A OeRTSdiiganBadld SP.RT michigandaily.com sportsdesk@umich.edu THURSDAY APRIL 4, 2002 8A. Meet Tables are turned as Wolverines leave Yost By J. Brady McCoIlough Daily Sports Writer It's been a long, seven-year odyssey for the Minnesota hockey team and its fans. The program, which owns the all- time record for wins in college hockey, is finally back where it feels it belongs me in St. - in the N C A A Frozen Four, competing for its fourth national charmpi - o n s h i p tonight at 7:30 p.m. against Michigan at the Xcel T. rAUL, NMINN. Who: Michigan (2810-5) vs. Minnesota (30.84) When: 7:30 p.m. Where: Xcel Energy Center Latest: In their second straight Frozen Four; the Wolverines will take on the home team in the Golden Gophers. TOM FELDKAMP/Daily If Michigan is to defeat Minnesota tonight, there is little doubt that junior center Mike Cammalleri will play a large role. Paul Minnesota gets nod as West's best By J. Brady McCollough Daily Sports Writer A lot can happen in four and a half months. Just ask the Michigan hockey team, which went from being in the middle of the CCHA standings to conference regular season and tour- nament champions during that span. Minnesota coach 'Don Lucia knows that the Wolverines are a much-improved team since his Golden Gophers dismantled them, 5-2, on Nov. 23 at Yost Ice Arena. Michigan is confident, talented, young and enthusiastic and could be the hottest team in college hockey after beating Michigan State, St. Cloud and then-No. 1 Denver in its last three games. MICHIGAN OFFENSE VS. MINNESOTA DEFENSE: Minnesota defenseman Jordan Leopold - a Hobey Baker Award finalist - will be matched up all night long with Michigan's top trio of Mike Cammalleri, Jed Ortmeyer and Eric Nystrom. Leopold, who Michigan coach Red Berenson deemed the top defensive defenseman in the WCHA, will have his hands full with the Wolverines' first line, which has been clicking on all cylinders since Cammalleri's -return from mono. Cammalleri gives Michigan the ability to light the lamp at any moment, and he is complemented by the grinding, physical style of Nys- trom and Ortmeyer. Even if he does- n't score a goal, Cammalleri's presence on the ice automatically elevates his teammates to a new level. With Leopold matched up against Michigan's top line, the key to Michigan's offensive success will be its ability to get productive shifts from lines two, three and four. Look for the Wolverines' third line - Milan Gajic, Michael Wood- ford and Dwight Helminen - to continue its emergence as a threat. The trio scored two of Michigan's goals in its win over St. Cloud, and their skill should give Michigan the edge in its offensive attack against an average Minnesota defense, which See MATCHUPS, Page 10A Energy Center in St. Paul, Minn. The Golden Gophers made their last trip to the Frozen Four in 1995, and a return trip has not been easy to come by. Hit hard by many of its star players leaving early for the NHL, Minnesota could not get over the hump in the next four seasons. Doug Woog, the Golden Gophers' coach for more than a decade, paid the price in 1999, when he was fired in favor of current coach Don Lucia, who came over from Colorado College. "They've lost a lot of great players that each year would have been their leaders," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "They never quite got to where everybody thought they should." Lucia took over a team that needed direction and a new attitude, and in his first season, the Golden Gophers fin- ished just one game above .500. "We had to become a team again," Lucia said. "I saw pockets of people (who were) worried about themselves and not the team. I've never been a part of a team who didn't care about each other and get along." But three years after taking the job at Minnesota, Lucia - with the help of a strong senior class - has his team in position to win its first national title since 1979. "(Our chemistry) changed last year," said Lucia, whose team fell in the first round of the NCAA Tournament last season. "There was much more sense of a team." While the Golden Gophers spent DAVID HORN Van Gundy's possible move isn't a surprise seven years trying to find a way to get back to the top, the Wolverines accom- plished that feat twice, winning the national championship in 1996 and 1998. Watching its Big Ten foe succeed year in and year out has helped Min- nesota see what it takes to get back to that level. "I look at Michigan as kind of a measuring stick," Lucia said. "If you want to compete for a national champi- onship, you have to be better than Michigan. Over the last 10 years, (Michigan) has been the most dominant program in college hockey. They know what it takes to get the job done at this time of year." . If Minnesota's measuring stick is comparing itself to