4B - The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - December 9, 2002 Chatting into the boards "That's a dumb question." - Michigan coach Red Berenson responding to whether Northern Michigan goalie Craig Kowalski had an impact in Friday night's game. FRIDAY'S GAME Michigan 2 Northern Michigan 5 SATURDAY'S GAME Michigan 1 Northern Michigan 4 Key play Saturday, 5:34 into the 3rd - With the game tied at one, Northern Michigan senior forward Mike Stutzel wristed the puck past Michigan goalie Al Montoya to give the Wildcats the sweep. 6 I FRIDAY'S GAME Northem Michigan 5, MichIgan 2 Michigan 0 1 1 - 2 NorthernMichigan 2 1 2 - 5 First period - 1, NMU, Terry Harrison 7 (Jimmy Jack- son, Chris Gobert) 1:13; 2, NMU Justin Kinnunen 1 (Jimmy Jackson, Dirk Southern) 7:03; Penalties - Jed Ortmeyer, MICH (interference) 5:40; Mike Stutzel, NMU (cross-checking) 6:18; Jimmy Jackson, NMU (obstruction-tripping) 12:50; Juna Alen, NMU (roughing) 18:50; Second pedod - 3, MICH, Jeff Tambellini 8 (Dwight Helminen, Mark Mink) 1:29; 4, NMU, Mike Stutzel 8 (Bryce Cockburn, Dirk Southern) 13:37 (pp). Penal- ties-Juna len, NMU (slashing) 5:05; Terry Harri- son, NMU (checking from behind) 8:37; Andy Burnes, MICH (roughing after the whistle) 12:25; Chris Gobert, NMU (roughing after the whistle) 12;25; David Moss, MICH (roughing after the whis- te) 12:25 Third period -5, MICH, Brandon Kaleniecki 5 (David Moss, Mark Mink) 13:57; 6, NMU, Terry Harrison 8 (Chris Gobert) 15:04; 7, NMU, Mike Stutzel 9 (Dirk Southern, Nathan Oystrick) Penalties - Jimmy Jack- son, NMU (slashing) 1:56; Andy Burnes, MICH (roughing) 6:46; Terry Harrison, NMU (cross-check- ing) 10:53;. Brandon Kaleniecki, MICH (boarding) 17:36; Shots on goal: MICH 17-6-11 34; NMU 11-7-9 27. Power plays: MICH 0 of 7; NMU 2 of 4. Saves - MICH, Montoya 11-3-1--22; NMU, Kowalski 7-4-1 -32. Referee: Brian Aaron. At Berry Events Center, Marquette. Attendance: 3,452. SATURDAY'S GAME Northem Michigan 4, Michigan1 Michigan 1 0 0 - 1 Northem Michigan 1 0 3 - 4 First period - 1, MICH, Brandon Kaleniecki 6 (Nick Martens, Andrew Ebbett) 13:05 (pp); 2, NMU Bryce Cockburn 5 (Mike Stutzel, Jamie Milam) 15:15 (pp). Penalties - Dwight Heminen, MICH (checking from behind) 0:16; Mike Stutze, NMU (checking from behind) 5:43; Dan Donnette, NMU (high sticking) 12:50; Andy Burnes, MICH (checking from behind) 13:54; TEAM, MICH (too many on ice) 14:45. Second period - none. Penalties - Nathan Oys- trick, NMU (obstruction-tripping) 1:45; Juna Alen, NMU (obstruction-holding) 5:13; John Shouneya, MICH (checking from behind) 6:31; John Shouneyia, MICH (high sticking) 6:31; Peter Michelutti, NMU (high sticking) 8:02. Third period - 3, NMU, Mike Stutzel 10 (Bryce Cockburn, Juna Aln) 5:34; 4,;NMU, Alex Sawruk 3 (Chris Gobert) 11:09; 5, NMU, Chris Gobert 9 (unas- sisted) 19:37(empty net) (sh). Penalties- Dwight Helminen, MICH (checking from behind) 0:24; Jamie Milam, NMU (roughing) 13:07; Mike Stutzel, NMU (boarding) 18:47. Shots on goal: MICH 6-11-8 25; NMU 9-2-8 19. Power plays: MICH 1 of 6; NMU 1 of5. Saves - MICH, Montoya 11-4-1 - 15; NMU, Kowal- ski &41- 24. Referee: Brian Aaron. At Berry Events Center, Marquette. Attendance: 3,873. HOW THEY FARED No. I North Dakota (14-1-) def. St. Cloud State 4-3, def. St. Could State 4-3. No. 2 New Hampshire (10-3-2) did not play. No. 3 Maine (11-1-2) lost to No. 4 Boston College 3-1, tied No. 4 Boston College 2-2. No. 4 Boston College (93-2) def. No. 3 Maine 3-1, tied No. 3 Maine 2-2. No. 5 Colorado College (13-1-2) def. No. 6 Denver 4-3, No. 6 Denver. No. 6 Denver (12-4-2) lost to No. 5 Col- orado College 4-3, def. No. 5 Colorado College 6-2. No. 7 Cornell (10-1-0) def. Western Michigan 6-1, def. Western Michigan 3-2. No.8 Michigan (1141) lost to Northern Michigan 5-2, lost to Northern Michigan 4-1. No. 9 Ferris State (1240) lost to Michi- gan State 6-2, def. Michigan State 5-3. No. 10 Minnesota (944) def. Wisconsin 3-0, def. Wisconsin 3-2. No. 11 Miami (12-5-1) lost to No. 14 Ohio State 4-0, lost to No. 14 Ohio State 5-3. No. 12 Harvard (9-0) def. Princeton 6-3, def. Yale 6-3. No. 13 Boston University (8-6-2) lost to Massachusetts 