4B - The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - February 16, 2004 Friday's game MIAMI REDHAWKS 1 Saturday's game MIAMI REDHAWKS MICHIGAN WOLVERINES 5 8 MICHIGAN WOLVERINES 4 4 SATURDAY'S GAME Michigan 8, Miami 5 Miami 2 1. Michigan 4 3 2 1. - 5 - 8 Rrst period -1, MIA, Matt Christie 18 (Derek Edwardson, Andy Geene) 11:50; 2, MICH, Milan Gajic 10 (Andrew Ebbett, Brandon Rogers) 13:18; 3, MIA, Matt Davis 4 (unassisted) 14:37; 4, MICH, Dwight Helminen 9 (Eric Werner) 15:36; 5, MICH, Brandon Kaleniecki 14 (T.J. Hensick) 16:04, 6. MICH, Hensi ck 10 (Rogers, Ebbett) 17:42 Penalties - Todd Grant, MIA (boarding) 5:17; Jeff Tambellini, MICH (high stick- ing) 11:14; Ben Tharp, MIA (hooking) 12:10; Greene, MIA (slashing) 16:22; Greene , MIA (interference) 16:57; David Moss, MICH (slashing) 17:46; Mike Kompon, MIA (slashing) 17:46. Second period - 7, MIA, Chris Busby 11 (Taylor Hus- tead, Grant) 2:03; 8, MICH, Rogers 5 (Milan Gajic, Kaleniecki) 4:25; 9, MICH, Helminen 10 (Andy Burnes, Matt Hunwick) 9:40; 10, MICH, Matt Hun- wick 1 (Hensick) 13:42. Penalties - Joe Pomarans- ki, MIA (high sticking) 2:26; Tambellini, MICH (roughing after the whistle) 5:21; Joe Cooper, MIA (roughing after the whistle) 5:21; Burnes, MICH (high sticking) 6:49; Nick Martens, MICH (roughing) 9:09; Greene, MIA (roughing) 9:09, Hunwick, MICH (holding) 9:09; Al Montoya, MICH (unsportsmanlike conduct) 17:29. Third period - 11, MIA, Derek Edwardson 16 (Greene, Busby) 0:32; 12, MICH, Moss 7 (unassist- ed) 2:54; 13, MIA, Greene 6 (Kompon, Christie) 8:25. Penalties - Moss, MICH (roughing) 7:12; Brian Sipotz, MIA (hooking) 10:19; Stephen Dennis, MIA (slashing) 17:09; Hensick, MICH (slashing) 17:09. Shots on goal: MICH 14-9-8 31; MIA 13-10-17 40. Power plays: MICH 3 of 6; MIA 2 of 5. Saves: MICH, Al Mon- toya (19-7-1) - 35; MIA, Brandon Crawford-West (16-5-2) - 15, Nick Petraglia (0-1-0) - 8. Referee: Brian Aaron. At: Yost Ice Arena Attendance: 6,874 FRIDAY'S GAME Michigan 4, Miami 1 Miami 1 0 0 - 1 Michigan 2 1 1 - 4 First period -1, MICH, David Moss 6 (Eric Nystrom, Jeff Tambellini) 4:12; 2, MICH, Jason Ryznar 5 (Andrew Ebbett, Moss) 15:39; 3, MIA, Taylor Hustead 7 (Geoff Smith, Todd Grant) 16:46. Penalties - Stephen Dennis, MIA (tripping) 2:52; Andy Greene, MIA (hooking) 5:03;' Michael Woodford, MICH (board- ing) 9:02; Brandon Kaleniecki, MICH (hooking) 13:05. Second period - 4, MICH, Dwight Helminen 8 (Mike Brown) 12:53. Penalties - Greg Hogeboom, MIA (slashing) 2:29; Greene, MIA (roughing) 6:39; Milan Gajic, MICH (roughing after the whistle) 6:39; Kale- niecki, MICH (roughing after the whistle) 6:39; Joe Cooper, MIA (roughing after the whistle) 10:00; Jason Dest, MICH (roughing after the whistle) 10:00; Pat evendusky, MIA (roughing after the whistle) 10:00; Matt Davis, MIA (boarding) 19:54. Third period - 3, MICH, Eric Werner 7 (Milan Gajic, T.J. Hensick) 12:20; 4, MICH, Brandon Rogers 4 (Hen- sick, Gajic) 13:43; 5, MICH, Ryznar 5 (Ebbett, Moss) 19:05. Penalties - Brandon Rogers, MICH (tripping) 4:11. Shots on goal: MICH 11-7-9 27; MIA 9-8-8 25. Power plays: MICH 1 of 5; MIA 0 of 4. Saves: MICH, Al Mon- toya (18-7-1) - 24; MIA, Brandon Crawford-West (16-4-2) - 23. Referee: Brian Aaron At: Yost Ice Arena Attendance: 6,847 M' STATS 0 TONY DING/Daily Junior David Moss closed out Michigan's scoring on Saturday night with his goal early in the third period. Moss's goal was Michigan's eighth of the night, the team's highest offensive output of the season. w1E U m U EU " __ FILICE Continued from Page 18 engaged. Michigan identified its work early this week - No. 8 Miami - and it was a heavy load. The RedHawks entered this weekend as the CCHA's top team, leading the second- place Wolverines by three points. Definition 2: Commercial, industrial, or professional dealings. "Professional dealings" exactly describes how Michigan dealt with the weeklong game preparation. On the ice, Michi- gan's practices ran smoothly, as usual. From what