4B - The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - March 15, 2004 4 Friday's game NEBRASKA-OMAHA 0 Saturday's game W NEBRASKA-OMAHA 3 Sunday's game % NEBRASKA-OMAHA 2 I MICHIGAN 2 MICHIGAN 1 MICHIGAN 5 I SUNDAY'S GAME Michigan 5, Nebraska-Omaha 2 Nebraska-Omaha 1 1 0 - 2 Michigan 1 0 4 - 5 First period -1. MICH, Jeff Tambellini 13 (Matt Hun- wick, David Moss) 12:52; 2. UNO, Alex Nikiforuk 6 (Mike Lefley) 16:12 (pp). Penalties - Josh Weeks, UNO (high sticking) 4:15; Michael Woodford, MICH (slashing) 4:15; Brent Kisio, UNO (slashing) 4:15; Andrew Wong, UNO0(holing the stick) 7:19; Mike Brown, MICH (hooking) 14:28. Second period -3. UNO, Scott Parse 16 (Kaleb Betts, Wong) 18:29. Penalties - Dan Knapp, UNO (roughing) 7:36; Knapp, UNO (roughing) 11:30; Milan Gajic, MICH (roughing) 11:30; Jason Krischuk, UNO (holding) 15:23. Third period -4. MICH, Dwight Helminen 16 (Brown) 6:55; 5. MICH, Eric Werner 8 (Andrew Ebbett) 7:54; 6. MICH, Tambellini 14 (Eric Nystrom, David Rohlfs) 9:38 (pp); 7. MICH, Helminen 17 (unassisted) 18:31 (en). Penalties - Brett Davis, UNO (holding the stick) 4:17; Davis, UNO (interference) 9:12; Jason Dest, MICH (high sticking) 10:12; Matt Hunwick, MICH (tripping) 12:14; T.J. Hensick, MICH (hooking) 16:17; Henisck, MICH (10-minute misconduct) 16:17; Andy Burnes, MICH (holding) 16:26; Dan Hacker, UNO (roughing) 19:40. Shots on Goal: UNO 968 23; MICH 10-11-14 35. Power plays: UNO 15; MICH 1-7. Saves: UNO, Chris Holt (5-17- 2) - 30; MICH, Al Montoya (24-10.2) - 21 Referee: Stephen Mclnchak. At: Yost Ice Arena Attendance: 5,873 SATURDAY'S GAME Nebraska-Omaha 3, Michigan 1 Nebraska-Omaha 1 1 1 - 3 Michigan 1 0 0 - 1 First period -1. MICH, Mike Brown 7 (Eric Nystrom, Jason Dest) 2:55; 2. UNO, Scott Parse 15 (Mike Gabi- net, Andrew Wong) 14:00 (pp). Penalties -Alex Niki- foruk, UNO (holding) 11:31; Nystrom, MICH (roughing) 12:14; Nystrom, MICH (roughing) 12:14; Dan Hacker, UNO (hitting from behind) 12:14; Andy Burnes, MICH (slashing) 13:36; Nikiforuk, UNO (holding) 18:56. Second period - 3. N Wong 11 (Kaleb Betts) 9:40. Penalties-Phil Angell, UNO (hooking) 5:20; Brett Davis, UNO (high sticking) 7:18; Mike Eickman, UNO (roughing) 8:21; David Rohlfs, MICH (roughing) 8:21; Jason Ryznar, MICH (slashing) 1111; Michael Woodford, MICH (roughing) 12:43; Chris Holt, UNO (roughing) 12:43. Third period - 4. Anthony Adams, UNO 3 (Nikiforuk) 13:55. Penalties - Ryan Bennett, UNO (tripping) 10:03. Shots on goal: UNO 13-7-7 27; MICH 13-9-8 30. Power plays: UNO 1-3; MICH 0-6. Saves: UNO, Holt (5-16-2) - 29; MICH, AL Montoya (23-10-2) - 24 Referee: Stephen Mclnchak At: Yost Ice Arena Attendance: 6,504 FRIDAY'S GAME Michigan 2, Nebraska-Omaha 0 Nebraska-Omaha 0 0 0 - 0 Michigan 1 1 0 - 2 First period -1. MICH, David Rohlfs 7 (Jeff Tambelli- ni)12:06 (pp). Penalties-Jason Krischuk, UNO (cross-checking) 2:09; Mike Gabinet, UNO (high stick- ing) 3:24; Kaleb Betts, UNO (clipping) 10:44; Matt Hunwick, MICH (hooking)12:34; Tim Cook, MICH (hooking) 14:51; Eric NystromMICH (slashing) 15:33; Scott Parse, UNO (tripping) 16:50. Second period -2. MICH, Dwight Helminen (Nystrom, Hunwick) 15:38. Penalties - Krischuk, UNO (holding) 4:08; Cook, MICH (tripping) 17:28; Betts, UNO (high sticking) 18:37. Third period - No scoring. Penalties - Andrew Ebbett, MICH (roughing) 1:39; Anthony Adams, UNO (roughing) 1:39; Jason Ryznar, MICH (roughing) 1:39; Mike Lefley, UNO (roughing) 1:39; Milan Gajic, MICH (roughing) 1:39; Dan Knapp, UNO (roughing) 1:39; Mike Brown, MICH (holding) 3:05; Andrew Wong, UNO (tripping) 3:20 Mike Gabinet, UNO (interference) 5:49; Parse, UNO (high sticking) 16:56; Ryznar, MICH (holding) 19:06.. Shyst on Goal: ;UN8-62 16; MICH 1&10-14 42. Power plays: UNO 0-5; MICH 19. Saves: UNO, Chris Holt (4-16- 2)- 40; MICH, Al Montoya (23-9-2) -16 Referee: Stephen Mclnchak. At: Yost Ice Arena Attendance: 6,518 CCHA iuCAP The six winners advance to Joe Louis Arena next weekend. No. 2 MIAMI Vs. No. 11 Lake Superior Miami wins 2-0 Miami's Todd Grant scored 12:05 into overtime on Saturday, clinching a 2- win to sweep the Lakers. Grant also scored in Friday's 4-0 win, and Brandon Crawford-West made nine saves for the shutout. No. 3 MICHIGAN STATE VS. No. 10 Ferris State Michigan State 2-0 Ferris State let this series slip away, erasing two two-goal leads on Friday, but ultimatel losing 6-4. The Bull- dogs blew a 3-0 lead on Saturday to lose 5-3. Michigan State's Jim Slater had a pair of goals on Friday. No. 4 OHIo STATE VS. No. 9 Bowling Green Ohio State wins 2-0 A combined total of 3,848 fans saw both games in Columbus this