5-4. No. 14 Ohio State (1041) def. No. 11 Miami 4-0, def. No. 11 Miami 5-3. No. 15 Providence (941) lost to Merri- mack 2-1. CCHA ROUNDUP Friday's games: OHIO STATE 4, Miami 0 NORTHERN MicIGAN 5, Michigan 2 Nebraska Omaha 4, LA(E SUPERIOR 1 Michigan State 6, FERRIS STATE 2 Saturday's games: Ferris State 5, MICHIGAN STATE 3 NoREm Miac mA 4, Michigan 1 Nebraska Omaha 3, LAKE SUPERIOR 0 OHIO STATE 5, Miami 3 NOTRE DAME 6, Bowling Green 3 Yesterday's games: NOTRE DAME 5, Bowling Green 2 CCHA STANDINGS CCHA Overall Team W L T Pts W L T Ferris State 10 2 0 20 12 4 0 Northern Michigan 8 4 0 16 9 5 1 Ohio State 7 2 1 15 10 4 1 Miami 7 4 1 15 12 5 1 Michigan 6 3 1 13 11 4 1. Western Michigan 6 6 0 12 7 9 1 Notre Dame 6 6 0 12 6 6 2 Nebraska-Omaha 5 5 0 10 7 7 2 Alaska-Fairbanks 4 6 2 10 7 7 2 Michigan State 4 5 0 8 7 7 1 Bowling Green 1 9 1 3 3 9 1 Lake Superior 0 12 0 0 3 13 0 CCHA LEADERS Through Dec. 8 - League games only Michigan needs to be great as schedule gets tougher By Kyle O'Neill Daily Sports Writer MARQUETTE - They had their chances. The Wolverines outshot their Northern Michigan counterparts for two consecutive nights. Yet it was the Wildcats who executed as Michigan waited for Northern Michigan goalie Craig Kowalski to allow a goal. Michigan had its chances to go into the win- ter break deserving of a top-10 ranking. HOCKEY But after an inspiring Commentary weekend in Minneapolis and Madison, the Wolver- ines could do no better than lose to Northern Michigan for the fourth and fifth straight time, leaving many questions to be answered before the Great Lakes Invitational later this month. There were a number of chances that the Wolverines saw in front of the net. And yet - besides two goals on the week- end by Michigan freshman Brandon Kaleniec- ki - the Wildcats were the ones who actually took advantage of their opportunities, scoring five third-period goals (two of them empty- ; netters) to Michigan's one on Friday. Now the Wolverines leave Marquette an exposed team, and they know it. "I knew that people were overrating our team, and our team needs to understand how hard you have to work to compete in this league every night," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "I kept saying before, 'We'reI not that good, and we've got to get better if we're going to beat anyone that's a good team." The talent is there, but so far this season, the4 production has not been. Montoya has proven himself to be every- thing that his predecessors were as freshmen. The losses of Mike Cammalleri and Mike I Komisarek have not yet doomed the Wolver-I ines' season like many had thought they ] might. The 'freshmen skaters - Kaleniecki, Jeff s Blue gives Ca extra chance,, By Kyle O'Neill Daily Sports Writer MARQUETTE - If Michigan can take one , out of this weekend, it's that the Wolverines put thy defensive effort on the ice Saturday for the tender Al Montoya. This came one nigh Montoya was repeatedly under attack from N Michigan shooters, who used every second opp ty they got with no consistent opposition from gan's offense. Just a minute into the weekend opener, M made a pad save on a Chris Gobert slap shot, bu himself out of place when senior Terry Harrisoi free from the Wolverines' defenders to put the < ed shot into the half-empty net. At the 13:37 mark of the second period, the W Mike Stutzel attacked what had been a solid M penalty kill for the past few weeks, when he plo way through the left side of the defense, sh scored off his own rebound. Then when things looked like Michigan was g get back into the game down just one in the thi od, Gobert received a breakaway on the left sid ice. Montoya was up to the challenge again, si the initial attempt, but.was left helpless when H was there to notch his second tally of the night. Even when Michigan pulled its goalie with a left, it couldn't catch a break. The left Michig made the first save on Northern Michigan fr Dirk Southern, but Stutzel finished off the fou ond-chance goal of the night. "Yeah, rebounds were a factor in the game," gan coach Red Berenson said. "We've got to sticks as they beat us to the puck on the