I saw at practice every day, the Wolverines worked with the fluidity, discipline and determination of seasoned veterans. Off the ice, players expressed their concentrated mindsets to the media, applauding Miami's efforts so far this year and stress- ing how difficult the weekend's series was going to be. Definition 3: A commercial enterprise or establishment. The establishment was Yost Ice Arena. Constructed in 1923, this may be Michigan's most hallowed structure (including the Big House). Entering the weekend, the Wolverines carried a 13-2 record in its friendly (for Michigan at least) confines. Definition 4: Volume or amount of commercial trade. The volume of trade was huge this weekend, as first place in the CCHA was up for grabs. Definition 5: Commercial dealings; patronage. The patronage, or support, was present the entire week. This weekend's series had a buzz usually reserved for a foot- ball or basketball matchup with the squad from Lansing. Heading into Yost on Friday night, I felt a little extra excite- ment from the jersey-sporting faithful. Definition 6: One's rightful or proper concern or interest. During nre game warm-uns the Wolverines were focused r1r'R w" N O!' on the task at hand. There was no conversation between play- ers and not a smile was struck; Michigan was concentrated on its proper concern. Definition 7: Serious work or endeavor Dictionary.com's usage example in this definition - "Got right down to business" - fit perfectly. This is exactly what Michigan did Friday night. The Wolverines dominated right off the bat, jumped out to a 2-0 lead and never looked back. Definition 8: An affair or matter Again, I'll to reference Dictionary.com's usage example: "We will proceed no further with this business." After Miami jumped out to a 2-1 lead in the 15th minute of Saturday's first period, Michigan said, 'I think not' and notched three scores in just over two minutes. Definition 9: An incidental action performed by an actor on the stage to fill a pause between lines or to provide an interesting detail. This may be the finest point of comparison there is. After Michigan's win on Friday night, I caught a Jason Ryznar - beaming with an ear-to-ear grin, as usual - outside of the lockerroom. Although goofy and lighthearted off the ice, the Anchorage, Alaska, native becomes Michigan's resident bull- dozer on it. I playfully introduced the idea of Ryznar's 6-foot- 4, 205 pound frame meeting with Miami's Brian Sipotz - a 6-foot-7, 245 pound behemoth. "He's got about 50 pounds on me, but I think I could take him," Ryznar responded to my request. Seven minutes into the third period, with Michigan up 8-4, Ryznar stayed true to his word. Sipotz tried to sneak up and cheap shot Ryznar at center ice. But, Ryznar saw Sipotz out of the corner of his eye, turned and dropped the mass of humanity to the ice with relative ease. It was an incidental action that def- initely filled a pause between line changes. Definition 10 (informal): Verbal abuse; scolding. The verbal abuse came viaYost's finest, who chanted "Over- rated" and "Warm up the bus" with over four minutes left in the third period of Saturday's game. The "scolding" came from Red Berenson following the Wolverines' 8-5 win. The never- satisfied - AKA business-minded - Berenson spoke with great discontent about the way his team gave up five goals, claiming Michigan was "lucky" to come out with a win. Definition 11 (obsolete): The condition of being busy. This is what Michigan has been and should continue to be all season. The Wolverines are as business as business gets. Last week made it official. And a true business methodology can increase a team's production ten fold. If you combine this business approach with Michigan's overwhelming talent, the result will be impressive. It may be outright inspiring. And it definitely, for the fourth year in a row, could be Frozen. Unlike the Michigan hockey team, Gennaro Filice isfarfrom 'business,'and