8A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, January 30, 2003 :h-'M' battles Bulldogs for first place By Courtney Lewis Daily Sports Writer Last season, Ferris State finished ninth in the CCHA, and it was picked in this season's preseason polls to end the 2002-03 campaign in the same spot. Needless to say, the Bulldogs raised a few eyebrows by roaring to first place and staying there to this point. But Michigan must have known something nobody else did, because several Wolverines said they expected Ferris State to be among the league leaders. "We knew they'd be up there," freshman Jeff Tambellini said. "They've got some guns on their team." Guns blazing, the Bulldogs will battle to keep their top spot when they clash with the Wolverines in a home- and-home series this weekend. Ferris State sits four points ahead of second- place Michigan in the CCHA stand- ings. The Wolverines have two games in hand, but finish with a tougher schedule than the Bulldogs. No won- der Tambellini said this weekend is "huge." Michigan coach Red Berenson said goaltending had been the one question about Ferris State, and sophomore Mike Brown has answered it, posting a 2.38 goals against average. The Bulldogs sport the No. 1 offense in the league, led by senior Chris Kunitz. The forward leads the league with 48 points, and his 20, goals rank first in the CCHA and third in the nation. But Ferris State's offense isn't one-dimensional. Besides Ku'nitz, sophomores Jeff Legue and Derek Nesbitt are also among the league scoring leaders. For the Wolverines, this isn't exact- ly the best time to face such a prolific offense. Berenson has been looking for better team defense for several weeks, and now Michigan is under- Victory over manned behind the blueline. Junior Andy Burnes is returning from a groin injury. Forward J.J. Swistak skated as a defenseman in practice yesterday and may fill the sixth spot this weekend. Tambellini said defense is Michi- gan's biggest concern this weekend, and that it will take "a group effort" to shut down Ferris State's snipers. Still, after chasingthtBulldogs all season, the Wolverines are more than ready to finally meet the upstarts on the ice. "This is what you dreamabout - a weekend where you can grab first place, and playing against one of the better teams in college hockey," Tam- bellini said. "It doesn't get any better than this right now" r THIS YOST ICE ARENA, EWIGLEBEN ICE ARENA Who: Michigan (1141 CCHA,17-&1 overall) vs. Ferris State (1341, 18-1) When: 7:35 p.m. tomorrow, 7:05 p.m. Saturday Latest: A Michigan sweep would tie the teams atop the CCHA standings. Ferris State has never finished higher than third in the league. Spartans key to Big Ten recovery By Josh Holman Daily Sports Writer The best thing to do in the Big Ten is forget. Whether it's a string of quali- ty wins or a tough loss, the conference schedule demands respect one game at a time. If the Michigan women's bas- ketball team hasn't learned that lesson yet, it can learn it the hard way tonight at the Breslin Center against in-state rival Michigan State. The Wolverines are coming off a heartbreaking 72-70 loss against Big cds (this year alone): $300 vintage rock posters: about $40 each letter from neighbor complaining about music: $0 frame for cc x:u oncert ticket stubs: $13 used turntable: $20 guitar pick necklace: $.75 Ten leader Penn State, in which they led by 13 at one time. There's little time to dwell on what could have been for Michigan (2-4 Big Ten, 11-6 overall), which is fac- ing a Spartan team that's won four of its last five. A win in East Lansing pushes the Wolverines just a bit clos- er to the 4-3 log jam in the middle of the conference between Minnesota, Illinois and Michigan State. A loss drops the Wolverines to 2-5 in the Big Ten, miles away from contention right before another road game against Wisconsin. "We have to prepare by going hard in practice," sophomore Tabitha Pool said, "Everybody might be a little tired, but we have to suck it up and go out there and perform." While the key may be to forget past performances, Michigan has been fighting against the memory of last season, when it managed only a 6-10 Big Ten record after a 10-1 preseason start. While the record will be the final judge, Sunday's game may have shown that it's not time to give up on the Wolverines yet. "I saw a lot of good things in that film," Michigan coach Sue Guevara said. "Now it's just a matter of finish- ing the pldy out. I think we can play with anybody," Guevara attributed part of that per- formance to her team's improving health status. Junior center Jennifer Smith and freshman Niki Reams are both slowly recovering from knee and wrist