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Subject: Women-in-Hockey Digest V1 #557
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Women-in-Hockey Digest    Tuesday, December 7 1999    Volume 01 : Number 557



In this issue:

   RE: skates
   National Post Story
   [none]
   WCHA Player of the Week
   Wisconsin women's hockey release
   National Post Story
   Ice for Sale in Hazel Park, MI

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Date: Mon, 6 Dec 1999 09:45:11 -0500 
From: email@hidden
Subject: RE: skates

I agree, CCM's are the only way to go.  If you find a good hockey store they
can get your daughter custom made skates (either Bauers or CCM's) for about
$100 (CAN.)n extra.  I take a 5 1/2 EE in the CCM goalie skates and it took
6 months to break the in.  I still have a few moments of grief with them
because I have no arch but they are tolerable...

The extra $100 may be work looking at.

Good luck.

Naomi

------------------------------

Date: Mon, 6 Dec 1999 10:59:48 -0500
From: email@hidden
Subject: National Post Story

Dear email@hidden,

Your friend email@hidden thought you might want to read:

'Storybook ending' for James
http://www.nationalpost.com/network.asp?f=991206/145389


_______________________________
This is a free service for readers of
National Post Online (http://www.nationalpost.com/)
to pass on stories they find interesting.

------------------------------

Date: Mon, 6 Dec 1999 16:52:20 -0600
From: "Craig Roberts" 
Subject: [none]

To
Subject: MINNESOTA WOMEN'S HOCKEY
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THIS WEEK-Fifth-ranked Minnesota entertains sixth-ranked Dartmouth in a 
two-game, non-conference series this weekend at Mariucci Arena. Game time both 
days is scheduled for 1:05 p.m.

GOPHER REWIND-The Gophers were swept in a two-game series for the first time 
ever, falling to conference foe Minnesota-Duluth, 5-4 and 1-0.

The Bulldogs scored just 29 seconds into the opening game of the series and led 
3-0 before Minnesota rallied in the final period. Sophomore Laura Slominski 
(Burnsville, Minn./Burnsville) scored a short-handed goal at 4:53 of the final 
period and junior Nadine Muzerall (Mississauga, Ontario/Kimball Union Academy) 
cut the lead to one goal at 6:21.

The first of Brittny Ralph's two-goals gave UMD a two-goal cushion once again 
but Slominski notched her second at 8:56 and junior Ambria Thomas (Fairbanks, 
Alaska/West Valley) scored short handed with 9:46 to play to tie the score. 
Ralph's second goal, less than a minute later, gave the Bulldogs the victory.

Saturday night saw the teams in a defensive battle that was decided when UMD's 
Joanne Eustace scored at 18:36 of the opening period. Amanda Tapp had 21 saves 
in the shutout victory, while Minnesota junior Erica Killewald (Troy, 
Mich./Troy) stopped 28 shots.

DARTMOUTH RECENTLY-The Big Green has been idle since pounding Boston College, 
9-2, at home, Nov. 23.

Kristin Romberg scored two goals and added two assists, while Jennifer Wiehn 
chipped in with two goals an assist for Dartmouth, which outshot the Eagles 
54-15.

All three Dartmouth goalies saw action in the game. Rookie Amy Ferguson got the 
start and win, stopping five shots while playing the first 34:09 of the game. 
Meaghan Cahill stopped all four shots she faced in the final six minutes of the 
second period and Kate Cochrane had four saves in the game's final 20 minutes.

BALANCING ACT-Minnesota has a balanced offensive attack through its first 15 
games, with six players scoring 19 or more points.

The group is led by Nadine Muzerall with 21 points. Five players have scored 19 
points, including Ambria Thomas and frosh Ronda Curtin (Roseville, 
Minn./Roseville Area), who are tied for the team lead with 11 goals. Joining 
that group are junior Winny Brodt (Roseville, Minn./Roseville Area) and Laura 
Slominski, who lead the team in assists with 14 and 13 respectively, and 
sophomore Tracy Engstrom (Willmar, Minn./Willmar), who is one of four Gophers 
with at least 10 goals.