can be reached at gfilice@umich.edu. REDHAWKS Continued from Page 1B behalf of the Wolverines. Less than 30 seconds after Helmi- nen's goal, the freshman center won a faceoff in the RedHawks' zone and quickly delivered the puck to linemate Brandon Kaleniecki. With winger David Rohlfs' 6-foot-3 body screening Crawford-West, Kaleniecki quickly fired a one-timer into the top right cor- ner of the goal to give Michigan a lead it would never relinquish. But he was far from done. Immediate- ly after the goal, Hensick - who is small on the ice but surprises opponents with his physicality - was looking for some- one to flatten. He found Miami's John Lenz, and leveled him near mid-ice, snapping his stick in half in the process. Ten seconds later, the Wolverines were on the powerplay, and 35 seconds after that, they had a 5-on-3 advantage. After methodically passing the puck and looking for a hole in Miami's defense, junior Brandon Rogers fed Hensick across the ice. The freshman forward, whose 36 points lead the team,z quickly redirected the puck just inside the post past Crawford-West with 2:18 left in the period to make it 4-2. The goal capped a wild 5:52, during which the two teams combined to score six goals. When the two teams headed for the locker rooms, Michigan had fired 13 of the final 14 shots on goal in the period to surge ahead. "It was pretty crazy," Rogers said. "It wasn't the style of hockey we were try- ing to come out and play. We didn't come out that well but we started to pick it up at the end of the period. The puck was bouncing for them a few times and luckily for us a few more times. It wasn't our best period, but we were able to come out with the lead." Miami showed signs of life as it came back onto the ice and scored a goal at 2:03 to cut the lead to one. But Joe Pomaranski committed a penalty 23 seconds later, and Rogers made the RedHawks pay by tallying a goal from the right faceoff circle. Michigan added two more goals in the period to take extend its lead to 7-3. "They kept scoring, and we kept scoring," Hensick said. "You never knew which one was going to be the game-winner." The No. 8 Redhawks (15-7-2 CCHA, 18-11-3 overall) came into the weekend believing years of frustration at Yost Ice Arena would come to an end, but left reeling. Saturday's loss was Miami's 17th straight in Ann Arbor; Michigan is 38-2-1 at home against Miami. "We had too many defensive lapses" said Derek Edwardson, who leads the CCHA in scoring with 40 points. "It had nothing to do with goaltending. We had too many lapses, gave them too many good chances." Friday's game was far different, with Michigan in control from the start. An early penalty gave Michigan a powerplay, and winger Eric Nys- trom set up center David Moss for an easy goal with a nice pass at 4:12. Forward Jason Ryznar added a goal with just over four minutes left in the first period when, on a two-on-one, he stretched his arm out and batted a pass from linemate Andrew Ebbett toward the net. Miraculously, he placed it perfectly, just past Crawford- West's left leg. From there, Montoya made it stand, allowing just one goal when a collision left a loose puck in front of the net for the RedHawks to clean up. After Friday's win, Berenson empha- sized the importance of the game's start, saying: "We knew the start of the game would be huge. We had to put our best foot forward early to get some momen- tum and get the crowd in the game." But, because the No. 5 Wolverines (16-5-1, 21-8-1) were unable to dupli- cate their fiery start on Saturday, Beren- son came away from the weekend just happy to be in first. "That's college hockey," Berenson said. "It's heart attack hockey. It is good we won two games. They were huge games to win. I like the game last night. Tonight, I don't know what it was but we got through it and we'll take it." Player Hensick Ebbett Gajic Kaleniecki Helminen Tambellini Moss Rogers Nystrom Werner Ryznar Hunwick Brown Rohlfs Martens