4B - The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - February 14, 2005 LINE OF THE WEEK Chad Kolarik Center Friday vs. Nebraska-Omaha I Goal, 2 Assists NOTABLE QUOTABLE PLAYERS OF THE WEEK " don't want to jinx it, so I don't want to talk about it that much." - Michigan captain Eric Nystrom on the bounces going his way against Nebraska-Omaha. Alex Nikiforuk (Nebraska-Omaha) Nikiforuk notched a goal and an assist in Saturday's 4-3 loss to the Wolverines. He was turning Michigan defenders around all weekend. T.J. Hensick (Michigan) Hensick had five points this weekend, including game-winning assists in both games and a game-tying goal on Saturday. I Im mv FRIDAY'S GAME Michigan Wolverines 6 Nystrom (2), Kolarik, Werner, Kaleniecki, Hensick Nebraska-Omaha Mavericks 4 Parse (2), Nikiforuk, Hacker Blue unstoppable when Hensick is scoring SATURDAY'S GAME MAHA - So you want to know how valuable T.J. Hensick is to the Michigan hockey team? At this point in the season, there's one thing you need to know: The Wolver- ines are 14-0-0 when the sophomore Hobey Baker Michigan Wolverines Hensick (2), Hunwick, Moss 4 Nebraska-Omaha Mavericks 3 Knapp, Nikiforuk, Bagron Michigan 4, Nebraska-Omaha 3 Michigan 022 - 4 Nebraska-Omaha 2 1 0 - 3 First period -1. UNO, Dan Knapp 4 (David Phil- lips, Alex Nikiforuk) 4:26. 2. UNO, Alex Nikiforuk 8 (Dan Knapp, Dan Hacker) 8:23. Penalties - Jason Dest, MICH (interference) 3:57; Jason Dest, MICH (slashing) 7:06; Kaleb Betts, UNO (roughing) 7:06; Kaleb Betts, UNO (roughing) 10:04; Mike Lefley, UNO (elbowing) 17:39; Michael Woodford Jr, MICH (holding the stick) 17:39; Mike Lefley, UNO (roughing) 17:39; Michael Woodford Jr, MICH (10-minute miscon- duct) 17:39. Second period -3. MICH, Matt Hunwick 6 (Eric Nystrom, Eric Werner) 2:18. 4. UNO, Bill Bagron 3 (Micah Sanford) 3:05. 5. MICH, T. J. Hensick 18 (Chad Kolarik, Al Montoya) 5:23. Penal- ties - Bryan Marshall, UNO (slashing) 2:00; Joe Grimaldi, UNO (high sticking) 4:32; David Rohifs, MICH (tripping) 6:00. Third period - 6. MICH. T. J. Hensick 19 (Kevin Porter, Nick Martens) 10:41. 7. MICH, David Moss 8 (T. J. Hensick) 17:49. Penalties - Bran- don Kaleniecki, MICH (hooking) 5:07; Matt Hun- wick, MICH (ATW roughing) 19:26; Dan Knapp, UNO (ATW roughing) 19:26; Brandon Rogers, MICH (cross-checking) 19:50. Shots on goal: MICH 8-18-10-36; UNO 6-5-8-19. Power plays: MICH 2 of 4; UNO 1 of 4. Saves - MICH, Al Montoya (4-4-8) - 16; UNO, Chris Holt (8-16- 8) - 32. Referee: Dan Brown At: Qwest Center Omaha Attendance: 10,415. 'M' STATS candidate scores a goal. This weekend, Hensick scored three goals and added two assists. So you can probably guess what happened, Michigan swept Nebraska-Omaha on the road. The Qwest Center seemed like a pretty tough place to play - especially down two goals, like the Wolverines were on Saturday night. But Hensick's been spe- IAN HERBERT Caught up in the Game - average numbers for a lot of players but a slump if you're T.J. Hensick. And, not surprisingly, Michi- gan was 2-2-2 during that stretch. Other teams have figured out that he's a big part of the reason they keep losing to the Wolverines, so they've geared their defenses to stop him. It was most noticeable in Columbus. Whenever Michigan was on the power play, the Buckeyes shadowed him up the ice. They wouldn't let him touch the puck. They had probably watched too many tapes of Hen- sick going coast to coast with the puck and murder- ing teams on the power play. Northern Michigan did the same thing when it came to Yost Ice Arena the next week, and Nebras- ka-Omaha coach Mike Kemp had clearly seen tape of Hensick, too. "He is on another level most nights," Kemp said after Saturday's game. "He is an awfully talented hockey player." I don't know who is Michigan's