THE CAPTAINS-Minnesota's co-captains are junior Kris Scholz (Hugo, 
Minn./Stillwater Area) and Shannon Kennedy (Woburn, Mass./Buckingham Browne & 
Nichols).

Scholz served as an assistant captain during the 1997-98 season and was one of 
the team's co-captains last season. She is the team's second-leading career 
scorer with 112 points in 81 games.

The team's lone senior, Kennedy is the Gophers' most experienced collegiate 
player with 97 career games. She has 95 career points.

NATURAL BORN KILLERS-Despite having a five-game streak of not allowing a 
power-play goal snapped Friday, MinnesotaÍs penalty-killing has been one of its 
strengths recently.

The Gophers had killed 38 consecutive penalties before giving up a power-play 
goal with 9:50 to play Friday. Since allowing Harvard to score on its first two 
power plays in an 8-3 loss, Nov. 7, Minnesota has been successful on 41 of its 
last 42 penalty kills, scoring four short-handed goals during that time.

SCORING SHORTIES-The two short-handed goals scored by the Gophers Friday marked 
the first time they had ever done so against a Division I opponent.

Minnesota scored two short-handed goals in its inaugural game, an 8-0 win over 
Augsburg, Nov. 2, 1997. The Gophers scored three short-handed goals against the 
Auggies March 8, 1998, in a 10-2 win.

A SPECIAL PLAYER-One of the keys to the success of Minnesota's penalty-killing 
success has been the play of Laura Slominski.

A tireless worker, Slominski has helped account for three of the team's four 
short-handed goals, with a goal and two assists for three short-handed points. 
She leads the team in the latter two categories along with her five shots on 
goal.

On special teams, Slominski has eight points and 16 shots, tallying two goals, 
five points and 11 shots on the power play.

FIRST GOAL WINS...USUALLY-The Gophers allowed the first goal in both games over 
the weekend and are now 2-5-0 when doing so, compared to 8-0-0 when they score 
first.

In three seasons, Minnesota has been scored upon first just 20 times and is 
5-13-2 during that time. The Gophers have scored first in 61 of 82 games the 
last three seasons, posting a 55-3-3 record in those games.

THE SERIES-Minnesota and Dartmouth will be meeting for the first time when the 
two teams face off this weekend.

SHE'S THE BOSS-Now in her third season behind the Minnesota bench and 10th as a 
head coach, Laura Halldorson has established herself as one of the nation's 
premier coaches in women's hockey, sporting a 119-91-15 overall record and a 
60-16-6 mark at Minnesota.

She began her head coaching career at Colby College, where she led the White 
Mules, one of only two non-Division I schools at the time in the 12-team Eastern
Collegiate Athletic Conference, to a 12-9-1 overall record in 1995-96, earning 
ECAC Co-Coach of the Year honors as well as being named the New England Hockey 
Writers' Coach of the Year. While at Colby, she also recruited and coached U.S. 
National Team members Meaghan Sittler and Barb Gordon.

At the national level, Halldorson was the assistant coach for the gold 
medal-winning team at the 1998 USA Hockey Women's Festival and was the head 
coach of the silver medal-winning team at the 1999 event. Last December, she 
served as an assistant for the U.S. National team that competed in the Three 
Nations Cup in Finland. She was also an assistant for the National Under-22 team
this past summer.

A native of Plymouth, Minn., and a 1981 graduate of Wayzata High School, 
Halldorson played four years at Princeton, where she was a co-captain and 
all-conference performer while leading the Tigers to three Ivy League titles. 
She graduated from Princeton in 1985 with a degree in psychology.

A member of the 1987 U.S. National Women's Team and three national club 
championship teams with the Minnesota Checkers, Halldorson returned to her alma 
mater in 1987 to begin her collegiate coaching career as an assistant.

BEHIND THE BIG GREEN BENCH-Judy Parish Oberting is in her second season guiding 
Dartmouth, taking over the program at her alma mater last season.

In her first season as head coach, Oberting guided the Big Green to a 16-5-1 
mark and a tie for fifth in the Eastern Collegiate Athletic Conference. In her 
second season, she has a career mark of 21-11-5.