Henderson Dest Woodford Kautz Burnes Cook Ruden Wyzgowski Montoya Mayhew GP 30 30 27 30 28 26 25 30 30 29 23 28 29 30 23 12 29 27 6 26 19 5 3 28 1 A 26 23 14 8 10 9 11 13 7 9 8 10 4 2 3 2 3 4 2 2 1 1 0 0 0 Pta 36 29 24 22 20 18 18 18 16 16 13 11 10 -V 6 4 4 4 3 2 1 1 0 0 0 +/- PIM 7 18 12 36 3 24 8 34 2 0 1 14 E 14 3 36 -2 42 5 28 12 12 12 48 6 37 6 20 2 30 2 8 9 23 -4 35 3 4 9 22 6 22 - 0 -2 4 - 18 - 0 Sht 95 71 74 97 84 120 54 52 60 44 33 32 70 41 23 18 15 33 8 18 12 0 2 0 0 TOTALS 30 111172 283 100 529 1056 Player GP GA Avg Svs Pct Mins Montoya 28 61 2.21 665 .9161652:32 Ruden 5 7 3.09 57 .891 136:08 Mayhew 1 1 3.54 12 .923 16:56 TOTALS 30 69 2.30 734 .914 1747:8 CCHA STANDINGS RYAN WEINER/Daily) Brandon Kaleniecki upends Miami's Taylor Husted on Friday. Kaleniecki extended his team lead in goals to 14. Team Michigan Miami Michigan State Ohio State Alaska Fairbanks Notre Dame Western Michigan Northern Michigan Ferris State Bowling Green Lake Superior Nebraska-Omaha CCHA W L T Pts 16 5 1 33 15 7 2 32 14 9 1 29 14 10 0 28 13 12 1 27 11 10 3 25 11 10 2 24 11 11 0 22 9 14 1 20 7 11 5 19 4 14 4 12 4 16 4 12 Overall W L T 21 8 1 1811 3 1815 1 1913 0 1415 1 15 11 4 1513 3 1612 2 1415 3 9 14 8 6 16 6 6 19 5 Top line finally producing Powerplay slowly emerging as a threat By Brian Schick Daily Sports Writer Michigan's top scoring line would seem to strike fear into opponents' hearts. The combina- tion of junior Dwight Helminen at center, and sophomore Jeff Tambellini and junior Eric Nys- trom on his wings, it would appear to be a can't- Saturday's results: MICHIGAN 8, Miami 5 NOTRE DAME 4, Ferris State 1 Northern Michigan 5, Wayne State 2 BOWLING GREEN 0 , Lake Superior 0 OHIO STATE 4, Nebraska-Omaha 3 Michigan State 3, ALASKA FAIRBANKS 2 Saturday's results: MICHIGAN 4, Miami 1 NOTRE DAME 4, Ferris State 2 Northern Michigan 4, Wayne State 1 BOWLING GREEN 3 , Lake Superior 2 OHIO STATE 3, Nebraska-Omaha 1 ALASKA FAIRBANKS 5, Michigan State 4 miss combination. Yet in recent weeks, this has- n't been the case, as Michi- gan's No. 1 line has struggled to find the scoring touch. It has been Michigan's second line of T.J. Hensick, Milan Gajic and -do Michigan's seven goals came off of Helminen's aspects of the v stick, bringing his season total to 10. and goaltendin Nystrom also picked up a goal to cap the scor- ing on Friday night. Tambellini, despite not light- ing the lamp, notched 10 shots this weekend. PROF.M Several times he had great shots robbed by the Offen Miami goaltenders, and his facial expressions showed his frustration. Miami goaltender Brandon Crawford-West made perhaps the best save of the weekend against Tambellini. On Saturday, Tambellini found an opening along the boards and ripped a booming shot toward an opening along the near post, but Crawford-West made an amazing glove save to rob Tambellini of a goal. Piti Bi "I've said all along that's not a checking line," Def Berenson said. "That should be our power line and those are our three top returning goal scorers from last season. They're a line that should be able to play with anyone, but should be able to outscore them. It was good to see them on the board tonight." MIGHTY MAN ADVANTAGE: The Michigan power- play - which at one time couldn't seem to take Pao. advantage of its man-advantage - has once again Sp' become a force to be reckoned with. The Wolver- ines have scored a powerplay goal in their last five Brandon Kaleniecki - dubbed the "Price Club Line" because it scores in bunches - that has produced the bulk of Michigan's scoring over the past few series. But this weekend's series against Miami gave Michigan's first line a chance to break out of its cold spell. In a coaching switch, Michigan coach Red Berenson decided not to match his top line with Miami's top line. As a result, rather than try- ing to shut down Miami's best players, Michigan's top line could focus solely on offense. The difference was immediately obvious, as the { a