Page 4-The Michigan Daily - Sports Monday - February 4,1991 III EI: Sorry Buckeye icers wallow in hellish pit by John Niyo Daily Hockey Writer COLUMBUS - It was a case of the good, the bad, and the ugly this weekend as the Wolverines traveled to face Ohio State in Columbus. Michigan's hockey team is good, Ohio State's is bad, and the two games they played were very, very ugly. Saturday, the good and the bad teams combined for a whopping 40 penalties, all of them two minute minors. Friday was somewhat milder with the two squads spending a mere 71 minutes in the penalty box. And during the hour-long second period Saturday night you could sense that all of the unfriendly gestures out on the ice were wearing on not just the players. It was painful for everyone. Mostly, it was painful because every fight, every penalty and every delay meant that all those innocent fans had to stay a little longer in that godforsaken building the Ohio State hockey team calls home and it just kept going on and on and on.... You get the idea. I was one of the lucky ones. Warned repeatedly be- forehand of what lay ahead, my initial shock was numbed somewhat. Others are not so lucky and surely there are some still standing outside, staring in disbelief. There it is. Where? That building right there. That's it? You've got to be kidding! My house is bigger than that! Good ole OSU Ice Rink. At least they don't try to call it an arena. But rink might even be a little too nice. Maybe they should just call it OSU Ice. Then there wouldn't be any false notions about the place. Or maybe they should just follow Michigan defenseman Aaron Ward's lead. "It's a pit. It's a pit from hell. There's nothing nice you can say about it." So we won't. Let's call it OSU Pit From Hell. Then everyone will know exactly what to expect when they get there. Or what not to expect. Don't expect to see the game. The view from all 1400 seats is bad. The 200 standing room only tickets aren't any better. You can see the game better by listening to the radio. Don't expect to attend a good game anyway. The ice is little more than a small frozen pond that, as Red Berenson put it, has "a center line and two ends." No matter where the puck is, it's within firing range of the opposing goal. Ten skaters at a time are corralled into the tiny rink and told to play hockey and told not to fight. It's like sticking eight second- graders in the back of a station wagon and telling them not to fight. The whole place is one big joke. Here, in the shadow of St. John Arena - an excellent facility where a top notch Ohio State basketball team plays - there is a carnival going on and few seem to realize it. Sitting in the press box you get a good idea of how silly everything is at the dinky OSU Pit From Hell. You can't help but laugh, watching the Zamboni in between periods. It goes around the rink for forty days and forty nights, hitting all the spots he missed earlier and generally making a mess of things. Then out comes the kid on skates with the pail and a squeegee to save the day. Good entertainment. The other form of entertainment (since the games here never provide any) is provided by the agitated fans. The Pit From Hell is a catcaller's dream. With the rink as small as it is, you can make eye contact and converse with anyone in the building if you want. And the OSU fans do, mostly with the referees. They're a pretty talkative bunch. And if you get bored of talking you can always try to spit on the ice. Or watch pieces of the ceiling fall dow Or try to figure out what exactly the announcer just said. Did someb>,, score? I couldn't see. Nice call ref, get some glasses. It just doesn't make any sense. How can Ohio State expect anything but a joke of a hockey team given it's current setting? And how can a school with 54,000 students continue to call a hole like The Pit "home ice" and keep a straight face? What's the matter with The Ohio State University (as they like to be called)? No one with any sense can call that place home. Of course, it probably doesn't even have a phone. JtskpJy rUtTdd rmE.J Steve Shields prepares to stop the puck as an Ohio State player lets it get away. The weekend was full of missed opportunities for the Buckeyes. BUCKEYES Continued from page 1 scoring explosions in the second stanza. In the first game, the Wolverines bombarded Ohio State goaltender Mike Bales with 15 shots in the first period, but Bales stood tall for the Buckeyes, allowing only a Patrick Neaton goal for a 1-0 margin. The dam finally broke in the second period, as Michigan scored four unanswered goals to put the game away. The Wolverines scored in the first and last minutes of the period, as junior leftwinger Denny Felsner opened the floodgates and sophomore defenseman David Harlock put the finishing touches on a nearly flawless 20 minutes. Michigan's two other goals in the period came within a minute of each other, with Tamer and rookie Mike Stone doing the honors. "(Michigan) had a couple of goals that were deflected off our sticks, so we can't do much about that," Welsh said. "They were getting opportun- ities in the first period, too, but they hit a few off the crossbar. The luck wasn't with them, then." The first period of the second game was a struggle for the Wolverines, as the Buckeyes outshot them, 16-12. Despite this fact, Ohio State trailed, 1-0, after Felsner opened the scoring with his 31st goal of the season. The Buckeyes finally got on the board after a controversial high- sticking call against rookie Brian Wiseman gave the Buckeyes the man advantage. David Smith's power play goal with :50 left evened the score at one heading into the first intermission. 