ON THE AIR-The first of two Gopher women's hockey broadcasts on Midwest Sports 
Channel will take place this weekend. Sunday's game will air live on MSC with 
MSC Sports Connection at 12:30 p.m., followed by Minnesota and Dartmouth at 1:05
p.m.

Veteran broadcaster Frank Mazzocco will call the play-by-play with long-time 
partner and former NHLer Tom Reid handling the color commentary.

Minnesota's game with Minnesota State, Mankato, Feb. 8, will also be broadcast 
live by MSC.

IT'S HOME-The home of Gopher Women's Hockey is Mariucci Arena (9,700). One of 
the finest college hockey facilities in the country, Mariucci Arena will be 
Minnesota's home until the new women's hockey facility, scheduled to open in 
2001, is completed.

Known as one of the toughest arenas in the nation on visiting teams, the Gophers
are 28-8-5 in the six-year-old building.

UP NEXT-Minnesota is off for four weeks before returning to action with an 
exhibition game against the U.S. Women's Select Team. The two teams will meet at
Mariucci Arena on Jan. 7 at 7:05 p.m.


For Gopher women's hockey news, stats, player info, and more, visit our website 
at www.gophersports.com/whock



- --------------------------------------
Craig Roberts, University of Minnesota
Assistant Sports Information Director
Phone: (612) 624-0522     Fax: (612) 624-8018
Check out the Gophers on the Web at http://www.gophersports.com
Or call the Diet Coke Gopher Sports Hotline at (612) 626-STAT
GO GOPHERS!

------------------------------

Date: Mon, 06 Dec 1999 17:30:35 -0600
From: "Paul Capobianco" 
Subject: WCHA Player of the Week

December 6, 1999

Michelle Sikich Named Women's WCHA Player of the Week

Madison, Wis. - The Western Collegiate Hockey Association Conference Office announced today that University of Wisconsin sophomore Michelle Sikich (Apple Valley, Minn.) has been named the WCHA Player of the Week for her play against Minnesota State, Mankato this past weekend.
	Sikich tallied four goals in the series to help the Badgers sweep her former team and vault Wisconsin into second place in the conference. The four goals were by no means ordinary. Sikich scored Friday's power-play game-winning goal with 11 seconds remaining to give UW a 3-2 win. The other three came on Saturday and made up her first hat trick as a Badger. Two of the three goals were short-handed, and one of the short-handed goals was the game-winning goal. The short-handed goals were the first two in Badger women's ice hockey history. In addition, Sikich was on the ice for each Wisconsin goal in the Badgers' 5-2 victory, going plus-5 in the game. Sikich now shares the league lead in both game-winning (4) and short-handed (2) goals.
	With nine points in her last four games, Sikich moved into a tie for the team lead with 12 goals and has 21 points on the season. Sikich also climbed to eighth in WCHA scoring and into a share of fifth-place in goal scoring (all games).
	The University of Wisconsin (10-6-2, 7-4-1 WCHA) is off for three and a half weeks before taking the ice on Dec. 29 at the Dartmouth Tournament in Hanover, N.H. The Badgers face host Dartmouth at 11:30 a.m., CST on the 29th. They also play Northeastern at 3 p.m., CST on Dec. 30 and Concordia (Quebec) at 9:30 a.m., CST on Dec. 31.

Paul Capobianco
Assistant Women's SID
University of Wisconsin
Phone: (608) 263-1983
Fax: (608) 265-8051
email@hidden

------------------------------

Date: Mon, 06 Dec 1999 18:14:50 -0600
From: "Paul Capobianco" 
Subject: Wisconsin women's hockey release

THIS WEEK: Wisconsin (10-6-2, 7-4-1 WCHA) is off this week, as well as the following two and a half weeks. The Badgers are now halfway through their conference schedule and hold a one point edge over Minnesota for second place in the WCHA standings. Minnesota has played three less conference games to date.

