2B - November 7, 2011 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com A 28 - November 1, 2011 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom ~ Be sure to keep an eye on the kids IOWA CITY - ake your eyes away from the screen for just a minute. Stop rewinding. Junior Hemingway isn't going to get his hands under the ball any more on the eleventy-first replay than he did live. It was a messy weekend for Michigan's Big Three - foot- ball, basketball and hockey. Brady Hoke and Co. STEPHEN J. dropped (or NESBITT did they?) a comeback chance in Iowa City. John Beilein's boys narrowly escaped witb a eight-point exhibition win over Division-II Wayne State. Red Berenson and the hockey team ended the program's longest home winning streak, a span of 20 straight games inAnn Arbor. It ended as a 2-2 weekend for the banner Michigan teams. Nothing to write home about - though plenty of grievances to Facebook or tweet - but there was plenty of silver lining on this cloudy weekend. At Kinnick Stadium, an eleva- tor ride changed everything. When the Wolverines lined up to punt with four minutes left in the game, the media made its way to the elevator at the back of the press box. One Marcus Coker first down and the game was over. By the time the elevator car descended from the fourth floor to the third - where a pair of pleased Iowa fans stood waiting - then down to ground level, the game was suddenly back in reach. Maybe you forgot about it. Rewind a little further back, past the uncalled pass interference and the two official reviews. There it is. Lost in the middle of the would-be heroics and officiating antics of the Wolverines' final drive was the precedingthree- and-out forced by the Michigan defense. Ninety seconds off the clock, wasting only one Michigan time- out. Denard Robinson and the offense suddenly had new life. And they almost made it count. Without that stop, there would have been no photo finish. What you should note, though, is that without four freshmen playing on defensive coordinator Greg Mat- tison's shutdown defense, there wouldn't have been that stop. Mattison started three fresh- men - linebacker Desmond Mor- gan, cornerback Blake Countess McGary, on Thursday cemented Michigan as a risingtitle con- tender next season. For a Michigan basketball fan, anything after the McGary announcement was just a bonus. In the exhibition against Wayne State, sophomores Tim Hardaway Jr. and Jon Horford were the first- and third-leading scorers for Michigan. They were also the leading rebounders. The basketball team boasts a lineup so youngthat only one upperclassman - senior guard Zack Novak - is expected to start. The youth, some which isn't even on campus yet, is driving this movement. Michigan basketball isn't selling a team, it's sellingthe expectation of a long-standing program. At Yost Ice Arena, the home winningstreak is over. But the 21-year NCAA Tourna- ment berth streak doesn't appear to be in jeopardy. Despite losing eight seniors after last season's run to the national title game, the Wolverines are ranked third in the nation. Berenson replaced the depart- ing seniors with fresh faces from places like Ontario and Las Vegas. Through 10 games, the underclassmen have scored 20 of Michigan's 46 goals. The dynamic trio of freshmen forwards Phil DiGiuseppe, Travis Lynch and Alex Guptill round out the team's top-five goal scor- ers, combining for 13 goals. Last season, the entire seven-man freshman class scored just 17 total goals. The point is this: At Michigan we are on campus with a Frozen Four contender, a Final Four con- tender and a warm-weather bowl contender. And no team is in its prime. Michigan football will be back when it has a true quarterback - maybe De La Salle (Warren, Mich.) junior Shane Morris in 2013. Michigan basketball will be back after consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances and a big-name recruit on campus in 2012. Michigan hockey will be back when, well, they never really budge. But this is a heck of a young team. So go ahead and grovel at a down weekend, but maintain perspective. Michigan athletics aren't going anywhere but up, but the real talent lies in its youth. Alright, rewind one more time, Hemingway may have cradled it better the eleventy-second time. - Nesbitt can be reached at stnesbit@umich.edu or on Twitter: @stephenjnesbitt. 