1*1'tl[5'IUU*"'OPO.rLw-llvlu."-u-4uy- opuris .von-uai y *ruvi* Who holds the Michigan record for most goals in an ice hockey game? (For the answer, turn to the bottom of page 2) 'M' Sports Calendar Fraternity IM Standings Q&A Gill Again Gymnastics Preview Wrestling Preview Men's Basketball Swimming Ice hockey Women's Basketball Indoor Track 2 2 3 3 4 4 6 7 7 8 8 r'f The Michigan Daily - Sports Monday *FU COURT L LPRESS Blue comes back to winning ways of old' by Theodore Cox Daily Basketball Writer MADISON - "It must be awful covering Michigan this year," the Badger Herald sportswriter said to me at halftime Saturday in Wiscon- sin's Fieldhouse. He was gloating - the Badgers were up 35-21. Michigan looked piti- ful, so I had no comeback or response. "Now you know how I've felt for the last three years," he quipped. * I really didn't. Michigan may not have the talent Wisconsin does, but Michigan knows how to win. "Hail to the Victors" is more than just a song. I watched Michigan come back and erase a 14-point lead, led by a walk-on named Freddie Hunter, a beanpole named Eric Riley, and a bunch of tiny guards. I witnessed Michael Talley drive and lay in a bucket with just 11 ticks left on the clock to send the game into over- time. My eyes expressed disbelief as Kirk Taylor and James Voskuil both calmly nailed three-pointers in the overtime session to put Michigan ahead. And then I watched forgotten guard Tony Tolbert take charge 0 with seconds left, to give the Wolverines a slim lead. But then a mistake. A chance for Wisconsin to take back what should have been theirs in the first place. With no time left on the clock, Badger guard Larry Hisle Jr. was fouled by Talley on the in- bounds pass. Wisconsin was in the bonus, so Hisle had two shots. The game was in his hands. He could win it, tie it, or lose it. He choked. Wisconsin blew another one. Michigan won in dramatic fashion like so many times in its proud tradition. See FULL COURT, Page 6 January 21, 1991 Missed free throws lead to Blue victory by Phil Green Daily Basketball Writer MADISON - There was no time left on the overtime clock. Wisconsin trailed by one point, and he had two foul shots - Larry Hisle Jr. was living every player's dream opportunity. As his second miss rolled off the rim, Hisle's dream became the Badgers' nightmare. Michigan (9-7 overall, 2-4 Big Ten) had come back from a 14-point halftime deficit to defeat Wisconsin (8-7, 2- 3), 69-68, in overtime. "When I shot the first one and missed, I said it was all right be- cause I'd hit the second and send it into overtime again," Hisle said. "I guess it wasn't meant to be." However, during Saturday's first half, nobody could have dreamed overtime would be necessary. The Badgers thoroughly domi- nated Michigan while building a 35-21 halftime advantage. On ev- ery possession, Wisconsin's guards penetrated at will, creating easy baskets or a Michigan foul and a Badger trip to the charity stripe. Patrick Tompkins proved to be, the main beneficiary, scoring 10 of his game high 19 points during the opening half in which he went to the foul line nine times. Mean- while, Wolverine center Eric Riley picked up three fouls. "We were moving the ball re- ally well and were getting inside shots," Tompkins said. "Our inside game is strong compared to Mich- igan's." Wisconsin also shut down Michigan's offense. The Wolver- ines couldn't get the ball inside, and they were held to 36 percent shooting. Demetrius Calip, Kirk Taylor, and Riley, the team's three leading scorers, combined for only six points, and they didn't get into the scoring column until a Riley bank shot with just under eight minutes remaining. "We told them to play harder (in the second half)," Michigan coach Steve Fisher said. "Don't try to get back a 14-point deficit in six, seven minutes. When the first timeout comes, let's be within 10; second segment let's be within five, and tied with them or ahead by the five-minute mark." Behind Taylor and the other guards, Michigan opened the sec- ond half quickly. The Wolverines used an 18-6 run to cut their deficit to four. The Badgers and the See WISCONSIN, Page 6 Michigan center Eric Riley defends Patrick Tompkins of Wisconsin. Riley was the first Wolverine to foul out in Saturday's overtime victory. " Icers sweep slumping Falcons Michigan winning streak up to eight - BG loses ten straight by John Niyo Daily Hockey Writer The holidays are long since past but it seems obvious that the new year has been a happy and joyous one for the Michigan hockey team. Red Berenson and the Wolverines have eagerly hopped on the new train set they got for Christmas and are now rac- ing down the tracks, picking up momentum along the way. And Bowling Green made the mistake of stopping in the middle of the tracks this weekend as Michigan (17-4-3 CCHA, 20-5-3 overall) crushed the Falcons, 9-1, Friday in Bowling Green (9-13-2, 11-15-2) and 6-2, Saturday in Yost Ice Arena. The sweep extended the Wolverine winning streak to eight in a row, while Falcon coach Jerry York and his "Little Engine That Couldn't" lost its tenth in a row. It is the longest losing streak in Bowling Green history. Not surpris- ingly, Berenson wants one of those