The Michigan Daily - Thursday, October 5, 1995 - 11A Wolverines satisfy early spring fever with Sunday exhibition The Michigan Hockey team began official practices October 1st and will take the Ice tomorrow night at Yost for the annual Blue-White Intra- squad game. JOE WESTRATE/Daily fy cers skate i the an John Lerol y Sports Writer For most people concerned, ichigan's hockey season starts Oct. 4 with a date with Guelph. But for the layers, the games start tomorrow. The Wolverines will play their an- ual intra-squad scrimmage - known cross Ann Arbor as the Blue-White ame - at 7 p.m. tomorrow night at ost Ice Arena. The game is billed as an exhibition r the fans. For $3, fans get a chance to e the 1995-96 Wolverines before they ep onto the ice for a regular season ame. Plus, kids are invited to skate ith the team after the game, take pic- res with the players and get as many utographs as they can. But the players insist that the Blue- hite game isn't just an exhibition. In ct, they take the game pretty seri- usly. "It's not just a scrimmage," team ptain Steven Halko said. "It's a game mosphere. Most ofthe guys really get p for it. "It's the first time we get a chance to lay hard and show what we can do for 0 minutes." Michigan coach Red Berenson also lnowledges how important the Blue- hite game is. Tomorrow will be the rst time the coaching staff can see the By Brian Sklar Daily Sports Writer It's not spring, so why is the Michi- gan women's softball team compet- ing in a round robin scrimmage Sun- day against Wayne State and Bowling Green? The Wolverines, who won the Big Ten title and their region on way to their first NCAA World Series ap- pearance in 14 years, are preparing to duplicate their success of last season. Michigan hopes the early scrim- mages will help the team get a feel for what to expect in the spring. With a new crop of freshman and the experience of the veteran players, the Wolverines hope to work on dif- ferent lineups and see how they com- pare to last season's team. The Wolverines play Wayne State at 10 a.m. and Bowling Green at 2 p.m. Wayne State will face Bowling Green at noon. Michigan coach Carol Hutchins feels that the outcome of the scrim- mages are not as important as how the team competes as a unit. "We want to see how we look now," Hutchins said. "We have a lot of good talent. The key to our season is mix- ing in the freshman and combining the talent with experience." The team has been practicing for over three and a half weeks and so far, the four newest members of the team - Traci Conrad, Cathy Davie, Lisa Kelly and Tammy Mika - have been a welcome addition to the squad. "We all get along great," senior center fielder Cheryl Pearcy said. "The freshmen work hard, are good listen- ers and are easy to get along with. "We have a lot ofgood talent. The key to our season is mixing in the freshmen and combining the talent with experience.' - Carol Hutchins Michigan softball coach They're also great athletes." Pearcy and the other veteran play- ers are doing their best to initiate the newcomers onto the team. "We hope to be role models to them and help them out," Pearcy said. "We're teaching them Hutchin's way of playing softball." The team has been focusing on in- tensity, which can be difficult to keep up in the fall because the team only plays exhibition games. However, the Wolverines are confident that their team will gel by February and is very optimistic about the season. "1 think the team will be great," Pearcy said. "We know we are ca- pable of another World Series ap- pearance since we (made it) there last year." toward onset of season nual Blue-White game team in game action. Berenson regularly sits in the press box to get a better look at the players' performance while assistants Billy Pow- ers and Mel Pearson take the coaching reins. "This is a time for players to start getting back into the groove," Berenson said. "Players cans see what they can do. They're playing at game speed for the first time." Berenson said the game can be very beneficial to the coaching staff. The season opener with Guelph is only four practices away and a game-type atmo- sphere acts as a barometer for the progress of the squad. Only a week into practices, the game will also give Berenson the first opportu- nity to see this year's crop of freshmen at their best. The Blue-White game will give the incoming class their first taste of playing in front of a large crowd at Yost. "A lot of the younger players don't realize how many people follow Michi- gan hockey until after the Blue-White game," Berenson said. "But a lot of people are interested in