The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Friday, March 23, 2012 - 9 The ichganDail - ichganailyom ridy, arch23,201 -Q ON HOLD From Page 8 Roberts hung told the six tea with the news, and then set ou tain and senior senior goaltend Sharples to the senior honor so g up the phone. He ammates he lived made a few calls, t with fellow cap- r Mike Moes and er Warren "Scott" ir Michiguama (a ciety) meeting. Sharples had been anxiously awaiting this call. He had been playing some of the best hockey of his career by 1990, and the only question left in his mind was about which team the Wolverines would play in the first round of the NCAA Tournament. The goalten- der was a late addition to Beren- son's second recruiting class after another recruit decommitted. Still, Sharples earned the job his firstyear, and byhis senior season, he become the first in a long string of four-year goaltenders that spanned all the way until when Al Montoya left early in 2005. But three years before he got that phone call, Sharples was cry- ing during a practice late in his freshman year. Despite winning the starting job, Sharples went 12-16 between the pipes in his freshman campaign and allowed more than five goals per game. And he couldn't do anything about it. "(It) was the hardest season I ever had in my life," Sharples said. "There were some people there when we got there that didn't have that hatred for losing that the rest of us did." And so at practice one day, Sharples broke down. "I just could not will theteamto win like I had been able to at dif- ferent levels," Sharples said. "And I remember a couple of seniors looking at me, incredulous. I knew they were looking at me (and) thinking, 'Why are you letting it bother you this much?' "(Losing) didn't bother the guys that were there." But, as more Berenson recruits came in, Michigan started win- ning. Sharples and his teammates went 14-25-1 in his freshman year in 1986-87. The following season, Berenson's team won more games than it lost for the first time since he arrived. InSharples'junioryear - the first team filled completely with Berenson recruits - the team finished sevengames over.500. From the outset of the 1989-90 season, the team set its sights on one goal: Makingthe NCAA Tour- nament. By the time the phone rang, after the tears had stopped, after the paint on the helmet had S dried, and even after the weight- room renovations were com- pleted, the team was right on the precipice. Sharples didn'tget to the receiv- er first. He remembers Moes, the other captain, answering, though Moes doesn't remember getting the call at home. Sharples and fel- low senior Rob Brown leaned in to listen. After the season, Brown would get so emotional at the senior banquet that he would need several attempts to get through a tearful goodbye speech. But right now, he was silent, waiting. margin of nine goals. Berenson's penchant for start- ing freshmen in the first half ofthe season, before they had matured, did not help. In 1989, freshmen Pat Neaton and David Harlock each went minus-seven in their first game at Munn Ice Arena. "I remember getting a call at the dorm from an assistant coach (after that game) telling us not to jump," Neaton said. The players dreaded when Michigan State came to Yost. At that time, the arena would fill up about halfway for home games. Except when the Spartans came to town. "It was 4,000 Spartan fans and 4,000 Wolverine fans," Roberts recalled. "And you'd have the 'Go Green, Go White' chant going on louder than any Michigan things." But at Joe Louis on Dec. 30, something happened: Michigan won, and won convincingly, 5-3 - and even that was only after two late goals by the Spartans. "That sent them a message," Neaton said. "We kicked the crap began screaming at Harlock and Neaton, who was also recruited by Anzalone. "You guys are nothing!" The Wolverines finished with nothing against the Lakers that year - winless in four tries - but they beat up on the rest of the con- ference. By the time the CCHA playoffs came around, Michigan was hot, and it easily dispatched first-round foe Western Michigan in a two-game sweep. Roberts recorded the only hat trick in his career that series. For most of the 1989-90 sea- son, though, a talented sopho- more class had carried the team's offensive production. Three of those sophomores lived together, including Denny Felsner (who led the team with 27 goals) and Ted Kramer (who was tied for second with David Roberts, with 21). But Don Stone, a junior, picked up the ringing phone, as Felsner and Kramer listened in. out of them. An a turning point was at the GL