4E - The Michigan Daily - New Student Edition - Fall 2005 SPORTS I MICHIGAN 4, Wisconsin I COLORADO LEE 4 , Michigan 3 Frozen failure National title slips away again." IAN HERBERT Caught up in the Game MARCH 28, 2005 GRAND RAPIDS - Fourteen NHL draft picks, three first rounders, two 50-point scorers, a Hobey Baker finalist, a superstar goalie and the win- ningest coach in Michigan history. Oh yeah, and 10 seniors. That's what made up this year's Michigan hockey team. That's what this team was - a team that had the tools to win it all but once again fell short in the NCAA Tournament. After the team's 4-3 loss to Colorado Col- lege, senior captain Eric Nystrom put it best: "With the talent we had in that locker room this year, anything short of a national cham- pionship was disappointing." And there it is - plain and simple. Nys- trom knew it, and the rest of the team proba- bly did too. For students in the class of 2005, there has been one national championship in their time at Michigan: the field hockey team in the fall of 2001. We go to probably the best university in the country for sports, and we can't win any championships. And I have news for this year's seniors: this hockey team was your best shot to see a natty. The Wolverines were preseason No. 1 and, when the playoffs came around, were playing their best hockey of the year. They brought a 14-game unbeaten streak into the NCAA Tournament. They had the talent to do it. But they couldn't. With the talent we had in that locker room this year, anything short of a national cham- pionship was disappointing. There's a tendency after a game like this to say that Michigan just got beat by a better team. After all, Colorado College was the No. 3 team in the nation and the top seed in the region. The Tigers came from the terrify- ing WCHA - the conference that amazingly houses all four of the teams in the Frozen Four. The nation's leading scorer, Marty Ser- tich, is on that team. And guess what, so is the second most prolific scorer in the country, Brett Sterling. So Michigan was "supposed" to lose that game, right? But that's taking the easy way out. The truth is that there is no excuse for losing a game like that. The Wolverines had a three- goal lead just minutes into the second period, and they blew it. They were winning when the third period started, and they couldn't hang on. They were the better team for a lot of the game, but not when it counted. They didn't get beat by a better team - they lost to a team that they should have beaten. If you're looking for answers, stop now. The players don't have them, the coaches don't have them and I certainly don't have them. The loss left everyone in Van Andel Arena - except the 100 or so Colorado fans - speechless and left me searching for some sort of explanation. I rode home to Ann Arbor in the backseat of our University- rented minivan about as speechless as the Michigan players must have been on their ride home. Here's what I've come up with: There is no good explanation. This Michigan hockey team's inability to win the big game defines what athlet- ics have been like in my four years at Michigan - the way the team lost defines Michigan athletics, as well. Every year, we have teams with potential that can't quite make it happen. Every year we have a fluke loss, a bad call or a mistake that costs us an important game. Every year, my friends and I sit around on the couches in our house and talk about how this year is going to be the year - for football, for basketball and for hockey. This year we had 10 seniors. Last year we had come off two straight trips to the Frozen Four. It's always something. "Every year we say, 'Learn from this experience,' " Nystrom said. "But when are we going to finally learn? We've blown leads, we've been there, we've been in the games and haven't found a way to win. You have to take it. You don't get back here every year." This was just another missed opportunity. And the seniors on the hockey team gradu- ated without a championship that they were more than capable of getting. The rest of the class of 2005 will leave with a field hockey championship. With the talent that we've had in our locker rooms over the last four years, that is disappointing. " 01 Ian Herbert can be reached at iherbert@umich.edu. FROZEN PARADISE LOST 2001-02 28-11-5 overall record CCHA regular-season champions CCHA Super 6 champions Lost to Minnesota in Frozen Four semifinals, 3-2 2002-03 30-10-3 overall record CCHA regular-season runner-up CCHA Super 6 champions Lost to Boston