The Michigan Daily michigandaily.com February 8, 2010 CA WJDLL Spectacle o outdoor hockey is priceless MADISON - When I was 12 years old, my family and I began a long- lasting, simple tradition. With every first snow of the season, my extended family would gather at our house tucked deep in rural Michigan, for something so pure, so harmless, so fun, that we continued it for six more years until I graduated from high school. The Kartje family snow football game. RYAN The game ran its course, and it was never one filled KARTJE with much athleticism, but something about being out- doors, running freely with the brisk wind against your face (and generally freezing your ass off for the sake of sport) that just felt unlike anything else. It's been three years since I've felt that same purity of sports. No field turf. No heated seats. And no way to plan for Mother Nature. That is, until I sat down in the freezing cold bleachers of Camp Randall Stadium Saturday night for Michigan hockey's second outdoor game in program history. I hadn't packed gloves or a winter hat. My layering was meager at best. And my teeth chat- tered for the better part of two periods. But as I peered down at the ice rink, sitting squarely between both 17-yard lines, I felt the same kind of nostalgic purity that I hadn't felt since quarterbacking my family to a snow foot- ball victory three years ago. So much so that I pretty much had to be dragged back to the press box. And that's exactly what this campus needs to reenergize a Michigan fanbase that's spiraling toward clinical depression: the pure, freezing- cold bliss of outdoor hockey. At the Wolverines' Friday practice, the Mich- igan players looked like kids in a candy store. "I love it," junior forward Louie Caporusso said. "I feel like I'm 10 years old again on the pond with my dad. It's an unbelievable feeling, and I'm cherishing every minute of it." Senior captain Chris Summers called the See Page 3B MAX COLLNS/Daily Junior forward Matt Rust drops to the ice as Wisconsin captain Brendan Smith scores the game-clinching goal, his second of the third period. The Wolverines held a one-goal lead with five minutes remaining. Penalties end Blue's bid in Camp Randall Classic By MICHAEL FLOREK Daily Sports Writer MADISON - In front of 55,031 peo- ple, the Michigan hockey team still felt isolated. In the frigid confines of Camp Ran- dall Stadium, with nothing above them but black sky and stadium MICHIGAN 2 lights, both WISCONSIN 3 Wisconsin - and Michigan made the long walks from their locker rooms underneath the stands tothe ice. All eyes were on the Badgers' trek, which was lined by a throng of youth hockey players. On the other side of the field, the Wolverines shared the path only with the zambonis. It seemed fitting in the end. Even with the novelty of an outdoor game, No.19 Michigan had the same feeling of loneliness it has experienced for much of the season, with only itself to blame. The Wolverines took two straight penalties with under six minutes left in the game. Two ensuing power play goals by No. 3 Wisconsin (16-7-4) gave the Badgers a 3-2 victory. After going up 2-1 midway through the third, Michigan was playing out of character. Despite being ranked 11th in the country in penalties, they had been called for just one penalty the entire game. That all changed with about six min- utes remaining. And it's only fittingthat in an event that had as much to do with the winter weather as the game itself, it was a Summers that cost the Wolver- ines. Senior captain Chris Summers was called for a tripping penalty. Ten sec- onds later, the puck was in the back of the Wolverines' net. With about two minutes left, Sum- mers was again called for a penalty. As he argued with the referees en route to the penalty box, the red-clad fans in attendance went into a frenzy, jump- ing and chanting throughout the entire television timeout and into the Michi- gan penalty kill. "We were, I thought, carrying the play five-on-five and it's unfortunate that calls have to be made at certain points in the game," Summers said. "That's just the way the games goes.... He obviously saw something I didn't, or maybe 70,000 other people." Thirty-four seconds into that pen- alty kill, Wisconsin defensemen Bren- dan Smith, who scored Wisconsin's first power play goal, jumped into the slot. Smith took a cross-ice pass and one-timed it past junior goalie Bryan Hogan's glove. With the same man in the box, the same player scored on the same play that led to the second Wisconsin goal. "We knew pretty much what they were doing, and they're good at it," MichigancoachRedBerensonsaid. "It's five-on-four so you really have to do a See CLASSIC, Page 3B 'M' outi ByJOE STAPLETON Daily Sparta Editor This season, Michigan has played quite a few bad halves of basketball. The first half of Saturday's 62-44 loss to Wisconsin at Crisler Arena, however, was not one WISCONSIN 62 of them. MICHIGAN 44 The Michi- gan men's basketball team shot 60 percent from the field and made both of its 3-point attempts. It even played tough defense for the vast majority of the half. The only problem for the Wolver- ines was that Wisconsin (8-3 Big Ten, 18-5 overall) couldn't miss. The Bad- gers shot 68 percent from the field and 69 percent