coming." Michigan di game in the G tional for seven Neaton and men in West up considerably heard the ph those freshmen a hard-hitting Dearborn, Mich Tamer rem goals. Before h son in 1989, the1 term goals ant on the board, a spoke to his pl through the wa out on the ice, h be ready to go th you go out half- knocked out. "And then he punch the old bi recalled. "So all tyquiet. He didn sluggingthat br Michigan wa bust down the w Tournament, b knock down so After the Great] the Wolverinesc igan State off t sent a message, Spartans wont easily. The other ing: Lake Supe abrasive coach F Harlock, the Anzalone well. coach from New ed Harlock ag he entered scho Harlock turned rior State was none of his tear him that March the news. The freshma Quad, across thi dorm, studying ence exam. Har son ofa CPA ant d I think that was You could say it was partially , even though that Kramer's fault that the team was I, that hey, we're even on the bubble anyway, but really, the sophomore was just dn't lose another plain unlucky. After the series reat Lakes Invita- against Western Michigan, the years. Wolverines drew Michigan State his fellow fresh- in the semifinals, again at Joe Quad had grown Louis Arena. Michigan rallied by the time they back to take a 3-2 lead late in the one ring. Among third period, but the Spartans was Chris Tamer, pulled even with just minutes left. defenseman from The game went into overtime. 1. "For me, I'm 42, and I can still feel that game," Kramer said. *** And here's why: In the overtime period, Moes, the captain, gave nembers setting Kramer a pass that left him alone is freshman sea- with the goalie. Kramer deked. He team wrote short- shot. d long-term goals Al Roberts threw his hands nd then Berenson up. Pat Neaton threw his hands ayers about going up. David Harlock, Chris Tamer, ll. Anytime you go David Roberts threw their hands e said, you have to up. hrough the wall. If And, crashing the opposite hearted, you'll get post, Mike Moes threw his hands up. The puck was goingin - Mich- 'd make a fist and igan was goingto the NCAA Tour- rick wall," Tamer nament. the guys got pret- Ding. n'teven flinch, he's Ding. ick wall." The puck hit two posts. No goal. as determined to Moes, with his hands trium- vall into the NCAA phantly in the air, couldn't corral ut first, it had to the rebound, even though the net me smaller ones. was wide open. About four min- Lakes Invitational, utes later, a freshman defender could check Mich- made abad pinch, and Peter White he list. They had converted on a two-on-one oppor- even though the tunity for Michigan State. Game the season series over. Spartansawin. rbigname remain- The loss could've hurt more rior State and its than it did. But for Kramer, the rank Anzalone. man who hit two posts, there was no time to dwell on the loss: *** a consolation game against Bowl- ing Green loomed the next day. freshman, knew Since the Falcons finished just one The fast-talking spot ahead of Michigan, nearly vYork had recruit- everyone involved described the gressively before game as essentially a play-in game, ol. But the reason though Bowling Green did go 3-1 down Lake Supe- against Michigan before meeting the same reason in the playoffs. mmates could find Michigan rolled to a 5-4victory. night to tell him After the game was over, the Fal- cons players, and their legendary tn was at South coach, Jerry York, were gracious. e street from his "Players, we can't really fool for a political sci- each other," Harlock said. "You lock was born the know who is worthy and who's d a nursing profes- a good player and who's a good ersity of Toronto. team. When we went through, and ne's pitch to come we shook hands with all the Bowl- rs centered on the ing Green players after that game, iperior State was a after we beat them in that conso- school," Harlock's lation game, they were all saying Instead, Harlock good luck in the NCAA Tourna- , and it was the ment. You know, 'Hey, we're going became the first on Spring Break. We haven't been ain in over four on Spring Break ever, so go enjoy yourselves.'"' ginning, Anzalone And so in South Quad, Harlock, the last player on the team to get ock's first series the news, was expecting a bid. perior State up at Neaton and Tamer, the freshmen e, Mich. in 1989, in West Quad, expected abid. The d over the boards sophomores - Kramer and Fel- of the game - and sner and David Roberts - expect- 4r Senior co-captain Mike Moes lifts the 1989 Great Lakes Invitaional championship trophy. ed a bid. The seniors - Mike Moes and Al Sharples and Rob Brown - expected a bid. And their leader, Al Roberts, expected one