week- end. The Buckeyes' Sean Collins was ejected from Saturday's 5-2 win for spearing and will miss next weekend's quarterfinal game. No. 5 NOTRE DAME VS. No. 8 Western Michigan Notre Dame wins 2-1 After winning Friday's game 4-2, the Irish were shut out by Western Michigan netminder Eric Marvin and the Broncos won 4-0. Yester- day, overtime was needed for Notre Dame to pull out a 5-4 win. No. 6 ALASKA-FAIRBANKS VS. No. 7 Northern Michigan Northern Michigan wins 2-0 The Last Frontier didn't intimidate the Wildcats, as they secured the only road sweep of this year's tour- nament. Northern Michigan goalie Tuomas Tarkki turned aside 68 shots this weekend. SUPER 6 MATCHUPS Holt surprises Yost crowd By Sharad Mattu Daily Sports Writer For two games and forty minutes, everything was different in Yost Ice Arena. It didn't sound the same and it didn't feel the same. The per- formance of the Michigan hockey team certainly didn't look the same, either. Why'd this happen? Well, yester- day's game wasn't included in stu- dent's season ticket plans, so the attendance was paltry (the announced crowd was 5,873, but it was less). Based on the magnitude of the game, it could have been played in Michigan Stadium in front of 110,000. Everyone was tight - from the fans to the players to the coaches. Though everything changed in yesterday's final period, there's still one more reason Michigan barely eked out its first-round series against the CCHA's worst team: Nebraska-Omaha freshman goal- tender Chris Holt and the Maver- icks' defense came to Ann Arbor with a sound gameplan, one that left Michigan coaches and players searching for answers until the weekend's final period. The Mavericks had been prepar- ing to play Michigan for three weeks, and they were ready to com- bat the Wolverines' deep, talented offense. Nebraska-Omaha focused on crowding the area in front of its net so as to force Michigan to fire away from the perimeter. Nebraska- Omaha planned to block the shots they did let loose. The plan worked. The Maverick defenders stopped 91 shots in the series, while the Wolverines pre- vented just 25 shots from reaching their goal. They also shut down Michigan's powerplay 20 times in 22 attempts. "Nebraska came up with a great series," Berenson said. "Their goalie played well, their team start- ed to believe in their system. Their coach said that was best they played all year." And most of the shots that made it past the Mavericks' defense were stopped by Holt. The Mavericks' 3.46 goals against average is more than one goal higher than Michi- gan's team GAA, but nobody who watched this weekend's games would have noticed that. Michigan's offense was slowly coming alive yesterday, and Holt made many eye-popping saves in the second period to keep the Mav- ericks in the lead. "They struggled in goals-against this season," Berenson said. "This kid came in here and stood on his head. "But if you look at the shot chart, we weren't getting shots from the slot area. All our shots were coming from bad angles." Last year, Holt played on the U.S. Under-18 team with current Wolverine freshmen Mike Brown, T.J. Hensick and Matt Hunwick. Though Holt's performance took many by surprise, his three former teammates weren't among them. "It's not really out of the ordi- nary," Hunwick said. "He was a pretty solid goaltender last year. We were a young team so we couldn't help out a whole lot." Holt, who was drafted by the New York Rangers last summer, believes that the lessons he learned from this weekend's series will pay off the next three years. "I feel as though I matured a lot," Holt said. "Playing against this team has been a real pleasure; it's been a real battle and I know what I need to do ... Hopefully I can come back and really flourish next season." But with the CCHA Tournament and possibly the NCAA Tournament on the line, Michigan finally came to life in the third period. Only 5- of-26 shots were blocked, and Jeff Tambellini's game-clinching goal came on the powerplay. But, more than anything, the Wolverines are relieved to still be alive. "This weekend seemed to take a month," Berenson said. 0 RYAN WEINER/Daily All weekend, the Mavericks' defenders blocked shots the Wolverines fired. And when they had opportunities, like Milan Gajic above, they were from poor angles. to find scoring touch By Brian Schick Daily Sports Writer Michigan sophomore Jeff Tambellini estab- lished himself last season as one of the premier goal scorers in the country, notching 26 goals in his freshman campaign. Tam- bellini entered the season DOgi right where he left