4 4 Freshman Blake Countess has become a starting cornerback under Brady Hoke. and defensive end Brennan Beyer. On the final drive, he had the confidence to add linebacker Jake Ryan to that mix. Beyer kept contain on first down, forcing Coker into a short gain. Morgan fought off a block and pulled Coker down a yard short of the marker on second down. And Ryan broke off the edge on the decisive third down and caught Coker in the backfield. Don't see this cup half full? Look at the 2012 recruiting class. Behold the future. At Crisler Arena, it was Mitch-igan week. The commitment of the nation's No. 2 recruit, Mitch Across-the-board scoring salvages split Hustle must carry 'M' hockey By LIZ VUKELICH Daily Sports Writer When the No. 3 Michigan hock- ey team entered thethird period of its game against Western Michi- gan tied on Saturday night, there was a feeling of deja vu. Twenty- four hours WMU 3 earlier, the MICHIGAN 2 Wolverines were in the WMU 2 exact same MICHIGAN 5 position. The game was tied 2-2 entering the third stanza, with both teams desper- ately searching for a way to come out on top. Michigan couldn't find an ave- nue on Friday, falling to the fourth- ranked Broncos, 3-2. But Saturday, Michigan rectified its problems and salvaged the weekend with a resounding 5-2 win - with help from some unfamiliar faces. "Our team came out tight," said Michigan coach Red Berenson of Saturday's game. "We played bet- ter (defense), with a little more sense of urgency. We're just trying to pay more attention to details." After losing in the final 30 sec- onds on Friday, Michigan changed the trend the next night when sophomore forward Derek DeBlois found a rebound that clanked off the post and scored for the Wol- verines midway through the first period. Michigan's goal went unan- swered for the remainder of the first stanza - the only other good look the Broncos had was saved by fifth-year senior goalie Shawn Hunwick just as the buzzer sig- ADAM SCHNITZER/Daily Freshman forward Alex Guptill scored a goal in Michigan's 5-2 win Saturday. naled the end of the period. But what Western Michigan couldn't find in the first period, it made up for very quickly in the second. The Broncos' equalizer was followed by another goal 10 minutes later. Once it was wired, Michigan kept cruising at a comfortable speed, with help from a previously quiet source - the power play. Freshman forward Alex Gup- till started the trend for the Wol- verines when he scored after the Broncos took a holding penalty, and sophomore defenseman Mac Bennett followed suit in the third period. "I think we just worked harder to get to the loose pucks," said Guptill. "On that one goal Mac Bennett scored, we chased hard, had pressure. It's little plays like that which end up in the goals." The power play goals put Mich- igan up by one. But the insurance A(Universtyof MichiganSIchoolof MusicTheatre &Dance Antonio Berardi isn't himself today... but someone else Is. y D pTi a comedy by Dario Fo the Wolverines needed to put away the game came from junior forward A.J. Treais in the third period. Junior forward Kevin Lynch had a clear shot on goal. But instead, he took the puck behind the net and patiently waited for Treais, who was skating up towards the crease. A quick dish from Lynch was all Treais needed to tuck the puck in the corner of the net. Lynch's empty-net goal with two minutes left in the game rounded out Michigan's scoring for the night. But what impressed Berenson wasn't the number of goals scored, but where the scor- ing came from. Lynch replaced sophomore for- ward Luke Moffatt to skate with Treais and freshman forward Phil Di Giuseppe. Treais and Di Giuseppe com- pose two-thirds of the Wolverines' most productive line. It seems like whenever Berenson wants a player to rack up some points, he puts them with the duo. "I just felt a little better with Lynch up there," Berenson said. "I think it was good for our team. We needed a change. That line strug- gled (Friday) night." That line wasn't the only one that struggled on Friday - most of the Wolverines played slug- gishly. Once again, Michigan spent too much time in the penalty box. Though the Broncos didn't score on any of its seven power play oppor- tunities, the offensive momentum was huge for Western Michigan. As the game wound down and the Broncos scored, Michigan couldn't find any opportunities for an equalizer. That's why Berenson decided to change all of the for- ward lines for Saturday. The swap wasn't just beneficial for Lynch. DeBlois, Guptill and sophomore defenseman Kevin Clare, who have all been towards the lower end of Michigan's point tally, were impact players over the course of the weekend. And that's comfortingfor the Wolverines. "(Having lots of people score) has been huge this year," Guptill said. "Everyone's been chipping in, it's huge like that." f you want to know why the Michigan hockey team lost on Friday against Western Michigan and won on Saturday, don't look at the box score. Sure, if you just want to know what hap- pened,go ahead and look. You'll see, the scores - , a 3-2 defeat and a 5-2 vic- tory for the Wolverines. ZACH You'll see HELFAND that Michi- gan outshot the Broncos on Friday, and out- shot them in the third period, too. You'll see that the Broncos did the same to the Wolverines on Saturday. But if you want to know why, don't waste your time. If you want to understand why, catch the end of a Michigan hockey practice. There, you'll see something more. You'll see players skating lines - back and forth, back and forth - to exhaustion. Maybe