6A - Thursday, April 7, 2011 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Breakdown: Keys to victory for both teams 0 FILE PHOTO/Daily Senior forward Louie Caporusso and the rest ofnthe Michigan senior class are returning to the site ofnthe 2008 Frozen Four at the Xcel Energy Center in St. Paul, Minn. Wolverines ready for Frozen Four matchup with No.1North Dakota By CASANDRA PAGNI Daily Sports Writer ST. PAUL, Minn. - The stakes might have been high the last time the No. 2 Michigan hock- ey team played North at the Xcel Dakota vs Energy Center in St. Paul, but Michigan they don't even Matchup: come close to North Dakota what's on the 32-8-3; Michi- line this time gan28-10-4 around. When: Thurs- As part of day 8:30 P.M. the Ice Breaker Where: Xcel Invitational, Energy Center the Wolverines TV/Radio: faced then-No. ESPN2 2 Boston Col- lege in the first game of the 2007 season. Mici- gan defeated the Eagles 4-3 in overtime, but the story of that game lies in how. Then-freshmen Carl Hagelin and Louie Caporusso started and finished the game on a bang for the Wolverines. Hagelin scored the first goal of his Mich- igan career at Xcel during the first period to put the Wolver- ines up early. And his linemate, Caporusso, scored the overtime game-winner for Michigan. The Wolverines know they can't live in the past, but Hage- lin, Caporusso and the current Michigan seniors who started their collegiate careers in St. Paul won't deny the history they have in this building. "I wasn't feeling it as much until I got here," Caporusso said. "When I was walking in the rink, I felt like it was freshman year all over again, like when I just started here. I think it was the same exact walk to the dress- ing room, I think it was the same exact dressing room. It's kind of cool how we've made a full circle here. Hopefully this time we can win both games." Hagelin and Caporusso will take the ice again as linemates against North Dakota tonight, but this time around, Michigan comes in to the NCAA Frozen Four as an underdog to the No. 1 team in the country. The Fighting Sioux (21-6-1 WCHA, 32-8-3 overall) demol- ished their NCAA regional and regional final opponents, out- scoring Rensselaer Polytech- nic Institute, 6-0, and Denver, 6-1, last weekend in Green Bay, Wisc. North Dakota was the No. 2 team overall heading into the NCAA Tournament, and is the only remaining No. 1 seed in the field. But while North Dakota poured on the goals in Green Bay, the Wolverines had to win two close games in St. Louis, one against Nebraska-Omaha and another against Colorado Col- lege. Michigan beat the Mavericks after coming back from a two- goal deficit. Sophomore forward Kevin Lynch scored the game- winner in overtime, after the referees overturned an initial no-goal call to end the game. Against the Tigers, the Wolver- ines got out to an early lead but had to tighten up their defense in the third period when Colo- rado College cut the lead in half. "You're going to face adver- sity," senior defenseman Chad Langlais said. "You have to be able to come back, you have to be able to play those tight games. That's what the playoffs are all about. North Dakota, they've walked all over teams. I think it's a good thing for them, but I think it's a great thing for us to be able to win close games." Michigan's tgsk defensively will be stopping North Dakota senior forward Matt Frattin, who headlines an impressive offense for the Fighting Sioux. As a team, North Dakota has scored 36 more goals than the Wolverines this season. Frattin is a Hobey Baker award finalist and was named both WCHA and College Hockey News Player of the Year. While Frattin has netted 36 goals during his senior cam- paign - cut that in half to get Hagelin's team-leading 18 for the Wolverines - he's had help along the way. His linemates, seniors Evan Trupp and Brad Malone, have scored 17 and 16 goals, respectively. Junior Jason Gregiore has chipped in 25. When the puck drops tonight, defense will be the name of the game for the Wolverines. "We need to play our game, and if we let (North Dakota) do what they are good at, they will do it," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "We need to stay on the ice, be responsible with the puck, and be ultra-responsi- ble without the puck. If you give this team out-numbered rushes and power plays, they will take you right out of the game." Michigan knows that despite being No. 2 in the country, it is the underdog in this