The Michigan Daily I michigandaily.com November 5, 2007 A- HEAD OF STATE Dejavu: No title for Blue again By NICOLE AUERBACH Daily Sports Writer Last year, the Michigan field hockey team lost to Iowa in the first round IOWA 4 of the MICHIGAN 1 Big Ten Championships. Iowa went on to win the whole thing. This year, much to Michigan's disappointment, the results ended up eerily similar. Exceptithis time, the Wolverines lost in the finals. No. 5 Michigan fell to No. 6 Iowa, 4-1, yesterday in the final of the Big Ten Championships in Columbus. But the Wolverines say the lop- sided score was misleading. "We played toe-to-toe with Iowa the entire first half," Michi- gan coach Nancy Cox said. "We had many more opportunities to finish than they did. We just couldn't finish today, and they could." The Hawkeyes scored goals in the 17th and 22nd minutes to take an early 2-0 lead into halftime. Michigan came out in the see- ond half with constant offensive pressure, taking two penalty cor- ners and four low shots on Iowa goalkeeper Lisa Munley in the first 10 minutes of the half. Iowa responded with a loose- ball goal in the 46th minute, but Michigan struck back with its only goal four minutes later. Senior forward Ashley Lenning- ton scored off a reboundin front of the net. The Wolverines didn't give up, hut the Hawkeyes never relented. Iowa scored an insurance goal with fewer than two minutes left in the game to seal the victory. As the Big Ten regular season champion, Michigan earned a bye and didn't play its first game until the semifinal round, a 3-2 overtime win over Penn State on Friday. After going 3-for-4 on penalty corners in 'the semifinal game, Michigan was unsuccessful on all of its penalty corners in the final. "Our shots just weren't falling," senior Kristen Tiner said. "Iowa has a really solid corner defense. We just didn't execute well." In Friday's semifinal, Michigan defeated Penn State in a defensive See BIG TENS, Page 3B Senior quarterback Chad Henne threw for a school-record tying four touchdowns in Saturday's comeback win at Michigan State. Defense answers call against No big blue ox, but Henne comes Big Ten's top tandem through once again By DANIEL BROMWICH Daily Sports Editor EAST LANSING - Prior to Saturday's game against Michigan State, much of the talk centered on the Spartans' vaunt- ed ground attack - the best in the con- ference, averaging more than 210 yards per game. Pundits questioned whether Michi- gan's run defense could hold up against the tandem of Jehuu Caulcrick (thun- der) and Javon Ringer (lightning) after five straight weeks against spread-based teams. After the first half Saturday, those questions appeared answered. The Wolverines held Michigan State to just 29 rushing yards (not counting sacks) before halftime, and facing a 14-3 deficit, it looked as if the Spartans would have to take to the air. But after a Michigan three-and-out to open the half, Michigan State pounded the Wolverines. And pounded them and pounded them and pounded them. Of the 14 plays the Spartans ran on the 75- yard drive that culminated with a one- yard Caulcrick touchdown, 13 were runs. Michigan State converted all three of the third downs it faced on the drive, all with short Caulcrick runs. "I think that we just kind of relaxed a little bit," defensive end Brandon Graham said. "We had to get our heads together. We got a lead, and everybody just kind of died down a little bit. (Michigan State) See DEFENSE, Page SB EAST LANSING - n a game in which the two teams competed for a trophy named after a legendary myth, one Wolver- ine wrote his own real-life tall tale. There was the shoulder injury., The ankle injury. The drive. The JACK second drive. The audible. And the HERMAN pass. On Top Had just one happened in Michigan's 28-24 comeback win over its intrastate rival, it would have been remembered. A combi- nation like that, though,.will be hard to ever forget. "If you wantto define courage, one way to do it is to mention (Michigan quarterback Chad) Henne," Michigan coach Lloyd Carr said. Later lie added: "Every quarterback I've had since I started as a head coach, (they've been) tough guys, smart guys. But there isn't anybody tougher than Henne." Certainly not during this season - or during the second half of the fourth quarter of Saturday's game. Early on, Henne overthrew receivers, his passes lacked zip and he even tossed an interception. But with 7:35 left, it no longer seemed See HERMAN, Page 5B Third-period comebacks erase second-period woes By4COURTNEY RATKOWIAK Daily Sports Writer OMAHA - The Wolverines rallied to win twice this weekend. But without los- ing leads in the MICHIGAN 6 second period of UNO 3 both games, they wouldn't have had MICHIGAN 3 to come back in the UNO 2 first place. Despite being outshot 29-10 and allow- ing four of Nebraska-Omaha's five goals in the middle frames combined, No. 3 Michi- gan extended its win streak to six games by defeatingNebraska-Omaha 6-3 on Friday and 3-2 on Saturday at the Qwest Center. Michigan (4-0 CCHA, 7-1 overall) came back from a 2-1 deficit after 40 minutes on Friday with a five-goal third period. The comeback started with captain Kevin Porter's on-target slapshot from the point on the first shift of the period. Less than three minutes later, senior Chad Kolarik's goal gave the Wolverines a 3-2 lead. After another Maverick goal tied the score at three, sophomore defenseman Steve Kamp- fer put Michigan aheaei for good 7:24 into the third period. Friday's game was the first in which one of the Wolverines' 12 freshmen did not score a goal, and Porter notched his first hat trick since last November's series against Nebras- ka-Omaha (0-4,1-4). Senior leadership proved to be the difference in a game that Michigan coach Red Berenson said his team was "for- tunate" to win. "(Kolarik and I) are the two old guys, and we're supposed to be the .top guys," Porter said. "We had to step up, and I think we did today." After Friday's slow first period and sloppy second period, the Wolverines knewthat they had tocome out strong on Saturday. See MAVERICKS, Page 6B 7-1? Who r would've thought? OMAHA - W~hen Michigan's hockey schedule was released in early June, itcaused alot of wide eyes. With four games against NCAA Tourna- ment teams from last sea- son, along with four conference road games in the first four / . A weeks;low NATE hopes for the NA early season SANDALS were under- Enter standable. Calling the Sandman JEN NLFER K RONDaly opening stretch Senior Kevin Porter notched four goals on the weekend, including a hat trick Friday night, to propel challenging would have been an Michigan to a weekend sweep at Nebraska-Omaha. He leads the nation in goals See SANDALS, Page 6B