SCHEDULE CHANGE: The Badgers contest with Concordia (Quebec) scheduled for Dec. 31 at 11:30 a.m. CST, has been changed. The game will now take place at 9:30 a.m. CST. The game with the Stingers is part of the Dartmouth Invitational Tournament. 

WCHA PLAYER OF THE WEEK: Sophomore Michelle Sikich (Apple Valley, Minn.) heads into the Badgers' break as a WCHA Player of Week. After Sikich tallied five points in two games at the Princeton Thanksgiving Tournament, she put up four in the series against MSU, Mankato. The four were by no means ordinary, however. She scored Friday's power-play game-winning goal with 11 seconds remaining to give UW a 3-2 win. The other three came on Saturday for her first hat trick as a Badger. Two of the three goals were short-handed, and one of the short-handed goals was the game-winning goal. Sikich now shares the league lead in both game-winning (4) and short-handed (2) goals for all games.
	With nine points in her las four games, Sikich is now tied for the team lead with 12 goals and has 21 points on the season.

SHORT-HANDED: When Michelle Sikich scored a shorthanded goal in the first period against Minnesota State on Saturday, she scored the first short-handed tally in Badger women's hockey history. In the second period, Sikich added her second short-handed goal of the game, which turned out to be the game-winner. Sikich, while playing for the Minnesota State during the 1998-99 season, shared the national lead with four short-handed scores.

CON(SIS)TENT: First-year defender Sis Paulsen (Fr., Eau Claire, Wis.) is in the midst of a team-record seven-game point-scoring streak. With a pair of assists in both games this past weekend, Paulsen now has four goals and seven assists in her last seven contests. Paulsen set a second team record on Saturday. Her 12 shots beat the old single-game mark of nine. Paulsen had previously had nine shots in three earlier games.
	The conference's leading scorer for defenders has eight goals and 15 assists for 23 points overall, and five goals and 10 assists for 15 points in WCHA action.

KERRY IS SO VERY: Alaskan native Kerry Weiland (Palmer, Alaska) has 17 points in 18 games, good for fourth place on the Badger squad. She has scored three points in a game twice - both times scoring a goal and notching two assists. Most recently, Weiland had a goal and an assist against Minnesota State on Saturday, finishing the weekend with three points.
	Weiland has remained productive while leading the team in penalty minutes. She has been called for 19 penalties, equalling 46 minutes.

KEGGER: With eight points in her last four games, Kelly Kegley (Inver Grove Heights, Minn.) has a four-game point-scoring streak. The frosh collected two assists Friday, and a goal and an assist Saturday, in the Badgers' games against Minnesota State to extend the streak. 
	Kegley ranks fifth on the Badgers in scoring with 16 points and third on the team with eight goals.

LEADER OF THE PACK: Frosh Kendra Antony (Yorkton, Sask.) has led the Badgers in scoring since the first goal scored of the season. After scoring the first three goals in school history, including the first power-play tally, Antony has maintained her place at the top of the Wisconsin scoring chart. Now through 18 games, Antony has 12 goals and 14 assists for 26 points. She had three assists this past weekend against Minnesota State, Mankato, and has yet to go longer than a game without registering a point. Her 26 points puts her third in the WCHA in scoring (all games) and she ranks in the top ten in five other scoring categories. Antony also ranks in the top ten in six categories covering just conference action.	

SHE'S GOT GAME: Goaltender Jackie MacMillan (Fr., Buffalo, Minn.) is 3-0-1 in her last four games. She has a 2.24 GAA and .917 save percentage over the four-game span, having allowed just nine goals.
	MacMillan now ranks third in WCHA winning percentage (.562 - 4-3-1) for all games and sports a 3.61 GAA and .891 save percentage.

SEASON HIGHS: The Badgers set numerous team records in the series against Minnesota State. Wisconsin had three power-play goals on Friday, the most in a game this season. The Badgers two short-handed goals in Saturday's game, both by Michelle Sikich, to set their single game mark. The Badgers' peppered the Mavericks for a season-high 51 shots in Saturday's 5-2 win. Finally, Sis Paulsen's 12-shot performance in the same game set the UW single game mark.

