4B - The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - March 20, 2000 Nebraska stuns conference with storybook playoff run B1Y Geoff Gammo Daily Sports Writer DETROIT -- They came from the western banks of the Missouri River where farm towns and sleepy rural ham- lets dot the Nebraskan landscape and where Omaha rises from the cornfields and cattle farms of Douglas County. And like the boys they came to cheer, they brought with them a sense of hope in a dream few could have expected. They came from Nebraska dressed like Rick Jefferies, the bellowing Omaha backer with his face painted in the crimson hue of his Mavericks hock- ey jersey. Outfitted in swashbuckling fashion with a painted eye patch and bandanna, Jefferies's intimidating vis- age had, by game's end, given way to a face that couldn't hide his emotion. advancing to the finals was astonishing. "We all started with this goal in mind," Sidoruk said. "To actually be here, to be doing this is surreal. You couldn't have written a better story." But its not just the remarkable quali- ties of a storied team built on a vision that had critics and skeptics alike shak- ing their heads last week- consider the road the 16-19-7 Mavericks took the reach the playoffs. Forced to play four games in five nights last week, the Mavericks snapped a five game winless streak to shock No. 3 seed Northern Michigan ilk three games on the road before earning a trip to Detroit with a 3-I win over Bowling Green last Tuesday night. "We were picked to finish Ilth before the season began and I think the They came like John Shrader, the Omaha native and student who has followed the team since its inception three seasons ago. With ban- ners and commemora- tive tee shirts printed for the occasion, they came to celebrate their version of the Frozen Four with enthusiasm that comes only from defying odds. Ad they came like Kendall Sidoruk, the Omaha netminder from S p i r i t w o o d, Saskatchewan who banked on a vision three years earlier when he helped form Omaha's first college hockey team from noth- ing. They came to be a part of something amazing while hoping for the improbable - what they left was an impression of some- thing great. Together they came with hundreds more to Detroit, intent on more than simply celebrating The lowest seed ever to advance to the CCHA, Tournament 'finals, Omaha's Cinderella run browghtit one game within the NCAA Tournament. Here's a look at the memo- rable run:' Berry Events Center 3/10 N. Michigan W 4-2 3/11 N. Michigan L 1-5 3/12 N. Michigan W 2-1 Omaha Civic Auditorium 3/14 Bowling Green W 3-1 3/17 3/18 Joe Louis Arena Michigan Michigan St. only thing that kept out from being picked 12th was sympathy," Kemp said prior to the weekend. "I couldn't be proud- er of this group of young men." And while Kemp's troops saw their season end on Saturday night, they also saw the realization of the conference's most storied tale of suc- cess. What the Mavericks missed with their 6-0 loss Saturday to Michigan State on Friday may have been an automatic N C A A Tournament bid, but what it gained is immeasurable. By becoming the lowest seed ever to knock off the top seed in the league tournament, the Mavericks did more than rewrite W7-4 L 6-0 S.. i ai(6: s < I t.,o, /ce Nebraska-Omaha Athletics exuberance this Maverick team has cre- ated in Omaha, the Mavericks filled the 43-year old Civic Auditorium to the gills to down Bowling Green in dramat- ic fashion in front of nearly 7,000 strong. "I've been in coaching at the division one level since 1981 and in that time I have never been in a building as electric and noisy as that place on Tuesday night," Kemp said. "They were going through the roof, we had people packed to the rafters and I'm sure the fire marshal looked the other way." And maybe Michigan looked the other way as it fell behind to Omaha Friday night before eventually losing 7- 4. But in the CCHA, just as in Omaha, all eyes are now focussed on a program that took a chance to make a statement and instead made a declaration; Nebraska-Omaha has arrived. "This has been such a tremendous opportunity for our team and our school as an institution," Kemp said. "There's not many people that had even heard of our school before this team. Heck, for most of our kids this is the first trip to Detroit. It's a trip to the big city for a bunch of them." And it's a journey that has been filled with stories of the triumph of athletes and the enthusiasm of a city - a city fittingly in the heart of America. It's been a story of players like Jeff Hoggan, the sophomore who tore the anterior cruciate ligament in his knee in December and shrugged off season end- ing surgery. Instead the forward spear- headed his team's charge into the play- offs scoring three of four game-winning goals, including two against Michigan. All of this on a bum knee and all of this from a kid that hails a tiny mining town in Fraser Canyon, British Columbia -a tiny mining town called Hope. It's been a story filled with people like Shrader, the Nebraska-Omaha stu- dent and high school classmate of Michigan's Jed Ortmeyer who decided with a handful of friends to drive over 700 miles through