from 3-point land. Wisconsin guard Jason Bohannon even made a last-second heave from midcourt before halftime in the per- fect cap to a near-perfect 20 minutes from the Badgers. As a result, Michigan (4-7, 11-12) played one of its best halves of the season, but went into halftime trail- ing by 14, en route to a thrashing at home. "They're amazing," Michigan coach John Beilein said. "Usually, even teams at the bottom of the Big Ten, which I guess we are now, can stay with teams in the first half. We couldn't even do that." Besides Wisconsin's shooting, the stat that jumped off the boxscore in the first half was Michigan's 3-point- ers - just two the entire half. Cer- Alayed by Wisco Freshman Morris looks to be floor general for Blue ByNICOLE AUERBACH Daily SportsEditor Michigan freshman Darius Morris is ready to change posi- tions - slightly. Instead of being simplya pointguard, he wants to become the Wolverines' general on the court. Who better to tell him how to make that transformation than The General himself? Gary Grant, a dynamic guard for Michigan from 1985-88 who earned the nicknamed The General and was Big Ten Fresh- man of the Year in 1985, was in Ann Arbor this weekend for a reunion. ' Grant watched the Wolver- ines struggle through a 62-44 loss to Wisconsin. After the game, he and Morris stood off to the side of the locker room talk- ing about the freshman's process to become a general, too. "As soon as we broke up out of the huddle, I wanted to go (talk to) him," Morris said. "He's been through this. He's been in my shoes. He was successful, so I was just trying to get whatever information I could from him. He told me on offense just to be a general, just tell people where to go. He said everything would fall into place. "No matter what mistakes you make or anything, if you have a bad game, just keep your con- fidence up. Even though I'm a freshman, don't be afraid to tell people what to do." Saturday's loss, though the score didn't indicate it, was a good first step for Morris's growth. Michigan coach John Beilein removed redshirt sophomore Laval Lucas-Perry from the starting lineup and inserted Morris. He began the season's first nine games in the starting lineup but had been coming off the bench in recent weeks. The decision to start Mor- ris came on Wednesday, the day after Michigan was shellacked by Northwestern 67-52. Morris scored eight points and tallied three assists in 33 minutes of playing time against Wisconsin on Saturday. "Coach just said that I had to be a solid point guard, it's what the team needs," Morris said. "I need to go out there and be an outlet of him on the court." It's been alongseason, and the point guard position has been one area where the Wolverines have struggled all year. Sopho- more Stu Douglass, naturally a shooting guard, has talked about challenges he's faced as someone who has never really brought the ball up the court on every possession. Douglass knows how hard the position is, and he appreciates how Morris is natu- rally comfortable there. "He's been a point guard his entire life," Douglass said. "He knows how to lead a team.... He knows how to win, and he's a natural leader like that. He's been a big help this year, the win and loss doesn't really show it, but he's helped us a lot." Morris echoed the impor- tance of a point guard's leader- ship. He emphasized being more vocal on the court, and making his teammates better by improv- ing his own play. Part of that comes from simply gaining more experience. "Three-fourths of the season is under my belt," Morris said. "Not really like a freshman no more. I should be playing like more than a freshman. I've had an opportunity to get a lot of minutes. You can't just go out there and keep making freshman mistakes." Morris has shown that he's learned from mistakes and has made a concerted effort to limit turnovers. He gave the ball away just once in Saturday's game. But, like Grant told him after the loss, being a point guard - See MORRIS, Page 3B The Wolverines starting line up looks on as Wisconsin guard Trevon Hughes dunks a Michigan's 62-44 loss at Crisler Arena on Saturday. x tainly not the norm for a team that gan struggled mightily from the field, relies heavily on long-range jumpers. causing the long bombs to become a The key, according to Beilein, was necessity. Wisconsin's ability to fight through And when they needed 3-pointers, screens and stay in the faces of the as has been the case so often this sea- Wolverines. son, they couldn't get any. Michigan "They chase you off every screen shot zero percent from long range in and they took that part away from the second half, missing all nine of its us," Beilein said. "We were trying to attempts. get open ones, we just couldn't get Wisconsin also cooled off sig- any." nificantly, but because of Michigan's In the first half, Michigan's scor- struggles, it didn't really matter. The ing from beyond the 3-point line was Badgers shot just 36 percent from the a luxury. In the second half, Michi- See Page 3B CAMERON INDOORS Wolverine Chris Cameron earned his way on to the U.S. National Team for the third straight year Page 2B HAWAIIAN THRILLER Michigan water polo finishes 2-2 after a weekend filled with highly ranked West Coast competition. Page 4B