The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - October 24, 2005 - 3B After second straight win, Varsity's streaks start anew After the game, junior cornerback Leon Hall joked with me about Michigan's recent streak - two straight wins. "We're going to live up this win for a little bit," Hall said. "You know, we have a little streak going - the first of the season." He laughed while he said it, but the truth is that I was thinking the same thing. It's hard to forget that, until Sat- urday, the football team had won (and lost) every other game this season. That streak stretches all the way back to Jan. 1 - the Rose Bowl loss last season - making this win mighty impressive. "Losing is never funny," redshirt freshman' cornerback Morgan Trent said. So I guess it's good that the Wolverines won. Because even Trent admitted that Michigan's streak was becoming comical "to a certain extent." But Saturday's game was filled with milestones and streaks - some long and some short, some funny and some not 1 - that pushed the plot lines for this Big Ten HER matchup. In case you didn't believe me, here's a quick The Spor look at some of the most interesting ones. To COL put it in perspective, I included where I was when the streak began. Al RBI tsl lm RYAN WEINER/Daily Defenseman Tim Cook is the third Michigan defender to be ejected from a game for checking from behind this season. Cook tosse in d penod By James V. Dowd Daily Sports Writer As Michigan State captain Drew Miller skated into the corner after a loose puck in Saturday night's third period at Yost Ice Arena, Michigan defenseman Tim Cook was hot ony his tail. When Miller reached for the puck, Cook checked him into the boards and looked up the ice to join the play. But as soon as his teammates touched the 1 _© ' YOO puck, the whistle blew and Cook's night was done. Cook was penalized for checking from behind and headed to the box in disbelief. When he had just about arrived, Cook was floored by more bad news. Referee Mark Wilkins escorted him off the ice after assessing him a five minute major pen-. alty and a game disqualification per the CCHA's increasingly strict rules initia- tive. The disqualification will prevent the junior from skating in Friday night's game in Fairbanks. Cook is the third Michigan skater to be removed from a game for checking from behind this year, but the first to receive a game disqualification rather than a game misconduct. According to the NCAA rule book, the distinction between a disqualification and miscon- duct is that, when receiving a game dis- qualification, you must sit out the next game on your first offense, the next two after your second, three after your third and so on. There is no suspension after a game misconduct. Three Michigan players have been ejected during this year's first five games: Cook, junior Jason Dest and senior cap- tain Andrew Ebbett. Last season, the Wol- verines received just two misconducts in 42 games. Ebbett said the Wolverines are just learning the ropes of the tighter offi- ciating. "It's not just the freshmen, it's all of us that need to get used to the way they call the game," he said several days before his game misconduct against Boston College on Oct. 14. "As the season goes on, we'll have a better idea of what will get called and adjust." LEADING BY EXAMPLE: Ebbett was named a captain of this year's squad for his work ethic - an asset that was displayed as clearly as ever on Saturday night. During the early stages of the first period, the Wol- verines came out flat. Passes that normally go tape-to-tape were off-target, and sloppy defensive play led to a Michigan State goal just four minutes into the game. Ebbett realized that his team needed a boost, and he found a way to provide it when he put a puck past Michigan State goaltender Dominic Vicari from the slot. After a shuffle in front of the Spartan net, the puck squirted out between the circles and Ebbett pounced on it. According to Michigan coach Red Berenson, this is just one of many examples of Ebbett's leader- ship. "Ebbett's a great example because he's not the biggest guy on the team or the fast- est," Berenson said. "He doesn't have the hardest shot, but he works the hardest. He's smart, he knows the game, and he anticipates well." Perhaps Ebbett's finest moment came on a Michigan penalty kill in the first period. Once Michigan State's defense- men were backed into the corner behind their net, Ebbett skated with them and poked the puck around, trapping them behind their own goal line for more than thirty seconds, sending the home crowd into a frenzy. "(Pressuring them while on the penalty kill) is something we have tried," Ebbett said. "Last year against these guys, we did that a couple of times, and that's some- thing that the coaches had talked about before the game. I just got the chance and held it down there to see what I could do. Their defense went back kind of noncha- lantly, and it helped kill off a few minutes of the penalty." STIU. No. 1?: When Michigan began last season as No. 1 in the college hock- ey polls, they lost that distinction in the first weekend when they were defeated by Northeastern. Although they tied the Spartans on Saturday they will likely remain atop the polls this week. No. 2 Cornell has yet to play and opens their season this Friday against Michi- gan State. No. 3 Ohio State beat Bowl- ing Green on Thursday and tied them on Friday. Though none of the top-10 lost, Michigan's tie with No. 10 Michigan State will likely allow it to remain in the top spot heading into next weekend's series at No. 19 Alaska Fairbanks. The rankings come out today. Give us more football: After the game was over, right tackle Jake Long said he knew that Michigan would win in overtime. And why not? Since overtime became a part of the college game, Michigan hasn't lost when it's been forced to play extra time. Two of Michigan's five overtime games have come this year - both three-point wins. The Wolverines have beaten Michi- gan State twice, and Penn State, Alabama and Iowa each once. Overtime was introduced to college football in 1996 - when I was still in junior high school. But Michigan's streak of overtime wins didn't actually start until the Orange Bowl in 1999. At that point, I was a sophomore at Wilson High School in Washington, D.C., and I wasn't even a true Michigan fan yet. I watched the game and rooted for the Maize and Blue, but I wouldn't have thrown things if it went the other way Close calls: Talk about sneaking by. The last five weeks of Michigan football have been scarier than walking alone at night in Ann Arbor. The last time that Michigan played a game decided by more than three points was all the way back on Sept. 17, when the Wolverines beat Eastern Michigan 55-0. Since then, Michigan has played three games - Michigan State, Penn State and Iowa - that have been won literally on the last play of the game. In the other two (both losses), Michigan ended the game with the ball trying to score. The streak is still alive, and, considering how well North- western has played recently, next week's game could also come down to the wire. Last year, the Wildcats beat Ohio State at home at night on ESPN. Next week, Michigan trav- els to Evanston for a night game on ESPN. I was in Madison for when this string of nail-biters began. I sat in the press box and watched as quarterback Chad Henne slipped and fell on the turf, ending Michigan's undefeated run through the Big Ten before it even began. That week also started a strange pattern ofplaying in games with afinal score of 23-20 every other week. Weird. Triple digits: To be honest, I thought Carr would be cel- ebrating his 100th win about three weeks ago. But at least he made it before the Ann Arbor crazies found an axe and his head. Carr is now 100-32 in his 11 seasons at Michigan - a winning percentage of .758. Before becoming a head coach, Carr was actually an assistant coach at Michigan under Bo Schembechler and Gary Moeller. So really, he has been at Michigan for 26 years and has seen 234 wins by the Wolverines. The win put him among the head coaching elite - with Fielding Yost and Schembechler - as Michigan's lone coaches to win more than 100 games. Now he just has about 600 more to go to catch Joe Paterno. This one blew my mind. When Carr got his first win as a Michigan head coach, I wasn't even in the seventh grade yet. It was actually the last-second 18-17 win over Virginia in August of 1995 when Carr was still an interim head coach. That game became an instant classic and Carr became Michigan's full-time head coach afew months later. If you go back to Carr's first win at Michigan, I wasn't even born yet - and as a fifth-year senior, I'm pretty old. Pretty in pink: A lot has been made of Iowa's pink locker rooms. Whether or not they're politi- cally correct is a story for a different column, but it's clear that Iowa has some sort of competitive ERT advantage at home. Before Michigan's overtime victory, Iowa had Monday won 22 straight games in the friendly confines of rn Kinnick Stadium. The Hawkeyes have also won 15 straight Big Ten games at home - dating back to 2001. With more than 90 percent of the fans dressed in black, it's easy to understand why. Iowa's next home game isn't until Nov. 19, so the Hawk- eyes have almost a month until they can start a new streak or continue their current one - of one home loss in a row. The last time Iowa lost a home conference game was almost exactly four years ago. I was at Michigan, but I hadn't even started working for The Daily yet. Instead I was a freshman, struggling to balance school and work - at the Intramural Sports Building. The enforcer: Last week, wide receiver Carl Tabb, play- ing on special teams, broke the arm of Penn State star fresh- man Derrick Williams. This week, he picked on Michigan's equipment manager Jon Falk. Tabb actually wasn't the one to break Falk's leg, but it was his 13-yard catch in the first quarter that injured the 32-year-old veteran of the Michigan football program. Sophomore Iowa linebacker Mike Humpal knocked Tabb out of bounds and, in the process, hit Falk, who was on the sideline. "I usually take care of guys who get hurt," Falk said after the game. Last week, Tabb knocked out the 18-year-old Williams and this week it was the nearly 60-year-old Falk that he took out. Clearly he doesn't discriminate. I'm sure the coaches and the players are staying away from Tabb this week in practice, and Northwestern defensive backs should be wary as well. At just two weeks long, it's the shortest streak of the bunch. When I saw Tabb hit Williams, I didn't even know he broke his arm. And watching from the stands on Sat- urday, I didn't know Falk was hurt until after the game. I think everyone, including me, is hoping this streak ends sooner rather than later. And then there is the pattern of win-one, lose-one that Michigan had fallen into this season. After the game, fresh- man Antonio Bass said that the feeling in the locker room was a lot of excitement coupled with a little bit of relief. But you could pretty much hear the sigh of relief as the Wolver- ines walked out of the locker room. They were smiling and joking, laughing and having fun. Even the guys who didn't really play - like rush end LaMarr Woodley and run- ning back Mike Hart - seemed to be having a good time. Because, as Leon Hall so correctly pointed out, they have a little streak going. Icers outshot 14-4 in the first period N :::,.>;.. SPARTANS Continued from page 1B to be a step slow to every loose puck. Michigan got back into the game with seven minutes left in the first period. Wolverines forward Chad Kolarik floated a shot in on net from the right slot. Spartans goaltender Dominic Vicari deflected the shot in front of the net where Ebbett was waiting, and Ebbett treated the deflection like a pass and unleashed a wicked slapshot over Vicari's left shoulder to tie the game at one. The goal was a huge boost to a Michigan team that had struggled throughout the first period. Despite being out- shot 14-4, the Wolverines had found a way to stay in the game. "We had the parents on the ice, and it was kind of a distraction I think, especially for the younger guys," Ebbett said. "So we had a sloppy 10 minutes. (The goal) helped the team regroup,' get back to level and play stronger after that." Michigan started the second period on the power play and quickly took advantage. After cycling the puck around the Spartans' zone, Coglia- no sent a pass along the blue line to defenseman Mark Mitera, who made a beautiful pass to the right slot, where forward Brandon Kaleniecki one-timed a shot past Vicari to give the Wolverines the lead. The Spartans responded two min- utes later when Jim McKenzie sent a pass to Tyler Howells in the left slot. Howells put the shot over Sauer's left shoulder to tie the game at two. Michigan took advantage of another Michigan State penalty to regain the lead. Mitera slid the puck along the blue line to Cogliano, who fired a shot past a screened Vicari with 13 minutes remaining in the second period. In the final minute of the peri- od, Michigan State .forward Tim Crowder put a pass on net that ended up sneaking through Sauer's legs, knotting the game at three. In the third period, both goalten- ders made great stops with the game on the line. Vicari displayed his abili- ty to rise to the occasion in big games last year, but Sauer proved he could do the same in his first game between the pipes in this heated rivalry. Late in the third period, Michigan State sent the puck into the Michigan zone. The puck took a strange bounce and wound up popping over Sauer's shoulder in front of the net. Sauer made sure not to knock the puck into his own goal, and then put himself in position to make a crucial save to keep the game tied. Later in the third, Michigan State had another point blank opportunity, and again, Sauer made the stop. 'I knew he wasn't going to score," Sauer said. "I could see him line up the whole way, and all I had to do was get in front of him." Michigan will be on the road for the first time this season when it makes the trek up north to take on No. 19 Alaska-Fairbanks this weekend. EARN $50.00 AND FREE BRUEGGER'S FOOD CERTIFICATES DISTRIBUTE COUPONS ON CAMPUS! Bruegger's is recruiting College Ambassadors on campus. Ambassadors will hand out Bruegger's coupons to other students in dorms, student centers and academic buildings. In addition to receiving $50, you'll also earn free food at Bruegger's when the coupons you distribute are redeemed. Food selections include coffee, bagels, sandwiches, salads, soups and more! Call today - 1-866-362-4343 October 2,2005 * Northwood 3 Apts. *esidence Halls 00Off-Campus Housing * Tons of landlords .,. . .. .. .v~r. R . .. .,.