BA - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, March 23, 2000 ECONSTRUCTING L 1 F I 5 i' -T . // fYrN' 2Y' _. 1an A year after steering Michigan into the postseason as a freshman, an older, more mature Mike Comrie has his Wolverines poised for the playoffs. But who is this Hobey Baker finalist? omrie 1 By Geoff Gagnon - Daily Sports Writer The strides are measured, the movement quick and light. It hap- pens like this every time; it's his only predictable move. Crisscrossing knees drive his legs like pistons to the blue line where he taps the stick of Jeff Jillson. A pivot later, as his name is announced before every game, Mike Comrie finds the empty space of the ice and leans back to carve a single straight line that parallels the blue one. In a shimmer of snow and skate, the blade and the ice, the steel and the water are his - and so is the arena. His style is in the simplicity, but the statement is in the line he's carving. It's like the line from here to his hometown Edmonton, where a boy and his brother learned the game near the banks of the North Saskatchewan River. Or it's the line from Edmonton to neighboring St. Albert, where he became a household name after guiding the Junior "A" St. Albert Saints to a championship a year before landing in Ann Arbor. It's the line from here to Albany and Saturday's NCAA Tournament opener or even Providence and this year's Frozen Four. ,It's the line back home to Edmonton add an Oilers team that made him -a third-round pick a year ago. It's the line between being good and being great - and Comrie knows it's a thin one. E.. Five hours east of Alberta's Rocky Mountain Range that cuts its way to the Pacific coast, Edmonton slides between southern Canada and the Athabasca frontier country to the north. It was a place that called to fur traders in the 19th century and it was a place where Mike's father Bill received a calling of his own, when at age 16 the Chicago sBlackhawks drafted him. Before he could make it to the NHL - even before he could make it to training camp - Bill Comrie lost his father and with him, any hope of play- ing hockey. "He was the oldest kid in the family," Comrie explains. "When his father passed away he was forced to give up hockey. He had to support the family and that meant getting a job." So when the father with the unspoiled potential and the dream left unrealized returned to the ice, it was to give the game to his sons Paul and Mike - a game that Comrie says has become the glue that has bound the three together. "Hockey pulled us together when we were young," Comrie said. "I remember just wanting to be on the ice with Paul and my father from the moment I learned to skate." It was the father and the brother and the closeness that formed out of the struggles of growing up that tied hock- ey to a boy and Comrie to a dream. It was Edmonton, a half a world away from South State Street and Yost Ice Arena, where flooded backyard rinks and frozen winter days gave Mike an introduction to the game he hopes to make a profession. And later, an intro- duction to the type of notoriety that comes with being a hockey hero in Western Canada. In just about the time it takes a 19- year-old to build the resume of a Hobey Baker finalist, fans outside of Edmonton can forget what made Comrie so known so young - even before Michigan. Visit the webpage for the St. Albert Saints of the Alberta Junior Hockey League and you'll see a litany of NHL stars and noted names listed as alumni. But it's two pictures in the center of the page, both of Comrie, that are larger than the rest - larger even than that of NHL star Mark Messier. "They love him in Edmonton and St. Albert," Paul said. "It's because of what he did with the Saints - he's very well known there." And maybe he should be. After all, his 60 goals, 78 assists and 138 points in 58 games in 1997-98 are all team records for the Saints who boast more than a handful of NHL alums. His recordbreaking 1997-98 campaign also garnered Comric Canadian Junior "A" Player of the Year honors and suddenly gave the acclaimed young phenom a difficult decision. Recruited by schools all over the U.S., Comrie debated whether or not he should attend college or play Major Junior hockey. In the end, it was the influence of his brother's experience as a junior at Denver University that may have convinced Mike to play at the col- lege level. "I had talked to people that play in Juniors, and I had talked to people that played in college, and I really couldn't make up my mind," Comrie said. "In the end, I thought about my visits to see Paul in Denver and I thought about what I could gain from college and decided that would be the direction I should go." With that decision out of the way, Comrie's father said the choice of which school to attend was one that didn't take his son long to make. "I remember after he decided to visit schools he scheduled several visits and his first was with Michigan," Bill Comrie said. "Well, I got a phone call from his hotel room the very first day he was there. He told me that he would cancel the rest of the trips, that his mind was made up." U.. Watch Mike Comrie before a game as the national anthem is played. Watch him rock and sway and dig his skates into the ice. Watch him fidget and tap his stick or his helmet. Watch him fight an obvious urge to scream to the band to hurry. And then watch the helmet and the stick and those skates find their way into a motion so pure it must be instinct as the speedy Comrie ignores the final few words of the song to begin skating. "I'm ready to play at that point," Comrie explains. "When I'm on the ice I want to play, I'm in a hurry to get start- ed." Even if that means skating with such intensity that you fail to see the col- orguard unit filing off the ice with the American flag earlier this season in East Lansing? Even if that means having to hurdle the red carpet while