the night to see his team keep their NCAA Tournament hopes alive. "We knew we couldn't miss this," Shrader said Friday night. "Nobody gave this team a shot, but back in Omaha we all had faith. People may not know who we are now, but next year they will." But in many ways they already do, and if they don't they can at least appre- ciate the story of a team that didn't exist four years ago doing the unthinkable. Surely they can appreciate the drama and the dream that for a brief moment this weekend shook hands in the mist of college hockey. While performances fade and heroes blur in the mix of boxscores and broad- casts, the story of Mike Kemp and his band of orphans who put themselves and a program on the map is one to remember.; Somewhere on that trip from Marquette to Omaha and back to1 Detroit, the impossible gave way to the improbable and as Mavericks fans blinked back the tears of disbelief, they watched as their infant team struck a knockout blow to perennial power Michigan. And as Jefferies fought the choking lump in his throat a chorus of chants went up from the contingent of Omaha fans that had gathered like a family Friday night at Joe Louis Arena. "We believe. We believe. We believe." an inconceiv- DAVID KATZ/Daily Geoff Koch and the rest of the Wolverines could do nothing to stop Nebraska-Omaha's Cinderella tournament run. Mavericks deliver reality-check to 'M' able first year in the CCHA. They came to keep a season and an amazing tour- nament run alive. And for Sidoruk and his senior classmates who formed the foundation of the program when they signed on in 1996, they came to fulfill a dream - one even they could have hardly believed possible when they arrived in Omaha without even a rink to play on. A rag-tag group of former junior players, wandering college skaters and dreamy eyed athletes looking for a place to latch on to - coach Mike Kemp said his team this season was a group of orphans who saw the possibility of something great. "We're a collection of cast-offs and misfits that nobody seemed to want," Kemp said. "We sold a dream to our guys and they came here believing something would happen" And something did happen: First in Omaha where 6,300 season tickets sold out two weeks after the school announced the formation of a team in 1996, and then this spring when a lowly seeded Mavericks squad debuted in the conference playoffs in its first season in the league. If making the playoffs was amazing, Sidoruk said after Friday's semi-final win over Michigan that conference history. They gave a city and a tiny school on the plains something to cheer about- and they gave the rest of us a pretty good story. A story that cele- brated a team's struggle over adversity and inexperience, a story of a team fighting for a shot to keep the wheels of its season moving. It was the journey itself though, and the circumstances that surrounded the run at the conference championship, that had even the hardened Mavericks believer wondering if theirs was truly a team of destiny. Coach Kemp's squad overcame a snowstorm in Marquette that forced them to fly to Green Bay where they caught a three hour bus ride to Northern Michigan before it took the ice last weekend. Once there, the squad sur- vived a 5-1 drubbing in the second game and two disallowed goals in the final game to win the series 2-1. But at least they had ice. After news of their upset over Northern Michigan, rink managers in Omaha, who had been preparing for a farm implementation show, frantically worked around the clock to re-install ice at the Omaha Civic Auditorium for Tuesday's play-in game.' Kemp and his squad made sure their efforts were not in vain. In an atmosphere capturing the sheer TOURNAMENT Continued from Page 1B The emotional disparity soon became a tangible deficit as Dave Noel- Bernier, on a breakaway, coasted up the ice and launched the puck at Michigan goalie Josh Blackburn. As Blackburn moved to the right, the puck skipped around him and landed in the net - I- 0 Nebraska-Omaha 7:18 into the first period. The Mavericks tallied another goal before Michigan's Scott Matzka, strate- gically placing himself in front of Nebraska goalie, Kendall Sidoruk, redi- rected a shot from Geoff Koch to pull the Wolverines within one point as the first stanza skidded to a close. Matzka's tally, which extended his six-game goal scoring streak, was the only mildly bright element of the game for Michigan. But the 2-1 lead at the end of the first didn't do the Mavericks' effort justice. From the get-go, the Mavericks dom- inated the ice, breaking up passes, fin- ishing their hits and dominating the puck - a habit usually reserved for Michigan's traditionally powerful offense. "We got outplayed," Michigan junior forward Josh Langfeld said. "They just dominated us. I don't know what it was, but we just didn't want it as bad as they did - and it showed. They outplayed us the whole first period and we let the guys go by. It's frustrating." Though Michigan had some momen- tum of Matzka's goal at the start of the second period, Nebraska-Omaha was even more assertive. Eleven seconds into the stanza, they regained a two- goal lead when Jeff Hoggan notched