heORrSchgn @ilg michigandaily.com sportsdesk@umich.edu FRIDAY AtRiL 5, 2002 9 So Struggle on powerplay paves way to defeat By Chris Burke Daily Sports Writer close, yet so far again Pain of losing should ST. PAUL, Minn. - Michigan trailed last night's NCAA semifinal game against Minnesota 1-0 in the second period when the Wolverines were called for a "too many men on the ice" penalty. Just 38 seconds later, the Golden Gophers gained possession in the Michigan zone. A pass found its way to Minnesota defenseman Jor- dan Leopold at the point, who fired a wrist shot toward the net. Forward Grant Potulny was sta- tioned all alone in front of Michigan goalie Josh Blackburn and managed to redirect the puck through the net- minder's legs to give the Golden Gophers a two-goal cushion en route to a 3-2 win. Though the Golden Gophers fin- ished just 1-for-8 on the powerplay, the lone goal was enormously important. Blackburn was in the midst of a stellar game and had pre- vented Minnesota from cashing in on several even-strength chances. The same situation was unfolding on the othef end of the ice, with Minnesota goalie Adam Hauser standing on his head. Due to Hauser's brilliance, the Wolverines desperately needed their dangerous powerplay unit to jumpstart them in the same way that Potulny did for Minnesota. But the Golden Gophers' penalty killers extended their pressure out wide instead of packing themselves into the middle of the ice, and they were relentless in stymying Michi- gan. They held the Wolverines scoreless on six powerplay opportu- nities. "They had pressure all over the ice and didn't give us a lot of time to move the puck around," Michigan forward Eric Nystrom said. Michigan was unable to get many shots through to Hauser from the point against the Golden Gophers' aggressive penalty kill and was also unable to execute any centering passes from deep in the zone, as Minnesota repeatedly blocked r-patel motivate ' T. PAUL, Minn. - Michigan freshman Milan Gajic could- n't bear to watch. He put his head down and placed his hands on his knees as the Golden Gophers celebrated just 50 feet away after clinching a shot at their first national title since 1979. It was def- initely not a feeling he wants to stay accustomed to. "It's an experience, a feeling that you just want to go away," a somber Gajic ..$ said. "It'sx going to stay with us (fresh- men) for the JOE rest of our SMITH careers. If we get to this The one point again, and only and I think we can, we'll remember this." And next time, expect this young, yet seasoned group of Wolverines to cash in. They're too talented and have been through too much not to. Gajic and the rest of the 11-mem- ber freshman class have been through a lot of adversity this sea- son. They started the year 2-4-1 and played 11 of their first 15 confer- ence games on the road. They played without star center Mike Cammalleri for 15 games. "We didn't expect a national title, but we expected to put ourselves in a chance to win it," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. But with two uncharacteristic turnovers by freshman Eric Werner and junior John Shouneyia leading to two of Minnesota's goals and a dismal 0-6 performance on the power play, Michigan didn't give itself a golden opportunity to advance to the title game. It was the first time this season Michigan had its back against the wall and didn't come through when it needed to. It was the first time that Michigan's top players - such as Cammalleri and Shouneyia - couldn't capitalize on their chances and inspired play by senior netmin- der Josh Blackburn couldn't save the day. It was the first time this season that Michigan felt the emptiest feel- ing - the kind you never forget. This holds true especially when ' next year nobody- except the Wolverines themselves - expected Michigan to get this far. Just one of 25 CCHA media members picked Michigan to win the CCHA regular season title. And Michigan proved all the critics wrong. Nobody expected theeWolverines to win 15 of their last 18 games, grab their first sweep of the CCHA regular season and CCHA Tourna- ment titles since 1996 and take the Mason Cup away from the Spar- tans. But the freshman-laden Wolver- ines did all of that. And how much consolation did they take out of their second straight Frozen Four appearance? "Not much," Cammalleri said. "It's great to be here, but this team came in with the mentality that it wasn't just great to be here - it's only great if we win." Nobody takes losing harder than Cammalleri, who is the heart and soul of the Wolverines. The Los Angeles Kings' second-rdund draft pick last year insisted that he'll return for his senior season, and he wants to be in this same spot next April, closing in on a national title. He'll have at his side a hungry sophomore class - which account- ed for six of Michigan's 11 goals in the NCAA Tournament this year - with a chip on its shoulder and an unbearable empty feeling inside. He won't have the four-member senior class that includes Black- burn, who Berenson said is one of the best goaltenders he's had in his 18 seasons behind Michigan's bench. But Cammalleri will have a top notch freshman netminder in Alvaro Montoya, who is fast-track- ing through high school just to don the maize and blue next fall, just like Cammalleri did three years ago. Cammalleri will also have the