The Michigan Daily - Sports Monday- February 18, 1991 - Page 5 JOSE JUAREZ/Daily Wolverine leftwinger Cam Stewart watches as his linemate, fellow rookie Brian Wiseman, score his second goal of the evening in Michigan's 6-5 victory over Michigan State Friday night. The Wolverines split the series at Joe Louis Arena, losing to the Spartans on Saturday. Rowdy rivals rumble r; ,.by Matt Rennie Daily Hockey Writer DETROIT - All that was miss- ing from Joe Louis Arena Saturday night was Don King. Despite the absence of the well-groomed box- ing promoter, all the other aspects of a championship fight were pre- : sent. Unfortunately, the scheduled event was a hockey game, not a boxing match. But, after the first period ended, it was quite difficult to tell the difference. As the Spartans and the Wolverines skated onto the ice to congratulate their respective } goalies, words were exchanged and a full-scale brawl ensued. The Spartans were apparently seething over a roughing,. penalty by Ted Kramer at the end of the period. After a few pushes and shoves, several individual con- frontations exploded in various ar- eas on the ice. "I guess (Michigan State) didn't like the Kramer thing," rookie defenseman Aaron Ward said. "Personally, I liked the hit. Anyway, we go out there to con- gratulate our goalies, and the next thing I know, there's a scrum going at center ice." The first real punches were pre- cipitated by the actions of Spartan goaltender Jason Muzzatti. Muz- zatti, who was not playing in the game, skated toward the Michigan end of the ice and confronted start- ing Michigan goaltender Steve Shields. While this was going on, many other players were picking their opponents for the battle royale. At this point, the fights were too nu- merous for the officials to control. In the end, five Spartans and six Wolverines were handed game misconducts. For Michigan, the guilty parties were Ward, Shields, Kent Brothers, Chris Tamer, Doug Evans, and Cam Stewart. Mean- while. Muzzatti, Jim Cummins, in ruckus penalties gave Michigan State a pair of power plays to open the second stanza. The Spartans took full advantage of the extra skater to score two quick goal to take a 3-0 lead. "I'm not sure about the penal- ties," Tamer said. "It looked like everything was pretty even out there to me." Several factors may have con- tributed to the belligerent attitudes. The rivalry between the two schools has always been fierce. Furthermore, neither team has an - important series scheduled next weekend, so the one-game suspen- sion that automatically accompa- yan Smolinski, nies a game misconduct might not at out the final have been as strong a deterrent as usual. CCHA needs to control fights, refs by Jeni Durst Daily Hockey Writer DETROIT - It wasn't Caesar's Palace. Evander Holyfield wasn't in sight. Neither was Mike Tyson. There weren't any ropes, nor a ring. In- stead there was ice, and it was Joe Louis Arena. But there was a title fight, or more precisely, fights. There was also a man in a black and white striped shirt in the middle of it all, though there might as well not have been. What should have been a classic hockey matchup between two in- trastate and CCHA rivals, Michigan and Michigan State, in the playdff setting of the JLA, was marred by an entire team brawl Saturday night. It began at the end of the first period. State's reserve goalie for the night, Jason Muzzatti, reacted to some Wolverine infraction and charged out onto the ice. Moments later he and Wolverine netminder Steve Shields sparred next to the Michigan bench. The rest of the players amassed on the ice after the buzzer sounded and preceded to pair off for the dance. More altercations broke out before the smoke finally cleared and when it was all over, twelve game disqualifications were handed out, six for each team, two going to Muzzatti. Michigan coach Red Berenson summed it up when he said that the whole incident was a "blemish on the league and a blemish on college hockey." And the biggest pimple on the face of the CCHA is its level of offi- ciating. Saturday, neither the ref nor the linesmen had any control over the happenings at the end of the period. They skated around aimlessly trying to decide what to do first as new fights broke out and old scuffles escalated. Referee Matt Shegos stood watching Muzzatti and Shields maul each other for minutes before the linesmen worked to break them up. After the goalies were finally carted to their separate benches, Muz- zatti, who had initiated the fight, skated back onto the ice. No attempt was made by Shegos or the linesmen to send him back to the bench, or better yet, to the lockerroom. Spartan Michael Stewart, who had pinned Michigan defender Aaron Ward to the ice for the duration of the incident, was not even issued a penalty. It's obvious the referee tried to distribute the ensuing penalties equally, but what is not so obvious is how he decided who got what. Ward was given a five-minute major for attempting to injure the referee when the official pushed him onto the bench and momentum carried the ref with him. Yet when State's Walt Bartels checked Michigan's Mike Stone from behind later in the second period, driving the rookie's head into the boards, Bartels was issued only a two-minute minor. Earlier this season, after Mike Helber was injured by a check from behind against Lake Superior, Michigan requested that the CCHA in- crease the penalty to a ten-minute major. The rule was enforced for one weekend of action until the NCAA overturned it. The CCHA referees now have the authority to decide if a check from behind is deliberate or not, and assigning a 10 or two-minute penalty. Their judgement has been questionable. "Ward got a five-minute major for attempting to injure the official, yet when a guy gets hit from behind, that's a real attempt to injure. It was out of control," a livid Red Berenson said. The weekend brawl highlights what has plagued the league all year. The referees have to remain more consistent in their calls and need to assert more control over their games. And the CCHA needs to assert more control over its officials. Until this is done, the blemish will con- tinue to grow and disfigure the real beauty of college hockey. CCH1i Through Feb. 21, 1991 Men's Hockey Standings .:::..............