12 Monday, June 7, 2010 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com YOST From Page 11 putting brochures in the dorm mailbox of every freshman. More importantly, it was turn- ing a 12-26-0 record into 22-15-4 and eventually, turning that into 34-10-3. Wearers of the Maize and Blue began to fill the building consistently. By the time Michigan hosted the 1991 NCAA regional, it had enough fans to set a weekend attendance record that still stands to this day. But the attendance was onlythe first step in creating a true home-ice advan- tage. THE TURNING POINT The student section, barely extend- ing blue line to blue line behind the benches, had already started the countdown. No. 3 seed Michigan was up 4-3 on sixth-seeded Cornell as the sec- onds slowly counted down in the 1991 Regional. The crowd, staring at the approxi- mately 200 Cornell fans situated near center ice on the side opposite of the student section, belted out the num- bers. "Five! Four! Three! Two!...". But the countdown never finished. Big Red forward Kent Manderville slapped a backhand shot from the top of the circle past freshman goaltender Steve Shields to tie the game. Cor- nell then scored on its first trip down the ice in overtime to end the game, but it was the halted countdown that spurred the veteran BigRed crowd. "I've never heard a countdown stop," William Sangrey, a Cornelligrad- uate student at the time said. "Five, four, three, two, and it stopped. The whole building just stopped." The following night, as the first period waned down, the boisterous Cornellians added a new chant to their already versatile repertoire. "They would go, 'Ten, nine, eight, seven, six, five, four, three, two, OHHH!' to make fun of the crowd reaction," then-Michigan graduate student Matt Thullen said. But the Michigan fans were drawn in before that. The personal cheers and clever- ness of Cornell clicked with them, and on that weekend in mid-March, the crowd took its first step toward becom- ing what it is today. In the face of the rowdy Ivy League crowd, it began to defend its building. "(The Cornell fans) were loud and they got their message across, and I think the fans kind of took it as a chal- lenge," Thullen said. "We're the ones with the intimidating building. We're the home team. "We're not going to let these guys come in and basically do anything (they want)." But many of the Michigan fans were new to college hockey and didn't know how to pass the test presented by the Cornell contingent. So, the Wolverine fans took the Big Red's cheers. The number and variety of cheers that were taken vary, depending on the memory of each person that was there. Some say that Steve Shields wasn't the only goalie who had his mother call to tell him he sucked. Others can only remember Cornell goaltender Jim Crozier getting hit with "It's all your fault! It's all your fault!" added to the end of Michigan's already established goal count. But the most important lesson that Big Red crowd taught wasn't a specific chant - it was the attitude that a college hockey crowd should have. "I think that the Cornell folks kind of taught us how you can really make a chant that really gets under people's skin a little bit better," Thullen said. And after a 6-4 Michigan win, the decisive game came on a St. Patrick's Day Sunday in front of Berenson's first sellout that wasn't against Michigan State. Michigan rode the crowd to a 9-3 victory. The winning method had been restored. The win also ended the three-day fan crash course. The Michigan faith- ful left for seven months of hiberna- tion, unsure if the atmosphere would take hold without Cornell baiting them. So in the home opener of the 1991- 92 season, the crowd faced another test - Michigan State. The fans showed up, and armed with their knowledge from early March, Michigan home games have never been the same. "The very first series of games, it was packed," Eric Storhok, a graduate student at the time, said last month. "There was enough students that once somebody came up with a clever cheer, everybody was doing it immediately." It was the beginning of the mod- ern era of the Yost crowd, one that has relied on the cheers and ability to adapt that was taught to them by 200 kids from Ithaca, New York. And when the Big Red came back to Yost in 1997, they saw the monster they had created. "They gave us a hard time about stealing their chants and those of us who were at that game were like, 'if we could chant 'thank you,' we would," Storhok said... Continue this story about the Michigan hockey crowd online at michigandaily.com 9 *I