4B - The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - March 4, 2002 Slap shouts "First place is great, but we have bigger dragons to slay." - Michigan forward Mike Cammalleri after the Wolverines beat Western Michigan 6-2 on Saturday to clinch the CCHA title outright. FRIDAY'S GAME to, Michigan 4 Western Michigan 2 SATURDAY'S GAME Michigan 6 Western Michigan 2 Key play Saturday, 4:22 into the third With the game tied at two, junior John Shouneyia redirected a Mark Mink pass past Western Michi- gan goalie JeffReynaert to put Michigan ahead for good. The Wolverines added three more goals to clinch the CCHA regular season title outright. THE DAILY'S STARS The Michigan Daily hockey writers' picks for Michigan's three stars of the weekend. JohneShouneyia Center The junior scored the game-winning goal Saturday night, while also record- ing three assists on the weekend. Mike Cammalleri Center In his return, Cammalleri had one assist Friday night and a goal and an assist Saturday night to boost Michigan's powerplay. Eric Nystrom Forward Thefreshman scored his 15th goal of the season Saturday night to tie the game at two and help Michigan come from behind. 'M' SCHEDULE CCHA Tournament - First Round This week: Friday vs. Lake Superior Yost Ice Arena, 7:35 p.m. Saturday vs. Lake Superior Yost Ice Arena, 7:05 p.m. Sunday vs. take Superior (if necessary) Yost ice Arena, 7:35 p.m. With Michigan's sweep over Western Michigan and Michigan State's loss to Ferris State Friday night, the Wolverines will now play the last-place team in the conference for the first round of the CCHA Tournament. The Wolverines swept the Lakers on Jan. 31-Feb. 1 as Michigan goalie Josh Blackburn did not allow sin- gle goal in the series. Lake Superior has not played at Yost this season. How THE Top 10 FARED No.1 Denver (28-7.1) def. North Dakota 4-3, lost to North Dakota 4-1 No. 2 St. Cloud (27.8-2) lost to Minnesota 5- 4, lost to Minnesota 3-1 No. 3 New Hampshire (23.6.3) def. Boston College 5-2 No. 4 Minnesota (26-7-4) def. St. Cloud 5-4, def. St. Cloud 31 No. 5 Michigan State (24-7-5) lost to Ferris State 3-2, def. Ferris State 2-0 No. 6 Boston University (23.8.3) lost to Maine 9-6, tied Maine 4-4 No. 7 Maine (20-9-7) def. Boston University 9-6, tied Boston University 4-4 No. 8 Michigan (22.95) def. Western Michigan 4-2, def. estern Michigan 6. No. 9 Cornell (21-6-2) def. Rensselaer 2-1, def. Union 3-1 No.10 Colorado College (20-11-3) def. Michi- gan Tech 2-0, def. Michigan Tech 8-1. FRIDAY'S GAME Michigan 4, Westem Michigan 2 Western Michigan 0 1 1 - 2 Michigan 1. 1 2 -4 First peiod - 1.UM, Henderson 6 (Werner), 3:25; Pena tes -UM,rtmeyer(boadrg),1:10; WMU,Farquhar(holdig), 9:55; UM, team(too may on ice), 18:26; WMU, Drake(hook- irg), 19:37. Seondlpedod-2. UM, Mink 4 (Rymar) 4:00; 3. WMU, Drake 5 (Jarmuth, Bishai),10:42 (sh); Penaaimes-WMU Dwyer (tripping), 4:13; WMU, Drae (holdirg), 7:46; UM, Camallei (roughing), 7:46; WMU, Yamashita (crosscheck- ing), 8:53. 'hrd peiod- 4. UM, Woodford 6 (Helminen), 4:24; 5. UM, Komsaek 10 (Cammalleri, Shouneyia)12:49 (pp); 6. WMU, Cousineau 11(Rmble, crane), 17:44 (pp). Penas- WMU, Cook (roughing), 12:21; UM, Mink (checkingfrom behind), 15:17; UM, Vancik (crosschecking), 17:20; UM, carrrrdleri(roughing),18:17; WMU, Carnpbell (roughing), 18:17. Shosongodl-UM,11-1714-42; WMU, 6411-21. Power Plays- UM,1 of 7; WMU,1 of 6. Saves - UM, Backbum-19-21; WMU, Reynaert--3842. Reere- Kevin Hall Linesmen- Butch Friedman, BruceVida At Yost Ice Arena, Ann Arbor Attendance: 6,347. SATURDAY'S GAME Michigan 6, Western Michigan 2 No longer on the bubble, Blue rolling into playoffs Road to the Joe First Round Best-of-three series Mar. &10 Play-in round March 15 Semifinals March 16 By chris Burke Daily Sports Writer KALAMAZOO - Somewhere this sea- son, between surprising losses to Northern Michigan, Alaska-Fairbanks and Bowling Green, the Michigan hockey team found a way to win a regular season conference championship. After unexpectedly splitting a home series with CCHA bottom-feeder Bowling Green on Jan. 25-26, the Wolverines found themselves not only trailing Michigan State in the CCHA standings, but also in danger of not making