6 -Friday, November 11, 2011 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 6 - Friday, November 11, 2011 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Burke to start season opener Michigan set for tight lCCHA series at Miami By LUKE PASCH tant change of all will be at point Daily Sports Editor guard. Freshman point guard Trey Burke will be handed the It's been nearly 250 long days reigns in his first collegiate con- since the Michigan basketball test, supplanting senior guard Stu team lost to Duke in the waning Douglass. Beilein named Burke moments of the NCAA Round of the starter yesterday. 32. "Two things - he's really a The finality NOTEBOOK point guard who has really done of those last few a great job his whole life of run- seconds - after Darius Morris ning ateam," Beilein said. "But I narrowly missed the game-tying also think, Stu took four shots and floater in the lane - cannot be had zero points (while playing understated. It weighed heavily pointguard in Friday's exhibition on the Wolverines, who entered against Wayne State). This is the the tournament with tremen- same young man that approached dous momentum, ready to shock 20 points against UConn, Ohio the world. And for Morris, it was State. I think Stu actually doesn't the final shot of his career in a mind coming off the bench and Michigan uniform, surely leav- hunting shots more than running ing a bitter taste in his mouth that a team." remains as he sits locked out of It has been clear since Mor- the Staples Center in Los Angeles, ris opted for the NBA Draft that unable to redeem himself. Burke would be the natural point But for the Wolverines, who guard on Michigan's roster this return everyone except Mor- season. But in the Wayne State ris and little-used guard Jordan exhibition, Beilein showed his Dumars, the offseason was cen- hesitance to start a freshman tered around training and con- floor general and instead ran ditioning. The sour conclusion with senior co-captain Douglass, to last season provided moti- who's known more for his perim- vation. Michigan coach John eter shooting than his playmak- Beilein mentioned at media day ing abilities. But on Thursday, last month that the team seemed Beilein came to grips with reality especially "hungry" to get back and made the move. For the sea- on the court, knowing how tanta- son opener, Douglass will be rel- lizingly close they had come to a egated to sixth man - a place he Sweet Sixteen appearance. thrived last season as a role player When the Wolverines take and shooter off the bench. the floor at Crisler Arena on Fri- DON'T UNDERESTIMATE: On day night against Ferris State, Friday, Michigan will get its first they'll look different. Fans will look at a tournament team. see a bulked-up Evan Smotrycz, No, not a squad from the who tacked on over 30 pounds of March Madness we all know and muscle in the hopes he'll be able love. Ferris State finished 24-7 to bang with bigger bodies under- last season and went all the way neath. They'll see a Tim Hard- to the Division-II Sweet Sixteen away Jr. who spent the offseason before being halted by eventual working nearly exclusively on champion, Bellarmine. ball-handling and rebounding It's unlikely that the Bulldogs to round out a skill set with his will be as competitive this year. already unquestioned shooting After losing Division-II All- abilities. They'll also see Jon Hor- American forward Justin Keenan ford starting at center, instead of and standout guard Darien Gay last year's everyday starter Jor- this past summer, they will need dan Morgan. to replace their two leading scor- AAn eh h nt in- . Pfn ntca Freshman Trey Burke is slated to start at point guard on Friday. In an exhibition against the Spartans on Oct. 31, Ferris State was outmatched in an 85-58 loss. But Bill Sall's crew hung with Michigan State for much of the game, and Detroit-native Daniel Sutherlin turned in an impressive 14-point performance. Junior college transfer Jerrell Sanders added 14 points of his own. And both may pose tough matchups for a Michigan front- court that struggled on both sides of the ball against lowly Wayne State on Friday. Senior point guard Dontae Molden will handle the ball from the top of the key for the Bulldogs, and he comes with far more start- ing experience than his Wolverine counterpart, Burke. Michigan is far and away the favorite against a Division-II team, but the Bulldogs have weap- ons and should turn out a compet- itive effort. SILENCEFINALLYBROKEN: Per NCAA rules, Beilein is now offi- cially allowed to comment on the their Letters of Intent to play for Michigan on Wednesday - top- ranked power forward Mitch McGary and his AAU teammate Glenn "Tre" Robinson III. Senior co-captain Zack Novak played a significant role in recruiting both of the high school stars. McGary used to attend high school with Novak in Chesterton, Ind., and Robinson played in the same con- ference. The 6-foot-10 McGary is easily the most prized recruit of Beilein's career and Michigan's best recruit since the late 1990s. And Robin- son is also very highly regarding in recruiting circles as a wing who can shoot from the perimeter and get to the hoop with relative ease. We're really enthused," Beilein said. "Whenever the media gets to really talk with (them)... you'll love the personalities, the enthu- siasm. Just fine young men who you want to coach. The big thing is they want to be coached. "You can't teach some of those passion things we talk about - By LIZ VUKELICH Daily Sports Writer A month ago, the Miami (Ohio) hockey team looked like it was running on all cylinders. The RedHawks had won the CCHA Tournament last season and was fresh off an NCAA Tour- nament berth. Though they lost Hobey Baker award winner Andy Miele, they filled the void with prized freshman forward Tyler Biggs. But things have changed since spring, and now Miami (2-4- 0 CCHA, 4-6-0 overall) is slug- ging through a mediocre season. Its forward corps ishavingtrouble converting its shots into goals, and even though it has two senior goalkeepers, its save percentage has declined. No. 4 Michigan (3-2-1, 7-2-1) has dropped seven of its last 10 games against the RedHawks, and though the Miami team it will face this weekend is not playing at the expected level, Michigan coach Red Berenson does not anticipate walking away with two easy wins. "I don't think (the matchup) has lost any luster for us," Berenson said. "They've got a good team, I know they're better than their record." But even with a less-than- stellar start to their season, the RedHawks are leading Michigan in one category: time spent in the penalty box. If Berenson has been unimpressed with the amount of penalties the Wolverines have been taking, it's nothing com- pared to Miami. The RedHawks have spent a third of their season playing a man down, and almost half of their opponent's goals have come from power plays. As a result, the Wolverines know how critical their special teams will be during this series. Michigan's power play unit end after staying relatively quiet for most of the season. Last week proved the unit can score - it did twice. Now Berenson wants it to convert more frequently. "(The power play) has to (play well)," Berenson said. "We're not going down there to play ina pen- alty-filled game, but I know how they play. If they're playing on the edge, you've got to be ready to win with a special teams game if it comes down to that." Playing a man up will provide Michigan with much needed opportunities to get ahead, but how it plays shorthanded will be just as important. According to Berenson, the power play on last year's RedHawks squad could "take you out of a game," and they did - Miami scored three power play goals over the course of two games against Michigan last sea- son. This year, the RedHawk unit hasn't been as forceful, but Beren- son still has important advice for his team: stay out of the box. Berenson and the players know that's easier said than done. The immensely physical nature of hockey means that penalties are inevitable. But though Michigan can't limit its number of penal- ties, it can control what kind of penalties it takes. "You don't go into a game thinking 'We can only take four penalties,' " said junior forward Lindsay Sparks. "We say we don't want to take any bad penalties, we want to take hard working penalties." The RedHawks might be the statistical underdogs in this weekend's series, but the Wolver- ines prefer to take that title upon themselves. 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