wind Out when all your favorite teams The other March Madness A Wind 'out when all your favorite teams begin first-round NIT action tonight. michigandaily.com/sports PRS WEDNESDAY MARCH 15, 2000 9 'Practice corps keeps 'M' sharp Vignier cuts hair;'M' takes on Notre Dame f' Don Bth Ksher Daly Sports Writer What most women's basketball afi- ionados don't know is that behind every good woman plays a good man - at least in this particular case. When a want-ad ran in The Michigan Daily at the beginning of the school year, five juniors and one freshman answered Michigan coach Sue Guevara's call for some strong recruits to play with the women's team. *0 .The catch - despite four or five practices a week, the new recruits would receive zero game time and face the potential humiliation of the women beating them in practice. "That's not necessarily that impor- tant," LSA junior Scott Ottolini said. Just being able to practice in Crisler Arena is reward in itself for the group. Ottolini and his four house mates -- LSA juniors Matt Barrett, David Knox, Matt Schettenhelm and Engineering junior Joe Klamo - promptly answered the ad. LSA freshman Russell Rogan also responded to Guevara's request. The six have become a part of the best women's basketball team in Michigan history. "They help us in a lot of ways," Michigan assistant coach Eileen Shea said. "They're faster and they're stronger. They push us and make us play at a higher level. We can't get away with the things that we get away with when we play each other." Junior point guard Anne Thorius said the six have forced the team to improve its patience, shooting and passing. "It's definitely what we need, because if you want to go out and play the big teams like Lousiana Tech this year, you need to practice against the same kind of speed and against the same kind of strength," Thorius said. "That's what the guys do for us." Thorius said that working with the guys has given the Wolverines a com- petitive edge - helping Michigan win three games over ranked opponents. Maybe the hard work will pay off once again this weekend as eighth-seeded Michigan (24-7) takes on ninth-seed- ed Stanford (20-8) in the first round of the South Regional in the NCAA Championships. "I think (the guys) have helped us all season, not necessarily just for the postseason," senior center Alison Miller said. "They've been pushing us in practice all season. They're a chal- lenge for us in practice. I think it's a great experience for us." Guevara, who is not the only Big Ten women's basketball coach to use men for the practice team, has the same group of men for the first time in her four years as Michigan's coach. "It's exciting to watch them do so Six young men have helped the Michigan women's basket- bah team gear up for opponents. SAM HOLLENSHEAO/Oai' well and to be a part of it," Schettenhelm said. Although his counterparts may not necessarily agree, Schettenhelm admits that he's a little afraid to play some of the Wolverines one-on-one. "A good amount of them could give me a good game," he said. Schettenhelm and his friends have given Michigan a good game all sea- son, and it will be disappointing to see their association come to an end once the Wolverines' season is finally over. "I enjoyed having them," Guevara said. "They work hard." my J-e Whwelew Duly Sp Edio How fitting that Peter Vignier, the only holdover from the Michigan basketball team's last NIT appearance, is sporting a brand new look for today's opening- round game at Notre Dame. Vignier has lopped off most of his throwback-era afro since Michigan's last game -a heartbreaking loss to Penn State in the Big Tournament - even though he scored a career-high 16 points including a double-double against the Nittany Lions. At a press conference this T past Monday, Vignier claimed Jot he's not superstitious. But he VVo:M did acknowledge coach Brian None Elerbesapproval of the haircut 1ThU - his first since November. W "Coach must have told me 1 fnre, six times in practice how f much he liked it;' quipped the senior center.t Ellerbe doesn't institute a team dress code, but as he professed to the media earlier this season, he is no fan of 'wild looks'-long hair, big hair, tat- toos or even headbands. But there's more to Vignier's haircut than his coach's conservative style. He may be shedding the past. Vignier was a meek freshman on the 1997 Michigan team that won the NIT. After finishing the regular season with a come-from-behind win at Ohio State, those Wolverines felt snubbed when they didn't receive a berth in the NCAA Tournament. They were angry, and that anger pushed them through the NIT field and into New York City for a championship, albeit of lesser proportions. "We're playing in this tournament and we're gonna win