matchup. But just as no one expected the freshmen to make waves against Boston College three years ago, Caporusso and Hagelin are happy to embrace the under- dog role against the top-ranked Fighting Sioux. "On paper, they're the bet- ter team," Caporusso said. "But I'm not sitting here telling you that we can't beat North Dakota. I definitely think we can beat North Dakota. But they're going to be a tough match. They're the favorite coming into this tourna- ment and they're the best team in this tournament. But that doesn't mean I don't think our team is capable of doing it. We have a lot of confidence." By CASANDRA PAGNI Daily Sports Writer As Michigan and North Dako- ta prepare for Thursday's match- up in St. Paul, here are the keys to victory for both teams. For North Dakota: 1. Get after Michigan net- minder Shawn Hunwick early and often After outscoring Rensse- laer Polytechnic Institute and Denver 12-1 last weekend in the NCAA Midwest regional and regional final, North Dakota will need to continue its offensive outburst in St. Paul. The Fighting Sioux are second in the nation in team offense and are led by red- hot scorers Matt Frattin and Jason Gregiore, currently the second and ninth-leading goal scorers in the country with 36 and 25 goals, respectively. Frattin and linemates Evan Trupp and Brad Malone have scored 69 goals this season and registered 11 points just last weekend. Hunwick has been a solid netminder for the Wol- verines all season but let three goals slip by last weekend - two against Nebraska-Omaha and one against Colorado College'J The senior has never played in a Frozen Four, and the Fighting Sioux should try to rattle him early. 2. Keep a one-game focus Everyone at the Frozen Four can't stop talking about the impressive numbers that the Fighting Sioux boast. They rank in the top-5 in the nation in goals for, goals against, scoring mar- gin and penalty kill, and their power play sits in seventh. They have six players with more than 13 goals. Their net- minder has 30 wins. In Wednes- day's press conference, North Dakota assured the media that it is preparing for only Michigan, but it's still hard to ignore the buzz surroundingthis team. The Fighting Sioux have brought a business-trip attitude to St. Paul, but they need to make sure that they're not overlooking their Thursday night date in favor of the national title game. 3. Listen to coach Dave Hak- stol Whatever Hakstol is doing behind the scenes and on the bench is working well for North Dakota. In his seventh season at the helm, Hakstol has led the program to five Frozen Four appearances and has helped North Dakota reach the NCAA Tournament all seven seasons. He has led the team to three WCHA Final Five champion- ship titles during his reign and has one WCHA Coach of the Year title. Hakstol has the North Dakota program on the fast track to being national title contend- ers each season in an extremely competitive conference. What- ever his game plan for Michigan is, it's bound tobe a good one. For Michigan: 1. Ride whoever's got the hot shot As senior forward Louie Capo- russo said Wednesday, "This isn't a top-heavy type of team." The Wolverines have received production from a variety of players this season and need to continue to score-by-committee to have a shot at cracking North Dakota, which boasts the No. 3 defense in the country. While senior forward Carl Hagelin leads the team with 18 goals, Michigan needs to find ways to get the puck to who- ever's got some luck in St. Paul. Whether it's a seeing-eye shot from the blue line from sopho- more defenseman Lee Moffie or a toe-drag one-timer by senior forward Scooter Vaughan. the Wolverines need to utilize their balance on all four lines to wear down the Fighting Sioux. 2. Stay out of the penalty box Last weekend in St. Louis, Michigan gave opponents 13 power play opportunities. While the Wolverines' penalties allowed only one power play goal allweekend,it doesn't changethe fact that the more 5-on-5 hockey Michigan plays on Thursday, the better off it will be. Aside from fatiguing critical players on the penalty kill, spending too many minutes in the sin bin against a North Dakota power play (that converts at 23 percent) won't give Hunwick much support. 3. Feed off the seniors Michigan's current senior class ,started its postseason careers as freshmen with a 4-3 overtime win against No. 2 Bos- ton College at the Xcel Energy Center. And while the class that they started with has dwindled from 12 to seven, they're going to be ultra-amped up for this game. As freshmen, the same class made it to the Frozen Four, and fell one game short of the national championship game after losing to Notre Dame, 5-4, in overtime. The current seniors are the backbone of this team, and the rest of the Wolverines will need to grab some of their intensity if they want to advance to Satur- day's national title game. Rust brothers look forward to potential National Championship matchup, capping off emotional year By STEPHENJ. NESBITT Daily Sports Editor ST. PAUL, Minn. - Matt Rust and his little brother Bryan have fought over plenty of things dur- ing the past 18 years. But none of them, it's safe to say, have been as big as a national championship. And they're just a step away from meeting once again. The anticipation started just after the Michigan hockey team punched its ticket to the Frozen Four with a 2-1 victory over Col- orado College. "As soon as I found out they won, I sent him a fast text, 'Hope I'll see you in St. Paul,' "said Bryan, a freshman forward for Notre Dame. The followingnight, the Fight- ing Irish finished off New Hamp- shire to capture the Northeast Regional. "Matt wrote back, 'Congrats, you'll get your chance in a few weeks, bro.'" Both teams have a game to win in St. Paul before the Rusts can meet again, but Matt and Bryan know just what this week means to their family. The boys are eyeing the championship game as the perfect way to com- plete a roller-coaster season, on and off the ice. The Bloomfield Hills, Mich. natives saw their lives come to brother and I, anything from an abrupt halt when their father, the golf course to video games Steve Rust, was diagnosed with to mini sticks when we were prostate cancer. Matt said his younger," Matt said Wednes- relationship with his brother is day. "It's one of the things that on a "manly level," but admitted has brought us so close and has that the cancer brought the Rust pushed both of us to the point family to its knees. that we've gone." After months of treatment, And although Michigan and Notre Dame have already played each other three times this sea- "This is my son, there was a time when the Rusts didn't know if they'd face time, and I hope one another. Instead, they thought they my brother can might be playing together. Until Bryan committed to respect that. Notre Dame, even Michigan coaches thought they had the inside track on him. "It was between Notre Dame Steve is reportedly in remission. and Michigan the entire time," He spoke at the Michigan hockey Bryan said. "I knew I wanted to team's banquet last Saturday and stay in the CCHA to be closer to will be in attendance at the Fro- home, which is a big part of me, zen Four. but I'd been playing on the same "He's given my brother and I a teams as my brother, so I wanted lot of strength, just that the guy to get out of the shadow a bit and never complains," Matt said of forge my own path." his father. "He loves his kids and But somehow, Bryan's path his family more than anything in still looks a whole lot like Matt's. the world, and I think me and my Matt came in with a freshman brother really feed off that." class of 12. So did Bryan. The relationship with their Matt is listed at 5-foot-10, 194 father has built Matt and Bryan lbs. Add three pounds and you into the hockey players they are have Bryan. today. And Matt's rookie season "We're very competitive, my ended at the Frozen Four. Hello, 0 0 Senior forward Matt Rust will be playing in his first Frozen Four since his freshman year. ,y .. JAKE FROMM/Daily Fighting Irish. But these brothers aren't quite carbon copies. There's still a bit of a little-brother complex. "Every time there's a possibil- ity of playing your older brother, it means something, especially playing for a national champion- ship," Bryan said. Matt wants to make sure his Wolverines finish some business left undone after Michigan's loss to Notre Dame in the 2008 Fro- zen Four. "At the end of the day, I'm going to take my time here to be a little selfish," Matt said with a laugh. "I think this is my time, and I hope my brother can respect that." Plus, it sounds like he also has a little unfinished business with his brother. "I saw (Bryan) during the pre- game skate firing slap shots at the Michigan sign," Matt said Wednesday. "It's in good fun, and he's definitely going to get it back either on the ice or the golf course this year." A