Friday March 10, 2006 sports. michigandaily.com sports@michigandaily.com RETSitig Bailv 8 . .. ......... - --- ----- - --------------- - Withloss, Cagers now sit and wait On bubble By Kevin Wright Daily Sports Editor INDIANAPOLIS - Trailing 27-23 at halftime, Minnesota coach Dan Monson made his team a promise. If the Gophers held Michigan to another 27 points in the second half, he guaranteed his players that they could score more than 54 total points and win. They didn't deliver - allow- ing the Wolverines to score 28 points in the second frame - but they came close enough. Minnesota scored 36 points in the final period yes- terday to defeat Michigan 59-55 in the first round of the Big Ten Tournament at Conseco Fieldhouse. "We barely made it," Monson said. "But we made it. ... I'm just proud of the effort. It was a good team win." The Wolverines (8-9 Big Ten, 18-10 overall) came into yesterday's contest desperately needing an impressive showing after dropping six of their last eight games. But just like so many times before, the Wolverines came up short. With a four-point lead at the break, Michigan looked to maintain its defensive intensity and execute better on the offensive end. In the first half, the Wolverines limited Minnesota (6-11, 15-13) to just eight field goals and 34-percent shooting from the floor. "(We wanted to) keep defending like we had been defending and play better on offense," senior Daniel Horton said. "And it didn't work out. We didn't do that." Minnesota had the same idea. But it executed its gameplan. The Gophers' halfcourt pressure flustered the Michigan backcourt. Late in the second half, in a span of two-and-half minutes, the Wolverines com- mitting three turnovers, all of which led to Minnesota breakaway lay-ups. "We knew that we could come and play with them and play better than them," said the Gophers' Zach Puchtel, who grabbed a game-high 15 rebounds. "We fought really hard and just wanted it more than they did." Said Horton: "I don't think that we were strong enough with the ball. They made some savvy plays in possessions where you're looking.to make a pass or feed the post, and they were able to get a hand on it. That comes back to us being tougher and stronger with the ball and taking more pride in having the ball." The Gophers' confidence grew with each steal and easy bucket, and each time Minnesota stopped Michi- M wis HOCKEY M'wisely turns to vet for playoffs H. JOSE BOSCH ON HOCKEY Someone tell the fat lady to shut her mouth. And leave the forks at the table. The Michigan hockey team is far from done this season, and that's because Red Berenson made the right decision by nam- ing Noah Ruden the starting goalie for tonight's game against Ferris State. Freshman Billy Sauer is not a bad goal- ie. His 11-6-4 record is nothing to scoff at, especially considering he's only 18 years old and playing his first full season of Division I college hockey. He shut out a solid Alaska-Fairbanks team, made 42 and 35 saves in games against Miami and Michigan State and had two three-game winning streaks - a feat Ruden cannot lay claim to. And many forget that by Nov. 22 of last year, Sauer had played well enough to be rated the No. I goaltending prospect for the NHL Entry Draft by the Central Scouting Service. So, then why is Ruden the better choice? Outside of his record, Ruden has better statistics. For the season, Ruden has a goals against average of 2.83 to Sauer's 3.04 and a save percentage of 911 to Sauer's .898. Still, hockey is played on ice, not on paper. And with playoff hockey, every- thing is thrown out the door. But this is Ruden's last season donning the maize and blue, and it may be the last time in his career he will stand between the pipes (Ruden has never been drafted by an NHL team). One should never underestimate a goaltender who a.) Has something to prove after watching Ferris State embarrass his team on Senior Night and b.) Is on his last hurrah. As Ruden himself said there is no "we'll get them next week" if the team loses this weekend. And there may not be anyone on the team that understands this more than Ruden himself. For an entire season, he and Sauer had to deal with Berenson's goaltending carousel, where a shaky per- formance one night - let alone an entire weekend - could mean riding the pine. So Ruden is used to playing in a game where he needs to perform well. Ruden is also familiar with the atmosphere of play- off college hockey. Sure, he hasn't played a single playoff game in