College in NCAA regional finals, 3-2 (OT) 2003-04 27-14-2 overall record CCHA regular-season champions CCHA Super 6 runner-up Lost to Minnesota in Frozen Four semifinals, 3-2 (0) 2004-05 31-8-3 overall record CCHA regular-season champions CCHA Super 6 champions Lost to Colorado College in NCAA regional finais, 4-3 JASON COOPER/Daily Senior captain Eric Nystrom's shot sails wide of the Colorado College goal. The game was a collection of missed chances for the Wolverines, especially Michigan's 10 seniors who graduated without a championship. TIGERS Continued from page 1E But it may have been the Tigers' second goal of the night that broke the Wolverines' spirits. With Sweatt in the penalty box and Michigan on the power play, Colorado College was able to mount a shorthanded rush into the offensive zone. After Montoya saved defenseman Mark Stuart's shot, forward Trevor Frischmon-scooped up the-rebound and put the puck past Montoya low to the glove side with 4:33 left in the second period. Colorado College tied the game 4:24 into the third period onforward Joey Crabb's wrist shot from the left slot. Junior Andrew Ebbett nearly regained the lead for Michigan at the 10:30 mark of the third, but his wide-angle shot from the left side of the net passed through the crease just in front of the posts. Just 30 seconds later, Frischmon notched the game-winner. After Montoya stopped forward J.P. Brunkhorst's shot, the rebound came out in traffic. Frischmon wound up with the puck and fired it past Montoya from the left circle for Colorado College's first lead of the game. Despite a power play opportunity in the waning moments, Michigan was unable to convert. Colorado College coach Scott Owens was proud of his team's effort, especially against a squad like Michigan, which Owens called "probably the hot- test team in the country." On the other hand, some Wolverines were left despondent as they faced the prospect of a long off- season. Others mourned the end of their Michigan careers. Nystrom took the loss particularly hard, but he cited even more important reasons for his sorrow. "The hardest thing is going around the locker room and hugging those guys for the last time," Nys- trom said. "We're never going to put the Michigan jersey on together ever again. So that's the hardest part. The game is just a game. It's a big game, and it hurts to lose it, but these are your closest friends. To not be able to play with them again is even harder. There's just been so many memories, highs and lows, good and bad. It's been a hell of a run, and it sucks (that) it ends like this." 'M' tops Buckeyes in CCHApVlayoffs By Jake Rosenwasser MA RCH 21, 2005a Daily Staff Writer DETROIT - After Michigan senior Jason Ryznar scored an empty-net goal with less than a second remaining in Michi- gan's 4-2 victory over Ohio H TE State, Wolverine goalie Al HG Montoya left the net he had been guarding so closely.A A N '1 He skated throughout his zone and along the boards with his hands raised in celebration. He even banged the glass with his goalie stick as the 16,000-plus fans in attendance at Joe Louis Arena - most of whom were clad in maize and blue - cheered. And because the final buzzer hadn't sounded yet, all Ohio State could do was watch. And after the formality of a faceoff, the Wol- verines players flipped their helmets and gloves in the air and continued the celebration of their third CCHA tournament victory in the last four years. With Saturday's win, No. 4 Michigan avenged its loss to the No. 10 Buckeyes in last year's CCHA Tournament final and wrestled the Mason Cup back to Ann Arbor. "Last year was tough, watching them skate around with the Cup," Michigan forward Jeff Tambellini said. "We came out, played hard and got it done. Any time you can beat Ohio State - with that rivalry they have with Mich- igan - it's a great feeling." The Wolverines took the lead early in the third period when Tambellini - the tourna- ment's Most Valuable Player - flipped a shot at the Ohio State net from deep in the corner. The puck took a fortunate bounce off of Ohio State J defender Jason DeSantis and slipped past Ohio State goalie David Caruso give Michigan a 3-2 lead that they would not relinquish. "It's a typical Tambellini kind of goal," Tam- bellini said. "I've scored half my goals in my career like that. I just shoot the puck, throw it to the net, and usually good things happen." Ohio State got one too. In the second period, just 11 seconds after senior Milan Gajic gave Michigan a 2-1 lead with his second power play