The Michigan Daily - Thursday, January 17, 1991 - Page 9 _ The En-four-cers Dekers induct four into Hall of Fame by Dan Zoch Daily Hockey Writer JOSE JUARE7IDay WDlverines Aaron Ward, Ted Kramer, Cam Stewart, and Chris Tamer (left to right) have established themselves as the "hit men" of Michigan hockey. Though the four personify physical play during a game, off the ice it's their personalities that really hit you. Tamer, Stewart, Ward and Kramer fill a tough role "Shattering every existing Wolverine record, Michigan's flashy left winger, Gib James, humiliated ... St. Thomas in the Coliseum last night when he banged home 10 goals and was credited with one assist," - Michigan Daily sportswriter Fred Buesser, February 19, 1936. Gib James, whose scoring record still stands fifty-five years later, will be one of four inductees into the Dekers Hall of Fame this weekend. Other inductees include William "Dave" Butts (1961-63), Angie Moretto (1973-76), and long-time Official Timer Doug Bamett. The Dekers, the booster club for B utts the Michigan hockey team, has been an active part of Michigan's hockey team since 1962.y James played under coachEddie Lowrey from 1935 through 1938. In 1936, Moretto James was referred to as "an entire hockey team unto himself," by Lowrey and the Daily. In 1937, he helped the Wolverines to a share in the Big Ten Championship. That same year, he was a selection to the Midwest College All-Star Team. Dave Butts got his chance to play in the net, under Michigan coach Al Renfrew in the 1962-63 season, when the Wolverines were short on players. He played goal for two seasons and switched to forward his senior year. In the 1961-62 season, Butts led the W.C.H.A. in average goals against (2.70). In 21 career games, his goals against average was 3.09. Since playing for Michigan, Butts moved on to coaching high school and the minor leagues. In 1965, Butts played senior hockey for the Calgary Spurs. He was also a college recruiter and a volunteer for the 1988 Calgary Olympiad. Nicknamed "Big Ange," Angie Moretto played under coaches Renfrew and Don Farrell. In 1973- 74, Moretto led the team in scoring with 47 points and in the 1974-75 season he again led the team with 67 points. Along with teammate Greg Fox, Moretto was one of the first players drafted in the NHL universal amateur draft in 1973. I o In 1974, Moretto scored Barnett both goals in a Wolverine 2-0 victory over Michigan Tech to take the Great Lakes Invitational. Moretto is still an active player in the Senior Hockey League. Doug Barnett J mes didn't play for a 0the Wolverines but his contributions to the team have been enormous. Barnett acted as official timer for the team from 1958 to 1983. In 1962, Barnett along with eleven other Michigan fans, formed the Dekers. For fifteen years, Barnett edited and published the Deker newsletter and has served as the chairperson of the Dekers Hall of Fame since the organization's inception. Among his memorable moments were timing the last game in the old Coliseum and the first game in Yost Ice Arena. The induction ceremonies will begin at 7:20 pm on Saturday night at Yost, preceding the face-off of the Michigan hockey game versus Bowling Green. by Jeni Durst Daily Hockey Writer Sunday, December 2, 1990. Boston. The Michigan hockey team versus top-ranked Boston College. There is a temporary stoppage in play. Number six in the Maize and Blue, Chris Tamer, paws at an Apposing player's helmet. Teammate Aaron Ward drops his gloves and pulls a Boston player's shirt over his head. Fellow Wolverines Cam Stewart and Ted Kramer join the action, grabbing and pushing at two other players. -It's a familiar sight to many Michigan fans and opposing teams around the Central Collegiate I16ckey Association. Week after .eek, fans can find these four Wolverines repeatedly slamming bodies into the boards, subtly and not-so-subtly pushing players when the officials backs are turned ... and frequently sitting in the penalty box. Together they have combined for 123 of the team's total 280 penalties this year, Wolverine coach Red Btrenson concedes they are making names for themselves as the hitmen" of the Michigan squad, and perhaps the league, carrying nicknames such as "The Assassin," (Ward) "Jackhammer" (Stewart), and just plain goon. With. this type of background, one might expect these guys to walk aupund campus wearing studded black l~ther