his career at Michigan. But Ruden wasn't sitting around playing jacks dur- ing the Wolverines' playoff runs in the past three seasons. There have been times throughout this season that both Berenson and Ruden talked about the experience Ruden received while sitting on the bench during the playoffs. He understands the atmosphere. He's experienced the butter- flies that every player feels before a playoff game, whether or not they end up playing. And he has seen exactly what it takes to ignore it all and focus on stopping every shot. His performance at the Great Lakes Invitational last season is the most telling evidence. The tournament is the closest Ruden has come to playing playoff hock- ey, and he gave up just three goals in two games and almost led Michigan to the GLI championship. His performance earned him a spot on the GLI All-Tournament team. Said Berenson of Ruden last season after the GLI: " He did a good job for us. I thought he really was the backbone of our team back there when he had to be." Tonight, Ruden will attempt to do the same. The best way to find out if he is ready to help carry the team is to talk to Ruden himself. "Any goalie that can't handle the pres- sure probably shouldn't be a goalie," Ruden said. "If you ask any goalie, espe- cially me, that's why a lot of people like (playing goalie). You're in the limelight most of the time for the good and for the bad. (The pressure) just adds to the excite- ment and adds to the fun. It makes it more fun, and that's the bottom line." So let the fat lady know - Noah Ruden is ready to have some fun and ready to help the Wolverines defend their Mason Cup Championship. 6-2, 7-6, while Bruckman needed the full three sets to overcome freshman Michael Venus, 6-3, 2-6, 6-4. But No. I sophomore Matko Maravic did not find success as he fell in two sets, 4- 6, 3-6. All three of the Michigan doubles teams succumbed to defeat last night. The No. 1 team of Hung and Maravic offered the biggest challenge, fall- ing 8-9 and watching their record as a tandem sink to 14-7 overall. The No. 2 team of Heller and Mazlin lost 7-9, .and Peretz and Bruckman were defeated 4-8. FOREST CASEY/Daily Junior Courtney Sims watches the ball, and possibly the Wolverines' NCAA Tournament hopes, slip away. gan, the Wolverines' fight disappeared a little more. In the second half, the Gophers outhustled Michigan to loose balls, crashed the offensive glass and buckled down defensively. Coming into the contest, it looked as though the Wolverines were poised to make a run. Both junior Lester Abram and senior Chris Hunter returned to the lineup. They each played for 13 minutes but scored just eight total points. Dion Harris shook off his recent shooting struggles and nailed his first two 3-pointers. The junior finished with a game-high 16 points and was the lone Michigan player to hit a 3-pointer. Even though Minnesota stormed back to take the lead late in the second half, the Gophers continued to give Michigan a chance to come back. In the last minute of the game, Minnesota shot 6- for-16 from the free throw line. But the Wolverines couldn't cash in on the chance. They missed several open 3-pointers with the game on the line and shot just 4-for-22 from beyond the arc on the day. Michigan also sealed its fate with 21 turnovers. Whenever the Wolverines seemed poised to storm back into the game, an errant pass or miscommunica- tion would give the ball back to the surging Gophers. "This afternoon was a winnable game for both teams," Michigan coach Tommy Amaker said. "The difference was our inability to take care of the basket- ball. I thought they were able to get some easy baskets in transition." Ending the regular season in a downward spiral, Michigan let yet another opportunity to effectively regain some confidence and secure an NCAA Tourna- ment bid slip away. "We're preparing for the best," senior Graham Brown said. "If we get the opportunity to (play in the NCAA Tournament), we're going to have to regroup and get ready to go. We have a chance." DAILY SPORTS: WE COME THROUGH IN THE CLUTCH fn l _, _ , NOTES No. 10 Longhorns easily defeat Wolverines The Wolverines fell last night 5-2 to No. 10 Texas at Pennick-Allison Tennis Center in Austin, Texas. The only sin- gles players to record wins for Michigan were No. 2 Brian Hung and No. 5 Scott Bruckman. The loss sank the Wolver- ines' record to 6-5 overall. Junior Hung vanquished his oppo- nent, senior Callum Beale, in two sets, 9 01 t t t 1 t 1 J - 1 t t~mm~hI t m