0 4B - The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - March 31, 2003 Chatting into the boards "We're all pretty excited. There's a lot more emotion on the inside than there is on the outside." - Michigan coach Red Berenson, who shed his poker face in favor of a smile and a fistpump at the end of yesterday's game. SATURDAY'S GAME M Michigan 2 Maine 1 SUNDAY'S GAME f Michigan 5 Colorado College 3 Key play 4:25 of the third period - Michigan's Jason Ryznar beat Colorado College goaltender Curtis McElhinney to put Michigan up4-3. " FRIDAY'S GAME Michigan 2, Maine: Power By Bob Hunt Daily Sports Writer out Michigan Maine 0 0 2 - 0 0 1 - 2 1 First period-- Penalties - Brandon Rogers, MICH (obstruction-holding) 9:24; Prestin Ryan, MAINE (checking from behind) 12:06. Second period - Penaltles - Jed Ortmeyer, MICH (tripping) 8:12; Travis Wight, MAINE (elbowing) 8:12; Prestin Ryan, MAINE (cross-checking) 13:11; Brandon Rogers, MICH (holding) 17:31. Third period -1, MICH, Eric Nystrom 14 (Michael Woodford) 6:47; 2, MAINE, Colin Shields 14 (Martin Kariya, Lucas Lawson) 18:29 (pp); 3, MICH, Jed Ortmeyer 17 (Jeff Tambellini, Eric Nystrom) 18:29 (pp). Penal- ties - Brandon Rogers, MICH (tripping) 4:44; Danny Richmond, MICH (obstruction-holding) 13:09; Travis Wight, MAINE (holding) 17:58; Prestin Ryan, MAINE (cross-checking) 18:29; John Shouneyia, MICH (cross-checking) 18:29.. Shots on Goal: OSU 7-10-14 31; MICH 7-7-10 24. Power plays: MICH 1lof 3; MAINE 0 of 4. Penalties: MICH 6(12 min); MAINE 5)(10 min) Saves- MICH, Al Mon- toya (29-9-3-34; MAINE, Frank Doyle (10-4-5) - 25. Referee: Derek Shepherd. At:Yost Ice Arena, Ann Arbor. Attendance: 6,798. SATURDAY'S GAME Michigan 5, Colorado College 3 x. What was once a cannon turned into a broken pistol. The Colorado College powerplay started the game as a well-oiled machine, scoring with the greatest of ease on its first two shots on the powerplay. The nation's best extra man unit went to work during its first opportunity, scoring 16 sec- onds after Jed Ortmeyer received an interference penalty. After win- ning the faceoff, forward Noah Clarke sent the puck from the point to Peter Sejna, who found Brett Sterling right in front of the net to easily deflect the puck in to the right side past goalie Al Montoya. Just over two minutes later, Eric Nystrom was called for checking from behind, and Sejna tipped in a pass from Clarke just over a minute into a four-on-three. Montoya had no chance of making a stop on either of the two goals that made the Michigan penalty kill look nothing like the second-best unit in the nation. "They made it look easy," associ- ate head coach Mel Pearson said. "We were hoping we weren't going to have to kill another one." But the Tiger arsenal disappeared in the second and third periods. JASON COOPER/Daily While the Wolverines were finish- Freshmen Andrew Ebbett (left), Brandon Kaleniecki (right) and sophomore Jason Ryznar ing off killing a Jeff Tambellini celebrate Michigan's 5-3 win yesterday. cross-checking call transferred into Mink breaks 30-game drought " age: Tigers the start of the second period, Mark Mink stole the puck from behind the Tiger net and scored Michigan's eighth short-handed goal of the season. . Colorado College would then fail to get a shot off in its final three powerplays. Michigan started to anticipate the patterns of the Tiger powerplay and put more pressure on. "They knew where they were going to move the puck before they even got it," said defenseman Andy Burnes, who was on the ice for both Tiger powerplay goals. "In order to combat that we had to anticipate a little more. We had to think a step ahead and know where they were going. We really didn't know what to expect." After Mike Roemensky got an obstruction-holding penalty at 5:11 of the second, the Wolverine penal- ty kill cleared the puck four times and never allowed the Tigers to get any sort of offensive set going. "They pressured us a little bit better," Colorado College defense- man Tom Pressing said. "They got to us all over the ice. They didn't just wait to get in to our zone. That was definitely a factor at stopping us near the end." After Brandon Rogers was called for hooking 3:31 into the third peri- od, Colorado