too. Berenson hung up the phone. The committee had gone with Bowling Green. Michigan did not make it. The news traveled through the phone wires like a wildfire. When the blaze reached the seniors, Moes felt it like a punch to the gut. Sharples said his heart broke. Al Roberts was shocked, more than anything. At the Mich- iguama meeting high up in the tower of the Michigan Union, Al Roberts and Sharples and Moes demanded justice. They demand- ed a reason. They demanded - anything. Any chance to put on the sweater one more time. Rob Brown locked himself in his room and didn't talk to any- body. And so the seniors searched for some explanation that could' ease the pain. The popular theory is that Bowling Green's Athletic Director, who served on the four- man selection committee, swayed the other three members. "(He) clearly homered them," said John U. Bacon, a Michigan hockey historian and author of "Blue Ice." "It was an inside job, it was grossly unfair, and Michigan paid the price." Of course, Schneider,the Sports Information Director, points out that Michigan simply didn't win enough games against Michigan State, Lake Superior State and Bowling Green to get themselves off the bubble. But then there's this curiosity: Schneider, curious as to whether Michigan would get the bid, secretly listened in on the committee's conference call. The board opened the lines to ques- tions from the media. The second question, accord- ing to Schneider, from a reporter for the Los Angeles Times: "Why Bowling Green over Michigan?" Rick Comley, the coach of Northern Michigan and a mem- ber of the committee, answered. "It was Michigan's non-confer- ence situation," he said. "And I'm sitting there not able to talk, and I'm thinking - see, I don't remember if we were the only team in the country, at least in the league, to not lose a non- conference game," Schneider said. "We had swept Boston University, and they were a seeded team." "I feel devastated," Berenson told The Michigan Daily. "I just think we were shafted." Harlock felt miserable too - not for himself, but for those who didn't have a next year. "(They) don't get the credit they deserve for turning around the program," he said. "They were the ones who probably did a lot more of the behind-the-scenes dirty work." In Kramer's house, someone said, "We're going to have a great team next year. Just remember what this feels like." "I am convinced, out of the pain of that experience, the seeds for their 20 years of success were sown," Bacon said. "They made a commitment that from now on, we were never going to leave it up to some committee of guys we've never met." And they didn't. The follow- ing year, they won 10 more games than in 1990 and cruised into the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 1977. In the first series, the team so familiar with agonizing exits lost to Cornell in overtime in the opening game. In the locker room after the game, Bacon said, the team made a pledge: "We're not going to let this happen again." "The sense of intensity, of importance, of determination (from 1990) was carried forward to the next team that (came back and) beat Cornell. "And now the modern template for Michigan hockey has been established." Sparked by the snub in 1990 and with the credibility from the 1991 tournament run to grab top recruits, Berenson brought the team to the verge of the National Championship game in 1991 and 1992. Each time, those seniors too suffered a painful ending to their careers. For Harlock and Neaton and Tamer, their ending would come at the hands of Maine in the 1992 Final Four in a crushing overtime loss. The freshmen on that team would be seniors in 1996. And they would remember. Now fast forward. Six years after the call that ended his career and sparked the modern Michigan hockey dynas- ty, Al Roberts gathered with some former teammates and Michi- gan hockey alumni at a bar in the shadow of Wrigley Field in Chi- cago. For six straight years, the Wolverines had made the NCAA Tournament, and for the first five years, their season ended with a loss. In that bar in Wrigleyville in 1996, Al Roberts and the rest of the crew watched as those Michi- gan seniors, who lost in overtime to Maine, entered yet another overtime. This time, it was against Colo- rado College, and this time, it wasn't for a spot in the National Championship game. It was the National Champion- ship game. Three minutes and 35 seconds later, a junior named Brendan Morrison clinched Berenson's first National Championship with a game-winning goal. Then, in what Bacon called a clear reference to that 1990 team - to the