The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Friday, April 11, 2008 - 9 NOTRE DAME 5, MICHIGAN 4 (OT) OUT OF TIME Z cAAYMISN/Day (TOP) Freshman goalie Bryan Hogan sits in the goal crease after allowing the game-winning goal in overtime. (ABOVE RIGHT) Junior goalie Billy Sauer stands behind the bench after being pulled for Hogan. Sauer let in three goals on nine shots in the first period. (ABOVE LEFT) Senior forward Kevin Porter tears up at a postgame press conference in his last game as a Michigan hockey player. Porter is one of three finalists for the Hobey Baker Award, which will be presented tonight. For seniors, a tearful farewell After Sauer's collapse, 'M' Porter and Kolarik struggle to hang up skates after last game By NATE SANDALS DailySports Editor DENVER - Kevin Porter and Chad Kolarik showed up to the postgame press conferences still fully dressed. They didn't want to take off their Mich- igan jerseys for that last time. Even back in the locker room, Mich- igan's two seniors kept their sweaters on as long as they could. Finally, they had to let go. "This is it," Kolarik said. "I took my jersey off for the last time. Wore that 'A' for the last time. It's a horrible feeling, I've been crying for a long time right now since after the game." While Porter and Kolarik sat quiet- ly, the rest of the team, those that still have time left, watched on, clearly sad to see the backbone of the team on its way out the door. Even Michigan coach Red Berenson seemed to have time on his mind. "It's disappointing to them," Beren- son said. "Porter and Kolarik have run out of time and I'm running out of time, obviously." Berenson trailed off, clearly not ready to face the realities quite yet. But the facts are clear. Michigan's two top scorers, its captain and assis- tant captain, the duo that brought the team together for what turned into a surprisingly successful season, are leaving. "We owe our whole season to them, whether it was scoring goals or just bringing the team together - they were incredible," sophomore Chris Summers said. "They will be missed." THERE'S NOT ENOUGH POWER: With the score tied at four and less than three minutes to play in the game, Notre Dame's Kevin Deeth got called for hooking in front of his own net. After putting in a power-play goal early in the period, the Wolverines were confident they could get another to put the game away. But the nation's second best pen- alty-killing unit stood strong. It could have been the difference for Michigan. Instead the momentum swung back to Notre Dame. "That was the season for sure," Kolarik said. "We bury it there, and the game's over. We had a chance with our best players on the ice to do the job and we couldn't get it done." Michigan finished 1-for-5 on the power play for the night. Not a bad showing against a team that kills pen- alties successfully almost 90 percent of the time. PUT ON YOUR HAPPY FACE: Porter will have to face the media one more time in his college career when the Hobey Baker Award is presented today at the Pepsi Center. Porter is one of three finalists, along with Miami's Ryan Jones and Boston College's Nathan Gerbe. While he has deflected questions about the award for months now, Por- ter is considered by many a lock to win the honor. The only other Michigan player to win the Hobey Baker was Brendan Morrison in 1997. He also had to force a smile when he won. The Wolverines had lost in the semifinals to Boston University the night before. WILL THE POPE BE THERE?: Notre Dame goes on to meet Boston College in the National Championship game. Though the two Catholic schools are long-time rivals on the football field, they don't meet regularly on the ice. The Eagles lead the Fighting Irish 14-10-2 in the all time series, but Notre Dame dominated in Boston College last season, winning 7-1. The matchup is the first all-private school meeting in the final since 1985, when Providence College and Rens- selaer Polytechnic squared off at Joe Louis Arena in Detroit. NOTES: The last time a Frozen Four semifinal game went to overtime was in 2003. The losing team: Michigan, 3- 2 to Minnesota. ... With his two goals last night, Kolarik reached the 30-goal plateau for the season. Porter finished with 33 goals, making the seniors the first pair of Michigan players with 30 goals since 1996-97 when Jason Bot- terill and Brendan Morrison had 37 and 31, respectively. ... Michigan gave up five goals just three times this season. It didn't win any of those games. The Wolverines lost 5-2 at Michigan State Feb. 22 and tied Miami 5-5 in Oxford on Feb. 9. ends year with Hogan in net After a strong season, Sauer rediscovers last year's struggles By MICHAEL EISENSTEIN DailySports Writer DENVER - This was Billy Sauer's year. The junior goalie had bounced back from two mediocre years and his inconsistency had rarely reared its ugly head this season. Ever since the CCHA playoffs, Sauer's "come- back" story was the endless topic of discussion. Last year, Sauer was often a scapegoat. This season, he was usuallythe star. But last night, the junior didn't even make it past the game's opening period. Michigan coach Red Berenson pulled the team's season-long starter after he surrendered three goals on nine shots. Freshman Bryan Hogan, who had not played in the postseason, replaced Sauer. Berenson told his team during the first inter- mission Hogan would take over for the junior. "He just came in and said'Getready,"'Hogan said. "So I just got ready, and that's about it." The decision was based mostly on Sauer's struggles last year at the Pepsi Center. Sauer let seven pucks find the back of the net in Mich- igan's first-round NCAA Tournament loss to North Dakota. "Had I not watched the (North Dakota) game I might not have pulled him," Berenson said. "He's been our bread-and-butter goalie all year, but I just didn't like the way that he game was going." Two of the three goals Sauer let in Berenson thought the goalie "would have stopped any other night." Berenson also wanted to spark his team with the switch, which it did. The Wolverines climbed within one goal (3-2) by the end of the second period. At the end of the third, Michi- gan tied Notre Dame at four. "It doesn't matter what you've done, we had to change the momentum of the game," Beren- son said. "It was a tough decision, but you're trying to win the game." Earlier in the evening, Berenson saw North Dakota's star goalie Jean Philippe Lamoureux give up four first-period goals in a 6-1 loss, another thing on the coach's mind when he made the decision to switch goaltenders. Sauer came off the ice visibly dejected after the first period, but he was one of the most excited Wolverines on Michigan's second goal and was jumping up and down from his spot behind the bench. But while Sauer was riding the emotional rollercoaster from behind the boards, Hogan played very well between the pipes. The fresh- man, who played in just five games during the season, posted 18 saves in a game he probably never imagined he'd enter. No one was talking about the tough goal he gave up to the Fighting Irish in overtime off a long pad-save rebound. It was his strong play that kept the contest from becoming a blowout. "I think he did a great job," goaltending coach Josh Blackburn said. "It's a hard situa- tion to be thrown in, and I think he responded very well to it." f 4,