his 15th goal of the season on a powerplay. Hoggan scored again less than a minute later, on another powerplay assessed when Michigan star center Mike Comrie took a cross-checking penalty, putting Michigan away for good. After Nebraska-Omaha scored again in Michigan's final conference stanza of the 1999-2000 campaign, the Wolverines finally started to get des- perate. And desperate times called for unheralded measures. Down 5-2, with a little over five minutes to play, Michigan coach Red Berenson pulled goalie Josh Blackburn and put six attackers on the ice. Unfortunately for the Wolverines, the ploy worked but on both ends of the ice. As Nebraska-Omaha fans chanted "We Believe," the game ended putting the Wolverines out of their misery. Without a doubt, Nebraska-Omaha earned their victory, just as they earned the glory of playing in the CCHA Tournament title game. Though they lost to Michigan State, 6-0, in the championship game, the Mavericks made a statement in their first year of CCHA play - they're for real. For Nebraska-Omaha, their CCHA Tournament success wasn't enough to earn a spot in the NCAA Tournament which begins next weekend. Michigan, on the other hand, has a chance to redeem itself. But because of their miserable exit from the CCHA Tournament, the Wolverines lost a first- round bye and instead will have to climb its way through the ranks in orde6 to reach the Frozen Four. As the five-seed, they will face Colgate on Saturday in Albany. The winner of that contest will play top- seeded Maine on Sunday. For Michigan to have any success in the NCAA Tournament, they must get back to their game plan and play solid defense. As for now, it will be crucial for the Wolverines to put their CCHA setbacks behind them in search C greater glory. "We're now in a situation where we have our backs against the wall," Michigan freshman Mike Cammalleii said. "You win or you lose and your season's over or keeps going. We now know what to expect and we'll learn from our loss. The reality has definitely set in." Friday's semi-final game Nebraska-Omaha 7, Michigan 4 Neb.-Omaha 2 2 3 -7 Michigan 1 0 3 - 4 First perod -1. UNO, Noel-Bernier 8(Brisson), 7:18: 2. UNO, Fohr 9) Cart), 13:58: 1. UM, Matzka 15 (Koch. Jillson), 19:12. Penalties - UNO, Zanon (hooking),.3:18: UM, Ortmeyer (cross-checking), 19:28. Second period -3. UNO, Hoggan 15 (Brisson, Zanon), 0:11 (pp); 4. UNO, Hoggan 16 (Brisson, Zanon), 1:47 (pp). Penalties- UM, Comrie (cross- checking). 1:06: UNO, Cart (tripping). 7:58. Third period - 5. UNO, Chalmers 5 (unassisted), :31; 2. UM, Peach 7 (Shouneyia, Jillson), 2:52; 6. UNO, Brisson 17 ;Cupp, Virecko), 17:07 (en); 3. UM, Comrie 21 (Koch). 17:39: 4. UM, Kosick 18 (Cornrie. Langfeld). 19:15 (ex); 7. UNO, Noel-Bernier 9 (unassisted), 19:42 (en). Shots on goal - UNO 95.6 - 20; UM 8-6-22 - 36 Power Plays - UNO, 2 of 2; UM, 0 of 2. Saves - UNO. Sidoruk 7-6-19 - 32; Blackburn 7-3 3-13. Referee - Matt Shegos. Linesmen - Kevin Langseth, Butch Friedman At: Joe Louis Arena. Attendance: Not Available. p 0 f Hobey Hopefuls On Thursday the Hobey Baker Award Committee announced ten finalists for the award chosen by the ballot of all 60 division I coaches and a fan vote. From these, a winner will be selected by a 20-member panel and announced April 7 at the Frozen Four. Among those being considered is Michigan's Mike Comrie. Mike Comrie Class Position Ht. Wt. Born Home Sophomore Center 5-10 172 9/11/80 Edmonton Ty Conklin New Hampshire's junior goaltender notched 20 wins in 33 games averging 2.53 goals against. Jeff Farkas The senior forward from New Hampshire led Hockey East with 53 points and had three hat tricks. Brian Gionta The Boston College junior forward was second in nation with 29 goals. Shawn Horcoff Michigan State's senior forward led the CCHA in scor- ing with 56 points and the nation in assists with 45. 4 Joel Laing The senior netminder out of Rensselaer had six shutouts and a 1.85 goals against average. Andy McDonald Colgate's senior forward led the ECAC with 52 points averaging 1.68 ppg. Mike Mottaue The Boston College senior defenseman was Hockey East defensive defenseman of the year and tallied 35 points. Jeff Panzer The North Dakota junior forward led the WCHA in I scoring with 44 points and was named one of North Dakota's top 50 athletes of the century by Sports Illustrated. Steve Reinprecht Wisconsin's senior forward was the WCHA Player of the Year after leading the nation in scoring with 63 points averaging 1.85 ppg. ® Second player in the history of the pro- gram to lead the team in scoring his fresh- man and sophomore seasons. Tallied 20 goals and 33 assists to finish with 53 points. First player in the nation to reach double digits in scoring after tallying 10 goals and 10 assists in the first nine games of the sea- son. SMichigran's seventh Hobey Baker finalist since 1991. DAVID KATZ/Daily Andy Hilbert is foiled in his attempts to put the puck in the net. Hilbert and the Wolverines would only convert on four of their 36 shots against Nebraska-Omaha goaltender Kendall Sidoruk. AdL F East Regional r I a I Hockey East I 97 ECAC Hockey East i 4 ECAC -I, 1 CCHA I I; WCHA I I N R rm.. - -. - ' j