MEN'S NCAA BASKETBALL (5) AUBURN 66, (23)Kentucky 63 (6) Syracuse 76, WEST VIRGINIA 63 (11) MICHIGAN ST. 77, (9) Indiana 71 (OT) (17) OKLAHOMA 76. Baylor 43. WOMEN'S NCAA BASKETBALL (6) NOTRE DAME 8G. Seton Hall 52 Nebraska 81. (23) KANSAS 69 NBA BASKETBALL WASHINGTON 117, Toronto 89 NEW YORK 95, Chicago 88 Miami 116, MINNESOTA 106 Phoenix at SEATTLE, Inc. Dallas at GOLDEN STATE, Inc. Ulbe £tpigmi g No. 1 wrestler, Olson, out for season By Dan Williams Daily Sports Writer It's close to the worst thing that could possibly happen to the Michigan wrestling team. Junior All- American Otto Olson's season is over., Yesterday, Olson learned that his lateral cruciate ligament and posteri- or cruciate ligament were blown out Saturday in a match against Northern Iowa's Randy Pugh. Olson's knee will require surgery, and he will have to participate in rehabilitation in order to return next season. The doctors estimate an eight-month recovery time. Olson believes dirty play spurred the injury. "It definitely was a cheap shot," Olson said. "I heard the ref call 'two points' and then I felt (Pugh) pop my knee." The questionable play resulted after Olson and Pugh found them- selves in a precarious position, with Olson on top of Pugh. When Pugh leaned up, the injury occurred. Pugh said he had no intent to hurt Olson.: "It was completely clean," Pugh said. "It was a real weird position. It's unfortunate, but I'm definitely not out to hurt anybody." Northern Iowa coach Mark Manning also feels that Olson was accidentally injured in the natural course of wrestling. "It was a dangerous situation for both guys," Manning said. "Randy was trying to get out of that position but he still had a hold of Otto's leg. "I think Randy Pugh is not only a great wrestler but also a great person. He would never hurt anybody pur- posely." But Pugh also said Olson's injury was a shame. "I really respect Otto Olson as a wrestler," Pugh said. "And I'm really crushed for him because he's a great kid." Whether Pugh meant it or not, Olson won't be wrestling again this year. But the season must continue for the Wolverines. Now the team's main concern becomes finding a way to win without the No. 1 174 pound wrestler in the country. Olson was 19-1 before Saturday's match, his only loss coming to a non- collegiate wrestler in the Midland Championships. "With Otto in the lineup, it's almost like a win," sophomore Matt Brink said. "Now maybe we will win, maybe we won't." But the team isn't bellyaching. Injuries are a part of sports and a part of wrestling. "Nobody is walking around mop- ing," junior Joe Degain said. "Sports teaches you to deal with adversity and setbacks" The immediate issue for coach Joe McFarland is to decide who will wrestle in Olson's place. The team's other natural 174-pounders, who had been stuck behind the best wrestler, left the team earlier in the season. One of the 165-pound wrestlers will probably have to move up a weight class. McFarland ; hasn't decided who will replace Olson, but he expects whomever it is to rise to the challenge. "It's a blow to the team, but we still have some great wrestlers here," McFarland said. "We haven't changed our goals at all." GOODWILL H UNTZICKER Home sweet home - Dave Huntzicker finds niche as a top Michigan defender 3y Uma Subramanian Daily Sports Writer No one ever gave the 1997-98 Michigan hockey team a chance. That year, the Wolverines played 0 freshmen after having graduated a remendous senior class that had iccomplished nearly everything dur- ng its time at Michigan. For Dave Huntzicker, that adversi- y made winning the 1998 NCAA ,hampionship all the more incredi- 'le. "I remember all the pain and suf- :'ering and hard work that went into winning it," Huntzicker said. "What mnade it so special was that nobody ave us a chance. From day one it was 'this team will be okay.' Nobody ;icked us to finish very high. "They said 'they're too young,' or .oo this or too that. 'They can't do it.' We did it and proved a lot of people rong:" No one really gave Huntzicker a Ihance either. But from those humble beginnings :ts a recruited walk-on, Huntzicker fas become indispensable. He's not the flashy defenseman who makes the orilliant play to save the game. But pe's a consistent force that helps hold he team together. Huntzicker's rise through the ranks of Michigan hockey's elite nearly nirrored that of his cherished inderella team, but it was very dif- erent from that of his classmates. Midway through the 1996-97 sea- ,;on, Huntzicker was playing his third and final year with the Compuware Ambassadors. At that point, he had no idea what the future held and time appeared to be running out on his hockey career. "I never thought I'd end up playing