The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com October 24, 2011 - 3B NORTHERN From Page 1B wick. "His emotions got to him (on Friday). He's not usually like that." Michigan dominated the first period on Saturday after play- ing a sloppy opening frame on Friday. The Wolverines outshot Northern Michigan, 12-4, in the first period of the finale and reg- istered goals from Treais and junior forward Lindsay Sparks. Sparks's goal came on Michi- gan's first power play opportu- nity. Sparks began the play on the wing and moved the puck to senior defenseman Greg Pateryn at the blue line. Pateryn quickly moved the puck to sophomore defenseman Mac Bennett who skated towards the goal, wound up for a slapshot and then moved the puck to Sparks for the easy finish. The Wolverines failed to con- vert on the remaining four power plays, including the five-minute advantage at the end of the third period into the overtime frame. "In the beginning we were trying to play more of a 2-3 (on the power play) and move the puck around high to low," Sparks said. "They started to read it a bit, and also on our chances we didn't move the puck great. Pass- es weren't on the stick." Michigan logged 44 penalty minutes on 11 penalties on Friday but only wentto the box four times on Saturday. All of those penalties came in the second period. The penalties cost them, as Northern Michigan scored two power play goals in the second period. "They really moved the puck well," said Michigan coach Red Berenson. "They got a little bit of puck luck too on the second one. It hit one of their players in front and bounced right over to a wide-open player." A brawl in the second period of Friday's contest changed the dynamic of the game. Before the fight, neither team scored. The sides combined for eight goals afterward. The Wildcats thwart- ed a late comeback to take the game, 5-3. The brawl began after a Northern Michigan breakaway. Hunwick made a glove save, and the puck squirted loose. The speeding Wildcat collided with Hunwick and upended him. Meanwhile, forward Reed Seck- el boarded a Michigan player in the corner after the whistle. Players from both teams exchanged blows near the goal and the site of Seckel's infrac- tion. Hunwick landed a punch on Cherniwchan's jaw, and Mof- fatt got into a fight for a moment before being thrown to the ice. The referees needed several minutes to sort out the mayhem and many more to sort out the penalties. They ejected Hun- wick, Moffatt and Cherniwchan and gave Seckel a double-minor for boarding. Michigan received a tie and two points, not three, for the shootout win. "This is CCHA hockey," Berenson said after Friday's loss. "It's a battle every night." HUNWICK From Page 1B was because of Hunwick. That sounds harsh, but here's the thing: Hunwick is a fifth-year senior. He's the oldest player on the team by more than two years. He's not a fresh-faced kid who has never handled adversity before. "We can't have one of our senior captains lose his cool like that, no matter what hap- pens," said Michigan coach Red Berenson. "We'll address that." Before he was ejected, he already had 17 saves and was carrying an offensively slug- gish Wolverine team. Hunwick is not only one of Michigan's best players - he is one of the best players in the country. With Hunwick in the net, the Wolverines have the abil- ity to beat anybody. He is that good. But Janecyk is not, and Hunwick has to know better than to get himself ejected. That's nothing against Jane- cyk. He just isn't Hunwick There's a fine line between playing with passion and play- TREAIS From Page 1B Treais. Treais scored the Wolver- ines' first goal of the evening and Sparks' goal three minutes later extended his current game point streak to three - the two were the ideal "snipers" that Berenson wanted to take the shots. But freshman forward Phil Di Giuseppe was a less obvi- ous choice. Di Giuseppe didn't tally any points this weekend and hasn't seen as much game action as Treais or Sparks. But that's why Berenson thought he would be most advantageous. "Di Giuseppe has been one our good young players," Beren- son said. "I thought he might be ing with a hot head. You can be competitive without allowing emotions to control the game. And for Michigan to be suc- cessful this year, Hunwick is going to have to geta much better grip of that line. If you were the opposing team, why wouldn't you try to start some- thing every game? Every team and every fanbase now has a blueprint against the Wolverines, because there's no replacing Hunwick if he gets ejected. He can't throw punches, challenge the entire Northern Michigan bench to a fight and then taunt the fans behind