,> f The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, October 2, 1995 - 5B Michi'ahockey ready to start over as practice begins By John Leroi Daily Sports Writer Last year ended in heartbreak. This season, the Michigan hockey team has hopes to end a half decade of frustration in the post season. The Wolverines begin practice today at Yost Ice Arena in preparation for their quest to defend the CCHA title. After almost a full six months since dropping a thriller in triple overtime in the NCAA semifinals to Maine, Michigan is more than ready to begin anew. "We're excited as coaches," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "I expect we'll have a few kids not used to the tempo, but we look in real good shape after the summer." Berenson has always had a talented team to work with. The Wolverines have been in the NCAA final four three of the last four seasons, but haven't advanced to the championship game since 1977 and haven't won the title since 1964. Since then, three other CCHA teams - Lake Superior State, Michigan State and Bowling Green-have hoisted the championship trophy at least once. And while no one in the Wolverine lockerrom will come out and say it, it's obvious that anything short of a national championship would be a letdown. Players have been lacing up their skates everyday for two weeks in unofficial practices run by team captain Steven Halko. Halko said the team looks good and healthy in the early stages, but added that everyone was looking forward to today. During the off-season, the players stuck to a dry-land training program and the coaches spent most of their time either in the office or on recruiting trips. With only two weeks of ice time, the Wolverines still have much more to accom- plish - especially considering they haven't had the oppor- tunity to skate with coaches since March. Berenson and assistant coaches Mel Pearson and Billy Powers will get their first look at the 1995 freshmen class that includes a couple of blue-chippers. "I'm looking forward to getting a chance to see (the freshmen)," Berenson said. "I haven't seen them play for a We're excited as coaches. We look in real good shape after the summer. " - Red Berenson Michigan hockey coach while and I expect them to do some good work." Berenson might want to focus most of his attention to the' newcomers because Michigan's veterans don't need much work. The Wolverines return All-CCHA goaltender Marty Turco as well as a brilliant crop of junior forwards led by national point-scoring leader Brendan Morrison. Michigan has only four days to prepare for the Blue/White game, the Wolverines' annual intrasquad scrimmage. Berenson said that he treats the Blue/White game as an opportunity to see his squad in game action and to test out various line combinations. The 11th-year coach may have to do a little juggling of lines on offense. The departure of Mike Knuble, who led the nation in goals last year, and Rob Gordon leave two vacan- cies on the first'line. But Berenson seemed more concerned with the fact that Michigan had only 12 days before it kicks off the 1995 season against Guelph. The Wolverines open up the CCHA regular season Oct. 20 at home against Western Michigan. "It's going to be tough because we can't fine-tune things in a week," Berenson said. "We'll have to see how things go week in and week out. "Right now we'll be shuffling lines around, looking at different combinations. It's hard to tell who is going to click with who. But, I'll tell you, the lines you see in the Bluer White game won't necessarily be the lines against Guelph or Western." FILE PHOTO/Daily Michigan sophomore goalie Marty Turco and the Wolverines begin practice today. Prairie'V O Prre's View: more losses Prairie View A&M takes 51st setback in a row with no end anywhere in sight The Washington Post, PRAIRIE VIEW, Tex.- Michael Porter has it all mapped out in his mind. He'll score the winning touchdown with a dive over the middle - no, check that, he'll score it by hurtling over a defender to get into the end zone. He'll have to celebrate then, a little high-stepping maybe, and who cares about ' : the NCAA rules? He'll take the penalty, no big deal, not on this day. The bus ride home likely will be long- at Prairie View A&M, Porter's school, the trips are always on the bus, even the one to Montgomery, Ala., which takes eight hours - and he probably won't get back to campus until the wee hours of the morning. So he'll take a quick nap before breakfast, then head to the dining hall to telli everybody that they won, they won, THEY WON, and then the school would4 probably give them all a parade and maybe even cancel classes on Monday. "They'd call off school," Porter said, "I'm sure they would." At Prairie View, there would be cause for all this celebration. The school's football team, which plays in the Division I-AA Southwestern Athletic Confer- ence, has not won a game since 1989. The losing streak hit 51 - the all-time mark at any college level - Saturday. night in Dallas, when the Panthers, in their fifth game of the season, lost to Grambling State, 64-0. It is an ignominious distinction that has drawn a great deal of attention to thisF historically black college just north of Houston and has made a mini-celebrity of Porter, the junior running back. Porter is spectacularly gifted in ther art of losing with grace and humor-heI never won a game during his varsity career at Houston's Jefferson Davis High School, either. The last time he won a game, he played for the junior varsity in the fall of 1988. It was the final game of the season. Afterward, he went to watch the varsity game. His team lost. "Well, I don't exactly remember," Porter said, when asked whether he A p could recall the thrill of victory, "but it felt good, I guess." It is easy to find the Prairie View I situation almost tragically funny. They have aNigerian kicker, Nsikan Udoyen, whose only football experience came in r ?a Moroccan flag football league in el- AP PHOTO ementary school,and who was recruited.. out of swimming class by the special- 1995 Michigan hockey schedule October 14 ' . 