4B - The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - February 11, 2002 01 Slap shouts "They're good. I don't do it, but I watch them, and they're awesome." - Michigan forward Milan Gajic about the Wolverines' 55 consecutive penalties killed dating back to Dec. 28 against North Dakota in the Great Lakes Invitational. FRIDAY'S GAME Nebraska-Omaha 1 Michigan 2 (ot) SATURDAY'S GAME Nebraska-Omaha 3 Michigan 6 Key play Friday, 17:27 into the second After a gutsy play by J J. Swistak, Michigan cen- ter Dwight Helminen scored a shorthanded goal against previously unbreakable Maverick goal- tender Dan Ellis to tie Friday night's garhe at one. THE DAILY'S STARS The Michigan Daily hockey writers' picks for Michigan's three stars of the weekend. Jed Ortmeyer Forward The Omaha native scored two goals in Saturday night's game giving him 10 goals on the season. His relentless forechecking caused a constant prob- lem for the Mavericks. Eric Nystrom Forward Friday, Nystrom scored a goal in over- time to beat Nebraska-Omaha for the second time this season. He also added two assists in Saturday's victory. Milan Gajic Center The freshman poured in two goals dur- ing Saturday night's four-goal barrage. Gajic also assisted on Jay Vancik's goal. 'M' SCHEDULE This week: Saturday vs. Michigan State Joe Louis Arena (Detroit), 7:35 p.m. After two deadlocks in their conference matchups this season, the Spartans and Wolverines will compete in the rubber match of the season series Saturday. Although both teams are tied for first place in the CCHA after this past week- end, Saturday's clash will not have any bearing on the conference race, as the rivals are only slated two conference games in the CCHA's cluster format. Regardless, the winner will steal the sea- son series and improve its NCAA Tourna- ment stock. How THE TOP 10 FARED No. 1.Denver (24-5-1) tied Minnesota-Duluth 3-3, def. Minnesota-Duluth 4-1. No. 2 St. Cloud (24-5-2) def. Michigan Tech 3-2, def. Michigan Tech 4-3 No. 3 New Hampshire (19.5-3) def. Provi- dence 5-2. No. 4. Michigan State (20-6-5) lost to Notre Dame 3-2, def. Notre Dame 2-0. No. 5 Minnesota (21-6-4) def. North Dakota 4-3, def. North Dakota 6-4. No. 6 Colorado College (19-8-3) def. Wiscon- sin 6-0, tied Wisconsin 5-5. No. 7 Maine (16-95) lost to Merrimack 5-2, lost to Boston College 4-3. No. 8 Cornell (17-5-1) def. Yale 3-2, def. Prince- ton 5.1. No. 9 Boston University (18-7-2) def. UMass- Amherst 4-2. No.10 Northern Michigan (18-10-2) lost to Western Michigan 4-0, lost to Western Michigan 5-3. FRIDAY' S GAME KdVA Z Nd rkaaiwdia 1(O1) Helminen, Nystrom By J. Brady McCollough Daily Sports Writer Nebraska-Omaha goaltender Dan Ellis was in a zone. Heading into Friday's game against Michi- gan, he had allowed just one goal in his last four games, including three shutouts against Lake Superior and Miami. Ellis continued his dominance in the first period, stoning all 16 Michigan shots. As the second period wore on, it became obvious that Mi.chigan would not be able to break Ellis on a normal scoring opportunity. Luckily for the Wolverines, there is nothing normal about the way freshman Dwight Helminen shoots the puck. With his team shorthanded and down 1-0 late in the second period, Helminen turned a valiant effort by junior J. J. Swistak into Michigan's first goal. Thanks to Swistak's forecheck in the Nebraska-Omaha zi Helminen, who ska mistake. He fired shoulder - the onl it. "Dwight made hi coach Red Beren important goal, a bi becoming Blue's prime-time one, the puck slid free for goaltender Ryan Miller in the same spot as he into overtime that ited in alone and made no did Ellis, once again tying the score for his a 3-2 win. a shot above Ellis' right team in a huge conference game. This time, it too ly place he could have put With the Wolverines' leading goal scorer just as sweet as th Mike Cammalleri absent, Helminen has "I wanted to d s chance count," Michigan emerged as Michigan's premier clutch offen- but (Komisarek) son said. "That was an sive threat - whether he'll take credit for it or Nystrom, who pro g-time shot." not. and has been wail scorers propelled the Wolverines to )k him 39 seconds, but it was e first. o the McCarty off the glass, wouldn't let me go," said actices different celebrations ting for the chance to mimic Helminen took a simple approach to