The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, October 18, 2007 - 5A Perfect penalty kill pleases 'M' By MICHAEL EISENSTEIN Daily Sports Writer ST. PAUL - At the Ice Breaker Invitational this past weekend, the 10th-ranked Wolverines defeated No.2 Boston College and lost to No. 5 Minnesota, both 4-3. NOTEBOOK But don't be fooled by the final scores - if you want to know how a young Michi- gan team hung in with two of the nation's top teams, the key statistic is 5-4, not 4-3. of the eight combined Boston College and Minnesota power plays, totaling 16 minutes the Wol- verines were down five players to four, Michigan didn't let a single puck past goalie Billy Sauer. "We respected the fact that (Minnesota's) power play is really dangerous," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "At least we got out of the game without giving up a power-play goal. "We thought at the start of the game, if we could do that we could have a good game, and we had a good game, but not good enough." While most teams take time to click on the power play, the Golden Gophers and Eagles were excep- tions to the rule. Each team scored three power-play goals in their other games this weekend. "It's not just shots that count; we didalotofthingsrightinthegame," Berenson said. "It just didn't show up in the win-loss (column), and that's the bottom line, but I liked what we did this weekend." PRIME-TIME ATMOSPHERE: Before Saturday, the Michigan freshmen had yet to play in front of a loud and hostile crowd. Sure, they've played twice in Yost Ice Arena - but attendance was sparse at the Blue-White scrimmage. The Wolverines also played in the Xcel Energy Center (home of the NHL Minnesota Wild) the night before, but most of the fans there had little interest in the col- lege game between two schools from the East. Well, check a huge crowd - 14,868 huge - off the list of experi- ences the Michigan freshmen will benefit from. "Definitely it's pretty intimidat- ing," freshman Matt Rust said. "On ice, with, I don't even know how many fans are out there, 15,000 or something like that, it'svery intim- idating. All those lights shining out there, as a freshman, it's a lot to get used to." While the freshmen adjusted, they weren't just dealing with the home-team crowd and Minnesota student band, either. The Golden Gophers had skating cheerlead- ers to support them, very rare in hockey. "As the game went on, it was easier to focus," Rust said. "You kind of focused more on the game than everything else going on. But it was somewhat of a distraction, all those cheerleaders and stuff like that going on." COACHING LEGENDS CON- VENTION: At the Ice Breaker Invitational this weekend, half of the top six active all-time winning coaches were present. Of the four teams, just Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute did not boast a 500-win coach. Boston College coach Jerry York tops that list with 779 wins. In the tournament's first game, Berenson and York brought a combined 1,389 wins. The newest addition to the group, Minnesota coach Don Lucia, registered his 500th win on Friday against RPI. NEW POLLS: Michigan climbed to No.6 in both the USCHO.com/ CSTV and USA Today Division I college hockey polls. Michigan went into last weekend ranked No.10 and No.9 in the respective polls. Michigan's upset victim Fri- daynight, Boston College, fell from second to fourth in both polls. BU START TIME: The start time for the game against Boston Uni- versity on Saturday Oct. 27 has been set for 8:35 p.m. The game was pushed back because the foot- ball game against Minnesota will begin at 3:30 p.m. Senior captain Jake Long and the other Michigan seniors called a team meeting after losing to Oregon to make sure the Wolverines didn't lose their competitive edge. Meeting prevents third By KEVIN WRIGHT Daily Sports Editor The seniors already saw this script. Two years ago, the Wolverines faltered to a 7-5 record, finishing the season by blowing a lead to underdog Nebraska in the Alamo Bowl. That team forgot how to win, and this year's seniors didn't want to let that happen again, especially after a 0-2 start. So they called a team meeting the Sunday after the Oregon loss. "We just want to make sure that people weren't going to buckle," senior captain Jake Long said. "We wanted to make sure everybody still was buying in, wanted to come to practice, wanted to play." Senior captain Shawn Crable talked about refocusing the team on winning, rather than "the hype of us being this big, high-powered team." The first loss to Appalachian State left the preseason No. 5 team in the nation with an extremely outside chance at a National Cham- pionship. But coupled with the Oregon blowout, the seniors understood they had to regroup or lose the season. The three captains - Long, Crable and run- ning back Mike Hart - made sure their team- mates knew some of the season goals could still be accomplished. "I just wanted to make sure ... everybody still had the mindset that we wanted to win," Long said. "There still was a championship out there." Michigan finds itself positioned quite nicely for a shot at a conference title. The Wolverines and Ohio State are the lone teams with unblem- ished Big Ten records. Michigan's offense has started to click with its balanced display against Purdue. Senior quarterback Chad Henne appears to have final- ly rediscovered his touch since returning from a knee injury. In his first three games back, he threw six touchdowns compared to the two he threw in the