The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com February 22, 2010 - 3B Injured Cameron was the difference TOREHAN SHARMAN/Daily Sophomore Luke Glendening has primarily served as a defensive forward this season for the Wolverines, playing a key role on the Wolverines' penalty kill. Michigan coach Red Berenson has made special teams a key concern this season. SPower play keeps Blue from slipping By MARK BURNS PP ... and tonight we shot it more junior forward Louie Caporusso Daily Sports Editor and got some goals, so that was said. "Lebler made a great pass. good for our team. Chad did a great job of finishing it. Sophomore Luke Glenden- Winnett's fifth goal of the sea- Sometimes you'll see that pass, but ing thought to himself, "Man, we son sent the Wolverines into the it never gets finished." should shoot it more." second intermission with a 3-2 The Wolverines' power play Glendening, normally a penal- lead, and in firm possession of the has been streaky all year, at times ty-killing specialist for the Michi- momentum. But after Michigan showing signs of greatness and gan hockey team, doesn't spend (13-12-1-0 CCHA, 18-16-1 overall) sometimes, just being downright much time on the power play. So surrendered two goals in a span average. But against the Wild- he's been able to watch the last few of 1:14 early in the final stanza, the cats (11-9-6-3, 15-11-8), Michigan games as the Wolverines' woes Wolverines found themselves in showed why it has the fourth-best with the man-advantage were a hole once again. It was the sec- power play in the CCHA. I made obvious. ond time in the game the team fell The unit spends every day in Entering Saturday's contest behind and had to come back from practice working on the man- against Northern Michigan, the a deficit. advantage and Michigan coach Wolverines had converted on just Still behind with about 12 min- Red Berenson has said throughout 2-of-21 chances in their previous utes remaining in the game, Mich- the year that he has worked on the four games, with eight of those igan went on its sixth power play power play more with this team missed opportunities coming of the contest. than any in recent memory. And in the previous night's matchup Senior forward Brian Lebler it has many different options that against the Wildcats. corralled a loose puck in the offen- it can rely on with the power play. Sitting above the left face-off sive zone and, while stationed in "We haven't been consistent on dot with about six minutes left in the right corner, sent a cross-ice the power play and yet our num- the second, junior forward Ben pass to a streaking and wide-open bers tell us we're decent on the Winnett sent a simple wristshot Chad Langlais. power play," Berenson said. "But over goalie Brian Stewart's block- The Spokane, Wash. native one- really, the timing of when you er. Glendening finally saw some- timed the puck past Stewart to tie score on the power play is huge.... thing the team had been missing. the game up at four. Tonight, the power play was a big "It's always a process," Glen- "Sometimes (the power play) factor in helping us come back and dening said. "I watch a lot of the clicks, sometimes it doesn't," win that game." After the No. 3 Michigan men's gymnastics team lost by a little more than four-tenths of a point to No.2 Oklahoma on Saturday after- noon, it was hard not to wonder one thing. What if Chris AMY Cameron PARLAPIANO was at full strength? On Men's Cameron, Gymnastics who was just named to the U.S. Senior Men's National Team for the third consecutive year, has placed in the top five individual scores on the floor, pommel horse and parallel bars in each match he has performed in at full strength, dating back to the home opener againstPenn State on Jan. 24. His injury, which he described as a sprain of the middle and index fingers, kept him from competing in all three of those areas on Sat- urday. And in what could be seen as a direct result of his absence, the team's weakest events on Saturday were the pommel horse and the parallel bars, where the Wolver- ines scored a 56.650 and 55.900, respectively. Compare that to' when Cameron led the Wolver- ines to a 57.750 on the pommel horse and a season-high 58.450 on the parallel bars Jan. 30, and it's obvious that his absence had an impact. Afterward, Cameron expressed frustration at not being able to compete, but was optimistic about the team's strength. He noted that the team scored one of its lowest scores of the season on the pom- mel horse and still tied Oklahoma in that category. "We definitely could have won without Chris's other events," senior Mel Anton Santander said. It's safe to say that's true. Had they eliminated the bobbles on the parallel bars and perfected their dismounts, the Wolverines likely would have picked up that extra .45 that would have given them the victory. "But Chris could have been a huge factor into winning today," Santander continued. Also true. His presence on the parallel bars and pommel horse was definitely missed. The main question here is not how weak are the Wolverines without Cameron, but how much better than everybody else would they be with him? Michigan and Cameron will attempt to answer that question as Cameron said he continues to take all the necessary precautions to heal his hand as quickly as pos- sible in the five weeks leading up to the Big Ten Championships. And when they arrive April 2, he will be out there competing in all six events, "no matter what." The bottom line is that the dif- ference between Michigan and Oklahoma's final score was assmall as four tenths of a point. The dif- ference between Michigan being a great team and being the best team in the country is as big as Chris Cameron. 'M' ice dancers, Davis and White, stand in second place after original dance round VANCOUVER, British Colum- bia (AP) - Sizzle beats buzz. Canada's Tessa Virtue and Scott . Moir won the original dance Sunday with a sultry, fiery flamenco number that reduced the uproar over the Russians' aboriginal routine to background noise. Virtue and Moir, medalists at the last two world champi- onships, scored 68.41 points to edge Americans Meryl Davis and Charlie White. With 111.15 points overall, Virtue and Moir lead Davis and White - their training partners - by 2.60 points going into Monday night's free dance. Davis and White's Bollywood- style dance is a feast for the senses, packed with so many interesting body movements and complicated steps that one almost doesn't know where to look. Make no mistake, though, they did more than just look pretty. They were so fast they prac- tically sprinted across the ice, yet they stayed in character throughout and never once lost the playful facial expressions that transported the audience to a wedding in Mumbai. And for anyone who questions whether ice dance is a sport, just watch their twizzles - spinning turns - that they paired with arm and hand movements. Know how hard it is to pat your stomach and rub your head at the same time? It's like that. Only on skates. (6-8, 13-13) has lost a game by fewer than six points. Missed shots down the stretch, not making a key stop with 14 seconds left in regulation - it was all too familiar to Beilein. "This is a perfectexample isn't it? A perfect example," he said. ktt tRE OND/Dal fC [ ° More photos at Senior DeShawn Sims was unable to heister thehDailyo Wolverines' offense on Saturday. M1Chigan~aily.com STAPLETON From Page 1B facet of the game. "The imperfections that you try to cut down during the season," Michigan coach John Beilein said. "When a few of them happen again, it's very frustrat- ing." After shooting a combined 47 percent from the field in those two road wins and 51 percent from 3-point land, Michigan returned to its old ways this weekend, shooting 35 percent from the field and 21 percent from beyond the arc. It's tough to say a team's shoot- ing deteriorated because it's not necessarily something teams can control. But still, it looked like the team was breaking out of its sea- son-long shooting slump-over the past two games. After Saturday, we can draw the conclusion that the "slump" is simply the way things are, and any night the per- centage is above 40 percent from the field and 30 percent from long range is just an anomaly. But it was easier to see the regression in other aspects of the game. Perhaps the most evident was Michigan's defense. Other than Darius Morris, who played lockdown defense on Penn State star Talor Battle, the defense went the way of the offense: streaky. "When we haven't shot well, we are a distracted team," Beilein said. "Now you're thinking about the missed shot and not getting the loose ball. You're thinking about it on defense." This has been a problem the entire season. When Michigan shoots poorly, its defense suffers. And this is literally the exact opposite of the way a basketball team needs to operate. It's easier said than done, but when a team misses shots, it needs to play even harder on defense to make up for it. It's true you can't control when shots fall, but you can always control defense. It's what coaches tell you in the third grade, and it's still true in college. Michigan seems to still be figuring it out. After keeping the rebounding margin relatively close the past two games, on Saturday, the Wol- verines were outrebounded by 14. While it's true that Michigan was missing more shots than Penn State - which gave the Nittany Lions more opportunities for defensive rebounds - that's still a pretty big number. Not many teams can win when they get out- rebounded by that margin. So where exactly is rock bot- tom? Is it