2B - The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, November 27, 1995 "aka,,. G-n" .. F ?# Madden has upper hand even when TM' doesnt y Alan Goldenbach aily Sports Writer MILWAUKEE - Michigan's pen- alty killing unit has been working at an 86.8 percent clip. A key reason for % success has been the work of John Mdden who has been keeping the puck out of the Michigan zone by putting it into the opposition's net. Madden's shorthanded goal in the third period of Michigan's win over Wisconsin was his third of the season - tops on the team. He is tied with Notre Dame's Jamie Ling for tops in Michikan needs Boiten i to adfst c-' the CCHA. 9'9 95 ,5. rg ~ockeY Notebook Last season, the junior from Barrie, Ontario, led the Wolverines with five shorthanded goals. No SHOTS, NO GLORY: Michigan was outshot in the first period in its loss to Minnesota Saturday, 10-9. So -----WALKER VANDYKE/Daly The Michigan hockey team defeated Wisconsin and lost to Minnesota at the College Hockey Showcase for the second year in a row. IcersplSwcaseagain what's the big deal? - The big deal is that it was only the second time that the Wolverines were outshot in a period all season, break- ing a string of 28 consecutive periods of Michigan dominance. The first time was in the second period of the Wolverines' other loss - a 7-2 defeat Oct. 20 to No. 8 West- ern Michigan - when the Broncos had 13 shots on goal to Michigan's nine. The Wolverines were also outscored in the second period against Minne- sota, 2-0. Excluding the loss to West- ern Michigan, the only other time that happened was in Michigan's 5-4 .come-from-behind victory over Mi- -ami (Ohio) Nov. 10. In the second period of that game, Miami took a 4- 2 lead by outscoring the Wolverines, 3-1. GOON SQUAD?: Michigan unchar- acteristically took a lot of penalties in .the two games this weekend - 14 in each contest. Those 28 penalties were the most -taken by the Michigan in any week- end series this season, and the 14 trips to the penalty box were the second- highest total of any single game. Eigh- teen Wolverines were escorted off the ice by referee John Edwards in Michigan's 8-0 win over Miami Nov. 11. "We're not a team that tries to take a lot of penalties," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "The end of the first period (against Wisconsin) was the kind of game we didn't want to get into with all the penalties and maybe getting back on our heels and giving up a power play goal." THANKSGIVING FOR ALL: With all four Showcase teams - Michigan, Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan State -arriving in MilwaukeeThurs- day, the players and coaches all had Thanksgiving dinner together at their hotel. Even though it wasn't a holiday for nine Wolverines, who are Canadian, it still was a good time for all. )ON'T FORGET YOU MOlTVm OVER TIHE HOLIDAYS Campaign with SIERRA CL UB to keep public lands and wilderness areas open earn3$2243-5/wk6- By Alan Goldenbach Daily Sports Writer MILWAUKEE - The Michigan hockey team found that giving 110 percent isn't always the best way to go. After handily beating Wisconsin, 7-3, Friday, in a very emotional and high-strung battle, the No.3 Wolverines (10-2 overall) came out unin- spired and somewhat flat Saturday as they fell to No. 5 Minnesota, 3-2, in the College Hockey Showcase. This marked the third time in as many appear- ances in the Showcase that Michigan came away from the Thanksgiving weekend twinbill with a split. Many people had suspected that Michigan would come in looking past the Badgers (2-9-1) and toward a Golden Gopher squad (10-3-1) that compared very favorably to the Wolverines talent-wise. But Michigan coach Red Berenson felt his team's attitude may have been the opposite. "We might have been too excited about play- ing against Wisconsin," Berenson said. "Some people said that we were looking past Wiscon- sin, but maybe we looked past Minnesota." The Wolverines expected Wisconsin to come out with a physical style of play, and the Badgers didn't disappoint. Wisconsin came out looking to initiate contact and got it right off the bat as Michigan's Warren Luhning and the Badger's Shawn