8 - Friday, February 6, 2009 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Hogan excels oim pa anecesas his own toughest cr1ii.LcAT By GJON JUNCAJ Daily Sports Writer If you walked into a Michigan hockey practice having never met sophomore goalie Bryan Hogan, youmightleave the rinkthinkinghe was a little too hard on himself. "Youwould thinkit's pretty obnox- ious," sophomore forward Matt Rust said."You'd maybe think he was a bit of a psycho. But LSSU at that's just how he Michigan is. He's a competi- tor" Matchup: t. la - Lake Superior to last week- State 9-11-8; end's zeries split Michigan against then-No. 19-9-0 1 Notre Dame, When: Hogan stopped 47 Tonight, of 51 shots in the 7:35 P.M. Wolverines' big- Where gest games of the Yost Ice Arena year. He owns a 16-3 record with a Live Blog: . thegame. 1.92 goals-agamst blogs.michi- average, which is gandaily.com eighth best in the country. Hogan, a Highland Township native, is notorious for his flaring temper after someone scores on him in practice. His cursing reverberates off the walls of Yost Ice Arena, and any teammate who fires a shot past him can expectapuck or stick flying back in their direction. The act of frustration is one of Hogan's trademarks - both senior goalie Billy Sauer and sophomore Shawn Hunwick are much more even-keeled during practice, regard- less of the number of goals they give up. And as strange (and entertain- ing) as it may be to see Hogan lose his bearings during shootout drills, the coaching staff sees no problem with players using practice to vent. "I've seen goalies before get upset like that," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "And they get upset with themselves. ... They appear mad at the player, but they're just mad at themselves. So I like that rather than a player who doesn't seem to care." The mood swings during practice give Hogan's teammates endless ammunition for teasing. But don't expect to see Hogan unravel during first time since Dec. 19. Senior forward Carly Benson, who has fallen victim to a scor- ing slump during the conference season, tried to take the game into her own hands as the Wolverines were down four with four min- utes remaining. She scored five straight points, including a clutch 3-pointer, to pull the Wolverines within one. But leading Northwestern scor- er Amy Jaeschke, a 65-percent free-throw shooter on the sea- son, netted two from the charity stripe to push the Wildcats' lead to three. After two more Northwestern free throws, Minnfield fired up a long-distance 3-pointer that fell short, leaving Hicks to tear the rebound out of her opponent's hands and draw a foul. With 10 seconds remaining, the Wolverines were down just three points and junior center Krista Phillips was left with an open shot from behind the arc to send the game into overtime. "We all thought it was going in," Hicks said. But it rimmed out, along with the Wolverines' chances of finish- ing above .500 in Big Ten confer- ence play. "It's clearly agame we should've and could've won," Hicks said of her homecoming. "No matter where we are, no matter where I am, a loss is the same." 'M' Note: Six gymnasts reach Winter Cup finals SAID ALSALAH/Dai Sophomore Bryan Hogan stops a Miami (Ohio) shot in the Wolverines weekend sweep oftthe RedHawks almost a month ago. this weekend's series between No. 4 Michigan (13-7 CCHA, 19-9 overall) and Lake Superior State (6-8-6-1, 9-11-8). He has an emotional switch he can turn on or off on cue. "(Hogan) told me that, and I didn't believe him," goaltending coach Josh Blackburn said. "But he seems to handle it pretty good in games. I expected maybe a busted stick or something like that in the beginning of the year." Given Hogan's unique practice reputation and this season's cir- cumstances, it is that much more surprising how easily he can keep his emotions in check. Hogan and Sauer were involved a well-publi- cized starting goalie competition during the first half of the season. Though their statistics mirrored each other's, Hogan received far better offensive support than Sauer - 4.26 goals per game for Hogan, compared to just 1.28 for Sauer - and won the starting job. It's been an incredibly pressure- packed year for Hogan. This is his first season as a full-time starter, and he's playing the sport's most scrutinized position at a premier national collegiate power. Plus, Sauer isn't a second-string netminder. The Walworth, New York native is prominently featured in Michigan's record book: he ranks in the top five in career wins, shut- outs, goals-against average and save percentage. So while Hogan has established himself as the Wolverines' starting goalie, each game is treated like a 60-minute audition for the job. "Hogan's alwaysbeen a hothead," Rust said, smiling. "He always will be a hothead. I don't think he's any looser. Although he is our No.I right now, Billy is a skilled, top-flight goalie. I don't think you can let up for one second. His spot is not set in stone." Hogan appears uneasy at times when discussing his individual suc- cess. He hates discussing winning and shutout streaks and is always quick to credit his defensemen for makinggames easy. Though Hogan needs to maintain a high stress level to stay on edge and sharpen his focus, coaches and teammates acknowledge that he might be best served cutting back on his outbursts. "We're trying to get him to calm down a little bit, so the boys don't give him such a hard time," Black- burn said with a laugh. Blackburn took on the role of Hogan's makeshift, on-ice therapist this season. IHe may, by all accounts, be a little calmer than last year, but there's still plenty of room for improvement. "(Blackburn) just says funny things when I'm getting mad out in practice and tries to lighten the mood a littlebit," Hogan said. "Does it help? I don't know. I don't think so. He just does it anyway. But it's funny. It's gotten a lot better over last year with that situation." Sophomore Chris Cameron finished second on the parallel bars yesterday. In his first Winter Cup as a col- lege gymnast, Michigan sopho- more Chris Cameron led a group of eight Wolverines in Las Vegas. Cameron, sophomore Thomas Kelley, senior Ralph Rosso and alumnusEddieUmphreycompeted in the evening session, usually the higher scoring of the Winter Cup's two preliminaries. Cameron won the still rings for his session with a score of 14.90, coming in second on the parallel bars (14.75) and sixth on the floor (14.70). Rosso placed fourth on the rings (14.50) and sixth on parallel bars in the session (14.30), with Kelley tying for fifth on the high bar (14.35). Intheearlier preliminary,junior Mel Santander tied for second on the pommel horse (14.75), with fifth-year senior Paul Woodward in fourth (14.40). Senior co-captain Phil Goldberg tied for seventh on the still rings (14.55). The top 42 gymnasts advance to Saturday's finals on the basis of a descending point system - a first-place finish earns 30 points, down to a 30th-place finish which earns one point. Cameron, Gold- berg, Kelley, Rosso, Santander and Woodward will all compete for spots onthe national team. 4 4 I