KICKED IN THE BALLS' The men's gymnastics team gets robbed at No. 1 Ohio State. PAGE 5B NCAA TOURNEY COVERAGE Everything you need to know about the Tourney and The Michigan Daily/Papa John Challenge Bracket. PAGE 6B t i t E t f I' arch 14, 2005 .- t - - ---- GENNARO FILICE The Cagers aren't dancing. Bummed? I've got a solution. PAGE 3B The SportsMonday Column SPORTS OI TI AY lB k able firkht]DUOU ------------- - - ey vie Michigan 10, Michigan 1, (OT) The mystique of playoff hockey A s a young and fickle hockey fan, I was the guy that die- hard fans hated. I watched regular-season games essen- tially just so'I would know who was on what team once playoffs came around. I can honestly say that watching a profes- sional hockey game this time of year was a priority only when college basketball, spring training baseball and the NFL draft were not available. But when playoffs came around, it was a whole different story. It's seems like playoff hockey games always have storylines worth watching. There is always an old timer - a Ray Borque or a Dave Andreychuk - help- ing his team through the playoffs and kissing the Cup. It's the mystique of the IAN HERBERT * playoffs that makes this time of year special. College hockey's no different. You Caught up in never know what a senior will do when the Game playing in possibly his final game. In Michigan's run through the NCAA Tournament in 1998, senior Marty Turco put the team on his back and carried the Wolver- ines. It's the mystique of the playoffs that makes this possible. After he won the Hobey Baker in 1997, Michigan's Brendan Morrison said, "Sometimes the best team doesn't win." His team, with his class of nine seniors, had just lost 3-2 to Bos- ton University in the semifinals of the Tournament. Last year, Nebraska-Omaha came into Yost and stole one from the Wolver- ines. The point is: anything can happen - playoff hockey has a mystique to it. Knowing all of that, I was light on my feet as I made my way into the Yost Ice Arena press box for the final weekend of the year. I had a plate of subs and a plastic cup full water. Even the event staff at Yost stepped it up for the playoffs this weekend with enough cupcakes, cookies and brownies to satisfy the entire hockey team. When Friday's game started, Notre Dame looked like it might put up a fight and make it a true playoff matchup. Notre Dame was a team that had allowed Michigan to score in the first six minutes of every game this season, but it was still able to shut out the Wolverines in the first period. Their 1-0 lead at the first intermission was their only lead of the year against mighty Michigan, and the tension was beginning to mount like a true playoff game. But then I was robbed. The Wolverines stole the playoff hockey game that I had so desperately been waiting for right out from under me with a seven-goal second period, and the rest of the game was a wash. I went back to Yost on Saturday with a little less hope. Maybe the playoffs don't really start until it's a do-or-die situation. After all, the Wolverines have been a lock for the NCAA play- offs for about a month now, and the Irish - a team that hasn't won since Jan. 2 - were probably hoping that their nightmare season would end. So I began thinking that I would have to wait until next week's Super 6 to see a true playoff hockey game. For me, Saturday's game started without the same playoff feel from the night before. I had mentally made the switch back to regular- season mode, fully expecting to see another Michigan blowout. But the players didn't make the same switch. Before the game, Brandon Rogers, one of the 10 seniors on this team, told his teammates to expect a 1-0 game. Despite the fact that they had handled Notre Dame to the tune of a 39-7 combined score in their first five meetings, the seniors knew that this game would be different. Why? The mystique. "It was their make-or-break game," senior Milan Gajic said. "They knew they were done if they lost, and we were expecting everything they gave us tonight." On Saturday, the Irish - or maybe just Morgan Cey, taking on the Turco role - played like they wanted to win, and they gave me the playoff game I wanted so badly. Four minutes into the third period, it was clear that Notre Dame wasn't going to roll over, and the chances were running out for Michigan. When freshman Chad Kolarik, who leads the See HERBERT, Page 4B PHOTOS BY TOMMASO GOMEZ AND RYAN WEINER/Daily After 62 minutes of scoreless hockey, senior defenseman Eric Werner broke the tie and sent Michigan to the Super 6 In Detroit next weekend. Cers sweep way into CCHA Super 