ONE FOR YOU, ONE FOR ME: The Badgers boast four skaters with at least a point per game average. Kendra Antony leads the quartet with 26 points in 18 games (1.44 points per game). Sis Paulsen (Eau Claire, Wis.) follows with 23 points in 16 games (1.44). Kelly Kegley, with 16 points in 12 games (1.33) and Sikich with 21 points in 18 games (1.17), complete the group.

OF NOTE: Chanda Gunn, a freshman hockey goalie from Huntington Beach, Calif., has taken a medical leave of absence from the University of Wisconsin women's hockey program. Gunn, who started seven games and had a 3-3-1 record, has expressed her desire to return to the Badgers in the future. All reasons for medical leaves are confidential at the University of Wisconsin.

WISCONSIN VS. THE ECAC: The Badgers earned their first win and tie against ECAC opponents this past weekend. The tie came against Princeton when the teams skated to a 4-4 deadlock on Saturday. Wisconsin notched its first victory with its 3-1 win over Yale. The Badgers now stand 1-2-1 against the established ECAC, with losses coming against No. 1 Harvard (3-1) and No. 3 Brown (3-2).
	The Badgers tie with Princeton was also its first point against a team listed in the US College Hockey Online Poll. Princeton collected six votes in last week's poll to rank an unofficial tenth in the nation.

SIGNINGS: The Badgers announced the signing of their first three recruits for the class of 2004 on Nov. 18. Defender Nicole Uliasz (Perkasie, Penn.), forward Stephanie Millar (Hudson, Wis.) and forward Meghan Hunter (Oil Springs, Ontario) signed national letters of intent last week and will attend Wisconsin starting the fall semester of 2000.

DEFENSE IN NAME ONLY: Defenders own three of the top four spots on the Wisconsin scoring chart. Sis Paulsen leads the defensive corps and is second on the team with eight goals and 15 assists. Michelle Sikich (So., Apple Valley, Minn.) ranks third with 12 goals and nine assists. Kerry Weiland (Fr., Palmer, Alaska)rounds out the trio with seven goals and 10 assists.
	As a whole, Badger defenders account for 30 of the teams 59 goals. The blue-liners also account for 40 of 83 assists and 70 of 142 total points.

THERE CAN BE ONLY ONE: The Badgers notched their first win in program history with a 2-1 victory at Ohio State on Friday, Oct. 15. Michelle Sikich (So., Apple Valley, Minn.) tallied the game-winner at 9:52 of the third period and Chanda Gunn (Huntington Beach, Calif.) made 30 saves to earn the win. 

IF YOU PLAY IT, THEY WILL COME: The Wisconsin women's ice hockey team opened up its inaugural season on Friday, Oct. 8. Gov. Tommy Thompson, Olympic Gold Medalists Cammi Granato and Karyn Bye, U.S. National Team coach Ben Smith and other VIPs attended. The second-largest women's collegiate ice hockey crowd attended. 3,892 came to the Kohl Center for the opening night. 
	The largest crowd to attend a women's collegiate ice hockey game came together on Nov. 2, 1997 when Minnesota held its inaugural game against Augsburg at Mariucci Arena in Minneapolis, Minn. 6,854 people showed up and saw the Golden Gophers shutout Augsburg 8-0.

HEAD COACH JULIE SASNER:  Head coach Julie Sasner (Harvard, 1988) is in her first year with the Badgers after spending six years at the helm of Cornell. The Badgers first coach sports a 10-6-2 record behind the bench for Wisconsin, and is 63-67-8 lifetime. She led Big Red to a 53-61-6 mark and the 1995-96 team to its first Ivy League title since 1990 with an 8-1-1 record. She also directed Cornell to a 15-8-3 record in 1997-98 and a 16-7-2 mark during the 1995-96 season. She was named the 1995 Coach of the Year by the American Women's Hockey Association. 
	A member of the first U.S. Women's National Team in 1990, she has since helped coach the team at the 1999 International Ice Hockey Federation Women's World Championship. She was also the head coach for the U.S. Women's Select Team that competed in the Three Nations Cup held in Finland in December of 1998. She earned her first U.S. head coaching position, leading the U.S. Women's National Team to a silver medal at the Pacific Women's Hockey Championship in Vancouver, British Columbia in 1996.