'I'd compare it to a dog that's nipping at your heels: You've either got to keep running or you've got to turn around and kick the dog' - Red Berenson Once again, though, the Wolverines bagged the game during the middle stanza. Rookie Cam Stewart and junior Ted Kramer each knocked home power play goals in the first six minutes of the period. Tamer then promptly closed the Wolverines' scoring two minutes later. Interestingly, in what seemed to be the norm for the evening, Tamer, Stewart, and Kramer were united in the penalty box after a melee which took place with five minutes to go in the period. "It reminded me of playing Junior A," Ward said. "Everyone was out there trying to prove something." HOCKEY NOTEBOOK Blue vs. OSU could create messy playoffs by John Niyo Daily Hockey Writer COLUMBUS - The weekend series with Ohio State left the Michigan hockey team holding a mixed bag of results. The Wolverines won their twelfth straight game (they are undefeated in the new year), and it was their tenth consecutive win away from Yost Ice Arena. The win Friday guaranteed Michigan at least a share of third place in the league. With Saturday's win, the Maize and Blue clinched second. This means that Michigan will host the seventh place finisher in the first round of the CCHA playoffs, March 1-3. That's where the bad news comes in. The seventh place team in the league is currently Ohio State. After this weekend's debacle in Columbus, the prospect of another meeting between these two teams is not a very pleasant one. ButBuckeye coach Jerry Welsh doesn't plan on that happening anyway. "We're not planning on finishing seventh," Welsh said. "We've got a plan to finish sixth. We've got Lake Superior coming up this weekend and it would be tough to come out of that series with any points, but we're still very confident that we can beat out Bowling Green for sixth." That confidence might be justified considering that Bowling Green has continued its monstrous slide down the CCHA standings. The Falcons lost their 13th and 14th straight games (they've lost 12 straight league games) this weekend at Northern Michigan. Likewise, Michigan (21-4-3 CCHA, 24-5-3 overall) still retains hopes of catching Lake Superior State (22-2-4, 25-3-4) for the@ regular season title. Both teams have four league games left on the schedule and Michigan now stands three points behind the Lakers, who are ranked first in the nation. Michigan has home-and-home series with Western Michigan and Michigan State coming up while Lake Superior hosts the Buckeyes and travels to Western Michigan* to close out the season. POLL WATCHING: Michigan could climb a notch in the national polls this week as Minnesota, ranked ahead of the fourth-place Wolverines, dropped a 5-3 decision to Minnesota-Duluth in WCHA action in St. Paul Friday night. It's possible that Michigan might move up in the polls again after this coming weekend since Minnesota travels to Marquette to face the WCHA-leading and probably second-ranked Northern Michigan Wildcats. Minnesota took three points from the Wildcats earlier this season. FINAL FIVE: Though it is still early, it looks as if five teams have emerged as the leading cand- idates for the top four spots in the NCAA Tournament in March. Lake Superior, Northern Michigan, Mich-igan, Minnesota and Boston College appear to be in line for the first-round NCAA byes. 'Freaky Friday' for frustrated Wolverine frosh by Mike Gill Daily Sports Writer COLUMBUS - is learning about the: knocks. And hard breaks. David Oliver school of hard He wonders what he ever did to desefve such bad fate. Friday night, the rookie Wolverine suf- fered a broken leg (technically, a broken fibular), which will idle him for the remainder of the regular season and at least part of the playoffs. Oliver will have a cast placed on his leg when swelling subsides and it will be removed four weeks later. Then he will begin rehabilitation. Oliver knew immediately the extent of his injury. "I skated off the ice and right there was (fellow rookie Cam) Stewart," he said. "I said 'Stewy, I broke my leg.' I knew it right there." "After he said that I looked at him and he had eyes this wide," Stewart recalled, while making a circle the size of a quarter. "I grabbed his leg and kept trying to move it saying 'No you didn't. No you didn't.' But then we found out that it was true." Up until this year, Oliver did not have the reputation of being injury prone. Before joining the Wolverines, in all his youth, he only suffered a broken wrist. Entering the Michigan State series in late November, Oliver led all CCHA rookies in scoring. Then, he suffered a broken jaw, idling him for four games. Now, a freakish second line with Stewart and Brian Wiseman, creating an all rookie, explosive line. Oliver tallied 13 goals and 11 assists while seeing action in 27 games. The injury left Michigan coach Red Berenson juggling his lineup. With defenseman Doug Evans and right wing David Wright in Ann Arbor nursing injuries, Berenson moved senior defenseman Kent Brothers to the wing position. Brothers, who previously had seen action in only nine games this season, had played the position his first three seasons at Michigan. Paul Sancimino, a walk-on transfer from University of Michigan- Dearborn dressed for the first time this season, but did not see ice time. "This will be a test for our depth," Berenson said after Sat- urday's 4-2 win. "It will be a chance for others to step up. It's too early to say how it will affect this team. Hopefully we can have guys come up and fill the void." For Brothers, the chance to move to offense was welcomed. "It was fun and a challenge," he said. "After not playing up there for awhile, it was enjoyed. Right now, there is a void on this team and someone's got to fill it. We've had a couple unfortunate injuries and it is my turn to step up and fill the hole." Sophomore Dan Stiver moved up and filled Oliver's spot on the second line Saturday. "We can't think of (Oliver's) ccI1q Through Feb. 3,1991 Men's Hockey Standings Conference Games TEAM W L T PTS. Lake Superior 22 2 4 48 Michigan 21 4 3 45 Ferris State 13 8 5 31 W. Michigan 14 10 2 30 -Michigan St. 10 11 5 25 Bowling Green 9 15 2 20 Ohio State 8 15 3 19 Illinois-Chicago 7 20 1 15 Miami (Ohio) 2 21 3 7 Right wing David Oliver watches his teammates beat OSU Saturday I