the NCAA Tournament. With its remaining series coming against top-20 teams Nebraska-Omaha, Ohio State and Western Michigan, the chances for a CCHA title seemed slim, and the chances for an NCAA bid were bleak. But five weeks and eight wins later, the Wolverines are suddenly the hottest team in college hockey - now fourth in the Pairwise Rankings - and are CCHA title holders., "I think we got better and as the season goes on, you hope to get better," Michigan forward Mike Cammalleri said. "I think everybody has stepped it up a little bit - everyone's contributing and that's great. That's a winning combination." Said Michigan coach Red Berenson: "When you look at the young players, the season, the schedule, the adversity and everything else, this is a good accomplish- ment for this team." Michigan defenseman Andy Burnes described Saturday's 6-2 win over Western Michigan as a microcosm of the Wolver- ines season. The Wolverines played a lackluster first period and trailed 2-1 after 20 minutes. But after fighting back to a 2-2. tie heading into the third period, the Wolverines took over, scoring four goals in the third period for a 6-2 win. Similarly, Michigan's season has been a roller coaster. A 2-4-1 start hit rock bot- tom with a sweep by Northern Michigan in Yost Ice Arena. The Wolverines responded and rallied back into contention going 10- 2-3 in their next 15 games before the dis- appointing losses to Alaska-Fairbanks and Bowling Green. But with their backs against the wall late in the year, the Wolverines have answered the call again. Since losing 4-2 to Bowling Green, Michigan has not dropped a game in nine CCHA contests, while the then-first-place Michigan State team slipped up twice. . The Wolverines will now open CCHA Tournament play on Friday by hosting Lake Superior - the worst team in the conference. Just two wins against the 12th-place Lakers stand between Michigan and the CCHA semifinals in Detroit, where the Wolverines would be one of the favorites. The bubble that the Wolverines were on for the NCAA is no longer a factor; bar- ring a stunning upset at the hands of Lake Superior, Michigan appears to be a lock for the NCAAs. And with that worry out of the way and the celebration of a league regular season title behind them, the Wolverines can focus on continuing their recent string of success. (Winning the regular season champi- onship) "is one step for our team, it's one goal that we set at the beginning of the year and we accomplished," forward John Shouneyia said. "But we've got to keep going - it's obviously not the end." No. 1 Michigan No. 12 Lake Superior No. 2 Michigan State No. 11 Bowling Green No. 3 Northern Michigan No. 10 Miami No. 4 Alaska-Fairbanks No. 9 Ferris State No. 5 Nebraska-Omaha No. 8 Notre Dame No. 6 Western Michigan No. 7 Ohio State 01 re-seeded No. 3 re-seeded No. 6 re-seeded No. 1 lowest remaining seed championship game March 17 re-seeded No. 2 other remaining team re-seeded No. 4 re-seeded No. 5 Under the new CCHA Tournament format, all 12 conference teams will get an opportunity to compete this postseason. In the first round this weekend, the teams will be matched up according to their regu- lar season finish. The six teams that advance from the first round will be re-seeded for the Super 6 Championship at Joe Louis Arena the fol- lowing weekend. The team with the highest original seed coming out of the first round will be re-seeded as one, the next highest team will be two, and so on. The top two re-seeded teams will get a bye in the play-in round, and play the winners of that round in the semifinals. S 4NA / mr' TOM FELDKAMP/Daily ----------- i 91 What you may have missed... Over spring break, Michigan went 4-0-0, sweeping both Ohio State and Western Michi- gan to become CCHA regular season champions. The Wolverines have won nine straight conference games, and are the hottest team in the CCHA heading into the tournament. Here is a recap of the games over break. Feb. 22 - Michigan 4, Ohio State 0 - Michigan goalie Josh Blackburn made 24 saves and junior John Shouneyia recorded three assists as the Wolverines blanked the Buck- eyes at home. Michigan scored three times in the first 10 