first go fourth goal was also a rebound goal where (M made the save and a forward didn't pick up th So it's defense more than anything ... not ji defensemen, but everybody playing better defen Although his goal kept the Wolverines in the freshman forward Jeff Tambellini was quick t that he and his teammates' defensive flaws w much to overcome. WI LDCATS1 Continued from Page 1B Northern Michigan coach Walt Kyle agreed with that assessment.1 "We took some penalties and they got some, momentum," Kyle said. "But we were able to bend; we didn't break. I think that was real important."l One of the main reasons for the scoreless second4 Tambellini, Andrew Ebbett and defenseman Danny Richmond - have looked like anything but newcomers when on the ice. So where's the problem? "The puck wasn't going in, obviously," Berenson said. "Our powerplay was a little bet- ter (Saturday) night. I thought we had better control and we had better shots. ... Our power- play, it's an issue obviously, and we don't have the confidence right now that we need to have. But that's something we're going to work on in the second half. We have a lot of things to get better at." But even though the puck may not be going in when it should, it is still being spread around too much. No one wants to take the extra shot. With all the praise bestowed on the team this season, there hasn't been an individual who has been able to take control of a game from an offensive standpoint. There is not one Michigan player in the nation's top 100 in points per game. Sophomore Dwight Helminen is the only Wolverine in the top 50 in any offensive cate- gory (when looking at per game averages) thanks to his three shorthanded goals. But Michigan isn't going to go to the Frozen Four on just shorthanded goals. It's now time for a John Shouneyia or Eric Nystrom, who was just named to the United States World Junior team last week, or even a talented, but very raw, Milan Gajic to produce more than one point a night, which no one except Helminen is close to doing. As was evident this weekend, Montoya can't win every game by himself. His streak of recov- ering well after allowing four or more goals was snapped at three games, when he surren- dered three one night after giving up four. What it means is that everyone on the team must find a role and stick with it. The scorers need to emerge so that scrappy players like Kaleniecki are actually fighting to get in front of the net for a reason. The defense needs to clamp down on clearing Montoya's rebounds, 6 JASON COOPER/Daily John Shouneyia and the Wolverines' offense are going to have to be more aggressive if they are going to put the puck in the net more than they did this weekend in Marquette. because good teams like Northern Michigan will show no mercy in making Michigan look second-rate. When the Wolverines return from the break, they will have their work cut out for them. Teams like Ferris State, Miami and Ohio State have all gone from pretenders to contenders and pose serious threats to the defending CCHA champs. Michigan State is vulnerable, but with a 6-2 win against the Bulldogs on Fri- day, the Spartans showed there is still plenty of life in East Lansing. "We did enough good things to come out of here better than being swept," Berenson said. Good can only go so far. It's time for "great" to emerge, or Michigan will be swept more often in the much tougher second half of the season. 0 Woodford latest injured Wolverine I By Dan Rosen Daily Sports Writer ALYSSA WOOD/Daily Michigan goalie Al Montoya saved the initial shots this weekend, but rebound shots to Wildcat goals. "(Friday) we didn't get back," Tambellini said. "We didn't get back into the zone as quick as we can. We didn't pick up sticks. And in this league if guys are loose in the slot they're going to score. "We gotta pay more attention coming back hard, and working harder to come back than we do coming up the ice." Northern Michigan goalie Craig Kowalski, on the other hand, seemed to have a magnet in his glove as no matter where the Wolverines shot it, the puck would end up in the junior's mitt foiling any thought of a