: ti, , _ k, . .. 4'.. :. . f The Michigan Daily j michigandailycom ( January 24,2011 WA RM UP THE SLEDS Michigan 2 Alaska O Michigan 4 Alaska 3 Nanooks si i sent back to Alaska empty- handed after \ weekend sweep SAMANTHA TRAUBEN/Daily It's not always pretty, but 'M'is gutting out wins The Michigan hockey team celebrates its ninth win in its last ten games Saturday night over Alaska. Despite shoddy defense, Ices grab weekend sweep By MICHAEL FLOREK Daily Sports Editor Ibo ten that the Wolver- ines learn a lesson from the Spar- tans. Two weeks ago, Michigan State scored back-to-back goals with a two-man advantage to beat the Michigan hockey team in overtime. Michigan coach Red Berenson tooknote. And after No.6 Michigan's 4-3 victory on Saturday, in which it killed off a five-on-three late in the third period, the Wolverines proved how much they learned in two weeks. "We had to do some serious work on it a couple of weeks ago to get our players to understand how to handle that five-on- three," Berenson said. "Then it's a gan territory - this time having matter of a sense of urgency." just a five-on-four power play with abottft inihiut~eft -and foundft s a and Michigan clingig to aene- shooting Vine from thepoint. goal lead Saturday, the crowd Senior forward Carl Hagelin erupted. A day after the Wolver- charged out and dove to block ines beat the Nanooks 2-0, the the shot. Langlais quickly found student section jumped up and the loose puck and sent it down down like a fishing bobber in the the ice - increasing the roar water. of the already raucous Yost Ice A slight rumble took over the Arena crowd. building as the rest stomped "We were all pretty tired their feet. The cheers weren't but when we heard the crowd for a goal or a save: only a simple every time we dumped it in their clear down the ice. zone, we went crazy just like the Facing 57 seconds of a two- crowd," Hagelin said. man disadvantage, the puck The body-flying, back- squirted towards the boards against-the-wall defense was near the faceoff circle. Senior the redeeming act of a team that Chad Langlais dove and swat- struggled in their own zone the ted the puck down the ice. The whole weekend. Michigan (14- Nanooks came back into Michi- See SWEEP, Page 3B Before boarding a plane for Fairbanks, Alaska in early November, Michigan coach Red Berenson compared the Alaska defense to a pack of musk oxen. Yes, those very wooly beasts from the frozen Alaskan tundra. Berenson explained that the STEPHEN J. defense's tendency to NESBITT herd around the net to minimize the risk of an offen- sive attack mimicked the strate- gies of the musk oxen. But by the time the Yost Ice Arena student section finished chanting "Warm up the sleds"- after the Michigan hockey team's 4-3 victory on Saturday, the Nanooks had lumbered to the dressing room dually defeat- ed - both swept by the Wolver- ines and knocked back to eighth in the conference standings. Michigan has sent several teams home empty-handed recently, including a pair of sweeps against.Ferris State and Alaska in the past two week-' ends. More impressively, the Wolverines are beating good defenses - the Bulldogs and Nanooks were Nos. 1 and 4 in the conference, respectively - picking them apart for 15 total goals. "They're a good team, boy, they're a good team," Berenson -said of Alaska. "I thought we played pretty"well when we got the puck in their zone. But they really exploited us when they got the puck." Since the beginning of December, the Wolverines have gone unbeaten in regulation with a record of 10-2-0 - the two losses came in. overtime fashion against Ohio State and Michigan State. And just two of those wins have been one-goal victories. After struggling to maintain a cohesive attack from night to night in the first half of the sea- son - Michigan entered early December with a 2-4-2 record See NESBITT, Page 3B ICE HOCKEY Blue 'scoring by committee' Wolverines battle, but drop sixth-straight game at the hands of No.15 Minnesota W By CASANDRA PAGNI Daily Sports Writer Michigan coach Red Beren- son dubbed it "scoring by com- mittee," but senior forward Scooter Vaughan simply tagged it as "awesome." Call it what- ever you want, but any way you look at it, it's simple. Couple the fact that the Wol- verine defensemen have 20 goals so far this season with the fact that three of Michigan's four lines have been clicking, recently, and it doesn't take a rocket scientist to see the con- nection between the Wolver- ines' timely secondary scoring and their recent victories. In its back-to-back weekend sweeps, No.6 Michigan received offensive production from all over the ice - with nine players tallying at least one point in this weekend's sweep. In the Wolverines' 2-0 Friday night shutout over the Nanooks, sophomore defenseman Lee Moffie and freshman defense- man Jon Merrill scored the only goals for the Wolverines. Moffie's goal was his fourth of the season and third in two weekends - he earned CCHA defensemen of the week honors for his two-goal series against Ferris State last weekend - while Merrill carried over his success into Saturday night's contest. Merrill scored just 1:15 into the first period to get Michi- gan (14-4-1-0 CCHA, 17-6-4 overall) out to the early lead. Merrill's two-goal weekend performance against Alaska See COMMITTEE, Page 3B By BEN ESTES stops, though, continually cut- Daily Sports Writer ting into Minnesota's lead only to see the Gophers respond From the opening tip, it was immediately. clear that the Michigan team It was a balanced effort that that took the court Saturday downed the Wolverines. Four night against Minnesota wasn't Gophers scored in double dig- the same its, though none scored more group that MINNESOTAN 64 than 13. Michigan had success got blown against Minnesota (4-3, 15-4) out at Indi- last season, finishing 2-0 in ana and Northwestern in its last their season series, aided by the two games. absence of Al Nolen. But improved play didn't In Saturday's game, the result in a win for the Wol- Gopher point guard sat out verines. The Michigan men's the entire second half after basketball team fell to the 15th- injuring his right ankle. This ranked Golden Gophers, 69-64, time around his absence didn't at Crisler Arena. matter, as the Wolverines suc- The two teams' offenses cumbed to Minnesota's deep struggled at times - Minne- lineup. sota shot 63.4 percent from the "They got a lot of good play- field but had 17 turnovers. Each ers," redshirt freshman forward started trading baskets late in Jordan Morgan said after the the game, as the Wolverines game. "They do a really good scrambled to come back. job of finding the best shot for Michigan (1-6 Big Ten, 11-9 everybody. It's not one person overall) just couldn't get enough See MINNESOTA, Page 3B ANNA ScHULTE/Daily Juniorguard Stu Douglass had a team-high six assists and had two 3-point- ers as the Wolverines dropped to1-6 in the Big Ten. TOO LITTLE, TOO LATE The Michigan men's basketball team has found itself in a slump with the recent performances of sophomore point guard Darius Morris. Page 4B BOILER DOWN The Michigan women's basketball team picked up its third-straight win yesterday against a talented Purdue squad. Page 2B