GIVING 'EM HELVEY SHARAD MATTU: The powers-that-be were happy to see A STAR IS BORN Dynamic Kelly Helvey Virginia Tech and UCLA go down. Andrew uogliano wasted n sparks Michigan's PAGE PAGE 3B scoring machine for the Mi second consecutive 5B PAGE 6B exhibition victory. The SportsMonday Column 05 P R o time becoming a chigan hockey team. ' : , November 7,20 Y 1iB M1 __ _ Coghlano s three goals lead Icers to weekend sweep AE Achim DttUll 11111 1 FIELD HOCKEY Blue takes By Mark Giannotto Daily Sports Writer ! SOUTH BEND - Freshman wing Andrew Cogliano made his presence felt late and early this weekend, lead- ing the Wolver-MICHIGAN 8 ines to a sweep N of Notre Dame. Not'r D"i2 On Friday &H4 night, with the Wolverines clinging to a 6-5 lead, Cogliano scored two goals to put away the host Irish in Michigan's 8- 5 victory. Saturday night at Yost Ice Arena Cogliano started the scoring with a goal five minutes into the game, launching Michigan to a 4-2 win. With the score deadlocked at zero, Cogliano received the puck at the top of the right circle. He shot it down the boards to senior captain Andrew Ebbett who immediately passed the puck back. Cogliano shot from the right wing and beat Notre Dame goalie Jordan Pearce stick side. For the night, the Wolverines were three for six on the power play, and killed off all of its own penalties. "I think we're getting the sem- blance of a real good power play," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "But we all know that can sputter from time to time. But right now that's a big part of our game." Michigan's home-and-home set with Notre Dame this weekend was not pretty, but it got the job done. The bounces seemed to go Michi- gan's way all weekend. The play was sloppy, but the Wolverines were able to piece things together when they needed to. "We have to play better hockey as a team," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "I can't make excus- es, whether it's a lot of new players or it's just not gelling." Despite the sloppy play, Michigan as able to finish off the Irish in ,pe second period. Freshman wing eson Bailey and a Notre Dame Aefenseman stabbed at the puck at ,be same moment, sending it flying 1to the air. Amidst the chaos, alter- nate captain T.J. Hensick was the only one who saw where the puck was headed. As the rest of the players on the ice went in one direction, Hensick went the other. He corralled the puck behind the net and saw a forward's dream - the goalie all alone. As he wrapped around the net, Hensick unleashed a shot that went five-hole for the Wolverines' fourth goal of the evening. That score essentially put the nail in the coffin for Michigan as they cruised in the third period. "I think I was the only one who saw where it ended up," Hensick said. "Everyone was going one way on the ice, and I was going the other. Luckily I picked it up, and that left pretty much a clear wrap around. The goalie didn't really know where I was coming from." Notre Dame responded to Cogli- ano's first-period tally a minute and a half later in the period, converting a Michigan turnover on its own blue line and sneaking a shot past fresh- man goaltender Billy Sauer. Notre Dame was able to take the lead at the 11-minute mark, when junior wing Michael Bartlett beat Sauer top shelf with a wrist shot. At this point, it looked as though Mich- igan was in trouble, with the Irish gaining confidence by the second. But the Wolverines were once again saved by their power play at the end of the first period. Defense- man Jack Johnson let go with a wrist shot from the point that somehow made its way through traffic in front of the net. The shot bounced off Pearce's pads right into the waiting stick of sophomore Chad Kolarik who punched it in for his second goal of the season with just 47 sec- onds remaining. That goal tied the game at two apiece going into the first intermis- sion. "I think Notre Dame is a much improved team," Berenson said. "They are hard working, they play a good system and they are hard to play against. They had their chances to win this weekend. Even though they were behind most of the time, they played hard and they are going to be a team down the stretch. I think that's a good team and it's a good win for us." On Friday night, the Wolver- See IRISH, page 4B Big title Ten By Colt Rosensweig Daily Sports Writer Few people may have expected Michigan to win all three of its games in the Big Ten Tournament, but the athletes and coach-MH es themselves were always confident that they would succeed. The fourth-seeded Michigan field hockey team (3-3 Big Ten, 15-7 overall) capped off a brilliant weekend with a 3-0 win over second-seeded Indiana (4-2 Big Ten, 16-4 overall) on Sunday. Now the Big Ten Tour- nament champions for the second straight year, Michigan is guaranteed a spot in the NCAA playoffs. The Michigan offense struck early, and the defense, led by senior Lori Hillman, never let up. Only 1:29 into the game, freshman forward Erin Dallas stole the ball away from Indiana and scored a wrap-around goal. Sophomore forward Lucia Belassi helped make junior goalie Beth Riley more com- fortable with a tip-in goal off a penalty cor- ner at 22:36 of the first half. The Wolverines, who had been putting in considerable prac- tice time improving their conversion rate on corner opportunities, made all that work pay off in the tournament. Four