injuries, respectively. The Wolverines need to be as healthy as possible against the Spar- tans. While the combination of Smith and senior LeeAnn Bies is usually enough to bully the opposition, Michi- gan State brings its own set of bruis- ers, boasting five players listed at six feet or taller. One of those is freshman Liz Shimek, who leads the Big Ten in rebounding, averaging 9.7 per game. The Spartans seem to match up well on paper, but Michigan hasn't forgotten that it's also playing a bitter rival that it's beaten the last four times in the series. "I let the media talk about the rival- ry in it," Guevara said. "We're going to go down and play on Thursday and guess what? We're going to get up and practice on Friday." BRESLIN CENTER Who: Michigan (2-4 Big Ten, 11-6 overall ) vs. Michigan State (4-3, 11-7) When: 7 p.m. Latest: Michigan has won four straight in the series, but is slumping as it faces a Spartan team that has won four of its last five. 0l 9 U finding out there's an internship for people like you: priceless SMITH Continued from Page 5A That's when the avalanche started building. Brandon Smith, a would-be captain, transferred, as did Anderson - all engulfed in a mess involving the theft of a student's Palm Pilot. And after an erratic, controversial and stress-packed freshman year filled with suspensions and school troubles, Crawford bolted and went pro, leaving Michigan with little to build on. Soon thereafter, Gaines was kicked off the team for a DUI. That's four players - three likely starters - gone in four months. Now that's a mess. Much worse than this year's depar- tures of Avery Queen and Dommanic Ingerson. But just like Daniel Horton didn't watch the Michigan State game in street clothes (like Crawford did due to alleged NCAA violations), this core of freshmen won't falter. They're too mentally tough. They're Apply for a summer internship with Interscope/Geffen/A&M Records at mastercard.com. You could be sent to Nashville, where you'll spend five weeks learning from industry bigwigs. You might even be flown to LA to work on the Jurassic 5 album Power in Numbers. there are some things money can't buy. for everything else there's MasterCard. " aF 5 No purchase ncessaroy .-8 U51 essay erianta win a sumcmer 55111;pogram. 12 of the 48 wit a 2-week internship. Contest open to undergraduate uusendct,1825, whosrr USUe nt isds Fon 4 1/ 03 Restrictions appy Go to mastercard comr for Official Rules and complete details. Offici Rules. No Purchase Necessary to Enter or Win. Eigiility: Open to legal residents of the 50 United Slates and the Distorct of Columbia who are 18 to 25 years of age and are enrolled as f- or paW-time undergraduate StudenIs in a U S Depatmeont of E uron accred ted2 yar orlear ollege nversty as of 1/2803 and a the ltime of w nner selection and notification. Employees of MasterCard International Incorporated ("Sponsor"), MasterCard member financial institutions, Malts League"Baseball PropetifsIncMLB Adanced Meda, L.PMajor Lage BaseballEterprises, c-i.,fte Office of the Comissioner of Baeballthe Aericnaational Leagues0of Profesion slCous andtMor Lague Baseball010el ii Irc r respective 01 r 00 012Ic-rn 00 0 pa0ent1,0di rectorofficers, affiltsrfpresentativfs. agents, successors, and assigns (hereinafterMLB Enfities"),Itterscope Records, Inc NEXTMOVE, Octagon Worldwide Limited, participatng uniestfs, ProectfSapport learnIncPST'),and their respecive parent compones. subsidiarie-s.affiliate.drbt ors.101012 l s 01d0ietos, goveros lted101entte rters t aPrtrhporl0 iipa 02 220 ts. icnsespnc--001010if, ..s, suc01000ricer n d sis.10 00 anoord oetsf0iglic-unr ilagenc~ies(collecfively'Released Porties")nod memrbers of the immediate family (motherlth~er brothers, sistets,,s00s0 daughters and spouse) and household of eaco sach employee are tot eligble t to paicpate, Thit Contest issbec to0a11 applicable federal, sfare ord local lawn atd reglafionr, Void owiere prohribied.Hew to Enter:ti IVisir wwo rrcaoan 0 iariilneckon the MasfnlCard0 Proc-o ss Ege fr otro-rI'1/ 11 M Genil r In it I nIr1,28l03 iaidl8859 SAM CT Onii11021Proofion Period "),2)Click onther icon rersentin8 your prefenred MasterCard" Priceless Edge0 counse of study: Sports Managemetor Music Enretainment follectively"course of stdy"f ):&Toaccess te application form for yor selecred course of stdy ,click 011tfe "Apply Now ufto or regstcr for oneoforsin fretcourse o study nyecfc oMser~ard Pricelesn feqon0 i tO stantoc221 bni °nil9rer ped by NEXT MOVE",Ir r oimypc-r rthe seI-ec-d sc-inar0 Participating dstanice-learninrg stminars are approimafely thirfy minutes in duration and academic prerequisifes ore not required for pad icipotiun, d,) Submit an I