8A - Friday, October 24, 2008a 4 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com MICHIGAN 4, NIAGARA 2 NIAGARA FALLS Sophomore duo dominates SAID ALSALAH/' Sophomore Louie Caporusso pokes in his first of two goals in Michigan's 4-2 victory over Niagara last night at Yost Ice Arena. Power-play unit breaks out of 154-minute slump By GJON JUNCAJ Michigan, the Wolverines were Daily Sports Writer caught over-handling the puck at times, losing possession and Entering its fifth game of the sea- constantly working to reset their son, the Michigan hockey team had offense. Michigan coach Red Beren- one noticeable blemish it couldn't son saidsuccessful power-play units seem to get rid of. treat the puck as a "hot potato," The Wolver- NOTEBOOK keeping defenders in motion in an ines' power-play effort to catch one out of position. unit had been a cause for concern, "I thought we were better as Michigan had converted a paltry tonight," Berenson said. "Our man- 3.2 percent of its chances entering date to our team is we need to play Thursday night, a far cry from last harder, we need to play better with season's 20.5 percent conversion the puck and without the puck. And rate, which was 12th in the nation. the goals will come later." But with 6:34 left in the second Just over five minutes into the period Thursday, Michigan soph- third period, Michigan's second omofe forward Aaron Palushaj power-play unit provided a text- momentarily quelled the doubts book example of the fast-paced surrounding the Wolverines' extra- tempo Berenson wants. Senior for- man attack. Palushaj's slapshot ward Brandon Naurato sent a quick from the top of the left circle beat backhand pass across the crease to Niagara goalie Juliano Pagliero senior forward Travis Turnbull, stick-side and ended a power-play who then found sophomore forward scoring drought of nearly 154 min- Louie Caporusso in the slot. Capo- utes. russo then sniped the shot between One of Michigan's two Tuesday Pagliero's legs. practices was almost entirely dedi- Michigan finished two-for-five cated to practicing the extra-man with the man-advantage, its best attack. Last weekend at Northern power-play performance to date. GOING DEEP: After mixing and matching his lines in the first few weeks of the season, Berenson may have finally found athirdline. While the third unit of sophomore Ben Winnett and freshmen David Wohl- berg and Robbie Czarnik tallied just one combined assist last night, the trio skated well in the open ice and created a number of scoring oppor- tunities. "I thought (the third line) got off to a bit of a slow start, but they got better and they wound up having a good game," Berenson said. "I think that has a chance of being a good line" Wohlberg and Winnett had an excellent scoring opportunity with a two-on-one rush six minutes into the game, but Winnett couldn't han- die Wohlberg's crossing pass, and Pagliero stopped a point-blank shot with his rightleg. "I thought Ben Winnetthad a ter- rific game tonight," Berenson said. "And yet he didn't get rewarded' with any goals. But his team won. And when you have everyone play- ing hard for the team, you're going to be successful." Last year's top line of Kevin Por- ter, Chad Kolarik and Max Pacio- retty scored an astounding 158 combinedpoints.For the Wolverines to come close to replacing such pro- lific offense, scoring depth through all four lines will be critical. MEASURING STICK: Saturday's game at No. 6 Boston University will be the highlight of Michigan's non-conference schedule.The Wolverines will only have today to craft their game plan against the Terriers, though Berenson said Wednesday his team doesn't alter the team's schemes too much, even against a highly-ranked opponent. Berenson had high praise for the Purple Eagles Thursday, saying Niagara was a precursor to what awaits the Wolverines on Satur- day. "(Niagara) is an NCAA-type team," Berenson said. "We played them last year in the tournament and they might be as good now as they were then. I can't say we are, but that was a good game for us, to prepare us for Saturday." By NICOLE AUERBACH Daily Sports Writer All season, members of the Michigan hockey team have said they expect to score by commit- tee. But don't tell that to sophomore forwards Aaron Palushaj and Louie Caporusso. Together, the duo has scored half of the team's 18 total goals through the first five games. "We're just having fun out there," Palushaj said with a shrug, downplaying his importance to the offense. And as long as it's enjoyable for the sophomores, the Wolverines will take all the goals they can get from them. Palushaj and Caporusso each tallied a pair of goals last night, paving the way for Michigan's 4-2 victory over Niagara (1-3) at Yost Ice Arena. But the Wolverines (1-1 CCHA, 4-1 overall) didn't have as much breathing room as the score indi- cated. - With just over five minutes remaining in the first period, a cluster of players scrambled for the puck in front of the Michigan goal. The puck slipped out from under sophomore goalie Bryan Hogan toward the left post, where Purple Eagle forward Dan Baco tipped it in for a 1-0 lead. Hogan lay sprawled on the ice, looking atthe flashingred lightfor an answer. "I had no idea where that was," Hogan said. "I thought it was out in front, then it ended up over there, and it was a mess." The Purple Eagles' early lead held through most of the second period. Then, the Wolverines turned around one of their most glaring weaknesses of the season thus far - the power play. Entering the game 1-for-32 on the man advantage, Michigan converted twice last night. Both proved to be game-changing goals. The first came with 6:43 left in the second as Palushaj slapped a one-timer from the left circle, connecting on a perfect pass from sophomore defenseman Chad Langlais. And Caporusso followed suit shortly afterward with a wrap- around goal after picking up the rebound from sophomore defen- seman Scooter Vaughan's wrist shot. "If you have a shift right after you score and score again, that's huge," MichigancoachRedBeren- son said. "We were lucky." The Wolverines continued their habit of scoring goals in pairs. Just as in last Saturday's second period against Northern Michigan, Mich- igan fed off the adrenaline rush. But after Hogan let up a Niagara rebound goal late in the second, the Wolverines and Purple Eagles entered the game's final period deadlocked at two. Six minutes into the frame, Caporusso capitalized on a pass from senior forward Travis Turn- bull a few feet in front of the net for a five-hole lamp-lighter. Later, Palushaj tacked on an empty-nett- er to put the game out of reach. The game marked Hogan's sec- ond consecutive start, something he didn't do all last season. After tallying 23 saves in last Saturday's victory over Northern Michigan, he saved another 23 shots last night. Hogan said he likes seeing more shots because it puts him in a rhythm and keeps him more focused. Berenson said senior netminder Billy Sauer will start Saturday's game at No. 6 Boston University. I I 4 Do you consider the word "motivated" an understatement? It's time for your hard work to pay off within an organization that was once again named one of BusinessWeek's 50 Best Places To Launch A Career. 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