jackets, folding Camel no- fjter cigarettes up their sleeves, and inly speaking in four-letter words. t just as actors who play dastardly v lains on television are usually the lkdest people in reality, these play- eo differ from their on-ice personas. But in meeting them, one is faced npt with the Sharks of "West Side Spry," but Richie Cunningham types - nice, very quiet students describing themselves with terms such as laid-back, easy-going, and */en gentle. Gentle? These are guys who attack taunting spectators with their sick while sitting in the penalty bex, take wild swings at players for holding them in the corner just a bit too long, and display certain finger gestures at other teams and referees. Gentle? The average fan's image of the cookie Ward was that of a 6-2, 200- ound brute taking down players. Actually, he is a red-cheeked 17-year- 61d who, in between munches on iiniature Snickers and caramel corn, talked about how excited he was to $ee Les Miserables that night. Not exactly the food of Clint Eastwood prototypes. Stewart came across differently. But his quiet demeanor and wit also presented a completely opposite image than his on-ice veneer. The guy whom Ward said would make you "suck glass and eat the sticker on the plexiglas" repeated his claim that he's just an ordinary, affable person. Tamer can present an intimidating exterior. He has more than made a name for himself as an intimidator around the league and even his own teammates emphasized his intensity. But even when he talked about his early boxing lessons and reminisced about fights he'd participated in, it was impossible not to feel comfortable around him. Though soft-spoken, his warmth penetrated his tacit nature. Kramer's everyday personality ranges the farthest from his game image. He finds comfort in just sitting in front of the TV and relaxing. He strives to leave hockey behind when he exits the rink, and to be an everyday student. One of his favorite pastimes is golf, a sport where the only contact is with a little white ball. "We're really calm guys actually, but when we go out on the ice it's different - a different attitude," leftwinger Stewart explained. "People that didn't know me thought I was really tough off the ice. If you go to a bar or whatever, people expect you to get into fights. If you don't know us, you might think that we're aggressive and mean, but it's not like that at all." So what is it like? What is it about a pair of skates and a wooden stick that makes these shy, calm, gentle individuals act the way they do? It's true that most athletes go through some kind of attitude change when they compete: a normally distracted person becomes focused and a jovial person becomes serious. But can a truly nice guy become as mean as these guys appear during a game? "It's sort of a Dr. Jeckyl and Mr. Hyde thing," rightwinger Kramer said. "And I think a lot of it's pride. If I get out on the ice and I get railed, I know I look like an idiot because I look like some weakling that just got nailed. And of course you want to get back up and get that guy. It's a one-on-one thing - you hit me, well, I'm going to hit you harder. There's a lot of pride in- volved and that comes from within." They all admitted to harboring a fierce temper that seems to burn hot- terout on the ice. They release all of their anger and frustration during a game and leave with the best sides of their personalities for their "normal" lives. They've taken it upon themselves to pump up their team, the crowd, and themselves and they do it the best way they know how. "It excites me so much to hit someone," defenseman Ward said. "When I hear 'The Victors' song I get so pumped, I want to hit someone in warm-up; I feel like doing something to stir up the crowd. Tamer and I sit sometimes and talk about who we want to get out there, not really who to get, but who is being an annoying factor in the game." But there is certainly more to being a physical presence than just taking care of a few troublesome players. The main reason these players harass someone is to stick up for their own team, not to get an individual thrill. There are physical players on other teams who are going to go after Michigan's "annoying factors" - many times the top scorer or the goalie - and it's these four who stop them from doing it. They add an intimidation factor to the Mich- igan that most teams can't escape. 