10 - Tuesday, March 20, 2007 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Pair of weekend goals a reminder of the importance of the little things By IAN ROBINSON Daily Sports Writer DETROIT - Notre Dame goalie David Brown faced 11 first-period shots alone Saturday night. On most occasions, his defense quick- NOTEBOOK ly cleared any rebound out of the zone to prevent second-chance opportunities. But when the Irish defense failed to bottle up these rebounds, the Wolverines took advantage by scor- ing their lone goal of the game. In the final seconds of the first period, sophomore Jack Johnson's shot on Brown from the right circle was deflected to the slot, where junior Kevin Porter launched the loose puck past Brown. In the playoffs, a forward pok- ing a loose puck into the goal or the defenseman not cradling a rebound can end or extend a team's season. "We know that, it's no big secret," senior Jason Dest said of second- chance opportunities. "It's just a matter of doing it. The team that buries (its) chances, (it's) going to get the momentum and take it from there." When Notre Dame lit the lamp for the first time, it also came on a loose puck near the net. Michigan goalie Billy Sauer deflected Notre Dame freshman Kevin Deeth's shot, which was going from the red line toward left side of the goal to the other side of the crease. Unfortunately for Sauer, sophomore Erik Condra was in a perfect position to poke the puck past the Wolverine netminder. In a one-goal game, two loose pucks around the net could be the difference between advancing and going home. Offensive p-killers: When Michi- gan played Notre Dame twice in December, the Irish power play played the Wolverines' penalty kill to the tune of five goals. So when the Irish had six power- play opportunities in the CCHA Championship game this weekend, logic would point to an Irish advan- tage. But it actually looked like the Wolverines were on the man advan- tage. The 42nd-ranked Michigan pen- alty kill silenced the 17th-ranked Notre Dame power play in the 10:16 it was on the ice this weekend and generated some quality chances offensively. The Wolverines have created more shorthanded scoring chances than any penalty kill unit this sea- son. Michigan leads the nation in shorthanded goals (14). Senior David Rohlfs hit the post on a shorthanded rush in the middle of the first period that would've put Michigan ahead early in the game. "I thought we were good on the penalty kill, and we had some really good scoring chances on the pen- alty kill and again didn't capitalize," Berenson said. "The kind of play- ers that we use on our penalty kill, they're quick to take advantage of loose pucks." Added Notre Dame coach Jeff Jackson: "It definitely makes them a threat any time they're on the ice. That's something that we'll deal with over time but right now, its immaterial to me." Unlike earlier in the season, the penalty kill unit prevented Notre Dame from setting up its offense. Later in the game, the Michigan penalty killers forced Notre Dame to pass in the zone for nearly a min-. ute without creating a solid scoring chance. The improvement comes just in time to face North Dakota's No. 3 power play. More than a game: At the end of Thursday practices, the Michigan hockey team plays a game to prac- tice penalty shots. Once a goalie is beaten, another netminder steps between the pipes. When a shooter fails to score, he is eliminated. The practice game paid off for goalie Billy Sauer this weekend when he stopped the first penalty shot of his career midway through the first period of Friday's CCHA Tournament semifinal against Michigan State. Spartan forward Justin Abdelkader was clipped from behind by Johnson, sending the Spartan star crashing into Sauer to setup the penalty shot. In the lull before the showdown, Michigan captain Matt Hunwick skated over to the sophomore net- minder to pass on some advice from Berenson, who wanted Sauer to be aggressive and everything would work itself out. Abdelkader carried the puck across the right side of center ice, faked a forehand shot at the left edge of the right circle, pulled it back and then tried to go through Sauer's five hole. But the Walworth, N.Y., native stopped the attempt with his right leg pad. "We had the power play and giv- ing them any momentum (can be) huge," Sauer said. "To keep it at 0-0 was definitely a good thing." TREVOR CAMPBELL/Daily Junior Kevin Porter was the recepient ofa favorable bounce in Michigan's 2-1 loss to Notre Dame on Saturday. Despite the early good fortune, Porter and his teammates were on the bad-luck end for the rest ofthe game, as the Irish got breaks of their own. g 4 U 4 4 4 a