beating Ellis on the Wolverines' 26th shot of the night. "I was thinking 'shoot' the whole time," Helminen said. "I've been known to shoot there a few times, so that's where I went." This was not the first time that Helminen and his rocket shot have bailed the Wolverines out of trouble in key games. Against Michigan State on Jan. 19, Michi- gan was trailing 1-0 with less than seven min- utes remaining in the third period. After taking over 30 shots without lighting the lamp, the center beat Hobey Baker Award-winning "I'm out there, and I work hard, and things just go my way in these big games," said Helminen with a smile. The freshman is not the only member of his class that has had a flare for the dramatic this season, as Eric Nystrom - Helminen's team- mate on the U.S. National Development Team last season - has tallied three game-winning goals, including Friday's overtime clincher. As Friday's game against the Mavericks pro- gressed into the extra frame, Nystrom found himself in a comfort zone. The last time the two teams faced off earlier this season in Omaha, it was Nystrom's goal just 12 seconds Detroit Red Wings forward Darren McCarty's signature move from the 1997 Stanley Cup Finals. The first-line forward has a family history of excelling in the clutch. His father, Bobby Nystrom, scored an overtime goal in Game 6 of the 1980 Stanley Cup Finals that won the series for the New York Islanders. In a similar fashion Friday, his son took a perfect pass from junior John Shouneyia and backhanded the puck past a sprawling Ellis to clinch a victory that his team had to have. "This could have been our season tonight," Nystrom said. 44 0 When it rains it pours Michigan poured on four goals midway through the first period of Satur- day's game during a 5:15 stretch. The only other time the Wolverines scored four goals in a period this Charlie season was against North Dakota. Hendersos 11:45 Jed Ortmeyer one-times a pass from John Shouneyia at the bottom of the circle on a four-on- three powerplay. 11:13 Milan Gajic slammed home an open net shot v 30 seconds later. Gajic was set up by linemate Michael Woodford. 9:28 Defenseman Jay Vancik scored his second goal of the season on a 2-on-1 odd-man rush off a pass from Gajic. Van-.I cik jumped into the play and freed himself up. 6:30 Gajic deflected a Vancik slapshot from the point while FELOKAMP/ standing in the circle. Daly Blue kills Omaha as streak reaches 55 *I Michigan Nebraska-Omaha 0 1 0 1. -2 1 0 0 0 -1 Frstpedod- 1.UNO,Hoggan18(Davis),5:10. Penaltes- UNO, Groslie (interference), 3:14; UM, Woodford (holding the stick), 4:40; UNO, Groslie (goaltender interference), 13:53; UM, Werner (high sticking), 17:38. Second peiod -2. UM, Helminen 9(Swistak), 17:27 (sh). Penamltes - UNO(toomany men), 3:57; UNOJaworski (inter- ference), 5:29; UM, Rynar (high sticking), 9:47; UNO, Hog- gan (unsportsmanlike conduct), 13:45; UM, woodford (roughing), 13:45; UM, Henderson (high sticking), 15:59. 7W~ peiod-Flo scoring. Penalties- UM, Rymar (board- ing), 2:40; UNO, Hoggan (crosschecking), 9:53. Overtme- 3. UM, Nystrom 11(Shouneyia), 0:39. Penaltes - None. Shosogoal-UM,1&12-51-34;UNO,6640-16. PowerPlays-UM, 0of 5; UNO,0oaf 5. Saves-UM, Blackburn-15-16; UNO, Ellis--32-34. Referee- Brian Aaon Unesmen - Butch Friedman, Tony Molina At Yost Ice Arena, Ann Arbor Attendance: 6,643. SATURDAY'S GAME Michigan 6, NebraskaOmaha 3 By Seth Klempner Daily Sports Writer Throughout all the ups and downs in the second half of the Michigan hockey team's season, there has been one con- sistency - the penalty kill. After shutting down nine Nebraska- Omaha powerplays this weekend, Michigan extended its killedwpenalties streak to 55 over the past 11 games. Michigan has not given up a powerplay goal since the second period against North Dakota in the Great Lakes Invita- tional on Dec. 28. The stretch has raised Michigan's national standing to second best - with an 89.2-percent efficiency. The Wolver- ines have stopped 140 out of 157 power- plays. Michigan State is the only team with a better penalty-killing efficiency (90.8- percent). While Michigan has not kept track of historical penalty killing statistics a spokesperson for the team is sure that this current streak is the "closest thing to a record that they have ever had." One of the biggest reasons for Michi- gan's success