8A - Wednesday, December 3, 2008 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Sauer losing ground in goalie battle By MICHAEL EISENSTEIN Daily Sports Editor It was supposed to be Billy Sau- er's year. Last season he emerged as one of the country's elite goalies, leading the country in wins, and played a key role in Michigan's first Frozen- Four run in five years. But after posting 30 wins and a 1.95 goals-against average last season, the senior is splitting time between the pipes with sophomore Bryan Hogan. It's the same role Sauer had as a freshman, before he spent two years as the full-time starter. And with Michigan's startling win-loss differential between start- ers - Sauer is 2-6, Hogan is 7-1 despite similar statistics - Sauer might end up watching from the bench for both games against Mich- igan State this weekend. "It's really a tough situation for me because I know if we're not win- ning when I'm in net, I know it's tough for coach to put me in, even if he does think I'mplayingwell," said Sauer, who led the nation in win per- centage last year. "It really is hard for me soI can just hope for the best. There's only so much Ican control." Michigan coach Red Berenson usually chooses his starting goalie early in the week, but he's taking a different approach this week. "If Hogan plays Friday, we might wait until after the game to announce Saturday's goalie," Beren- son said. And with the offensive support Hogan has been getting this year, it's very likely he could be back in net Saturday if he gets the first start. The Wolverines have scored 37 goals when Hogan starts and just 10 with Sauer in goal. Michigan hasn't scored a goal with Sauer in net in almost 150 minutes, dating back to Nov.14. Last year, Sauer had the support of the nation's No. 2 offense, which averaged nearly four goals a game. "It'stough," Sauer said."If I could score goals or something, that'd be great." It's not as though either goalie is with Hogan playing statistically better than the other. Sauer has a 2.64 goals-against average with a .903 save percent- age. Hogan has allowed 2.29 scores a game and tallied a .909 save per- centage. And that just further clouds the situation. "It's not as simple as it might look," Berenson said. "It's not black and white. It's all the intangibles." And that's the biggest advantage the undrafted Hoganhad over Sauer, a seventh-round NHL draft pick of Colorado in 2006, coming into the season. Hogan says he's been in a similar situation almost every sea- son since his sophomore year ofhigh school at Detroit Catholic Central. "A lot of guys were buddies with the one goalie and they thought he was the guy," Hogan said. "That was when it really got competitive for a spot. That's really where I started to learn to develop each year." Hogan eventually split time with the other goalie, a junior. But more importantly, Hogan grew accustomed to everyday com- petition and gained experience earning his team's trust from the ground up. "I learned a lot from that," Hogan said. "And each year and on it was really competitive. So that definitely helped me to get where I'm at now." As a result, Hogan is much more comfortable playing just one game a week, whereas Sauer has been the full-time starter since his sopho- more year. Sauer took longer at the begin- ning of the season to adjust to the circumstances, over hyping himself for his one start rather than staying calm for each game as he did last year. Sauer says he has improved on that. But it may be too late now with Hogan establishing himself as the go-to goalie. The team is simply responding better to the sophomore. "There's so many other things, intangibles," Sauer said. "Maybe I don't know what I'm doing. Hogan is doing something right now that has the team winning no problem, and I'mnot doing that." Michigan looks to help end Big Ten futiylityin, Challenge Maryland matchup kicks off big week for Wolverines By RUTH LINCOLN Daily Sports Writer Since its inception in 1999, the Big Ten/ACC Challenge hasn't just been difficult for the Big Ten. It's been nearly impossible. The Big Ten has never won the challenge, Michigan at compiling a 31-56 Maryland overallrecord.In fact, Michigan Matchup: State is the con- Michigan51; ference's only Maryland 4-2 team with a win- When: Tonight ning record (5-3). 7:30 P.M. Despite the Where: Corn- Atlantic Coast cast Center Conference's TV/Radio: dominance, ESPNU ESPN extend- ed its contract with the conferences three years ago, and the network will air the matchups until 2011. The Wolverines did not partici- pate in the 2001 and 2002 games because NCAA sanctions prohib- ited them from taking part in tour- naments. They are 3-4 in the series of games and have fared relatively well against what many consider to be the most competitive basket- ball conference in the country. Michigan will try to even its record in the challenge tonight when it takes on Maryland in Col- lege Park, Md., at 7:30 p.m. The matchups pair all Big Ten squads against all but one ACC team. Pairings are based on a vari- ety of factors, but typically pit the best teams against one another. The challenge was competitive through its first four seasons, but the past two years has been unkind to the Big Ten. The conference went 6-16 in that time. Michigan fell to Boston College at home last season 77-64, as the Eagles pulled away in the second half. "I think it will cycle both ways over time," Beilein said. The Wolverines made headlines with their upsetvictory over then- No. 4 UCLA two weeks ago, but that was at a neutral site. Tonight * will be their first road test against a Terrapins team that upset then- No.5 Michigan State last week. With Duke coming to Crisler Arena for a sold-out game this Sat- urday, the Wolverines have their work cut out for them over next four days. "No matter who we were play- ing last year, it was going to be a hard week," said Beilein who went 1-0 against Maryland when he was the head coach at West Virginia. "When you play an ACC road game against a team like Maryland, at their place, (they're) so difficult to beat. "And then you have a team of Duke's magnitude coming in here, you just can't even think about the week. You have to think about today's practice, and then Mary- land is the only game left, and then we'll deal with Duke later on." Thanks to their win over UCLA, the unranked Wolverines received votes in the AP poll each of the last two weeks. Those were their first votes since January 2007. "We want to be ranked," said sophomore forward Manny Har- ris, who is Michigan's leading scorer with 22.3 points per game. "It's not a player thing, it's more of a team thing. We've got a chance to do something big this week." Sophomore forward Manny Harris leads the team in scoring (22.3) and is tied for the lead in rebounding (8.0) with junior DeShawn Sims. No. 13 Michigan State also plays, tonight against No. 1 North Caro- lina at Ford Field. The game could be a preview of the Final Four which Detroit is slated to host in April2009. "For scheduling, it's great," Michigan coach John Beilein said. "It's so hard to schedule.You know, you have another quality home game every other year. ... You need some good road game strength on your RPI, so why not Maryland?" Junior powerforwardDeShawn Sims and redshirt junior center Zack Gibson both said they sup- port Big Ten teams in the chal- lenge even if it means cheering for a rival like the Spartans or Ohio State. COVERAGE OF THE WOMEN'S BASKETBALL TEAM'S LATE GAME IS AT WWW.MICHIGANDAILY.COM. 0 0 Spend Smart. Fake advantage of your educational discount this holiday season. Visi the Computer Showcase located on the ground floor of the Michigan Union and Pierpont Commons to find out how.* Or shop online at: www.apple.com/edu/umichigan Macbooks starting at $949 Macbook Pros starting at $1899 Payroll deduction available for eligible UM faculty and aff