Roberts and to Sharples and to Moes and Harlock and Tamer - Morrison uttered his now-famous impromptu speech. "This is for all the guys that never had a chance to win it," he said. Guys like David Harlock, who heard the news of Michigan's vic- tory during an intermission in a game with a Washington Captials affiliate and then played the best third period of his life. Guys like Mike Moes, who still to this day finds himself wonder- ing how in the world Morrison had the composure and wisdom to think of guys like him minutes after one of the best moments in his life. And for guys like Al Roberts, who watched, transfixed, in that bar in Wrigleyville. He listened to the speech, hanging on every word. He felt a chill run down his spine, a lump form in his throat, and then the tears came. The man who had sacrificed championships with Michigan State to come to Michigan looked up and saw the rest of his former teammates and friends. They were bawling too - a bunch of grown men sobbing into their suds over a hockey game played by kids. And 22 years after the phone call that sparked it all, Michigan hasn't yet missed an NCAA Tour- nament. Something h 30,1989 at Joe L Michigan State in the Gi tional. Though won the tour before on a ga * by Moes, and improvement Michigan rarel house from Eas gan State bea earlier that Dec and-home serie sor at the Univ *** So when Anzalo play for the Lake iappened on Dec. fact that Lake Su Louis Arena. "glorified high: played Michigan mother balked. reat Lakes Invita- chose Michigan the Wolverines right fit - he nament the year three-year capt ame-winning goal decades. despite the steady But in the bei of the program, made him pay. y beat the power- During Harl t Lansing. Michi- against Lake Su t the Wolverines Sault Ste. Mari ember in a home- Anzalone leaner s by a combined - in the middle. Wolverines host Penn State to open Big Ten softball season By COLLEEN THOMAS Daily Sports Writer After finishing nonconference play with a bang by defeating Eastern Michigan, 10-2, in five innings, the Michigan softball team is ready for the Big Ten sea- son.. The 20th-ranked Wolverines open conference play with three games against Penn State this weekend at Alumni Field. The Nittany Lions are already a familiar opponent this season - the two teams faced off on Feb. 12 at the Tiger Classic in Baton Rouge, La. Michigan (18-9 over- all) dominated, winning 12-1 in five innings to wrap up the tour- nament title. After the matchup with the Wolverines, Penn State (7-15) proceeded to drop four of its next five games and is currently suf- fering through a six-game losing streak, the latest being a 9-0 loss to Rutgers on March 11. Lack of offensive production has plagued the Nittany Lions this season - they average 1.7 runs in their losses and barely a run better in wins, while hitting .243 as a team. Only one player hits over .300. Junior shortstop Alyssa Ren- wick is the lone leader on offense, batting .349 while the rest of the lineup puts up sub-par numbers. Though Penn State's offense may be lacking, it does have a standout in the circle. Senior pitcher Lisa Akamine returns to the lead role after an impressive 2011 campaign. She was selected Second Team All- Big Ten with a 135 strikeouts and a career-low 1.89 ERA. This year, her numbers are significantly worse, but Akamine has the con- fidence and experience to lead the team through a tough conference schedule., History is on Michigan's side in the matchup between these two teams, though. The Wolver- ines have dominated the series, winning the last nine games - a majority coming in shortened play - and boasting an overall 47-7 record against the Nittany Lions. While Penn State is struggling to find offensive consistency, Michigan is finally warming up after a preseason that may not have been up to Wolverine stan- dards. Freshman catcher Lauren Sweet and senior first baseman Amanda Chidester lead Michi- gan's offense with .296 and .289 batting averages, respectively, and Chidester leads the team in RBIs with 23. And the freshman pitching duo of Haylie Wagner and Sara Dri- esenga have surprised with their performances. Wagner is 12-4 in the circle with a 1.26 ERA and Driesenga had quality starts against then- No.22 LSU and then-No. 17 Lou- isiana-Lafayette. Despite a sub-par preseason, Michigan coach Carol Hutchins is confident in her team's ability to win a 15th Big Ten title. "We play a very competitive preseason schedule so we are ready to compete with anybody," Hutchins said. "The key word is compete.... If we want to have a chance to be a Big Ten champion, we have to compete and battle." I 0 i I