has been its ability to chal- lenge players at the point and to block passing lanes. This goes hand-in-hand with the players self-sacrifice. They have risked injury and pain while dropping to the ice to block a shot. All of this has the Wolverines limiting their opponents' shots on the powerplay. During the four Nebraska-Omaha pow- erplays on Saturday, Michigan allowed just two shots on goal. The Wolverines surrender fewer than 1.1 shots on goal per penalty kill. "It seems when hockey players have their backs to the wall and they are down a man, they work harder," Michi- gan coach Red Berenson said. Two of the biggest contributors on the penalty kill have been juniors Mark Mink and J.J. Swistak. Though they both play on the fourth line and don't receive much even-strength time, both are keys for Michigan when playing a man down. Swistak, one of the hardest workers on the team, made a spectacular play in Friday night's game to set up Dwight Helminen's game-tying goal in the sec- ond period. After being on the ice for more than a minute and a half of the penalty kill, Swistak went down to block a Greg Zanon shot from the point. As Zanon struggled to corral the rebound, Swistak dove headfirst at Zanon's feet to poke- check the puck out of the zone. Swistak then followed the play up ice, forcing Zanon to retreat further into the defensive zone. Swistak forced a turnover and made a perfect feed to Helminen who had just come off the bench. "Swistak made a great effort, just sec- ond-effort hockey, and that's what we are asking from our team (on the penalty kill)," Berenson said. "He made that play happen just with his effort." The goal was Michigan's ninth short- handed score of the season and its fifth since its penalty-killing streak began. The Wolverines are currently third in the nation in short-handed goals and are 8- 0-0 when they score a goal with a man down. TOM FEIDRAMP/Daily Michigan captain Jed Ortmeyer, an Omaha native, scored two goals and laid several big hits on the Mavericks. njury hampers Blackburn's play Ortmeyer leads way as Wolverines celebrate another OT win Michigan Nebraska-Omaha 4 0 2 -6 2 1 0 -3 First peiod- 1. UNO, Turner 4 (Larnpman, O'Keefe), 3:33; 2. UM, Ortmeyer 9 (Shouneyla, Nstrom), 8:15 (pp); 3. UM; Gic 6 (Woodford, Komisarek), 8:47; 4. UM, Vancik 2 (Gaic),10:32; 5. UM,Gajic 7 (Vancik, Woodford); 6. UNO, Hoggan 19 (Hcker, Zanon), 17:42 (sh). Penalties - UM, Swistk (roghing), 6:46; UNO, Claffey (holding), 6:46; UNO, Zanon (checking from behind), 7:18; UM, Shouneyia (high sticking), 14:56; UNO, Groslie (crosschecking), 16:32; UM, Woodford (slashing), 19:50. Second period - 7. UNO, Zanron 7 (Hacker), 11:18. Penalties-UNO, Fohr (tripping), 6:36; UM, Ortrteyer (hooking), 6:50. N1d period -8. UM, Ortmeyer 10(unassisted),0:36;9. UM, Murry4 (Werner, Nystrom), 5:34 (pp). Penalties- UNO, Hoggan (charging), 3:55; UNO. ciaffey (roughing after the whistle), 4:43; UM, Swistak (tripping),8:14; UNO, Pereira (high sticking), 14:37. Shots an gal-UM, 7-7-17 -31; UNO, 886- 22. PowerPlays-UM, 2of6; UNO, -of4. Sams-UM, Blackburn-19-22; UM, Ellis-25-31. Referee - Brian Aaron Lnesnmen - Butch Friedman, Torr' Molina At Yost Ice Arena, Ann Arbor Attendance: 6,759. STATE WATCH With a 3-2 loss to Notre Dame Sat- urday, Michigan State's unbeaten streak at Munn Ice Arena was ended at 33 games (30-0-3). The Fighting Irish beat Spartan goaltender Ryan Miller for three goals in the first 22 minutes of action, giving them a 3-1 lead that they would not relinquish. The loss allowed Michigan to tie the Spartans atop the CCHA for the first time since Jan. 12. AROUND THE CCHA By Chris Burke Daily Sports Writer Coming off of back-to-back shutout wins over Lake Superior, Michigan goalie Josh Blackburn knew that he would need an equally stellar perfor- mance against Nebraska-Omaha this weekend if he was going to keep his team in the hunt for the CCHA title. HOCKEY But while the Notebook Wolverines were able to notch a sweep over the Mavericks, Blackburn had some difficulties. Hampered by an injury to his right hand - and some misjudgments - Blackburn struggled to handle the puck over the weekend, particularly in deliv- ering it to his teammates. The injury occurred on Friday night in pregame warm-ups, and made stick handling difficult. "(He) took a shot on his index finger, and he had to have