fastest player based solely on speed - from watching sprints every Tuesday for the last five months, I would guess it's either Jeff Tambellini or Mike Brown. But one thing is certain: With a puck on his stick, Hensick - who, at 5-foot-10 and 187 pounds, is one of the team's smaller players - beats them all. The Howell native might even be faster with a puck than without one, and players seem to completely misjudge his speed. If I was going to count the number of times I've seen opposing players try to cut him off at the boards only to see him fly by, I'd need more hands. Saturday, with Michigan trailing 3-2 halfway through the third period, Hensick got the puck at center ice from freshman Kevin Porter and took the play into his own hands. There were three Nebraska-Omaha defenders in the zone, but Hen- sick skated past all of them and put the puck over the glove of Mavericks goalie Chris Holt. "A lot of his plays were individual efforts," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "I don't think it matters who he plays with. He's a special player, and, when he gets going; it's hard to stop him." Hen sick also scored a power play goal just min- utes after being hit in the neck with a stick. But it's not just his scoring that made him special this weekend. The sophomore seemed to have hoisted the team on his shoulders. He expected himself to win the games for the Wolverines. With three minutes left, the opportunity was right for a line change. Everyone but Hensick left the ice. Either he or Berenson - or most likely both - wanted to make sure the team's most dynamic player was on the ice with the clock wind- ing down. Just one minute later, Hensick sent a perfect cross-crease pass to David Moss for the game-winning goal. And after the game, the Wol- verines' leading scorer admitted that he put a lot of pressure on himself to create something. "Last week against Michigan State, I was disap- pointed in myself that I couldn't bury any chances and give our team a win, or give our team a lead, or give our team some momentum," Hensick said. Even without talking to Hensick, you could tell that he was hungry this week. You could tell that he was tired of being in a slump - if that's what it was. You could tell that he was going to make sure Michigan came out of Omaha still in first place. There aren't many players who can do that at will, but Hensick is one of them. Over Thanksgiving break, Berenson sat Hensick for a 3-1 loss at Wisconsin because of Hensick's poor play on defense. At the time, he was leading the team in points but had a plus-minus rating of zero. Since then, he has a rating of plus-lI. Halfway through Saturday's game, Hensick got clocked against the boards, and, as he got to his feet, Michigan was clearing the puck through the neutral zone. Shaking off the hit, he could have just skated back towards the bench and taken himself off the ice. But Hensick stayed in the play, and, when Michigan turned the puck over in the neutral zone seconds later, Hensick was waiting - ready to make the defensive stop. Berenson has said numerous times this season that Hensick is at his best when he's playing defense and being physical. This weekend, he showed that he can do everything the team wants him to do, but he also scored some timely goals and had game-winning assists in both games like only T.J. Hensick can. "I was brought here to score big goals and be a part of the big offense - and I think I was able to do that this weekend," he said after Saturday's game. And if he keeps putting the puck in the net, the Wolverines will probably keep winning. I mean, it's worked each of the last 14 times. Ian Herbert can be reached at iherbert@umich.edu. cial for pretty much the entire season. He has been the