minutes and never looked back. Feb. 23 - Michigan 6, Ohio State 3 - Freshman Eric Nystrom had two goals and senior Craig Murray had a powerplay goal on senior night, as the Wolverines guaranteed them- selves no less than second place in the CCHA by sweeping the Buckeyes. Mar. 1- Michigan 4, Western Michigan 2 - The Wolverines grabbed at least a share of the CCHA title thanks to their win over the Broncos at home and Michigan State's 3-2 loss to Ferris State. Mike Cammalleri made his return in this game and recorded one assist. Mar. 2 - Michigan 6, Western Michigan 2 - Michigan scored four times in the third to come from behind and beat the Broncos in Kalamazoo to become CCHA champions. TOM FELDKAMP/Daily Michigan forward John Shouneyia re-directs Mark Mink's pass past Western Michigan goalie Jeff Reynaert to put the Wolverines ahead for good on Saturday night, 3-2. Shouneyla had four points on the weekend. BRONCOS Continued from Page 1B Jan. 12 -upped the lead to 4-2 with 12:12 remaining in the game on a beautiful pass from Shouneyia, as the Wolverines took advantage of a 5-on-3 powerplay. Senior defenseman Jay Vancik added an empty net goal with just under two minutes left, and freshman Charlie Henderson notched a powerplay goal - Michi- gan's third of the night - for the final margin. The win was the Wolverines' ninth straight in the CCHA, locking up the top seed in the conference play- offs that begin this weekend. Friday night's 4-2 win was not played as tightly as the final score would indicate, as Michigan outshot Western Michigan 42-21 and carried the play for much of the contest. The Wolverines jumped on the board quickly, with freshman Charlie Henderson scoring 3:25 into the first period after a perfect feed from defenseman Eric Werner. "It's always good to get the first goal, no matter who you're playing against," Henderson said. "But especially in a game like this where you have such a big opportuni- ty to do so much." Michigan increased the lead to 2-0 with 16:00 left in the second period. A spectacular shift by the Wolver- ines' forward line of Shouneyia, Jason Ryznar and Mink didn't allow the Broncos to make the line change they desperately needed. After a long period of pressure, Mink circled in front of the Western Michigan goal and snapped a shot that hit Reynaert's shoulder and trickled behind him into the net. Western Michigan closed within 2-1, but Michigan freshman Michael Woodford scored just over four min- utes into the third to reestablish the two-goal cushion. Defenseman Mike Komisarek used a screen to beat Rey- naert on the powerplay with for Michigan's fourth goal. The solid game by the Wolverines set the stage for Saturday's championship-clinching victory. "It feels really good," said Berenson of the title. "I can't tell you that we did it the easy way - there were times that we were just about out of the picture in terms of the first-place race. Our team just continued to win the games that they had to win" Michigan Michigan State 1 1 4 -6 2 0 0-2 Fkst period- 1. UM, Murray 6 (Moss, Henderson), 9:33 (pp); 2. WMU, Drke 6 (Cook), 9:58; 3. WMU, Lattery 18 (crane), 18:29. Penties- UM, Komisa-ek (trpping), 2:45, WMU, Yamashita (interference), 9:22; UM, Burnes (roughing), 11:42; UM, Helminen (slashing), 16:08. Second pediod -4. UM, Nystrom 15 (Vancik, Shouneyia), 4:24. Penlties-WMU Rose (holding the stick), 4:48; WMU, Ggnon (charging), 10:32; UM, Cammalleri (hooking), 15:14; WMU, Drke (dv), 12:29. 7Wrd period - 5. UM, Shouneyia 9 (Mink), 4:22; 6. UM, Cammalleri 16 (Shouneyia, Ortmeyer), 7:48 (pp); 7. UM, Van- cik 3 (unassisted), 18:18 (empty net); 8. UM, Henderson 7 (Cammalleri, Woodford),18:40 (pp). Pencities- WMU, Crane, (obstructionholding), 6:01. S *tson-UMw7-12-28;WMU, 843-15. Power Plays- UM, 3 of 7; WMU, 0OofS5. Saves-UM, Blackburn-1315; WMU, Reynaert-22-27. Referee-Steve Piotrowski Lkiemen -Brent Gawlik, John Philo At Lawson Arena, Kawr h oo Attence: 4,575. AROUND THE CCHA Spartans drop the pace; Wildcats sneak by Nanooks Even though Michigan State beat Michigan 3-1 in a nonconference game on Feb. 16, the Spartans could not keep pace with the Wolverines in the final weekend of conference