HER ASSISTANTS:  Trina Bourget (New Hampshire, 1994), Tracy Cornell (Cornell, 1997) and Mike Dibble (Wisconsin, 1978) will serve as the Badger assistant coaches for the inaugural season. 
	Bourget coached the past two years at Division III Sacred Heart University and led the Pioneers to the No. 8 national ranking in just the third year of the program's existence. Named the Eastern Collegiate Athletic Conference's Coach of the year for her team's 15-4-3 mark for the 1998-99 season, Bourget was named runner-up for the American Women's Hockey Coaches Association Coach of the Year Award. Bourget spent her playing days with the University of New Hampshire.
	Cornell coached Cushing Academy in Ashburnham, Mass., to a 24-4-2 record last year, the most successful season in school history. Her team captured second during the regular season and advanced to the NEPSAC Championship. Her playing experiences include four years at Cornell and one as a professional player in Switzerland with the SC Reinach Lions. While at Cornell, she was a two-time All-Ivy League player and a co-captain her senior year.
	Dibble coached Sun Prairie High School from1980-86. While coaching Sun Prairie, he also served as the coaching program director for the the state of Wisconsin's WAHA from 1979-86. In 1987, he became the Central District coaching director, a position held until 1992. At the national level, Dibble was a part of the original staff of USA Hockey's National Goaltender Camp and coached the U.S. National Midget Team in 1986. Most recently he served as coach of the U.S. National 17-Selects in 1994. The former men's hockey goaltending standout ranks on numerous Badger top-10 lists, was the Badgers' 1975 MVP and helped the squad to the 1977 NCAA Championship. A draft pick of the New York Islanders in 1974, the Minneapolis, Minn., native was the alternate goalie for the 1980 U.S. Olympic Team. 


THE DARTMOUTH TOURNAMENT: The Badgers will face top competition when they head to Hanover, N.H., for the Dartmouth Tournament on Dec. 29-31. Darmouth is currently ranked sixth and has a win over top-ranked Harvard. Northeastern ranks third in the latest US College Hockey Online Poll. Concordia (Quebec) is 15-1-1 with a win over Dartmouth and its lone loss coming at the hands of No. 2 New Hampshire.
	
COLLEGE HOCKEY STATS: Information regarding all collegiate women's ice hockey teams can be found at: 
www.collegehockeystats.com. Box scores, standings and statistics are updated following each night's action in college hockey.

WCHA FAX-ON-DEMAND: The WCHA now has a fax-on-demand system for women's hockey. To retrieve a document, dial 770-563-1131 then enter your pin number (your 10-digit fax number). The WCHA passcode is 9242#. From there, enter the document you want followed by # key. Press 3, then the # key and finally the * key. Document 2000 gives a listing of all the codes for the WCHA schools.

BIG TEN FAX-ON-DEMAND:  Information on Badger women's hockey can now be retrieved using the Big Ten Conference's fax-on-demand system. Using the Infoconnection System, information will be posted as follows:
	Entire Release:  		3365
	Statistics/Results:	3366
	Roster/Schedule:	3367
	Latest Game Report:	3368

HOME, SWEET HOME: The Badgers have played home games in four different arenas during the 1999-2000 season and still have one more building to host a game in. So far, they played host to three games at the Kohl Center, one at the Capitol Ice Arena in Middleton, Wis., two at Hobbs Ice Center in Eau Claire, Wis., and four at the Dane County Coliseum. They host four more in the Coliseum and one, against the U.S. National team, at the Blue Line Ice Center in Fond du Lac, Wis.
BADGERS IN THE WCHA:

