2B - October 31, 2011 The Michigan Daily- michigandaily.com The legend of the Rocketman ric Scott gripped the handles on his jet pack, waiting in the southeast corner of the concourse, just out- side Michigan Stadium's bowl. Scott had never stepped foot inside the Big House. His friend had to tell him that the stadium was even called the Big House. But he had the famous Michigan wings on his, helmet and a huge block 'M' on his back. Growing up on a small TIM ranch in Hel- ROHAN ena, Mont., Scott didn't have time to watch football. There wasn't enough time to watch TV, par- ticularly on the weekends. He'd wake up, feed the horses, clean the chicken coops - maybe kill a chicken, if his family needed him to. In the fall, Scott and his. four siblings were busy preparing for the cold winter months. As he put it, "TV was a privilege." "There weren't a lot of pro sports in Montana," he said. "And for college, I probably would've rooted for the Montana State Uni- versity Bobcats. But they always kind of sucked anyways. ... It wasn't anything like Michigan." Now, he was about to surprise the 100,000-plus people seated inside. They'd only remember Rocketman for the 25 seconds he spent streaking through the air, inviting the usual did-you-see- that or jet-packs-are-so-freaking- cool comments. Always a very calculated man, Scott wasn't nervous for this flight. Nearly 19 years of flying his jet pack had prepared him. It didn't bother him that he didn't havea "prayer- shute." He never had one. "I just have to remember plan B, which is don't fuck up plan A," Scott said. He didn't have a planB when he made a mistake during his training in 1993. During a flight,, he was about 40 feet in the air when he made a critical mistake, pushing the jet pack too hard. It started shooting down - 60 miles per hour, righttowards the ground. Luckily, he thought enough to turn the jet pack off a few feet from the ground. Still, his shoulder had tobe recre- ated. His knee was busted up. Six months after the accident, he went back and found pieces of himself in the asphalt. It takes a certain type of person to fly a jet pack. Scott was always that type of person. "I grew up out in the country, so there wasn't a lot for entertain- ment, soI was always blowing something up," Scott said. "Just doingsomething stupid. Riding my dirt bike and pulling off some crazy stuff.... That's the story of my life, I guess." After high school, he joined the Air Force, where he was a Para- rescue special operations team member for four years. His job was simple, save "anybody from anywhere in the world." Oceans, valleys, cliffs. Behind enemy lines. Anywhere. If some- one needed a ride home, Scott and his team provided it. Four years later, he was starting his family and found a less intense job in construction. But by 1990, a friend helped him get into show business. There was a market for people who worked in the mili- tary because they made for great stunt doubles. That same friend introduced Scott to Kinnie Gib- son, who was working at the time as Chuck Norris's stunt double on "Walker Texas Ranger." Gibson was also one of the few people who knew how to fly a jet pack. And he was the first person in the world to make a business out of it. Gibson got Scott a part on Walker Texas Ranger, where Scott usu- ally played Bad Guy No. 1, 2 or 3. "(I'm) usually always getting my butt kicked," Scott said. "I got to beat (Norris) up once. But that was out of like 60 epi- sodes I was in, in eight years." In his spare time, Gibson did promotional work with his jet pack. He had asked Scott's mutu- al friend if he'd be interested in filling in when Gibson was too busy. But the friend wasn't the right kind of person. So Gibson asked Scott. Scott's first impres- sion of the jet pack was that the pilots always made it look so easy. "People call them jet packs - Michigan wins eighth Big Ten championship they're rocket packs, if you will," Scott said. "In the military, we called them rocket belts." Scott had never flown one before Gibson taught him every- thing he needed to know in a three-month span in 1993. Gibson had taught himself how to fly it after he found it covered in dust in a Bell Technologies lab in 1981. Nelson Tyler, the inventor of the jet pack, had built it, but even he didn't fully know how to control it. "There's nothing easy about it," said Scott, who's now fully employed by Gibson's "Rocket- man" business. "It's a total finesse thing, and you have to learn not to be too excited, too anxious. "You find your mind racing harder and faster than anything you've ever experienced in your life. If you've ever done a sport, this thing is..." His voice trailed. "You know, I don't like saying it, but if you're riding a bicycle and fall off, it's not like falling out of the sky. ... Some people work well under pressure." Scott was a pro by the time Smirnoff called in 2004, look- ing for a pilot to help promote its new bottle label. In London, Scott flew 152 feet in the air - a Guin- ness World Record - getting high enough to land on a 10-foot-by-10- foot platform atop a castle turret. In 2007, he set the speed record when he reached 80 miles per hour. Then, in 2009, he met a "personal challenge," when he crossed a 1,000-foot deep gorge - the same chasm the 1,500-foot Royal Gorge Bridge spans in Colo- rado. Standing outside Michigan Stadium, Scott felt comfortable