play. The teams entered the weekend tied, but Michigan State fell to Ferris State 3-2 Friday night. It was the first time since 1990 that the Spartans lost in Big Rapids. With 8:04 remaining in the third period, Ferris State's Phil Lewandowski beat Ryan Miller on the backhand to put the Bulldogs ahead. TOM FELDKAMP/Daily The Wolverines celebrate following John Shouneyla's go-ahead goal In the third period on Sat- urday night. The goal was the first of four by Michigan in the period. Cammalleri notches three points i*n return By Chris Burke Daily Sports Writer KALAMAZOO - If the red-hot Michigan hockey team needed an extra boost heading into the final weekend of the season, it got it in the form of junior forward Mike Cammalleri. The alternate captain returned to the lineup after having to sit out 10 games HOCKEY due to mononucleo- sis. While he wasn't Notebook at 100 percent for the two-game series against Western Michigan, his effort was good enough for a goal and two assists over the week- end. "Coach kept asking me how I felt - I was tired, but once you get out there it's tough to say 'no'," Cammalleri said after Friday's win. "It was the first game back in a long time. My timing was a little off, but overall I still feel pretty well." Cammalleri centered a line with freshman Jason Ryznar and junior Jed Ortmeyer for much of the week- end. He also was reinserted back onto the Wolverir es' top powerplay line and received some penalty killing time as well. "It's good to have Mike back, he adds a dimension to our team that's special:' Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "He's going to need a couple of games to get back in sync totally with timing, but it's a good start though." The Wolverines had gone 7-2-1 during Cammalleri's absence, falling to Bowling Green and to Michigan State in a nonconference game at Joe Louis Arena. KNOCK ON WOOD: Freshman Michael Woodford finally found his way back into the scoring column in Friday's vic- tory over Western Michigan. The Michi- gan forward had been suffering through a 12-game goal-less drought since tally- ing five goals in three games over winter break. But Woodford scored the game-win- ner in Friday night's contest, beating Western Michigan goalie Jeff Reynaert with 15:36 left in the game. Forward Dwight Helminen cleanly blocked a shot in the Michigan zone, carried into West- ern Michigan's zone and fed Woodford in the right circle where he lit the lamp with a wrist shot on Reynaert's stickside. "You block a shot like that you deserve to score a goal and although Helminen didn't score it, he set it up," Berenson said. "It was good for Wood- ford to get one that went in for him instead of one that just missed. We need those guys to chip in, it's not always going to be (John) Shouneyia, Ortmeyer, (Eric) Nystrom or Cammalleri." BREAKING THE HEX: Saturday's win not only clinched the outright CCHA regular season title for the Wolverines, but it also marked the first time that the Michi- gan seniors had captured a win at West- ern Michigan's Lawson Arena. In the past four years, Michigan was 0-1-3 on the road against the Broncos - the Wolverines fell 3-1 a~t Western Michigan in their second conference game this season on Oct. 19. "We definitely had a little problem over the years finishing out games here," Michigan senior defenseman Jay Vancik said. "It's good to come in here, in an important game for us, and finish out with a victory in this building." Michigan had last defeated Western Michigan in Kalamazoo in a 4-3 over- time victory on Jan. 10, 1998. 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. New Hampshire 24-6-3 27 2. Minnesota 26-7-4 26 3. Denver 28-7-1 24 4. Michigan 22-9-5 23 5. Boston University 23-8-3 22 6. Michigan State 24-7-5 22 7. St. Cloud 27-8-2 21 8. Maine 20-9-7 21 9. Cornell 21-6-2 21 10. Colorado College 22-11-3 18 11. Alaska-Fairbanks 20-11-3 17 12. Western Michigan19-13-4 16 13. Northern Michigan23-11-2 15 14. Mercyhurst 22-7-3 13 15. Mass-Lowell 20-11-3 12 (114A Q T'A NTnTXTC' C ( 014 JA iT -PA TmED 2C 0014 jJA Unir T-T1T TTYn '1 Afr-IITf' AX'T T -V A ThEY C I Li i1iC1 31AILN JJ .VlI1. trx irIAic zI r iLt1N iiujr lVii UI~l-N ii ViiUi'h A&