it stitched up," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "He got through it better (Friday) than (Saturday), but (Saturday) it was really sore. Imagine trying to swing a base- ball bat with four stitches in your index finger, and it's the same thing." Second in line Over the past four games, Josh Blackburn has surrendered just four goals. The defense in front of Black- burn has helped him out, allowing more than 20 shots just once. Here is how Blackburn compares to some of the other top netminders in the CCHA over the course of the season. Player GAA Pct. Miller, Michigan State 1.68 .940 Blackburn, Michigan 2.28 .908 Ellis, Nebraska-Omaha 2.34 .922 Betz, Ohio State 2.44 .907 Brown, Ferris State 2.48 .918 Blackburn still managed to make 15 saves in Friday's win and another 19 in Saturday's 6-3 triumph. But time and time again, Blackburn seemed out of sync when transitioning the Wolverines from defense to offense. Saturday night was particularly trou- blesome. Blackburn began the gamie by hitting Michigan defenseman Nick Martens with a clearing attempt, and the rest of the contest followed the same pattern. The senior ventured out of his net often, but only on a few occasions did those travels result in successful con- trol of possession for Michigan. "I didn't do such a good job (on Sat- urday night) communicating," Black- burn said. "As of late, we've been doing a pretty good job communicat- ing, but tonight it was my fault." 'BOUT A MAN NAMED JED: Michigan forward and Omaha native Jed Ort- meyer once again had a solid weekend against his hometown team. The junior captain tallied two goals in Saturday's game. Ortmeyer also threw his body around, playing with the type of physical intensity that has been a staple of his all season. "Ortmeyer continues to be a leader," Berenson said. "I don't think there was a better player all weekend." When the Wolverines played in Omaha on Nov. 16 and 17, Ortmeyer was the Wolverines' most intimidating physical presence. He also assisted on Eric Nystrom's game-winning, over- time goal in Michigan's 3-2 win in the second game of that series. This weekend's sweep gives the Wolverines a 7-2-1 advantage in their all-time record against Nebraska- Omaha - with all of those games coming in Ortmeyer's three years at Michigan. "I chose to come to Michigan, and a lot of people back home probably don't agree with that back home," Ortmeyer said. "It's a good feeling to be able to show that I feel like I made the right PAIRWISE RANKINGS The Pairwise Rankings are based on the ranking system used by the NCAA selection committee to deter- mine which 12 teams will partici- pate in the NCAA Tournament. Team Record PWR 1. Denver 24-5-1 31 2. St. Cloud 24-5-2 30 3. New Hampshire 19-5-3 29 4. Minnesota 21-6-4 28 5. Colorado College 19-8-3 27 6. Boston University 18-7-2 25 7. Michigan State 20-6-5 25 8. Cornell 17-5-1 24 9. Michigan 18-8-5 24 10. Maine 16-9-5 22 11. Mass-Lowell 17-8-3 20 12. Alaska-Fairbanks 18-10-2 19 13. Western Michigan 16-10-4 19 14. Northern Michigan18-10-2 18 15. Nebraska-Omaha 18-11-3 17 decision." OVER THE LIMIT: With Friday night's overtime contest, Michigan has now played in 10 overtime games this sea- son, the second most in team history. It is one behind the record of 11 set in 1983-84, when the Wolverines posted a 5-5-1 mark in overtime. This year, the Wolverines are 3-2-5 in extra sessions, but hold a 2-0-1 mark against Nebraska-Omaha and are 3-1-4 in the CCHA. "This isn't an easy league," Beren- son said. "There are no easy teams in it, and we haven't rolled over anyone. We battle every night" HOME SWEEP HOME: It wasn't just the players that enjoyed the Wolverines first regular season home sweep in CCHA play since Jan. 5-7 against Lake Superior. With time winding down in the third period, "Disco Dan" (or Dan DeSena outside of Yost), the Michigan band leader, got into the action, symbolically sweeping a music stand in front of him while performing his trademark victory dance in celebration of Michigan's win. KELLY LIN/Daily The hard work of Charlie Henderson is the mentality that coach Red Berenson wants to see when Michigan is on the penalty kill. (1(114 A CT Th rQ C'('"A T FAThTFPq ( lC(':T A DRfbi VNJTI Im UMf'141 TAN IT PAT-FRS .. i 17.'J 11UNlilV oV1 11 3.1 LfL't LLiltA-I 1L L 3.AJ ,.J1vA l -'& VM-11l J".l kk ~I.LdL i