The Michigan Daily I michigandaily com I February14,2011 iM aE , Chris Brown and Michigan's top line power a weekend sweep of the Buckeyes 1 sLr IJSaTIU a a n o ', seams tne - Aoo lichigan 3 Rio State 2 ichigan 2 no State 1 By STEPHEN J. NESBITT Daily Sports Editor Before facing Ohio State, Michi- an coach Red Berenson pieced ogether a line so potent it could've arried the Wolverines to the romised Land - last year's NCAA inals. But that was then, and this year s a different story. When Beren- son created a line combination of eniors Carl Hagelin and Louie aporusso and sophomore Chris rown, he was doing it on a whim nd out of dire necessity. Their 25 oals, entering the series, were less han half of their production from ,ast season, and 13 of those tallies came from Hagelin's stick alone. I Once their blades hit the ice r arly in the first period of Friday's -2 victory over the Buckeyes, the igh-octane line made Berenson ook like a regular wizard. Capo- usso netted the game-winning oal on Friday, and Brown did the onors in Saturday's 2-1 win. The rio had seven points in the Wolver- nes' series sweep of Ohio State at Vost Ice Arena. The three skaters, who had just two points in the No. 13 Michigan hockey teams three-game skid, gave their coach exactly what he's been asking for all year: his best players finally were his best players. The weekend belonged to Brown, who caught fire to pace the Wolverines (16-7-1-0 CCHA,19-9-4 overall) with two goals - the fifth and sixth of his sophomore cam- paign. "It feels really good (to score again), but I've got to give a lot of credit to Louie and Carl," Brown said. "I think we're just click- ing right now. It's something that (Berenson) was hoping for, and I think we're doing above and beyond what he wanted. "Since we did juggle the lines around, there was definitely a need of more communication, so I think that really helped." Brown was on the prowl all weekend, putting on a show that coupled his scoring finesse with his penchant for bashing and bruising. The Texas state flag, a tradition that started last season in honor of the Flower Mound, Texas native, flew five times in the student sec- tion on Saturday. The first two were expected - once during See OHIO STATE, Page 3B t515 KIRKLAND/Daily Sophomore forward Chris Brown celebrates with Louie Caporusso (29), Chad Langlais (7) and Jon Merrill (24) after scoring Michigan's second goal Friday. Penalty kill carries icers while power pla lt S ers & By CASANDRA PAGNI Daily Sports Writer Three weeks ago, Michigan was forced to kill 57 seconds of a 5-on-3 in the final minutes of the game to preserve their one-goal lead over Alaska. The Wolverines and the Nanooks went back-and-forth all game, until the penalty kill came to the rescue in the waning minutes to shut down Alaska and secure the narrow victory. The Michigan faithful were as animated as they had been all . season at Yost Ice Arena during those 57 seconds - that is, until Michigan's penalty kill gave the 6,900 in attendance an even big- ger reason to be deafeningly loud on Saturday against Ohio State. With the No. 13 Michigan hockey team leading 2-1, sopho- more forward Chris Brown picked up a five-minute major penalty for checking from behind and was ejected from the game just two minutes into the third period. Brown's penalty came at a crucial time for the Wolverines. It was both late in the game and almost immediate- ly after Michigan's power play failed to get a shot off for the opening 1:28 of the third period. But the Michigan penalty kill more than picked up the slack of its woebegone power play this weekend, killing all four Buckeye attemps - and none more impor- tant than killing off Brown's five minute penalty. "It's just great for our team to win close games like this," senior forward Carl Hagelin said. "It always gives the team some extra energy for next week, and also confidence. That penalty kill at the end, the five minute major that Brownie got ... that we killed that off was key." The Wolverines didn't just kill the major penalty on Saturday - the stifled the Buckeye power play during those five minutes. Michigan didn't allow Ohio State to geta single shot on net during that kill. But the Wolverines took three shots of their own on Buckeye netminder Cal Heeter. Without one of its mos(physi cal forwards on the ice in Brown, Michigan continually found ways to clear the puck out of its own zone - something the Yost crowd couldn't get enough of. "It's unbelievable that they could keep (Ohio State) out of our end for five minutes," senior netminder Shawn Hunwick said. Added Michigan coach Red Berenson: "When you're killing a See PENALTY KILL, Page 3B SALAM RIDA/Daily kbove: Senior goalie Shawn Hunwick (31) made 55 saves on the weekend. Below: Senior Chad Langlais gets into it ith Sergio Somma of Ohio State. .M'picks up sixth _onference victory By ZAK PYZIK seven of them. Daily Sports Editor "It wasn't like our game plan not to take many shots in the A tale of two halves is the first half, it just happened that est way to describe the Michi- way," junior guard Stu Douglass an basketball team's 73-69 win said. "But then in the second, gainst INDIANA 69 the baskets just opened up so we ndiana MICHIGAN 73 took a lot more. Everybody was t Crisler making their shots." Srena on Saturday. After committing 10 turn- The Wolverines (6-7 Big Ten, overs, the Hoosiers (3-10, 12-14) 6-10 overall) went into halftime were fortunate to end the first aving taken just five 3-pointers half trailing just 32-24. Indiana a season low for the Wolverines scored half of its points on fast n one stanza - and making only breaks but couldn't get anything ne of them. But in the second done in its set offense. half, Michigan hoisted 10 shots "We just played our game," from 3-point land and drained See INDIANA, Page 3B Blue allows late-game comeback, holds off IU By CHANTEL JENNINGS Daily Sports Editor In late November, just five games into the Michigan men's basketball season, coach John Beilein told his team that he knew the Wolverines were a team he could lose with, because he knew they were going to get better. He knew it was a team that would learn from its losses. Now, with five games remain- ing in the regular season, and after a disappointing January, the Wolverines have shown their improvement through the last two and a half weeks, going 5-1 in con- ference play. But on Saturday, in Michigan's 73-69 win over Indiana, it really looked like the Wolverines were not only the team that Beilein could lose with, but the team he would lose with. Ahead by as many as 22, the Wolverines relinquished the lead and allowed the Hoosiers to mount a comeback to turn what was a blowout into a nail biter. Michigan showed its poise during much of the game and came out on fire in the second half, hitting seven 3-pointers in the second stanza. But in the final five minutes of the game, the Wolverines began to falter. They failed to hit a field goal and missed free throw after See COMEBACK, Page 3B JAMES WEAVER/Daily Freshman Tim Hardaway Jr. scored a career-high 27 points in the narrow win over the Hoosiers on Saturday. * LT'S SHOWHTML From battling injuries to Big Ten big men, redshirt freshman Jordan Morgan is starting to make his mark on Michigan basketball. Page 4B Michigan State continued its dominance over the Michigan women's basketball team in front of a sold-out crowd in East Lansing. Page 2B