The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com March 28, 2011 - 3B ST. MIKE'S From Page 4B Standing on Hill Street in front of the Coliseum, and beside a troupe of fellow Canucks, Watt knew Ann Arbor already felt like home. But Watt had made a commit- ment to North Dakota, and he wanted to honor that obligation. He drove through the night and arrived in Grand Forks at six the following morning. "At nine o'clock I turned around and said, 'There is no way, this is so far from home,' " Watt said. "So I told the coach, 'I can't do this. They offered me a chance to go to Michigan, I'm going to go to Michigan."' That coach was Al Renfrew. Just months later, Renfrew replaced Heyliger at the helm of the Wolverines - and Watt, Renfrew's former North Dakota recruit, was the first to greet him. "I met him at the door, and said, 'Coach, how are you? I'm supposed to be in North Dakota, aren't you too?'" Michigan - having earned six championship banners in the NCAA Tournament's first nine years of existence - was the place to be. And the Bathurst Brigade fueled the nation's hockey pow- erhouse. Four years later, Watt finished with his own All-American hon- ors. Two hundred fifty miles away from Davidson's office, Watt finally knew he'd made the right choice. And just before he left Ann Arbor, Watt agreed to show another recruit around campus. The young defenseman's name was Tom Polanic - St. Mike's must-have recruit at the time. Former St. Mike's players giving St. Mike's recruits tours around the Michigan campus - Renfrew had discovered how to keep the pipeline alive. When Red Berenson took over as coach of Michigan before the 1984 season, he inher- ited a program that had captured only one NCAA Tournament bid since winning its last title exactly two decades earlier. Since the "decade of domi- nance," the Michigan hockey team lacked its usual luster. What's more, the Wolverines hadn't skated a product of St. Mike's since Polonic and three others played on the 1964 cham- pionship team. Berenson understood the importance of bringing Cana- dian talent back to Michigan and unearthing the near-forgotten pipeline between Toronto and Ann Arbor. Berenson knew the relation- ship existed because the major- ity of his teammates at Michigan had come from Canada - and the lion's share of them were St. Mike's graduates. "Everyone was from Canada in those days," Berenson said. "When I got here in the late 50s, I think we had two Americans on the team. One of my linemates, Al Hinnegan, and our captain Bob Watt were from St. Mike's." In the 10 years after Michi- gan coach Vic Heyliger's 1952 recruiting class, 14 players made the crossover trek from St. Mike's to Michigan. But in the second half of Renfrew's tutelage, the pipeline ran dry. Berenson quickly revitalized the relationship, heavily recruit- ing Bryan Deasley, one of the most highly touted Canadian for- ward prospects of the mid-1980s. After hearing Berenson's mis- sion, Deasley was on board. Over the next six years, Michi- gan skated five Buzzer recruits, including three-year captain David Harlock. Emblazoned along the brick fagade of the arena is St. Mike's mantra: TEACH ME GOODNESS, DISCIPLINE AND KNOWLEDGE. Young men flood the halls between class periods, each stu- dent wearing dark khaki pants, a white shirt, tie and dark blue blazer. St. Mike's is no hockey factory - the nation's only Cath- olic all-male prep school churns out the best hockey players and students. Bob Schiller, one of the pio- neers of the pipeline in the early 1950s, recognized the demand for academic excellence at both St. Mike's and Michigan. "It was a joint venture," said Schiller, who majored in aero- nautical engineering at Michi- gan. "You knew you were going to play hockey at a good level, and you got to keep the education going as well. "The education at St. Mike's was very rigid. They're Basilian priests, and they were tough. But because you played sports, you didn't get any breaks." And as if the caliber of stu- dents the school graduated wasn't enough, the Basilian Fathers of St. Mike's have been sure to keep hockey in check for the past century. In the mid-1960s, the hockey program shut down altogeth- er. It certainly was no burden financially; on the contrary, the Fathers had determined hockey at St. Mike's had become so pro- fessional that it was overshadow- ing the academics. And for a college hockey coach, these players are simply a differ- ent breed. "Kids are different in every era, but there's something differ- ent about kids from St. Mike's," Berenson said. "They can relate to what's going on at Michigan." Without the school's dedica- tion to education, the connection with college hockey might never have existed. And without the feeder rela- tionship with St. Mike's, Michi- gan wouldn't be the program it is today. Of the Wolverines' nine national championship teams, all but one title roster has fielded a player from St. Mike's. But the most striking con- nection between Michigan and St. Mike's is the one that got away. More specifically, "The Next One" that got away. In 1989, 16-year-old Eric Lin- dros, playing his first and only year at St. Mike's, was already considered one of the greatest prospects ever. The London, Ont. native's on-ice accolades quickly earned him the nickname, "The Next One," prophesied as the sec- ond coming of "The Great One" - Wayne Gretzky. But in the 1989 OHL draft, Lin- dros was used as a pawn by Phil Esposito, then-part-owner of the Sault. Ste. Marie Greyhounds. Knowing that Lindros would refuse to move 500 miles away from home and drop his edu- cation to join the Greyhounds, Esposito selected Lindros as the first overall pick. The Sault Ste. Marie franchise was financially desperate, and the owners knew that select- ing Lindros would skyrocket its value. And it worked. Fortunately for the Greyhounds, the OHL had a rule that prohibited trading first-round draft picks for a full year after the draft. The franchise sold, but it lost Lindros's respect. "The whole episode showed A framed jersey hangs outisde the coach's office in the home locker room at St. Michael's College School Arena, commemorating the 2006 championship team. me that hockey is a bottom- line business, even at the junior level," Lindros wrote on his per- sonal website. "I felt like a piece