0 8A - Thursday, January 14, 2010 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Falling short hurts most at Crisler t Y 3f 1 ih S 7 r fi 4 1 + Y,' !K+". _ _ i r z ,.d - v _ p sue. , . fir~ . "°^ , °"Ta, - _ _ w' { ;: fix' h. . { g '3' . P ,.rte ... , b. Honestly, I felt claustrophobic. After the Michigan men's bas- ketball team upset then-No. 15 Ohio State, the Wolverine Nation started to come crawl- ing back. That was fine. It was good to see some enthusi- But when NICOLE Michigan AUERBACH pulled off one of the most unexpected and exhilarating comebacks against Penn State a week ago, the rest of the fanbase returned to the bandwagon. Or rather, smushed into the band- wagon. { The excitement reminded me, well, of last year. Students wore basketball jerseys to class, class- mates tried to scalp tickets on Facebook for upcoming games and the buzz throughout campus was getting louder and louder. Wait. This couldn't be happen- -11 l , on the tip of our tongues. Are the Wolverines actually good? It took 40 minutes and a blown 17-point lead against a rather mediocre Northwestern team to answer that question once and for all: No. In the most soul-crushing, stake-through-the-heart kind of way, the answer was no. And boy, does that suck. This was supposed to be the year of Michigan basketball. Remember last season - the first March Madness appearance in 11 years? Well, it wasn't supposed to be a one-and-done deal. For the first time in more than a decade, fans on campus finally let themselves believe in the pro- gram. Fifteen games, 7 losses and an RPI of 162 later, and we're basi- cally back to square one. But why? Michigan lost a pair of walk-on guards this offseason. That's it. The core of the team, and most importantly Manny Harris and DeShawn Sims, remained. High expectations practically oozed out of Ann Arbor. The accolades poured in even before the Wolverines began their sea- son: A No. 15 ranking. Pre-season All-Big Ten selections. Features in national college basketball magazines. Student season ticket sales increased 500 percent, balloon- ing to nearly 2,500 tickets this season. That's nearly 2,500 dis- appointed students who planned their winter classes around mid- week games. That's nearly 2,500 people who expected the season to extend deep into March with a trip to the NCAA Tournament. Now, that sentiment seems almost ludicrous. In fact, this season has felt more like a long, drawn-out dream that none of us can wake up from. Did I say dream? I meant nightmare. Bad losses, a pathetic 29 per- cent 3-point field goal percentage, poor interior defense ... the list of Michigan's on-court problems could go on for days. The trendy excuse is that the team suffers from a lack of leadership. Me? I don't believe that, and I don't buy the "maybe the players just don't care" argument, either. They care, and they're good guys. They're as confused as the fans are, and it's pretty apparent they don't know how to fix things any more than we do. I'm hearing that it's a pretty similar situation next door at Yost. A talented team that - for some reason or another - has fallen out of the national spotlight. Sure, the hockey team's 19-year It was supposed to be the year of Michigan basketball. NCAA Tournament appearance streak might snap this year. That's rough. Even though Hockeytown is just 40 miles from Ann Arbor, the fact is that college hockey isn't a major sport here on campus, like football and basketball are. Even if Michigan hockey won 19 straight NCAA titles, it wouldn't attract 2,500 student season tick- et-holders. If the hockey team's tourna- ment appearance streak ends, half the campus won't notice. But when the basketball team snaps its one-year tournament appearance streak, it's going tobe a long, quiet March. And after DeShawn and, in all likelihood, Manny leave this sum- mer, it could be the first of many. - Auerbach can be reached at naauer@umich.edu PPW61 ing. And then Sunday came along and brought us all back to reality. Welcome to Michigan basketball circa 2009-10. This is the team that lost to Utah, which lost to a school called Illinois State (Who?). These are the Wolverines who, in front of a hopeful Crisler nfiUi. Arena crowd, were embarrassed by Boston College, ateam that lost to Maine ... at home (Seriously). Those losses were head- scratchers, but after a while, we became numb to the pain. A few false glimmers of hope later - aka the Ohio State and Penn State shockers - and we couldn't quite figure out this bipolar team. That question we didn't dare ask was What do you think? Which season is more pair Join Auerbach and Kartje and sound off in the Duel of the Disappointments Live Chat Today at 6 p.m. on michigandaily.com