is ' ;., ., ' f r.= sfh l'Y [ _ 4 (. ,z aa i i. ' a. The Michigan Daily I michigandaily.com I October 24,2011 N. MICHIGAN 5, MICHIGAN 3 MICHIGAN 3, N. MICHIGAN 3 (SO) CORY GENOVESE/Northern Michigan Athletic Department Fifth-yearsenior goalie Shawn Hunwick was ejected in the second period of Friday's game after punching Wildcat forward Andrew Cherniwchnr. i 'M' salvages series in shootout victory By ZACH HELFAND attempts during the shootout to became the fourth player eject- Daily Sports Editor secure the victory. On Friday, ed in the series when he picked Hunwick earned an ejection for up the penalty for a blindside MARQUETTE - Junior for- a contact-to-the-head penalty hit to freshman forward Travis ward A.J. Treais said he hadn't after punching Wildcat forward Lynch. scored a shootout goal "since Andrew Cherniwchan during a On Saturday, Hunwick didn't mini-mites." brawl. perform at his best - Jones's That's OK: the No. 1 Michi- "We had a chip on our shoul- tying goal came after a deke that gan hockey team hadn't won a der tonight," Treais said. "We lured Hunwick out of position shootout in its history. really didn't want to lose that - but he made stops in big situa- A shootout, though, was the one. A lot of emotions were fly- tions in front of a hostile crowd. only fitting ending to the Wol- ing (Friday) night so we just With nine minutes remaining in verines' wild two-game series really wanted to get this win the third period, he made a save with No. 17 Northern Michigan (Saturday night)." on a shot that was good enough (1-0-1 CCHA, 4-1-1 overall). The Wolverines (0-1-1, 4-1- to trick the goal judge. Treais - who said he found out 1) led for most of the game on A Wildcat player fired in a he'd be Michigan's final shooter Saturday, but a Wildcat goal by one-timer from close range just 40 seconds before he took freshman defenseman Mitch that headed toward the corner the ice - fired a shot into the Jones tied the game just a of the net. The lamp lit up, but top corner of the net to win the minute into the third period. the puck sat in Hunwick's glove. shootout victory in a series filled Michigan couldn't convert on The referees reviewed the play with punches, ejections and a five-minute major penalty and ruled it a save. late-game drama. that extended from the end of "He's our goalie, he's our Fifth-year senior goalie the third period into overtime. go-to guy," Treais said of Hun- Shawn Hunwick denied all three Sophomore forward Reed Seckel See NORTHERN, Page 3B MARQUETTE - hawn Hunwick is a great goalie because of his unrivaled passion and intensity. On game days, the diminutive senior net- minder is EVERETT in the zone COOK hours before On Ice Hockey the puck drops, to the point where everyone knows not to mess with him. He is great because he is an unbelievable competitor who will do anything in his power to win. That's why his teammates love him - they know the man behind them wants nothing more than to protect them. But the thingthat makes Shawn Hunwick great is the thing that got him in trouble on Friday night in the team's con- ference opener. Ten minutes into the second period, Northern Michigan's Andrew Cherniwchan ran into Hunwick after a missed break- away shot, sending Hunwick flying through the air and onto his back. He rolled around the ice for a couple seconds, then got up and promptly jabbed his stick into Cherniwchan. It was a little reminder that no one goes in his zone. Goal- ies do not like to be touched, let alone knocked over. Fine, no big deal. Still not satisfied, Hunwick shoved Cherniwchan. Retali- ation ensued, and a skirmish broke out. Shoving matches happen routinely in hockey, especially in tough, physical games. Fine, no big deal. But then Hunwick cocked his arm and delivered a whop- per of a punch to the chin of Cherniwchan, sending him on his back. This was not a little sock - Hunwick didn't hold anything back. Hunwick was subsequently ejected from the game, putting the incredibly raw sophomore Adam Janecyk in the net. Not fine - and a very big deal. Less than five minutes later, the Michigan shutout was gone. It was the first of four goals that Janecyk would allow en route to a 5-3 Northern Michigan victory. It's hard to blame Janecyk. He played more minutes on Friday than in the rest of his Michigan career combined, and he was on the road in front of a brutal Northern Michigan crowd. He was not put into a position to succeed. And that See HUNWICK, Page 3B Hunwick can't let emotions get the best ofhim Treais's oal wins shootout Sparks continues hot streak in NMU split By MATT SLOVIN The most recent lamplighter period, he was feeling par- DottylSports_ Wr-te f_. r .Spakst cme n Stra' tiu.tarty genrou ..omclos By LIZ VUKELICH Daily Sports Writer MARQUETTE - Until Satur- day night, the Michigan hockey team had only been in three shootouts since the CCHA first implemented the concept in 2008 to settle tied games. And in those three years, the Wol- verines had never won one. That's why Michigan coach Red Berenson has him team go through a shootout simula- tion in its last practice of every week. More important than making the team feel comfort- able should the situation arise, it gives Berenson a chance to eval- uate who would take the shots. The Wolverines entered its weekend series against North- ern Michigan (1-0-1, 4-1-1) with plenty of goals behind their belt, but still no go-to scorer. So when the situation actually arose after Saturday night's scoreless overtime against the Wildcats, Berenson still had no clue who he wanted to take the shots. And he had to come up with names - fast. "We weren't even thinking about going into a shootout," Berenson said. "I want to use players that have confidence, that are playing well and scor- ing." That's how he settled on two of his shooters - junior for- wards Lindsay Sparks and A.J. See TREAIS, Page 3B Daily Sports Writer MARQUETTE - Junior forward Lindsay Sparks's fin- est moment of a stellar season so far came this week- NOTEBOOK end when his team needed it most. With his team-leading five tallies, Sparks has emerged as an anchor of Michigan coach Red Berenson's third line, which has been a pleasant surprise entering CCHA play. for Sparks came in Saturday's shootout win over Northern Michigan, when his power play score extended his team's lead. "I just try to play honest hockey," Sparks said Saturday after the game. "(Everything's) starting to click a little for me and we're trying to run with it now." In addition to his scoring, Sparks has proven equally adept at finding the tape of his teammates' sticks. As time wound down in the second ticularly generous. From close range, Sparks sailed a beau- tifully crafted pass right to junior forward Kevin Lynch, who knocked it in for his first point of the season. HIGHLIGHT FOR HYMAN: Like Sparks, another Wolver- ine forward had his strongest showing of the season this weekend. Freshman forward Zach Hyman posted his first career goal in Friday night's 5-3 loss to the Wildcats. See NOTEBOOK, Page 38 PATIENCE IS A VIRTUE Playing with Rich Rod's players, Hoke and Co. will turn Michigan around. But they'll need some time. Page 2B TWO FOR NOTHING Michigan was shut out twice over the weekend, blanked by Penn State and Ohio State. Page 4B