of meat." Instead, Lindros looked to the NCAA. His family had already visited Michigan a few months earlier, but he was still more than a year away from eligibility. Berenson's team had complet- ed its second-consecutive win- ning season, but the coach knew Lindros would be a landmark addition, bringing the Wolver- ines back to national prominence. When Lindros first visited before the OHL draft, Beren- son was sure to make the right impression. Berenson called Lindros into his office with an offer he hoped the 6-foot-4 power for- ward wouldn't be able to pass up. Hanging in the coaches' room when Lindros entered was a tra- ditional white Michigan jersey, with the trademark 'M' on the chest. Berenson then revealed the back of the sweater: LIN- DROS 88. Lindros had been No. 8 at St. Mike's, but Berenson was making a statement. "I didn't let anyone have a high number back then," Berenson said. "But (Lindros) was big time, and we knew that. Gretzky was 99 - I gave Lindros 88." The offer was made and the decision was left up to Lindros. He chose Michigan. In an effort to keep the star recruit nearby, Berenson gave Lindros' family the number of Andy Weidenbach, the coach of Detroit-based Compuware, a team in the Tier-II hockey league. For the fall semester, Lin- dros tore up the ice just 40 min- utes from Michigan. But a rule change allowed Sault Ste. Marie to trade Lindros to the Oshawa Generals for three players, two top draft choices, $80,000 cash and two more play- ers sent in the span of two years. Experts estimated the price for the 16-year-old ended up at over a half-million dollars. Lindros returned to Ontario, never playing a game for Michi- gan, but it was a give-and-take with him. Michigan gave him No. 88, which he wore for the remain- der of his career - a 13-year NHL career after being drafted first overall at age 18 by the Quebec Nordiques in 1991. And Lindros gave back in a dif- ferent way. In his short stint with Com- puware, a Detroit-based Tier II level program, Lindros made a profound impact on a certain teammate - defenseman Mark Sakala. Sakala, then a senior at River- view High School, was a gifted student, but was disappointed with the inability to find an edu- cational institution that coupled his passion for hockey with rigor- ous academics. Enter Lindros, who, alongwith his parents, convinced Sakala's parents to head to Toronto and spend a year at St. Mike's, play- ing alongside Lindros's brother, Brett Lindros. Sakala took their advice, enrolling at St. Mike's for a 13th year of school. A year later, Sakala had his name on the duct and a Michigan 'M' on his sweater - Lindros had neither. championships, but because they did it on both sides - academics and athletics." Dressed in a black sweater, jeans and a silver wristwatch, Sakala is the picture of success. Wearing a national title ring, and as a top-flight engineer for Chrysler living in Birmingham, Mich., Sakala understands that the word 'champion' is a dichot- omy. "If you look at some of the other schools that were strictly hockey factories, they've come and gone. They weren't consis- tent, like Lake State, who was a powerhouse when I was there. Jeff Jackson was the coach, Doug Weight came out of there, a lot of good players. But they were strictly a hockey factory, that's what mattered most. And where are they now?" Sakala left the question unan- swered. He knows that sports don't exist in a vacuum. This goes beyond the rink. Sakala knows that better than anyone. The 'Big Two' at Chrys- ler LLC - Chairman C. Robert Kidder and Chief Executive Offi- cer Sergio Marchionne - are Michigan graduates. And Marchionne, the 58-year- old man dubbed the "savior of Chrysler" after being charged with rebuilding the bankrupted corporation, learned his trade as a student at St. Mike's. "With St. Mike's, it's that enti- ty - both academics and hockey - thatpreparedme for Michigan, prepared Sergio to be top dog at Chrysler," Sakala says, setting his drink down. "At Michigan, it's the same thing." St. Mike's and Michigan. Captains on the ice, captains of industry, Michigan's finest - imported from St. Mike's. Light flickers off the golden band as Sakala leans back in his chair, slowly turning the 1996 championship ring around his finger. The head of the ring bears a raised edge encircling a deep blue background, all centered on a gold block 'M.' Without a second thought, he says a date he'll never forget: March 30, 1996. Sakala removes the ring, showing the proof engraved on the back. March 30. It was the day Berenson won his 300th game and completed the turnaround - recapturing Michigan's heyday glory after a 32-year drought. It was the day Brendan Mor- rison knocked in a Bill Muckalt The Barn on rebound to topple Colorado Col- lege 3-2 in overtime and then proclaimed, "This is for all the (Michigan) guys who never had a chance to win it." And it was the day Sakala at the end of the bench realized he almost never had that chance either. Without Eric Lindros, he wouldn't have been there. With- out St. Mike's, he wouldn't have been there. And without his engineering degree necessitating a fifth year - no chance. When he reflects, Sakala doesn't think about the cham- pionship. He thinks about the championship mentality that carried him and his teammates to where they are today. Three doctors, a lawyer, a Princeton law graduate, a Michigan profes- sor, the assistant general man- ager of the Pittsburgh Penguins and three current NHLers - that 9 Wolverine team knew success. It wasn't just a hockey team, Sakala asserts, it was the perfect combination of education and athletics that makes Michigan unique. "They were winners there and winners on the rink and in life, in both realms," Sakala said, paus- ing for a moment to sip his cof- fee. "It's not so much that hockey made them winners, I really feel like it's the entity of the two." And it's that blend that built the pipeline between St. Mike's and Michigan. "It's the best of both worlds," 5 Sakala says. "Both of those schools produce winners. Both are championship programs not because they won one or two n Bathurst" has housed the Buzzers since the mid-1950s. -UKU DANGER NESBITT/FOR THE DAILY A heating duct cut through the center of the home locker room, honoring the players who chose college hockey over the OHL. i