Carter received slashing penalties only six seconds in. As each team was fighting to establish itself as the more physical of the two, Michigan was able to sneak three markers past Wisconsin goaltender Kirk Daubenspeck. Greg Crozier put the Wolverines on the board at 6:30 of the first, coming off of a two-on-one Michigan break. Sean Ritchlin scored his first collegiate goal at 8:54 with a tip-in of a Jason Botterill pass as the final seconds of the Wolverines' second power play ticked away. Kevin Hilton made it 3-0 with a rebound of his redirection ofa Harold Schock shot at 11:56. Less than six minutes later, Wisconsin got on the board with a shorthanded tally. Darrin Haley intercepted a Michigan clearing attempt along the boards, spun around Wolverine defenseman Bubba Berenzweig and sent a pass between his legs to Joe Bianchi in the slot. He deked Michi- gan goaltender Marty Turco and slid the puck around him into the net. The hard-hitting and slow-paced play contin- ued throughout the period and culminated with a sequence at the 18:44 mark. Hilton rushed the Badger net following up a shot and ran into Daubenspeck. Only 42 sec- onds earlier, Luhning received a penalty for running into the Wisconsin netminder. The sec- ond collision set off some fireworks, as each Wolverine on the ice squared off with a Badger. The most notable pair was Botterill and Wisconsin's MikeStrobel. They scuffledbriefly, but neither dropped their gloves. Referees Greg Shepard and Jerry Krieger saw otherwise, though, and ejected the two for fighting. This was Botterill's second such dis- qualification, and it resulted in a two-game suspension that he began serving Saturday. "(Botterill) may have been ourbest left winger in the game," Berenson said, "and losing him really hurt us." Wisconsin seemed to feed off ofthe emotion immediately. Sixteen seconds later, Mickey Elick fired a slap shot that Turco juggled before it floated over his left shoulder. Berenson knew histeam was on the defensive late in the period and was fortunate to reach the intermission still ahead. "One good thing was that the period ended," Berenson said. "We had time to regroup in between periods." It seemed as if both teams regrouped, as the style of play changed after the first 20 minutes. There were only five penalties called the rest of the way, compared to 21 in the first period. Michigan got the key goal of the game only 2:26 into the second as Matt Herr poked in the rebound of Mike Legg's semi-breakaway. With Daubenspeck on his stomach, Herr lifted the puck over the fallen goalie. Crozier followed with his second of the game at 9:57, picking up a rebound on the goal line that initially hit the post and trickled behind the den scored his third shorthanded goal of the season. Wisconsin got its third and final goal from Mark Smith at 13:24 as he caught Turco out of position and knocked the puck in from the slot. Brendan Morrison closed out the scoring at 16:40 taking a feed from Madden and flipping it over the shoulder of Daubenspeck. "Our team settled down in the second period and played more consistent hockey and got back in the driver's seat," Berenson said. However, the Wolverines seemed to lose the keys to the car Saturday. Once again, there were a lot of stoppages of play and neither Michigan nor Minnesota were completing their characteristically crisp passes. Nonetheless, the Wolverines were the first to get on the scoreboard as Madden fired a wrist shot from 10 feet out that beat Minnesota goalie Steve DeBus between the legs. The Gophers scored twice in the second to take the lead for good. Mike Anderson picked up a loose puck deep in the Michigan zone and scored off his own rebound at 6:26 as Turco couldn't corral the free puck. Casey Hankinson followed at the 13:42 mark with aredirectionofa Wyatt Smith pass in the slot that got past an out-of-position Turco. The third period offered more of the same as the second- heavy neutral-zone play from two less-than-energetic teams. At the 7:38 mark, Brian Bonin scored on a four-on-four situation, five seconds after a Blake Sloan penalty ended a Michigan power play. Crozier missed a chance to get