losing at home to a team that had one Big Ten win this sea- son before Saturday? I'm not sure. Right now, rock bottom looks a lot like a bottomless pit. PENN STATE From Page 1B come down to the wire. The Nit- tany Lions had just earned their first victory in conference play, and OKLAHOMA . From Page 1B high bar. "If we could have performed on one more event like we did on the high bar I think we would have come away with a victory." Michigan faced a marginal deficit going into the final rota- tion, down by 3.5 points. The high bar has always been a strong routine and after sweep- ing the event with top perfor- mances by Kelley, redshirt senior Ryari McCarthy and senior Mel Anton Santander, it looked like the Wolverines were going to make a comeback. They came up just short. Kelley was a bright spot for the Wolverines placing first in the still rings and high bar, and second in the parallel bars and all-around competition. Other bright spots for the Wolverines included Santander's first-place finish in the pommel NORTHERN; From Page 1B from a secondary scorer. It was truly a team effort to make the comebacks. And the goals weren't exactly tic-tac-toe plays - they were dirty, workman-like goals. The Wolverines made their own luck Saturday after not having much on Friday. In the first game+ of the series, Michigan fell down 0-2 in the middle of the first period and couldn't score more than one goal on 39 shots. The Wolverines ended up losing the game 3-1. The power play especially struggled on Friday as Michigan finished the game 0-8 with the man-advantage with 16 shots. But the Wolverines used the power play to come back Saturday and scored two crucial goals. One gave Michigan the lead in the second period, and the other was Lan- glais's tying goal in the third. The poise and energy with which Michigan played Saturday to come back is something the Wolverines have been trying to harness all season. The Wolver- ines have been improving in that they hadn't won a game at Crisler in more than a decade. Meanwhile, Michigan had just reeled off two straight road wins for the first time in the Beilein era. But after a four- day layoff, the momentum didn't seem to carry over into Saturday's horse and third-place finish in the high bar. Prior to Saturday's loss, Mich- igan hadn't really been tested much all season. "It was the first meet where somebody came in here and they could beat us," Cameron said. "It's just fun to have that excite- ment and that motivation behind you." With another challenge ahead for the Wolverines next week, facing No. 4 Stanford in Palo Alto, Calif., they will need to be more successful in some aspects of their routine to a legitimate contender. Michigan will look to use this narrow defeat as fuel for its upcoming schedule which only gets tougher. "As a team it was slightly dis- appointing," Santander said. "We could have done a lot better. We're just going to have to prac- tice in the gym and transfer our training in the gym into compe- tition when the pressure is actu- ally on." area, though. And junior forward Carl Hagelin said that the team has been playing better from behind since winter break. Friday's 0-2 deficit just ended up being too large of a mountain to climb. Michigan dropped to 0-9 on the season when the oppo- nent scores the first two goals of the game, and the team was 2-12- 1 entering the weekend when its opponent scored first. Comebacks have not been common. Now, with just one more regular season series remaining against Notre Dame next weekend, the Wolverines are almost out of chances to improve their seventh- place standing in the CCHA. The interesting question going into the Notre Dame series and the CCHA Tournament will be whether the Friday night Michi- gan squad or the Saturday night comeback kids come to play. And to think that all of those comebacks were almost for naught if Olver was able to put away his final chance. It sure makes the Wol- verines that much more humble. "You just feel like it's a lucky win," Berenson said. "But it's important that we won." game against Penn State (2-12 Big Ten, 10-16 overall). That, in itself, was a cause for frustration. "Very irritating," Harris said. "We're all disappointed." Saturday's loss marked the sev- enth time this season that Michigan Mention This AD And Receive $100 Off. No is the erfitt time t: ewith tn .'o the , nation's leaders in test preparation. *Small Classes -Expert Instructors -Free Extra Help Pinceton Review CONGRAT$! Results from week Sthree are In$ January 17th-March 271h TIP: Use a canvas, reusable U-M is in 5th place in bag instead of paper or the Gorilla Prize! plastic when shopping! But we're only 93rd in percentage recycled... $0 COME ON, MICHIGAN! INCREA$E YOUR RECYCLING! University of Michigan Waste Management Services www.recycle.umich.edu