with the 85-pound machine on his back. Thirty pounds of force were about to be exerted on his hands. Scott compared the feeling to standing on top of a ball, trying to balance yourself, with two fire hoses turned on. But there was no reason to panic. The PA announcer boomed, "Presenting today's Homecom- ing 2011 game ball, ROCKET- MAN." Scott shot straight up into the air, appearing just above the mas- sive luxury suites in the south- east corner. The stadium erupted, but Scott couldn't hear a thing. Up that high, above the stadium, Scott looked out and enjoyed his view of Ann Arbor. Then he head- ed towards the student section - and fast. Everyone in the stadium who was first witnessing Rocket- man didn't know he was in con- trol. But Scott smoothly turned and glided towards the block 'M' at the SO-yard line. "When you land, there's all that noise (from the jet pack), then when it shuts off there's silence," Scott said. For every one of his 15 to 30 flights he takes each year, it's always the same. "Then you hear the crowd screaming for me," he continued. "It one-upped every show that I've done before. It just keeps get- ting better every time. It was (my) pleasure." No, Mr. Rocketman. Thank you. -Rohan can be reached at trohanlumich.edu By DANIEL FELDMAN For the Daily The No. 7 Michigan field hockey team clinched the out- right Big Ten regular seasontitle with a 4-2 victory over Indiana on Friday. The vic- INDIANA 2 tory MICHIGAN 4 marks the second- STANFORD 3 straight MICHIGAN 0 confer- ence title for Michigan and the eighth overall in the program's history. The title is also the first in all of Michigan athletics in the fall season. "I love trophies, I love for our student athletes to leave here with championship rings," said Michigan Athletic Director Dave Brandon. Added Michigan coach Mar- cia Pankratz: "They worked so hard all season. I'm just so proud to win a championship for Mich- igan." Pankratz has coached seven of the program's eight champi- onship teams. Sophomore forward Rachael Mack, the team's leading scor- er, scored the game-winning goal. The contest was tied 1-1 at halftime after freshman Emy Guttman scored off a pass from sophomore Ainsley McCallister in the 21st minute. The score did not remain tied for long, as Mack scored her 12th goal of the season off a pass from senior Eileen Brandes 26 seconds into the second half. Brandes would record her sec- ond assist of the game in the 65th minute when senior Jess Allen scored her second goal of the season to put the game out of reach at 4-2. Though both Indiana and Michigan tallied seven shots each in the second half, Michi- gan had eight penalty corners compared to four for Indiana. Michigan took advantage of closer shots on net and scored three goals in the final frame. "Today was a tough one, and we squeaked it out, and I'm real- ly proud of them," Pankratz said. On senior day on Sunday, the Wolverines (5-1 Big Ten, 13-5 overall) fell to No. 9 Stanford, 3-0. The defeat was Michigan's fourth non-conference loss of the year. Despite outshooting Stanford 10-3 in the first half and 9-2 in the second half, Michigan was held scoreless. Many of the Wol- verines' shots were off target or further away than their chances were against Indiana. Only nine of Michigan's 14 shots were on net. The result was simple: Michi- gan's shots were consistently deflected and saved by Stanford senior goalie Ale Moss, who recorded her sixth shutout of the season. "I think we need to be more aggressive," Mack said. "We didn't possess the ball as well as we should have. We need to bring a mental intensity to our next game." With a large presence of Stan- ford fans in the stands, the Cardi- nal (15-2 overall) took a 1-0 lead with seconds left in the first half off a corner. Sophomore Hope Burke scored from the left side of the post off a pass from junior Becky Dru, who assisted on the second goal as well, before scor- ing the third herself. The loss ended Michigan's eight-game home win streak. "We have to keep playing, we've been doing it all year," Pan- kratz said. "We just didn'ttoday." By winning the regular season Big Ten title, Michigan receives a first-round bye in the confer- ence tournament at Penn State in Happy Valley. The Wolverines' first game in the playoffs will be Friday. Hunwick proves himself as best goaltender on ice ALDEN REISS/Daily The Wolverines celebrate one of their four goals against goalie C.J. Motte in a 4-0 win on Friday night at Yost Ice Arena. 'M'sweeps home series By EVERETT COOK Daily Sports Writer The Ferris State hockey team came into Yost Ice Arena on a roll. The Bulldogs swept perenni- al power Miami (Ohio) the previ- ous weekend and rose all the way up to No. 6 in the polls. Fer- ris State's FERRIS STATE 2 defense MICHIGAN 5 was doing it all, allow- FERRIS STAT E0 ing just MICHIGAN 4 five goals through six games, including three shutouts. But then the Bulldogs came to Ann Arbor. On Thursday night, No. 4 Michigan doubled Ferris State's goals allowed season total en route to a 5-2 victory. Friday was supposed to be different for the Wolverines, though, with freshman goalten- der C.J. Motte in net for the Bull- dogs. Motte had allowed only one goal all year, sitting pretty with a .986 save percentage. Yawn. Michigan (2-1-1 CCHA, 6-1-1 overall) blew past Ferris State (2-2-0, 6-2-0) again on Friday night, continuing its