'It's sort of a Dr. Jeckyl and Mr. Hyde thing. And I think a lot of it's pride.' - Ted Kramer, Wolverine righ twinger "The whole thing about being an intimidator is so people won't do something to you and won't do stuff to your teammates," defenseman Ta- mer said. "Maybe they'll think twice next time about sticking one of our top players if they know a couple guys out there don't like it and are going to do something about it." And in the overall team concept there are definitely many dimensions to the game of hockey. A lot of the time the skill of a team can be greatly diminished just by the way a game is flowing. A basement squad has been known to demolish a first-place team just by grabbing onto the mo- mentum of the game, when a good hit can be as instrumental as a goal. And when the Wolverines need a hit and a little momentum they know where to look: Tamer, Kramer, Stewart, and Ward. Just like the players who go out and score every night, these four fill a needed role. "As a group they add a physical dimension to our team in the sense that they play the man," Berenson said. "They give our team that element of toughness that every good team needs.", But there are many negatives attached to carrying a bad reputation. Every weekend they must deal with opposing teams and very often hostile fans pick them out as the ones to persecute. They must endure being pushed around and hit by players, and booed, heckled and even spit on by spectators. Many times, even the referees let the reputations blind their judgement. "There are players on each team and probably Stewart, me, Ward, and Tamer are the four guys the refs know that'll get their penalties and rough it up a little bit," Kramer said. "I think that we cannot do as much as other players can, that we won't get away with as much as other players can because they're always watching us. "And, on the other hand, I think other players can do more to us that the refs will not call just because it's us." Even Michigan fans heed their reputations more than those of other Wolverines. Kramer is not remembered for being fourth on the overall career scoring list for Michigan, but for being the "Charles Manson of the CCHA," as one Bowling Green sportswriter put it. Tamer is not known for holding a top plus/minus goal ratio or for his ability on the power play, but for compiling a record 60 penalties last year as a rookie. Stewart plays a key role on the all-rookie second line and was a third-round draft choice of the Boston Bruins last year at 18. But when people talk about him it is only his team-high number of penalties (38) and his hard hits in the corner that dominate the conversation. People do not pay attention to how many shots Ward blocks or his presence on the second defensive line in just his first-year, but rather how many times he takes a man down. "They're good kids and they're good students, but they're still players," Berenson said. "It's not like they rely on playing aggressive hockey and that's all there is to their game. That's something that maybe the fans have noticed early in their careers, but they should also take note that they have other important elements to their game." And their lives. CCHA STANDINGS Team 1. Lake Superior (20-3-3) 2. Michigan (18-5-3) 3. Ferris State (16-5-5) 4. Michigan State (12-10-4) 5. Bowling Green (11-13-2) Western Michigan (12-11-3) 7. Ohio State (8-16-3) 8. UIC (6-17-1) 9. Miami (4-18-3) W 17 15 12 9 9 9 6 4 2 L 2 4 5 7 11 9 13 17 15 T 3 3 5 4 2 2 3 1 3 PTS 37 33 29 22 20 20 15 9 7 I Tencdin9 the Ty po9raphic Ciarcten a lecture by 1J es eyS . Tanner Thursday, ,an. 17, 7:30 p.m. University of nitcan Library D epartment ofj Rare Books and Special Collections Room 711 Matcher Library also see the art of Wesley$ . Tanner Twenty W orks from Twenty Jear s An ehtbi-tion of fine Limited-edition books printed in Berkeley, California, between the years 1970 - 1990 by the noted printer now through arch 23, 1991 Department of Rare Books and Special Cottections a1- The Universitty of nichigan Library kinko's COPIES 81/2X11, white, self serve or auto fed only expires 4/3/91 Open 24 Hours An Asian American Art Show Reception held at the Michigan Union Art A S how Display Continues Through Jan. 31 Experie Michig 76 nce the "Road to the Joe" gan Wolverines vs. Bowling Green Saturday, January 19, 1991 Yost Ice Arena Puck drops at 7:30 p.m. Falcons 4-0247 FOR TICKET INFO a I i i