you'll see A.J. Treais beating his linemates. More likely, you'll see him in the back, trying to close the gap. If you watched the way Michigan works on hustle or what Red Berenson just called "the details," then you would've seen a familiar sight on Saturday. Treais sprinted down the length of the ice with five min- utes remaining as Michigan led 3-2 just like he was trying to catch his teammate in practice. Treais had skated up to center ice when Kevin Lynch took the puck up the right side of Western Michigan's goal, one-on-one with a defender. "I was really far back in the play," Treais said. "I thought he was just going to shoot it." So did everyone else in Yost Ice Arena. But Lynch pulled up, and Treais kept on coming. Show- ing patience, Lynch skated with the puck behind the net, then snapped a pass to the speeding Treais for an easy goal. Michigan took a 4-2 lead with five minutes remaining. Game over. Hockey, more than any other sport, is about work. The most common remedy to cure a loss is not "we need to play better," it's "we have to work harder." Skaters work on literal shifts. Players clock in and clock out on the fly - the only thing missing is the lunch pail. Hockey isn't basketball where one player can dominate. It isn't football, where the team that executes best wins. Life as a hockey player is life as a worker. Sometimes, you catch a bad bounce. Often, you fight. And you could have all the skill in the world, but if you don't hustle you won't win. Legendary hockey writer Bob Verdi once wrote of the Stanley Cup-contending Bruins of the late 1970s that, "They show that the greatest ability is the ability to work. Their insignia shouldbe a droplet of sweat." Sweat decided each game for Michigan. The teams entered the final frame in both games with the scored tied, and in each, one team asserted itself in crunch time. On Friday, the Broncos beat the Wolverines to each loose puck, won each fight in the cor- ner and put more pressure on fifth-year senior goalie Shawn Hunwick. "They just kept on pounding us down in our zone and outwork- ing us," said senior defenseman Greg Pateryn. "That's just hustle and effort, it has nothing to do with skill." When the Broncos finally cracked the Michigan defense with one minute remaining, they didn't do it through any set plays or dekes or fancy skating. They fought in front of the crease so they could ram the puck into the net. "In the last 10 minutes of the game when the game was on the line, I thought we got outplayed and outworked," said Michigan coach Red Berenson. Little separated each team this series. The shot total for the series? Dead even. Western Michigan commit- ted one more penalty. On Satur- day, Michigan worked harder. Worked harder than it had Fri- day. Worked harder than Western did Saturday. Sophomore forward Derek DeBlois fought his way through defenders to score on a rebound for Michigan's firstgoal. Fresh- man forward Zach Hyman dove to keep the puck in the attack- ing zone. Treais created his goal through hustle. "We just worked harder to the get to the loose pucks and that kind of thing," said freshman for- ward Alex Guptill, who scored a goal of his own on Saturday. "It's little plays like that that end up into goals." At No. 4 in the nation, West- ern Michigan might just be the toughest CCHA team Michigan will face all season. Miami (Ohio) - Michigan's next opponent - has struggled early and Notre Dame has lots of talent, but no team has asserted itself as the conference's best. So this weekend's series was a good test for Michigan. The Wol- verines aren't any more skilled than Western Michigan, nor will they be against any of the nation's other top teams. When Michigan scores, it won't score using stars. It will score using balance. The Wolverines found goals from players like Guptill and Mac Bennett - who scored his first two goals of the season this weekend - or Kevin Clare, who scored his first career goal simply because he had the awareness to take a shot after the goalie fell. Berenson said that the game of hockey isn't really aboutskill. He would know. Berenson estab- lished himself as one of Michi- gan's greatest scorers ever, but he'd rather be known as an "hon- est" two-way player. "I know there's a little bit of physical talent and strength and conditioning and everything," Berenson said. "(But) it's all men- tal. The whole game is mental." Michigan won't dominate any other quality foe. The Wolverines can go far, but only go as far as their hustle and work ethic take them. And those are qualities you won't find in a box score. - Helfand can be reached at zhelfand@umich.edu ( 5' Directed by Malcolm Tulip Dept. of Theatre & Drama November 17 - 20 Arthur Miller Theatre General Admission $26 Students $10 with ID League Ticket Office 734-764-2538 tickets.music.umichedu ADAM SCHNITZER/Daily Junior forward A.J. Treais and the Wolverines did the dirty work they needed to on Saturday to beat the Broncos. i 1 l---