2B - October 10, 2011 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 41 Late-game goals propel 'M' PORISMONDAY COLUMN By ZACH HELFAND Daily Sports Editor The puck lying in the net behind Michigan fifth-year senior goalie Shawn Hunwick was a wake-up call. Bentley looked like it had just done the improbable on Satur- day: a team ranked 10th out of 12 in the Atlantic Hockey Asso- ciation preseason poll apparently took a one-goal lead late in the second period against the No. 6 Michigan hockeyteam. Ultimately, a wake-up call was all that it was. After a few brief seconds of celebration, the referees waved off the goal due to a goaltender interference penalty on Bentley forward Joe Campanelli. The scare, though, was real. The Falcons hung close with the Wolverines for both games of the weekend series, even though the score was lopsided in the two Michigan victories. Bentley trailed by just one goal entering the final frame in both contests, but the constant Michi- gan onslaught - the Wolverines dominated shots 93-41 on the weekend - eventually broke down the Falcons in each game. "We've been conditioning pretty hard all spring and sum- mer," said sophomore forward Luke Moffatt. "I think right now (it's) just the fatigue factor. We're able to wear down the other team and by the third period, they just can't keep up with us." Conditioning from three games prior to the weekend series also earned Michigan (3-0) an upper-hand in the third peri- od. Bentley (0-2) hadn't played a single game before this week- end's series. Third-period performance decided each contest. The Wol- verines outscored Bentley a com- bined 5-0 in the final frame, led by junior forward A.J. Treais and freshman forward Alex Guptill, who each scoredtwo goals apiece in the third period. Still, it took the near-Bentley ALDEN REISS/Daily Junior forward A.J. Treais scored two goals ina weekend sweep of Sentley. I I goal to light a spark under the Michigan offense. Freshman forward Phil Di Giuseppe tapped in the go-ahead goal just 34 seconds after the penalty thanks to a feed to the crease by Moffatt. "That was a pretty big momen- tum switch," Moffatt said. "We were able to get that power play goal and boost up the whole bench, and it gave us a lot of momentum after that." Conditioning hasn't been the sole contributor to the boost in third-period play. Michigan coach Red Berenson replaced Guptill on the first line with freshman forward Travis Lynch for the third period on Friday. Senior forward David Wohlberg had been playing center with Guptill and senior forward Luke Glendening on the wings, and Berenson believed they could generate more offense with Wohlberg there too. The move paid off. Glendening scored the Wolverines' second goal ofthethird period on Friday, and Lynch and Wohlberg record- ed assists. All three of Michigan's third-period goals in that game came in a three-minute span, transforming a one-goal game with five minutes remaining into a blowout. Scoring has been contagious for Michigan this season: it scoredthree goals in five minutes against Niagara, and just 80 sec- onds separated goals by Guptill and Treais on Saturday, although Guptill's was an empty-netter. "College hockey is all about momentum," Berenson said. "That's the great thing about Yost Ice Arena and playing at Michigan. If we can get some- thing going and the crowd gets into it and the players just get' into it, there just seems to be another level. And it can intimi- date an opponent and the game changes." The momentum on Saturday came from Bentley's mistake rather than anything that the Wolverines did. Hunwick likely would have made a routine save if Campanelli hadn't impeded his path to the puck, butthe momen- tum swing proved decisive. And Michigan capitalized when it mattered. "That was big," Berenson said. "We were lucky that it didn't count, because we would have been climbing an uphill battle. That doesn't mean we couldn't have come back, but you'd rather play with a lead." ED MoCH/Daily Michigan fans congragated en masse Saturday at Ryan Field. The Wolverines felt right at home in Evanston, Don't take the l ouse experience for granted EVANSTON - Nathan Anderson trudged up to Gate T at Ryan Field three hours before kickoff. He held a gallon of sweet tea in one hand and a bag of chips in the other. Nathan, a junior at Northwest- ern, lives for game day. But ' he's stuck in a city that hard- ly has a foot- STEPHEN J. ball culture to NESBITT speak of. Nathan rarely sees a sellout at Ryan Field. The smallest stadium in the Big Ten seats a capacity crowd of 47,130 - a mere 62,771 less than at Michigan Stadium. . He knew Saturday would be dif- ferent, but it wouldn't be pretty: Michigan was coming to town. So he arrived three hours early to sit outside the student entrance, which opens 90 min- utes before kickoff, and sat out- side Gate T for hours, wishing to feel the typical college football atmosphere. The minds are brilliant, the teams are good - but the two don't mix. More students in Evanston stroll around in busi- ness suits on football Saturdays than in Wildcat purple. Along the front of the stadium, a ban- ner proclaims, "Northwestern: Chicago's Big Ten Team." This season, Illinois countered with a rival campaign to claim the Fighting Illini as "Kings of Chi- cago." In proximity, Northwestern is Chicago's team. But in reality, due to the small student body, Northwestern has the second- fewest alumni living in the Chicagoland area of any Big Ten school. In the early hours on Satur- day morning, block 'M's lined the shoreline of Lake Michigan. Tailgates dotted every open parking lot on campus - all of them hoisting Michigan flags and tents. Northwestern students receive football tickets as part of their tuition package - atten- dance is first come, first served. No one was there to battle Nathan, as he sipped his sweet tea and waited for the gate to swing open. Once the cold lake wind and snow begin swirling over Evan- ston, Nathan said showing up an hour before the game would still guarantee a spot in the front 15 rows. The Michigan game marked the first home game of the scho- lastic year with the students on campus for the fall semester. The situation for the team - and the fans - was clear: If we don't win thisgame, nobody will come back to the next one. So they came. The stadium filled to the brim. An attendance of 47,330 was announced. On the sidewalk bordering Central Street, directly in front of the stadium, a pair of Michi- gan fans were searching for tickets. "I've got two for $180 each," one scalper said. "I went to the Michigan-Notre Dame game and got two for $150, man," the fan said. "Yeah, well this is a big game, too." Not for Michigan. But it was giant for Northwestern coach Pat Fitzgerald and Wildcat football. The students and Northwest- ern faithful faced an opposing sideline nearly 70-percent filled with Michigan fans. That was hard. It was the Little Big House. z But then they suffered the same second-half heartbreak the Wildcats' have conditioned them to expect. In the post-game press con- ference, Fitzgerald knew what everyone was thinking. He ended his opening statement by plead- ing with students to return, to remember the first-half Wildcats. "There was great fan support tonight, especiallyour students," Fitzgerald said. "It was an abso- lutely outstanding environment, one not only that we thank them for but one we expect of them as we move forward. "So we'll see them back here in a couple weeks for homecoming." But many won't be back. Before the game, one student remarked on the student sec- tion's 2011 T-shirts. "We should have a new motto on them," she said. "How about,' All we do is almost win?"' Michigan coach Brady Hoke doesn't have to coddle the stu- dent section. Fitzgerald has to coddle the entire fan base. Michigan students don't have to be told by a head coach what is expected of them. It's almost hard to fathom a scenario where college students would choose not to attend a full slate of games they've already paid for. But that's the Michigan difference - or one of them. At Michigan, the expectations are from within, not beamed down from Hoke or Athletic Director Dave Brandon. It's why Michigan, unlike Northwest- ern, has home-field advantage. It's why every home game since November 8, 1975 has drawn a crowd of more than 100,000. "It was a good environment, we just let our fans down," said Northwestern quarterback Dan Persa. "We've got to play a lot bet- ter than that." The difference is that when the Wildcats let their fans down, they don't come back. Denard Robin- son can always expect 100,000 surrounding the field at Michigan Stadium. We're lucky at Michigan. We're blessed. Don't take the Big House experience for granted. Nathan wouldn't. - Nesbitt can be reached at stnesbit@michigandaily.com or on Twitter: @stephenjnesbitt CHECK OUT OUR NEW FOOTBALL AND ICE HOCKEY VIDEOS ONLINE MICHIGANDAILY.COM/ SPORTS 6 0 0