The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, March S, 2007 - 3B ICERS From page 1B Though multiple players received minor penalties, Buckeye Zach Pelle- tier was the lone player awarded a game disqualification. The Wolverines left the rink without engaging in customary post-game handshakes. "A couple guys started shoving (Kevin Porter)," sophomore Brandon Naurato said. "Their bench was already off to celebrate, so we just tried to get everyone out of there so we have every- one for the playoffs." For a game with 11 total goals, it was surprising the first didn't come for nearly 14 minutes. Predictably, how- ever, was the Michigan duo concoct- ing the offense: senior T.J. Hensick and junior Kevin Porter. Off a lengthy Hensick pass, Porter received the puck at the Ohio State blue line. Skating in alone on Ohio State goalie Joseph Palmer, Porter wristed the puck into the net on the blocker side. BADGERS From page 1B play in the second stanza. Looking like a whole new team, Michigan stormed back with the help of sophomores Carly Benson and Stephany Skrba. Each poured in four points, cutting the deficit to just five. Benson and Skrba finished with 11 and 10 points, respec- tively. "I think the second half is where we started to come together and be more aggressive offensively," Benson said. "We regrouped (in the second half), BUCKEYES From page 1B After Michigan stopped the Buckeyes on the ensuing possession, Harris drew a foul and went to the line for a one- and-one situation. The 86-percent free- throw shooter came up short on his first attempt, leaving the Wolverines down two. "I think I'm a great free-throw shoot- er, and to go up there and miss those with the opportunity to tie the game, that's going to be tough (to get over)," Harris said. "That's pretty much all that's going through my mind." Needing a stop and a score in the final minute, Michigan failed to corral the rebound off a Mike Conley Jr. miss, and the Wolverines were forced to foul. But- ler calmly sank a pair of free throws with 10 seconds left to ice the game, as disap- pointed fans headed for the exits. "We lost a game that we had in our hands," Harris said. "We should have Hensick's assist was his 42nd point in conference play this season and was the crown on his second CCHA scoring title. Michigan (18-9-1 CCHA, 23-12-1 overall) controlledthe early pace, regis- tering the first 10 shots of the game. The Wolverines' dominance was so com- plete that Ohio State (12-12-4, 15-16-5) didn't put a shot on Michigan goalie Billy Sauer until late in the first period. Unfortunately for Sauer, Ohio State's first attempt lit the lamp. Beaudoin grabbed the puck in a seemingly inno- cent scramble in front of the crease and stuffed it past Sauer to tie the game. Sauer gave up nine goals on the weekend. "It was a coach's nightmare," said Michigan coach Red Berenson of the Wolverines' defensive collapse. "It was a goalie's nightmare - too many goals against." Naurato factored in each of Michi- gan's next two goals, assisting on Tra- vis Turnbull's tally and then deflecting Mark Mitera's point shot past Palmer during a 5-on-3 power play. but I think somewhere we just left it go." But like in so many other games this year, Michigan comeback efforts fell short. The Wolverines expended so much energy pulling the game within five that they had nothing left down the stretch. The Badgers (7-9, 19-12) took advan- tage of their tired opponents, scorching Michigan for 53 points after halftime. Wisconsin eventually pulled ahead 30 before resting players for their second round game. Burnett is now 1-4 in Big Ten Tour- nament games. won." The magnitude of the game was evi- dent from the outset. Harris sank a shot from downtown for three of his game- high 19 points, and Michigan (8-8 Big Ten, 20-11 overall) jumped out to a quick lead with its four seniors starting togeth- er for the first time since a Feb. 13 loss at Michigan State. But it wasn't until early in the second half that everyone got a taste of just how badly Michigan coach Tommy Amaker wanted this game. First, Michigan drew what appeared to be Greg Oden's third foul, but the offi- cial assigned the foul to Ohio State's Ivan Harris instead. On the next possession, Dion Harris drove right at the Buckeyes' 7-foot freshman phenom and drew con- tact without a call. Following that, Sims attacked the basket. Again, there was contact but no whistle. That was all Amaker needed to see. Feeling his team wasn't getting its fair shake in the lane, the normally reserved and collected Amaker immediately From that point on, the goals came at a frenetic pace, with four in the first half of the second period and six total during the frame. Michigan had a 4-2 lead with just over two minutes to go until the sec- ond intermission, but Ohio State scored twice in twenty seconds, setting up the wild final stanza. Despite the loss, Michigan backed into second-place of the CCHA stand- ings because of Miami (Ohio)'s 4-1 loss at Northern Michigan. But the Wolverines found little sol- ace in the RedHawks' gift. "I heard Miami lost, so we still got second place," Naurato said after the game. "But we wanted to win. We wanted to get some momentum going into the playoffs. We've got to start over again in practice." The Wolverines took three days off before returning .to the ice this past Wednesday. Michigan's next opponent will be Northern Michigan, which secured its first-round playoff victory by beating Ohio State 3-2 last night. "It's been a challenging year," Bur- nett said. "We've come close so many times. You want your kids to have a payoff for their effort on the court. We all know that winning makes life eas- ier. I continue to give this team credit' because they've continued to come out and fight." But, following a year without a sin- gle Big Ten win with three this season, is the season a success? "Any coach that doesn't win the national championship is going to say, 'I wish we would've come out and done better,' " Burnett said. "Certainly you want to come out and win the games." jumped in the official's face and drew an uncharacteristic technical foul, as he angrily ripped off his jacket. "Any time you see your coach fired up like that, you know he's in it with