Appalachian State and Oregon games combined. "The most important thing was just get- ting back on track, knowing we hurt our- selves," Henne said. "We didn't execute well and didn't execute the gameplan." Most surprising, the Wolverines' defense has dictated play in each of the Michigan's wins. The unit has gang tackled and pres- sured the opposing quarterback better, which has helped it force 19 turnovers dur- ing the streak. The seniors all point to the well-timed meeting as the reason for the more focused play. Since the meeting, the Wolverines have rattled off five consecutive wins and regained a spot in The Associated Press Top- 25 poll. "It's always a tough thing when you lose a ballgame, but you don't want to lose guys mentally, in the sense of believing in what we do here," senior safety Jamar Adams said. "We have a system and a structure that we believe in here." Across the Nation Blue ready for new era without class of 2007 By H. JOSE BOSCH Daily Sports Editor The parity bug has bitten col- lege football. This is the fewest number of weeks it has ever taken for every preseason top-10 team to lose at least one game. All these upsets have made for compelling television, but it has also made it hard to make picks. Now picking national games is more dangerous than stand- ing between Kansas coach Mark Mangino and a batch of cookies. 4 For better or worse, these three weeks have had everybodyscratch- See ACROSS NATION. Page BA By MARK GIANNOTTO Daily Sports Writer On the court, it was pret- ty clear last year's version of the Michigan men's basketball team was a disharmonious bunch. The team finished the season ranked ninth and 10th in the Big Ten in turnover margin and assist/ turnover ratio, respectively - two statistics that tell you if a team is on the same page or not. So it should come as no sur- prise when current players describe last year's locker room as divided, especially between the seniors - Lester Abram, Dion Har- ris, Courtney Sims and Brent Pet- way - and the underclassmen on the team. "(The seniors) lost their hun- ger over the course of their careers," said sophomore DeShawn Sims at the team's Media Day last week. "We came in play- ing hard, trying to fight for minutes and win. I think they took that as if we were trying to steal their spots, but we were really just trying to give a spark and win." DeShawn Sims also talked about the obligation former coach Tommy Amaker felt to play all four seniors. Sims said whether they were merely playing because of reputation or because of merit caused much of the friction within the team. But DeShawn Sims wasn't alone in mentioning the lack of chemistry. Several players discussed the dras- tic difference between early pre- season workouts this fall and what transpired in the past. "We've been more together since day one this year," sophomore K'Len Morris said. "The whole locker room atmosphere - last year we would have little divisions of conversa- tion, and now the locker room is one giant conversation. And everyone gets along really well. It's 110 times better than last year." Last season, the tensions from inside the locker room trans- ferred to the floor, where the Wolverines struggled, espe- cially once they finished their easy non-conference schedule. After starting the season 11- 1, Michigan faltered down the stretch with an 11-12 record the rest of the way. The team's lack of unity likely cost them a spot in the NCAA Tournament. When Michigan needed a late-season road win to solidify its tournament position, the team repeatedly responded with sloppy, turnover-laden losses. In road defeats to Michi- gan State and Illinois last Feb- ruary, the Wolverines had 20 giveaways. At the Big Ten Tour- nament, Michigan committed 16 turnovers atthe hands of Ohio State, cementing its ninth-consecutive season without an NCAA Tourna- ment appearance. In all three losses, play- ers could never explain exact- ly what went wrong. But in hindsight, some think it might have come down to the lack of account- ability demanded by Amaker. "Attitude and effort were definitely missing last year," Sims said. "A lot was demanded from us, but there weren't really any consequences. Coach Beilein came in right away and did things that will lead up to us winning - very little things. Last year, it wasn't established that way, so our mindsets are totally changed." New Michigan coach John Beilein provides this year's Wol- verines a chance for a fresh start, and the opportunity to leave the turmoil from last year behind. With such an inexperienced team, Michigan will have to rely on its upperclassmen even more than in the past. New leaders like senior Ron Coleman and juniors Jerret Smith and Jevohn Shep- herd have already emerged, but it is yet to be seen if they can avoid slipping back into old habits. "I want to instill winning most importantly," Shep- herd said. "In previous years, upperclassmen didn't assume that role. They had other, individual goals more than team-oriented goals. Things are different nqw with coach Beilein." This Weekend in Michigan Athletics Friday Saturday Sunday _ October 19th October_20th October 21st |Women's Soccer ||; Volleyball :;Women's Soccer | 5:30PM vs ||7:00PM vs. Purdue :; 1:00PM vs. | Northwestern Men's Soccer Wisconsin Volleyball 7:00PM|| 7:00PM vs. vs. Indiana Northwestern ALL EVENTS FREE FORUM STUDENTS WITH VALID M-CARD All men's & women's soccer home games played at the Varsity Soccer Field All volleyball home games played at Cliff Keen Arena i 547 7 s