-..........................................-.....:.-".. "r":>-t i Conference Games TEAM W L T PTS. Lake Superior 24 2 4 52 Michigan 24 5 3 51 W. Michigan 16 12 2 34 Ferris State 14 11 5 33 Michigan St. 13 12 5 31 Bowling Green 12 16 2 26 Ohio State 8 18 4 20 :Ilinois-Chicago 8 20 2 18 Miami (Ohio) 2 25 3 7 tj, ooolmkx Muzzatti Joby Messier, Bry and Kelly Harper s t in d~i~ fn tha two perios sor the Spartans. In addition, Wolverine de- fenseman David Harlock received two minutes for hooking while Kramer picked up another two minutes for roughing. Those two "It was just one of those situa- tions that can happen in a hockey game," Brothers said. "I'm sure they hate us as much as we hate them." --, _, -, 4: . !: . ; . , '. ' t 4: ?. L e ; C: ( (: 4' ' g . t' { { i- e Y 4 i 4 :i fi HOCKEY NOTEBOOK 'M' State fans set new CCHA record at JLA by Jeni Durst Daily Hockey Writer DETROIT - For the past several seasons, Michigan State has upended the Wolverines in the squads' hockey matchups. At least as far as fan attendance was concerned. In an effort to deter the problem this year and also give the teams an early taste of playoff surroundings, the second home-and- home series between the rivals was moved to the confines of Joe Louis Arena. In the process, the opponents set a new CCHA record for attendance at a regular- season game Saturday night, with 15,684 fans packing the stands. The previous mark of ,15,348 was set almost exactly 17 years ago in February of 1974 when Ohio State traveled to Missouri for a game with St. Louis. Helping to establish the new mark were the 5-plus buses rented from Michigan to carry various Wolverine groups and clubs to Detroit to witness the festivities, including several fraternities and sororities. THE END OF THE STREAK: Michigan's 6- 2 loss to Michigan State Saturday night finally ended the Wolverines record winning streak. Michigan had not lost a regular or league con- test since Lake Superior upended the squad in their meeting on December 15. With the victory over State on Friday, the record streak increased to 15 before getting cut short by the Spartans. THE END OF THE STREAK, PART 2: Though it is not as historic or monumental as the winning streak of his team, rookie center Brian Wiseman had been busy setting a streak of his own - and it also ended with the lost to State. Beginning with the Wolverines first game with Western last weekend, Wiseman has scored two goals in each Michigan game up until Saturday. Wiseman leads all CCHA rookies in scoring, tallying nine goals and 16 assists on the season. His recent scoring flury came at a needed time for Michigan, during a period of injuries, when leading scorers David Roberts and Denny Felsner were both sitting out. SHORT-HANDED: Due to Saturday night's fisticuffs between Michigan and Michigan State, the Wolverines, who were limited to just 18 skaters going into the weekend because of injuries, will be limited to even less this Friday. Six Michigan players were issued game disqualifications that will keep them out of the upcoming matchup with Kent State. The Wolverines will be forced to perform with 13 skaters, including only three defensemen, and one goalie. s M i 1 Q 4 i f t t ti i k 3 !., y'; x i ICERS Continued from page 1 board late in the second period and scored again midway into the third stanza. But, before and after the fight, the game belonged to the Spartans. The disqualifications mean that 11 players will also be absent from playing this Friday. For- Michigan State, that means five players will be out of a home se- ries against eighth-place Illinois, Chicago. The Wolverines will have to deal with six fewer play.- ers for a home game with non- conference Kent State. "When it's all. said and done, it's going to affect us more than Michigan," Mason said. "They're playing two exhibition games next week and we're playing league games." Friday's contest was much more balanced. Michigan shot off to a 4-1 lead, but Michigan State hung in the game and eventually tied it late in the third period. Michigan forward Mike Helber scored the winning goal with less than five minutes remaining in the game, quieting the over- whelmingly Spartan crowd. In the last minute of the third period, the Spartans surged but were unable to score. Two Spar- tan shots ricocheted off the pipes but did not go in the net. With fif- teen seconds left, Michigan for- ward Denny Felsner missed an open-net goal, but the Spartans did not have enough time to get the puck down the ice for a final attempt. "We let them back into the game and they took it to us," Berenson said. "Luckily, we got the win." Michigan forward Brian Wise- man continued his scoring ways for the third consecutive, game by getting two goals and adding an assist. Rightwinger Dan Stiver, who didn't even dress for part of the season, proved his value by chipping in three assists. 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