you," Petway said. "I think we were already playing hard, but I think we looked up and saw him battling forus as far as the officiating so we said we're gonna battle some more for him." Michigan responded to Amaker's pas- sion with a 14-6 run for a 51-44 lead with nine minutes remaining. Ohio State (I5-1, 27-3) countered thanks to six of Oden's team-high 16 points, and tied the game at 55. Michigan came right back with a JerretSmith triple and three-point play from Sims to regain control, 61-55, with four minutes left in frontof the raucous Crisler faithful. But the fans' faith quickly turned to despair. Ohio State clawed back once more and this time the Wolverines were out of answers. Instead, Michigan was once again left to wonder "What if?" '1 angry in win By COLT ROSENSWEIG Daily Sports Writer PALO ALTO, Calif. - The scoreboard report- ed a victory for the No. 1 Michigan men's gym- nastics team on Friday night, but the Wolverines' faces didn't. Despite facing a No. 5 Stanford team depleted by injuries and the loss of junior co-captain and national-team member David Sender, Michigan almost let the 212.35-208.1 win slip through its fingers. "It's one of those hollow victories," Michigan coach Kurt Golder said. "Just because we didn't perform well. We made quite a few mistakes.... Maybe we've got to change a few routines, maybe we've got to take some guys out of the lineup, I don't know, but we can't continue to keep making mistakes like we are." At the start, everything seemed to be going Michigan's way. The late-arriving Stanford crowd meant that for a short while, Michigan supporters made up the majority. And after last weekend's ugly showing on pommel horse, the Wolverines led off the meet with five clean rou- tines of six. Michigan took the lead with a typically strong floor showing - none of the five gymnasts scored lower than a 9.0. Sophomore Jamie Thompson posted a career-high 9.45. Fellow sophomore Kent Caldwell, amid his teammates' chants of "Quad-well!" stuck his signature skill on his way to a meet-topping 9.65 mark. But on the rings, Michigan's fourth event, things began to go wrong. The Wolverines' nagging problem of failing to hold strength skills resurfaced in front of tough road judges. Even seemingly-solid routines received scores far below normal. Golder was so displeased with one judge that after the meet, he informed Stanford head coach Thom Glielmi that COLVIN From page lB they're going to see each night - a strong squad with a prolific offense or a wobbly group with a porous defense? But these guys can set themselves apart. They've matured and are better than last year - they're even better than they've showed this year. Every hockey fan knows the cliche that pegs the playoffs as "a whole new season," and though that's not exactly true, it is a chance. It's a chance for a team stocked with NHL draft picks, many of those in the first round, to play up to its potential. It's a chance to prove that Michigan still belongs in the upper echelon of college hockey. It's a chance to erase "overrated" cheers from opponents' crowds and make everyone believe that the Wolverines get high rankings because of their present play, not the history of the pro- gram. Michigan would notcompete at Stanford again if the same judge worked the meet. And sophomore Ralph Rosso, current Michi- gan rings record-holder, had the night off. Sud- denly the meet was tight. Michigan's struggles continued on high bar, as only senior co-captain Andrew Elkind, who won the event (9.25), and senior Aaron Rakes (9.1) made it through their routines with no major form breaks. For the final event of the night, most of the pressure was on Stanford. With just four gym- nasts competing on high bar, every Cardinal score would count. Ahead by more than a point, the meetrwas Michigan's to lose. To the credit of the parallel bars squad, when Stanfordbuckled, the Wolverines held fast.After junior Paul Woodward led off the event with a 9.0, freshman Mel Santander executed a flowing, graceful set culminatingin a stucklanding(9.35). After two missed routines, Elkind came through with a routine worthy of the No. 1 parallel bars man in the nation, scoring an event-winning 9.7. "I was really proud of our p-bar team," Caldwell said. "We weren't having a really good meet, obviously, and just the way they came back and fought, did these beautiful routines, was really good. You just want that to carry through to every event and not (just) when it comes to crunch time." Michiganwill have amuch-neededhomemeet next Saturday against Illinois. After a month on the road, returning to familiar Cliff Keen Arena will be a welcome change. "We have the most meets, hardest schedule, and hardest road schedule (of any team in the country)," Elkind said. "Illinois, they're having a little bit of a down year, so we can easily at home get a nice big crowd, see all that blue again, hear the Go Blue (cheers) and The Victors, and that will getour spirits and confidence up again." It's a chance to bury the letdown that was the 2005-2006 season once and for all. That would be nice, but will it happen? With this team, nobody knows. No matter how many people in Ann Arbor wish it, no matter how many times Berenson works with them, the 19 guys who take the ice during the game hold the power. And just when you think they get it (see the seven- and six-game win streaks this season), they crawl back into the hole of inconsistency. They know how to fix it. They've told the media from the beginning that they know what to do (tighten up on team defense, confident goaltending, less turnovers, etc.). So let's see if their words can play out on the ice, starting now in the CCHATournament and then the NCAA Tournament. No more "one-and-done," no underachieving, no more mental laziness. The time to stand apart is now. - Colvin can be reached at ambermco@umichedu. 41D M @U , SOMSLBRALYAETGUMTAD Chi1ago $123DAmsterdamE$298 p EJMM TATSA ATDT New N GE Yor $131ALLLondonY $310ATY...SS..DWICES, BU Miami $193 Paris $312 ||* StudentUniverscom s e e k i n g Join The Michigan Daily's advertising design team as an outlet for all of the creativity that's stirring inside your head. Currently Hiring: Summer Design Manager Designers for Fall '07 i