Hockey USCHO ratings v Michigan ranks sixth in the latest hockey USCHO poll. Go online to see how the rest of the top 10 shakes out. michigandaily.com /sports PORTSlet~t~lf I r. TUESDAY MARCH 14, 2000 10 M R..0 1 0T.v . _ NITa blessing is tme around By Chris Du pry Daily Sports Editor f. There's nothing like the confines of Yost; a trib down memwry lane Four years ago I made my first visit to the old barn on South State Street. I'll be honest with you, I did- n't know much about Michigan hockey or college hockey in general for that matter. Sure, I knew the Wolverines had won the National Championship the pre- vious year - I had seen Brendan Morrison's goal in overtime against Colorado College in the championship, and Mike Legg's amazing circus goal against Minnesota in the Regional Final on TV. But I had no idea what I would find under the archway More than a few have felt witty enough to have fun with the acronym NIT. But members of the Michigan basketball team are mak- ing no such jokes. To them, it's the National Invitational Tournament, and noth- ing different. "A lot of people are done with their season but we have a chance to continue on," freshman guard NIT L a V e lII Blanchard said First round yesterday at a post-practice press conference. Blanchard, Peter Vignier and Gavin Groninger assured the media that the Wolverines are truly upbeat about their first-round game at Notre Dame tomorrow night in the NIT - not the destination they had hoped for back in January when they were 12-3, but a postscason tournament nonetheless. "You always have a dream. In my dream, we won the NCAA champi- onship and I was cutting down the nets," Blanchard reflected. "I guess it didn't work out that way. "Hopefully, we can win (the NIT)." There seem to be three types of teams in the NIT field this season: Small unheard-ofs like Siena and Southern Illinois that failed to win their conference tournaments and earn automatic NCAA bids; middle- of-the-road teams with decent records, such as Xavier and Marquette, teams that represent the Wolverines' possible oppanents should they win tomorrow; and marquee programs that fell short of and through the north doors of Yost Ice Arena that first night. I approached the brick structure and wondered what I was doing. Some guys in my hall had said that hockey games at Yost were the best thing going in Ann Arbor, and almost on a whim I found myself dropping $80 or so for season tick- ets (about half of what you'd pay now). It didn't take long though for me to figure out what all the talk was about. Just minutes into my first game, -~ CHRIS GRAN DSrAFF The Grand Scheme MARJORIE MARSHALL/Daily LaVell Blanchard gets to look forward to a first-round NIT matchup with Notre Dame tomorrow. The Wolverines open on the road. and 11-1. They won the Great Lakes Invitational and the regular-season and tournament CCHA crowns, before falling to Boston University in the national semifinals. The next year, without the services of lobey Baker winner Brendan Morrison, they would go on to win a national championship. On the way, they played in what ranks among the great- est single sporting events I've ever seen in person - a 4- 3 victory over defending national champion North Dakota in the regional final. The atmosphere in Yost on that day can never be given justice by a writer, but the deafening sounds of the crowd after the Wolverines took the lead late in the third period are still described by Michigan coach Red Berenson as "the loudest I've ever heard Yost." But of all the great teams, and through all of the great0 games, it is the experience of Yost itself that I will always remember. Where else does the smell of new ice mixed with the stale and decaying aroma of food lost deep within the annals of the bleachers smell so good? Where else is the word sieve used so often by so many people? Where else does your mom call with so many unpleas- ant things to say? Where else does a band play such an integral part in the game? And for that matter, where else is it a pre-req- uisite to be both a good dancer and a good conductor to lead the band? Yost is a special place and on Saturday night I entered the old barn for my last game as a student here at Michigan - no longer as a ran, but as a reporter. I no longer cheer and go crazy when we score a goal (well, maybe a little tapping of the feet once in a while...) - I think Jaime Morris would probably throw me over the side of the press box if I did. But, I do appreciate the hockey on the ice, and college hockey in general. And Yost has taught me that. After the game on Saturday I stuck around Yost for awhile. I stood over the balcony and looked across the ice. I remembered that game against North Dakota, that announcement that Charles Woodson won the Heisman Trophy, that record setting victory by Marty Turco and those banners being raised. I remembered the first time I stepped in the doors of Yost, and wished I could do it all over again. - Chris Grandstaff can be reached ot cgrandst@umich.edu. i the NCAA Tournament. Like Michigan and Notre Dame. Notre Dame was one of the few teams to make the heartbreaking "Bubble's Burst" list. With an 8-8 Big East record and an 18-14 overall mark that boasted big-time victories against Ohio State and Connecticut, the Fighting Irish felt that they had already played their last home game and were instead en route to the belovcd Big Dance. Plans change. Turn on the lights and warm up the popcorn machines in the Joyce Center - there's more basketball to be played. Notre Dame, after the allowed NCAA-rcjection pouting period, should be careful not to look a gift horse in the mouth. But at least the Fighting Irish are opening at home. Despite the larger sealing capaci- ty of Crisler Arena relative to the Joyce Center (13,562 vs. 1 1,418). the Wolverines were not given the privilege of hosting a first-round game. Maybe the NIT committee was impressed with Notre Dame's record. Maybe the committee was less than impressed with the attendance at Crisler when Michigan hosted two NIT games back in 1997, where the lower bowl was barely filled - although the Maize Rage had not Vet been born. "Realistically, we weren't opti- mistic about getting one the first night," Michigan coach Brian Ellerbe said. "If we're fortunate enough to play well enoughi to win, there's a possi- bility we can get one in the second" round. Trying to psychoanalyze the NIT committee is useless. Time and energy, from the Wolverines' perspective, is much better spent on beating Notre Dame a task they are happy to have. "We're still playing. There are a lot of teams that are not," Ellerbe said. visiting Ohio State was called for a penalty, and, as if somehow telepathically linked, everyone around me stood up and started waving their hands in unison at the ban- ished Buckeye. I followed suit, and as he entered the penalty box we all yelled, "SEE YA!" But the words that tollowed took me completely by surprise. "CHUMP, DICK, PUSS, DOOOOOUCHEBAG, ASS- HOLE, PRICK, CHEATER!" (yes, I predate the now commonly used "BEOTCH, WILDFONG; BASTARD," et cetera). Huh!? Now thoroughly amused, and intently focused on the game I watched as the Wolverines quickly scored on the powerplay -- transforming the student section into an absolute mob scene, followed by a rousing chorus of...THE VICTORS. Yost had me -- hook, line and sinker. The Wolverines went on to win that game, 7-2. Since then I've seen many memorable Michigan hockey games. That 1996-97 team (which I will claim until my grave is still the best college hockey team I've ever seen) fin- ished the season 35-4-4, with only two home blemishes - ties to Cornell and Lake Superior. The Wolverines would go on to demoralize opponents by scores.like 13-1 ' 1 DAVID KATZ/Daily Michigan fans create the Intense fervor that turns Yost Ice Arena from an old fieldhouse into the most vocal building.on cam- pus. The ambiance created at the Michigan hockey team's home cannot be replicated. We wish we could broadcast every last detail about the technology that's being developed here. But you can only divulge so much when you're trying to do what's never been done before. So instead, we invite you to do this: Visit our site. Look at the features. Consider the performance tradeoffs and scaling challenges. 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