him. Provocation doesn't matter. It's understandable that Hun- wick was upset on Friday. But he has to know that he's Mich- igan's most important player. He has to play smarter. "We are not trying to take penalties and retaliate, but that's the way the game was played," Berenson said. "Hock- ey is a game of emotion. You just have to play with more control." On Saturday, he did. Hun- wick didn't play his best game able to surprise the goalie." Wildcat goalkeeper Jared Coreau didn't seem too sur- prised after Di Giuseppe and Sparks both tried and missed. Michigan (0-1-1 CCHA, 4-1-1 overall) had scouted Coreau and knew he had a "weak glove," according to Sparks. But Coreau was easily able to read their moves as they skated down the ice. Di Giuseppe backhanded the puck into the Coreau's block- er and Sparks' shot hit him squarely in the chest. Treais learned he would be the third to take the ice just about 40 seconds before he actually went out. And that didn't leave him much time to come up with an idea. "I didn't really have a plan going in there," Treais said. "I of the year, allowing three goals, but he played well enough to keep Michigan in the game. The Wolverines went on to win in an overtime shootout, where Hunwick stopped all three Northern Michigan shot attempts. Hunwick kept his compo- sure, staying out of scuffles near the net and ignoring a hostile Wildcat student section that was in his ear all night He even ignored a 400-pound Wildcat fan who took off his shirt in order to shake his fat all over the boards next to Hunwick's net. But if Janecyk had been in Hunwick's spot on Saturday, Michigan would've lost. A kid who has never started a game doesn't have any chance at denying all three shots in a shootout, especially on the road. There was much discus- sion after Friday's game as to whether Hunwick would be suspended for Saturday's game. If he didn't play on Sat- urday Michigan would have lost, simple as that. With Hunwick in net, the Wolverines will always have a chance. Without him, they won't. saw a little spot (in the goal) and picked it." And although Treais was the only Wolverine to score during the shootout, the team also gives credit to fifth-year senior goalie Shawn Hunwick, who is known for his ability to perform in big games. Saturday was no exception - he blocked all the shots he faced during the shootout. In fact, he only had to save two shots - the Wildcats' first shot went wide. The other two shots were denied by Hunwick's blocker. During the unfamiliar situation, his presence on the ice provided a sense of ease for Michigan. "He took us to the Frozen Four last year," Treais said. "I think everyone's got confidence in him." NOTEBOOK From Page 1B The third-period goal from Hyman - Berenson's most prized recruit among the fresh- men - added to his season tally of two assists. The freshman has been tabbed as a dangerous scor- ing threat. Berenson hoped that by scor- ing in a hostile road environ- ment, Hyman will build more confidence around the net. Another freshman contribu- tor, forward Travis Lynch, is a regular starter for the Wolver- ines who also picked up valuable experience on the road. MAN DOWN MAYHEM: Michigan's penalty kill unit was every bit as troubling this week- end as the third line was promis- ing. The Wildcats enjoyed sus- tained success when skating with a man advantage. Two of their three goals on Saturday came with a Wolverine in the penalty box. "I would give them credit," Berenson said. "(But) they got a little bit of puck luck on the sec- ond (power play)." Earlier in the week, Beren- son had noted that a challenge of playing on the Olympic-sized rink at the Berry Events Center was how spread thin the Wol- verines would be on the penalty kill. With 15 additional feet of ice in the width of the rink, there was concern about how Michi- gan would prevent goals on the penalty kill. Though the playing conditions deteriorated as the game wore on, Berenson knows that the unit needs to improve as CCHA play continues. "The ice wasn't good at the end, but that's no excuse," Beren- son said. WE'RE NOT GOING TO BEG YOU. Not quite yet, at least. JOIN DAILY SPORTS - MEETINGS SUNDAYS AT 1 P.M. An invaluable resource at a new, low rate. Get a New York Times Digital Subscription for as low as $1.88 a week. As a college student, faculty or staff member, now you can become a Digital ewC 0 hes Subscriber to the world's finest journalism on your computer, smartphone or tablet at our exclusive college rate - and save 50%. Plus, keep this special college rate as long as you remain a college student, faculty or staff member. Subscribe at the college rate available only at nytimes.com/resource