at Michigan," Huntzicker said. "I'd always wanted to, but my last year of junior hockey, I came to the conclu- sion that I probably wasn't going to play here. I was scrambling trying to find anywhere that would take me. "The cards worked out in my favor; I was looking for a place to play, Michigan offered me a walk-on spot and I took it." The Wolverines' 1996-97 squad notched a Michigan-record 35 victo- ries and were the No. I team in the land for all but two weeks of the sea- son. The following season's team had a tough act to follow and was required to prove itself on the ice to earn national recognition. Huntzicker had to surmount a chal- lenge himself. By becoming a mem- ber of that freshman class, Huntzicker first and foremost had to prove himself to friends and skeptics alike while helping his team return to the winner's circle - all this from a guy who never expected to play. "I told him when he came that I couldn't guarantee that he'd ever play a game here," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "We weren't sure about him - nobody was, really. He wasn't a kid who was recruited heav- ily" It didn't take long before everyone stood up and took notice. As a fresh- man, Huntzicker played in all 46 of Michigan's games - including the 3- 2 overtime victory over Boston College in the 1998 championship game. He was one of only four play- ers to play in every contest that year. "As a freshman he was a big sur- prise," Berenson said. "No one expected him to play every game for us and play them as well as he did." This year, Huntzicker continues to further his quiet success story. Take a look at the Great Lakes Invitational. In that tournament, Huntzicker was plus-I and assisted on Mark Kosick's game-winning overtime goal against Lake Superior. But it was his consistent play, not his numbers that earned Huntzicker a spot on the GLI all-tournament team. "Huntzy came here and stepped right in," Michigan captain Sean Peach said. "I didn't think he'd be in the lineup, but he's been a leader on this team for the last couple of years. He's a defensive force." It would almost seem as though Huntzicker was destined to play Michigan hockey. Raised in Ann Arbor, he grew up watching the Wolverines. Huntzicker's father played at Colgate and taught his sons to play the game from a very early age. Living near Burns Park, just off cam- pus, the Huntzickers would spend winter days skating on the ice pond in the park. "When they were little, their dad would take them over to the park to skate," Huntzicker's mother, Kay, said. "As (Huntzicker and brother Joe) got older it just seemed natural that they would take to hockey. It was also something that kept them busy." Yost Ice Arena soon followed Burns Park as Huntzicker's home rink. In the wee hours of the morning - around 6 a.m. - when most college students were still asleep, the rink was filled with pee-wee hockey teams that skate circles around Yost's freshly zambonied ice. According to his mother, Huntzicker got his hockey start under the same conditions - his father drove the boys to early morning prac- tice in the winter. Occasionally there was time for cartoons and a quick nap before it was off to school. Coaches and teammates alike attribute Huntzicker's development into a top Division I defenseman to his work ethic. His mother attributes part of her son's success to his posi- tion in the family. "David was a younger brother who had to work harder," she said. "He wanted to play with the older kids who lived on our street. But in order to do that, he had to play at their level. He didn't like being left out. "He became a defenseman because his father wanted him to learn to skate backward, but as a kid he only wanted to skate fast." Huntzicker went on to become a standout defenseman at Pioneer High School, but still he was not recruited by college teams. "Because of his size he was so awkward when he was young that he hadn't caught up to his body in terms of agility, strength, balance and everything else," Berenson said. "He appeared to be a very gangly, fragile player. But he wasn't far away from catching up to it when he came to Michigan." When Dave Huntzicker got to Michigan, the number 27 was one of the only numbers remaining. Plus, Blake Sloan, who currently plays in the NHL, wore the number and Huntzicker thought it would bring him some luck. If nothing else, the number brought a smile to his mother's face. "The first time I saw him skate out with the maize jersey, it was stun- ning," Kay Huntzicker said. "It was amazing, he was just so huge when he skated out there. "The number 27 was a big birthday number in my father's family, and raa iui uo [L14 uxe 4 5v -,a, 1116 tv 61v4 ejz41 iltsl[iG14n41 as