Daily forum Ssomething about Michigan's hockey team bothering you- you disappointed by your favorite teasa' covrrage. jA plain bored' Stop yelling from the sidelines. Speak your mind at rirhtandailyxcom|forum. We'l see var there. 'tichigandaily.com sports te~fidiawu ag SPORTS TUESDAY MARCH 6, 2001 11 Gearing up CHRIS DUPREY Injured Langfeld may be back for CCHAs THE SECONDSEASON 129 COUNTDOWN To ALBANY By Ryan C. Moloney *ySports Writer Many who saw it happen wondered how Josh Langfeld could stand afterward. When the senior forward crumpled to the ice late in the second period of the Michigan hockey team's Feb. 17 game against Michigan State, a collective gasp rose up from the Joe Louis Arena crowd and press box. Langfeld had gotten his right knee locked underneath a falling Adam Hall with Langfeld's scrunched, pain- stricken face fully visible through his face mask, his body fell backward and 'contracted into a "C" shape. The crowd reaction was well-intended sympathy, but little consolation for Langfeld. As Michigan's big winger lay writhing on the ice, it looked as though his last games as a Wolverine would be spent in a suit and tie instead of maize blue. et there Langfeld was yesterday, slashing around the Yost Arena ice with a vengeance - as if he'd just awakened from a two-week-long bad dream. Through steady rehabilitation, Langfeld has worked his knee back up to "0 or 85 percent" by his estimations. Michigan's third-leading goal scorer could be back for the Wolverines' week- end bout with Ferris State. "I'm glad he's on the ice, I feel good ut that," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "We'll see how he feels tomorrow and the next day as to whether or not we'll think about him playing on Friday." Langfeld reported little pain in his skating, save his stopping and starting. "I was happy to make it through the whole practice today," he said. "It's pret- ty sore right now - I'd like to play. If it gets worse everyday I'll have to back off." In his time away from the ice, Langfeld has tried to maintain the same physical regimen, though weight and car- diovascular training offer little to match the reactionary quickness of game speed. "I'm going to train as though I'm going to play this weekend," Langfeld said. "I'm not out of shape but I am not in the shape I was in two weeks ago. It's a matter of getting my timing back and seeing the ice again." Without Langfeld in the lineup for the past three games, the Michigan offense has averaged just over two goals a game. KOmISAREK WINS AWARD: Michigan freshman defenseman Mike Komisarek was named to the CCHA All-Rookie Team yesterday. The 6-4, 225-pound blueliner won respect from around the league this sea- son with his physical presence and con- siderable skill on both sides of the puck. Komisarek is also a mainstay on special teams. "It's a great honor - a pat on the back for this year," Komisarek said. Surprisingly, Michigan's other fresh- man defenseman, Andy Burnes, was left off the team. "I'm kind of shocked I was picked and not Andy" Komisarek said. Some Tuesday mormng musings F ive Big Ten teams have already locked up NCAA Tournament bids. Two more, Penn State and Iowa, are fighting for what appears to be the Big Ten's final spot. One of the two must get in to do justice to the conference's power ranking, but not both. Each has a nearly identical. record (Penn State at 17-10, Iowa at 18-1) and they've split the season series, with the road team winning both. W- I invoke the Kenyon Martin rule. Last season, Cincinnti was dropped from a No. I to a No. 2 seed because of Martin's season-ending injury. If Martin's impending absence was able to hurt Cincinnati, then Luke Recker's past absence and possible return can help Iowa. The Hawkeyes have played nine games without Reker, suffering a 2-7 slide during that time. Recker may or may not be back for Big Tens. A more ike- ly scenario puts him back in action the week after, for the first week of postseason play. If that's the case, the NCAA Tournament committee - which claims Iowa athletic director Bob Bowlsby as a mem- ber, I might add - should evaluate Iowa on a Recker-inclu- sive basis. With quality wins over Detroit, Illinois and Indiana, that should be enough to squeeze the Hawkeyes 1. Penn State hasn't been missing a player the caliber of Recker. The Nittany Lions are playing the best they can which should position them for a run to the NIT champi-.. onship game, as it almost always does. I can see it now: The Crispins do the Big Apple. Brilliant. REF BLUNDERS: It might have slipped by the students that left town early for Spring Break, but the Michigan hockey team's 2-1 loss at Lake Superior on Feb. 22 provided further evidence of the weak officiating that plagues the CCHA. Michigan has never been a team to draw favors from league refs, especially on the road. The Lake State game took this principle to ridiculousness when referee Brent , Rutherford granted the Lakers a goal with 2:06 remaining in the third period of a 1-1 game. Lake Superior's Tyson Turgeon wristed a shot from theslot that hit the crossbar and bounced harmlessly away. The goal judge did not turn on his light; neither Rutherford nor his linesmen ruled the shot a goal. Michigan goalie Josh Blackburn eventually