Wolverines' crutch when they've needed one. He leads Michigan in scoring (41 points), goals (19) and assists (22). He's also tied for the team lead with two game-winning goals. Three times this season, he has been the CCHA Offensive Player of the Week, more often than any other Wolverine. And he made a strong bid for another one of those awards with this weekend's five-point performance. But recently, Hensick - who is the only draft- eligible Wolverine - had struggled to put any marks on the scoreboard. Coming into the week- end, Hensick had scored just one goal and had tal- lied a measly three assists in the previous six games I Player Hensick Tambellini Gajic Kolarik Moss bbett Nystrom Ryznar Porter Werner Hunwick k aleniecki Rogers Martens Rohifs Brown Dest Henderson Woodford Montoya Cook Olson Ruden Player Montoya Ruden GP 29 32 32 321 30 30 28 28 30 29 30 32 32 31 25 25 32 9 16 30 32 10 5 A Pts +/- PIM Sht 22 41 +11 22 100 22 36 +22 20 154 16 30 +1 36 90 14 25 +7 39 86 16 24 +8 24 61 22 24 +7 20 65 13 22 +12 27 42 15 20 +3 42 41 11 19 +7 28 46 12 19 +13 40 35 13 19 +9 48 43 5 16 +5 38 104 14 16 +16 60 64 8 9 +7 28 26 3 8 +7 10 33 3 6 +7 64 46 4 5 +1544 33 1 3 +1 4 9 1 2 +1 24 20 2 2 -- 20 0 0 0 +5 42 12 0 0 +2 6 4 0 0-- 0 0 3FFTHE DRAW MICHIG JPLAYf (NEBRASKA-OMAHA PLAYER D - Maverick Defende * D - Maverick Defender D - Mave ' der - Skating w/ puck "" Skating w/o puck . . . Pass - - Shot How it happened: This one was all T.J. Hensick. Freshman Kevin Porter and senior Nick Martens got assists, but Hensick did most of it himself. He got the puck in the neutral zone and split the Mavericks defenders. He came in from the right and shot a wrister at Nebraska-Omaha goalie Chris Holt. The shot went off and over Holt's glove to tie the game. Analysis: He's back. After three weeks of relatively quiet scoring, Hensick lit up the Mavericks this weekend. The soph- omore scored three goals and added two assists - both on game-winning goals. Both coaches heaped praise onto Hen- sick for his ability to create on his own. Michigan's leading scorer put the burden to score on his shoulders and put up some very timely goals, including this one, which Holt gave up halfway through the final frame. GP W 30 21 5 1 L 6 1 T GAA 3 2.69 0 1.54 PCT .893 .949 CCHA STANDINGS Team Michigan Ohio State Northern Mich. Nebraska-Omaha Alaska-Fairbanks Bowling Green Miami (OH) Lake Superior Michigan State Ferris State Western Michigan Notre Dame CCHA Overall 19-3-2 19-4-1 13-7-4 11-10-3 10-11-3 10-9-3 9-12-3 7-10-5 8-11-3 6-14-4 6-14-2 3-16-5 22-7-3 22-7-3 15-9-6 15-12-3 11-12-3 13-11-4 13-15-4 8-16-6 13-14-4 11-17-4 11-15-2 5-21-6 FRIDAY'S RESULTS: Michigan 6, NEBRASKA-OMAHA 4 OHIO STATE 3, Bowling Green 2 ALASKA-FAIRBANKS 6, Michigan State 5 Western Michigan 3, NORTHERN MICHIGAN 3 Lake Superior 3, MIAMI (OHIO) 2 Ferris State 4, NOTRE DAME 3 SATURDAY'S RESULTS: Michigan 4, NEBRASKA-OMAHA 3 OHIO STATE 3, Bowling Green 2 ALASKA-FAIRBANKS 1, Michigan State 0 NORTHERN MICHIGAN 5, Western Michigan 1 Lake Superior 8, MIAMI (OHIO) 3 Ferris State 4, NOTRE DAME 2 Senior captain Eric Nystrom, right, scored his 100th career point on Friday night, helping Michigan to a 6-4 victory over Nebraska-Omaha. Nystrom joins the century club MAVERICKS Continued from page 1B Ohio State took care of business. Michigan disposed of Nebraska-Omaha 6-4 while Ohio State beat Bowling Green 3-2. In Michigan's Friday win, Hensick assisted on the game-winner to Brandon Kaleniecki late in the third period. Just minutes later, he clinched the game with the final goal to make the score 6-4. The Wolverine's road sweep was its first in nearly two years when they swept a much weaker Mavericks team. After Ohio State's game ended on Saturday, Hen- sick was not the only one who knew that