hockey." Maybe most importantly, the game will give Berenson an idea of who to place on different lines. With the depar- ture of All-American Mike Knuble to graduation and the loss ofnational scor- ing leader Brendan Morrison to a knee injury, most of the line combinations are in doubt. A handful of walk-on hopefuls will also get a chance to impress the coach- ing staff in their debut at Yost. A couple of players who have been trying out for the past week will get at least a little playing time tomorrow. Michigan has only two goalies on its roster and is looking to add a third. There is also a spot left open after Rob Gordon left the team at the end of the summer to play in the juniors. "We have a spot open because Gor- don left," Berenson said. "But, we played a whole season last year with two roster spots open, so that doesn't say anything. "What we're looking for are guys who can play on this level and people we don't needto slow down practice for - guys who can step in and play if we need them." But even though thoaplayers take the Blue-White game seriously, they know that they're supposed to have some fun on the ice. And they realize how impor- tant the post-game activities are to some of the younger fans. "It's fun for the fans and its fun for us," goalie Marty Turco said. "We usu- ally have helmets on and we're just numbers, not faces. Now, they can meet us up close." Sophomore pitcher Sara Griffin and the Wolverines gear up for the spring season with various fall exhibitions, including a round robin Sunday. MississiPPi State at No. 11 Auburn The game scheduled for 8 p.m. tonight, to be shown on ESPN,-has been postponed due to Hurricane Opal. It is tentatively rescheduled for 2 p.m. Saturday. Success is -cali Dan Twetten y Northwestern In the midst of the clamor and confu- 'on following Northwestern's upset of otre Dame on Sept. 2, there was quar- rback Steve Schnur. Schnur stood outside the press tent nswering questions from a dozen re- orters about his performance against e Fighting Irish and what it meant to eat a team like Notre Dame in South end. What it meant was that Steve Schnur ad arrived. Schnur threw two touchdowns in the ame, completed half his passes and n the Wildcat offense almost flaw- ssly. Could this be the same guy whose rformance in 1994 spring practice arranted coach Gary Barnett's deci- ion to pluck a starting quarterback rom the junior college ranks? Could this be the same guy who saw is starting spot last season go to juco sfer Tim Hughes for the first eight aies? Could this be the same guy whose atus as a starter was in jeopardy as cently as August? Schnurhad clearly undergone a meta- orphosis and ascended to a new plane s a player. But how did he get there? Steve Schnur came to Northwestern s an undersized 6-foot-1, 190-pound eshman slated to carry star quarter- here for Wildcat er Steve Schnur worked hard on his arm strength :chanics." ugh Schnur's physical talents overwhelm anyone upon his ar- Evanston, the St. Louis native's tanding of the game impressed -s immediately. ould say his overall knowledge game and his awareness on the re his biggest assets," offensive nator Greg Meyer said. pite questions his skills, r said, the B.si$ n of whether, Id compete in thinking, me nig Ien never bothered him. "There's guy who writes fora St. Louis paper who writes a story on me once year, and it's always a rags-to-riches thing every time," Schnur said. "I don't think of it that way, but I think a lot of people see it that way. Obviously there were some obstacles there, but I know what I can Smany pel country at position?-# 'How man would love my positho just be ar compete' Northwesterr a year makes. Last year at this time I was pretty miserable trying to cope with all those things." Schnur's 1994 season was a study in inconsistency. Both his playing time and performance were erratic. In the season opener against Notre Dame, Schnur played about half the game and followed that up with his best performance of the year against Stanford the next week. In relief of Hughes, Schnur went 11 for 24 and threw two 'H5Ow touchdown passes in a 41-41 tie. Despite that r in my effort, Barnett re kept Hughes as the starter, and Schnur's playing y people time all but dis- appeared until e to be in the Wildcats' seventh game of )n, to the year. Following the Illinois game, a 28-7 loss in which Hughes threw two first-halfintercep- Steve SChnur tions, Schnur was n quarterback. named the starter for the rest of the season. "Last year helped me appreciate sim- Schnur's evolu- tion from backup to starter was sup- posed to happen after the 1993 season. , > m