20 21. 26 3 4 10.11 1718 24-25 24 25 28 GUELPH4 (Exhib) WESTERN MICHIGAN* at Western Michigan* at Maine at Ferris State* at Ferris State* at Miami University* ALASKA FAIRBANKS* at College Hockey Showcase (Milwaukee) vs. Wisconsin vs. Minnesota at Michigan State* 7:00 7:00 TBA 7;00 J P.M. )p.m. ' 7:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 9:00 p.m. 6:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. December b LAKE SUPERIOR STATE* 9at Western Michigan* 14 at Bowling Green* 29-30 at Great Lakes Invitational (Detroit) 29 vs. Northern Michigan 30 GU Consolation 30 GLI Championship January FERRIS STATE* 6 MIAM* 12-13 ILLNIS-.CHICAGO* 16 ALASKA-FAIRBANKS*. 20 at Notre Dame* 26 at Ohio State* l 27. at Bowling Green* February 2-3 OH10 STATE* 9 at Notre Dame*' 10 at llinois-Chicago* 16 NOTRE.DAME* 17 vs. MICHIGAN STATE* (@Joe Louis Are 23-24 at Lake 'Superior .State* March 1 MICHIGAN.STATE* 2 BOWLING GREEN*. 8-10 CCHA Qu arterfinals (Campus Sites) 15 at CCHA Semi-finals (Detroit) 16 at CCHA Championships (Detroit) 22-24 at NCAA Regionals (East Lansing and 28 at NCAA Semifinals (Cincinnati) 30 at NCAA Championships (Cincinnati) Home games In BOLD at Yost Ice Arena *Denotes CCHA Opponents. 7:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 4:00 p.m. 5:00 p.m. 8:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. ana); 7:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 5:00 p.m. 8:30 p.m. 7:30 p.m. Albany, N.Y.) I 1 I i I I teams coach, John Tankersley. Last week, Udoyen was given his first opportunity to kick an extra point (Prairie View had only scored two other touchdowns this season and went for two points both times) and he kicked the ball off the back of his own teammate. The players have ill-fitting equipment and hand-me-down practice uniforms donated by the Houston Oilers.:Prairie View's budget is a fraction of its neigh- bors', Texas A&M and Texas, and alumni are so disgusted by the state of the program - and a financial scandal that occurred in 1990-that they rarely bother to donate money to the school. Indeed, the financial scandal (members of the athletic department were accused of money mismanagement) forced the cancellation of the football program for the 1990 season and is a huge part of how Prairie View, once a football power, has reached this state. When Prairie View reinvented its football program for the 1991 season, it did so without scholarships. Not one. Every other school in the SWAC has handfuls to dole out, and the Prairie View program is left to fend for itself. All its coaches have teaching jobs - as well as other coaching jobs in other Prairie View athletic programs - and the entire athletic department budget is $849,000 this year. Hence, the bus rides to places like Montgomery, Ala., where Prairie View plays Alabama State. Porter thinks maybe that's what the team needs to break this cycle - dump the current bus company and pick a new one. They already have gotten rid of the boxed chicken dinners they used to get for the ride home, figuring they were bad luck. That didn't work. Neither did the "Lucky Blue Dot" Porter received in the mail from the National Enquirer and wore in his helmet for one game last season. Of course, the problem also could be the uniforms. Orthe nickname. Porter wore purple and gray in high school and played for a team nicknamed the Panthers. At AP PHOTO The win over Prairie View A&M was Grambling coach Eddie Robinson's 399th. That Porter chose to play for Prairie View despite the recent losing tradition does not come as a surprise once you spend a few minutes talking to him. That's the remarkable thing, really - the remarkable thing about all the guys on the team, and the thing that doesn't make this so tragic, or funny, after all. Porter and the other players still have fun. They still enjoy playing football. They still laugh andj oke and tease each other at practice, even last week, when they were preparing to play a game in front of 63,000 people at the Cotton Bowl, a game that would make them forever infamous for their losing streak. "At a certain point, when we're really getting blown out, I stop looking at the scoreboard and just start thinking about playing football," Porter said. "That's what it's all about - playing football and being a man. Nobody's ever going to say I quit." Porter isn't a quitter. And he's not a loser, either, no matter how many consecutive losses his football team manages to amass. He's simply a kid playing a game that he loves to the best of his abilities. And if those abilities make it hard to compete against the big-budget, scholarship-laden competition, well, so be it. He's going to keep going out to the field every Saturday. And every Saturday he'll be having that fantasy, the one where he gets to dance in the end zone. I Get y ur Michian Job Hotline i I GET INVOLVED"I The Michigan Student Assembly is looking for students to serve on campus- wide committees. Committees are comprised of students, faculty and staff, and advise various University Departments. Most committees meet about once a month and require a commitment of one to two years. POSMONS AVAILABLE: Student Legal Services (3) 2 undergrad and I Law student Financial Affairs (2) 1 grad and I andergrad Student Relations (4) grad and undergrad Research Policies (3).1 undergrad and 2 grad Recreational Sports (2) students Military Officer Education Programs (2) students