offensive explosion and sweeping the Bull- dogs with a 4-0 victory. "It's a good weekend for us," said Michigan coach Red Beren- son. "Those are games we had to have. We had to establish ourself at home and get back in the con- ference race. I think we took a step this weekend." On Friday night, Michigan struck first in the first peri- od when sophomore forward Derek DeBlois slid a backward, between-the-legs pass to fresh- man forward Alex Guptill, who buried the shot in the top right corner of the net. After that, the Wolverines were off to the races, scoring three goals in the second period. Offensively, Michigan moved the puck, didn't try to beat any- one one-on-one and waited patiently for a chink in the armor to present itself. The Wolver- ines didn't force anything in the offensive zone, but instead wait- ed for rebounds and open scoring opportunities. Michigan's third goal of the game came on a rebound off a breakaway that junior forward A.J. Treias cleaned up with Motte on his back from two pre- vious saves. A goalie is only able do so much, and the Wolverines never let up on Motte. Earlier in the week, Beren- son talked about beating a good defensive team with even bet- ter defense. Goals allowed are even more valuable when scor- ing chances on the other end are limited. Leading up to the game against the tough Ferris State defense, Michigan wasn't focus- ing on its offense. Instead, Michi- gan was focusing on its defense. Berenson got what he was looking for in senior netminder Shawn Hunwick, who recorded 24 saves in Michigan's second shutout of the season on Friday. Hunwick seemed locked in from the very beginning, never ceding an inch. Ferris State didn't score on seven power-play chanc- es. It also helped that four close shots hit off the post - there's nothing wrong with a little luck. Scoring nine goals in two games against anyone is impres- sive, but doing it against Ferris State's defense is a great sign for a young offense that had so many question marks enteringthe year. With six freshmen getting sig- nificant playing time, not even Berenson knew how the offense was going to play early on in the season. So far, there hasn't been an issue. "(The freshmen) are just fill- ing in for what we lost," Brown said. "That's kind of what Michi- gan does. We don't lose, we just reload." By MATT SLOVIN Daily Sports Writer Ferris State goaltender Taylor Nelson failed to get the job done in Michigan's series-opening 5-2 win over the Bulldogs on Thurs- day. So all eyes were on his fresh- man understudy C.J. Motte the next night. Motte had one task: shut down a Wolverine offense fresh off a five-goal performance. No one was happier to kindly escort Motte from the spotlight than Michigan's fifth-year senior netminder Shawn Hunwick. After the 4-0 victory on Fri- day to sweep the series, Hun- wick highlighted how important a shutout can be - not just for his morale, but for the team's as well. "It's a team thing, too," Hun- wick said. "It's ahuge confidence booster for everyone in the lock- er room knowing we can go up against a CCHA team and give up nothing." Michigan coach Red Berenson likes to talk about "puck luck" - the hockey gods' way of altering the outcome on the ice. Several times on Friday, it looked as if the sixth-ranked Bulldogs were ready to strike. And when a few of their shots found metal, not nylon, the crowd's sighs of relief empha- sized that "puck luck" was on the fourth-ranked Wolverines' side. "The goal posts, obviously, were in our favor tonight," Berenson said. "(Hunwick) played really well. The puck didn't go in for them but it went in for us." Hunwick, too, was quick to dismiss his 24-save performance as little more than fortunate. "I actually had probably one of my worst games tonight," Hunwick said Friday. "Those (shots off the posts) could have 4 0 ALDEN REISS/Daily Fifth-year senior Shawn Hunwick made 24 saves in a series-clinching 4-0 shutout on Friday. been game changers. Sometimes it's better tobe lucky than good." But Hunwick's role in the second shutout of the season for Michigan (2-1-1 CCHA, 6-1-1 overall) and its first sweep of Ferris State since February 2009 cannot be overstated. With a young defense skating in front of Hunwick, Berenson mentioned how crucial having an experi- enced goaltender can be. "I don't think he's ever been in this kind of a role," Berenson said. "He's such an important player on the team and now he's got to act like it. He knows that." The Bulldogs (2-2, 6-2) are now left to hope that the early season play of their goaltenders wasn't a fluke after deep attacks like ones from the Wolverines have made them appear vulner- able. But Hunwick was still impressed with the performance of Motte, who isstill adjusting to the rigors of college hockey and the unwelcoming home crowds that await him in the CCHA. "I thought he looked good," Hunwick said of Motte, whose younger brother, Tyler, has com- mitted to Michigan for 2013. "Coming into Yost as a visitor is a hard thing to do. The fans are all over you. I'm just happy they're on my side." Junior forward Chris Brown thinks no other goalie in the country can provide the instant boost that Hunwick is capable of giving with a timely save or clutch block. "Our goalie is going to play and stand on his head every night," Brown said. And for the Wolverines, that's a talent that hardly goes unno- ticed. 0 40