College was not even able to get the puck into the Michi- gan zone until Andrew Canzanello was called for hooking 48 seconds shut down later. Then, in the final Tiger pow- erplay after a Ortmeyer boarding call, the puck spent the majority of the two minutes in the Colorado College end. "It's easy to go out and make adjustments, but you have to go out and execute it on the ice," Pearson said. "They did a fabulous job with the adjustments." Shutting down the Tiger power- play effectively shut down the whole offense. The only even strength Col- orado College goal was off a Michi- gan zone turnover, and the Tigers had just five third period shots. It was a hefty accomplishment for the Wolverines to go up against a unit that had scored on more than 30 percent of its powerplays going into this weekend's regional. In Sat- urday's opening round game against Wayne State, Colorado College gen- erated almost all of its scoring chances on the powerplay and scored three of its four goals on five opportunities with an extra man. The performance, will bode well for the Wolverines' penalty kill as it will go up against the nation's fifth-best powerplay when they play Minnesota - the Wolverines' second-best penalty kill will be tested once again in Buffalo, N.Y. "Our penalty kill has been strong all year," Burnes said. "We had a couple breakdowns out there, but it was just hard work is all it comes down to." Michigan Ferris State 2 2 1 1 2 0 - 5 - 3 First period-1, MICH, Eric Nystrom 15 (Dwight Helminen, Mark Mink) 2:22; 2, CC, Brett Sterling 26 (Peter Sejna, Noah Clarke) 8:10 (pp); 3, CC, Peter Sejna 36 (Noah Clarke, Tom Preissing) 10:42 (pp); 4 MICH, Milan Gajic 11 (David Moss, Mike Roemen- sky) 17:18. Penalties -Richard Petiot, CC (obstruction-holding) 4:38; Tom Preissing, CC (cross- checking) 5:54: Jed Ortmeyer, MICH (interference) 7:40; Brandon Kaleniecki, MICH (holding) 8:48; Joey Crabb, CC (roughing) 8:48; Eric Nystrom, MICH (checking from behind) 9:41; Scott Polaski, CC (trip- ping) 13:56; Jeff Tambellini, MICH (cross-checking) 19:27. Second period -5, MICH, Mark Mink 6 (unassisted) 1:23 (sh); 6, CC, Brett Sterling 27 (Tyler Liebel) 11:57. Penalties - Joey Crabb, CC (roughing) 2:14; Brandon Rogers, MICH (roughing) 2:14; Mike Roemensky, MICH (obstruction-holding) 5:11; Trevor Frischmon, CC (holding) 7:43; Joe Cullen, CC (cross-checking) 9:48; Richard Petiot, CC (obstruction-holding) 12:57. Third period - 7, MICH, Jason Ryznar 7 (unassisted) 4:25; 8, MICH, Mark Mink 7 (Eric Nystrom) 19:42 (empty net) (pp). Penalties - Brandon Rogers, MICH (slashing) 3:31; Andrew Canzanello, CC (hooking) 4:19; Jed Ortmey- er, MICH (boarding) 10:08; Tyler Liebel, CC (hook- ing) 17:47. Shots on Goal: MICH 11-13-832; CC8-11-5 24. Power plays: MICH 1 of 7; CC 2 of 6. Saves - MICH, Al Montoya (3043) - 21; CC, Curtis McEl- hinny (2565) -27. Referee: Dan Murphy. At: Yost Ice Arena, Ann Arbor. Attendance: 6,781. How THEY FARED No. I Cornell (30-4-1) def. No. 11 Min- nesota-State Mankato 5-2, def. No. 8 College 2-1. No. 2 Colorado College (30-7-5) def. Wayne State 4-2, lost to No. 7 Michi- gan 5-3. No. 3 New Hampshire (27-7.6) def. No. 15 St. Cloud State 5-2, def. No. 6 Boston University 3-0. No. 4 Minnesota (26-8-9) def. Mercy- hurst 9-2, def. No. 5 Ferris State 7-4. No. 5 Ferris State (31-101) de. No. 12 North Dakota 5-2, lost to No. 4 Min- nesota 7-4. No. 6 Boston University (25-14-3) def. No. 10 Harvard 6-4, lost to No. 3 New Hampshire 3-0. No. 7 Michigan (30-9-3) def. No. 9 Maine 2-1, def. No. 2 Colorado College 5-3. No. 8 Boston College (24-114) def. No. 13 Ohio State 1-0, lost to No. 1 Cornell 2-1. No. 9 Maine (24-10-5) lost to No. 7 Michigan 2-1. No. 10 Harvard (22-10-2) lost to No. 6 Boston University 6-4. No. 11 Minnesota-State Mankato (20- 11-10) lost to No. 1 Cornell 5-2. No. 12 North Dakota (26-12-5) lost to No. 5 Ferris State 5-2. No. 13 Ohio State (25-13-5) lost to No. 8 Boston College 1-0. No. 14 Minnesota-Duluth (22-16-5) did not play. No. 15 St. Cloud State (17-16-5) lost to No. 3 New Hampshire 5-2. NCAA ROUNDUP Fra's ms: Minnesota 9, Mercyhurst 2 New Hampshire 5, St. Cloud State 2 Boston University 6, Harvard 4 Ferris State 5, North Dakota 2 Saturday's games: Cornell 5, MSU-Mankato 2 Boston College 1, Ohio State 0 New Hampshire 3, Boston University 0 Colorado College 4, Wayne State 2 Minnesota 7, Ferris State 4 Michiganu2, Maine1 Boston College 1, Cornell 2 Michigan 5, Colorado College 3 ALL-MIDWEST REGIONAL TEAM By Courtney Lewis Daily Sports Editor Four months. Thirty games. Zero goals. To say Mark Mink was going through a dry spell would be an under- statement. After equaling his 2001-02 total of five goals in Michigan's first 11 games of this season, Mink hadn't found the net since Nov. 22. But he chose the perfect game to go on a scoring binge. Mink tallied not one, but two goals in the Wolverines' 5-3 victory over Colorado College in the Midwest Regional Final yesterday. Colorado College coach Scott Owens called Mink's first goal a "backbreaker." With the game tied 2-2 and Michigan killing a penalty in the beginning of the second period, Mink stole the puck behind the Tigers' net, skated it out in front and jammed it between the left goalpost and a scram- bling Curtis McElhinney. "I think any time you get a short- handed goal it kind of knocks the other team back, takes a little of their momentum away," Michigan defense- man Andy Burnes said. "It really gives you the momentum, and it gives you a lot of stuff to build on. So that was definitely a big goal, not only for Mark Mink, but for the team." Mink threw his arms in the air in cel- ebration after that goal, but he wasn't done yet. As the final seconds of the game ticked off, he skated the puck into the Tigers' zone and flicked the puck past a Colorado College defenseman and into the empty net at 19:42. The Wolverines on the ice mobbed Mink in the corner after he scored. "I barely got it through (the defenseman) actually," Mink said of his first career empty-net goal. "Time was running out, and I've been wait- ing four years to get that empty-netter. I finally got it in my last game (at Yost Ice Arena)." The two-goal outburst gave Mink seven goals to go along with his 13 assists this season. But offensive production is not what Mink, a scrappy two-way player, focuses on. "I was just trying to play hard every, game and just try to lead the younger guys in big games like this," Mink said. "Work hard and good things are going to happen no matter what." Mink's teammates said his solid play is often unnoticed, and they were glad to see him receive some acco- lades yesterday. "What he does goes unrecognized, but he is so effective," sophomore Eric Nystrom said. "He works hard every game, day in and day out and in prac- tice. I think he was getting stoned a little - he was snakebitten. And you know what? It doesn't matter what you do (in the regular season) because this is the time of year when those guys step up and score big goals." "It's a storybook ending: In his last game at Yost, he scores two goals and sends us to the Frozen Four." Storybook, sure. But it might not be the ending for Mink. The Frozen Four will be held in Buffalo's HSBC Arena, where Michigan played in the Xerox College Hockey Showcase in October - and where Mink scored two goals in two games. POISE UNDER PRESSURE: Freshman goaltender Al Montoya was named the Midwest Regional's Most Out- standing Player and was one of four Wolverines on the All-Regional Team. Montoya stopped 21 of Colorado Col- lege's 24 shots, after denying all but one of Maine's 35 shots Saturday. "This is the time of year when you can ride a goalie or the goalie can lose it for you, and Monty has been standing on his head, making huge saves," Nystrom said of the 18-year ,ld netminder. "He should be in high school, yet he has played so poised. Even when he handles the puck, he's really poised." HOME, SWEET HOME: Michigan is now 9-1 in NCAA Tournament games at Yost and has advanced to the Frozen Four every time it has hosted a region- al. The home crowd easily drowned out the Tigers fans yesterday, but Col- orado College captain Tom Preissing said it was not a big factor in the game. "It affected us, but I don't think this was the toughest place we've had to play this year," Preissing said. "There are other teams, like North Dakota or Minnesota, that have as tough, if not tougher, environments." Nystrom was more impressed. "You can't experience