6 By Gabe Edelson Daily Sports Writer After No. 4 Michigan's lopsided 10-1 victory over Notre Dame to open the teams' first-round CCHA playoff series at Yost Ice Arena on Friday, freshman forward Chad Kolarik uttered one of the most oft-used clich6s in sports. "It's the playoffs," Kolarik said. "Anything can hap- pen, so you have to come prepared." Kolarik was attempting to dispel the notion that the Fighting Irish would lay down on Saturday as they faced elimination in the best-of-three series. Still, few expected the tight contest that played out in the Wolverines' last home game of the year. Despite racking up an awe-inspiring 39 goals in its five previ- ous matches this season against Notre Dame (3-20-5 CCHA, 5-27-6 overall), Michigan (23-3-2, 28-7-3) found itself heading to overtime with both the Wolverines' Al Montoya and the Fighting Irish's Morgan Cey working on shutouts. One goalie was bound to give up the game- winner, and it turned out to be Cey. Even though he stopped an-impressive 43 shots, the Notre Dame senior allowed Michigan senior defense- man Eric Werner to flip a rebound shot over his glove and into a largely unprotected net just 2:05 into the extra frame. Werner's sudden-death tally gave Michigan the 1-0 win, ending Notre Dame's season and propelling the Wolverines into the CCHA Super 6 Championships at Joe Louis Arena in Detroit next weekend. The sweep put Michigan in the Super 6 for the 16th consecutive year, and Werner's goal snapped the Wolverines' 12-game winless streak in overtime games (0-5-7). "It's quite a blur, really," Cey said as he replayed the game-winner in his head. "(Senior David Moss) took a slapshot on the ice, and it hit my stick. The rebound came out, and I went to poke check it. Then one of our guys came in. I thought he was going to get it, and then I kind of hesitated for a second. By that time it was too late. Werner came in and buried it on me." Michigan was on the attack throughout the overtime period, but Cey denied both T.J. Hensick and Brandon Rogers on quality scoring chances. Moss also fired a shot from the left slot that the Irish's netminder stopped, but the rebound ricocheted out to Werner in the low right circle. An out-of-position Cey had no chance to stop the soaring puck, and the Michigan bench rushed the ice to congratulate Werner, who was standing in the right cor- ner of the Notre Dame zone. "My emotions were running," said Werner, who waved goodbye to the Notre Dame bench just seconds after he ended the series. "I couldn't move. I had sticks flying everywhere. I think I got stepped on one time. It was pretty chaotic - just a good feeling all around." But the Wolverines weren't filled with cheer for most of the evening. The majority of the contest was charac- terized by tense play and Michigan opportunities that went unconverted. "The longer the puck doesn't go in, the harder it is to score one," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "And you could see that every time we missed one, we were squeezing our sticks a little tighter. We were trying to play with confidence, but it's an important game. You don't want to lose it, and certainly, you want to try to find a way to win it." See IRISH, Page 4B Steady offense paces Blue By H. Jose Bosch Daily Sports Writer A very deep pitching staff and consis- tent hitting allowed the Michigan bae-. 'M' champs amid controversy By Pete Sneider Daily Sports Writer FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. - The final result wouldn't be posted until nearly all of the 5,006 fans had left the Randal Tyson Track Center. It took an hour and a half after the event ended before Michigan would find out that they were cham- pions at the distance medley relay of the 2005 NCAA Indoor Track and Field Championships. In the final leg of the relay, Michigan senior Nate Bran- nen overcame a 30-meter deficit to pull behind Arkansas's Said Ahined with 100 meters to go. Although Ahmed edged him at the line by .03 seconds, the tight finish created some controversy as Ahmed drifted into Brannen's lane down the stretch. But there was no red flag, and the results were posted on was disqualified and the Wolverines were the DMR national champions with their time of 9:30.82. The committee reconvened for 45 more minutes while Arkansas appealed the protest. But the decision was upheld and, at 11 p.m., the few Wolverines still in the building could breathe a sigh of relief. "It's unfortunate it had to happen this way," Michigan See TRACK, Page 3B Michigan pitcher Jim Brauer gave up five hits in seven innings against Lamar. ,.*, AM. *~1~ii~ ~ ~ I