10 Monday, June 7, 2010 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 0 Games at Yost have turned into a non-stop tirade against refs, the opposing team, its fans and, most importantly, its goalie. It starts before the first puck is dropped as fans tell ref- erees to "check the net!" and after the official has done so, to "check it again!." The opposing player introductions are met with newspaper reading by the student section. And only after that does the crowd get rowdy. The student section, dotted with celebrities like "the penguin guy" and "the guys dressed as Blues Brothers," extends the length of the arena, filling up the sections next to and behind both benches. It also spearheads the cheering effort of the 6,000-plus fans in the building, uniting the arena as one in order to tell the refs they suck, the opposing goalie he's a sieve, and the opposing parents they are ugly - repeatedly. "The kind of people who go to Yost are the kind of people that want to act like fools," LSA junior Jamie Fogel said last month. "It's, 'I'm going to come and act like an idiot. I'm going to dress like a penguin, I'm going to dress like Thomas the Tank Engine,' and it's totally nor- mal to do that." And when the game stops, the crowd keeps going. During intermission, the crowd tries to get a lucky seven-year old riding the zamboni to do poses that eventually results in taking his or her shoe off and throwing itonthe ice. When the shoe goes flying, it is always met with a thunderous cheer. But that is just a warmup for the second intermission, which is highlighted by a rendition of the Blues Brothers song "Can't Turn You Loose" and has turned into a group dance for the entire student section. With the volume, the intermission antics and the raucous multitude of mean-spirited chants comes the fact that these fans are some of the most knowledgeable college hockey fans in the country. The building will get just as loud for a good penalty kill as a goal, and they know a hand pass is legal in the defensive zone. Most importantly, the fans have shown up game after game ever since that final game of Michigan's three-game series with Cornell. Their dedication level has led to one of the most significant home-ice advantages in the country - the Wolverines have won See YOST, Page 11 0 TOREHAN SHARMAN/Daily The Michigan hockey student section raises a Sweden flag in honor of Swedish-born junior Carl Hagelin. The Michigan crowd has helped the Wolverines to win 79 percent of their home games