sending ROTC cadets scurrying off the ice like troops to a trench? It's a tendency that seems to reflect his career - Mike Comrie is in a hurry, and at times not even an army can stop him - literally. He moves faster to carve that line in the ice straighter and longer, and when he comes to a stop near the boards, the motivation stares back at him off the MMM" The Talented Mr. Comrie shine in the glass. He drives himself, and Paul - ironically now with the Edmonton Oilers - says that's what sets his brother apart. "He sets tremendous expectations for himself and he works hard to show that he can accomplish great things," Paul said. "That drive to be better and to work harder makes him the player he is. It's been two years since Comrie made his decision to come to Michigan, and in that time the center has raced his way to become one of the CCHA's pre- mier players on the strength of a 44- point season last year. "What we wanted out of Mike was a player who could come in here and make an immediate impact," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "That's cer- tainly what we got." And maybe a little more. Rather than merely make an impact, Comrie used his rookie season to make a statement about who he is and what he intends to become in the CCHA - and the league took note, awarding Comrie the conference's Rookie of the Year award. And at this point in his still-young career there's little question about just what type of player he is. As Comrie stands poised to lead Micligan into Albany and the NCAA Tournament on Saturday, he is a very different player from the one that tallied five points in six playoff games a year ago as a rook- ie. He has defined himself this season as Michigan's most potent offensive weapon, netting 55 points on 21 goals and 34 assists, while shouldering an increasing leadership role as his contri- butions continue to make him Michigan's marquee player. Don't think other teams haven't taken notice. Comrie found in his transformation from one of the league's best rookies to one of the league's best players the frus- trating reality of success: sometimes you create more than a reputation, you create a target. The victim of increased defensive scrutiny this season was a result of Comrie's scorching start to the year, as he scored 10 goals and 10 assists in the first nine games. Since then he's been targeted and harassed by teams doing their best to keep him out of Michigan's offensive b k % , N.'± r y. picture, leaving him prey to what Berenson termed "on-ice stalking" at one point this season. But the result, say both Comrie and his coach, has been good for him at times. "It's a form of flattery," Berenson said. "And it's helped him mature as a player. To be keyed in on like that all season long by opposing defenses& helped him learn how to deal with being a star player. He's learning to play with control and to make good decisions:' And Comrie's maturation this season has also meant learning that sometimes decisions are out of his control. It was a dejected and confused Mike Comrie that arrived in Detroit for this season's Great Lakes Invitational while the Canadian Junior National teamflew to Sweden for the Wo d Championships in December. Ha~ been selected to try out for the team, the highly-touted Canadian star was sent home scratching his head after the team's roster of 22 had been finalized. Maybe because of his status as a college player playing in the United States, per- haps defensive inconsistency, or maybe because of his size - Comrie was released and left without answers. "Mike was frustrated and confu after that," his father said. "He looke at the decision and realized ther' was nothing he could do except show them that they were wrong about him."w Even Berenson, a Canadian himself, was puzzled by the move to cut Comrie, but saw it as an experience from which lessons could be learned. "We talked about it after he returned," Berenson said. "I told him that this was a chance for him to realize that no ter how well you play, some things out of your hands. I said 'If you did your best then there's no reason to second guess yourself. Your mission to grow as a player shouldn't change."' And it's clear that for Comrie it has- n't. Nor has he remained bitter over a decision that called his ability into ques- tion. "Mike loves to prove people wroo9' Paul said. "He's been defying critics since the first day he put on skates and it only seems to make him better." U. - When the winter whips its way down South State Street, and the freeze of the rink and and the steam of sweat mix to meet the thunder of applause in an air of electricity that is Yost Arena,: Mike Comrie is focused, almost alone-with himself. He thinks of nothing more than the simplicity of the task at hand -the puck, the stick, the ice. Gone are the blurring realities of expectations or the numbing drone of critics. His thoughts are his and the moment is too. And when Michigan takes the ice Saturday in Albany, feeling and intensi- ty will be amplified, but for Com, now a playoff veteran, the routine be the same. He'll race to his spot to carve the same line when his name is annouoced and then he'll play to keep carvingit - the way he always has. /4 FILE PHOTOS GP 1999-2000 39 G 21 A 34 PTS 55 ® Finished second in the CCHA in scoring. N Second Michigan player to lead the team m scoring his freshman and sophomore seasons. * 10 goals and 10 assists in first nine games game him the fastest scoring start in the country, ::?: : ;:F;: Let iMac" put you in movies. iMach brings you the next revolution: home movies. In fact, with the iMac DV models, anyone can become a successful moviemaker. You just plug in your digital camcorder, launch the included iMovie software and start directing: re-arrange scenes, cut out the boring parts, add transitions, titles, effects and soundtracks. Put yourself in the picture with an iMac. U-M Computer Showcase ,I