The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, November 18, 2010 - 7A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Thursday, November18, 2010 - 7A Consistent play from third line sparks icers Junior guard Zack Novak is expected to provide an offensive boost off the bench this season for the Wolverines. 'M hopes shooters stay hot against By CASANDRA PAGNI Daily Sports Writer While most athletes agree that competition among teammates is good, sophomore forwards Chris Brown and A.J. Treais take their friendly rivalry pretty seriously. As linemates on the Michigan ice hockey team and roommates, their close friendship adds fuel to their competitive edges. To keep pushing each other to get better, Brown and Treais regularly make predictions about who will score before each game. The incentive? They give each other rewards when they're right. And according to Treais, Brown is leading the way. "Sometimes we just try to pre- dict who is going to score," Treais said after practice Wednesday. "And then if he scores, I give him something and if I score, vice versa. It's to keep it fun. I think he's winning because I didn't get my first goal until last weekend, so good for him." Treais and Brown are used to playing together - they spent the last half of last season on the same line and played together for two years on the Ann Arbor- based U.S. National Team Devel- opment Program. They started this season on different lines, but for the past two weekends, Brown and Treais have played on a line with fresh- man left winger Luke Moffatt. There is something to be said for familiarity. Over the four- game span, the trio has provided a consistent offensive spark for the Wolverines (5-2-1-0 CCHA, 6-3-3 overall), tallying a com- bined three goals and 11 assists. Treais has netted his only two goals of the season in the past two series, and Brown and Moffatt each have had three-assist games during that time. Prior to playing together, Brown had just one goal and one assist while Moffatt and Treais hadn't recorded a point. While Treais acknowledged that at least two of the goals from his line have been a direct prod- uct of "puck luck," as Michigan coach Red Berenson calls it, the sophomore knows the important role that work ethic plays in hav- ing success on the ice. "We've got a lot of confidence (on the line)," Treais said. "I mean, we've been working hard and that's been translating into goals and assists. We've been a little lucky, too. I got one off the head, Luke got one off the skate. But we're working hard, and we're reading off each other real- ly well, so that's good too." Moffatt, Brown and Treais haven't just been scoring goals and notching assists, though. The line has clicked at the right time for the Wolverines, scoring at crucial moments in each of their last two Saturday matchups. After being shut out two Fri- days ago against Alaska-Fair- banks, Michigan rebounded to grab game two thanks in large part to the production of Brown, Moffatt and Treais. The Wol- verines took an early lead with senior forward Louie Caporus- so's goal at 1:25 in the first, but the Nanooks scored just 23 sec- onds into the second period to tie the game at one. Moffatt's first career goal came two minutes later to give Michigan the one-goal advantage. And after the Nanooks tied the game at two, Treais responded with his first goal of the season to cement the win. "Confidence is definitely huge, especially getting the first goal," Treais said. "My first goal of the season, for a while I didn't think it was ever going to come. When your confidence is high, every- thing is better." The line responded ina similar way this past Saturday against Notre Dame. When the Fight- ing Irish scored first, the crowd at Yost Ice Arena fell silent. But after a five-minute span, Treais found his way to the net for his second goal of the season to tie the game at one. While the game went back and forth two more times before the Wolverines could pull away, Treais's score put Michigan back in the game, coming off its third consecutive Friday night loss. "A little more confidence, little more spark, a little enthusiasm ... they're giving our team a life right now," Berenson said. "(Brown), for example, was struggling until we put him on that line and now he's excited and he's getting a little confidence. And he hasn't even started to score yet. Wait until he starts to score. He's play- ing physical, he's working hard and he's really taken charge of that line." Berenson constantly empha- sizes the fact that line chang- es can be expected to occur frequently, especially to help jump-start certain players who aren't having production in games. But in the case of Treais, Brown and Moffatt, the line has gelled quickly and hasn't given Berenson a reason to doubt its legitimacy. "It helps sometimes to have the chemistry with someone that you respect so much," Berenson said. "You don't want to let them down, you want to help them, and they want to help you. It's just contagious." By BEN ESTES guard Darius Morris said Wednes- Daily Sports Writer day. "And we make shots in practice --- ---- and he recruits a lot of shooters and In the 2008-09 season, the Mich- we know that everybody on this igan men's basketball team shot team can get it done. It's just the 42.5 percent from the field, includ- bottom line of going out there and ing 33.4 percent executing it. on three-point "Just hopefully we can be consis- attempts. The Bowling tent this year. We don't want to have next year, those Gmn at flashes where some games we're 50 numbers dipped percent, 30 percent or 10 percent. to 4n.6 percent Michigan We just want to be consistent." and 29.9 percent, When: Tonight The Falcons aren't a very explo- respectively. at 7 p.m. sive offensive team. They only mus- So it comes Where: tered 52 points in a season-opening as no surprise Crisler Arena loss to Howard, and they return just that the former two of their top-six scorers from last made the NCAA TnRadio year's team, a squad that finished in Tournament for Network last place in the Mid-American Con- the first time all ference's East Division. decade, while One of those players though, the latter slid to a junior swingman Scott Thomas, has disappointing seventh-place finish scoring potential. The forward led in the Big Ten, failing to make any Bowling Green in scoring last sea- postseason tournament. son and is repeating the feat so far That's why the Wolverines' per- in 2010, coming in with 15.5 points formance in their season opener per game. Thomas can do damage last Saturday against South Caro- from any spot on the court, meaning lina Upstate was so encouraging for Michigan will have to be disciplined Michigan fans. Michigan (1-0) went to keep him fromgting open ooks. 22-of-50 from the field and made Down low, the Falcons feature seven of 22 3-pointers, good for 3L8 