f" r- 4 0' Failure hits hardestat Yost 4 Imagine that for 19 straight years, your family has gathered to celebrate your birthday. I'm talking balloons, choc- olate birthday cake with that special frost- ing your mom knows you like . and presents just for you. RYAN The whole she- bang. KARTJE Then, you - wake up with a smile on that fateful day, expec- tations through the roof, because nothing - by your judgment - is out of the ordinary. Much to your chagrin, there's no cake, no bal- loons and no presents. Your family has forgotten your birthday, a la Sixteen Candles. Except, in this case, the Michi- gan hockey team is Molly Ring- wald. And that birthday you have marked on your calendar year after year, because well, it's your birthday, that's the NCAA Tour- nament. John Hughes couldn't have written it any better. At 12-10, the Wolverines are enduring one of the worst seasons of coach Red Berenson's 26-year tenure. And with each crushing loss to teams increasingly inferior to their own, hopes of extending the longest streak of NCAA Tourna- ment appearances in the nation to 20 are looking slimmer and slim- mer. With a returning group of 11 NHL draftees - four of those in rounds one or two - and a Hobey Baker finalist from the year before, Michigan looked like the Fab Five on Mark McGwire's ste- roid regimen. So in front of a crowd of loyal Michigan hockey fans on Nov. 7, a following that forgave the team's near screw-up in the home opener against Niagara and its two-goal defeat at the hands of Miami (Ohio) the night before, fans expected a triumphant comeback, a return to glory, a piece de resis- tance of sorts. Instead, they got 65 penalty minutes - 51 in the third period. For a frame of reference, that's more than a third of the penalty minutes upcoming CCHA oppo- nent Alaska has tallied all season. Berenson, a man of little visible emotion, looked embarrassed. He took nearly half an hour to address his team in the locker room, and when he finally left, called them "spoiled brats" to the media. Four games and 14 goals later, the star-studded defense was underachieving, the offense couldn't score and Michigan fans were praying for an early arrival from mega goaltending recruit Jack Campbell to spell Bryan Hogan's mediocrity and turn around a five-game losing streak. That is of course, before Camp- bell decommitted, opting instead for the OHL. And to add insult to injury (lit- erally and figuratively), Spartan forward Corey Tropp, who was kicked off the team for a cheap shot on senior Wolverine Steve Kampfer a year before, beat Kampfer one-on-one tosecure the series sweep. It vas enough to stomp on the grave of Michigan's 19-year streak, but Enemy No. 1 of Michi- gan hockeyfans did his best rendi- tion of "Twist and Shout" on the way out of Yost Ice Arena. And much to the delight of masochists everywhere, Tropp's a shoe-in to be a Hobey Baker Award finalist this year. Pouring salt in their own wounds became a hobby, one capped off when Berenson benched Hogan for the final period of the Wolverines' open- ing round loss to RPI in the Great Lakes Invitational. As two-time defending GLI champions, Michigan's expecta- tions were high. And though they trailed early, they even scored two quick goals in the third to tie it up with backup Shawn Hunwick in net. But in a fit of bad luck that would make Lemony Snicket blush, Hun- wick's .5-foot, 7-inch frame was about three inches from stopping the game-winning goal. This had to be a dream. Sure, 2010 was supposed to be the year of Michigan basketball. Bandwagoners all around cam- pus bought tickets in droves when they saw the shiny number before the Wolverines' name. But what they don't understand is that it's been the year of Michi- gan hockey for nearly two decades It's been the year of Michigan hockey for two decades now. I now. And fans abandoned the bandwagon long ago for a charter bus. Michigan wins are like a life- style for dedicated hockey fans, who have been coming to Yost for years to get away from the culture of disappointment fester- ing a few miles down the street at Crisler. Nearly a quarter century of lofty expectations in the Beren- son era have been sent swirling down the toilet as Michigan has limped to splits with CCHA base- ment dwellers like Bowling Green (who has been as bad in the past 19 years as Michigan has been good) and Ohio State. So when the basketball team misses the Tournament this year, Michigan students will look to the hockey team for postseason comfort. Just like they have every year, with the exception of last season, since 1998. But this time, there won't be any birthday candles waitingto be blown out. - Kartje can be reached at rkartje@umich.edu