the confer- ence lead was at stake. "I just have a good ear on the bench," Hensick said with a smirk. "But I think a lot of guys heard it, which is something that motivated us a little. But we have to be motivated on our own." Each team has four games remaining, but Berenson wants Michigan to worry about itself rather than the Buckeyes. "I haven't said one word about Ohio State," Beren- son said. "I talk about playing for first place - play- ing like a first-place team, competing like a first-place team, and then first place will take care of itself. It's not about what Ohio State does, it's about what Michi- gan does." After 20 minutes of play on Saturday, Nebraska was ahead 2-0, and it looked as if the Wolverines might be looking up to Ohio State in the standings at night's end. Just four minutes into the game, on the Mavericks' first shot, sophomore defenseman Dan Knapp scored on a wrister from just inside the blue line. In the ninth minute of play, Nebraska-Omaha soph- omore Alex Nikiforuk stretched the lead to two when he skated in from the left and deposited the puck to Montoya's glove side on just the Mavericks' third shot of the game. But after Michigan sophomore Matt Hunwick scored a goal in the second period, Montoya settled down. In the third period, he made a number of spectacular stops, including two post-to-post saves on odd-man rushes. In all, he made eight saves and shutout the Mavericks in the final frame. "Al made some big saves," Berenson said. "This was another tough game for Al. Obviously, we had our ---L ir;- h walTh n . o-ra t na h t By Gabe Edelson Daily Sports Writer OMAHA - After Friday's game against the Wolverines, Nebraska-Omaha coach Mike Kemp pictured Michigan captain Eric Nystrom in his cap and gown on com- mencement day. "Other than his mom and dad, I'll prob- ably be the next happiest guy to see him graduate," Kemp said. But the Mavericks' coach isn't a fam- ily friend or relative of Nystrom. Kemp was simply looking forward to facing a Michigan team without the senior, who has torched Nebraska-Omaha since his early days in Ann Arbor. Throughout Nystrom's career, the oppor- tunity to play games against Nebraska- selected him in the first round of the 2002 NHL Draft. Before Friday, Nystrom's last two-goal performance came in - you guessed it - Omaha on Dec. 13, 2003. Nystrom opened the scoring on Friday three minutes into the first period. After a Nebraska-Omaha turnover, Nystrom picked up speed and skated into the slot, where he took a pass from junior Andrew Ebbett and went top shelf to beat Mavericks goalie Chris Holt. After a wild eight minutes following Nystrom's goal, Nebraska-Omaha led 3-2. But Nystrom's second score knot- ted the game at three and helped change the momentum, as Michigan knocked in four of the game's final five goals. With just over three minutes remaining in the opening frame and Michigan on the power venir. After realizing that it was still being used as play continued, Nystrom kept a careful eye on the vulcanized rubber disc. "The play went on, and I was hoping the puck wouldn't get shot out of the rink," Nystrom said. "When there was a whistle, I went out there and grabbed the puck." Said Kemp: "(Nystrom) certainly has been a guy who's done a lot of damage to us over the years - not just points, but key goals, major goals. (Friday night), he got us again. He really brings his game against the Mavericks." Michigan coach Red Berenson admired Nystrom's effort in all facets of the game on Friday, noting that the senior contrib- uted to the Wolverines' special teams play and the end result of the contest. "(Nystrom) played terrific," Beren- FILE PHOTO The Wolverines will head to Fort Wayne, ind. for the first game of the weekend. UP NEXT: Mrvu uTI PA IXLXU