goal of the game, Ohio State captain J.B. Bittner centered a puck from behind Michi- gan's net. The pass deflected off of Michigan defenseman Eric Werner's skate and into the net to even the game at 2-2. The game - a matchup between the CCHA's top two teams - was hard-hitting and close throughout. Werner set the tone less than a min- ute into the game when he leveled Ohio State forward Andrew Schembri in the neutral zone. And until Ryznar scored the empty-net goal to push the lead to 4-2, the margin was never more than one goal. "It was a hard-fought game," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "Ohio State has had a great year, and they lived up to their billing tonight. It was a game that could have gone either way." Ohio State coach John Markell wished that one whistle, in particular, went the Buckeyes' way. In the first period, with Michigan lead- ing 1-0, a Buckeye sent a shot at Montoya from the point. Montoya made the save and the puck disappeared, for just a second, somewhere in the clutter of his jersey and pads. Then the whistle blew. An instant later the puck became visible behind Montoya. Ohio State forward Kenny Bernard slapped the puck into the net and Ohio State thought they had evened the score. But the S RYAN WEINER/Daily Forwards TJ. Hensick and Jeff Tambellini pose with the Mason Cup after the CCHA championship. Following the season, Hensick and Tambellini, the Wolverines' two top scorers, were named MVP. play was reviewed, and because the whistle had blown, the goal was disallowed. "The puck was held for a millisecond, and the whistle was gone," Markell said. "(The ref- eree) lost sight of the puck. That was a legiti- mate goal. Any time you can score a goal in a game with this kind of magnitude - I think we had other mistakes, but that kind of goal being called back is positioning by the referee. We have to live with it." He also had to live with the stellar play of Montoya. The junior made 27 saves and faced significantly more pressure than he had seen in the earlier rounds of the tournament. After a sub-par regular season, Montoya has raised the level of his game in the playoffs. In four playoff games this season, Montoya has surrendered just four goals. On Friday, Michigan beat Alaska-Fairbanks 3-1 in the semi-finals. Juniors Tambellini and Brandon Kaleniecki and freshman Chad Kolarik scored and Al Montoya made 12 saves to put the Wolverines in their fifth CCHA Tournament final in a row. Tarwater fulfills lifelong dream, wins NCAA 200-yard butterfly * By Anne Ulble MARCH 28, 2005 Daily Staff Writer MINNEAPOLIS - Junior Davis Tarwater dreamt of earning an NCAA title since he was seven years old and watched Tennessee swimmer Melvin Stewart claim the event title and record in the 200- yard butterfly. "When Davis was 10 years old he was the (Knox- ville) city champion in the 25-yard butterfly," Davis's father, Dwight Tarwater, said. "He got a letter from Stewart congratulating him on winning the event. I think that got Davis really excited about swimming. Never would I have imagined that 11 as he stepped up to the block. "He had a healthy confidence going into the event," Dwight said. "He had a pretty full program over the three days, so we were just hoping that he had enough steam to finish it off in this race." As the official hit the buzzer to start the race, Tarwater got off to a slow start and was the sev- enth swimmer to make the first turn. At the 100- yard mark Tarwater moved up to fourth place and tried to track down Stanford's Jamie Cramer, who maintained a lead of an arm's length over the rest of the field. In the third 50-meter stretch, Tarwa- ter made a pivotal move to take the lead position and was even with the fading Cramer. As Tarwater took control of the pack, he was followed closely by, T~n' RP e.r Anrink the rrpuninc NIC'A A He broke out into a huge grin and lifted his hands above his head. Then he pointed up into the stands to where his family was sitting. "I didn't really know what to do," Tarwater said. "I just kind of did whatever the first thing that came to my mind. I did some kind of celebration, but words really can't describe how it felt." Dwight and Mary Tarwater were elated when they saw Davis won. "It's very emotional to see one of your own win a national championship," Dwight said. "Davis has worked so hard for this moment, and we couldn't be more proud." At the awards ceremony, the trophies for the event were handed out by Olympic gold medalist at the 200 Svdwne'v games and forme~r Miciga~ngreat I J:' , s