of their eight tournament goals came off of corners. Junior forward Mary Fox put the final nail in the coffin with just 30 seconds left in the half, slipping the ball into the goal from the right of the cage. For Riley, who performed phenomenally all weekend, three goals were more than enough. She blanked Indiana for her fifth shutout of the season. "(Riley's performance) was exceptional all weekend," Michigan coach Nancy Cox said. "She stayed at home, and when she needed to she did a nice job taking one- on-ones. She made very good decisions throughout the course of the weekend." The entire team played consistently strong field hockey throughout the tournament. "It's a huge victory for the program," Cox said. "This could be the beginning of some- thing really special. Our kids have overcome tremendous adversity this fall. Each day they come to practice and work as hard as they can and keep improving. They've embraced what we've asked them to do." Their hard work and achievements didn't go unnoticed - Riley and Hillman were named to the All-Tournament team. Hill- man also earned the tournament's MVP award. "It was well deserved," Cox said. "(Hill- man's) ability to get the ball out when it's under pressure is exceptional. She did a real- ly nice job distributing the ball. Collectively the entire team has picked up on defense." One of the most pivotal moments of the tournament actually came in the first game on Friday against fifth-seeded Iowa (3-3 Big Ten, 10-7 overall), which Michigan won, 3-2. With only two minutes left in the first half, and Iowa up 1-0, Dallas scored a tip-in goal off a corner to tie the game. If she had not tied the game at that juncture, Michigan would have had a much tougher road to vic- tory. "It was critically important for the team to go into halftime not being down 1-0 on an See STICKERS, page 5B JASON COOPER/Daily Chad Kolarik, Andrew Cogliano and Travis Turnbull celebrate after Kolarik's second power-play goal of Saturday's 4-2 win over Notre Dame. Cogliano, who assisted this goal, scored three of his over the weekend. For more on the hockey team, see page 4B. For more on Cogliano, see page 6B. N MEN'S BASKETBALL Cagers come out winners in sloppy exhibition By Kevin Wright Daily Sports Writer The game wasn't pretty, but Michigan got the job done. In the first exhibition game of the season, the 77 Michigan men's basket- ball team struggled to maintain consistency on both sides of the court but still defeated Grand Valley State at Crisler Arena, 77-69, on Saturday. With a commanding 68-44 lead with 8:13 left in the second half, the Wolverines looked as though they were poised to cruise to a lacka- daisical win. But the Lakers had other plans in mind. Grand Valley State employed several three- pointers from Jason Jamerson and turned Mich- igan turnovers into fast-break points to inch within eight of Michigan. After a 16-0 run, the Lakers trailed the Wolverines 68-60 with 4:47 left in the game. Faced with the hint of a close game, the Wol- verines responded to the Lakers surge and went on a 7-2 run to regain a comfortable advantage. To cap off the run, senior Graham Brown took a beautiful bounce pass from Horton and scored while being fouled, ending Grand Valley State's brief threat. Against a Division II opponent, the Wolver- ines came out cold, allowing the Lakers to take, a 9-8 lead early in the first half. Following the media timeout at 15:37, the Lakers jumped ahead of the Wolverines when Kyle Carhart hit a lay-up following a Courtney Sims charging foul. But Michigan answered quickly and began to pull away from the pesky Lakers, erupting on a quick 6-0 run, highlight- ed by senior Daniel Horton's fast-break lob to a streaking Lester Abram for the emphatic dunk. The junior's slam gave the Wolverines a 16-9 advantage, and Michigan rolled to a 41-28 half- time lead. Coming out of the locker room at halftime, Horton started where he left off when - on Michigan's first possession - he hit a quick corner three. The senior paced the Wolverines with 23 points on 7-for-10 shooting. "It felt good," Horton said. "I don't remember the last game I played in, but it felt good to come back out there and play against someone other than my teammates." Holding an obvious size advantage over the smaller Lakers, Michigan utilized aggressive post play and rebounding to wear down Grand Valley State. The Wolverines also pushed the ball - especially after turnovers - and smoothly ran the break, resulting in a number See CAGERS, page 5B Elements, Badgers defeat 'M' By Katie Niemeyer Daily Sports Writer Against the wind. That was the theme for the Michigan women's soccer team in the Big Ten Tournament at U- M S o c c e r F ie ld th is Week e n d 3 weekend. ___G consin (4-6-2 Big Ten, 13-8-2 overall), losing both the Big Ten Tournament and the automatic bid to the NCAA Tourna- ment. The loss ends their season, and, because Michigan (3-6-1, 8-9-4) is ineli- gible for an at-large bid due to a sub-.500 record, it will miss the NCAA tourna- ment for the first time since 1996. senior midfielder Marisa Brown, Wis- consin junior Katy Lindemuth picked up the loose ball and sent it to the back of the net, giving the Badgers the 2-1 lead. The Wolverines just couldn't get any- thing going after that. The wind proved to be too much of a factor. Tuura, who usually has no trouble clearing the ball I -: