The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com April 11, 2011 - 3B Wolverine seniors stand By MARK BURNS press conference. Daily Sports Editor Winnett tallied the Wolver- ines' first goal against the Bull- ST. PAUL, Minn. - Two dogs with about five minutes senior unsung heroes sat in the remaining in the first period Michigan hockey locker room, - it was just his fifth goal all dejected after coming one goal season, but the second in just as shy of winning the program's many games. loth national title. Even though he hasn't had Matt Rust, the offensive season Michigan with his NOTEBOOK coach Red Berenson expected, arm around Winnett still had a consistent a teary-eyed Ben Winnett, spot in the lineup. encompassed the Wolverines' The same could be said for devastating loss to Minnesota- Rust, who has just five goals and "Duluth on Saturday in just a few 21 assists on the year. short words. An integral piece of the Wol- "Everyone played their verine penalty kill and a face- hearts out," Rust said. "I don't off specialist, Rust has been the have much else to say." backbone of Michigan's stel- While seniors Carl Hagelin lar defensive play the past few and Louie Caporusso are the weeks. more visible Wolverines on the He helped the Wolverines kill team, it was some of the play- eight of the nine Minnesota- ers behind the scenes - namely Duluth power play opportuni- Rust and Winnett - who pro- ties. pelled Michigan to have so Additionally, he won the key much success late in the year. faceoff that led to Winnett's Rust and Winnett impacted first-period goal. the NCAA title game in their "Guys go unnoticed," Capo- own separate ways. russo said. "A guy like Matt Rust "If it wasn't for (Winnett), goes unnoticed. Those guys win I don't know if we would have championships. They're in the been in the final game," Capo- shadows ... they played unbe- russo said in the post-game lievable." SILVER LINING: Berenson didn't mince words when talk- ing about the officiating of the National Championship game. "Every time a player falls down, it shouldn't be a penalty, not in NCAA championship hockey," Berenson said follow- ing the loss. "Guys go unnoticed (Q. They're in the shadows." Prior to the game, Berenson and the Michigan coaching staff said that if the Wolverines could kill off three penalties then they'd be perfectly fine against Minnesota-Duluth. The Bulldogs boast the loth best power-play unit in the country, so Michigan didn't want to be in the sin-bin the entire night. But that wasn't the case, as the Wolverines were whistled out, penalty kill steps up for nine penalties to Minnesota- Duluth's four. Yet, even though they were in the box for almost a third of the game, the Wolverines killed off all but one of the Bulldogs' power plays - a testament to the strength of a team that has placed heightened emphasis on defense in the past three weeks. "We were dialed in," Beren- son said. Michigan assistant coach Billy Powers prepared Michi- gan for Minnesota-Duluth's potent power play prior to Sat- urday's game, with the Wol- verines' penalty killers playing aggressive and limiting the Bulldogs' time to work the puck down low. And while the Wolverines lost the biggest game of the sea- son, there is still a small silver lining to be taken away from the Xcel Energy Center. "We showed a lot of charac- ter, guys blocking shots," senior forward Carl Hagelin said. JAKE FROMM/Daily "Overall, great PK this week- Senior forward Matt Rustfights for the puck in Michigan's 3-2 overtime loss to end." Minnesota-Duluth on Saturday. NOTES: The Wolverines had goaltender Shawn Hunwick, 2-1 in National Championship three team members named Winnett and freshman defen- games and 5-9 in the Frozen to the 2011 men's Frozen Four seman Jon Merrill ... Michigan Four during his 27-year career All-Tournament team: senior coach Red Berenson is now in Ann Arbor. :::. BULLDOGS From Page 1B The Wolverines got out to an early lead when senior for- ward Ben Winnett scored his fifth goal of the season - and second goal of the Frozen Four - five minutes into the first period, but Minnesota-Duluth sustained pressure on Michi- gan defenders and senior net- minder Shawn Hunwick all night. The Bulldogs tied the game at one just under two minutes into the second period and then took the 2-1 lead eight minutes later on the power play. But led by a strong class of seniors, Michigan kept confi- dence high on the bench. It had been down in plenty of games this season, even in the NCAA regional semifinal against Nebraska-Omaha. Near the end of the second period, junior defenseman Greg Pateryn slapped a shot from the blue line in front of Minnesota-Duluth netminder Kenny Reiter. In front of the net, sophomore forward Jeff Rohrkemper got a hold of the puck and back-handed it to beat Reiter on the right side to tie the game at two. "I think the top players just about neutralize each other throughout the game, and it's an unexpected or unsung hero that ends up scoring a goal ... Rohorkemper's goal was a fluky goal, but it was a huge goal." PATERYN From Page 1B found a different guy to step up at the right time. Saturday night, Pateryn was that guy. The junior defenseman finished the game plus-1 with an assist, and was responsible for sending the game to overtime. With less than 10 minutes to go in the third period, Pateryn and the Wolverines found them- selves where they had been nearly all game - on the penalty kill. A boarding call brought the Bulldogs' vaunted power-play unit back on the ice for the ninth and final time. Of Minnesota- Duluth's 14 goals in the NCAA Tournament, 11 of them came on the power play. The power play moved the puck around until it came to a Bulldog all alone, two feet from the crease. Senior goalie Shawn Hunwick made the save, but the -o; , : r V _, t'1 ' 7. _ . , p _t_ _ .: NESBITT From Page 1B Michigan to the national title game. The little man was the star of college hockey's biggest stage. But Rudy didn'tget a champion- ship ring, and neither did Hun- wick. It wasn't for lack of goalmouth heroics. With just over nine min- utes left in the deadlocked, 2-2 game, Bulldog forward Mike Con- nolly picked up a loose puck and waltzed in on Hunwick. The path was clear, Connolly just needed to bury it like he had 28 times already this season. Top shelf, glove side. The puck smacked the netting of Hunwick's glove. "He's the one that got us here," senior Matt Rust said. "He played great, made some (really) great saves (Saturday). It's too bad." In the postgame press con- ference, Hunwick credited the defense with playingsolid defense in front of him. But how could he? Hunwick faced 78 shots in the Frozen Four. He had to stave off 13 power- play opportunities against North Dakota and Minnesota-Duluth - Michigan was lucky to even be in striking distance of a title. He wouldn't leave his team- mates out to dry. Back in the lock- er room, not on national television, the goaltender finally opened up. "I don't know if we played our best defense - we came out tenta- tive," Hunwick said. Still, it was "we" that choked, "we" that came up short in the national championship game. And fortunately for Beren- son, the Wolverines and hockey fans anywhere, that "we" will be headlined by Hunwick's return in the fall. No. 31 plans to return as a fifth-year senior to backstop Michigan in one final NCAA title run. "Every guy in this room that's returning is going to have a bitter taste in their mouth all summer long," Hunwick said. "Losing in overtime in the national champi- onship game, you should be pretty easily motivated." The storybook ending got lost somewhere in the excitement of the Frozen Four, but the final twist may be still to come. "Being able to win a national championship on mybirthday would've been something I'd always remember," Hunwick con- tinued. "But I'll always remember the guys in this room and the run we went on." For Hunwick, his legacy lies in how this - his biggest failure at Michigan - drives him. Because while the film crews shut down, the lights dim and the madness subsides, this kid, with tears in his eyes, knows he can be more than just a good story. And that's how legends are made. - Nesbitt's column faces its fiercest critic this morning, when Hunwick sits down in John U. Bacon's course and critiques it. He can be reached at stnesbit@michigandaily.com dA tFp OMM/Daily Senior goaltender Shawn Hunwick makes ose of his 35 sases against the Bulldogs is Saturday's championship tame. Hunwick, who made 40 saves against North Dakota on Thursday to lead the Wol- verines to the NCAA Cham- pionship, kept the Wolverines in the game again on Satur- day. Dubbed "Tiny Jesus" by Michigan fans for his, at times, indescribable saves in St. Paul, Hunwick lived up to the nick- name and got the Wolverines to overtime against the Bulldogs. While Hunwick kept the Minnesota-Duluth offense and power play at bay long enough for the Wolverines to have a chance on Saturday, sudden- death overtime was a different story. At 3:22 into the extra frame, Minnesota-Duluth senior Kyle Schmidt's shot in front of the net was the game-winner. When Bulldog forward Travis Oleksuk got the puck behind the net on the right side of Hun- wick, he slid it to Schmidt who one-timed it to earn a National Title for Minnesota-Duluth. "It's a tough loss," Michi- gan coach Red Berenson said. "Shawn Hunwick was terrific. He gave us a chance and it wasn't to be." Pateryn added: "We knew it was going to be a really ugly goal. "We knew it was going to be quick. This is what overtime is sometimes. We knew it was going to take one shot and it did, but it wasn't for us." [ See a multimedia piece about this story on MichiganDaily. puck bounced over him and trick- led onto the goal line. Pateryn reached back and swept it away. "I thought it was going in," Hunwick said. "I got a glove on it, but not enough. It looked like it was going to go off the post and in or just straight in, and Greg saved the day." Immediately, senior forwards Carl Hagelin and Louie Capo- russo went back down the ice on a two-on-one, Michigan's last scoringchance of the contest. "That play kind of gave us a little momentum," Pateryn said. "Obviously it led to that two-on- one. When Louie and Carl were going down I really thought that they were going to bury it." It was one of a couple poten- tially momentum-changing plays Pateryn had. He made the play to keep the puck in the zone on Michigan's second goal to tie the game and early in the third peri- od, his diving poke check negated a breakaway. But that ha out of, dogs' a 'C', as, Wil "Ma tery," A son sai turnov period or not, we shi one of weren we nee Tura he was also part of a unit fatal flaw. The game-winner id trouble gettingthe puck came because the Wolverines the zone against the Bull- were tired and couldn't get the ggressive forecheck. puck out of the zone. All Pateryn could do was sit, head down, star- ing holes through the floor of the bench. Ve were not But Pateryn has another chance to be in the same situa- confident or tion. As a senior, Pateryn - along with fellow junior Brandon t as patlent Burlon - will have to lead the th thepuck. defense corps. Luckily for Pateryn, he has some experience in that all ready. "Particularly in the second- half of the year, he's just been as tybe we were a little jit- solid as a rock, somebody who Michigan coach Red Beren- has played like a senior and not a d. "(We had) way too many junior, atake charge kind of guy," 'ers starting in the first assistant coach Billy Powers . We were not as confident said. "He's on the ice, he wants as patient with the puck as to make a difference, he wants to ould have been and that's have the puck. I can't say enough the tell-tale signs that we about him." t having as good a game as And if he has to answer the ded to." tough questions next year, he has novers were Michigan's experience in that too. NATIONAL NATIONAL STORAGE -TORGE CENTER OF ANN ARBOR STUDENT STORAGE SPECIAL 1st Month E with Coupon!* *Based on availability - first come first served. 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