Michigan, it grew by leaps and bounds on Nov. 23 at Yost Ice Arena in the annual College Hockey Showcase. The then-No. 1 ranked Gold- en Gophers smacked around the Wolverines like a schoolyard bully, jumping out to a 3-0 lead in the first seven minutes and cruising to a 5-2 vic- tory. Lucia said that he has not focused on that game in preparation for tonight's national semifinal, as Michigan has improved dramatically in many ways since the teams' initial matchup. But Berenson remembers the prob- lems that his team had with the Golden Gophers very vividly, as his Wolverines were forced onto their heels before they could even find a rhythm. "This is going to be a skating game," Berenson said. "We're going to have to be able to keep up with these guys. They skate like the wind, and we can't be a step hesitant." Fear of attacking early has been absent in Michigan's game in its current six-game winning streak, as the Wolver- ines have scored the first goal in each of those victories. Coming out strong and playing with desperation in the early part of the game will be crucial to Michigan's chances in tonight's contest because of the home-ice advantage that Minnesota will hold. The Wolverines will take a dose of the medicine that propelled them to the Frozen Four, as the Xcel Energy Center will be packed with thousands of screaming Minnesota fans who are desperate for the school's fourth national title. The Golden Gophers have played in the Xcel Energy Center numerous times, and Lucia is convinced that hav- ing his players in familiar surroundings will help calm the nerves that will inevitably come. "We're the only team in the Frozen Four where no players have been there before," Lucia said. "We have played in that facility, and it will take tension away from our guys." "It's their tournament to lose," Beren- son said. "They're playing at home, and they may as well be the No. 1 seed as far as we're concerned. They've got all these All-Americans and all-stars. We're going in as a huge underdog." ere is so much to say this week in the world of sports. Baseball opened, and our very own Wolverines are in Minneapolis tonight trying to prolong the magic. But I just have to say something about the Jeff Van Gundy situation. A report in the Orlando Sun Sentinel on Tuesday claimed that the former coach of the New York Knicks has decided to head south - not in terms of talent, although perhaps in that too. The story said that Van Gundy intends to take his coaching talents to Washington to coach the Mys- tics of the WNBA. That's Women's National Basketball Association. Yesterday a spokesperson for the Mystics denied that the team had been in contact with Van Gundy, and that the report in the Sentinel was false. Let's pretend that it was not. It would be easy to be misogynistic and vulgar here,sand make a remark that is derogatory to women and their bas- ketball abilities. My friend made the comment earlier this week that it is probably much less likely that Van Gundy will get trampled by Alonzo Mourning, but there is a greater likeli- hood that he will get bitch-slapped. I'm going to be above making com- ments like that, and speak beyond my natural tendencies as a season ticket- holding, American beer-drinking, cheese on top of cheese on top of cheese on top of cheese on top of nachos-eating, blue collar, armchair quarterback sports fan. There's nothing wrong with Jeff Van Gundy going to coach in the WNBA, and if you think there is, you've allowed yourself to become seduced by the "I Love This Game" campaign. Take a look at the NBA: In my expert opinion as a sports fan, it sucks. And Van Gundy is right to have left it to search for a better gig. Van Gundy, who compiled a 248-172 record as coach of the Knicks, left behind a team (and I use that word loosely) of overpaid, overrated and over- grown glory mongers, who would not allow themselves to be coached. According to an NBA source quoted in the Sentinel, Van Gundy was frustrated by not being listened to and frustrated by his team's inability to play anything resembling good basketball. I imagine he hopes to find players in the WNBA who still do "Love This Game" and still aspire to achieve excellence on the court - as athletes, as professionals and as teammates. He hopes to find players who aren't doing it for the money. Which is why coaching on the col- lege level was really not an option. Let me apologize now. The comment before about coaching lesser talent was for cheap laughs (criticize me for being a poor columnist - not a chauvinist). Yeah, they can't dunk and the game isn't as fast, but who cares? What good do those subjective measures of athleti- cism do you in the NBA? I was at the airport last Sunday, stranded as I waited for a friend to pick me up. I had an hour to kill. I