I was at the other end of the rink and could not see this goal clearly. However, I would like to point out that Michigan has a whole slew of pregame rituals. Certain guys talk to each other, certain guys tap gloves in a particular sequence, and so on. During the warm-ups, if my memory serves me correctly, Legg was the last player on the ice. He took a puck, went behind the net, cradled it onto his stick, and, in a lacrosse like manner, came in front of the net and deposited it just under the crossbar into the net. He then skated the length of the ice, tapped Hilton's gloves, and went into the locker room. As they say, "practice makes perfect." John Hannon [log in to unmask] ---------- From: Andrew Weise To: Multiple recipients of list HOCKEY-L Subject: Michigan-Minnesota hi-lites Date: Sunday, March 24, 1996 7:59 For those of you who were not at the game or were happening to watch SportsCenter (yes, ESPN showed highlights of college hockey!!!), you missed an unbelieveable goal. Mike Legg (Michigan) was behind the Gopher net with the puck. He stood for a second, waiting to pass the puck to a teammate. Well, he never passed the puck off to anyone. Legg lifted the puck onto the blade of his stick and carried the puck above the Gopher netminder's left shoulder into the net. Meanwhile, the puck stayed on Legg's stick the entire time - it never touched the ice. Amazing.... If ESPN is nice enough, we'll see it again on the 11:00 edition of SportsCenter. Andy HOCKEY-L is for discussion of college ice hockey; send information to [log in to unmask], The College Hockey Information List. HOCKEY-L is for discussion of college ice hockey; send information to [log in to unmask], The College Hockey Information List.