Monday, June 7, 2010 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 11l YOST From Page 10 79 percent of their games at Yost since 1991. "The dedication level, you can just kind of see it," Engineering sophomore Rob Eckert said in May. "When you're surrounded by passionate people, it's hard not to catch on." So how did this happen? How did Yost become the most intimidating place to play in America? Part of the final answer lies within the 3.7 million people who have walked through the Yost doors, but it begins almost 40 years before many of today's fans were even born. THE CHILDREN BEFORE THE CHILDREN Long before the Children of Yost had the rink vibrating with noise, the arena was housing footballs as the team's prac- tice facility. The hockey - and the noise - was a few streets down, inside the Weinberg Coliseum (now the Sports Col- iseum). It was there where then-coach Vic Heyliger created a simple method to put fans in the seats - win. Six national championships brought the crowds in and Heyliger's successor, Al Renfrew, kept the winning method going. By the time a young center from Saskatchewan named Red Berenson pulled the Michigan sweater. over his head, supporters would line up all the way down Hill St. to try to be one of the approximately 2,000 lucky fans that squeezed into the building on gameday. "It was a great environment for us. It wasn't just the students, it was the townspeople, it was a little bit of every- thing," Berenson said. Inside that comparatively tiny of a Pro Nails 1171 West Eisenhower Parkway Ann Arbor, II 48103 (734) 222-0850 Sperial Student ['rice (734) 222-0200 building, the University and the city of Ann Arbor set the precedent for support- ing Michigan hockey. It was obviously smaller than Yost, and Berenson admits it wasn't as organized, but the rules were still the same: Pack the building. Make it loud. "I remember them playing 'The Vic- tors' - a lot," Berenson said after this season. "In a small building, as you can imagine, it's even louder than it is in (Yost)." non-existent. The high volume of stu- dents and townspeople stopped showing up and the band became a collection of students with nothing better to do. "It was a kind of piecemeal situation, like 'we have 18 tickets, who wants to come?' " John Pasquale, Director of the Michigan Hockey Pep Band, said in May. "So we'll have six trombones and a flute, two tubas and a bass drum and we'll kind of get together and just kind of play just for fun." The same high ceilings and brick walls that would be ideal for holding in sound and adding to the raucous atmosphere that would arrive years later only con- tributed to the dire situation. "There was nobody in the building," Berenson said. "It was like being in a big cave." But there were games when the poten- tial of Yost could be seen. Twice a year, Yost was rocking - for the other team. When rival Michigan State came to town, so did its supporters. While the Wolverines and Spartans battled on the Yost ice, the official col- ors in the stands were Green and White. Inside the building named for one of the greatest figures in Michigan athlet- ics, the sold out crowd donned the other team's colors and watched its Spartans play their inferior neighbors. "It was embarrassing," Berenson said. From the embarrassment, came action. Berenson wanted the Michigan State fans out of Yost, and so the coach- ing staff began to reach out. "One of the programs they imple- mented was to try to block them out," associate head coach Mel Pearson said. "So they did go up on campus in the Diag and to the faculty and the students to try to get them at least to buy Michigan State tickets, so we wouldn't have a road game at home." It wasn't just going to the Diag. It was going to the dorms. It was sending play- ers to fraternities and sororities. It was See YOST, Page 12 PLAYING ROAD GAMES AT HOME The year was 1984, and Michigan was in the middle of the lowest era in the his- tory of the Michigan crowd. Somewhere between the time Beren- son transitioned from Michigan center to Michigan coach, The winning was interrupted. The Wolverines hadn't fin- ished first in the conference in 20 years and had made exactly one NCAA Tour- nament appearance in that time. In the five years before Berenson took over, the team had just a .479 winning percentage, and as the team lost, the foundation of support tn began to erode. Less than ten years after Michigan moved to Yost Ice Arena in 1973, it played most of its games with the paint-chipped bleachers empty. The atmosphere was MAX COLLINS/Dai The Michigan hockey team huddles around their own net before taking the ice in front of their home fans.