off - leading the team in goals - scoring nine goals in his first 10 games this season, including a hat trick against Quinnipiac on Oct. 18. At that point, it looked as if he could challenge the single-sea- son goal record held by current coach Red Berenson - who scored 43 goals in the 1961- 62 season. Then came the well-documented dry spell of 16 straight games without lighting the lamp. On several occasions, Tambellini refused to call his drought a "slump," as he continued to take good shots, but just couldn't find the back of the net. Finally, he snapped his dubious streak and scored a powerplay goal against Bowling Green on Feb. 20. Since then, he has exploded for five more goals in the past seven games, including two in last night's 5-2 clincher against Nebraska-Omaha. Berenson held a meeting before yesterday's game and called on the players to turn up the intensity. He called for all his players to take their respective games to the next level. "He confronted us and told us to step up," Tambellini said. "We were not playing well. (Saturday) was an embarrassment, and that should never happen to Michigan." Tambellini especially seemed to take the talk to heart, as he notched his first multi- goal game since Nov. 7. Tambellini's recent success could be attrib- uted to his return to the powerplay unit. With one of the hardest shots on the team, the Port Moody, B.C., native has always been seen as a sniper who could rip shots from the blueline with the man advantage. But for most of this season, he was taken off the powerplay unit in favor of Andrew Ebbett. Since Berenson mixed up his lines two weeks ago, Michigan has had one of its best weapons back on the man advantage. Tambellini finally got the chance to break last night's game wide open on a powerplay in the third period. He faked his initial shot, and it froze the Nebraska-Omaha defense just enough to get a clean shot through the slot and past the Mavericks' netminder Chris Holt. "That was something we were working on in the pregame skate, being able to take a step," Tambellini said. "The defense bit on the first shot, and (1) took one step by them to get it through. I got lucky enough that it didn't hit a couple of sticks." MIGHTY MAVERICKS: Despite finishing last in the CCHA with just five conference wins, Nebraska-Omaha gave Michigan a run for its money. Saturday's 3-1 loss was Michigan's first defeat of the Mavericks in Ann Arbor, and evens the two teams' playoff record at 2- 2. This was also Michigan's first loss in the second game of a first round series in the CCHA Tournament since 1988. "I still can't believe that they finished last place in our league - they're not a last-place team," Berenson said. "Their forwards were quick, they had some isolated great chances to score and they didn't go in." RYAN WEINER/Daily Dwight Helminen and the Wolverines narrowly avoided getting bowled over by Nebraska-Omaha. MAVERICKS Continued from Page1B state of intense elation. It also prompted Nebraska-Omaha coach Mike Kemp to take a timeout to stop the bleeding. A little over a minute after the timeout, Nebraska-Omaha defenseman Brett Davis picked up an interference penalty. The mistake left the Wolverines - who struggled mightily on the man-advantage for most of the weekend, going 2-for-22 - with a chance to redeem themselves. They did exactly that. With 10:22 showing on the clock, sopho- more Jeff Tambellini collected the puck just inside the blueline and fired through traffic, beating Holt five-hole. "I got lucky enough that the puck missed a couple of sticks," Tambellini said. "We had (freshman David Rohlfs and junior Eric Nys- trom) sitting in front. I'm sure that (Holt) did- n't see a thing." Tambellini's goal all but sealed the deal for Michigan. Helminen added an empty-net goal with 1:29 remaining. Berenson noted that the players felt that if they had lost the game, and subsequently squandered the series, then their season could have been over. "Our team knew that this could be our last game," Berenson said. "Everything else is out of your control. We didn't make a big deal of that ... (but) you don't want it to end that way." Instead of sitting back and letting the NCAA Selection Committee determine its fate, Michigan will move on to the semifinal round of the CCHA Tournament. The Wolver- ines will take the ice on Friday in Detroit. Their opponent will be the lowest remaining seed after Thursday's quarterfinal games are complete. If the Wolverines win the CCHA Tourna- ment, they receive the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. 0 r4a Ujvj a