big-bodied freshman Cameron percent. Black. The 6-foot-10, 230-pound The team will have to continue center is a physical presence in the to put up those kinds of numbers paint and will be a challenge for the in order to perform above its rock- Wolverines' equally inexperienced bottom expectations this season. group of big men. Thursday night's game against "He's a strong guy," Beilein said. Bowling Green (1-1) at Crisler Arena "He's just going to get rebounds just will provide another test early. because he's a space eater, so we've "(Coach John Beilein) really got to play with our feet around him emphasizes trying to put up a lot of to make sure that we somehow can shots in practice," sophomore point establish some leverage with him when he has the ball, and when he doesn't have the ball, because he can get some put-backs very easy because of his size." But if Michigan's excellent defen- sive performance against the Spar- tans is any indication, it should be able to slow down the Falcons' aver- age attack. That just makes it even more critical that the Wolverines' offense remains efficient - a poor showing could keep Bowling Green in the game longer than it should be. One area of particular focus will be on the fast break. Beilein wasn't happy with his team's tran- sition attack against South Carolina Upstate, as Michigan failed to con- vert on a number of attempts. Whether it was Morris throwing an errant pass or any number of his teammates mishandling the point guard's quality looks, the Wolver- ines appeared rusty when pushing the ball. But the players believe they can straighten it out. "(Fast-break mistakes) were all decision-making errors," junior guard Zack Novak said. "They weren't effort errors. People were running hard, probably as hard as they ran, but we just made bad deci- sions. (Improvement) will come as you play together more." Beilein knows Falcons coach Louis Orr from their days in the Big East - Orr coached Seton Hall when Beilein was still at West Virginia. And whenever their teams squared off, Beilein said, the home team was usually the victor. I I After weekend sweep, Blue advances to World Series GET YOUR. SENIOR PORTRAIT TAKEN November 10-12 and 15-19 in the Sophia B. Jones room of the Michigan Union North Campus November 18-19 in Valley room of Pierpont ByEMILYBONCHI Daily Sports Writer The bat made contact, popping the ball up into short right field, just behind the second baseman. After a collision between junior right fielder Ashley Rose McLaury and senior second baseman Jackie Genow, the ball somehow still rested securely in Genow's glove. The Michigan club softball team had made the third and final out against Central Michigan, earn- ing the Great Lakes North Confer- ence title. The victory on Sunday, which secured a trip to the 2011 National Club Softball Association World Series in Columbus, Ga., has been a long time coming. In 2002, two students interest- ed in playing softball, but not at the Varsity level, founded the club program. Now, eight seasons later, the team has developed quickly, expanding from a pickup team on Elbel Field to a conference-win- ning program. The Wolverines (12-3) packed up their cars early Sunday morn- ing and drove to Mt. Pleasant, Mich. for their final games of the fall season - a triple-header against Central Michigan. Two wins would give them first place in the conference. But if Grand Valley won just one game that weekend, the threat of a tie for first would loom. A sweep, however, would give Michigan the berth to nationals. Junior Kelly Babcock pitched a shutout in game one, giving the Wolverines the 9-0 win. During the next two games, pitched by junior Lyndsay Berger and Bab- cock, respectively, Michigan lim- ited the Chippewas' offense to just eight runs. Sophomore Brigid Lynch, junior Genevieve Kotyuk and Burger earned top offensive honors for the Wolverines, con- sistently getting on base and pro- ducing RBIs. Michigan ended up sweeping the series with scores of 6-2 and 13-6 in the second and third games. "It was absolutely freezing at the game and it was snowing," said Berger, who is co-president of the club. "It was our last game of the year and everyone was pretty tired. As soon as the last out was made, we all freaked out. 'We just won the conference, we can go to nationals!'" The shutout against Central Michigan was Michigan's fifth of the season, as it blanked Indiana - South Bend in three games on Oct. 10 and shut out Bowling Green in a game the following weekend. The club softball team has out- scored its opponents 126-63 this season, proving that talent on the diamond can be found outside of Alumni Field. Berger and her co-president, junior Jessica Kraft, have worked together to make sure everything runs smoothly throughout the season, since being involved in a club sport brings upon many dif- ferent types of responsibilities. "I think it's a completely dif- ferent experience," Berger said, comparing the club team to a varsity program. "There is a lot more of a balancing act that goes on. A lot of girls are challenging softball with one, sometimes two jobs, and a full academic load. In addition to that we have to pro- vide our own transportation. We're paying for equipment, bats, uniforms ourselves." This player-run team definitely has its ups and downs - last week- end only one umpire showed up to a game, and the team has to fund the entirety of its trip to Georgia. But the hard work its members have put in throughout the course of the season has certainly made it worthwhile. "I think this team is one of the most talented teams I've seen while being here," said Michigan graduate student and fifth-year shortstop Kelly Bartlett. "What's made us really good this year is that we have an older team; a lot of our team members are juniors and seniors. Over the past couple of years, we've really developed together, making our individual talents even better." This year, the Wolverines returned thirteen players, nine of whom are juniors. "We've banded together as a team," Barlett said. "We realized we had to stick together and face the opposition with those issues. If we started fighting internally, then things would start to fall apart." Junior Ashley Rose McLaury said earning a bid to the World Series was something the play- ers have wanted for a while and receiving it was an all-around team accomplishment. "I think that we have a lot fun when we're together," McLaury said. "And that chemistry trans- lates into us being able to work together as a team. At the end of the third game on Sunday we all wanted that out. We wanted to finish it and have that good solid end to a really awesome fall sea- son." A 1 Then sittigf e~ This price inClU the 2011 Michi Sign up online b and enterin Sc Phone 734.418. E-mail ensian.uj wP PCA Bring in this ad and receive $2 off the sitting fee. Michiganensian YEARBOOK