-.Wednesday, September 6, 2000 - The Michigan Daily - New Student Edition- 5E Youth served GEOFF GAGNON Young icers learn quickly, high expectations set this fall By Stephanie Offen Daily Sports Editor On Saturday, March 26, 2000, the Wolverines witnessed the longest hockey game tn NCAA playoff histo- ry. Six periods and seven hours they waited for the start to their game, as St. Lawrence and Boston University went at it - almost forever. "We kept running back and forth to see what was going on (in Boston's eventual overtime victory over the Saints)," said junior goaltender Josh Blackburn after the Wolverines ended their season with a 5-2 loss to Maine in their second game of the NCAA east regional. "Everytime we would hear a oooh' or an 'aaahh,' we would open the door to see if it was over. It seemed to go on forever." But finally at 7:05 p.m., three-and- a-half hours after the scheduled start- ing time, Michigan skated onto the ice against the Black Bears, the defending national champion. The Wolverines were without star defenseman David Huntzicker, who exited the previous day's overtime vic- tory over Colgate three minutes into the first period with a knee sprain. And Huntzicker's injury only aggra- vated the already depleted defense, which had been a concern all season for Michigan. The biggest worry coming into last season for Michigan coach Red Berenson was how to replace three defensemen he lost just before the season began. These three included would-be assistant captain Mike Van Ryn who joined the professional ranks instead of coming back for his junior year. But the answer to this concern seemed to come in the form of an unprecedented move by the Wolver- ines when they added a freshman defenseman to the team in the middle of the season. Mike Roemensky gave up a semester of eligibility to save Michigan from its defensive woes. But come playoff time, the team's biggest concern had now turned to one of inexperience, as Roemensky joined six other freshmen on the Five reasons why Michigan will win it all 1. Everyone's back: Minus defenseman and cap- tain Sean Peach, the Wolverines have every key player back for another year. No one left for the pros, no one got arrested, and no NCAA violations - now how many college programs can say that? 2. It's been awhile: The Wolverines have gone a WHOLE two straight seasons without a national championship. Things are a little empty at Yost. Besides, what other Michigan team can we countx on to win one? 3. Comrie, Jillson and Hilbert: The big three will all have breakout seasons. Mike Comrie will fight for Hobey, Jeff Jillson will make San Jose watch intensely and Andy Hilbert will embarrass oppo- nents with his quickly developing skills.v 4. Toughman competition: With two extra tourna- ments, all with the toughest competition in the nation, a grueling schedule will make Michigan post- °ANa season ready. Hey, Michigan State basketball did it, why can't Michigan hockey? 5. Yost yahoos: Any team that has fans who are encouraged to swear at and make fun of the opponents deserves to win. The Yost fans are the best fans in college hockey and rival the Cameron Crazies as the best fans in college sports. Get season tickets in September. squad. The freshmen, led by Andy Hilbert, who finished third on the team in scoring, looked strong in the playoff run. Only a year after All-Americans Jeff Jillson and Mike Comrie and star goaltender Blackburn led their team to the second round of the tournament, the new batch of rookies did the same. But just like the previous year, things finally caught up to the Wolverines. With just ten minutes left in the game, the culmination of fatigue, inexperience and a well-rest- ed, healthy Maine team were too much for Michigan to handle. But this season, the worries of inex- perience and lack of defense will no longer plague the Wolverines. All seven freshmen received ample play- ing time last season and provided over one-third of the team's goals. Michigan also adds three freshmen defensemen. The Wolverines lose defenseman and captain Sean Peach, but he is the only senior that saw a great deal of playing time last season. Defensemen Andy Burnes, Michael Komisarek and Reilly Olson will try to fill his shoes. "We had a good early signing peri- od," Berenson said after he signed the three recruits. "We weren't looking to sign a lot of players because we had a small senior class, but we did want to get some defensemen and we did that." The Wolverines begin the season earlier than usual this year as they host the Ice Breaker Cup preseason hockey tournament. The tournament will take place October 6-7. In late January, Berenson said that he was trying to entice last season's NCAA tournament members Colgate, New Hampshire and National Champion North Dakota to compete along with the Wolverines in the tournament. "It will be a tough schedule, but one we want to play," Comrie said. "I also like starting the season early because it gets us out on the ice practicing ear- lier in the year. We are all used to starting that early because that is when we used to start in juniors." The Wolverines may have hung their heads for a moment after the loss to Maine, but those heads were quickly raised again in eager anticipa- tion of the potential of this year's team. With a competitive schedule and a more experienced, well-bal- anced squad, the team has only the highest hopes, those of a national championship. "We're still a young, young team," said Blackburn, after Michigan's loss to Maine. "We're going to work hard and come back next year with a little more experience." The recent story Of a Rich'program Far from the clatter of dishes and the din of lunchroom chatter at Cottage Inn Pizza, Red Berenson and his Michigan hockey team have used the last 10 years to fulfill a prediction made years ago in the Ann Arbor pizzeria. And along the way they've staked their claim as one of the coun- try's most dominant programs. But SportsCenter anchor (and former Daily scribe), Rich Eisen remembers when that notion seemed laugh- able. Long before Michigan hockey became Ann Arbor's hottest ticket, and long before Eisen became one of ESPN's biggest names, the amber-haired skipper with the NHL resume and the New York kid with the smirk met for lunch along with Eisen's fellow hockey writers from The Daily. The slumping Wolverines had spent the previous years crawling from the doldrums of the conference cellar where Berenson found the program when he was hired in 1984. Under light as dim as Michigan's on-ice outlook, the former Wolver- ines star leaned forward over his salad and offered a prophetic vision of Michigan's rise to national prominence. The preposterous nature of Berenson's bold predictions that Michigan would someday be a confer- ence leader (gasp) or a national contender (unthinkable) had Eisen near laughter as he choked on his pizza. In the decade that has followed, Berenson's program has grown from relative obscurity to national respect-just like the grinning writer who laughed at its chances. These days the walls of Yost Ice Arena rattle with the unbridled fer vor that is born out of success. In the process of making his Michigan squad the winningest program in college hockey in the last 10 years, Berenson has rekindled an excitement and redefined an energy unlike any in Michigan athletics. Marshalling its way into the NCAA tourna- ment in each of the last 10 seasons, Michigan has ignited a program that once seemed dormant while restoring its name to the ranks of the country's dominant after winning both the 1996 and 1998 NCAA Championships. These days as the winter winds whip up the hopes and spirits of Michigan's hockey faithful, the ghosts of the Wolverines' dreary days of yester-year are but memories for the vocal contingent of followers who've witnessed the turn around. These days unbridled passion and unlimited potential meet in an old brick fortress on State Street - in a building never short on legend, always full of emotion and ever-charged with an electric brand of hockey. These days, the future is now for Michigan hockey as it reloads for another run at the national title. After bolstering its defense with a solid core of recruits tojoin veterans like Jeff Jillson and Dave Huntzicker, Michigan will welcome back an offensivejuggernaut that featured some of the conferences most potent scorers including Hobey Baker Award finalist Mike Comrie. And with one of the nation's most feared netminders in Josh Blackburn, Michigan is once again poised for greatness. And as the predictions of over a decade ago have become the banners that line the musty rafters of Yost, the disbelief of a young writer has been replaced by the pride of an alumnus who's come to know a thing or two about sports. - Geoff Gagnon can be rached at ggagnon~tttich.edu. &f" DAVID KATZ/Daly Michigan forward Scott Matzka broke out last season, with a few bumps in the road. The senior will help guide the Wolverines this year in their quest for a national championship. U. - . 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