Overall Scoring			WCHA Scoring
3t. Kendra Antony (12-14=26)		5. Kendra Antony (8-10=18)
5t. Sis Paulsen (8-15=23)		8t. Sis Paulsen (5-10=15)
8t. Michelle Sikich (12-9=21)		Goals
Goals				7t. Kendra Antony (8)
5t. Kendra Antony (12)		9t. Michelle Sikich (7)
5t. Michelle Sikich (12)		Assists
Assists				7t. Kendra Antony (10)
2t. Sis Paulsen (15)			7t. Sis Paulsen
4t. Kendra Antony (14)		Power-Play Scoring
Power-Play Scoring			3t. Sis Paulsen (2-5=7)
1t. Sis Paulsen (3-6=9)		7t. Kendra Antony (3-2=5)
6t. Michelle Sikich (3-4=7)		7t. Kerry Weiland (2-3=5)
6t. Kerry Weiland (2-5=7)		Power-Play Goals
8t. Kendra Antony (3-3=6)		3t. Kendra Antony (3)
Power-Play Goals			3t. Sis Paulsen (3)
4t. Kendra Antony (3)		Short-Handed Points
4t. Sis Paulsen (3)			3t. Michelle Sikich (2-0=2)
4t. Michelle Sikich (3)		Short-Handed Goals
8t. Kerry Weiland (2)			1t. Michelle Sikich (2)
8t. Leslie Toner (2)			Game-Winning Goals
Short-Handed Scoring		2t. Michelle Sikich (3)
3t. Michelle Sikich (2-0-2)		Defense Scoring
Short-Handed Goals			1. Sis Paulsen (5-10=15)
1t. Michelle Sikich (2)		2t. Kerry Weiland (6-8=14)
Game-Winning Goals		5t. Michelle Sikich (7-5=12)
1t. Michelle Sikich (4)		Frosh Scoring
3t. Sis Paulsen (3)			4. Kendra Antony (8-10=18)
Defense Scoring			5t. Sis Paulsen (5-10=15)
1. Sis Paulsen (8-15=23)		7t. Kerry Weiland (6-8=14)
2. Michelle Sikich (12-9=21)		Goals Against Average
4. Kerry Weiland (7-10=17)		7. Jackie MacMillan (4.06)
Frosh Scoring			Save Percentage
2t. Kendra Antony (12-14=26)	7. Jackie MacMillan (.876)
4t. Paulsen (8-15=23)		Winning Percentage
9. Kerry Weiland (7-10=17)	4. Jackie MacMillan (.500 - 3-3-0)
10. Kelly Kegley (8-8=16)
Goals Against Average
6. Jackie MacMillan (3.61)
Save Percentage
6. Jackie MacMillan (.891)
Winning Percentage
3. Jackie MacMillan (.562 - 4-3-1)
 
UPCOMING FOR THE BADGERS: After a three and a half week break and the Dartmouth Tournament, the Badgers play host to the U.S. National Team on Jan. 8. The exhibition game is scheduled for 7:00 p.m. at the Blue Line Ice Center in Fond du Lac, Wis.

Paul Capobianco
Assistant Women's SID
University of Wisconsin
Phone: (608) 263-1983
Fax: (608) 265-8051
email@hidden

------------------------------

Date: Tue, 7 Dec 1999 09:27:21 -0500
From: email@hidden
Subject: National Post Story

Dear email@hidden,

Your friend email@hidden thought you might want to read:

One of Canada's top female players has finally figured out how to hold a
job
http://www.nationalpost.com/network.asp?f=991207/146215


_______________________________
This is a free service for readers of
National Post Online (http://www.nationalpost.com/)
to pass on stories they find interesting.

------------------------------

Date: Tue, 7 Dec 1999 11:02:10 -0500 
From: "Angela Koos (NTT)" 
Subject: Ice for Sale in Hazel Park, MI

I hope it's okay to post this...

Our team is looking to sell our home ice for two days.  We have away games
on those days and won't be able to use our ice time.  If you think you or
anyone you know might be interested, please e-mail me!

Arena:  Viking Arena in Hazel Park, MI.

Days:  Friday, January 14th and Friday, February 4th -- both at 7:30pm

Thanks!
Angela Koos
Team Michigan Herricanes
http://www.goaliegirl.com/herricanes

------------------------------

End of Women-in-Hockey Digest V1 #557
*************************************