sec- ond-chance goal. "I thought (that with) the chances we had, we should have scored," Tambellini said. "He made some great saves - I have to give it to him. But we didn't get peo- ple in front of him and that's what we have to do. They got people in front of our goalie and we didn't get in front of theirs." MARQUETTE - It has been a recurring theme for the Michigan hockey team this season: The same weekend that anyone returns from an injury, another player seems destined to go down. Forward Michael Woodford tore the ligaments in his thumb in his second HOCKEY shift during Friday Notebook night's 5-2 loss to Northern Michigan. It was the same game in which captain Jed Ortmeyer returned for the first time since Nov. 8. Woodford will have to wait for further X-rays in Ann Arbor to determine if the bone in his thumb is also broken, which might require surgery. "It's real disappointing," Woodford said. "After losing a game like that (Friday night), you want to be back. The positive is, you know, it's our last game for essentially a month so I have some time to rest. If there was any time to have the injury, I guess it would be now." Back on Nov. 8 and 9, Michigan got two of their injured captains back from injury - Andy Burnes and John Shouneyia. But Ortmeyer tore his MCL on Friday night of that weekend and was out for three weeks. On the season, the Wolverines have yet to play a game with their full ros- ter available. Jason Ryznar didn't make the trip to Marquette this week- end due to a nagging shoulder injury. "It just seems like every weekend there's a new injury," Woodford said. "I think coach is kind of getting frus- trated at it. I think the team is getting frustrated with it." The sophomore was optimistic that the second half of the season would provide some better luck. "When we do have our whole team, it could be a scary thing," Woodford said. "Right now we're just hitting some bumps in the road. But I think in the long run, once everyone gets healthy, we'll be ready to go." WHERE HE LEFT OFF: In his return on Friday, Ortmeyer didn't miss a beat. Even though the Omaha native didn't record a point, he helped create a number of scoring chances for Michigan - especially on the powerplay. "I think he'll be a little better with the puck as he gets in game shape," coach Red Berenson said of Ortmey- er. "But he was fine. Physically he was great. Emotionally, it was good for our team." SAY WHAT?: Before the game, Northern Michigan honored Indepen- dence Day. Not that school officials mistook the freezing temperatures and feet of accumulated snow for July 4. At the request of the Wildcats' two Finnish players, the school played that country's national anthem to honor their national holiday. Both freshman defenseman Juha Alen and backup goalie Tuomas Tark- ki were born in the Scandanavian country. 0 period was Kowalski. The junior made 11 saves in the period, including a sprawling stop with his stick with just 10 seconds left. Kowalski had headed into the right corner to play a loose puck. But his pass out of the zone went straight to Michigan's Milan Gajic along the blueline. The sophomore let one fly to try to beat Kowalski before he could get back to the net. But the Wildcats goalie dove with his stick out and deflected the puck away. Stutzel, who had four points on the weekend, then broke the tie five and half minutes into the third. Northern Michigan dumped the puck into the back left corner of the Michigan zone and it caromed to the senior, who wristed it past Montoya. "We talked about it before the game - how (we were) going to dump the puck," Stutzel said. "(We made) a perfect dump and (forward Dirk Southern) left it. I just shot it on net and it was lucky enough to go in." Six minutes later, the Wildcats iced the victory. They forced the puck free from the Michigan defense to forward Alex Sawruk, and the junior blasted it into the top right corner of the net to give his team the two-goal lead. "We've had a great first half, but this really puts a sour taste in your mouth when you get swept," Beren- son said. Three stars of the weekend A i---------rr7.. - - .Ta rr - Am