covered th, puck. Rather than heading for the facoff circle, Rutherford went to the phones. Following a conversation with the goal~ judge, he ruled the play a goal and skated to center ice. The Wolverines stood in shock. The CCHA tries to hide its lack of quality officials, and for the most part is able to do so. It has two solid rfereesin Steve Piotrowski and Duke Shegos. More often than not for big games, the league sends one of these two to uphold law and order on the ice. That way, a capacity crowd of 20,000 at the Joe Louis Arena isn't out- raged by poor officiating - only a sparse gathering of 2,500 in Sault Ste. Marie is. With the addition of Nebraska-Omaha in 1999-2000, the CCHA now has 12 teams. On a nightly basis, six referees, need to be assigned. Before, in the 1I-team league, only ftve conference games were being played on any given night,, while one team took the night off. Couple this with the retirement of Matt Shegos, one of the league's best, and the CCHA is down two quality officials, every night. (One extra game that needs to be officiated, one less good official.) The league can cover itself well for big games with Piotrowski and Duke Shegos. But on a nightly basis, the Brent Rutherfords, Brian Aarons and Mark Wilkins of the CCHA rule the roost. And that leaves the league and its vic- tims - teams like the Wolverines - in great peril. Chris Duprev can be reaghed at cduprev@umnchiedu BRAD QUINN/Daily Even after forward Josh Langfeld injured his right knee in the Feb. 17 game against Michigan State, the senior made it through practice yesterday. But playing time this weekend is still uncertain. Cagers change mindset for Big Tens By Dan Williams Daily Sports Editor The Michigan basketball team seemed unusually relaxed yesterday as it reflected on the 2000-'01 regular season and spoke about the daunting Big Ten Tournament. Much of the conversation focused on how the Wolverines dug themselves such a large hole and how they could dig their way back out of it. With Duke, Maryland, Wake Forest and St. John's on the pre-Big Ten schedule, Michigan was never able to really get on a roll during the regular season. "You always want to get off to a good start, just like you want to get off to a good start in a game," Michigan coach Brian Ellerbe said. "But we've played some pretty good teams." Michigan then opened up the Big Ten season with four of the first five games on the road, causing the Wolverines to stumble again. "You're going up against a lot of really good veterans. You look at the rosters of the first five or six teams in our league, there's no youngsters on the roster," Ellerbe said. "I don't care how good you are in high school, if you come to the Big Ten, and you're playing against juniors and seniors, you're going to get baptized a few times." Last Saturday was the end to a long, laborious journey for the Wolverines. Michigan (4-12 Big Ten, 10-17 overall) closed out its difficult regular season with a 78-57 loss at the Breslin Center to Michigan State. Following the game, things sank even lower as the team bus got caught in post-game traffic. The bus had its interior lights on so that the team could eat dinner, allowing rowdy Michigan State passers-by to recognize and taunt the defeat- ed Wolverines. "They started hooting and hollering and saying all kinds of derogatory statements. Right at that moment I lost my appetite," Michigan junior Chris Young said. And with that, Michigan closes the book on a regular sea- son where things were never close to going right. The team was obviously relieved yesterday to be separated from the rest of the year and focusing on the BTT in Chicago. "I'm just optimistic. about it. It's a totally new season," Young said. "I think we can do whatever we want. We can go in there and win four games, cut down the nets on Sunday and get our automatic bid to the NCAAs." The team hopes with a fresh start, they can finally build some momentum. "I think under the circumstances, with our schedule and the personnel that we have, I don't feel like we underachieved," Ellerbe said. "I think we're in good spirits. We're looking for- ward to Chicago." Michigan will face Penn State in the opening .round Thursday at 4:30 p.m. The Wolverines fell to the Nittany Lions in State College in their only regular-season meeting, 77-66. BLANCHARD LAUDED: The media named LaVell Blanchard See BLANCHARD, Page 13 MARJORIE MAHbMALL/Daily Josh Asselin and the Wolverines know that the Big Ten Tournament means a second chance at the postseason. .. LAW, POLICY AND THE CONVERGENCE OF TELECOMMUNICATIONS AND COMPUTING TECHNOLOGIES A UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN CONFERENCE SPONSORED BY THE LAW SCHOOL, THE COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING, THE SCHOOL OF INFORMATION, THE FORD SCHOOL OF PUBLIC POLICY, THE BUSINESS SCHOOL, AND THE MICHIGAN TELECOMMUNICATIONS AND TECHNOLOGY LAW REVIEW WITH THE GENEROUS SUPPORT OF THE PARK FOUNDATION ANY SIZE ROLL 4" Double Prints $4.99 Any Size Roll ._ffPremiu UN FEATURING THE 2001 COOK LECTURE ON AMERICAN INSTITUTIONS JOEL KLEIN 'ORMER ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL U.S. DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE am Double Prints u -te f- Le - rr n A lt U I ,