streaks to continue. "I just hope we're not peaking right now; peaking too early," Berenson said. "I hope we don't go into a slump like they're in." But York, after facing Lake Su- perior State (ranked number one in the nation) last weekend, doesn't think they will. "They're truly a national power," York said. "They're like Lake Superior. Michigan really has a great hockey team. This is Coach Berenson's best team ever by a. mile. He's had some great players in the past, but he's never had this many on the same team before." Senior center Don Stone stuffed the first lump of coal into York's stocking both nights. Only :45 into the game Friday, Stone took a pass from defenseman Patrick Neaton and fired it by Falcon goalie Angelo Libertucci. The next night it was Don Stone again, this time at :46, when he skated across the crease and flipped it in for an- other early Wolverine lead. And both nights it was only the begin- ning of an onslaught. Friday, junior Denny Felsner fed David Roberts who caught Libertucci straying too far out of the net and angled Michigan's second goal behind the rattled goalie at 3:00 - a scene league coaches are becoming accustomed to. "The Ouimet line is a truly ex- ceptional one," York said. "Those(z guys move the puck so well. Somebody is always there for the puck. We don't have guys like that. We don't have the people with the flat out speed to take over a game.", Bowling Green drew closer when Martin Jiranek, one of the............................: few Falcon players who seemed ...3 able to break free at all against the Wolverines, scored an unassisted goal, his 19th of the year, at 13:01. Jiranek's slapshot was wide of the mark, but Michigan goalie Steve Shields (16-3-3) was unable to get a handle on the rebound and it. trickled in for Bowling Green's only goal. After that it was all Michigan and all David Roberts. Uncon- tested behind the net, Roberts sat back and waited until he found Ted Kramer in front of the net for: an easy power play goal that put Michigan up 3-1. Goals by Mike Stone and Tim Helber rounded out the scoring in the first period. # w Roberts scored twice more 'u while both teams were a man short to notch his second hat trick of the season - and sandwiched in be- tween was Denny Felsner's nation- Forward Ted Kramer attempts to block a Bowling Green shot en route to a 9-1 victory Friday night. See FALCONS, Page 7 .. RESTRI CTI ON REACTIONS Men swimmers drown by Theodore Cox Daily Sports Writer If you ask a coach which is; more important, athletics or academics, he will always say school. But deep in his heart, he knows his job depends on his win-loss ratio. Coaches need every edge they can get - and rules restricting their actions take many of the edges away. An athlete spends more time with a coach than all of his or her teachers combined. Coaches have enormous influence. It is no wonder athletics have become more important than studies in many instances. A coach doesn't have time to think about how much a player knows about physics and French. All a coach looks for is passing grades -most of his or her 'M' coaches speak on NCAA changes NEW CCHI #NG LIMIITATIONS.5 regain control of athletics. That is exactly what happened last week at the 1991 NCAA Convention in Nashville, Tenn. The 95 proposals voted on last week will not only affect the student-athlete, but, more importantly, the coaches, who will have to prepare for numerous changes. Assistant coaches are going to be laid-off, scholarships will be reduced by ten percent, supervised practice and playing time will be limited to 20 hours a week, sea sons will be shorter, and the list goes on and on. Michigan coaches reacted in a typical manner this week after' being notified of the future changes. Most of them were pleased with the convention's direction, but everyone seemed Stanford an by Andy De Korte Daily Sports Writer, A new Wolverine rivalry has1 been growing over the past four years between two perennial top+ ten teams. The fifth-ranked Michi- gan men's swimming team has now won four straight meets in the last four years against No. 2 Stan- ford University. Michigan also extended its winning streak to two over No. 9 University of California-Berkeley Golden Bears during the weekend stay in California. On Friday, the Michigan swimmers and divers overpowered the Cardinal, 132-111, winning eight of thirteen events. Following this incredible performance, Wol- verine head swimming coach Jon Urbanchek's wishes were fulfilled d Berkeley "But it wasn't that we swam exceptional. Our divers were just better." Michigan divers ate up both opponents, gaining 32 points out of a possible 38 against Stanford and 30 against Berkeley. Eric Lesser won the 3000 meter dives both days and split the honors with Jeff Jozwiak on the 1000 meter board to combine for 48 points. "We didn't do anything special. We have just been practicing hard, and we all came up to the chal- lenge," Jeff Jozwiak said. The divers could not win the meet alone, however. The World Championship medal winning trio, Eric Wunderlich, Eric Namesnik, and Mike Barrowman, were joined at the vanguard by Brian Gunn. Wunderlich swam with the tenac- :":::">: G %:::: ' . ::>::