the Wolverines back into the game about 11 minutes into the period, as he was stopped on a breakaway by a sprawling DeBus. Hilton gave Michigan a glimmer of hope with a superb effort at 18:50, as he skated around defenseman Darsebil, got DeBus on his back and slid the puck around the outstretched goalie to make it a one-goal game. to referees, nies By Nicholas J. Cotsonika Daily Sports Writer MILWAUKEE - It is hard to say who is at fault here, but it really does not matter. Michigan must understand that it cannot keep losing its top left winger to the indifferent blow of a referee's whistle. In the first period of Friday night's game with Wisconsin, for the second time in three weeks, Jason Botterill received a garhe disqualification for fighting. It was just the usual "'m- protecting-my-goalie" scuffle as common to hockey as cold feet, but two major parties could not agree on just how serious it was. Botterill's coach said it was not a fight. oce The referees said it was. So Botterill sits. "We're very, very disappointed in the judgement that the officials used to call Jason Botterill's incident a fighting major," Michigan coach Red Berenson h.said. "I don't know if they appreciate the implications that throwing someone out for fighting has on him, on the team, and even the game." The implications are immense. For Botterill personally, he had to miss two-thirds of Friday's game and all of Saturday's game, and he must sit out tomorrow night at Michigan State. In addition, his parents made the trip to Milwaukee from Winnipeg, Manitoba, and didn't get to see him skate more than a few shifts. The team lost one of its best players. Botterill led the Wolverines in goals (nine) and game-winning goals (four) entering the weekend -things they could have used in their 3- 2 loss to No. 5 Minnesota Saturday. His presence gives them a lot of muscle and talent up front, and his absence, at times, leaves them as if they had a missing appendage. The games were greatly affected. Michigan scored on the power play at 8:54 of the first period Friday, with Botterill getting an assist. Ten minutes later, Botterill was tossed. The Wolverines ended up scoring only one more power play goal in the College Hockey Showcase, even though they had 16 total chances. But the officials could not cae less. "The referees here don't know that, and the referees (in the CCHA) better nt think about it," CCHA Director of Botterill Officials Dave Fisher said. "We can't make the choices. We have to enforce the rules." So that is what it comes down to - rules and interpretations. The NCAA says that if a player throws a punch, he must be given a fighting major and a game disqualification. But what is a punch? What is the difference between a wrestling match and fisticuffs? When does a player deserve a two-minute minor and when should he get a five-minute major, a game disqualifica- tion and an automatic suspension? "It has to come from the shoulder and had to be delivered as a punch," Fisher said. "There is a fine line on whether it is or it isn't." Berenson feels Botterill has not crossed it yet, though he has been nailed with three games worth of suspensions this year. "He's been thrown out twice this year, and he still asn't thrown a punch," Berenson said. "He did everything to not fight (Friday), he let his hands dangleHe was ready to take a punch if that's what it took - and yet, they still called it fighting. I feel bad for Jason Botterill. All I can tell him is that it was a poor call." Whether it was a fight or not, Berenson cannot afford to tell Botterill that. Botterill, though a junior, is 13th in all-time penalty minutes at Michigan with 261 going into the weekend. Talented as he is, he can be a hothead, and he may become a target for referees and opposing players alike. "Maybe (Berenson) better take a look at his guys," Fisher said. "Maybe he should tell them to slack off a little bit. They need to have a little respect for the officials, so the officials- will have a little respect for the players." Fisher, probably like some the referees that work for him, doesn't like the one-punch rule personally, but that has nothing to