usual expectations. "I'm proud of this team," Beren- son said. "But the bar is still high. We just have to find a way to reach it." If, as expected, all of their play- ers return next season, don't be sur- prised if the Wolverines have even greater success in 2003. DANNY MOLOSHOK/Daily This was about the only time Michigan could contain Grant Potuiny (18). He scored two of Minnesota's three goals in the Golden Gophers' 3-2 win over the Wolverines yesterday. Minnesota will play Maine for the national title tomorrow night. Michigan's setups. Virtually nothing materialized on the Wolverines' first three power- play opportunities, and Minnesota's first good scoring chance came dur- ing the Wolverines' first powerplay when Leopold fired a shot through traffic, forcing Blackburn to make a tough save. Michigan later earned a 5-on-3 with just under eight minutes remaining in the second period while trailing 2-0. But again, the Wolverines failed to light the lamp and were ineffective in generating any sustained pressure on Hauser. "Everyone did their job," Leopold said. "We were getting down and blocking shots and (closing) the passing lanes." Minnesota's penalty kill entered the game with a solid, if unspectac- ular, 84.8 percent success rate for the season. But the Golden Gophers' shorthanded effort last night is one of the primary reasons that Minnesota will be returning tomorrow to play Maine for the national title. "We did manage to get some chances eventually, but they defi- nitely put us on our heels in terms of the penalty kill," Michigan assis- tant coach Billy Powers said. "Espe- cially early on, I thought they shut us down pretty solidly." Joe Smith can be reached at josephms@umich..edu. Costly mistakes doom Blue against Minnesota By J. Brady McCoNough Daily Sports Writer ST. PAUL, Minn. - The Michigan hockey team knew that there were two things it couldn't do if it wanted to upset Minnesota and advance to the national championship game: Fall behind early and commit undisciplined penalties. The Wolverines did both last night, digging themselves a hole that was far too deep to crawl HOCKEY out of. Notebook With thousands of Minnesota fans packed into the Xcel Energy Center, the Wolverines desperately needed to score the first goal - which they had done in their past three victories over Michigan State, St. Cloud and Denver - to steal the game's momentum at the outset. "Against a team like Minnesota in this building on the road, you have to have a good start," Michigan associate head coach Mel Pearson said. "You can't play from behind, especially against good teams this time of year." But after fighting through the initial Minnesota push and controlling much of the action in the first few minutes, Michigan committed a costly error in its own zone. Michigan defenseman Eric Werner, who was one of the Wolverines' steadi- est blueliners all season, tried to make an outlet pass from behind the net. His pass hit the skate of Minnesota Michigan knew it needed to stay out of the box to beat Minnesota. The Gold- en Gophers' powerplay was second in the WCHA this season, converting on 26 percent of their attempts. But in the second period, as Michigan was trying to tie the game at one, the Wolverines committed a penalty for too many men on the ice with 16:05 left in the period. Potulny immediately took advantage, tallying a textbook powerplay goal - his second of the game - which put Michigan in the same situation it faced last season against Boston College in the national semifinal, down 2-0. "We took way too many penalties," Pearson said. "For us, the keys were to not commit the giveaways that we did and stay out of the penalty box, and we couldn't do either one of those tonight." The Wolverines moved into despera- tion mode early in the third period, thanks to another huge blunder. Michi- gan junior John Shouneyia made a lazy pass at the Minnesota blueline that resulted in a breakaway for Minnesota's top goal scorer, Jeff Taffe. The junior forward deked Blackburn and slipped the puck five-hole to give Minnesota an insurmountable 3-0 lead. "(Turnovers) are crucial, especially against a team that can really score," Pearson said. "The last couple of games we've limited our turnovers, but tonight, they scored on those tuwovers. When you get guys like Taffe and Potulny too many chances, they're going to put it in the net." The wide wide world of online sports stories Visit The Michigan Daily online at www.michigandaily.com for coverage of these sports, including two more hockey stories from St. Paul. Hockey Basketball Baseball Softball M Tennis W Tennis ,U R r Enjoy a night of percussion, electronics, and ' improvisation on Saturday April 6 featuring: z" Gould/Laman/Peck ® and Chenaux/Wallace Show starts at 8 p.m. Admission is $5,$3 for students, with proceeds benefiting the Ann Arbor Hunger Coalition Ntq', ttAcv Sunday evening Jazz Mass at 5 p.m. Alternative worship featuring live music by Stephen Rush and Quartex 72 .Huo 73)606I06 w wumc e- cant * U 6 > If you're looking for an extraordinary the job for you. The job of Wilderness job in which you can realLy make a Camp Counselor is a year-round 9 ,i k~~,F,.eI~ i, r°? tnn iA~tl2 ~~In DANNY MOLOSHOK/Daily For most of the game, nothing could get past Minnesota goaltender Adam Hauser, not even Eric Werner, who ended up hurting himself on this play.'