decided I.would sit down at the bar, drink a beer, and watch some NBA basketball; it had been a while. I was treated to the third quarter of a Wizards- Mavs game, which ended up being more painful to watch than the cavity search the guy ahead of me in line at security had gotten. If you want good, smart basketball played by athletes who have trained harder and longer for fewer dividends than their male counterparts, check out the WNBA. Van Gundy sounds like a guy who realized what everyone with their lips not on David Stern's ass realized about three years ago: That the NBA in the post-Jordan era (it's weird, isn't it? You see that guy wearing No. 23 in D.C., but it's still somehow the post- Jordan era) is probably the worst product in the sports industry. He sounds like a guy who really loves to coach basketball, and thinks he found a place where he can coach and have that sort of fun that one is supposed to have when he or she is involved with sports. I salute him for that, and I hope he finds in Washington what has been missing from Madison Square Garden - and the entire NBA - for years: Good, fun basketball. David Horn can be reached at hornd@umich.edu. Michigan vs. Minnesota: Martin vs. Ventura Michigan Minnesota We have They have Edge Not Yanni Yanni Michigan "American Pie" "Fargo" Minnesota Ed Martin Jan Gangelhoff , Push Little Brown Jug A bronze pig Michigan A fat governor A fat, wrestling governor Minnesota Marty Mornhinweg George O'Leary Da Bears Medical MD & Veterinary De ree Programs Making World-Class Physicians & Veterinarians Today, For Tomorrow's World " Programs to meet the needs of high school and college graduates. " More than a half century old well-recognized and established European medical and veterinary universities. " Programs recognized by the National Committee on Medical Education, Accreditation, and the U.S. Department of Education. " 100% financial aid is available. The U.S. government provides subsidized loans to qualified students in our programs. " Approved by New York Medical Education Board for clinical training in the state of New York. (A state with a high number of residency positions.) " Medical and veterinary clinical clerkships/training in the USA. " Smaller class size with traditional European tutorial style education. -Programs offer opportunity to earn dual degrees - MD PhD, MD MBA, MD MSHA, MD MPHA, etc. Much safer campus environment, compared to many campuses in the USA, allowing retaining and strengthening of cultural identities. ' English language curriculum matches to major American medical and veterinary schools. * An excellent opportunity for hands-on participation for extensive Gynasts confident heading into regional By Josh Holman Daily Sports Writer against Nebraska yet this year, they finished .925 ahead of the third-place Hawkeyes two weeks ago en route to winning their fourth-straight Big Ten Championship. This victory came despite stumbles from a number of 4 To say that the Michigan women's gymnastics team is confident may be an understatement as it State College this Satur- day for the NCAA Regional Champi- onships. In fact, the Wolver- ines are so confident about advancing this weekend that they've already begun moving from their old practice facility in the Sports Coliseum into their new one which will be ready heads into 4 STATE COLLEGE What: Michigan will be at the NCAA Regionals. When: 6 p.m. Latest: Michigan standouts Calli Ryals and Elise Ray hope to rebound from her sub-par performances at Big Tens last month in Columbus where Ray was the only top five performer. gymnasts, including Michigan's top two gym- nasts in Ryals and sopho- more Elise Ray. Only Ray managed to finish in the top five of the all-around competition. "I'm even more pre- pared now because it's like a little wake-up call," Ryals said. "I was getting too confident in my rou- tines and a little ahead of next week, just in time for the team to begin preparing for the NCAA Championships. "This meet is kind of anti-climac- tic, but we can't get ahead of our- selves because it is the national qualifier," sophomore Calli Ryals said. Michigan does have reason to be optimistic though. Michigan's tough- est competition for one of the two qualifying spots comes from No. 8 Nebraska and No. 16 Iowa. While the Wolverines- have not competed myself." After addressing the mistakes it made at Big Tens, Michigan can now concentrate on winning its fourth straight NCAA regional, and they'll get to do it at Penn State, a venue in which they've historically done well. Two years ago the Wolverines cruised into nationals after posting scores of 197.850 and 196.550 at the Big Ten Championships and NCAA Regionals, both hosted by Penn State. See REGIONALS, Page 9A 4 'Rout the Titans': An epic tale starring M' I I