8 -- Tuesday, February 1, 2011 The Michigan Daily - mchigandaily.corrm 8 - Tuesday, February 1, 2011 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Hunwick's stellar play continues in loss By MICHAEL FLOREK Daily Sports Editor DETROIT - The No. 6 Michi- gan hockey team's bench was a little more crowded than usual Saturday night. Senior goaltender Bryan Hogan was in uniform NOTEBOOK for the first time since his groin injury on Dec. 11. While Hogan joined freshman Adam Janecyk in standing behind the bench, it was still senior Shawn Hunwick who was between the pipes. He didn't disappoint. Hunwick made 28 stops in the Wolverines' 2-1 loss to Michigan State, includ- ing 22 on the Spartans' first 22 shots. The game was scoreless late into the second period and as each minute ticked by, Hunwick matched his counterpart, Michi- gan State's Will Yanakeff. Each gave up goals in the final minute, setting the stage for the third peri- od. After a Michigan State goal, Michigan turned the puck over. A backhand pass came out from the boards and Hunwick found him- self alone with Spartan Kevin Wal- rod. Hunwick made the pad save, setting up the rush that led to a penalty shot on the other end: "I thinkthe chancesthey had on Hunwick might have been tougher than the chances we had at the other end," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "Hunwick gave us a chance. That's all you can ask." Despite the loss dropping his record to 10-5-4, Hunwick also dropped his goals against average to 2.33, though he still ranks 27th in the country. NO MORE STREAKING: It's been a long time since sullen faces emerged from the Michigan dress- ing room. The sixth-ranked Wolverines, a team Michigan State coach Rick Comley called the "bestteaminthe country, top to bottom," snapped a numberstreaks with their loss. Their five game winning streak is gone. Senior forward Carl Hage- lin's nine-game point streak is over. Michigan's undefeated streak on Saturday nights, which lasted the whole season, is over at 13 games. But according to senior forward Louie Caporusso, who snapped a streak of his own when he scored his first goal in seven games, the streaks may have been a little mis- leading. "We want to be a CCHA playoff team, CCHA regular season cham- pionship team, we're going to have to beat these teams," senior winger Scooter Vaughan said. "This is a really big weekend (at Miami). We're not going in there expecting anythingless than six points." The loss that snapped the streak also dropped Michigan out of first place. Notre Dame's shootout win vaulted them over Michigan by one point. But the Wolverines have two games in hand on both the Fight- ing Irish and third-place Miami (Ohio). Michigan heads to Oxford next weekend to play the Red- Hawks while Notre Dame has the weekend off. NOTES: The loss evens Michi- gan's season series with the Spar- tans at two ... Saturday's game was likely the last Comely will have against the Wolverines. He announced his retirement at the end of the season this week and won't play Michigan again in the regular season ... Kevin Lynch's penalty shot in the third period was the first since now-senior defenseman Chad Langlais had one last season - 66 games ago. ERIN KIRKLAND/Daily Michigan coach Kevin Borseth has led Michigan to a respectable 13-8 record. Whic teamewilt showup next? SAM WOLSON/Daily Senior goaltender Shawn Hunwick, pictured here duringthe Big Chill at the Big House, has been a solid player for the Wolverines since Bryan Hogan injured hisgroin. MEN'S BASKETBALL Vogrich solidifying himself on offense By ZAK PYZIK surprise that younger players Daily Sports Editor are expected to contribute a lot. But it is surprising that one of the Michigan men's basketball athletes doing so much is the sec- guard Matt Vogrich is 27 minutes ond-smallest player on the team - away from doubling the amount of standing at 6-foot-4 and weighing time he played all last season. 190 pounds. And the Wolverines still have at "I don't know if you noticed, but least10 games remaining. I'm not one of the biggest kids out The sophomore's role in Michi- there," Vogrich said. "So some- gan coach John Beilein's scheme times I have to getscrappy to get to has evolved to make him where he the ball or to geta rebound. Those is one of the team's main contribu- are thetypes of things I work on at tors off the bench. practice too, just finding the ball." On a team with no seniors and Vogrich tallied 11 3-pointers for three freshmen starters, it is no Michigan last year. This season he has already netted 18 and is shoot- ing atla consistent 39 percent from beyond the arc. With freshman Tim Hardaway Jr. starting the entire season at the three-guard position, it has been Vogrich has come in for Hardaway Jr. when he's needed rest or is in foul trouble. Being smaller than a lot of his defenders, Vogrich sports a striking resemblance to team- mate Zack Novak, who had the same issue playing as the four in the post last year. Novak - best known for his hustle plays that aren't recorded on the stat sheet - has been one of the Wolverines' top defenders. Vogrich has demonstrated the same type of hustle on the court as Novak - several times this season he has dove for loose balls and fought for possession with players much larger than him. "Zack (Novak) is ,just one of those guys who work hard every play," Vogrich said earlier in this season. "How can I