey alive. The Nanooks' nearest opponent, Alaska- Anchorage, is still more than a 300 miles away. And while the travel schedule is a gauntlet, the Nanooks have virtually no choice if they want to keep their hockey program in exis- tence. Recruiting in Alaska is also a hardship, due to the travel involved and the small-scale nature of the pro- gram at its current state. Laurion's frustration was com- pounded by the Nanooks' struggles this season. Senior goaltender Ian Perkins has hit a rocky road,. and Alaska-Fairbanks hasn't had the fire- power to support him. As a result, the Nanooks have gone 5-15 in the CCHA and current- ly reside in ninth place - one spot away from the cutoff for the confer- ence playoffs. "The nature of big-time college coaching usually involves a few changes until the perfect match is found," Alaska-Fairbanks Athletic Director Randy Pitney said in a statement. "Dave has put his heart and soul into the advancement of Alaska-Fairbanks hockey and I know that it has been hard on him that we weren't more successful." Pitney said there are no plans to hire a new coach right away. KELLY MCKINNELL/Da4 AlaskaFairbanks forward Sjon Wynia, here being pushed by Michigan's Sean Peach, will have a new coach next season, as Dave Laurion resigned as coach of the Nanooks. CCHA Standings Michigan State takes three.points from road trip Tem Michigan State mhigan Ohio State w 14 11 L 2 3 6 T 4 12 3 Pts 32 30 25 op 20 19 20 w 20 17 13 OVERALL L T C 3 4 2 5 3 2 10 4 wP 27 25 27 ?A5 From staff reports Sophomore goaltender Joe Blackburn almost blacked out Northern Michigan on Saturday night, helping the Spartans earn a 1-1 tie in Marquette. to five players Saturday. Still, the two teams played a fast but physical game through two periods, with neither able to light up the scoreboard. Michigan State's defense played its best during a Northern Michigan 5-on-3 power play early in Lake Superior goaltender Mike Brusseau made 24 saves and several unlikely Lakers came up with timely goals as they averted a sweep of the season series with the Fighting Irish with a 3-1 victory Saturday night. .Notre Dame's injury woes have become a code red F i