do with what he does professionally. He can't change what is happening to players like Botterill this season. "Maybe the NCAA is going a little bit overboard and is making the situation tougher on everybody," Fisher said. "There's not that much trouble with fighting in college hockey. Personally, I don't like the rule. I think you have to have a fight to get somebody thrown out. But it's our job to call it, so we do." So Botterill sits. The next time he gets thrown out, he will sit for three games. The next time, it will be four. And it will go on and on if he is not careful. The referees cannot and will not budge. Botterill must - he is too valuable to Michigan not to. If Botterill wants to help his team, he had better walk away from trouble and walk away fast. Badger goalie. Michi- gan put the game out of reach at the 9:59 mark of the third period as John Mad- CCHA Standings MICHIGAN 71 WISCONSIN 3 Michigan 3 2 2-7 FistPed-1, M rze, 7 (LuhningScoc) 6:30. 2, UM, R itchin 1 (BotterRl, Morrson), 8:64 (pp), 3, Hiton 5(;Schocli, Botteiill), 11:56.4, UW, Bianchi 12(Hale, Elick),17:42 (sh). 5, UW, Elick 3 (Williams, Raygor), 19:00 (pp 43). Penalties - Luhning, UM (slashing), 0:06; Carter, UW (slashing), 0:06; Halko, UM (interference), 3:25; Carter, UW (high-sticking), 6:59; Morrison. UM (roughing), 12:57; Strobel, UW (roughing), 12:57; Enrico, UJW (holding). 17:32; Luhnng, UM (running into goalkeeper), 18:02; Strobel, (UW major-game dq (fighting). 18:44; Botterill, UM major-game dq (fighting), 18:44; Frescoln, UM double minor (roughing), 18:44; Sloan, UM double minor (roughing), 18:44; Hilton, UM (checking the goalkeeper), 18:44; Sabo, UW double minor (roughing), 18:44; Peterson, UW double minor (roughing), 18:44. Second Period - 6, UM, Herr 3 (Legg, Halko), 2:26. 7, UIM, Crozier 8 (Hilton, Frescoin), 9:57. Penalty - Williams, UW (high-sticking), 16:53. Third Period -8. UM, Madden 4 (unassisted), 9:59 (sh). 9, UW, Smith 1 (Bradley), 13:24 . 10, UIM Morrison 5 (Madden). Penalties - Peterson. UW (cross-checking), 2:29; Sanderson, UW (holding), 4:33: Schock,IM (interference), 9:20; Sabo, UW (high-sticking), 19:33. Shots on goal - UM 15-12-835. AF 13-4-7-24. Power plays - UM 1 of 6; UW 1 of 3. Goalie saves - UM, Turco 11-4-6-21. UW, Daubenspeck 12-10-6-28. Referees- Greg Shepard, Jerry Krieger. unesman - Joe Romano. At: The Bradley Center. Team (Overall Record) 1. Western Michigan (11-2-0) 2. Michigan (10.-2-0) 3. Michigan tate (10-4-0) 4. Bow lng Gee <9-24) 5. Lake Sipeior (9-3-0 6. llinois-Chicago (5-5-2) 7. Notre Dame (3-9-0) 8 Ferris State (4-8-1) 9. Alask a-Fairbank s (2-9-1) 10. Ohjo State (3-6-0) 11. Miami (Ohio) (2-9-0) GP 9C 8 .9 8 8 10 10 7 7 8 7 7 3 .3 2 2 1 1 L 2 1' 3 5 .7' 5 8 6 6 9 0 0 a. Sr V n 1V 16 14 14 13 10 6 6 5. 4 2 2- MINNESOTA 3, MICHIGAN 2 Michigan 1 0 1-2 Minnesota 0 2 1-3 First Period - 1, UM, Madden 5 (Morrison, Legg), 17:38 (pp). Penalties - Dustin, MINN (high-sticking), 3:03; Larson, MINN (roughing), 7:08; Luhning, UM (roughing), 7:08; Zwaknan, MINN (tripping), 7:25; Muckalt tIM (hooking), 8:37; Morrison 5-minute major (checking from behind), 11:30; Kraft, MINN (interference), 16:18; Brink, MINN (holding), 18:13. Second Period -2, MINN, Anderson 2 (Bertogliat), 6:26. 3, MINN, Hankinson 6 (Smith, Brink), 13:42. Penalties - Anderson, MINN (hooking), 1:48; Bertogliat, MINN (roughing), 10:48; Ritchlin, UM (roughing), 10:48; Wasley, MINN (roughing), 10:48; Anderson, MINN (slashing), 15:45; Morrison, UM (cross-checking), 19:39. Third Period - 4, MINN, Bonin 10 (Rasmussen), 7:38. 5, UM, Hilton 6 (unassisted), 18:50. Penalties - Anderson, MINN (check from behind), 3:31; Wasley, MINN (roughing). 5:59; Sloan,d)M (tripping). 7:33; Luhning, UM (check from behind), 11:52: Schock, UM (roughing), 14:06; Anderson, MINN (roughing). 14:06; Anderson, M INN (high-sticking), 14:06: Madden. UM (slashing), 20:00; Berg, MINN (slashing), 20:00. Shots on goal - UM 9-14-8-31. MINN 10-5-6-21. Power plays - UM 1 of 10; MINN 0 of 5. Goalie saves - UM, Turco 10-4-4-18, MINN, DeBus 814-7-29 Referees- Greg Shepard, Jerry Krieger. Unesman - Joe Romano. 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