not try to play like him? He put's 110 per- cent into everything that he does and I'mjust a lot like him." This year, Vogrich has eight steals and a block - already more than what he had last year in both categories. Given Beilein's strategy, Vogrich is normally on the hard- wood to take advantage of any open looks he gets on the perim- eter - the reason 47 of his 66 field goal attempts are 3-point shots. But every now and then you'll see Vogrich do something out of the ordinary. He averages about two rebounds a game. Arguably his most impressive stunt was against Northwestern, when he came from 3-point land to tip in a bricked shot before it rolled off the rim. "It was just a good bounce so I just hit it with my righthand and it rolled off the glass,"he said. This type of hustle followed other plays by Vogrich which have shaped games. Against Penn State, Vogrich hit a 3-pointer about five minutes into the second half to tie the game after the Nittany Lions led by as many as nine points.Then Vogrich stole the ball and that pos- session propelled the Wolverines to its first lead of the second half. "It definitely started with Matt Vogrich," Novak said after the Wolverines win against Penn State. "He comes out, we had just scored a bucket, he comes back, gets a steal right away. That's the kind of energy plays we need. Just huge play fromhim." The energy that Vogrich brings to this youthful Wolverine squad is something that was otherwise absent last year. I had it all written in my head. After the Michigan women's basketball team upset then-No. 24 Ohio State for the second time this season and vaulted into a four-way tie for first place in the Big Ten on Thursday, I KEVIN figured the RAFTERY Wolverines wr wel On Women's were well Baskebl on their way B to their first NCAA tournament berth since 2001 and possibly their first Big Ten title since ... ever - and I was goingto let everybody know about it. Suddenly, Michigan had the chance to be a basketball school again. A women's basketball school. Okay, maybe that's a little bit of a stretch, but maybe stu- dents on campus would recog- nize the names Veronica Hicks or Carmen Reynolds as Michigan basketball players, not just the girls sitting next to them in class. I'd present my case of why this team is worth watching, and the campus would go into a women's basketball frenzy (it doesn't hurt to dream) - the first ever in Ann Arbor. But then Sunday rolled around, and the Wolverines headed to Minneapolis to take on the Big Ten bottom-dwelling Golden Gophers. I was so convinced they'd win that I already had half of my story written before tipoff. As you may have guessed by now, Minnesota beat Michigan (6-3 Big Ten, 13-8 overall) hand- ily, as the Golden Gophers led the entire game en route to a 60-50 victory. And just like that, there went my brilliant idea for a story. How could I make a plug for a team that just lost tothe worst team in the league? The answer: I couldn't. But I could do something else. In my eyes, there are two women's basketball teams inAnn Arbor (yes, your dream has come true). First, there's the team who lost to Minnesota on Sunday. That's the team that turns the ball over four times before final- ly converting its first field goal, the team who gets out-hustled, out-rebounded, and "out-phys- icalled," as Michigan coach Kevin Borseth called it after the Minnesota game. And it's the team who simply doesn't have the resilience to come back when it's down. It's the same team who got smoked at home by Detroit - a team at the bottom of the Hori- zon League standings - earlier in the season. And then there's the team who stormed back from a 13-point halftime deficit last Thursday to beat Ohio State in Columbus to complete its first series sweep of the Buckeyes in programhistory.' That's the team that has play- ers who step up in big-time moments - players like sopho- more Rachel Sheffer, who scored acareer-high23 pointsinColum- bus and nailed two pressure- packed free throws with under 30 seconds left to give Michigan the jead. It's a team with players like Hicks (I'm convinced her picture is in the dictionary under "senior leader"), who led her team to four straight victories and tothe top of the conference standings en route to her first-career Big Ten Player of the Week award. It's an undersized team who annoys the hell out of bigger opponents, often putting three or four players on the block; swatting the ball at every oppor- tunity. It's the team that held three-time Big Ten Player of the Year Jantel Lavender to a career- low 10 points last Thursday. It's the team who beat three ranked teams in consecutive games in December. That team is fun to watch. And for the most part, it's been that team who has resided in Ann Arbor so far this year. But with three of Michigan's next five games coming against the Big Ten leaders - start- ing with Penn State at home on Thursday - the question remains. Do the Wolverines have what it takes to earn their first NCAA berth in 10 years? There's one Michigan wom- en's basketball team that does. 0 AMERICS FAVOFIE SANDvWICeI HEVERY aVSr Wednesday Michigan League Ballroom Gerald R. Ford February 2,2011 911 N. University Ave. School of Public Policy 4:00-5:30 p.m. UNIVERSITYOFrMItHIGAN Free and open to the public. Info: 734-615-3893 Reception to follow. fordschoolumich.edu NIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN i a R