it unless you're down there," Nystrom said. "It was so loud, just adrenaline. And my legs were shaking. I was standing on the bench, and my legs were shaking because the crowd was so loud. It was unbelievable. Unfortunately, (the Midwest Regional) can't be here every year." JASON COOPER/Daily Michigan seniors Mike Roemensky, John Shouneyla and Jed Ortmeyer enjoy a curtain call from the fans yesterday. i _ i O'NEILL Continued from Page 1.3 Bertin and runner Nate Brannen have brought joy to the University with individual national titles - a feat not to be thought of lightly - with Ed Martin's spirit still looming over the basketball program, the surprising and unfortunate "resignation" of Sue Guevara and another season of Pasadena-less football, there was not much for those who reside between Pierpont Commons and Crisler Arena to be happy about. That's why yesterday was needed. Yesterday was needed so that Ort- meyer, Shouneyia, Swistak, Mark Mink and Mike Roemensky could leave no doubt in anyone's mind that they were still as good, if not better, than last year's team with Cammalleri. Pictures are worth a thousand words, and there was no image more novel-esque than watching Ortmeyer, Shouneyia and Roemensky receive wave upon wave of curtain calls from the stands. "Our fans are arguably the best in the country and to win our last game at Yost is something special," Ort- meyer said. "We didn't really want to get off the ice. It's an amazing feel- ing, and to have our fans celebrate with us has been a great ride." Yesterday was needed to free Gajic from any failures he has had in the past, as he scored an opportunistic goal to tie Colorado College at two in the second period. He said after the game that even though he was two feet away from the goal, when the puck left his stick, it felt like "an hour and a half" before it went in. "When you're a team that doesn't go through any hardships and you go through the year nice and every- thing's copasetic - and then some- thing does happen, and you don't know how to deal with it," Gajic said. "With all our injuries and everything else happening ... if something bad happens, we're able to handle it because we've been through it. It was nice knowing that we could go through all of that and still pull it off." Yesterday was needed to give the defense an identity - other than the one characterized by blowing third period leads. There was hardly a hap- pier man than Burnes after the game. He and the rest of the defensemen couldn't have played any tougher down the stretch after giving up two early, and somewhat easy, powerplay goals. When a mistake was made, Burnes was the one driving that mis- take into the boards never to be seen again. When a puck needed to be cleared, it was players like Roemen- sky - who had his problems against Maine on Saturday doing so - mak- ing sure that shorthanded opportuni- ties were created, like the one Mink took advantage of. Most of all, the University lept up into one collective cheer yesterday. When the players mobbed each other on the bench after Mink's empty-net- ter, the fans were there with them. "It was awesome, I just wanted to get on the pile on the bench," sopho- more Eric Nystrom said. "It's just the best feeling ... I think I hurt (Bran- don) Rogers after the goal was scored - I came in and tackled him." After that celebration and the game was over, each Wolverine took turns giving each other hugs. Mink hugged Rogers, Nystrom and Richmond embraced and the top line of Ortmey- er, Shouneyia and Jeff Tambellini mauled each other in celebration. Michigan hockey became the Univer- sity's best team yesterday and any problem waiting to come down and depress the Michigan athletic depart- ment is now going to have to wait, because this is a time to remember, not to forget. - Kyle is hoping Michigan's success carries over to the Tigers of Detroit today at 1:05 p.m. Please contact him at kylero@umich.edu. RYAN WEINER/Daily Michigan senior Mark Mink breaks toward the goal for his second tally of the day - an empty-netter. Yesterday was the first time in 30 games Mink scored. Mark Mink Senior/forward three stars of the weekend" Al Montoya Freshman/goaltender '1 l) Eric Nystrom Sophomore/forward A