it;' Vignier recalled Robert Traylor as saying. "That was our mindset from day one." But analogies between the '97 squad and this year's team are futile. The cur- rent Wolverines held no expectations of landing in the NCAA Tournament, espe- cially after last week's poor performance in the Big Ten Tournament. Vignier, the veteran of this year's tam, isn't giving any motivational speeches before tonight's game in South Bend, because he has very little material to build upon from this season's forgettable second half. Instead he got a haircut. This year Michigan (15-13) isn't the veteran team that just missed the Big Dance and could use that fire under the belly to win the NIT. That's Notre Dame, tonight's opponent. The Fighting Irish (18-14) were a bub- ble team that just 'N Hmissed the NCAA ONIGHT Tournament aftar'- YCE CENTER ishing 8-8 in the -ig idAgm (15-13)at East conference And e(18-14) they're upsetabout 9pa. that. ; "&Wiol "We didn'thave a Willthe fe a"t winning record inde league' Notre Dame ____coach Matt DoheUty Q om.said. "But we had a tougher schedule than other teams in the Big East.: "Our motivation is we've got topion that we belong in the NCAA Tournament. It's a tough mental process. Maybe Michigan is proud to be in the NIT because they weren't a bubble team likce we were"' The Irishboastthe BigEast p1yof the year in forward Trry Murph=-a franchise player who poses problems for Michigan because he can damage his opponent from the perimeter as well the low post. Murphy is averaging 22.8 points and 10.8 rebounds per game. "In the awards ceremony he might as well just stand up on the podium while they bring up Santa Claus' bag:"Doherty said about the decorated sophomore. Ellerbe said that LaVell Blanchard will inherit the task of guarding Murphy first. Blanchard has had some success in defending the opponents' most danger- ous players, notably shutting down Jason Collier at Georgia Tech. "But we're gonna give him an awful lot of help" with forward Chris Young and center Josh Asselin spelling Blanchard, Ellerbe said. Vancik a crucial cog of Berenson's blue line By Unm Subramuia Dafly Sports Writer 0 He may not be the guy who scores the spectacular goal or throws the brusing hit. And he may not be the player who grabs your attention as the maize and blue colors streak across the ice. But this season, Jay Vancik has quietly and solidly become one of the most criti- cal players on the Michigan hockey team. At the start of this 1999-2000 season, no one knew what the Wolverines were capable of. They had lost three impact 'l efensemen over the summer and the questions loomed large. The coaches knew they had three vet- eran, tested defensemen in Dave Huntzicker, Jeff Jillson and captain Sean Peach. But the other three spots were anyone's for the taking. By the sixth game of the season, after scoring a goal and two assists and going plus-2, Vancik had earned himself the fourth spot on the Michigan defensive roster. Six months later, Vancik has played in 37 out of Michigan's 38 contests and become a solid, indispensable force on the defensive front. This past Friday against Western - Michigan, in perhaps his finest game of the season, Vancik went plus-4 - mean- ing he was on the ice for every Michigan goal and did not get scored upon. That impressive mark was the highest individual game plus/minus total record- ed by any Wolverine this year. Vancik totaled a plus-6 mark in Michigan's CCHA playoff first-round sweep of the Broncos - the sophomore now leads the team with a plus-29 total on the season. All this from a guy who last year did- n't play in the final two months of the season. Vancik "is a guy who has had to step up big time this year and step into impor- tant roles," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "He's done a good job, and he's a very coachable player." Vancik's teammates have also noticed his progression and have confidence in the fact that he will make the crucial stops when he's on the ice. "Vancik has been playing well in the second half of the year and all year;' Peach said. "You can't say enough about him. He's been rock solid." Vancik's rise through the Michigan hockey ranks in many ways resembles the Little Engine that CouldA trek up the hill. He was the unproven player who stepped in and has climbed his way to the top. "I played a lot last summer and gained my confidence back," Vancik said. "I knew I could play, it was just a matter of getting confidence. I had a pretty good start in the first few games and my confi- dence just kept rolling on and built up ever since." That quiet confidence is an important element for a defenseman. Defensemen, according to Berenson, are often times judged not by the positive statistics they See VANCIK, Page 10 .;: ,r Vi I