Monday July 17, 2006 sports.michigandaily.com sports@mickigandaily.com SPORTS 13 SICE HOCKEY Top recruit leaves for NHL without playing for Icers By H. Jose Bosch Daily Sports Editor Trevor Lewis, the crown jewel of the Michigan hockey team's incom- ing 2006-07 freshman class, prompt- ly ended his Wolverine career before it even started. On Friday after- noon the Murray, "I'm very di Utah, native signed in the L.A. i with the Los Ange- for thinkin les Kings after he whrteverre was selected as the whatever re team's first round would signl draft choice (No. not let him 17 overall) in the at Michigan NHL Entry draft- on June 24. coach Re Ra h d n. d RODRIGO GAYA/Daly Michigan coach Tommy Amaker helped bring is shooting guard Manny Harris to Michigan. Harris verbally commits toCagers By Scott Bell No. 45-ranked player in his class by Daily Sports Editor Rivals.com, would be the highest- rated guard since Dion Harris (No. After a spring filled with near- 28) to join the team. misses and decommitments, the Harris replaces Alex Legion as the Michigan men's basketball team secondplayerwithaverbalcommitment finally received some good news from to the team. Legion, a four-star recruit a big-time recruit. himself, originally verbally commit- Shooting guard Manny Harris ted to Michigan, only to decommit this verbally committed to Michigan on spring and reopen his recruitment. He Monday, joining East Grand Rapids has since eliminated Michigan from senior-to-be Kelvin Grady as the sec- his potential choices for 2007. ond member of the 2007 recruiting Though Michigan has had bad luck class for the Wolverines. recently with recruits backing out, The Detroit native, whose stock has Harris is firm that his verbal commit- been rising after a great performance ment will be binding. at the Nike All-American Camp, chose "When I made my decision, I took Michigan over Indiana, Iowa, Mar- my time and thought about it a lot," quette and Miami (FL). Harris said. "There (won't) be any "Michigan has some really good decommiting by me." coaches," Harris said. "It's a great The senior-to-be at Detroit Redford school, and it's somewhere I can come expects to see a lot of playing time as right in and play." a freshman, but knows he has areas of Letters of intent can't be signed until his game to work on next year before the winter. Until that time, members of entering the collegiateranks. He'll have the Michigan coaching staff can't com- that opportunity next year at Redford, ment on verbal commitments. where he averaged more than 22 points Harris's performance at the Nike and seven rebounds per game last year All-American camp brought him more as an All-State 1st team member. attention. While there, he was named "I still need to get stronger," Har- the camp's No. 4 shooting guard. ris said. "I've gained 10 or 12 pounds "I was just being myself there," Har- since last year, but I still think I need ris said. "I tried to do it all - rebound, to get stronger. play defense and hit open shots." Harris said his ideal weight down Dave Telet, a recruiting analyst for the line would be 190 or 200 pounds. Scout.com who saw Harris perform at He also listed long-range shooting as a the camp in Indianapolis, agreed that targeted area of improvement. Harris could be something special. He said he was excited to get to "He consistently was making his play with DeShawn Sims, the highly jump shots," Telet said. "If he contin- touted forward who will be joining ues making his shots and plays with the team this season. the energy that he did on both ends of "I've played with DeShawn before, the court, he's going to be a huge help and he's a great player," Harris said. "I to Michigan." really like his game, I think we can do Harris, currently listed as the big things together." Michigan is no stranger to players leaving early, but unlike last year when former play- ers Jeff Tambellini and Al Montoya bolted for the NHL before their senior seasons, Lewis is attempting to make a jump to the professional ranks without ever skating for the Wolverines. Even though this appears to be a major blow to the program, Michi- gan coach Red Berenson doesn't appear to be phased by the sudden loss of such a highly touted recruit. "This is not a one-player pro- gram," Berenson said. "We've had to deal with this sort of thing in the past. Now, we're very disappointed that Trevor Lewis decided to turn pro, and I'm very disappointed in the L.A. Kings for thinking that for whatever reason, they would sign him and not let him develop at Mich- igan. But it's not going to devastate our program ... The person that is missing out on everything is Trevor Lewis. Our team is still going to be a good team." Even though Berenson can't discuss particular recruits during the summer, he did acknowledge that there are players out there who remain unsigned. He did not rule out the possibility that anoth- er player would be brought in to replace Lewis.' One player that has been looked at by Michigan is Patrick Kane, a forward for the U.S. National Team Development Program based in Ann Arbor. Kane had expressed interest in the Wolverines before, but he wouldn't be able to graduate from high school before the season aointed begins. The earli- appos est possible time tha fo Kane could join the that for team is mid-sea- rson, they son. Still, Berenson M and isconfident in the levelop team's depth and -" doesn't feel that the Michigan Wolverines have I Berenson been caught short handed. But the Lewis signing also brings to light a situation other than just losing a top recruit, a situation that college coaches like Berenson hadn't dealt with in the past - the possibility of losing a player to the NHL before they play a game of col- lege hockey. Just a year following the NHL's new collective bargaining agree- ment, a rash of draft picks are being signed as early as possible - a low- risk, high-reward move if a team only pays a player the entry level salary at signing. With the exception of the few teams in a given draft who pick up a special player like a Sidney Cros- by or a Wayne Gretzkey - play- ers that could compete in the NHL younger than age 20 - teams aren't expecting immediate help from it's draft picks at the pro level, even though the teams are signing them early. Berenson finds this new trend alarming and not in the best inter- est of the player. "I think (the Kings) took advan- tage of a kid who wasn't getting good advice and signed him so that they own him, and they can do what- ever they want," Berenson said. In his 26 years of coaching at Michigan, Berenson has seen NHL general managers promise immedi- ate playing time to players, only to see those promises go unfulfilled. Unlike at Michigan, Berenson says that NHL teams are not concerned with whether a player has a college education to fall back on if his hockey career is cut short, either by injury or if the player doesn't pan out. "College hockey has been a per- fect fit for so many players," Beren- son said. "They have a chance to play hockey, develop and get an edu- cation at the same time. So that when they're ready to turn pro, they're ready. They're more ready than they would've been had they left when they were 19." Even after three years of college experience, some players find it dif- ficult to break into the NHL. Former Wolverine Jeff Tambel- lini, a superstar for Michigan dur- ing his three years in college, met the harsh realities of professional hockey with the same team that drafted Lewis. Despite his position as arguably one of the mosttalented players in the nation while at Michigan, he played in just four games with the Kings before being sent to the Islanders, in which he appeared in 21 games for the team (in an 82-game season). Montoya, another superstar from the same class, has yet to appear in an NHL game with his organization, the New York Rangers. Whether the current trend of NHL teams signing players earlier is going to continue remains to be seen, butit is unquestionably a period of insta- bility for the NHL, a period that could have long-lasting effects for players and their families, coaches and college hockey programs. Berenson paints this picture for future hockey recruits. "Are you ready to compete in the NHL?" Berenson said. "Are you ready to compete with men for a job? You're not given a job. They're not handing you a jersey and saying, 'You're going to be in our power play just because we signed you.' It's a whole different world." PRESENT THIS AD AND GET 0/OF ' ' I ' Coloaial Lanes Plaza S 195S.IndustrialHwy SuiteSG nnArbor